Anne Alvaro – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Fri, 19 Dec 2025 07:22:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Anne Alvaro – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Raoul Ruiz – La ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1983) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/07/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1983/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/07/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1983/#respond Mon, 12 Jul 2021 06:05:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=149554 Quote:Raúl Ruiz’s City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. Given the surprising swerves and disorientations evoking Buñuel and Dalí, and the confidence in a poetic discourse recalling Eluard and Péret, one wonders if Ruiz didn’t …

The post Raoul Ruiz – La ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Quote:
Raúl Ruiz’s City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. Given the surprising swerves and disorientations evoking Buñuel and Dalí, and the confidence in a poetic discourse recalling Eluard and Péret, one wonders if Ruiz didn’t elaborate his scenario using the Surrealist mode of automatic writing. Troubled, graceful Isidore – Ducasse and Duncan? – is a purely Surrealist heroine, part Ophelia, Salomé, Bérénice, prone to trances, somnambulism, hysterical seizure, contact with the ‘other side’. Her calm violence links her to the real life murderesses – Germaine Berton, the Papin sisters – exalted by Breton’s circle, and by Jacques Lacan. Indeed, Lacan’s notion of a psychoanalysis in which the analyst stays off his patient’s wavelength, inspired by the idea of ‘surrealist dialogue’ in which paired monologues at cross purposes strike sparks of meaning off each other, underpins the scatty trajectory of Ruiz’s own graphomania, snared this time as the tale of a Pirate’s City.

There is no city of course, just a spooky castle on a rocky island (although Tobi [Hugues Quester] does tell us that his madness is due to a hatred of big cities). The rocks and the sea are not the only echoes of the quintessential Surrealist film, L’Age d’or (1930). Cryptic and humorous touches in Ruiz are like reprises of Buñuel’s dialogue, as when the dying cyclist offers Isidore (Anne Alvaro) anything she wants, ‘a radio, corned beef, calamari’. The kiss in the garden shared by Isidore and Tobi completes one consummated by Gaston Modot and Lya Lys. The Spaniards who must fight the pirates once a year evoke the invading Majorcans who built Rome in a day in 1930. The Surrealist object as seen in L’Age d’or – Modot fantasies a woman’s masturbating finger in an ad for cold cream – lives again in Isidore’s suitcase containing chicken legs, cabbage leaves and a severed prophet’s head that lights up when read poetry. The jokes in Ruiz’s film partake of the ‘Umour’ of Jacques Vaché, anarchist dandy, Breton’s mentor. Indeed, the paper boats that Isidore and Malo (Melvil Poupaud) float on the oozing blood of her murdered father directly echo one of Vaché’s black tales. And when a bouncing ball is interpreted with much aplomb by Isidore’s parents as their lost son, we are reminded of a similar enigmatic ball ricocheting through a scenario by the Surrealist poet Robert Desnos.

If it is useful to map out this constellation of congruencies – in an attempt to extend not empty the richness of Ruiz’s work – then perhaps City of Pirates should be read as a film fantastique, sharing something of the trance-like, morbid poetry of Maya Deren and the paranoid Manicheism of English SF cinema of the early ‘60s. The drawing of the baleful child Malo owes something to the intense, malign ‘children of the damned’ in the film of the same name. The willing suicide of the cyclist, destroyed as much by the amoral stare of the boy as by his skill with a razor, echoes the unforgettable shotgun death of Mervyn Johns (although it is difficult to remember which of the Damned cycle this was in, Leander’s, Rilla’s, or even Losey’s). The tumescent, terrible sexuality that drives the narrative along takes on a vampirish quality. The ghoulish and lascivious Malo eats only garlic; Tobi’s alter ego, his sister Carmela, evokes Le Fanu’s lesbian bloodsucker Carmilla; Isidore’s pregnancy makes us think of raw liver-eating Rosemary: oral sadism, cannibalism even, underpins these images.

