• Philippe Garrel – La jalousie (2013)

    2011-2020ArthouseDramaFrancePhilippe Garrel

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    An impoverished actor tries to make his girl-friend a big star. But in spite of all his efforts he cannot get her proper roles. Eventually she falls in love with another man and cheats on him.Read More »

  • Various – Alternativni Filmovi u Beogradu [Experimental Shorts] (1950-1990)

    Short FilmAnimationExperimentalVariousYugoslavia

    This is collection of 20 Serbian Experimental/Alternative short movies/animations.It’s released on DVD,but it’s hard to find .Read More »

  • Klaus Härö – Äideistä parhain AKA Mother of Mine (2005)

    2001-2010DramaFinlandKlaus Härö

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    The film highlights a significant event in Finnish history — that during WWII, around 70,000 Finnish children were sent to Sweden among other countries to be temporarily hosted as their real parents stayed in Finland to continue in the war. The story is made accessible and immediate by taking us through the experiences of one child — Eero (Topi Majaniemi) — who as a 9-year old boy is dealing with language differences, a desire to return home, and a host family that can provide materially, but maybe not in the non-material ways that Eero really needs.
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  • Ferdinand Khittl – Auf geht’s AKA Off we go! (1955)

    1951-1960DocumentaryFerdinand KhittlGermanyShort Film

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Auf geht’s – West Germany 1955, 11 min.
    Directed by: Ferdinand Khittl
    Written by: Just Scheu
    Cinematography by: Gerd von Bonin
    Edited by: Hans Dieter Schiller
    Produced by: Olympia-Film, München

    One of the 3 short films that came as an extra on Edition Filmmuseum 47: Die Parallelstrasse AKA The Parallel Street (Ferdinand Khittl, 1962).

    Documentary short on the Octoberfest in Munich.
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  • Dusan Makavejev – Covek nije tica AKA Man Is Not A Bird (1965)

    1961-1970ArthouseDramaDusan MakavejevYugoslaviaYugoslavian Cinema under Tito

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Dušan Makavejev’s debut feature, establishing his freewheeling, exploratory, and often childlike style.

    From the Chicago Reader:
    [One of the best Chicago releases of 1974.]  “His first, seen here last, like all his others only better. A parable on Socialist living, enacted on the playground of peasants in the industrial landscape.” –Myron Meisel

    From Time Out London:
    Makavejev’s first feature is a delightful, typically eccentric concoction, centred very loosely indeed around a story about an engineer who visits a new town to assemble mining machinery. There his devotion to work fouls up his relationship with his beloved, while a fellow worker encounters problems when his wife discovers he has a mistress. A freewheeling kaleidoscope mixing comedy and social comment as it deals with both labour and sexual politics, not to mention many seemingly unrelated topics such as hypnotism and culture (there’s a marvellous climactic scene with Beethoven performed in an enormous foundry while the heroine conjures her own ode to joy), it defies description but is extremely entertaining. – Geoff Andrew
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  • Hirokazu Koreeda – Soshite chichi ni naru AKA Like Father, Like Son (2013)

    2011-2020AsianDramaHirokazu KoreedaJapan

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    The Japanese melodrama “Like Father, Like Son” turns on the kind of cruel twist — children switched at birth — that’s the stuff of tear-wringing headlines and fiction. It begins with the revelation that two 6-year-old boys were given at birth to the wrong families, which now need to decide on the best thing to do. For one set of parents, Ryota (Masaharu Fukuyama) and Midorino (Machiko Ono), a comfortably middle-class couple nestled high in a glass tower, the revelation that their only son, Keita (Keita Ninomiya), isn’t a blood relation is a blow to their tiny family. It’s also a wedge that — day by day, hurt by hurt — transforms these loving parents into sparring partners. Family ties wind through the work of the Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-eda, whose films include “Nobody Knows” (about four children abandoned by their mother) and “Still Walking” (about a family grieving for a dead son). In his last film, “I Wish,” he tells the story of two seemingly unsinkable young brothers separated by their mother and father’s bad marriage and choices: Each child lives with a different parent, having been divided up as if they were household possessions. In “Like Father, Like Son,” Mr. Hirokazu again creates a pair of irresistible charmers whose lives are, with increasing emotional violence, upended — with polite bows, civilized conversations and hollow-sounding rationalizations — by the very adults meant to take care of them. — Manohla Dargis
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  • Pat Collins – Silence (2012)

    2011-2020ArthouseDocumentaryIrelandPat Collins

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    Eoghan is a sound recordist who is returning to Ireland for the first time in 15 years. His reason for returning is a job offer: to find and record places free from man-made sound. His quest takes him away from towns and villages into remote terrain. Throughout his journey, he is drawn into a series of encounters and conversations which gradually divert his attention towards a more intangible silence, one that is bound up with the sounds of the life he had left behind. Influenced by elements of folklore and archive, Silence unfolds with a quiet intensity, where poetic images reveal an absorbing meditation on themes relating to sound and silence, history, memory and exile. (IMDB)
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  • Claude Chabrol – Jours tranquilles à Clichy AKA Quiet Days in Clichy (1990)

    1981-1990Claude ChabrolDramaEroticaFrance

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    SYNOPSIS:
    Expatriate Henry Miller indulges in a variety of sexual escapades while struggling to establish himself as a serious writer in Paris.
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  • Herbert Ross – Play It Again, Sam (1972)

    Drama1971-1980ComedyHerbert RossUSAWoody Allen

    Quote:
    Herbert Ross directed this adaptation of Woody Allen’s hit Broadway play concerning a shy film critic who has trouble with women. Woody Allen plays Allan Felix, a writer for Film Quarterly consumed by movies, particularly his favorite film of all time, Casablanca. At the start of the film, Allan’s wife Nancy (Susan Anspach) has just left him and is applying for a divorce. Unable to deal with this emotional turmoil, Allan seeks solace in the movies he loves, imagining Humphrey Bogart (Jerry Lacy) has dropped by his apartment to offer Allan advice on dealing with the ladies (“Dames are simple. I never met one that didn’t understand a slap in the mouth or a slug from a forty-five”).Read More »

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