Elliott Gould – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Thu, 26 Feb 2026 10:23:21 +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 Elliott Gould – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Stuart Rosenberg – Move (1970) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/12/stuart-rosenberg-move-1970/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/12/stuart-rosenberg-move-1970/#respond Sat, 06 Dec 2025 03:06:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=263508 PLOT Three days in the life of Hiram Jaffe [Elliot Good], a would-be playwright who supplements his living as a porn writer and by walking dogs. He and his wife, Dolly [Paula Prentiss], are moving to a new apartment on New York’s Upper West Side. Jaffe is beset by problems, including his inability to persuade …

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PLOT
Three days in the life of Hiram Jaffe [Elliot Good], a would-be playwright who supplements his living as a porn writer and by walking dogs. He and his wife, Dolly [Paula Prentiss], are moving to a new apartment on New York’s Upper West Side. Jaffe is beset by problems, including his inability to persuade the moving man to move the couple’s furniture, and retreats into fantasy.

Rosenberg - 1970 - Move.avi

General
Container: AVI
Runtime: 1 h 28 min
Size: 1.01 GiB
Video
Codec: DivX
Resolution: 702x476 ~> 702x526
Aspect ratio: 4:3
Frame rate: 29.970 fps
Bit rate: 1 500 kb/s
BPP: 0.150
Audio
#1: 2.0ch MP3 @ 128 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/F2F6FC44F615050/Rosenberg_-_1970_-_Move.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Robert Altman – The Long Goodbye [4K Restoration] (1973) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/08/robert-altman-the-long-goodbye-4k-restoration-1973/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/08/robert-altman-the-long-goodbye-4k-restoration-1973/#comments Mon, 08 Aug 2022 02:26:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=175702 Private investigator Philip Marlowe helps a friend out of a jam, but in doing so gets implicated in his wife’s murder. +Commentary by film historian Tim Lucas 9.05GB | 1h 52m | 1280×536 | mkv https://nitro.download/view/C2EA724403B5814/The_Long_Goodbye_1973_720p_BluRay_FLAC2.0_x264-CALiGARi.mkv Language(s):EnglishSubtitles:English

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Private investigator Philip Marlowe helps a friend out of a jam, but in doing so gets implicated in his wife’s murder.



+Commentary by film historian Tim Lucas

9.05GB | 1h 52m | 1280×536 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/C2EA724403B5814/The_Long_Goodbye_1973_720p_BluRay_FLAC2.0_x264-CALiGARi.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

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Ingmar Bergman – Beröringen aka The Touch (1971) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/01/ingmar-bergman-beroringen-aka-the-touch-1971/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/01/ingmar-bergman-beroringen-aka-the-touch-1971/#comments Tue, 19 Jan 2021 23:21:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=2361 Quote:Bergman’s little-seen English-language film starring Elliott Gould and Bibi Andersson, which charts the course of a doomed affair, earned mixed reviews on release in 1971 and was quickly overshadowed by his subsequent works – but it’s time to recognise it as a major entry in the director’s canon. It’s unsurprising that many myths and misconceptions …

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Quote:
Bergman’s little-seen English-language film starring Elliott Gould and Bibi Andersson, which charts the course of a doomed affair, earned mixed reviews on release in 1971 and was quickly overshadowed by his subsequent works – but it’s time to recognise it as a major entry in the director’s canon.

It’s unsurprising that many myths and misconceptions have arisen surrounding Ingmar Bergman, that of the terminally gloomy Swede being merely the most prevalent. Here, after all, is someone acknowledged as one of the greatest filmmakers of all time yet viewed by those none too familiar with his body of work as a whole as a forbiddingly lofty, aloof philosopher rather than an artist or entertainer. (Even a feature in last month’s Sight & Sound claimed that some of Bergman’s films might today “be considered so wilfully opaque and mired in symbolism as to be past the point of parody”.)