Much of the pleasure in Ruiz comes from the aesthetic means he employs to suggest the Surreality inhabited by his desiring machines. (Of course their world looks exactly like our own.) His maniacs live in, and for, contradiction. When the tide is on the turn, as the opening shot shows, it comes in and goes out at the same time. Surprise, invention, paradox are Ruiz’s touchstones. He believes in affirmation through irony, the clarity of enigma, deferred resolution, outlandish change of mood.

He moves forward by staying in the same place. The tales his characters tell echo each other in certain details, enough to suggest an occult order behind discrete events. (The literal device of a vicious secret society controlling events is a delicious deus ex machina.) A newspaper is repeatedly read in preference to hearing real-life stories. Father’s aching teeth recall the cyclist’s soaking in a glass, and evoke the cadaverous Isidore’s gaping maw.Ruiz’s striking framing, with enormous foreground objects united through deep focus to background subjects, recalls not so much Welles as Hitchcock’s experiments in his Freudian melodrama (Spellbound [1945], with its dream sequence by Dalí), or even the beach nude photographs of Bill Brandt. In one extraordinary and hilarious shot, the camera peeps from inside a mouth, teeth and gums framing the image top and bottom. Kitschy, tinted seascapes add little but themselves. The music persistently suggests imminent climax, but never delivers. Switches from colour to monochrome seem to add credence to the idea that Ruiz’s whole film is a gratifying and elaborate subterfuge intended to keep meaning at a distance. For many audiences, the free-associating, poetic dialogue will ensure this is so.

Attempting to sum up City of Pirates, one finds phrases like ‘family romance’ (Freud), ‘puer aeternus’ (Jung), ‘the myth of the androgyne’ (Boehme), springing to mind. What binds Ruiz’s lost souls to each other’s desire is an Oedipal, narcissistic quest for identity, for a place in the world other than by a poolside, by water. A sister wants to meet her brother, a mother and father their son. A boy kills a father and a brother. A son wants to be his sister and his mother. A mother offers advice on how to live with the Eternal Return.

Desire depends upon creating an unbridgeable distance to ensure infinite pursuit of the object. If Ruiz’s film palls in its compulsive retreading of trod ground, in its insistent miracle-working, it is because such desiring fictions are by definition interminable, and autonomous. The cinema, of course, is the ideal location for such doomed searches for the cathartic image, for recapturing the eternal, dangerous moment of looking: ‘Risk introduced in thought as much as in the world, in the realness of thought as in external reality, that which is not found, that which is only met in meeting itself’ (Maurice Blanchot).

© Paul Hammond 1985, adapted from a review in Monthly Film Bulletin. Reprinted with permission of the author at Rouge Press

2.31GB | 1h 48m | 768×576 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/493A89EB66808ED/Raoul_Ruiz_-_(1984)_City_of_Pirates.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French, Portuguese

The post Raoul Ruiz – La ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/07/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1983/feed/ 0
Andrzej Wajda – Danton (1983) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/05/andrzej-wajda-danton-1983/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/05/andrzej-wajda-danton-1983/#respond Tue, 04 May 2021 08:39:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=145953 Quote:Gérard Depardieu and Wojciech Pszoniak star in Andrzej Wajda’s powerful, intimate depiction of the ideological clash between the earthy, man-of-the-people Georges Danton and icy Jacobin extremist Maximilien Robespierre, both key figures of the French Revolution. By drawing parallels to Polish “solidarity,” a movement that was being quashed by the government as the film went into …

The post Andrzej Wajda – Danton (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Quote:
Gérard Depardieu and Wojciech Pszoniak star in Andrzej Wajda’s powerful, intimate depiction of the ideological clash between the earthy, man-of-the-people Georges Danton and icy Jacobin extremist Maximilien Robespierre, both key figures of the French Revolution. By drawing parallels to Polish “solidarity,” a movement that was being quashed by the government as the film went into production, Wajda drags history into the present. Meticulous and fiery, Danton has been hailed as one of the greatest films ever made about the Terror.

