Mariko Miyagi was an actress who had also written screenplays, produced, and directed films. She was also the director of Nemunoki Gakuen, a school for disabled children – the first ever such school in Japan. The school was founded by Miyagi in Shizuoka Perfecture in April 1968 using her own money. At Nemunoki, children and young adults with physical, intellectual or familial difficulties are gently encouraged to discover and develop their talents through such activities as painting, music, tea ceremony and dancing. The Silk Tree Ballad was the first in a series of documentaries, initially distributed by the ATG.Read More »
-
Mariko Miyagi – Nemuno-ki no uta AKA The Silk Tree Ballad (1974)
1971-1980AsianDocumentaryJapanJapanese Female DirectorsMariko Miyagi -
Lambert Hillyer – Girl from Rio (1939)
1931-1940CrimeDramaLambert HillyerUSAQuote:
This is a fun one, nothing very unexpected and definitely no ‘film noir,’ but if you are into a decently acted torch-songstress adventure this is a good pick. Marquita is an up-and-comer on the Rio club scene but has to back-burner her career for a trip up to New York (where nobody’s heard of her) in order to clear her dancer brother of a murder frame-up.Read More » -
Arturo Ripstein – El castillo de la pureza aka The Castle of Purity (1973) (HD)
1971-1980Arturo RipsteinDramaMexicoQuote:
The story of a disciplined and sexually driven man who keeps his family isolated in his home for years to protect them from the “evil nature” of human beings while inventing (with his wife) rat poison.Read More » -
Kuba Mikurda – Ucieczka na srebrny glob AKA Escape to the Silver Globe (2021)
2021-2030DocumentaryKuba MikurdaPolandSci-Fi

Plot(s): A documentary project about what the filmmakers claim to be the greatest, unfulfilled dream of Polish cinema, the 1970s science fiction epic “On the Silver Globe”.Read More »
-
Nick Millard – L’amour de femme (1969)
1961-1970EroticaExploitationNick MillardUSAIMDB:
Lenore and Suzanne are swinging’ 60s chicks who share a swank apartment and a Lincoln Continental financed by their rich, bankrolling daddies.Read More » -
Olivier Smolders – Axolotl (2018) (HD)
2011-2020ArthouseBelgiumExperimentalOlivier SmoldersThe story of a man lost in a labyrinth.
Six months before his death, Kafka wrote “The Burrow”. In this short story, a half-human, half-animal narrator describes the labyrinth he has built for himself to live apart from the world. He multiplies the strategies to protect himself from an invisible enemy who is perhaps only himself. Or death approaching in the darkness of a neighbouring gallery. The film “Axolotl” is a variation on this theme. The main character accepts a job as a janitor in an old building. He discovers a network of galleries that allow him to observe the tenants. But is it really the tenants that he observes in this way?Read More »
-
Hal Hartley – Kimono (2000)
1991-2000GermanyHal HartleyHorrorShort Film
Synopsis
A hot summer day on a country road. A young woman in her bridal dress gets kicked out of a car. Lost and frustrated, she wanders off across a sea of grass into a dark wood – and discovers an abandoned house. Tired and worn out, she lies down on a bed. When she is awakened from her nap by a clap of thunder, she sees a cup of steaming hot tea and a package on the floor. She opens it – and finds a kimono. The bride knows she no longer is alone … but should she put on the kimono?Read More » -
Philippe Ramos – Fou d’amour AKA Mad Love (2015)
2011-2020ArthouseDramaFrancePhilippe RamosSynopsis : 1959. Guilty of a double-murder, a man is beheaded. At the bottom of the basket that just welcomed it, the head of the dead man tells his story: everything was going so well. Admired priest, magnificient lover, his earthly paradise seemed to have no end.Read More »
-
Gyula Maár – Déryné, hol van? AKA Mrs. Dery Where Are You? (1975)
1971-1980DramaGyula MaárHungaryMrs. Dery Where Are You? (Hungarian: Déryné hol van?) is a 1975 Hungarian drama film directed by Gyula Maár. It was entered into the 1976 Cannes Film Festival, where Mari Törőcsik won the award for Best Actress and the movie was nominated for Palme d’Or award.
Dery (Mari Torcsik) is a grande dame actress of the Sarah Bernhardt school of big-gesture theater. Her beauty and popularity is fading, and a new school of acting which involves the use of one’s own emotions (a-la Eleanora Duse) is emerging in the person of her younger Viennese rival. She thinks of retiring from the stage, and reunites briefly with her estranged husband in a newly-built manor in the country. Finding that life there is boring, she returns to town, the theater, and her old friends. ~ Clarke Fountain, RoviRead More »







