• Rodjara – Dimorfo AKA Dimorphic (1980)

    1971-1980CampCultQueer Cinema(s)RodjaraSpain

    Quote:
    This is one of the most weird, bizarre and oscure movies from Spain. Very hard to find nowadays and a total masterpiece for the collectors of hidden spanish gems.

    The plot is about a man, Salomon, living in a hermit in the forest. He scaped from a concentration nazi camp and falls in a house in the middle of the mountains where a strange family lives there.

    Illness, Sex, Homosexuality, rape, violence… rated “S” in Spain in those years.

    The quality is very good and this is the uncut version, 95 minutes. Only for lovers of strange movies.Read More »

  • Dieudo Hamadi – Kinshasa Makambo (2018)

    2011-2020African CinemaCongo - Kinshasa (Zaire)Dieudo HamadiDocumentary

    Hundreds of young revolutionaries take to the streets of Kinshasa when Joseph Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, refuses to relinquish power at the end of his second term. Protests are met with violence, but the battle for free elections and democracy cannot be repressed.
    Quote:
    Sidestepping conventional approaches to narrative, Kinshasa Makambo is a ground-level account of collective action told with blistering immediacy. With his attentive, perceptive camera, Dieudo Hamadi takes to the streets for an urgent portrait of young Congolese protestors fighting for democracy.Read More »

  • Shaohong Li – Sishi puhuo AKA Family Portrait (1992)

    Shaohong Li1991-2000ChinaDrama

    After laying bare backward village mentalities in Bloody Morning, Li Shaohong turns her attention to China’s urban middle class. Cao is a photographer, married to an opera singer and with an infant son, caught in the usual professional morass of political compromise. His life starts to fall apart when he learns that his ex-wife also bore him a son some months after their divorce – and when the boy turns up looking for his father. Nothing wildly dramatic, just believable people in believable situations. If the ending seems a touch forced, this is nevertheless a sign that ‘Fifth Generation’ cinema is changing and coming to terms with up-to-date realities.Read More »

  • Henry King – Maryland (1940)

    Henry King1931-1940ClassicsDramaUSA

    Synopsis: Charlotte Danfield (Fay Bainter), a member of an old Maryland family with horse breeding in its blood, orders her entire stable sold after her husband meets his death in a hunting accident. She also forbids her son Lee (John Payne) to ride again, but when the boy remains friendly with Charlotte’s old horse trainer, William Stewart (Walter Brennan), and his granddaugther Linda (Brenda Joyce), Charlotte ships him off to school in Europe to remove him from Maryland’s horse-oriented environment. Horses are in Lee’s blood, however, so when he returns home a grown man and learns that “Uncle Bill” is grooming “Cavalier” for the Maryland Cup, he eagerly offers to ride the steed. Later, after acquiescing to Charlotte’s wish that he not ride, Lee, out of a sense of loyalty to Uncle Bill, defies his mother’s will. Read More »

  • Robert Eggers – The Witch (2015)

    Robert Eggers2011-2020HorrorMysteryUSA

    Quote:
    New England, 1630: William and Katherine lead a devout Christian life, homesteading on the edge of an impassible wilderness, with five children. When their newborn son mysteriously vanishes and their crops fail, the family begins to turn on one another. “The Witch” is a chilling portrait of a family unraveling within their own fears and anxieties, leaving them prey for an inescapable evil.Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Grandpère’s Pear (2003)

    Stephen Dwoskin2001-2010ExperimentalShort FilmUnited Kingdom

    “My grandfather was a charming artist and he would have acted if he had had an audience. In this film, taken from family images, it is a simple pear that is the object of his panache.”Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Dear Frances (2003)

    Stephen Dwoskin2001-2010ExperimentalUnited Kingdom

    `Suddenly and sadly my dear friend Frances died. At that moment of loss I needed to hold on to her. The film is just that.’Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Dad (2003)

    2001-2010DocumentaryExperimentalStephen DwoskinUnited Kingdom

    ‘An ode to my father, and perhaps to all fathers. Called a “moving painting” by my sister, the film blends found family footage of the young and the ageing father. It takes the tiny gestures of daily life and turns them into the monumental moments of tenderness and respect.’Read More »

  • Jesús Franco & Jean Rollin & Pierre Quérut – Christina, princesse de l’érotisme aka A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973)

    Jesus Franco1971-1980BelgiumCultHorrorJean RollinPierre Quérut

    Quote:
    After losing her mother at an early age and being raised at a boarding school, Cristina Reiner is notified of her father’s death and summoned to Monserrat Mansion for the reading of his will. Other members of her strange, accursed family are found there awaiting the imminent demise of Cristina’s ailing stepmother, whom she has never met. When Death finally visits the castle in the person of an elegantly attired Queen of Darkness, Cristina is approached by the ghost of her father, who advises her to flee the castle and her cold-skinned, bloodthirsty relatives. But is it already too late?Read More »

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