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Jem Cohen – Museum Hours (2012)

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Acclaimed filmmaker Jem Cohen’s new feature, Museum Hours, is a mesmerizing tale of two adrift strangers who find refuge in Vienna’s grand Kunsthistorisches Art Museum. Johann, a museum guard, spends his days silently observing both the art and the visitors. Anne, suddenly called to Vienna from overseas, has been wandering the city in a state of limbo. A chance meeting sparks a deepening connection that draws them through the halls of the museum and the streets of the city. The exquisitely photographed Museum Hours is an ode to the bonds of friendship, an exploration of an unseen Vienna, and the power of art to both mirror and alter our lives.






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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/79495259B73CAe6a/Jem Cohen – 2012 Museum Hours.mkv

Language(s):German, English
Subtitles:English


Wolfgang Becker – Good Bye Lenin! (2003)

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If not as dense as Godard’s Masculin Féminin, Wolfgang Becker’s Good Bye, Lenin! is an equally playful look at the effects of American globalization abroad. Christiane Kerner (Katrin Saß) is a Communist party supporter who falls into a coma after a heart attack and sleeps through the fall of the Berlin Wall and the subsequent invasion of America’s fast food joints. Looking to spare his mother further injury, Alex (Daniel Brühl) concocts an elaborate plan to convince the bedridden woman that Communism is still very much alive: He videotapes fake news programs to explain the “Trink Coca-Cola” banner outside her window and makes her believe that her favorite brands of food haven’t been replaced by cheap—but apparently similar tasting—knock-offs from Holland.Becker’s Berlin is a grungy Art Deco haven that changes overnight with the dismantling of the Wall, and he uses a magical realist swirl of images and flash-forwards (a postmodern trick that isn’t very functional but appropriately out-of-place) to humorously pit the past against the present. How do we guard someone against the threat of globalization? Both Becker and Alex seem to understand the uplift perpetuated by the end of Communism (Germany won the World Cup soon after), but in forcing his main character to ask big questions he awakens Alex to the reality of capitalism’s tactless, personality-free invasion. In the end, Alex’s game becomes a kind of fantasy wish fulfillment, a regressive act of familial restoration. It’s easy to forgive Becker’s too-literal evocation of globalization (Alex is a dreamer cosmonaut and the World Cup is a planetary battle) because the symbolism is hopeful and never overwrought. In the end, Good Bye, Lenin! works so well because Becker playfully likens Germany’s East-West split and political upheavals to the sort of traumas that tear families apart. If the film’s characters are “the children of Lenin and Coca-Cola,” by film’s end Becker has lovingly evoked a happy in between.







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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/53f08b0e599cc549/Wolfgang Becker – 2003 Good Bye Lenin.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

Richard Fleischer – See No Evil AKA Blind Terror (1971)

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A young blind woman is pursued by a maniac while staying with family in their country manor.

Storyline: Sarah is a blind girl who has returned to her home, a country manor in which all of the occupants are dead. She unknowingly sleeps overnight, among a houseful of corpses, arising the next morning to quietly creep out of bed, in order not to awaken the other members of the household.








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/851fEe666f8ad5AF/See.No.Evil.aka.Blind.Terror.1971.DVDRip.h264-Sweet.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, French, Dutch, German, Portuguese, Portuguese BR, Spanish, Italian, Czech, Bosnian, Turkish, Arabic, Hindi

Marcel Carné – Les visiteurs du soir AKA The Devil’s Envoys (1942)

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Synopsis
Two wandering minstrels, Gilles and Dominique, arrive at the castle of the Baron Hugh just as he announces the engagement of his daughter Anne to the knight Renaud. However Gilles and Dominique have really sold their souls to The Devil and have been charged with traveling throughout the land and tempting mortals into damnation by causing them to fall in love with them. Dominique causes both Renaud and Hugh to fall for her. Meanwhile Gilles seduces Anne but then falls for her himself. And so The Devil arrives in person to visit a cruel punishment on the two lovers.







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Eng srt:
https://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitles/3599951/les-visiteurs-du-soir-en

Language(s):French
Subtitles:French SDH (idx/sub),English

Yoshishige Yoshida – Kaigenrei AKA Coup D’Etat (1973)

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Ikka Kita is a revolutionary, who suffers when he is brought his younger brother’s clothes, still smeared with his blood. Ikka’s brother followed the revoltionary’s precept and acted, attempting on the life of a finantial group manager and then, unable to escape, killing himself. Now, Ikka is more determined than ever to take his own teachings to the ultimate end, the «coup d’etat».Ikka Kita is a revolutionary, who suffers when he is brought his younger brother’s clothes, still smeared with his blood. Ikka’s brother followed the revoltionary’s precept and acted, attempting on the life of a finantial group manager and then, unable to escape, killing himself. Now, Ikka is more determined than ever to take his own teachings to the ultimate end, the «coup d’etat»






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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/724aabba5Bbe09c6/Yoshishige Yoshida – 1973 Coup DEtat.mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

Marcel Carné – Le Jour se lève aka Daybreak (1939)

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Le Jour se lève (or Daybreak) is a 1939 French film directed by Marcel Carné and written by Jacques Prévert, based on a story by Jacques Viot. It is considered one of the principal examples of the French film movement known as poetic realism.

In 1952, it was included in the first Sight and Sound top ten greatest films list.

Synopsis:
After committing a murder, a man locks himself in his apartment and recollects the events the led him to the killing.

Analysis (with spoilers)

At the end of Hôtel du Nord , Peter turns to Renee and said, “The sun rises, he will be fine Come, now it’s over …”.

