Wednesday, 23 August 2023

Retrospettiva

Locarno film festival retrospectives: A list


2025 — Great Expectations: British Postwar Cinema, 1945-1960

2024 — The Lady with the Torch: Columbia Pictures, 1929-1959

2023 — Mexican Popular Cinema

2022 — Douglas Sirk

2021 — Alberto Lattuada

2020 — Kinuyo Tanaka

2019 — Black Light

2018 — Leo MaCarey

2017 —Jacques Tourneur

2016 — Beloved and Rejected: Cinema in the Young Federal Republic of Germany, 1949–1963

2015 — Sam Peckinpah

2014 — Titanus

2013 — George Cukor

2012 — Otto Preminger

2011 — Vincente Minnelli

2010 — Ernst Lubitsch

2009 — Manga Impact

2008 — Nanni Moretti

2007 — Retour à Locarno

2006 — Aki Kaurismäki

2005 — Orson Welles 

2004 — Newsfront

2003 — All That Jazz

2002 — Allan Dwan

2001 — Out of the Shadows: Asians in American Cinema

2000 — Une autre histoire du cinéma soviétique 1926–1968 

1999 — Joe Dante e l’altro cinema indipendente.

1998 — Marco Bellocchio

1997 — 50 +1 ans de cinéma américain

1996 — Youssef Chahine

1995 — Abbas Kiarostami

1994 — Frank Tashlin

1993 — Sacha Guitry

1992 — Mario Camerini

1991 — Jacques Becker

1990 — Lev Kuleshov

1989 — Preston Sturges

1988 — Alberto Cavalcanti

1987 — 40 ans de Festival à Locarno

1986 — Keisuke Kinoshita

1985 — Boris Barnet

1984 — Lux Film (1934–1954)

1983 — Mikio Naruse

1982 — Powell & Pressburger

1981 — American Cinema of the 1950s [?]

1979 — Yasujiro Ozu

1978 — Douglas Sirk

1977 — Citel Films Geneva

1976 — Pietro Germi [?]

1975 — Totò, Portrait of An Actor

1974 — Swiss cinema [?]

1973 — Swiss Cinema Retrospective 1920-1944

1972 — 25th Anniversary Retrospective

1971 — Cinéma et Résistance

1970 — Claude Autant-Lara

1969 — Luchino Visconti

1968 — Satyajit Ray

1967 — Tribute To Soviet Cinema

1966 — G. W. Pabst

1965  — Jiri Trnka + Manoel de Oliveira

1964 — Andrzej Munk + Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau + Louis Lumière

1963 — John Ford

1962 — Jean Vigo + King Vidor

1961 — Georges Méliès + Fritz Lang

1960 — Luis Buñuel

1959 — Ingmar Bergman

1958 — Humphrey Bogart + Norman Mclaren

1957 — Akira Kurosawa + G.W. Pabst + Francesca Bertini

1956 — Ethnographic Film Review [?]

1955 — Aspects of Italian Neorealist Cinema

1954 — Comic Cinema in the Silent Era

1947 — Reconstruction

1946 — Revue du film documentaire


Thursday, 20 July 2023

Tranquility in the Presence of Others (Nasser Taghvai, 1969)


Tranquility in the Presence of Others

Nasser Taghvai, 1969, 84 min, Persian with English subtitles


Often seen as one of the indispensable films of the Iranian New Wave, Tranquility in the Presence of Others [Aramsh Dar Hozor-e Digaran] is a poignant and brisk cinematic adaptation of a story by leftist (and later exiled and banned) writer Gholam-Hossein Saedi, attacking the indecisiveness and empty rhetoric of Iranian intellectuals, as well as dissecting the patriarchal core of Iranian society. Banned after a single screening at the Shiraz Arts Festival of 1969 – a ban which was not removed until 1973 – it tells the story of a retired army general who travels to Tehran with his newlywed wife to visit his daughters, only to observe their unhappiness and casual affairs. As his mental condition deteriorates, the film’s tone shifts from sardonic to tragic. Tranquility in the Presence of Others delves into the anxieties of a country that is seemingly marching forward but retains a troubled, melancholic relationship with the past. The gender and social conflicts of Saedi's story are brilliantly translated into a bleak vision of Iranian society and the confusion of the middle classes.  – Ehsan Khoshbakht

Wednesday, 12 July 2023

Il Cinema Ritrovato 2023: Favourites & Discoveries


The 37th edition of Il Cinema Ritrovato concluded last week but its memories live on. 

In Silk Stockings (Rouben Mamoulian, 1957), a quintet of melancholic expats freshly returned from a seductive Paris to a drab shared apartment in Moscow start reminiscing about the joys of the high life in the French capital. Soon it turns into a competition in remembering. Getting too intense where disillusioned Marxist-Leninists accuse each other of stealing one another's memories, Ninotchka (Cyd Charisse), fervently dedicated to the equal distribution of all kinds of wealth, steps in and declares: "Comrades, there are enough memories for all of us." Judging from the range and diversity of this year's picks by festival attendees, it seems that we should not be too worried about running out of memories until next June.

Statistics tell me "120,000 spectators" have viewed "470 films [in] seven cinemas," a 12% increase in attendance compared to previous year. Feelings tell me billions of memories have been made.

Nearly 120 participants from 39 countries have picked their "favourite film" at the festival, as well as their "major discovery" this year. Some have accompanied their choices with additional notes. It's a delight to read.

See their picks below.

