Drama

  • Anne Fontaine – Nathalie… [+Extras] (2003)

    2001-2010Anne FontaineDramaFrance

    Quote:
    A rich woman hires an elite prostitute in order to verify her husband’s faithfulness. Before long the experiment gets out of control.Read More »

  • Kenji Mizoguchi – Sanshô dayû AKA Sansho the Bailiff (1954) (HD)

    1951-1960ClassicsDramaJapanKenji Mizoguchi

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    Sansho Dayu… is the triumphant summation of Mizoguchi’s style and themes, as well as the most compassionate response imaginable to those atrocities which had been committed in then very recent years, in Japan and all over the world. It is the most humanist of films, but it asserts that humanism is powerless without politics, just as politics is purposeless without humanism. The last sequence is the most perfect ending in cinema, so broad in implication, so exquisite in form. The reunion of mother and son – the revelation of human love – is at once the most important thing in the world, and an event insignificant against the panorama of human suffering. The double perspective – never to see things in isolation, always in context – is assured by Mizoguchi’s style, and defines his art. Sansho Dayu is, in Gilbert Adair’s words, “one of those films for whose sake the cinema exists”.
    Alexander Jacoby, Senses Of Cinema.comRead More »

  • Wim Wenders – Bis ans Ende der Welt AKA Until the End of the World (1991)

    1991-2000DramaGermanySci-FiWim Wenders

    Quote:
    Conceived as the ultimate road movie, this decades-in-the-making science-fiction epic from Wim Wenders follows the restless Claire Tourneur (Solveig Dommartin) across continents as she pursues a mysterious stranger (William Hurt) in possession of a device that can make the blind see and bring dream images to waking life. With an eclectic soundtrack that gathers a host of the director’s favorite musicians, along with gorgeous cinematography by Robby Müller, this breathless adventure in the shadow of Armageddon takes its heroes to the ends of the earth and into the oneiric depths of their own souls. Presented here in its triumphant 287-minute director’s cut, Until the End of the World assumes its rightful place as Wenders’ magnum opus, a cosmic ode to the pleasures and perils of the image and a prescient meditation on cinema’s digital future.Read More »

  • Wim Wenders – Die Angst des Tormanns beim Elfmeter AKA The Goalkeeper’s Fear of the Penalty Kick (1972)

    1971-1980ArthouseDramaGermanyWim Wenders

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    IMDB User Comments (Frank from Iceland):

    The Goalie s Anxiety at the Penalty Kick is the first collaboration of
    Wim Wenders and Peter Handke, a collaboration which produced Wings of
    Desire in 1987. In The Goalie, Handke and Wenders explore patterns of
    thought and their relation to reality.

    The main action of the film occurs in the first minute, where we get
    one view of how the Goalie misses blocking a penalty kick and loses
    the game for his team.

    Later, we get to hear him describe the action and we also get a view
    of the way it really happened, the videotaped highlights on the tv
    news. They are three wonderfully different plausible representations
    which each explain the result just as well. While only one explains
    the goalie’s anxiety before the penalty kick, all three allow for his
    anxiety afterwards.Read More »

  • Wim Wenders – Land of Plenty (2004)

    2001-2010DramaPoliticsUSAWim Wenders

    After years of living abroad with her American missionary father, Lana (Michelle Williams) returns to the United States to begin her studies. But instead of focusing on her education, Lana sets out to find her only other living relative – her uncle Paul, her deceased mother’s brother. A Vietnam veteran, Paul is a reclusive vagabond with deep emotional war wounds. A tragic event witnessed by the two unites them in a common goal to rectify a wrong, and takes them on a journey of healing, discovery, and kinship.Read More »

  • Wim Wenders – Summer in the City (1970)

    1961-1970ArthouseDramaGermanyWim Wenders

    Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

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    Prison discharges Hans into a freedom as inhospitable as the winter weather. As a stranger, he strays in familiar streets, bars, flies to a friend in Berlin.

    Always fleeing from invisible enemies.
    Always on the way to an indeterminate goal.

    Wenders’ graduation film for the Academy of Film and Television marked out Wenders’ innovative and individual style, which was to become such a recognizable characteristic of his later films.

    This is very rare VHS -rip.Low quality..Read More »

  • Wim Wenders – Falsche Bewegung AKA The Wrong Movement (1975)

    1971-1980DramaGermanyWim Wenders

    Quote:
    A loose contemporary adaptation of Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, the middle installment of Wim Wenders’ “road movie trilogy” opens with a scene that’s pure Wenders — a young man gazes out his window while American rock rollicks out of the LP player, until he suddenly puts both fists through the glass, quietly sobbing. That’s Wilhelm (Rudiger Vogler), who grudgingly accepts that, if he’s ever to become the writer he wants to be, he has to overcome his dislike for people and venture out to accumulate experiences. In place of inspiration, the journey hooks him up with a group of fellow loners, the “dead souls of Germany”: an apathetic actress (Hanna Schygulla), an aged ex-Nazi whose nose bleeds from “remembering” (Hans Christian Blech), his mute street-performer travelling companion (a teenage, almost tomboyish Nastassja Kinski), a pudgy poet (Peter Kern), and a suicidally bereft industrialist (Ivan Desny). Read More »

  • Wim Wenders – Der Himmel über Berlin aka Wings of Desire (1987)

    1981-1990ArthouseDramaGermanyWim Wenders

    Quote:
    Wim Wender’s deliberately paced, hauntingly realized contemporary masterpiece, Wings of Desire is, all at once: a political allegory for the reunification of Germany, an existential parable on a soul’s search for connection, a metaphor for the conflict between, what Friedrich Nietzsche defines as, the Appolinian intellect and the Dionysian passion, a euphemism for creation. A dispassionate angel stands atop a statue on a winter morning, watching over Berlin. His name is Damiel (Bruno Ganz): a spiritual guide for the desperate, an eternal spectator of life. The world is gray through his eyes, unable to experience the subtlety of the hues and textures of physical being. Read More »

  • Michael R. Roskam – Rundskop aka Bullhead (2011)

    2011-2020BelgiumCrimeDramaMichael R. Roskam


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    From Imdb:
    The young Limburg cattle farmer Jacky Vanmarsenille is approached by an unscrupulous veterinarian to make a shady deal with a notorious West-Flemish beef trader. But the assassination of a federal policeman, and an unexpected confrontation with a mysterious secret from Jacky’s past, set in motion a chain of events with farreaching consequences. BULLHEAD is an exciting tragedy about fate, lost innocence and friendship, about crime and punishment, but also about conflicting desires and the irreversibility of a man’s destiny. Written by AnonymousRead More »

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