Why do people wave their hands when they say goodbye? We embark on a dreamlike journey from Borges’ ‘The Circular Ruins’. Filmed in 16mm by filmmaker, graphic artist and manga author Isao Yamada. Co-produced by Yumekichi Minatoya and starring Hiroko Ishimaru.Read More »
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Isao Yamada – Lynx Reel (1987)
1981-1990ExperimentalIsao YamadaJapanShort Film -
Robert Rossen – Lilith (1964)
Robert Rossen1961-1970DramaUSAQuote:
Lilith is a about a mysterious young woman in an elite sanitarium in New England, who seems to weave a magical spell all around her. A restless, but sincere young man with an equally obscure past is seemingly drawn into her web. As time passes, their relationship deepens and intensifies, and the differences between them begin to blur, leading to a shocking, but oddly logical conclusion.Read More » -
Gérard Oury – La menace AKA The Menace (1961)
Gérard Oury1961-1970FranceMysteryThriller

Synopsis:
‘Josepha is only eighteen and longs for the companionship of a group of her peers who dabble in activities on the shady side of a legal dividing line. In order to get the semi-delinquent group to accept her, Josepha runs to the police with a tall tale about the local druggist, Savary. The police are looking for a sex murderer, and Josepha insists Savary is their man. What she does not know, however, can do her considerable damage.’
– Eleanor MannikkaRead More » -
Albert Valentin – L’entraîneuse (1939)
Albert Valentin1931-1940DramaFranceSynopsis:
The young Suzy is a nightclub hostess in a cabaret in which Frehel is the star. Because one night she gets propositions from a rich widower who would like to have her as his girlfriend, Suzy wishes to leave this place, where she has no future, for a better one. Abandoned by her protector, a young hoodlum named Robert, she gets the occasion to get away from it. She decides to go on vacation on the Riviera and stay at the Chateau des Cedres, the former residence of a noble family that has been transformed into a bourgeois guest house by the baroness Saint-Leu. Shy and elegant, in her modest suit, Suzy stays there under the name of Suzanne Michelet and soon makes new friends among the young people of very wealthy families.Read More » -
Ray Enright – Golden Dawn (1930)
Ray Enright1921-1930ComedyMusicalUSAPlot: Talkie Era musicals were usually all-star revues or tales of backstage heartache and triumph. Golden Dawn – based on a 184-performance, 1927 operetta co-created by Oscar Hammerstein II – ambitiously breaks free of those musical confines to expand the genre’s cinematic reach. Set in World War I-era Africa, it tells the tale of Dawn, a tribal woman in love with a British soldier but chosen to be the sacrificial bride of a god. Stage sensation Vivienne Segal (perhaps best known for starring opposite Gene Kelly in 1940 Broadway’s Pal Joey) portrays Dawn. The film was originally shot and released entirely in color (another example of the production team’s ambitiousness), but color prints have unfortunately long been lost.Read More »
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Errol Morris – Gates of Heaven (1978)
Errol Morris1971-1980CultDocumentaryUSA

Quote:
Gates of Heaven is a documentary film by Errol Morris about the pet cemetery business. It was made when Morris was unknown and did much to launch his career.Read More » -
Václav Krska – Stríbrný vítr aka Silvery Wind (1954)
1951-1960ClassicsCzech RepublicDramaVáclav KrskaQuote:
Silvery Wind is a classic Czech film, based on a novel by Fráňa Šrámek first published in 1910.The hero of the story is an enthusiastic and idealistic young student, who reaches maturity amidst small-town brutality, narrow-mindedness and hypocrisy.Read More »
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Lech Kowalski – I PAY for YOUR STORY (2017)
Lech Kowalski2011-2020DocumentaryTVUSALech Kowalski returns to Utica (New York), where he grew up. He decides to document the struggles of his fellow citizens by offering to pay to hear their stories.Read More »
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Rosine Mfetgo Mbakam – Les prières de Delphine AKA Delphine’s Prayers (2021)
2021-2030African CinemaCameroonDocumentaryRosine Mfetgo MbakamThrough interviews as intimate as they are disconcerting, we meet Delphine, a Cameroonian immigrant residing in Belgium who narrates her life for the camera of Rosine Mbakam, also originally from Cameroon. As in her previous feature film “At Jolie Coiffure” (awarded at Olhar ’19), concise elements become a cinematographic force based on the encounter between black women all at once close and distant. The protagonist’s confessional tone reveals her self-awareness as the conductor of her own story, dealing with patriarchal and colonial scars and striving to assert her own voice.Read More »






