Tacita Dean
Cinema Scope Issue 92 | Table of Contents
By Cinema Scope | 09/27/2022 | CS92, From Cinema Scope Magazine, Table of Contents
Interviews with Kelly Reichardt, Cyril Schäublin, Olivier Assayas. Features, Columns and more.
Read More → Cinema Scope Magazine 92: Editor’s Note
By Mark Peranson | 09/26/2022 | Columns, CS92, From Cinema Scope Magazine
we shouldn’t forget the reasons why we all got into this job in the first place, which is the promotion of film as an art form. The impact that festivals have on general art-house distribution should not be overlooked; of course, as touched on above, sometimes it’s the distributor who decides to skip festival screenings for certain films, because everyone has their reasons.
Read More → Film/Art | Evidence Visible from a Distance: Tacita Dean on Fata Morgana
By Antoine Thirion | 09/26/2022 | Books, Columns, CS92, Film - Art, Interviews
In The Green Ray (2001), British artist Tacita Dean famously managed to capture on 16mm film the fleeting light that the sun leaves behind right at the moment when it disappears from the horizon. And, because a digital camera used by others at the same time, on the same beach, was unable to capture it, her film proves two things: one, that the green ray, despite being missed by almost all who try and see it, is not a legend; two, that only film can capture it. But the evidence is elusive, as Éric Rohmer found out while shooting Le rayon vert (1986), eventual
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