3.23GB | 2h 16m | 960×576 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/9EED0F272B34388/Andrzej_Wajda_-_(1983)_Danton.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

The post Andrzej Wajda – Danton (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/05/andrzej-wajda-danton-1983/feed/ 0
Raoul Ruiz – Régime sans pain (1985) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/11/raoul-ruiz-regime-sans-pain-1985/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/11/raoul-ruiz-regime-sans-pain-1985/#respond Tue, 12 Nov 2019 07:24:54 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=116785 Jonathan Rosenbaum from Essential Cinema: On the Necessity of Film Canons (2004), pp. 236-237: Within my experience, Ruiz is the least neurotic of filmakers; he doesn’t even seem to care whether what he’s doing is good or not (and, as he’s aptly noted, bad work and good work generally entail the same amount of effort). …

The post Raoul Ruiz – Régime sans pain (1985) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Jonathan Rosenbaum from Essential Cinema: On the Necessity of Film Canons (2004), pp. 236-237:

Within my experience, Ruiz is the least neurotic of filmakers; he doesn’t even seem to care whether what he’s doing is good or not (and, as he’s aptly noted, bad work and good work generally entail the same amount of effort). No single film functions as the be-all or end-all of an evolving career but merely as part of an overall process. Example: the 1985 Régime sans pain — one of his films most influenced by his friend Jean Baudrillard, and perhaps the one that most calls to mind grade-Z SF — grew out of a commission to direct a music video. Ruiz offered a counterproposal that he direct several music videos rather than one; once this deal was made, he shot enough material to interconnect the various videos until he arrived at a feature.

1.14GB | 1:14:55 | 640×480 | avi

https://nitroflare.com/view/08884C074495AAD/Regime_sans_pain_%28Raoul_Ruiz_1985%29.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/1368D4C25709AD3/Regime_sans_pain_%28Raoul_Ruiz_1985%29.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/25C7A1BD3B73227/Regime_sans_pain_%28Raoul_Ruiz_1985%29.srt

Language(s):French, German + English & Italian lyrics
Subtitles:Japanese hardcoded,English

The post Raoul Ruiz – Régime sans pain (1985) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/11/raoul-ruiz-regime-sans-pain-1985/feed/ 0
Raoul Ruiz – Bérénice (1983) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/08/raoul-ruiz-berenice-1983/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/08/raoul-ruiz-berenice-1983/#comments Tue, 28 Aug 2018 11:50:08 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=73943 Synopsis: ‘A lush, baroque adaptation of Jean Racine’s 1670 tragedy about a Roman emperor who bends to popular will and declines to marry the Palestinian queen he loves.’ – IMDb ‘Abandoning his project of filming the collected works of Racine on Super 8, Ruiz produced this remarkable piece of ‘theatre on film’ in collaboration with …

The post Raoul Ruiz – Bérénice (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Synopsis:
‘A lush, baroque adaptation of Jean Racine’s 1670 tragedy about a Roman emperor who bends to popular will and declines to marry the Palestinian queen he loves.’
– IMDb

‘Abandoning his project of filming the collected works of Racine on Super 8, Ruiz produced this remarkable piece of ‘theatre on film’ in collaboration with the Avignon Festival. On screen, the absolutely remarkable actors read the text, nothing but the text, and almost all the text of Bérénice. The light modernisation does not turn it into a pretext for a familiar Ruizian rebus. He opts for, simultaneously, great unity and great richness: every scene invents a new effect, a new way to play the scene, but the aesthetic of shadow and light gives it overall unity. Ruiz chose Bérénice precisely because it is the only Racine tragedy that doesn’t end in slaughter. And yet the characters are presented as spectres, ‘dead souls’. This beyond-the-grave ambience relates to an ambiguity some have detected in Racine: the possibility that the characters are already dead. If one takes play and film together, everything occurs as if the drama has already played out, and we are witness to its post-mortem re-presentation. Bérénice is about an impossible meeting, impossible harmony: a tragedy of closing doors. Ruiz’s typical intellectualism is ghosted here by an unexpected lyricism; rarely has his work attained such heights of emotion.’
– Olivier Curchod











https://nitro.download/view/5386B3419732769/Berenice.1983.DVDRip.x264.AC3.mkv
https://nitro.download/view/6E749567649ECFD/Berenice_(1983).srt