Some will see this dialogue invented by Marcel Carné to announce his next film. But if Peter Day evokes rises, it’s just a funny coincidence. You could call it a sign of fate or good omen but it is not: in 1938 the director of Funny drama has no clear idea of his cinematic future. However, one thing is certain: his next film will be produced in partnership with his two friends, Jacques Prévert and Jean Gabin. The three men who had given birth to Port of Shadows , had promised to work together again. Free of any commitment they gather in search of a script. Initially, Gabin proposes an adaptation of a book by Pierre René Wolf. The novel, Room Upstairs (1), does not wrap Carné, Prévert or who decides to write an original screenplay. The poet begins his writing while doing some scouting director sets that could be used during filming. Time passes, and Carné Gabin are impatient, and Prévert finally admitted to them that he tramples and uninspired. So you have to start from scratch when Jacques Viot knocks Marcel Carné (his neighbor !! bearing) to propose a scenario. The director agrees to read the script and devours before offering it to his two sidekicks. The trio of artists appreciate this urban sad love story and accepts the project with enthusiasm rises … The Day is born!

Today the interest film historians have in this work is mainly based in the use of flashbacks. For many, the day rises is the first talkie using this method Welles popularize a year later with Citizen Kane . However, this fourth feature film by Marcel Carné cover many more treasures to be described in later chapters!

As everyone knows, the flashback is the process that is to go back in the story. Today, many films use this trick of writing: Casino (Martin Scorsese) to Once Upon a Time in America (Sergio Leone) through The Last Emperor (Bernardo Bertolucci), the cinephile culture is populated by works operating in flashback. But until the late 30s, the narrative was based on a sacrosanct linearity. Going against this rule was synonymous with incomprehension for the viewer. And if Carné was tempted, it has nevertheless been worried, just hours before the release of his film (June 17, 1939 to Madeleine Cinema in Paris) he still wondered if the public would understand the story . Sharing this fear, production inserted before each screening of the film a box explaining the process! Unlike some older works that use it occasionally, Day rises is mainly constructed using flashbacks. On the diegetic point of view, the duration of action is relatively short (a few hours in between shots that open and conclude the story), but during this time Francis earth in its shelter, smoking cigarette after cigarette and think about the sequence of events that led to this situation. He dives three times in his memories and allows us to reconstruct the pieces of the narrative puzzle designed by Jacques Viot.

However, if the use of the method demonstrates the daring film by Marcel Carné, it does not change much for his extraordinary skills. Fully respecting the rule of three units (location, diegetic and share time), the filmmaker sets up a drama whose progress captivates the viewer from beginning to end. He thus shows that by using the founding rules of storytelling, it is still possible to innovate. Is this not the mark of a pure artist?

If Carné knew renew film grammar while demonstrating the greatest proficiency in staging it is also because he has surrounded himself with peerless technicians. After collaborating with Eugene Shufftan on Port of Shadows , he says the new lighting feature Curt Courant. As Shufftan, the German-born cinematographer learned his craft from the great masters of beyond the Rhine as Fritz Lang and Max Ophuls film. Dice the 30s, he fled Nazi Germany to work in Europe. He was responsible for the photography of The Human Beast (Renoir, 1938), The Man Who Knew Too Much (Hitchcock, 1934) or later Monsieur Verdoux (Chaplin, 1947), in other words, great job … His approach expressionist lighting is perfectly suited to the poetic realism of Prévert / duo Carné. Playing with shadows and light, technique focuses light on the subject of the story and directs the movie plays. Performing dogs led by Jules Berry where the whole frame is illuminated (28’45) to those big silent shots where only a ray of light reveals the lost look of François (12’57), Current carrying out work in all Points admirable.

But if the light of current pictorial combines beauty and dramatic effectiveness, sets designed by Alexandre Trauner indispensable are not far behind. To better express the loneliness of the hero, Trauner built a modern building erected in the middle of a square in the suburbs. When the police laid siege, Francis earth deep in his small studio. This piece reminds CC Baxter’s apartment the designer will create a few years later in The Apartment (Billy Wilder, 1960). There is the same type of objects and a typically male design. Some memories and a lot of empty symbolize the loneliness of the hero. But it is certainly the height of the building is most surprising in Day rises: with its five floors, it dominates the other houses and crushes the landscape of all its ugliness. Trauner anticipates a modern urbanization while verticality and without any charm that will change the landscape of post-war and participate in the pain of living in the suburbs. Studio Francis, on the top floor, also evokes the isolation he suffered: away from the street, the hero is dehumanized. When hiding in his refuge, Gabin around in circles and eventually scream his distress to the crowd of onlookers: “Francis, Francis, Francis no more … let me alone, all alone, I want one m’foute peace. ” Here dehumanization of the protagonist is clear, his will to live is gone and the final tragedy is announced.

In another scene, Francis is at the factory. The place where men work alongside each other does not mean a haven of humanity behind the mask, the workers working in the dust and noise. No communication is allowed and when the beautiful little Françoise comes with a bouquet of flowers, must François away machines to be heard. After a few minutes, the bouquet is faded and Gabin says wryly: “J’te had said was all that was healthier here.” As in Modern Times Chaplin, the message is clear: the factory and modernity provide no social progress, it is only a machine that grinds personalities.

Finally, we recall the torque Port of Shadows forced to hide behind the barracks to love. This is reflected in the Day rises where Carné films her lover behind windows and in confined spaces. It is in the small house of Françoise or in the floral greenhouse employer they declare their love. We are in 1939, Germany has already started his war machine and all forms of hatred at their worst. For Carné, love no longer has a place in the street and gets up Day is as a work of anticipation poetic, sad and deeply upsetting.

