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Nagisa Ôshima – Ai no korîda AKA In the Realm of the Senses (1976)

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Based upon a true incident in 1930s Japan, Nagisa Oshima’s controversial film effectively skirts the borderline between pornography and art — making Bernardo Bertolucci’s Last Tango in Paris of four years earlier look like children’s programming in comparison. The story concerns servant and former prostitute Sada Abe (Eiko Matsuda) who becomes sexually obsessed with her employer Kizicho (Tatsuya Fuji), a businessman, after seeing him making love to his wife. After making love to Sada, Kizicho becomes obsessed with her as well. As their love-making becomes more and more intense, they find themselves unable to separate themselves from each other, until every waking hour is spent in more and more dangerous sexual acts with Sada becoming more and more of the aggressor. Finally, for the ultimate in eroticism, Kizicho agrees to be strangled during sexual ecstasy for the ultimate in orgasmic fulfillment.





http://nitroflare.com/view/A695DD953BC2072/Nagisa_Oshima_-_%281976%29_In_the_Realm_Of_the_Senses.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/34655eee92bda/Nagisa_Oshima_-_%281976%29_In_the_Realm_Of_the_Senses.mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English


Gianluigi Calderone – Appassionata (1974)

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Two teenage friends, Eugenia (Ornella Muti) and Nicola (Eleonora Giorgi) conspire to find out how much their youthful sensuality can disrupt one of their households, headed by a dentist, Dr. Emilio Rutelli (Gabriele Ferzetti) and his mentally-ill wife Elisa (Valentina Cortese).

Chronicling the competition of two nubile girls who attempt to seduce the patriarch of a household, Gianluigi Calderone’s movie didn’t shy away from depicting such forbidden subjects as incest or the early sexual awakening of teenagers. This disturbing story was made more all the sensual by the lush underscore of Piero Piccioni. “Valzer di Valentina” (Valentina’ waltz) is one of hist most famous themes.





http://nitroflare.com/view/2950128C91A28E4/Appassionata.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/b674aa5737411/Appassionata.mp4

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English (poor translation), Spanish

Danièle Huillet & Jean-Marie Straub – Moses und Aron (1975)

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In expressive, melodic tones, the fraternal pair debate God’s true message and intent for His creations, a conflict that leads their followers – in extravagantly choreographed song and dance – towards chaos and sin.

Quote:
Moses and Aaron finds Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet, through their exemplary craft, transforming a familiar Biblical tale into a borderline-surreal cinematic opera of seemingly endless possibility. In expressive, melodic tones, the fraternal pair debate God’s true message and intent for His creations, a conflict that leads their followers — in extravagantly choreographed song and dance — towards chaos and sin. Set almost entirely within a Roman amphitheater whose history lends every precise line-reading and gesture, every startling camera move and cut, a totalizing force, Straub-Huillet’s adaptation of Schoenberg’s unfinished opera opens us to the stimulating worldview of a filmmaking duo whose masterful efforts are finally coming to light.










http://nitroflare.com/view/A8F365512681EB5/Moses_und_Aron_Jean_Marie_Straub__Daniele_Huillet_1975.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/03484fec50138/Moses_und_Aron_%28Jean-Marie_Straub___Dani%D1%86%E2%95%97le_Huillet%2C_1975%29.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

Yoshimasa Ishibashi – Oh! Mikey Hard Core (2005)

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Welcome to the world of the Fuccon Family, aka Oh Mikey!, a bizarre and amazing mannequin drama that has taken Japan by storm. Based on a popular independent film, OH! Mikey is the bizarre and hilarious story of the Fuccon family, who have come from America to live in Japan, despite the fact that they are mannequins.
Some episodes of the series were a little too spicy to air, and determined unfit for airing and were cut from the broadcast version. However, these cut scenes have been restored in HARDCORE where you get to see cut scenes from 8 different episodes.



