In a clear, engaging way, John Farr can synthesize movies and the media like no one else.
After Princeton, he began his career at Ogilvy Advertising, where he branded and sold everything from tissue paper to the “I Love New York” Campaign.

After close to 20 years in the ad business, John left to pursue what he’s always loved most: uncovering and promoting the best of world film, old and new.

In 2003, he helped revive the Avon Theatre in Stamford, Conn., a not-for-profit, landmark cinema, showing the best of independent, foreign, and classic films. In his capacity as co-founder, he interviewed the likes of Robert Altman, Gene Wilder, Tim Robbins, Arthur Penn, and Paul Newman, among others. In 2004, he also began writing the “DVD Detective” column for The Stamford Advocate and The Greenwich Time.

With his own multi-media enterprise, Best Movies by Farr, John now promotes outstanding film via an ongoing lecture series and a website that already features more than 2,000 movie recommendations: www.bestmoviesbyfarr.com

Currently, John is a featured weekly film blogger on the Huffington Post, and also provides branded film suggestions on video to WNET’s “Reel 13” program website (www.reel13.org).

He has been interviewed on Westwood One Radio, WCBS Radio, as well as Air America’s “Ron Reagan Show”, and has also appeared on CNN.


Blog Entries by John Farr

The Immigrant Who Best Captured Christmas -- And America

3 Comments | Posted December 24, 2009 | 11:56 AM (EST)


With each successive viewing of this perennial Christmas film, the familiar story lodges more deeply in our consciousness...

On Christmas Eve, 1946, small-town banker George Bailey (James Stewart) becomes embroiled in scandal and overwhelmed by a sense of personal failure. Stopped from leaping to his death by awkward guardian...

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Is Blu-ray That Red-Hot?

33 Comments | Posted December 14, 2009 | 04:07 PM (EST)


I suppose it was bound to happen. With time it was inevitable that the technological innovation called "Blu-ray" would impinge on my particular corner of the movie universe, and I would have to confront it, willingly or not.

The fact it took over three years since Blu-ray's ballyhooed introduction speaks...

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Beauty With Substance: The Best Catherine Deneuve Movies By Farr

13 Comments | Posted December 7, 2009 | 05:58 PM (EST)


Cinematically speaking, there are fewer spectacles less inspiring than physical beauty unaccompanied by any semblance of distinct humanity, character or spontaneous emotion. Unfortunately, we see way too much of this "Stepford" syndrome in our popular media -- whether they're washed-out looking models or those fit, corn-fed, camera-ready young Americans whom...

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Dickens On Film

130 Comments | Posted November 29, 2009 | 05:11 PM (EST)


Nineteenth century English writer Charles Dickens produced a massive legacy of novels, plays, articles, and short stories, and with the 1844 publication of The Christmas Carol, may have done more to enliven the institution of Christmas than anyone before or since.

Drawing from his own early life of poverty, Dickens'...

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Ten Films For The Coming Weeks

41 Comments | Posted November 25, 2009 | 03:27 PM (EST)


 We all know it, and consciously or unconsciously, we prepare for it: Thanksgiving is not, after all, just a holiday, but the starting line for a five and a half week social immersion involving family, colleagues and friends that leaves us all stunned and spent (if not worse) on New...

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The Coolest Male Movie Star, By Farr (You'll Never Guess)

172 Comments | Posted November 15, 2009 | 05:55 PM (EST)


First, I suppose I should describe what I mean by “cool,” since the word is so broadly defined now…

Growing up, to me “cool” meant someone that people were instinctively drawn to, but who kept themselves slightly apart. Someone unflappable, slightly mysterious, out of reach. Someone aware of their own charisma...

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The Alarming Decline Of Expressive Language, In Life and On Film

26 Comments | Posted November 2, 2009 | 07:29 PM (EST)


A month ago I attended a Parents’ Day conference at one of our kids’ private high schools. A history teacher set to retire after 45 years of service was musing on reading the old student literary journals from the forties and fifties. Asked whether by comparison he noticed an erosion in writing skills in the history papers...

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Our Morally Superior Nation: Movies That Reflect The Corrosive Influence Of Religious Extremism

226 Comments | Posted October 25, 2009 | 08:42 PM (EST)


With a couple of recent celebrity scandals, a troubling aspect of the American character has reared its head once again: a moral absolutism and extremism fostered largely by the fanatical religious right -- be they fundamentalist, evangelical, or the more orthodox wing of the Catholic Church.

 Their vocal and powerful...