If the scenery, photography and the work of the technical team involved in the disillusioned atmosphere of the Day rises must not forget as long as the work of Prévert fantastically highlighted by épatants actors.

By adapting the script Jacques Viot, the poet once again demonstrated its immense talent. The film is less talkative than Port of Shadows, but it still offers some remarkable dialogues. So when Clara declaims “memorabilia, souvenirs, do I look like to make love with memories,” Prévert rivals Jeanson’s famous “atmosphere” offered the same Arletty a year earlier (Hotel North) But Prévert made ​​the difference and imposes its footprint through the poetic verve he brings to certain sequences. bouquet of withered flowers mentioned above, the tears Arletty behind the window or blind (2) spends his time asking questions are all inventions participating in poetic realism of the film.

To bring this atmosphere, three actors now entered the pantheon of French cinema, their talent and deliver outstanding performance. There was first Gabin that expresses the largest natural sweetness tinged violence. It is this character lost in his love and passion like the teddy bear of his beloved: “You see, it is like you, he has a gay eye and the other a little bit sad,” said Frances. Constantly on the verge of explosion, he holds up his feelings this unforgettable scene where he yells at her window. Admittedly, this magnificent rant remains one of the greatest monologues of cinema. Gabin allows Francis to express his discomfort and anecdote says he found it very hard to turn this sequence: according to some witnesses, the interpreter finally locked in his dressing room where he wept bitterly. Latent power, the mild smile and look lost, that’s all Gabin! An actor fully inhabited by choosing roles that he knew perfectly.

At his side, found Arletty who came to prominence a year earlier thanks to Hotel du Nord . In The Day rises, Carné and Prévert bring a new dimension. Behind the Parisienne with a machine gun replica, viewers discover a love and tenderness well. This interpretation opens the door to other memorable roles including that of Garance in her Children of Paradise (1943).

Finally, like any great movie, The Day rises features a “nasty” absolutely great. In interpreting Valentin, Jules Berry creates an ambiguous character. One never knows his ambitions nor his past and he emerges from her attitudes, her smiles and palaver an unhealthy and destructive power. He lies, listen behind doors, handles the weakest and Clara admits that torture animals !!! His satanic performance is enough to convince Carné who offer him the role of the devil a few years later in the evening The Visitors (1942).

This combination of technical and artistic talents as provide a beautiful critical acclaim Day rises. But a few months after its release, the Vichy government banned the film as too demoralizing. However, the decision cowardly and hypocritical not stop him from becoming one of the greatest classics of our heritage. In 1947, Anatole Litvak attempts a Hollywood remake with Henry Fonda and Barbara Bel Geddes (The Long Night). Unfortunately, the success is not at the rendezvous. Despite its capabilities, Litvak never reaches the dramatic power that was born talent gathered Carné, Prévert, Current, Trauner, Gabin and Arletty Berry … The other masterpieces of cinema are the result of an alchemy that is certainly impossible to replicate, Le Jour rises is obviously one. Cherish it!








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6594bE35aFaC7a03/Le Jour Se Lève.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English German French

Christopher Hampton – Carrington (1995)

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Frail, intellectual Bloomsburyan Lytton Strachey is the unlikely hero for a movie, but congratulations to writer-director Christopher Hampton for making the essayist an elitist everyone can love.
Based on Michael Holroyd’s Strachey biography,
“Carrington” is ostensibly about Dora Carrington, an iconoclastic English painter who had the bad luck to fall irretrievably in love with Strachey, a confirmed homosexual. During their 17-year relationship that lasted until his death in 1932, they managed to live together happily, mostly platonically, sometimes sharing male lovers (one of whom would marry Carrington), but with Carrington often yearning for the sexual comfort Strachey could never fully offer.
As played by Emma Thompson, this Carrington isn’t quite as convincingly androgynous-looking as you’d expect of someone the prowling Strachey mistakes for a beautiful boy at first meeting. Thompson has all the other qualifications. She brings a fierceness to the role, giving Carrington a one-minded dedication to Strachey that touchingly surpasses all other concerns in her life.
The center of this movie, however, is Strachey, played with great sensitivity and nerve by Jonathan Pryce as part wise-cracking Oscar Wilde and part timid self-doubter. At times, it seems he can scarcely believe his own audacity as an intellectual admired in his own small circle but otherwise unknown. A talented critic, he would come to fame and fortune after the publication of his satirical profiles, “Eminent Victorians.”
Speaking in a pinched voice quite unlike the one he uses to hawk Infiniti cars on television, Pryce creates a character who is physically weak but thrilled to experience a rare dance with danger. After Mark Gertler (Rufus Sewell), the man Carrington leaves to be with Strachey, assaults Strachey in the street, he picks himself up and remarks – like a professor partaking in a thrilling experiment – how exhilarating it was to be attacked.
Wearing a long spongy beard, the actor Pryce, who appeared in “Glengarry Glen Ross” and starred in “Brazil,” doesn’t look like he is acting. It’s an extraordinary portrayal. Not only do we believe that he is Strachey, but he seems to believe it, too.
Strachey, appearing a bit stiff at first view, comes alive as the movie progresses, proving himself a galloping oddball with an enduring sense of justice. He wins our hearts when he arrives for a hearing before a magistrate to plead his case for conscientious objector status during World War I. Strachey methodically removes his overcoat and then, begging the court’s pardon, inflates a rubber doughnut on which he politely sits. “I am a martyr to the piles,” he explains unashamedly.
Hampton, who wrote “Dangerous Liaisons,” and the more recent “Total Eclipse” about the poets Verlaine and Rimbaud, is a gift to the cinema. He manages to focus on literary subjects without deadening them, so often the fate of books turned into movies by the Merchant-Ivory team. Helping to stir things up is an urgent cacophony of Mendelssohnian string music in Michael Nyman’s score, much reminiscent of work he’s done for Peter Greenaway films.The passion of the music carries through the film.
This movie has the flesh to go with the intellect. Carrington’s lovers are all strapping young men with admirable appetites. The love scenes are discreet but also hauntingly erotic. We catch a glimpse of Carrington with Beacus Penrose (Jeremy Northam, the thinking woman’s pinup) making love against a dresser, bathed in shadows, and in those shadows we see both Carrington’s pleasure and her rueful yearning for Strachey.
Hampton has a wicked wit, well demonstrated in “Dangerous Liaisons,” and there is also plenty of it to savor here..