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

The post Raoul Ruiz – Bérénice (1983) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/08/raoul-ruiz-berenice-1983/feed/ 2
Raoul Ruiz – La Ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1984) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2014/06/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1984/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2014/06/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1984/#comments Tue, 17 Jun 2014 08:47:39 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=26418 City of Pirates (La Ville des pirates, France/Portugal, 1983) Raúl Ruiz’s City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. Given the surprising swerves and disorientations evoking Buñuel and Dalí, and the confidence in a poetic discourse …

The post Raoul Ruiz – La Ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1984) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

City of Pirates
(La Ville des pirates, France/Portugal, 1983)

Raúl Ruiz’s City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. Given the surprising swerves and disorientations evoking Buñuel and Dalí, and the confidence in a poetic discourse recalling Eluard and Péret, one wonders if Ruiz didn’t elaborate his scenario using the Surrealist mode of automatic writing. Troubled, graceful Isidore – Ducasse and Duncan? – is a purely Surrealist heroine, part Ophelia, Salomé, Bérénice, prone to trances, somnambulism, hysterical seizure, contact with the ‘other side’. Her calm violence links her to the real life murderesses – Germaine Berton, the Papin sisters – exalted by Breton’s circle, and by Jacques Lacan. Indeed, Lacan’s notion of a psychoanalysis in which the analyst stays off his patient’s wavelength, inspired by the idea of ‘surrealist dialogue’ in which paired monologues at cross purposes strike sparks of meaning off each other, underpins the scatty trajectory of Ruiz’s own graphomania, snared this time as the tale of a Pirate’s City.

There is no city of course, just a spooky castle on a rocky island (although Tobi [Hugues Quester] does tell us that his madness is due to a hatred of big cities). The rocks and the sea are not the only echoes of the quintessential Surrealist film, L’Age d’or (1930). Cryptic and humorous touches in Ruiz are like reprises of Buñuel’s dialogue, as when the dying cyclist offers Isidore (Anne Alvaro) anything she wants, ‘a radio, corned beef, calamari’. The kiss in the garden shared by Isidore and Tobi completes one consummated by Gaston Modot and Lya Lys. The Spaniards who must fight the pirates once a year evoke the invading Majorcans who built Rome in a day in 1930. The Surrealist object as seen in L’Age d’or – Modot fantasies a woman’s masturbating finger in an ad for cold cream – lives again in Isidore’s suitcase containing chicken legs, cabbage leaves and a severed prophet’s head that lights up when read poetry. The jokes in Ruiz’s film partake of the ‘Umour’ of Jacques Vaché, anarchist dandy, Breton’s mentor. Indeed, the paper boats that Isidore and Malo (Melvil Poupaud) float on the oozing blood of her murdered father directly echo one of Vaché’s black tales. And when a bouncing ball is interpreted with much aplomb by Isidore’s parents as their lost son, we are reminded of a similar enigmatic ball ricocheting through a scenario by the Surrealist poet Robert Desnos.

