Category: Directed by Mike Nichols

  • Silkwood (1983, Mike Nichols)

    I wholeheartedly recommend Silkwood. It’s beautifully made, with a singular performance from Meryl Streep and great performances from its astounding ensemble. I need to remember to list all the supporting actors in the film. But I caution against reading up on the actual history. The film’s very accurate; the problem isn’t with veracity; it’s with…

  • Biloxi Blues (1988, Mike Nichols)

    Uneven but charming tale of Matthew Broderick (an analogue for writer Neil Simon) and his time, in 1945, at Army boot camp in, you guessed it, Biloxi, MS. Simon’s adapting his stage play, which explains the stagey plotting; however, the film itself never feels stagey in the scenes, probably because director Nichols takes the whole…

  • Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966, Mike Nichols)

    Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? opens with this gentle, lovely music from Alex North. It’s night, it’s a university campus, a couple is walking silently as the credits roll; the music’s beautiful. Then the couple–Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton–get home. And pretty soon they start yelling at each other. And they don’t stop until the…

  • Working Girl (1988, Mike Nichols)

    Towards the end of Working Girl, the film seems to jump around a bit with the timeline. It seems to jump ahead, but then it turns out it doesn’t. And it only seems to jump ahead because of how director Nichols and editor Sam O’Steen structure a couple transitions. It’s not a big thing, but…

  • Wolf (1994, Mike Nichols)

    Mike Nichols has a very peculiar technique in Wolf. He does these intense close-ups, sometimes zooming into them, sometimes zooming out of them. He fixates on his actors–usually Jack Nicholson and Michelle Pfeiffer, but all of the actors get at least one intense close-up (except maybe Eileen Atkins). It’s like he’s drawing attention to the…