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http://nitroflare.com/view/84CCC702C6839B1/Oh_Mikey_Hardcore.idx
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https://publish2.me/file/67f4028b8fe82/Oh_Mikey_Hardcore.mp4
https://publish2.me/file/b8b4272f3478f/Oh_Mikey_Hardcore.sub
https://publish2.me/file/339bd0b815837/Oh_Mikey_Hardcore.idx

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

Amir Naderi – Tangna AKA Strait (1973)

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Plot summary on imdb
Naderi’s second film is set in the slums of Tehran. Hanging out in a pool hall, Ali Khoshdast becomes involved in a brawl with three brothers, and accidently kills one of them. He runs for his life, eventually taking refuge in the home of a young woman. The victim’s brothers continue the chase, and finally close in on him. Following the murder, streets, alleys and houses that were all part of Ali’s everyday world suddenly become dangerous and hostile. Although in many ways a classic tale of revenge, Naderi uses this story to imply that an underlying violence pervades society, ready to burst forth with or without justification. Written by Anonymous










http://nitroflare.com/view/6AD51D1B8C9A62D/19730000_-_Tangna_%28Strait%29_%28Amir_Naderi%2C_1973%29.avi

https://publish2.me/file/de911ff113b94/19730000_-_Tangna_%28Strait%29_%28Amir_Naderi%2C_1973%29.mp4

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:None

Masaki Kobayashi – Kaidan AKA Kwaidan [uncut] [+commentary] (1964)

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For a film so widely and indelibly remembered, Masaki Kobayashi’s Kwaidan has confounded a surprising number of critics over the years. Ever since its release in 1965, there have been those who have found it too long, too artificial, too self-consciously exotic, not socially minded enough for the director of The Human Condition (1959–61) and Harakiri (1962), not scary or gory enough to qualify as a horror film. To be sure, this four-part adaptation of four renowned ghost stories by Lafcadio Hearn—not quite comparable to any other film, regardless of genre or country of origin, and unique in Kobayashi’s oeuvre—defies easy categorization. That is perhaps why it has remained for countless viewers such a singular experience, clinging to memory like an unshakable dream, a glimpse into some alternate zone where light falls differently on faces, time moves by a different measure, and terror blends disturbingly with beauty.

In its day, it was the most expensive Japanese film to date, shot almost entirely on hand-painted sets built in an airplane hangar, the only space big enough to accommodate them. The meticulousness of the production is evident in every frame: there is not a leaf or a piece of fabric or a dust trace on a worn floorboard that is not visibly the result of intensive consideration and labor. The whole film feels made by hand, a quality not ordinarily associated with a production epic both in length (restored for this release to its full 183-minute running time) and in the spatial dimensions of the TohoScope screen. The elaborateness of Kwaidan’s artifice is not concealed. On the contrary, right from the first liquid swirls of primary-colored ink that wash across the screen, we are invited to savor the sensory delights of every hue, every movement, every unfolding pattern. On repeated viewings, the spectator becomes aware of further layers of mirroring and repetition and counterpoint, of seasonal shifts and contrasting colors, of insistent images, whether of an opening gate or an abandoned pair of sandals, recurring in different contexts.

Such openly acknowledged artificiality has deep roots in Japanese art, and most prominently in Japanese theatrical traditions. It was the eighteenth-century Bunraku playwright Monzaemon Chikamatsu, in discussing the aesthetics of the puppet theater, who described art as “something that lies in the slender margin between the real and the unreal.” Kwaidan was following closely on such notable cinematic experiments as Akira Kurosawa’s Throne of Blood (1957), with its grafting of Noh performance style to the period action film, Keisuke Kinoshita’s The Ballad of Narayama (1958), with its painted landscapes, and Kon Ichikawa’s An Actor’s Revenge (1963), with its jarringly garish color effects. Kobayashi had trained as a painter before beginning his career as a filmmaker, and in the progression from earlier, more naturalistic work like Black River (1957) through the monumental compositions of The Human Condition and the more extreme stylization of his first period film, Harakiri, he seems to have moved quite deliberately toward the almost hermetically controlled visual and aural world of Kwaidan.

