• Elvis Lu – The Shepherds (2018)

    2011-2020DocumentaryElvis LuQueer Cinema(s)Taiwan

    Despite harsh condemnation and denunciation from society, a heterosexual female pastor founded Taiwan’s first LGBT-affirming church in May 1996. For LGBT Christians, who had been rejected by the Christian community for a long time, they finally have a church that offers them a safe haven. Though the founder has passed away, the church members continue to make their voice heard, confronting the unjust social institutions while struggling with religious conflict at the same time. Come hell or high water, they strive to make a difference in the lives of others by telling their own life stories, in hope that love will eventually trump hate and solve misunderstanding someday.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – Fado majeur et mineur AKA Fado, Major and Minor (1994)

    1991-2000ArthouseFranceRaoul Ruiz

    Quote:
    Ruiz returned to Portugal, the locale of many of his films, to adapt Dostoevsky’s The Eternal Husband, and the end product, Fado, Major and Minor, is among the most elliptical and intriguing works in his filmography. Jean-Luc Bideau stars as a tour guide who after blacking out returns to his apartment to find a mysterious intruder (Melvil Poupaud) who holds him accountable for the death of his lover. After premiering at Cannes, the film all but vanished due to rights issues, but it endures for Ruiz’s toggles between tragedy and farce, black and white and color, pop music and the traditional fatalistic sea shanties of its title.Read More »

  • Julie Dash – Illusions (1982)

    1981-1990ArthouseJulie DashShort FilmUSA

    from the Women Make Movies description:
    “The time is 1942, a year after Pearl Harbor; the place is National Studios, a fictitious Hollywood motion picture studio. Mignon Duprée, a Black woman studio executive who appears to be white and Ester Jeeter, an African American woman who is the singing voice for a white Hollywood star are forced to come to grips with a society that perpetuates false images as status quo. This highly-acclaimed drama by one of the leading African American women directors follows Mignon’s dilemma, Ester’s struggle and the use of cinema in wartime Hollywood: three illusions in conflict with reality.”Read More »

  • Yevgeny Yufit – Pryamokhozhdenie AKA Bipedalism (2005)

    2001-2010ArthouseRussiaSci-FiYevgeny Yufit

    Yufit continues themes from Silver Heads, this time featuring an artist who paints insects, and who discovers evidence of scientific experiments aimed at understanding and controlling the progress of man. Specifically, what caused man to stand upright, thus moving away from a more practical and natural lifestyle and into a modern, intellectual one. The experiments attempt to recreate this effect or fuse the advantages of both. He moves into an old house with his family, is haunted by strange visions and dreams, but when his children uncover a film archive documenting the experiments, and a strange old man disturbs his peace, he loses his simple pleasures and his mind regresses into a form of insanity. While he slowly unravels the truth, experimental bipedals (naked crouched men) roam and terrorize the countryside chased by the government. By far Yufit’s most conventional narrative, with odd, mildly interesting but simplistic meditations on humankind.

    — The Worldwide Celluloid MassacreRead More »

  • Michelange Quay – Mange, ceci est mon corps AKA Eat, for This Is My Body (2007)

    2001-2010ArthouseDramaFranceMichelange Quay

    Michelange Quay’s stunning first feature seductively begs the viewer to abandon the rules of traditional storytelling and instead embrace a poetic,… Michelange Quay’s stunning first feature seductively begs the viewer to abandon the rules of traditional storytelling and instead embrace a poetic, cinematic language. Eat, for This Is My Body tells of the evolution of power in Quay’s native Haiti and the colonial relationship between black boys and white women.Read More »

  • Joshua Gen Solondz – Luna e Santur (2016)

    USA2011-2020ExperimentalJoshua Gen Solondz

    Quote:
    Moon and sun are elliptically and stroboscopically conjured in Joshua Gen Solondz’s cloistered yet operatic Luna e Santur. In milky, hand-processed images, hooded figures recalling Magritte’s The Lovers enact a series of rituals in which an old trauma is remembered and exorcized.Read More »

  • Stephen Dwoskin – Naissant (1964)

    1961-1970Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtExperimentalShort FilmStephen DwoskinUSA

    Experimental film which attempts to communicate in strictly cinematographic terms the emotions of a pregnant woman alone.
    Music composed and played by Gavin Bryars.Read More »

  • Antoine d’Agata – Aka Ana (2008)

    2001-2010Antoine d'AgataArthouseDocumentaryFrance

    Renowned French photographer and Nan Goldin disciple Antoine D’Agata offers this visual essay of Tokyo prostitution circuits that isn’t for the easily offended. By exploring the prostitutes’ filthy working rooms and capturing the sex workers as they service clients, shoot heroin, and masturbate with their own blood, D’Agata effectively shatters the standard perception of the porn industry. ~ Jason Buchanan, RoviRead More »

  • Jurriën Rood & Leo de Boer – De Weg naar Bresson aka The Road to Bresson (1984)

    1981-1990DocumentaryJurriën RoodLeo de BoerNetherlands

    SYNOPSIS
    The film style of Robert Bresson is the subject of this documentary tribute to the French director and screenwriter, and to his minimalist auteur films about sensitive individuals (or even animals) trying unsuccessfully to survive in a cruel world. Weg Naar Bresson is divided into several segments with specific themes, such as “camera” or “theory,” that are illustrated by film clips, and interviews with Bresson himself (a coup), and also with acclaimed directors Andrei Tarkovsky, Louis Malle, and Paul Schrader (who also wrote a book on three directors, including Bresson).

    – Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie GuideRead More »

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