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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/49faE3c001F7e56b/Carrington-1995-Christopher.Hampton.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Jim Jarmusch – Paterson (2016)

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The new movie written and directed by Jim Jarmusch is a total fantasy. This in spite of being shot on the streets of the New Jersey city in which it is set, and for which the movie itself and its lead character are named. It’s as much of a fantasy as Jean Cocteau’s “Orpheus,” another great film about a poet that was at least partially set in the “real” contemporary world. It’s maybe not as much of a fantasy as the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.

The movie’s protagonist, played with spectacular attention to detail and what feels like a genuine sense of affinity by Adam Driver, is named Paterson, and he drives a New Jersey Transit bus around the New Jersey city of Paterson, where he also lives. Paterson, New Jersey was once an industrial center of the United States—a storied manufacturer of silks and textiles—that fell into a kind of ruin by the time this film reviewer moved there, to live, in 1978. It has undergone several not-quite-revivals since that time. Its main fame today is in its being the ostensible subject of an epic modernist American poem by William Carlos Williams, who lived in nearby Rutherford. “[A]nd so to man/to Paterson,” Williams wrote in the Preface to that work, underlining an ambition that was potentially pantheistic.

The Paterson inhabited by Paterson is not a ruin but it is a largely quiet, sometimes haunted-seeming place. Paterson the man (whose first name is not given, or is perhaps nonexistent) is a fellow of routine. For the most part he gets up at the same early hour every morning, summoned by what his wife Laura calls his “silent alarm watch,” a Casio of retro design. Paterson’s marriage is also a little retro (some critics have derided it as retrograde, politically, a claim I find not pertinent). Laura, played by Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani (who’s in Kiarostami’s “Shirin” and Farhadi’s “About Elly”) is more or less a housewife. She bakes delicious cupcakes, dubious dinner pies, is unfailingly sweet, and decorates the couple’s small house with bold black and white patterns, which also distinguish her cupcakes. She has some whimsical seeming ambitions that Paterson either indulges or helps her with, depending on how you want to look at it. But aside from muse functions, she has little to do with her husband’s daily routine, which, aside from driving a bus, is devoted to poetry. In his neat notebook Paterson writes, in a neat hand, plain-spoken poems celebrating what the Surrealists called “the marvelous in the everyday.” These poems were actually written by Ron Padgett, a still-living poet with roots in the “New York School” which of course was influenced by Allen Ginsberg and his mentor Williams and whose most famous member was Frank O’Hara.

The plain-spoken poems here bear a slight resemblance to the work of James Schuyler, only minus Schuyler’s anxieties and tortured longings—they seem to come from a place of contemplative contentment. Paterson’s nearly rigid approach to life, love and work, seems deliberately designed to produce that state of being. His other muse is, of course, the Paterson Falls, where he sits on his lunch hour and at other times.

His nemesis is an English bulldog named Marvin, who belongs to the couple but is clearly not crazy about Paterson. Every night, though, Paterson walks the growling, grumbling beast, and leashes him outside a bar. There, Paterson has precisely one beer and talks things over with bartender Doc (Barry Shabaka Henley), discussing Doc’s Paterson Wall of Fame (featuring Lou Costello, Floyd and Jimmy Vivino, and others) and contemplating life and love. Paterson gets food for thought on his bus, too; he overhears a teenage girl explaining Italian anarchist Gaetano Bresci to a fellow student, say, or two construction works discussing (in incredibly polite terms) their potential amorous conquests, which they say they’re too tired or preoccupied to follow through on.

This is the third of Jarmusch’s fictional films in which he concocts a fantasy realm in which he, the image-maker and aesthete, could lead a comfortable and productive existence. In 2009’s “The Limits of Control” he posited the imaginative realm as one in which an individual could not just escape political oppression but also effectively obliterate it. In 2013’s “Only Lovers Left Alive” he explored the state of vampirism as a way of building a realm in which one could stay not just forever young but forever young with fantastic taste. Here he constructs an idyll out of orderliness and a circumscribed mode of engagement. Paterson and Laura have no onscreen social life to speak of (the bake sale for which Laura creates dozens of delicious looking black and white cupcakes is not depicted), and no nosy or imposing family members. Paterson has not published his work, and does not even deign to copy it out of his notebook. And yet there’s a sense of interdependent gears at work here. The man, the bus, the passengers, the bar patrons, all pouring into the poetry.