The aural dimension was entrusted to the great composer Toru Takemitsu, whose hundred or so film scores include—aside from his other collaborations with Kobayashi—ones for major works by Kurosawa, Nagisa Oshima, Hiroshi Teshigahara, Masahiro Shinoda, Ichikawa, and Shohei Imamura. Takemitsu’s contribution to Kwaidan can hardly be overestimated. He once stated that “timing is the most crucial element in film music: where to place the music, where to end it, how long or how short it should be,” and from the opening moments of Kwaidan’s first episode—as the camera moves through and then soars above the dilapidated gate of a ruined dwelling, proceeding to glide through the house’s uninhabited interiors in a series of voluptuous forward movements, as if it were calmly swallowing great gulps of empty space—our perception is already being shaped by the creaks and cracks and muffled slams and whooshes of wind on Takemitsu’s soundtrack. Kwaidan’s atmosphere is fully established before a single character has appeared on-screen. His musique concrète, compounded of jangling plucks and tweets and a hundred other not-quite-identifiable sounds, is defined as much by its silences as by its never predictable accents. Of the making of the soundtrack, Takemitsu remarked: “I wanted to create an atmosphere of terror. But if the music is constantly saying, ‘Watch out! Be scared!’ then all the tension is lost. It’s like sneaking up behind someone to scare them. First, you have to be silent. Even a single sound can be film music . . . We used real wood for effects. I’d ask for a cra-a-a-ck sound, and they’d split a plank of wood, or rip it apart, or rend it with a knife. Using all these wood sounds, I assembled the track.” What we get is the sound of a constant, tormented undermining of the world Kobayashi’s characters think they inhabit.

That world is an exotic one. It could hardly be otherwise given the nature of the source material. The life and work of Lafcadio Hearn (1850–1904) are something of a case study in exoticism, with Hearn the quintessential man without a country: born to a Greek mother and an Irish father, set adrift at an early age among unsympathetic relatives, absorbing the aesthetic directives of French romanticism while enduring the dreary rigors of a Catholic boarding school in Normandy, shipped off to the United States, where he remade himself as a chronicler of black culture in the American South and in the Caribbean—and finally reinventing himself once more in Japan, marrying a woman from a samurai family (while concealing the traces of an earlier biracial marriage in America), converting to Buddhism, and establishing himself as a world-famous interpreter of Japanese culture and folklore, while remaining only modestly capable of reading Japanese.

By a circuitous process, his literary versions of Japanese folktales, some of which had not previously been written down, and to which he added his own European literary flourishes, became part of Japanese literature under his adopted name, Yakumo Koizumi. Hearn’s books—of which Kobayashi’s film draws on Shadowings (1900), Kotto (1902), and Kwaidan (1904)—were calculated to appeal to a Western appetite for the mysteries of “ghostly Japan”; but they were also, it might be supposed, to some degree exotic to a Japanese readership then in the midst of the modernizing Meiji period. That era too, in light of all the cataclysms that followed, had by 1965 acquired its own patina of nostalgic myth. Myth within myth, then, exoticism within exoticism: for Kwaidan, the whole of the past is itself something of a supernatural phenomenon, an unreality to which we yet remain inescapably tied, a ghost story from which no one can entirely awake.

The first three stories Kobayashi chose to include all involve broken vows, broken not through conscious malevolence but through what seem like unavoidable circumstances: in “The Black Hair,” a promise made to a wife; in “The Woman of the Snow,” to a spirit; and in the film’s dazzling centerpiece, “Hoichi the Earless,” to a whole phantom army. The brief final episode, “In a Cup of Tea,” ends the film on a note of bizarre comedy. These are not tales that point to any obvious moral other than the danger of venturing, deliberately or by accident, beyond the invisible barriers that mark the limits of the human world. What lies beyond those barriers is the domain of supernatural terror, but it is also the domain of art. In Kwaidan, beauty is not decoration but a direct link to unknown and perilous realms.