If it is useful to map out this constellation of congruencies – in an attempt to extend not empty the richness of Ruiz’s work – then perhaps City of Pirates should be read as a film fantastique, sharing something of the trance-like, morbid poetry of Maya Deren and the paranoid Manicheism of English SF cinema of the early ‘60s. The drawing of the baleful child Malo owes something to the intense, malign ‘children of the damned’ in the film of the same name. The willing suicide of the cyclist, destroyed as much by the amoral stare of the boy as by his skill with a razor, echoes the unforgettable shotgun death of Mervyn Johns (although it is difficult to remember which of the Damned cycle this was in, Leander’s, Rilla’s, or even Losey’s). The tumescent, terrible sexuality that drives the narrative along takes on a vampirish quality. The ghoulish and lascivious Malo eats only garlic; Tobi’s alter ego, his sister Carmela, evokes Le Fanu’s lesbian bloodsucker Carmilla; Isidore’s pregnancy makes us think of raw liver-eating Rosemary: oral sadism, cannibalism even, underpins these images.

Much of the pleasure in Ruiz comes from the aesthetic means he employs to suggest the Surreality inhabited by his desiring machines. (Of course their world looks exactly like our own.) His maniacs live in, and for, contradiction. When the tide is on the turn, as the opening shot shows, it comes in and goes out at the same time. Surprise, invention, paradox are Ruiz’s touchstones. He believes in affirmation through irony, the clarity of enigma, deferred resolution, outlandish change of mood.

He moves forward by staying in the same place. The tales his characters tell echo each other in certain details, enough to suggest an occult order behind discrete events. (The literal device of a vicious secret society controlling events is a delicious deus ex machina.) A newspaper is repeatedly read in preference to hearing real-life stories. Father’s aching teeth recall the cyclist’s soaking in a glass, and evoke the cadaverous Isidore’s gaping maw.Ruiz’s striking framing, with enormous foreground objects united through deep focus to background subjects, recalls not so much Welles as Hitchcock’s experiments in his Freudian melodrama (Spellbound [1945], with its dream sequence by Dalí), or even the beach nude photographs of Bill Brandt. In one extraordinary and hilarious shot, the camera peeps from inside a mouth, teeth and gums framing the image top and bottom. Kitschy, tinted seascapes add little but themselves. The music persistently suggests imminent climax, but never delivers. Switches from colour to monochrome seem to add credence to the idea that Ruiz’s whole film is a gratifying and elaborate subterfuge intended to keep meaning at a distance. For many audiences, the free-associating, poetic dialogue will ensure this is so.

Attempting to sum up City of Pirates, one finds phrases like ‘family romance’ (Freud), ‘puer aeternus’ (Jung), ‘the myth of the androgyne’ (Boehme), springing to mind. What binds Ruiz’s lost souls to each other’s desire is an Oedipal, narcissistic quest for identity, for a place in the world other than by a poolside, by water. A sister wants to meet her brother, a mother and father their son. A boy kills a father and a brother. A son wants to be his sister and his mother. A mother offers advice on how to live with the Eternal Return.

Desire depends upon creating an unbridgeable distance to ensure infinite pursuit of the object. If Ruiz’s film palls in its compulsive retreading of trod ground, in its insistent miracle-working, it is because such desiring fictions are by definition interminable, and autonomous. The cinema, of course, is the ideal location for such doomed searches for the cathartic image, for recapturing the eternal, dangerous moment of looking: ‘Risk introduced in thought as much as in the world, in the realness of thought as in external reality, that which is not found, that which is only met in meeting itself’ (Maurice Blanchot).

© Paul Hammond 1985, adapted from a review in Monthly Film Bulletin. Reprinted with permission of the author at Rouge Press



City.of.Pirates.1983.PAL.DVD.AAC.2.0.x264-900p.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1h 52mn
Size: 2.84 GiB
DXVA: Compatible
Minimum settings: Met
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 720x576 ~> 768x576
Aspect ratio: 4:3
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 3 469 kb/s
Audio
French 2.0ch AAC LC @ 132 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/A7DDE386CBCF4CE/City.of.Pirates.1983.PAL.DVD.AAC.2.0.x264-900p.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, Portuguese

The post Raoul Ruiz – La Ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1984) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2014/06/raoul-ruiz-la-ville-des-pirates-aka-city-of-pirates-1984/feed/ 1