But if the movie were merely an exercise in Jarmusch’s fancy, it would be a pleasurable thing. It is a meticulously composed movie, shot beautifully by Frederick Elmes; every frame is a beauty. “Paterson” is ultimately more than a whim. It is a movie that actually grows more enigmatic on a second viewing. Asked at one point why he doesn’t carry a smart phone, Paterson responds that it would feel like a leash. And yet he hardly seems a person who would stray. At one point in the movie, Paterson, who maintains a stoic countenance in most circumstances, is forced to intervene before an act of violence is committed. His bearing in the aftermath is odd; he laughs, with a kind of horror. His calm surface disturbed, he reveals he’s fighting something within himself in order to maintain his equanimity. After that, we are shown a photograph of Paterson bearing military medals (the shot is a real picture of Driver during his time in the Marines). The film feels like one in which nothing is happening, but it’s not happening beautifully, and then there finally is a galvanic event that’s both heartbreaking and comical. And what happens after that is moving, and instructive. “I breathe poetry,” a character Paterson meets at the end of the film says to him as they both sit and look at the falls. That is ultimately the very real thing that the movie is about: the conviction that if you can live at least part of your life breathing poetry (and that poetry is not necessarily a verbal thing), you can make your life more worthwhile.






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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/d8c8ce3e62d36a52/Jim Jarmusch – 2016 Paterson.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English


Andrei Tarkovsky – Ivanovo detstvo AKA Ivan’s Childhood (1962)

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The debut feature from the great Andrei Tarkovsky, Ivan’s Childhood is an evocative, poetic journey through the shadows and shards of one boy’s war-torn youth. Moving back and forth between the traumatic realities of WWII and the serene moments of family life before the conflict began, Tarkovsky’s film remains one of the most jarring and unforgettable depictions of the impact of violence on children in wartime.








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6e04a87475F5fc11/Andrei Tarkovsky – 1962 Ivans Childhood.mkv

Language(s):Russian, German
Subtitles:English

Andrei Tarkovsky – Solyaris (1972)

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One of the most frequent charges against science-fiction is that it replaces emotion with intellect. Its characters are people who live by and for the mind, and their personal relationships are likely to be stifled and awkward, That’s probably true enough of most s-f novels (although exceptions range from Fredric Brown’s “The Lights in the Sky are Stars” to a lot of the work by Theodore Sturgeon), but it’s even more true of science-fiction movies.

“Solaris” is an interesting exception to the rule. It’s a 21/2 hour Russian epic, filmed at great expense, and yet it’s about the lives and emotions of its characters — not about gadgets or monsters or space opera props. The movie’s based on a novel by Stanislas Lem, one of the leading figures of Eastern European science-fiction, and takes place partly on a Soviet space station orbiting the mysterious planet Solaris, and partly in the imaginations and subconscious of the station’s crew members.

The planet’s surface is covered by a vast ocean that’s apparently alive and sentient. And the ocean has the ability to materialize “guests” on the space station: exact duplicates of people remembered by the crew. A psychologist is sent to the station to sort out the situation, and Solaris obligingly presents him with a duplicate of the girl he loved and left, and who committed suicide many years ago. And this is where the movie gets interesting (after a pretty slow start). It concerns itself with matters of love, dignity and our relationship with God. The girl, or “guest,” is a truly original science-fiction creation. She isn’t one of those aliens in disguise who are out to conquer mankind; in fact, she doesn’t fit into any of the standard categories of aliens who take the shape of men. Even though she’s manufactured from neutrinos, she is the person she appears to be. And what’s a person, anyway?

To complicate things further, the girl has been provided by Solaris with free will and self-knowledge (those two most burdensome gifts from any god), and knows that the person she’s “based” on is dead. Now there’s a metaphysical double-reverse for you: She’s so real she knows she isn’t real, and so aware she knows she shouldn’t be aware. She forgives the psychologist’s original attempt to kill her, and then tries to kill herself because, you see, she’s just as much in love with him as her “original” was, and so she’s tormented by doubt and inadequacy.

“Solaris” isn’t a fast-moving action picture; it’s a thoughtful, deep, sensitive movie that uses the freedom of, science-fiction to examine human nature. It starts slow, but once you get involved, it grows on you.








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/3b9394020303c4Ab/Andrei Tarkovsky – 1972 Solaris.mkv

Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English

Ingmar Bergman – Såsom i en spegel AKA Through a Glass Darkly [+Extras] (1961)

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A young woman, Karin, has recently returned to the family island after spending some time in a mental hospital. On the island with her is her lonely brother and kind, but increasingly desperate husband (Max von Sydow). They are joined by Karin’s father (Gunnar Björnstrand), who is a world-traveling author that is estranged to his children. The film depicts how Karin’s grip on reality slowly slips away and how the bonds between the family members are changing in light of this fact.







Extras:
US trailer
Exploring the Film: Video Discussion with Bergman Biographer Peter Cowie

http://nitroflare.com/view/A7BE0B97062C02B/S%C3%A5som_i_en_spegel.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/A95BD5898195445/Peter_Cowie_Discusses_Through_a_Glass_Darkly.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/5B47EE804877293/US_trailer.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9Aff438d455F1d14/Såsom i en spegel.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/9d20d32aC41D44F7/Peter Cowie Discusses Through a Glass Darkly.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/983020F30292148c/US trailer.mkv

Language(s):Swedish, Latin
Subtitles:English sub/idx muxed

Larry Clark – The Smell of Us (2014) (HD)

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Math, JP, Pacman and Marie belong to the same crew of skate kids in Paris. Every day they meet up at The Dome – behind the Museum of Modern Art, opposite the Eiffel Tower – skateboarding, goofing off or getting stoned as they ignore the smart crowd of art lovers. Math and JP are inseparable, bound by complicated family ties. Boredom, the lure of easy money and the anonymity of the Internet all play a part in tearing their world apart.




http://nitroflare.com/view/C90323EDE9CD2EB/The.Smell.Of.Us.2014.1080p.en.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/91565d2526dcD576/The.Smell.Of.Us.2014.1080p.en.mkv

Language(s):French, English, Japanese
Subtitles:English

Hans Weingartner – Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei aka The Edukators [+extras] (2004)

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The Edukators (German: Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei) is a German-Austrian film made by the Austrian director Hans Weingartner and released in 2004. Nominated for the Palme d’Or at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival,[1] it stars Daniel Brühl, Stipe Erceg and Julia Jentsch.