Hearn’s four original stories run to a total of thirty-seven pages in their first, large-type printings. These skeletal anecdotes expand under Kobayashi’s treatment into dense and multileveled experiences, in which great stretches of time are compressed. In “The Black Hair,” an impoverished samurai leaves his wife, remarries into a more socially elevated family, and moves to a distant province in the service of a feudal lord. The years of his absence are marked by discontent in his new marriage and deepening regret for the woman he abandoned. In his imagination, he returns again and again to their former home, the camera repeating the same probing movement, as if nudging in frustration against temporal limits, pushing forward and then forced to pull back. When he does finally get back to where he started out, we are once again enmeshed in the movement with which the episode began, moving toward the light in the far room where the first wife sits at her loom. Here time slows down, every second of the longed-for reunion seeming stretched out, until the inevitable revelation that turns it all to horror and decay.

The straight-out horror ending of “The Black Hair” gives way in “The Woman of the Snow” to a fairy-tale atmosphere whose entirely fabricated loveliness, all painted moon and artificial snow, in no way impedes a deepening mood of menacing uncanniness. A young woodcutter’s encounter with a snow spirit culminates in her threatening him with doom should he ever speak of their meeting. Once again years go by, a whole rural lifetime of courtship and parenthood and contented domestic life passing before us, until he is put to the test. At Kwaidan’s Cannes premiere, this episode was omitted, depriving the film of a crucial emotional register: the suggestion of a forbidden love uniting the natural and supernatural worlds. The woodcutter’s failure to adhere to his vow is a mark of his human weakness, and the departure of the loved being—radiant in blue light for a suspended moment before she vanishes forever—is as heartbreaking as it is chilling. The emotionally warmest chapter is suffused with images of snow.

These two seem but preludes to the film’s most overpowering segment. In “Hoichi the Earless”—the famous story of a blind biwa-playing monk unwittingly summoned to perform for the dead—the collapsing of time takes on extravagant proportions. An opening shot shows us the waters where the decisive battle of Dan-no-ura was fought between the Heike and Genji clans in the late twelfth century, as recounted in the epic Heike monogatari (The Tale of the Heike). That shot, dissonant because it gives us an abrupt glimpse of a real world outside the film studio (as if we might have forgotten), fades in to a scroll painting of the battle, in which the Heike were destroyed along with the infant emperor and his mother. Smoke swirls in front of the painted images, which are now intercut with enacted scenes of the battle, filmed in such lurid light as to seem more animation than live action, especially since the actors move with the ritual slowness of Bunraku puppets in full military regalia. Here the classical recitation and biwa playing adds a new dimension to the soundtrack. The chanting of the traditional chronicle becomes the central pulse for the duration of the chapter.

An episode that begins on such a visually gaudy note only becomes stormier and more menacing as it goes on. The young musician Hoichi sits playing his biwa in the courtyard of the monastery when the voice of a dead warrior calls out to him. This summoning of the blind mortal by the invisible dead signals the point of entry into a forbidden place. The music is the link between them, and it sustains a sense of continuity even while the images crosscut wildly between worlds—the painted battle, the filmed battle, the unreal pavilion in which the ghosts sit listening to the recitation, the cemetery in which the action is actually taking place—as the mist swirls, the rain pours in torrents, the ghosts suffer their dying once again, and hellish flames burn on all sides. It is all quite exhilarating and at the same time insidiously disturbing. The terrors evoked are of the oldest kind; the fear is that the horrors and unassuageable sorrows of those ancient massacres might once more come fully to life. Here Kobayashi goes far beyond the quaint antiquarian tone of Hearn’s story; the ordeal of the blind musician has laid bare an age-old cauldron of sorrows. The realm of the supernatural becomes an extension of those inescapable hierarchies and historic injustices that Kobayashi had charted in his earlier films, and to which he would return. (One of his last works, 1983’s Tokyo Trial, was a lengthy documentary on the Tokyo war crimes trials.)