Here, too, is someone who, notwithstanding two volumes of mischievous, possibly unreliable autobiography, kept his personal life private, even as he poured his own emotions into his films. Someone who preferred the company of a close circle of friends and collaborators, and spent much of his life reclusively on the island of Fårö. And someone whose best known film – The Seventh Seal (1957) – is quite atypical (he made few films which were allegorical or set in the distant past), and which has therefore reinforced many misunderstandings about his work.

Look closely at Bergman’s oeuvre in toto and you won’t find someone constantly obsessing about death or God’s silence. While death occurs as frequently as it does in most cinema (where death is almost as ubiquitous as it is in real life), it isn’t a central concern in most of his work; and questions of religious faith feature in still fewer movies, and hardly at all after Winter Light (1962).

Likewise erroneous is the notion that his work is laboriously slow (most of his films zip along for around 90 minutes) and difficult to understand (only Persona, released in 1966 and by far his most radically experimental film, might fit that description). Bergman’s popular reputation, then, based more on impressions of his prolific output than on close familiarity and measured consideration, is a mixed blessing.

One victim of this mythification has been The Touch (1971). On those rare occasions when it has even been mentioned, the film has often been lumped together with the 1950 thriller This Can’t Happen Here (aka High Tension), a commercial chore from a script by Herbert Grevenius which Bergman later disavowed and requested not to be shown. That film, he claimed, he’d known from the start would be rubbish; The Touch is a very different creature.

True, Bergman says little about it in his autobiographies, other than to opine that he’d bungled the story and to list it alongside Face to Face (1976), The Serpent’s Egg (1977) “and so on” as projects that ended in “embarrassing failure” compared with the achievements of Tarkovsky, whom he greatly admired. But should we really trust the opinion of a film’s creator, whose feelings are surely inflected by the experiences of making it and witnessing its passage into the world?

If the former was not especially problematic, the latter was something Bergman probably preferred not to recall in detail. Receiving mixed reviews, The Touch performed poorly at the box office; thereafter, unlike the works that followed and immediately overshadowed it – Cries and Whispers (1972) and Scenes from a Marriage (1973), both critical and commercial hits – it was seldom revived, virtually becoming a ‘lost’ film. It’s likely that few who mentioned it in passing in articles on Bergman had seen it; all they knew was that it starred Elliott Gould and Bibi Andersson, was Bergman’s first English-language movie, and surely must have deserved its box-office failure, given the unfavourable reviews.

Look beyond the mythology, however, and a rather different picture emerges. One of the most successful European directors of the late 50s and 60s, Bergman had been much courted by Hollywood but, preferring to make films about what he knew best – people like himself and his acquaintances – he had repeatedly rejected such offers.

The Touch, however, was a different proposition, since it allowed him to film in Sweden. In 1964, in London, Bergman had encountered Morton Baum of the American Broadcasting Company; it was about to set up its own production department, ABC Pictures, which would specialise in faintly offbeat fare like Take the Money and Run (1969), They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969), Straw Dogs (1972) and Cabaret (1972). Bergman and Baum agreed that he’d write and direct a film for ABC; The Touch was the result.

For the lead actor, the company proposed Paul Newman, Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford, but Bergman cast Gould, whom he’d recently seen in Getting Straight (1970). Otherwise, the film was par for the Bergman course: Bibi Andersson was the lead actress, Max von Sydow played the third main character, the cinematographer was Sven Nykvist and the chief technical personnel were all regular collaborators.

Two versions of the film were made: one in Swedish and English, the other wholly in English, made at the Americans’ insistence, which included scenes of the Andersson character conversing with her family and other Swedes in a language that was absurdly not their own. This, sadly, was for many years the only version available; even now, YouTube proffers a dismally soft-focused copy of this version complete with floating Hungarian subtitles. Small wonder the film’s reputation sank so low.

