FALL FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS
Redemption (Miguel Gomes, Portugal/France/Germany/Italy)
By Max Nelson | 12/13/2013 | CS57, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Spotlight
By Max Nelson Miguel Gomes is in a tricky position: three features into his filmmaking career, he’s already developed a remarkably consistent and well-rounded personal style, stretched it to the breaking point, and then whittled it back down. Tabu, Gomes’ 2012 breakout, felt like a triumphant fusion of elements from his previous two features, borrowing…
Read More → La jalousie (Philippe Garrel, France)
By Blake Williams | 12/13/2013 | CS57, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Spotlight
By Blake Williams At one point in Philippe Garrel’s La jalousie, eight-year-old Charlotte (Olga Milshtein) asks Claudia (Anna Mouglalis), the new girlfriend of her father Louis, whom she thinks her father loves more. Claudia’s answer: “His father.” In one sense, of course, this reply is an evasion of the question Charlotte was actually asking—i.e., “Does…
Read More → Ida (Pawel Pawlikowski, Poland/Denmark)
By Jerry White | 12/13/2013 | CS57, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Spotlight
By Jerry White Ida marks Polish filmmaker Pawel Pawlikowski’s first feature film in Polish—the director immigrated to the UK with his parents in the ’70s, and subsequently built his career there—but just what kind of Polish film it is proves a rather tricky question. There are, to be sure, several national-cinema standbys on order: it’s…
Read More → Hard to Be a God (Aleksei German, Russia)
By Olaf Moller | 12/13/2013 | CS57, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Spotlight
By Olaf Möller Now it’s been delivered, the last work of the late Aleksei German. On Wednesday, November 13th, 10:30 a.m., during the Festival internazionale del film di Roma, his 14-years-in-the-making Hard to Be a God (Trudno byt’ bogom)—for some time called History of the Arkanar Massacre (Istorija Arkanarskoj rezni)—got its first public screening. It…
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