Spain
TIFF 2023 | Close Your Eyes (Víctor Erice, Spain) — Centrepiece
By Lawrence Garcia | 09/05/2023 | Cinema Scope Online, CS95, TIFF 2023
The Cannes Première of Close Your Eyes, Víctor Erice’s first feature since Dream of Light (1992) over three decades ago, was immediately followed by a minor controversy. Conspicuously absent from the film’s screening, Erice published an open letter at El País explaining his reasons for boycotting the festival, namely, a marked lack of communication—and an implicit lack of respect—from Thierry Frémaux and his programming team regarding his film’s inclusion in the Official Selection, not in Competition.
Read More → Close Your Eyes (Víctor Erice, Spain)
By Lawrence Garcia | 06/20/2023 | CS95, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine
The Cannes Première of Close Your Eyes, Víctor Erice’s first feature since Dream of Light (1992) over three decades ago, was immediately followed by a minor controversy. Conspicuously absent from the film’s screening, Erice published an open letter at El País explaining his reasons for boycotting the festival, namely, a marked lack of communication—and an implicit lack of respect—from Thierry Frémaux and his programming team regarding his film’s inclusion in the Official Selection, not in Competition.
Read More → Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell (Pham Thien An, Vietnam/Singapore/France/Spain)
By Robert Koehler | 06/20/2023 | CS95, Festivals, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Spotlight
Cinema has always had to defend itself against the pressures of business and capital, and yet, because filmmaking remains expensive (contrary to the false digital fantasies of “cheap” cameras), it is business and capital that continues to keep cinema going. This contradiction of conditions deepens when the filmmaking takes place in a communist-governed nation like Vietnam, where capital operates (albeit sometimes uneasily) within a state-run system.
Read More → Alcarràs (Carla Simón, Spain/Italy)
By Saffron Maeve | 09/26/2022 | CS92, Currency, From Cinema Scope Magazine
By Saffron Maeve A pejorative superficially on par with its sister terms Big Pharma and Big Tech, which imply a gadgety reshaping of the natural world, Big Ag looms heavy over the sunny fields of Carla Simón’s acclaimed Alcarràs, which was awarded the Golden Bear at this year’s Berlinale and exceeded all box-office expectations upon…
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