The initial response, however, was far from wholly negative. The Swedish reviews were mixed. In America, while Vincent Canby and Roger Ebert expressed disappointment, Richard Schickel and Molly Haskell praised the film. In Britain, it received strong support from Jan Dawson in the Monthly Film Bulletin and Nigel Andrews in Time Out. So it was not altogether surprising when, four decades later, a restoration of the original bilingual version met with a very warm welcome: despite all those rumours to the contrary, here finally was a film that undoubtedly belonged to that unbroken string of masterworks running from Persona in 1966 to (pace Bergman’s own disappointment with it) the 1976 TV series Face to Face.

Bergman’s description of The Touch as “a love story” is also rather misleading. When Karin (Andersson), a seemingly happily married mother of two, impulsively decides to go to bed with David (Gould), an archaeologist visiting Sweden whom her doctor husband Andreas (von Sydow) has befriended, she tells him she doesn’t know why she’s doing so or whether she loves him. Still, she behaves as if she loves David, tolerating his volatile mood swings, his clumsy, even brutish sexual overtures, his peevish immaturity and increasingly jealous hostility towards Andreas – who himself begins, after a while, to suspect that his wife is up to something. Karin, meanwhile, dreams of an ideal, whereby her double life will be accepted by both men, so that her one “good, wise life” can help them all. Needless to say, her dream is doomed to failure.

The film is sometimes characterised as the story of a romantic triangle, but it’s more accurate to stress its constant focus on Karin. Her point of view and emotions are what interest Bergman throughout: her happiness with Andreas and her children; her elation at being so suddenly courted by David (who rashly tells her, when invited to dinner by Andreas, that he fell in love when he first saw her some weeks earlier at the local hospital, alone and grieving for her mother); her confusion at the cold rebuttals which regularly punctuate David’s more affectionate behaviour; her anxiety and indecision over betraying and possibly losing her family; and her determination to remain true to herself… whatever that may mean.

The Touch is not so much a traditional love story as a film about the quest for real human contact: the need and desire for love, and the difficulty of giving, accepting and sustaining it. Typically, Bergman eschews romance, knowing that humans sometimes act according to self-destructive impulses: Karin is not only seduced by David’s forthright – but, to us, self-deluding – declaration of love; she’s also clearly drawn to his moodiness, vulnerability and solitude (Jewish, he tells her he lost his family in the Nazi death camps). Likewise, she may believe her marriage of 15 years is a happy one, but her swift, unthinking, excited response to David’s possibly booze-fuelled confession may suggest otherwise; indeed, perhaps unconsciously she’s already been looking for something to enliven her life.

Little of this is explicit in the script: Bergman’s characteristically unflashy, pared back but precise mise-en-scène enriches the film’s levels of meaning. Nykvist’s use of Eastmancolor may suggest naturalism – the mood, now autumnal, now wintry, is beautifully sustained – but in the early scenes Karin’s bright red outfits (worn even to the hospital, when she arrives 15 minutes late to bid her dying mother farewell) stand in telling contrast to the whites, greys and beiges of her surroundings, suggestive of a nonconformist spirit seeking some kind of freedom.

The opening credits shots of the small coastal town where she and Andreas live initially look like slightly touristy images – a castle, picturesque streets – until it becomes apparent that old, solid stone walls are everywhere, foreshadowing the themes of imprisonment and separation. Likewise the use of sound: the scenes of Karin’s cheery interactions with her children over breakfast and of her doing the housework are accompanied by pop music on the radio, gratingly bright, banal and repetitive, highlighting the mechanical routine of her daily existence. And whenever she visits David for a tryst in his glum green apartment, there in the background is the constant noise of demolition and construction work, an echo of his own turbulent temperament.

