Architecture

  • Raoul Ruiz – Querelle de jardins (1982) 

    1981-1990ArchitectureExperimentalFranceRaoul RuizShort Film

    From Charles Tesson, Cahiers du cinema 333 (March 1982):
    Raul Ruiz filmed the gardens of the Château de Versailles. The first one, French, focuses on the King’s Square (a space where everything is arranged in order to be seen). The other one, English, is the exact opposite, because from any point within it, one falls out of view. Within these two constructions, the labyrinth and the concentric circles, Ruiz conceives a ‘photo-roman’ plot: a husband and his mistress rendez-vous in the English garden (one understands why) and, through a series of accidents and afraid of being seen, he relocates to the other garden. There he runs into his wife who is with her own lover, into the ex-husband of his wife who is with his new mistress, and into the new lover of his ex-wife….Read More »

  • Heinz Emigholz – Ecce Mole (2025)

    Documentary2021-2030ArchitectureExperimentalGermanyHeinz Emigholz

    The latest entry in Heinz Emigholz’s (Slaughterhouses of Modernity, NYFF60) incisive, decades-long inquiry into the cinematic representation of space contrasts two Turin landmarks designed by Italian neoclassical architect Alessandro Antonelli: the narrow Casa Scaccabarozzi and the towering Mole Antonelliana, now home to the Museo Nazionale del Cinema. With Emigholz’s signature metrical cutting and oblique framings, Ecce Mole explores cinema’s own spatial and symbolic dimensions through the buildings’ opposing scales and functions—interior and exterior, domestic and civic, modest and monumental.Read More »

  • René Clair – La tour (1928)

    Silent1921-1930ArchitectureExperimentalFranceRené ClairUncategorized

    The great French filmmaker René Clair crafted this elegant sepia-toned profile of Paris’s iconic landmark almost forty years after the Eiffel Tower took its first bow (at the 1889 Exposition Universelle). It clearly still fascinates and awes in this loving and playful tribute. LA TOUR takes the viewer first up and then down the mighty structure while also acting as a tribute to its eponymous designer, Gustave Eiffel. The film initially burrows into blueprints and photographs of the earliest stages of its construction ahead of the opening of the World’s Fair but Clair’s film revels in the completed structure itself, reverently scaling its heights and accompanying tourists on up through the various levels toward the topmost landing. Read More »

  • Ralph Steiner & Willard Van Dyke – The City (1939)

    1931-1940ArchitectureDocumentaryRalph SteinerShort FilmUSAWillard Van Dyke

    Visionary documentary that contrasts the conditions of life in small towns and in the industrialized cities, starting with a brief portrait of pre-industrial United States, then moving into the modern chaotic, industrial and commercial city to reflect on the effects of this environment on family life and the raising of children, and finally proposing a return to a simpler life, in an idyllic “new city” in Maryland, constructed as a New Deal project, to promote proper upbringing of children, as well as a stable family life.Read More »

  • Peter Greenaway – Inside Rooms: 26 Bathrooms, London and Oxfordshire, 1985 (1985)

    1981-1990ArchitectureArthouseDocumentaryPeter GreenawayUnited Kingdom

    From the IMDB:
    26 Bathrooms is a witty, light little film that must be seen by those who appreciate Greenaway’s darker, more allegorical works. Simultaneously satiric and celebratory, the lighter side of his humanism washes through this quirky quasi-documentary of our most fundamental bodily needs and the spaces we create to fulfil them.Read More »

  • Heinz Emigholz – Slaughterhouses of Modernity (2022)

    2021-2030ArchitectureDocumentaryGermanyHeinz Emigholz

    “Heinz Emigholz opens his latest, Slaughterhouses of Modernity, with a voice. This would have normally been shocking as Emigholz’s austere “Photography and Beyond” series of films lack any sort of voiceover, preferring the subjects (always architecture) to do the talking themselves. Oftentimes, this means an overview of an architect’s career (Perret in France and Algeria or Maillart’s Bridges) or an attempt to compare and contrast the details of certain works (Two Museums or Two Basilicas). Read More »

  • Norman Cohen – The London Nobody Knows (1968)

    1961-1970ArchitectureDocumentaryNorman CohenUnited Kingdom

    Quote:
    In stark contrast to the colourful, “swinging” imagery of 1960’s London we are all too familiar with, The London Nobody Knows, displays the dying, decaying underbelly of old Victorian values, practices and architecture. We are shown proto-delboy’s hawking goods in now-dead street markets. Bizarre buskers and street performers act out their defunct acts to grey, bewildered onlookers. Old forgotten men pay 6 shillings a week for bed and breakfast in Salvation Army hostels, the memories of the war lingering in their haggard faces.Read More »

  • H.C. Potter – Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948)

    1941-1950ArchitectureComedyH.C. PotterRomanceUSA

    A man and his wife decide they can afford to have a house in the country built to their specifications. It’s a lot more trouble than they think.Read More »

  • John Guillermin – The Towering Inferno (1974)

    John Guillermin1971-1980ActionArchitectureDramaUSA

    Plot: Doug Roberts, Architect, returns from a long vacation to find work nearly completed on his skyscraper. He goes to the party that night concerned he’s found that his wiring specifications have not been followed and that the building continues to develop short circuits. When the fire begins, Michael O’Halleran is the chief on duty as a series of daring rescues punctuate the terror of a building too tall to have a fire successfully fought from the ground.Read More »

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