The original German title, Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei translates literally as “the fat years are over”. Die fetten Jahre is a German expression originating from the story of Joseph in Egypt as found in the Luther Bible, meaning a period in which one enjoys considerable success and indulges oneself heavily. The official translation of the statement as used in the film and the subtitle to the English-language release was “Your days of plenty are numbered.”

The film was generally well received by critics. Based on 74 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an overall approval rating from critics of 69%, with an average score of 6.5/10. By comparison, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, calculated an average score of 68, based on 28 reviews.

A. O. Scott of The New York Times called it a “A slyly effective thriller and of a deft comedy of romantic confusion. Whatever its shortcomings as a consideration of globalization and its discontents, The Edukators succeeds brilliantly in telling the story of a man who falls in love with his best buddy’s girlfriend and doesn’t know what to do about it.” Los Angeles Times critic Carina Chocano concluded that it was “A sweet, funny and gripping romantic adventure, it’s about the limitations of political activism in this day and age, and what happens when your girlfriend and your best friend fall in love.” Jonathan Romney of The Independent also favoured the film “Hans Weingartner’s digitally-shot The Edukators wonders whether the old political idealism can be revived, but its gentle, trendily pallid vision of youthful ferment is strictly non-threatening – the Revolution with a Jamie Cullum haircut.”

In 2009, a statue stolen from Bernard Madoff was returned with a note that read “Bernie the Swindler, Lesson: Return stolen property to rightful owners” and was signed by “The Educators”. This is a reference to the film, although in the film they did not tend to steal from the houses they broke into.

In 2006, it was announced that Brad Anderson would adapt and direct a remake of the film set in the United States instead of Berlin.






http://nitroflare.com/view/84A6234CE289B58/The_Edukators.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/0CBA0452346A617/Making_of.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/72E17713C1A6CBA/Funny_Scenes.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/8C718247efdc5a91/The Edukators.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/BabEad309875B71f/Making of.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/82afA811bac39ff8/Funny Scenes.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:english

Jorge Mautner – O Demiurgo AKA The Demiurge (1972)

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A colorful feature film that mixes exile with the figure of the poet Rimbaud and the feminist revolution. “It’s super-intellectual. A fable-musical-philosophical-chanchada”, Mautner says. He also affirms that the work focuses a lot on the longing for Brazil, on the will that the exiled had to return to their homeland. The idea came from conversations between the musician and his old father, “always talking about the pre-Socratics”, he recalls. Glauber Rocha states that “The Demiurge” is the best film “of” and “about” exile.



Quote:
Never a card-carrying member of the Tropicálists, writer/musician/filmmaker Jorge Mautner still had a moon-like influence on Caetano Veloso and is mentioned in the same breath as artist Hélio Oiticica, poet Augusto de Campos, director Glauber Rocha and designer Rogerio Duarte as one of the movement’s spiritual forefathers.
It was Mautner’s trilogy of novels, the Mythology of Kaos, as well as his song “Radioatividade,” about the Third World War, which caused Mautner to be labelled a dangerous Trotskyist subversive and his name included in the National Security Law. He went into political exile and in London met up with Veloso and Gil, where he filmed O Demiurgo, a low-budget feature film starring Veloso in the title role and Gil as Pan. – Jez Smadja




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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/95fD510F7AAa6912/O Demiurgo.avi

Language(s):Portuguese
Subtitles:English (Hardcoded)

Michelangelo Antonioni – La notte (1961)

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Quote:
One of the masterworks of 1960s cinema, La notte [The Night] marked yet another development in the continuous stylistic evolution of its director, Michelangelo Antonioni — even as it solidified his reputation as one of the greatest artists of the 20th century. La notte is Antonioni’s “Twilight of the Gods”, but composed in cinematic terms. Examined from a crane-shot, it’s a sprawling study of Italy’s upper middle-class; seen in close-up, it’s an x-ray of modern man’s psychic desolation. Two of the giants of film-acting come together as a married couple living in crisis: Marcello Mastroianni (La dolce vita, 8 1/2) and Jeanne Moreau (Jules et Jim, Bay of Angels). He is a renowned author and “public intellectual”; she is “the wife”. Over the course of one day and the night into which it inevitably bleeds, the pair will come to re-examine their emotional bonds, and grapple with the question of whether love and communication are even possible in a world built out of profligate idylls and sexual hysteria.

Photographed in rapturous black-and-white by the great Gianni di Venanzo (8 1/2, Giulietta degli spiriti), La notte presents the beauty of seduction, then asks: “When did this occur — this seduction of Beauty?” The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present Michelangelo Antonioni’s haunted odyssey in a new digital restoration, uncut for the first time ever on home video.