None of this is ‘symbolism’ as such; Bergman is simply using the various signifiers at his disposal to enhance mood and meaning. Even some delicately deployed images of gardens and flowers, which have led some commentators to allude to Eden, Satan and temptation, would seem to have more to do with evoking a carefully cultivated ‘freshness’ in Andreas and Karin’s marriage and, in the case of a hot-house, a stifling claustrophobia. Indeed, the only evident symbol is a medieval wooden Madonna discovered in a church where David is working; once removed from behind the wall that concealed it for centuries, the figure falls prey to the elements, just as Karin’s bid for love and freedom carries its own risks.

The Touch is rich in ironies, paradoxes and ambiguities. We never learn who sent letters to Andreas (if indeed anyone did…) alerting him to Karin’s affair; similarly, the details of David’s past and his life back in London remain tantalisingly vague, as they are to Karin herself. One especially significant conversation between David and Andreas is subtly intriguing as to its possible nuances and consequences, in terms of why they say what they do, and who they think can hear them.

Since Bergman generally strives to understand what makes even his minor characters tick, Karin, Andreas and David all have their reasons… and their virtues and flaws. Notwithstanding Karin’s feelings for him, however, David is at heart sad, surly and self-obsessed, alert only to his own needs: even when he inadvertently stumbles upon Karin in her grief at the hospital, after making a perfunctory offer of help he simply stares at her, tactlessly, until she’s driven to demand he leave her alone. Such insensitivity doesn’t bode well – but even when she’s later reminded of the encounter, Karin can’t prevent herself responding to his self-serving efforts, however boorish or inappropriate given his status as a dinner guest, to reach out and seduce her.

The Touch is a fine companion piece to the film that preceded it: En passion (1969), which is now generally known in English as The Passion of Anna but would be far better translated as ‘A Passion’ as its protagonist is not Anna (Liv Ullmann) but the reclusive divorcé Andreas (von Sydow), who undergoes a passion in the biblical sense of a process of suffering. He, like Karin, is touched by the interest shown in him by a new acquaintance, and responds by trying to give – and hence receive – love; like Karin too, he finds that such an ambition is not that easy to achieve, since other people are not always as straightforward or accepting as we’d like them to be.

Like The Passion of Anna, The Touch ends on an image of solitude, indecision, immobility – but also of freedom and open-endedness. A pause before an unknown future; a moment of truth and self-awareness. A glimmer, then, of hope.

– Geoff Andrew (Sight & Sound, March 2018)

2.72GB | 1h 55m | 1024×552 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/A229D6D64107836/Ingmar_Bergman_-_(1971)_The_Touch.mkv

Language:English, Swedish, French
Subtitles:English

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Jeremy Kagan – Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago 8 (1987) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/11/jeremy-kagan-conspiracy-the-trial-of-the-chicago-8-1987/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/11/jeremy-kagan-conspiracy-the-trial-of-the-chicago-8-1987/#comments Tue, 17 Nov 2020 07:00:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=136809 Despite the title the film has nothing to do with conspiracy stuff but refers to the “Chicago Eight” who were eight protestors and were charged with conspiracy, inciting to riot, and other charges related to violent protests that took place in Chicago, IL, at the time of the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Quote:In 1987, HBO …

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Despite the title the film has nothing to do with conspiracy stuff but refers to the “Chicago Eight” who were eight protestors and were charged with conspiracy, inciting to riot, and other charges related to violent protests that took place in Chicago, IL, at the time of the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

Quote:
In 1987, HBO aired Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago 8, a docudrama which re-enacted the trial using the transcript as the primary source for the script. William Kunstler, Leonard Weinglass, and all eight of the original defendants participated in the project, and provided commentary throughout the film. It was awarded the 1988 CableACE Award for Best Dramatic Special.

1.57GB | 1s 57m | 1366×768 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/10731927B25DAFC/conspiracy_trial_of_chicago_8.mkv

Language:English
Subtitles:English

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Alan Arkin – Little Murders (1971) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/11/alan-arkin-little-murders-1971/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/11/alan-arkin-little-murders-1971/#comments Sat, 02 Nov 2019 07:30:52 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=115058 Quote:Pitch black comedy about a young nihilistic New Yorker coping with pervasive urban violence, obscene phone calls, rusty water pipes, electrical blackouts, paranoia and ethnic-racial conflict during a typical summer of the 1970s. 2.56GB | 1 h 48 min | 1024×552 | mkv https://nitro.download/view/72BD8955C4A3953/Alan_Arkin_-_(1971)_Little_Murders.mkv Language(s):EnglishSubtitles:None

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Pitch black comedy about a young nihilistic New Yorker coping with pervasive urban violence, obscene phone calls, rusty water pipes, electrical blackouts, paranoia and ethnic-racial conflict during a typical summer of the 1970s.

2.56GB | 1 h 48 min | 1024×552 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/72BD8955C4A3953/Alan_Arkin_-_(1971)_Little_Murders.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Robert Altman – The Long Goodbye (1973) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/02/robert-altman-the-long-goodbye-1973/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/02/robert-altman-the-long-goodbye-1973/#respond Fri, 08 Feb 2019 11:26:19 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=17169 Quote:Director Robert Altman, famous for his ability to turn any genre inside out, takes aim at film noir with this evocative adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel. Altman’s Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould) is a relatively unsuccessful private eye living and working in 1970s Los Angeles. Stepping into the shoes of the notorious detective, Gould delivers a …

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Quote:
Director Robert Altman, famous for his ability to turn any genre inside out, takes aim at film noir with this evocative adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel. Altman’s Philip Marlowe (Elliott Gould) is a relatively unsuccessful private eye living and working in 1970s Los Angeles. Stepping into the shoes of the notorious detective, Gould delivers a captivating performance that is the definition of ’70s hip: he spends the entire film mumbling to himself, smoking cigarettes, and making wisecracks to everyone he encounters. This time around, Marlowe decides to investigate the supposed suicide of his friend Terry Lennox (Jim Bouton). At the same time, he’s hired by Lennox’s beautiful neighbor, Eileen Wade (Nina Van Pallandt), to track down her husband Roger (Sterling Hayden), a successful author and belligerent alcoholic. Slowly, the mystery begins to reveal itself, as Marlowe discovers that Eileen’s relationship with his dead friend was more than merely casual. All the while, Marlowe must contend with police, a psychopathic gangster (Mark Rydell), and a host of other characters and situations that make up the hazy existential malaise that is the world of THE LONG GOODBYE.

2.14GB | 1 h 52 min | 1024×440 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/ED1395297F8E3A9/Robert_Altman_-_(1973)_The_Long_Goodbye.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

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Robert Altman – California Split (1974) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/08/robert-altman-california-split-extras-1974/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/08/robert-altman-california-split-extras-1974/#respond Fri, 10 Aug 2018 11:45:06 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=72659 California Split By Roger Ebert / January 1, 1974 They meet in a California poker parlor. One wins, despite a heated discussion with a loser over whether or not a dealt card hit the floor. They drink. They become friends after they are jointly mugged in the parking lot by the sore loser. They did …

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29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

California Split

By Roger Ebert / January 1, 1974

They meet in a California poker parlor. One wins, despite a heated discussion with a loser over whether or not a dealt card hit the floor. They drink. They become friends after they are jointly mugged in the parking lot by the sore loser.

They did not know each other before, and they don’t know much about each other now, but they know all they need to know: They’re both compulsive gamblers, and the dimensions of the world of gambling equal the dimensions of the world they care anything about. It is a small world and a flat one, like one of those maps of the world before Columbus, and they are constantly threatened with falling over the edge.

