Sunday, 17 September 2023
Wednesday, 30 August 2023
Still Life (Sohrab Shahid Saless, 1974) reviewed by John Gillet for Sight & Sound
Perhaps Berlin’s main achievement was to reveal the progress of the young Iranian director Sohrab Shahid Sales, with A Simple Event (reviewed from last year’s Tehran Festival) in the Forum and Still Life in competition. The new film continues his preoccupation with the lives of inarticulate people—in this case, an elderly railway signalman who receives news of his retirement with utter incomprehension— developed through lengthy scenes in which the characters are simply observed going about their daily chores. Without Sales’ extraordinary control, the result could be intolerable, but for me the film’s exact placing and timing of shots, rather like a slow symphony scored pianissimo throughout, was entirely hypnotic.
Monday, 28 August 2023
Sven Klangs kvintett (Stellan Olsson, 1976)
Playing at Close-Up Cinema in London on September 24, 2023. – EK
Voted by Swedish film critics as one of the "25 greatest Swedish films ever", Stellan Olsson's tender drama is based on a play by Henric Holmberg and Ninne Olsson, about the failed transformation of a dance band, formed by a group of young friends, into a proper jazz band in southern Sweden of the late 1950s. Excited by the discovery of a new musical language, they discuss Charlie Parker, and one of them, the saxophonist Lars Nilsson, goes as far as imitating his idol not only in his saxophone sound but also in his wild lifestyle. Shot in stunning black-and-white, many traces of the tableau-like compositions that Swedish cinema through figures like Roy Andersson became known for are already established here. So is the cracking humour. This gem of Swedish films is ripe for rediscovery.
Wednesday, 23 August 2023
San Sebastian Film Festival Retrospectives
Year Retrospective
1959 René Clair
1960 Masters of Nordic Cinema; Jean Grémillon
1961 Emilio Fernández; Georges Méliès; Japanese Cinema
1962 Florian Rey; Greta Garbo; The Cartoon World
1963 Bulls and Bullfighters on the Screen
1964 Elia Kazan
1965 Horror Cinema
1966 Buster Keaton; Science-Fiction Cinema
1967 New Spanish Cinema
1968 New American Cinema
1969 Josef von Sternberg
1970 Fritz Lang
1971 King Vidor
1972 Howard Hawks
1973 Rouben Mamoulian
1974 Nicholas Ray
1975 Henri-Georges Clouzot
1976 Dolores del Río; Humphrey Bogart; Film Noir
1977 Luis Buñuel; Pier Paolo Pasolini; Spanish Cinema from the 2nd Republic
1978 Cinema We Haven't Seen for Decades; Cinema as an Expression of National Culture; Cinema by Women
1979 The Cinema of Nationalities
1980 Stanley Kubrick; José María Berzosa
1981 Brazilian Cinema; Spanish Cinema from the 40s; Spanish Cartoons
1982 Rainer Werner Fassbinder; Leopoldo Torre Nilsson; Roberto Rossellini
1983 The Other Road 2; The Door of the Orient 2
1984 Richard Burton; Cinema and Video
1985 Roman Chalbaud; Ashes and Diamonds; The Vietnam War on Screen
1986 The Guys in the Photo; Luise Rainer
1987 Robert Siodmak; Forgotten Films; Chile
1988 Jacques Tourneur; ABC of Latin America; You Only Live Once
1989 James Whale; All Kieslowski; Great Latin American Melodramas
1990 Harry d’Abbadie d’Arrast
1991 Richard Attenborough; Every Way… or Some Way? (5th Centenary of Ignatius of Loyola); Kurier
1992 The Other Shore; Welcome, Mr. Cassavetes
1993 William A. Wellman; The Best 100 Years; Chicano Cinema
1994 William Dieterle; The Best 100 Years (and 2): The European Adventure; John Sayles
1995 Gregory La Cava; The Best 100 Years (and 3): The Shop Around the Corner; Hou Hsiao-Hsien
1996 Tod Browning; The Red Nightmare; Eloy de la Iglesia
1997 Mitchell Leisen; A Long Absence; Getting to Know Peter Bogdanovich
1998 Mikio Naruse; Hunger, Humour and Fantasy; Terry Gilliam
1999 John M. Stahl; The Boom Italian-Style; Bertrand Tavernier
2000 Carol Reed; The TV Generation; Bernardo Bertolucci
2001 Frank Borzage; It Happened Yesterday; Getting to Know Otar Iosseliani
2002 Michael Powell; 50 from the 50s; Volker Schlöndorff
2003 Preston Sturges; Michael Winterbottom
2004 Anthony Mann; Woody Allen
2005 Robert Wise; Rebellious and Untamed; Abel Ferrara
2006 Ernst Lubitsch; Emigrants; Barbet Schroeder
2007 Henry King; Cold Fever; Philippe Garrel
2008 Mario Monicelli; Terence Davies; Japan in Black: Japanese Film Noir
2009 Backwash: The Cutting-Edge of French Cinema; Richard Brooks
2010 New Paths of Non-Fiction; Don Siegel
2011 America Way of Death: American Film Noir 1920–2010; Digital Shadows: Last Generation Chinese Film; Jacques Demy
2012 Very Funny Things: New American Comedy; In Progress: Ten Years with Latin American Cinema; Georges Franju
2013 ANIMATOPIA: New Paths of Animation Cinema; Nagisa Oshima
2014 Eastern Promises: Portrait of Eastern Europe in 50 Films; Dorothy Arzner
2015 New Japanese Independent Cinema 2000–2015; Merian C. Cooper & Ernest B. Schoedsack
2016 The Act of Killing: Cinema and Global Violence; Jacques Becker
2017 Joseph Losey
2018 Muriel Box
2019 Roberto Gavaldón
2021 Flowers in Hell: The Golden Age of Korean Cinema
2022 Claude Sautet
2023 Hiroshi Teshigahara
2024 Violent Italy: Italian Crime Films
2025 Lillian Hellman
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
Friday, 2 June 2023
Wednesday, 31 May 2023
Rouben Mamoulian, Lost and Found (André S. Labarthe, 2016)
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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.