Kwaidan remains distinct among Kobayashi’s films in its exploration of parallel realities. No one who has contemplated his nightmarish distillation of wartime experience in The Human Condition or the grueling rigor with which he exposed feudal codes in Harakiri and Samurai Rebellion (1967) would think of him as an artist inclined toward escapist fantasy. And indeed the three main stories of Kwaidan offer no escape. The gorgeousness of their painted skies and otherworldly color schemes, the transparent unreality of everything we see, all the bravura touches of stylization, only emphasize that one may travel to the farthest reaches of the imagination only to find at last a great and terrifying void. (Kwaidan’s fusion of transcendent beauty and icy cosmic emptiness—its creation of spaces both vast and hermetic—sometimes calls to mind 2001: A Space Odyssey or The Shining. One can well imagine Stanley Kubrick paying close attention to what Kobayashi achieved here.)

The whimsically unsettling “In a Cup of Tea,” Kwaidan’s deliberately unfinished coda, sets up a paradoxical game involving a disembodied yet apparently life-threatening reflection in the tea that a samurai is about to drink. Finally, the storyteller disappears into his own story, becoming himself another reflection, as if the only way to escape from this counterworld is by way of a tale that omits any final explanation by simply flinging itself down like an empty cup.









http://nitroflare.com/view/A690B0B879715D2/Masaki_Kobayashi_-_%281964%29_Kwaidan.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/3b251af081cd7/Masaki_Kobayashi_-_%281964%29_Kwaidan.mp4

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

Marco Martins – São Jorge AKA Saint George (2016)

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From TMDB:
In 2011 Portugal began the so-called “year of the Troika” (EU, IMF and ECB budget cuts and economic restructuring), with the level of debt among the Portuguese people reaching staggering amounts and a growing number of families and companies unable to repay their installment loans. Jorge is an unemployed boxer on the verge of losing his son and his wife, who has decided to return to Brazil. As a means of paying off his debt and persuading his wife to remain in Portugal, Jorge accepts a job with a debt-collection agency, which will drag him into a world of violence and crime.




http://nitroflare.com/view/CF7916E7B73F9C5/Sao.Jorge.2016.DVDRip.x264-PODRE.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/472a98da45275/Sao.Jorge.2016.DVDRip.x264-PODRE.mp4

Language(s):Portuguese
Subtitles:English

Alain Resnais – Coeurs AKA Private Fears In Public Places (2006)

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Private Fears in Public Places, (French: Cœurs (“Hearts”), is a 2006 French film directed by Alain Resnais. It was adapted from Alan Ayckbourn’s play Private Fears in Public Places. The film won several awards, including a Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival.

Synopsis:
In Paris, six people all look for love, despite typically having their romantic aspirations dashed at every turn.

For the second time in his career Alain Resnais turned to an Alan Ayckbourn play for his source material (having previously adapted another play for Smoking/No Smoking), and remained close to the original structure while transferring the setting and milieu from provincial England to the 13th arrondissement of Paris (contrary to his usual preference).

The film consists of over 50 short scenes, usually featuring two characters – occasionally three or just one. Scenes are linked by dissolves featuring falling snow, a device similar to one which Resnais previously used in L’Amour à mort (1984).

Several of Resnais’s regular actors appear in the film (Arditi, Azéma, Dussollier, Wilson), and he was joined by his longstanding technical collaborators in design and editing, but he worked for the first time with cinematographer Éric Gautier.

The fictional TV programmes called “Ces chansons qui ont changé ma vie” which feature in the film were directed by Bruno Podalydès.

Nicole (Laura Morante) is looking for a new apartment for herself and her fiancé Dan (Lambert Wilson), who has recently been fired from his position as a career soldier. She is very critical of him for not being more aggressive in finding work. Nicole’s real estate agent, Thierry (Andre Dussollier), is a cheerful man who is quite taken with the quiet beauty of his co-worker Charlotte (Sabine Azema), a Christian who lends him a videotape of her favorite religious program that features theologians and artists talking about the hymns and songs they love most. Thierry is shocked and turned on when the tape also includes some scenes of Charlotte doing erotic moves.