They’re the heroes (or at least the subjects) of “California Split,” the magnificently funny, cynical film by Robert Altman. Their names are Bill and Charlie, and they’re played by George Segal and Elliott Gould with a combination of unaffected naturalism and sheer raw nervous exhaustion. We don’t need to know anything about gambling to understand the odyssey they undertake to the tracks, to the private poker parties, to the bars, to Vegas, to the edge of defeat, and to the scene of victory. Their compulsion is so strong that it carries us along.
The movie will be compared with “M*A*S*H,” the first big hit by Altman (who is possibly our best and certainly our most diverting American director). It deserves that comparison, because it resembles “M*A*S*H” in several big ways: It’s funny, it’s hard-boiled, it gives us a bond between two frazzled heroes trying to win by the rules in a game where the rules re-quire defeat. But it’s a better movie than “M*A*S*H” because here Altman gets it all together. Ever since “M*A*S*H,” he’s been trying to make a kind of movie that would function like a comedy but allow its laughs to dig us deeper and deeper into the despair underneath.

Bill and Charlie are driven. We laugh at their hangovers, their bruises (treated with hot shaving cream), the kooky part-time prostitutes who serve them breakfasts of Froot Loops and beer. We move easily through the underworld of their friends, casually introduced through Altman’s gift of overlapping dialogue and understated visual introductions, so that we’re not so much shown a new character as encouraged to assume we knew him all along. And because Joseph Walsh’s screenplay is funny and Segal and Gould are naturally engaging, we have a good time.

But then there are moments that take on bleaker meanings. At one point, for example, at the ragged edge of sleep, boozed out, defeated, Bill and Charlie cling desperately to a bar and very seriously bet with each other on the names of the Seven Dwarfs (There was Droopy … Sleepy … Dumbo?). And at another time, cornered with their winnings in still another parking lot by still another mugger, this one armed, they hand over half their winnings and bet him that’s all they have.

He takes it and runs; they win; they could have been killed but their gambler’s instinct forced them to make the try. At the end of “California Split” we realize that Altman has made a lot more than a comedy about gambling; he’s taken us into an American nightmare, and all the people we met along the way felt genuine and looked real. This movie has a taste in its mouth like stale air-conditioning, and no matter what time it seems to be, it’s always five in the morning in a second-rate casino.

As always, Altman fills his movie with quirky supporting roles — people who have somehow become caricatures of themselves. At the private poker game, Segal stands at the bar, surveys the table, and quietly describes every player. He’s right about them, although he (and we) have never seen them before. We know he’s right because these people wear their styles and destinies on their faces.

So do the hookers (played with a kind of tart-next-door wholesomeness by Ann Prentiss and Gwen Welles). So does “Helen Brown,” one of their customers who’s a middle-aged man who likes drag as much as he’s terrified of the cops (inspiring a scene of true tragicomedy). Altman’s movies always seem full, somehow; we don’t have the feeling of an empty screen into which carefully drawn characters are introduced, but of a camera plunging into a boiling sea of frenzied human activity.

What Altman comes up with is sometimes almost a documentary feel; at the end of “California Split” we know something about organized gambling in this country we didn’t know before. His movies always seem perfectly at home wherever they are, but this time there’s an almost palpable sense of place. And Altman has never been more firmly in control of his style. He has one of the few really individual visual styles among contemporary American directors; we can always see it’s an Altman film. He bases his visual strategies on an incredibly attentive sound track, using background noises with particular care so that our ears tell us we’re moving through these people — instead of that they’re lined up talking to us. “California Split” is a great movie and it’s a great experience, too; we’ve been there with Bill and Charlie.



California.Split.1974.DVDRip.x264.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1h 45mn
Size: 1.78 GiB
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 718x366 ~> 860x366
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Frame rate: 23.976 fps
Bit rate: 1 905 Kbps
BPP: 0.302
Audio
#1: English 3ch AC-3 @ 384 Kbps
#2: English 2.0ch Vorbis @ 80.0 Kbps (Commentary with Altman, Segal, Gould and Joseph Walsh)

https://nitro.download/view/5C7F38A40FE0422/California.Split.1974.DVDRip.x264.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, Japanese

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