Overview of articles
-
Little Flower
Wound up to a maximum fever pitch, fusing melodrama, romance and war epic, Little Flower is a big movie in every sense. Joan Chen became…Published on: -
The Man from London
Plesently slow, moody and – for Tarr – short film version of Simenon’s crime novel from 1933, shot in glorious black & white by Fred…Published on: -
Junk Films: The Collected Short Shockumentaries of Tsurisaki Kiyotaka
Without wanting to scare anyone off, a warning is not out of place with this film. Tsurisaki is a photographer and filmmaker who has specialised…Published on: -
The Band’s Visit
An Egyptian police band arrives in Israel for an initiation ceremony but gets stranded at the airport. In the heart of the desert, in a…Published on: -
Casting a Glance
The master of the American landscape film focuses his unique cinematographic eye on the famous landscape work of art Spiral Jetty (1970) by Robert SmiPublished on: -
The Golden Age of Fish
The film maker follows a black geologist through Cleveland, Ohio. But his real theme in this poetic documentary – yes, apparently documentaries can alPublished on: -
Camhead
Camhead is a man with a security-camera for a head. He feels rejected by everyone but when he visits an illegal party in the Rotterdam…Published on: -
The Tenants
After buying a new house, a young couple discovers that they aren’t the only ones living inside.Published on: -
The Finite
The Finite lays bare the ephemeral and fast fleeting nature of family, home and life on earth.Published on: -
The Wooden Lightbox: A Secret Art of Seeing
Proto-cinema artist Alex MacKenzie moves among the audience with his wooden projection equipment.Published on: