• Tinto Brass – La chiave aka The key (1983)

    1981-1990DramaEroticaItalyTinto Brass

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    R E V I E W B Y D E R E K H I L L
    Director Tinto Brass is a man of big passions. His films — excluding Caligula (1980), which doesn’t really fit into his overall body of work — are filled with curvaceous women who are uninhibited and bold enough to freely express their healthy appetites for sex. Brass’ camera lovingly (and intrusively) explores the many facets of a woman’s beauty, be it physical or psychological. Brass also isn’t shy about what he likes most about a woman’s body, either — her ample backside. The bigger the better.
    Although Brass would probably chuckle at the idea that his films have a strong feminist slant, Brass’ female leads are strong, independent, and almost heroic in their quests to become emancipated from their roles as housewives, concubines, or mothers. Less cartoonish than his American counterpart Russ Meyer’s heroines, Brass’ ladies actually exude a real humanity with their sensuality.
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  • Jem Cohen – Drink Deep (1992)

    1991-2000ArthouseExperimentalJem CohenUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    Drink Deep is a lyrical vision of friendship, hidden secrets, and desires. Cohen uses several types of film image to add texture to the layered composition. Beautiful shades of grey, silver, black and blue echo the water, reminiscent of early photography and silverprints. Cohen says, “The piece was constructed primarily from footage I’d shot of skinnydippers at swimming holes in Georgia and rural Pennsylvania. It’s about water and memory and stories just submerged. It is also, in part, a response to thinking about censorship. I would say that Drink Deep is both unabashedly and deceptively romantic. Surface, flow, and undertow. What looks like paradise is always paradise lost.”

    Music composed by Stephen Vitiello and performed with Gabriel Cohen and Mary Wooten.Read More »

  • Yuuji Makiguchi – Virgin Breaker Yuki (1976)

    1971-1980AsianEroticaJapanYuuji Makiguchi

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Kentai wrote:
    Based on a porno manga by Kosuke Miki and Tadashi Matsumori, this pair of short features follow the adventures of Yuki, who works in a Kyoto red-light district house of ill repute as a “tamawari,” or “virgin-breaker.” She’s the gal who gets first dibs on the new recruits to the brothel (some willing, some not), and it’s her job to break them in for future clients. The first film finds Yuki involved with a group of political rebels, and in the slower sequel Yuki thinks she’s finally found love after some studly service, but as you might expected, things don’t quite turn out the way she expected.
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  • Luca Damiano – Decameron: Tales of Desire (1995)

    1991-2000EroticaItalyLuca Damiano

    A group of folks is celebrating at the dinner table, with each man recounting a peculiar sexual experience he has had.Read More »

  • Aleksandr Sokurov – Dni Zatmenija AKA The Days Of Eclipse (1988)

    1981-1990Aleksandr SokurovPhilosophyRussiaSci-Fi

    Quote:
    The bridge film between his (Sokurov’s) first decade’s essays into historicized metafilm and the subsequent, fame-making fata morganas is Days of the Eclipse(1988), a patience-testing post-apocalyptic dawdle (based on a novel by the Strugatsky brothers) that plays more like aimless third-world doc than science fiction. Concerning a young doctor stuck in the middle of a rocky wasteland (actually, Turkmenistan, though it could easily pass for any post-colonial hunk of Africa), Daysis maddeningly oblique, visually erratic, and utterly disconnective. Angels, earthquakes, talking corpses, Stalinist iconography, and visual disjunctions may figure in, but for the most part Sokurov designed the film as an elusive tissue of non-happenings and mysterious nexuses, all of it sucking the dusty air of Soviet-satellite poverty.Read More »

  • Astra Taylor – Zizek! (2005)

    USA2001-2010Astra TaylorDocumentaryPhilosophyPhilosophy on Screen

    from all movie:
    Slavoj Zizek is that rarity, an internationally famous philosopher, and one who has built a career out of telling his audience things they probably don’t want to hear. Embracing a world view that blends Marxism with the teachings of Jacques Lacan, Zizek’s work obsesses on how capitalism affects the way we think and function in our society, and how this is reflected in everything from pop psychology to plumbing. Zizek’s writings have won him a sizable following in the United States, and he’s been described as an “academic rock star” in Europe, where his lectures frequently attract sell-out crowds.Read More »

  • Pierre-Oscar Levy – La règle du jeu de Jean Renoir: Une analyse du film par l’image (1987)

    Documentary1981-1990FrancePierre-Oscar Levy

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

    An interesting documentary on Renoir’s Regle du Jeu. From the series Image Par Image. Told entirely in images from the film, no talking heads. With optional English subtitles.Read More »

  • Vincente Minnelli – Yolanda and the Thief (1945)

    1941-1950FantasyMusicalUSAVincente Minnelli

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Plot: Johnny Riggs, a con man on the lam, finds himself in a Latin-American country named Patria. There, he overhears a convent-bred rich girl praying to her guardian angel for help in managing her tangled business affairs. Riggs decides to materialize as the girl’s “angel”, gains her unquestioning confidence, and helps himself to the deluded girl’s millions. Just as he and his partner are about to flee Patria with their booty, Riggs realizes he has fallen in love with the girl and returns the money, together with a note that is part confession and part love letter. But the larcenous duo’s escape from Patria turns out to be more difficult than they could ever have imagined. Written by Dan NavarroRead More »

  • Ming-liang Tsai – Walker (2012) (HD)

    2011-2020ExperimentalHong KongMing-liang TsaiShort Film

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Tsai Ming-liang’s delightfully shot film Walker, which could also work as a gallery installation, takes an unusual look at the bustling streets of Hong Kong as its features a series of stunningly shot scenes with at the centre a red-robed monk who walks at a snail’s pace. With traffic and pedestrians speeding around him the man (head intensely bowed, bare feet and holding a bread roll in one hand and a plastic bag in the other) walks only a step every minute.Read More »

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