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/2f78F89f4B7512a2/Michelangelo Antonioni – 1961 La notte.mkv

Language(s):Italian, French
Subtitles:English


Marlen Khutsiyev – Mne dvadtsat let AKA I Am Twenty [+Extras] (1965)

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Synopsis:
I am Twenty is notable for its often dramatic camera movements, handheld camerawork and heavy use of location shooting, often incorporating non-actors (including a group of foreign exchange students from Ghana and the poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko) and centering scenes around non-staged events (a May Day parade, a building demolition, a poetry reading). Filmmakers Andrei Tarkovsky and Andrei Konchalovsky both play small roles in the film. The dialogue often overlaps and there are stylized flourishes that echo the early French New Wave, especially François Truffaut’s black and white films. The screenplay, co-written by Gennadi Shpalikov, originally called for a film running only 90 minutes, but the full version of the film runs for three hours.

I am Twenty began production in 1959,[1] during the De-Stalinization period of the Khrushchev thaw, when Soviet society experienced several years of unprecedented freedom of speech.

By the time the film was finished, the thaw was waning and the film’s openly critical view of Stalinism was deemed unacceptable, as was the its portrayal of the lives of everyday Soviet youth worrying about money and jobs and listening to Western music. At a speech in March 1963, Khrushchev personally attacked the film and denounced Khutsiev and his collaborators for “[thinking] that young people ought to decide for themselves how to live, without asking their elders for counsel and help.”
— form Wiki

– Special Jury Prize, Venice 1965
– The single case when Andrey Tarkovsky starred.





Review:
Half Godard, half serious but worthy drama, with an unexpected bit of propaganda thrown in for good measure, Khutsiev’s 3-hour epic is an interesting, serious and even fun look at Moscow circa 1964. Some of it is idealized and lying: the clean communal apartments without alcoholics, the bright streets unlittered. Some of it is truthful and
feels true, even if Russians of that generation hadn’t confirmed its truthfulness post-screening. Its all blended together so well, though, that truth and falsehood make a single fascinating film.

Sergei (Valentin Popov) returns to Moscow post-army experience, and hooks up with his old friends, holding down an undemanding post at the power plant while growing increasingly sick of his meaningless and repetitive life.

He and his pals eventually split up in different directions, and then the film does an ideological 180, extolling the glory of the Soviet state, and before you know it the final shot, of Lenin’s tomb no less, has arrived.

The first half (and the film has a labeled second half, so you can tell where the very definite boundaries begin) is clearly under the influence of the French New Wave. As Sergei and pals clown around Moscow, the light abandon of the film has many charming, whimsical moments. The highlight is the May Day parade, a bright and seemingly spontaneous display of happiness. Forgetting about the grandeur of the Soviet state, Khutsiev shows Moscow in clear, uncluttered and un show-offy shots. The feel is refreshingly un-propagandistic. The second half is serious and deals with somewhat cliched material; however, acted flawlessly, it comes through with effect and Khutsiev doesn’t lose the viewer with his tonal shift. The ending propaganda is so unexpected and quick it can be forgiven.

I Am Twenty is clearly a film of its time, and it records its time and place in ways that the best time capsules do: with sympathy, perception and an acute eye and ear (it’s especially interesting to note how, as with so many international films from the early 60s, jazz recordings are everywhere). Particularly lovely are the tracking shots taken from afar. Never leaving the city, Khutsiev shows a time and a place, as well as an acute if not thoroughly original character study. It’s art, and naturally was cracked down on (unfortunately for Khutsiev, war on formalism had just been declared): cut in half and with key sequences exorcised, it was finally restored in 1989. Our gain; truly an unknown classic.

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http://nitroflare.com/view/B1DD80952C5ABEE/Making_of.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/8ec6de6914eeA26b/I am Twenty 1964 — Marlen Khutsiyev Part 1.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/58041Aee5feaf578/I am Twenty 1964 — Marlen Khutsiyev Part 1.srt
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/2b1Da91127E29b55/I am Twenty 1964 — Marlen Khutsiyev Part 2.mkv
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/96359df80b7e8522/I am Twenty 1964 — Marlen Khutsiyev Part 2.srt
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/a70172C19e662Caf/Making of.mkv

Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English (srt)

Youssef Chahine – Iskanderija, kaman oue kaman AKA Alexandria Again and Forever (1989)

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The last film in Youssef Chahine’s autobiographical Alexandria Trilogy stars Chahine himself as his cinematic alter ego, Yehia Mourad, completing his merging of fiction with real life and drama with psychodrama. Opening with Chahine’s triumph at the Berlin Film Festival, where he took home the Silver Bear for Alexandria…Why? (the first film in the trilogy–this is layered stuff), the film explores Yehia’s obsession with his young star, Amir (Amr Abdel-Guelil), while participating in the general strike of 1987. As Yehia fantasizes about the films they would make together (one of them looks like a loony take on Jesus Christ Superstar), he elevates Amir from a kind of adopted son to cinematic messiah. But while caught up in the strike, Yehia becomes enchanted by a former actress, Nadia (Yousra), turned dedicated revolutionary, and he decides to cast her in his next feature.