* * *

Monday, 5 June 2023

Peter Cowie on Gharibeh va Meh (1974)


"Two years in the making, it is a vast, symbolist drama, set in some remote historical period (hazy even to Iranians), and bursting at the seams with action and bloodcurdling confrontations. Why a young man arrives in a boat to disturb the ritual of a small village, why he is pursued by a band of ominous, black-clad strangers, and why he takes once more to the sea, seems unimportant, for Beizai’s [sic] dazzling technique, clearly influenced by Kurosawa, sweeps all before it. No other Middle Eastern cinema could sustain such an ambitious and visually exciting production."  Peter Cowie / Sight & Sound, April 1975

Wednesday, 31 May 2023

Rouben Mamoulian, Lost and Found (André S. Labarthe, 2016)

Rouben Mamoulian, Lost and Found

Free admission screening of the film at Il Cinema Ritrovato, on June 23, 14.30, Sala Scorsese.


When it comes to filmed interviews, Mamoulian is one of the well-documented giants of classical Hollywood. His eloquence and wisdom can be heard in interviews shot for documentaries about his friends (George Stevens: A Filmmaker's Journey, shown at Il Cinema Ritrovato 2021) or horror cinema (The Horror of It All by Gene Feldman and Suzette Winter, 1983). There are films exclusively about him such as Patrick Cazals's Rouben Mamoulian, l’âge d’or de Broadway et Hollywood (2007) which also features brief clips of interviews that Iranian director of Armenian origins, Arby Ovanessian (a guest of Il Cinema Ritrovato 2022) conducted with Mamoulian. Television networks, too, since the revival of his films in the 1960s, have interviewed him as in BBC's Film Extra (1973). However, this French television interview, by one of the fathering figures of television documentaries on cinema, André S. Labarthe, was lost for decades until retrieved and made into the Rouben Mamoulian, Lost and Found. This is the most detailed career interview Mamoulian ever gave on film.

Tuesday, 30 May 2023

Cherike-ye Tara [The Ballad of Tara] (Bahram Beyzaie, 1979)

The Ballad of Tara
 

Bahram Beyzaie's seamless blend of myth, symbolism, folklore and classical Persian literature in The Ballad of Tara is unparalleled in its complexity. Yet, apart from Downpour (1972), which was restored and revived a decade ago, the director with the most consistent body of work in the Iranian cinema of the 1970s is also, unjustly, one of the most invisible masters of the Iranian New Wave. Here, as well as directing, he has also produced, written, set-, costume-designed and edited a mesmerising tale that fuses the ceremonial legends of the past with contemporary life. Tara, a strong-willed widow encounters the fleeting ghost of an ancient warrior in the forest next to her village. The ghost's appearances become more frequent and finally he talks to her, claiming a sword that she has found among her father's effects. Without the sword, the dead warrior can't rest. But when the sword is restored to him, it's his love for Tara that prevents him from returning to the land of the dead.

Monday, 22 May 2023

Rouben Mamoulian: A Touch of Desire

Silk Stockings | publicity still

Rouben Mamoulian: A Touch of Desire (1926-1957)

Retrospective at Il Cinema Ritrovato, June 24-July 2, 2023


Known for his ability to encode his vision in light, movement, and later in colour, the Tbilisi-born Armenian Rouben Mamoulian had one of the most consistent bodies of work in American cinema. Rightly celebrated for his invaluable contribution to Hollywood's transition to sound, he both unchained the camera and used dialogue like a work of musical accompaniment. His mobile camera was envied and imitated, and his style is instantly recognisable for its sophistication, humour and erotic undertone. Mamoulian was equally efficient in more sombre types of cinema, serving as a pioneering figure in both gangster and horror genres. This career retrospective showcases Mamoulian's work from his only silent film, to the early sound period, to his final musical, in colour and CinemaScope. Aside from a new digital restoration of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, everything else will be screened in 35mm.

Friday, 21 April 2023

Cry of Midnight (Samuel Khachikian, 1961)


Playing in Berlin (Sinema Transtopia) on May 11, 2023.


In 1961, the Iranian-Armenian Samuel Khachikian, a figure of enormous talent known for his strong female characters and the use of crime cinema motifs, the latter giving him the title of “Iranian Hitchcock”, was at the peak of his success. That year, both titles topping the Iranian box office were his. Indeed, other directors imitated his style and he became the first "name above the title" of Iranian cinema. Cry of Midnight [Faryade Nime Shab], internationally also known as Midnight Terror, was an unofficial remake of Charles Vidor's 1948 film, Gilda. It portrays one of the essential femme fatales of Iranian cinema, Parvin Ghaffari, appearing alongside the popular star Fardin as a young man who becomes entangled with a criminal gang but eventually finds his way back to the innocent girl that he's in love with. – EK

Thursday, 20 April 2023

25 Fireman's Street (István Szabó, 1973)


25 Fireman's Street

István Szabó, 1973 | 98 mins

UK premiere of the new restoration at Close-Up Cinema (London) on May 28, 2023


István Szabó's agile camera is an uninvited guest peeking into the private and collective memories of the residents of an apartment building in Budapest that is due to be demolished the next day. In a Cocteauesque quest into the inner life of a house (which also bears trace of early surrealists in its splendid and puzzling juxtapositions) some 50 years is remembered overnight. The breath-taking long takes that have the fluidity of a dream reconstruct the recent history of nation through bricks, windows, walls and wooden panels. Like Jacques Tati's PlayTime, architecture is both the starting point and what frames every movement – it's a living organ. But here the building reflects people's desires and traumas more than similar voyeuristic investigations of architecture and film as it even bears the subtitle of a "Dream About a House".