1971-1980

  • Cheh Chang – Mai ming xiao zi AKA The Magnificent Ruffians (1979)

    1971-1980ActionCheh ChangHong KongMartial Arts

    A tale of lies and revenge. A local Kung fu master hopes to monopolise, but family in his way is protected by a great martial artist. The evil lord hires 4 local beggars all masters in their own arts (pole, swords, kicking, axe) and tells them lies about the young fighter to sour their feelings on him causing them to challenge him to a duel. But after countless fights between them they all realize that they are much better friends then enemies, until one of the fighters is sabotaged and kills the young fighter. Being mistakin for a killer the other 3 turn their backs on him and chase him off swearing revenge until they find out what the real story is. Amazing weopon work that only the venoms could show you. Another first class story line, hands down just another great venoms movie period.Read More »

  • Jim Goddard – The Black Stuff (1980)

    1971-1980ComedyDramaJim GoddardUnited Kingdom

    A group of Liverpudlians goes to Middlesborough to lay a tarmac road. Without the boss around, there’s a chance for some diversions with the locals, while keeping up the spirit of free enterprise, preferably on the firm’s time.Read More »

  • Terrence Malick – Badlands (1973)

    1971-1980DramaTerrence MalickUSA

    Quote:
    An impressionable teenage girl from a dead-end town and her older greaser boyfriend embark on a killing spree in the South Dakota badlands.

    Roger Ebert, in 1973, wrote:
    They meet for the first time when she is in her front yard practicing baton-twirling. He has just walked off his job on a garbage truck. She thinks he is the handsomest man she’s ever seen — he looks just like James Dean. He likes her because he never knew a fifteen-year-old who knew so much: “She could talk like a grown-up woman, without a lot of giggles.” Within a few weeks, they will be the targets of a manhunt after he has shot down half a dozen victims.Read More »

  • Laura Mulvey & Peter Wollen – Amy! (1979)

    1971-1980DocumentaryExperimentalLaura MulveyPeter WollenUnited Kingdom

    AMY! is neither a drama not a portrait in the conventional sense, but an assembly of sounds and images which evoke the subject through historic documents and relics, re-enactments and metaphors. The film also asks an underlying question; what is a heroine? We want to enquire into the idea and image of the heroine, not in an explicitly theoretical way, though the film has a theoretical background, but by putting fragments on display to suggest both the frustrations from which heroism is born and to which it is condemned, and at the same time something of the exhilaration it provides for the heroine herself and for others. Formally, our points of reference are Maya Deren and Gertrude Stein.Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Tod und Teufel aka Death and devil (1973)

    1971-1980ExperimentalStephen DwoskinUSA

    Without turning his back on his earlier experiments with testing the boundaries, Dwoskin made fictional films, including a superb adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s Tod und Teufel, in which voids and slips are filmed during acts of speech, rather than the characters and their actions.Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Behindert (1974)

    USA1971-1980ExperimentalStephen Dwoskin

    given how he arrived in the world of film, Dwoskin is usually considered to be an experimental film-maker, which he, like any genuine artist, evidently is, but this attitude leads to a misunderstanding, and makes his films difficult to distribute, because his films are immediatly assumed (in a humdrum, unthinking world) to be primarly dominated by considerations of form rather than substance, and thus not only inaccessible to, but also uninterested in attracting, a broader audience
    But Dwoskin words do not bear this out. As early as 1981, he explained how “Behindert was intended for a television audience and it was easier to get my message accross by showing myself directly on screen. My aim is to make films that work both in the cinema and on television”(…)Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Silent Cry (1977)

    1971-1980ExperimentalStephen DwoskinUnited Kingdom

    ‘The Silent Cry is a fictionalised narrative film, based on documentary facts and extracts of one English girl’s memories and thoughts, all surrounded, and directed towards her particular dilemma. This dilemma can be summarized as her basic inability to have relationships, especially sustained relationships, and particularly with men. This is the total of her statement and the film. The construction and flow of the film follows the way she thinks – it is her point of view that is followed in the film. So all things are the way she remembers and dwells on them, and which are important to her.’ – S.D.Read More »

  • Santiago Álvarez – La guerra necesaria AKA The Necessary War (1980)

    1971-1980CubaDocumentaryPoliticsSantiago Alvarez

    Alvarez’ longest documentary examination of the Cuban Revolution, this contains exceptional interviews with Fidel, Raúl, Almeida, Vilma, Haydee, Celia and Faustino Perez, among other key players in the Revolution.Read More »

  • Roberto Bodegas – Españolas en París AKA Spaniards in Paris (1971)

    1971-1980DramaRoberto BodegasSpainSpanish cinema under Franco

    imdb says:
    In the beginning of the 70s thousand of spaniards women immigrated to Paris to work as house maids. This is the story of some of them.Read More »

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