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Divine Inspirations: Our Finest Arts Documentaries

20 Comments | Posted October 18, 2009 | 04:00 PM (EST)


Even for a jaded movie hound like myself, it’s been a revelation to experience both the quality and range of feature-length documentaries now available for home viewing. At their best, these kinds of films provide an immediacy and intimacy that narrative films rarely match.

 I’ve always been partial to documentaries...

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Leo and Kate: They Didn't Go Down With The Ship

46 Comments | Posted October 12, 2009 | 03:55 PM (EST)


Earlier this month Kate Winslet celebrated her birthday. To this aging fan, she still  seems astonishingly young, but of course, success came fairly early for her. Who can forget her disarming freshness and exuberance in Ang Lee’s “Sense and Sensibility” (1995)?

Her close friend and co-star Leonardo di Caprio shares...

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The Man Who Made the Best Movie Ever

165 Comments | Posted October 4, 2009 | 07:17 PM (EST)


Those who hold to the American Film Institute’s view will assume the subject of this piece is Orson Welles, who, at the tender age of 25, made Citizen Kane (1941), a film that both cursed and immortalized the young man. This admittedly brilliant feature heads their much scrutinized list of...

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Leniency for Polanski

677 Comments | Posted September 27, 2009 | 04:45 PM (EST)


The news of director Roman Polanski's arrest stirred me more than I might have expected, since I'd just screened Marina Zenovich's revealing documentary about this man's tortured life, entitled Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired (2008).

This documentary is must-viewing, particularly given breaking events.

Confronting these developments, we must affirm the law's the...

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In a World Starved For Great Comedy, Why Not Revisit Some Stellar Sellers?

55 Comments | Posted September 21, 2009 | 10:37 PM (EST)


Earlier this month the British actor/comedian Peter Sellers, best known to the world as the bumbling Inspector Clouseau in the “Pink Panther” series, would have turned 84. Wouldn’t life be brighter if this comic genius hadn’t left us so soon? As it was, we lost him close to thirty years...

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How Popular Culture Empowers The Joe Wilsons Of This World

49 Comments | Posted September 12, 2009 | 04:02 PM (EST)


In politics, in life and in the movies, whatever happened to the idea of good fellowship and manners?

The whole flap with Joe Wilson made me ashamed to be a fifty year-old white guy. Did anyone hear Mark Shields (someone who makes me feel considerably better about being a fifty...

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The Centennial of Elia Kazan

49 Comments | Posted September 7, 2009 | 12:36 PM (EST)


Today marks the centennial of director Elia Kazan’s birth, and doubtless Hollywood will soon be giving us souped-up special editions of his finest film work, if they haven’t already. Though DVD extras can be uneven, this is still an exciting prospect.  Kazan’s best work truly deserves re-discovery, since for the...

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Targeted Quality: The Advent Of On-Demand DVDs

8 Comments | Posted September 1, 2009 | 02:33 PM (EST)


As a movie lover and home viewing advocate, I've often complained at needing to wait six months to see a new Hollywood release. I've also lamented that certain classic DVD titles remain unavaillable, for reasons unknown.

On the first point, the explanation is fairly straightforward: the industry wants us...

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The Dimming of Star Power in Hollywood

189 Comments | Posted August 21, 2009 | 04:42 PM (EST)


Today's New York Times carried a revealing article titled "A-List Stars Flailing At The Box Office", which raises some pressing questions facing the movie business today.

Lo and behold, industry insiders are shocked (shocked!) and mightily troubled by the revelation that Hollywood's top stars are not opening films the way they...

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In Honor Of Woodstock, The Best Rock Documentaries and Concert Films By Farr

109 Comments | Posted August 10, 2009 | 04:21 PM (EST)


I'm one of those unfortunate children of the seventies who was old enough to know about Woodstock as it was happening, but way too young to attend. This cruel injustice stuck in my craw then, but the pain has eased with repeat viewings of the seminal documentary shot in and...

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John Huston's Century

75 Comments | Posted August 3, 2009 | 10:10 PM (EST)


This week marks the birthday of legendary director John Huston. In the eighty outsize years he actually had on this earth, he seems to have lived several lives and lifetimes. Those who remember him best for his occasional acting forays, most memorably as Noah Cross in "Chinatown", should also explore...

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The Ten Best Movies About Journalism by Farr

46 Comments | Posted July 27, 2009 | 02:31 PM (EST)


I don't know how many of you caught the superb "American Masters" tribute to the late Walter Cronkite on PBS last week, but it was highly illuminating.

Most of us think of "Uncle Walt" sitting behind his anchor desk at CBS, but this program also outlined just what brought him...

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