A young woman spends a lot of time in a house. She is usually alone, sometimes she chats on the phone, she rarely receives visits: a buddy with her boyfriend, a potential boyfriend, wannabe candidates for a room to rent. Until the right roommate arrives…Read More »
“Boy” is growing up, questioning what becoming a man is all about. On the one hand, he can’t wait to leave his traumatic childhood behind, and on the other hand, he is growing up in a far off village with no real friends his age.Read More »
Exploring Hitchcock’s iconic style through his early film “Blackmail,” an insight into the director’s emerging techniques and themes during the transition to talkies, showcasing elements that would define his later masterpieces.Read More »
A fictional Alfred Hitchcock narrates an explanation of some of the lesser known cinematic techniques he used in his movies, richly illustrated with clips from his entire 50-year career.Read More »
Synopsis:
A bitter-aged man reluctantly drives to Spain to pay a last visit to a dying friend, along with his wife who’s suffering from dementia. But as their journey unfolds, he slowly starts to soften up and rediscovers the meaning of love.Read More »
Synopsis:
Recently widowed Margaux moves in with her sister. Looking to turn a page, she re-enrolls at university and becomes interested in new pursuits. At the same time, dark compulsions begin to arise.Read More »
Quote:
On the basis of their own creative, political and financial struggles, two filmmakers – along with composer Geneviève Ackerman – decide to play the lead roles in a B-movie inspired scenario, creating a diffracted projection of their own concerns with the state of things. Shot over a three-year period with an old analog camera, no budget, financial or professional support, The Dream and the Radio was entirely produced with the help of friends, neighbours and homeless people. Mixing hybrid elements and using alienating visual and sound effects, the film refers to experimental and political film movements from the 1920s and 1960s. Read More »