Quote:
This dazzling 1990 installment, the third of Egyptian director Youssef Chahine’s autobiographical Alexandria quartet, can be seen independently of the other two features; its writer-director stars as a famous filmmaker very much like himself, happily married but also smitten first with one of his young actors and then with a young actress he meets (Yousra). Yousra played Chahine’s wife in the second part of the trilogy, An Egyptian Story (1982), and the young actor in this film is based on Mohsen Mohiedine, who played Chahine as a young man in Alexandria, Why? Filmed in sumptuous color, this is not only one of the most passionate celebrations of bisexuality ever filmed, it’s also one of the funniest; Chahine’s tap-dance duet with his lead actor on a movie set is priceless. In Arabic with subtitles. 100 min.
by Jonathan Rosenbaum (chicagoreader.com)

Quote:
The film’s remarkable range of tone and style gives us evidence of an artist in full command of his craft. Chahine moves with equal grace from the scenes of backroom political squabbling to the whacked-out farce that is Chahine’s musical production (a la Jesus Christ Superstar) of the story of Alexander the Great — a film that allows him to make pointed attacks on the contemporary political situation in his homeland. Interspersed are scenes that show the director’s supreme confidence, such as a lovely and elegant dance sequence set in Berlin, and another set against the fountains of Cannes. Chahine’s assured hand shows us a man who is unafraid of looking foolish for attempting the grand artistic gesture.
Alexandria Again and Forever plays a little with the line between fantasy and reality, as the film shows us actors portraying real people who are playing actors in the movie within this movie. Or something like that. Yet, pulling it all together is the terrific performance of Youssef Chahine, as both director and actor. After casting others to play his cinematic proxy Yehia in the first two parts of the trilogy, Chahine steps into the role he was born to play, and does so beautifully. When Nadia (Yousra) wonders aloud why he gave up the craft he so clearly worships, we in the audience might be excused for asking the same thing.
Dan Jardine (apolloguide.com)







http://nitroflare.com/view/A906ECB22665C63/Alexandria_Again_and_Forever.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/8C9E5843a5B25f4C/Alexandria Again and Forever.mkv

Language(s):Arabic
Subtitles:English

Yannis Sakaridis – Wild Duck (2013)

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Synopsis
A bankrupt telecoms engineer, employed by his ex-boss to investigate a phone-hacking operation, gets trapped into paying off either his economic or his moral debts.

———————–

“Wild Duck” is the story of Dimitris, a telecommunications engineer who’s forced to shutter his business after running up a considerable debt with a local loan shark. He and his buddy Nikos, another telecommunications expert working for a big outfit, decide to get to the bottom of a big scandal. Their research leads them to a certain apartment, whose tenant Panagiota becomes the focus of their attention. Dimitris is now facing some major dilemmas and a trip to his hometown will help him clear his head and look at himself under a different light.








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https://uploadgig.com/file/download/ef6692d5b17f286d/Wild Duck Sakaridis 2013 720.mkv

Language(s):Greek
Subtitles:English (hardcoded)

Marjorie Keller – Objection (1974)

James L. Brooks – Broadcast News (1987)

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Review (Sarah Goodman, DVD Bits)
Writer, director and producer James L. Brooks, notably best known as a producer of The Simpsons, provides a satirical look at the world of television news, coupled with an absorbing character-driven romantic comedy in his 1987 feature Broadcast News. Focusing on the operations of a national network news program, the film follows the intercrossing paths of handsome anchorman Tom Grunick (William Hurt), passionate genius producer Jane Craig (Holly Hunter), and undervalued star reporter Aaron Altman (Albert Brooks) as they navigate their way through the treacherous journalistic jungle that is prime-time news.

Jane, an obsessive perfectionist and successful news producer, strives for morality in a field not known for its moral conscience. This is displayed in her friendship with Aaron, a gifted reporter with aspirations for an anchorman position, but with too much talent and too little charisma to land the job. When Tom arrives as the new recruit at their television station, refreshingly honest about his lack of ability but boasting an impressive enthusiasm to learn from his colleagues, Jane’s sense of self is thrown into doubt, as she finds herself falling for him. Painfully aware that Aaron is infatuated with her, Jane is faced with the choice of following her heart or following her head, both on a professional and romantic level.

Although the romantic triangle of the three lead characters forms the basis of the content of the film, the use of the television setting allows the feature to touch on more meaningful themes that still today provide important commentary on the television news business. Essential to Jane’s struggle between Tom and Aaron is the ongoing debate of style over substance that is inherent to any television news program. Also evident is the importance of external constraints on internal relationships, whether they be the impact of ratings and budgets on the producer-reporter relationship, or the effect of personal values on a new romantic prospect. Finally, the film is about appearances versus reality and commercialism versus professionalism, essaying journalism’s descent into show business as Tom’s affinity for the camera wins over Aaron’s beautifully written news copy.

Riding on the strengths of leading actors Hunter, Brooks and Hunt, and with an appropriately sardonic cameo from Jack Nicholson, Broadcast News excels both as an investigation into the cut-throat world of broadcast journalism, and as a cleverly different romantic comedy. Displaying every facet of her Oscar-winning acting ability (for 1993’s The Piano ), Holly Hunter inhabits driven news producer Jane with an air of honesty, imbuing the character with a rich tapestry of authentic details worthy of the Best Actress nomination she earned for this role. Similarly, as “pretty but stupid” network anchor Tom, William Hurt provides depth to a character that so easily could have remained a caricature. In addition, Albert Brooks is outstanding as the neurotically brilliant journalist Aaron, juggling the character’s internal duality with ease.

Perfectly paced, wittily written, and enjoyable from start to finish, Broadcast News offers a delightfully different love story mixed with an insightful television satire, infused with a strong sense of ethics and morality. A worthy example of the depiction of journalism in film, Broadcast News is an intelligent media film with a healthy dash of realistic romantic comedy.






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Language(s):English
Subtitles:Dutch, English (HoH), French, German, Greek, Italian, Spanish, Swedish – VobSub

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