Dan, an alcoholic, spends most of his time in a hotel bar confessing his sadness to Lionel (Pierre Arditi) whose ailing and bed-ridden father causes him heartache with his bellicose behavior. He hires Charlotte to look after him in the evenings when he works; she revels in the challenge and comes up with her own special solution to soothe the old man’s anger and rage. Thierry’s shy and lonely sister Gaelle (Isabelle Carre) goes out each night in an attempt to hook up with the right man and eventually connects with Dan, who has taken a mutually-agreed upon break from Nicole. They are both pleasantly surprised to meet each other through a dating service.

Private Fears in Public Places is based on a play by Alan Ayckbourn. The French film director Alan Resnais seems to be having a lark with this light-hearted study of urban loneliness. In an interview he has stated:

“What struck me when I read the play was the characters’ constant determination to shake off their solitude, with all the obstacles that implies. The sense of solitude is irreversible. There’s no cure for the desire not to be alone. It’s the eternal quest for happiness. It’s easy to believe it’s within your grasp and hard to accept that it is a figment of your imagination.”

There is a chill in the air and snow as these characters reach out for each other and struggle with their private demons. The most mysterious and fascinating character is Charlotte who reads the Bible when stressed out and believes that the Devil is always at work tempting her to do the things that express her hidden sexual proclivities. She is the only one in the drama who truly shows a compassionate nature.

This stylish and sensitive drama about the furtive quest for love by six Parisians is well worth experiencing.
by Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat – spiritualityandpractice.com






http://nitroflare.com/view/A4DDBC3242C83F5/Coeurs.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/3e3e009e5c116/Coeurs.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English Spanish


Paolo Taviani & Vittorio Taviani – Cesare deve morire (2012)

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The performance of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar comes to an end and the performers are rewarded with rapturous applause. The lights go out; the actors leave the stage and return to their cells. They are all inmates of the Roman maximum security prison Rebibbia. One of them comments: ‘Ever since I discovered art this cell has truly become a prison’.

Filmmakers Paolo and Vittorio Taviani spent six months following rehearsals for this stage production; their film demonstrates how the universality of Shakespeare’s language helps the actors to understand their roles and immerse themselves in the bard’s interplay of friendship and betrayal, power, dishonesty and violence. This documentary does not dwell on the crimes these men have committed in their ‘real’ lives; rather, it draws parallels between this classical drama and the world of today, describes the commitment displayed by all those involved and shows how their personal hopes and fears also flow into the performance.

After the premiere the cell doors slam shut behind Caesar, Brutus and the others. These men all feel proud and strangely touched, as if the play has somehow revealed to them the depths of their own personal history.






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https://publish2.me/file/ae72c7d65f969/Cesare_deve_morire.sub

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:Italian,English

Luc Béraud – Plein sud AKA Heat of Desire (1981)

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In France in the near future, revolt and chaos erupt. A right-wing politician, Philippe Muphand, is set to take control when his lady friend Caroline walks out, announcing she will take up with the first fool she sees. The fool is Serge Laine, a professor and author of the prize-winning “Le voyage qui ne finit pas,” headed to the train station for tickets to Barcelona where he and his wife will enjoy a second honeymoon and he will lecture at the university. Caroline seduces Serge, and he soon abandons wife, family, job, and honesty to embrace Caroline, the romanticism of Jack London, and murder.







http://nitroflare.com/view/78CC6C8E68F9EB9/Luc_Beraud_-_%281981%29_Heat_of_Desire.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/ca2d6f258cfc4/Luc_Beraud_-_%281981%29_Heat_of_Desire.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

Lev Kuleshov – Velikiy uteshitel aka The Great Consoler (1933)

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The Great Consoler is Lev Kuleshov’s most personal film reflecting both the facts of his life and his thoughts about the place of the artist in contemporary reality. It was the only film in the Soviet cinema of those years that raised the question of what role a creative person played in society.

The film takes place in America in 1899, and in its principal plot depicts Bill Porter, who is the great consoler of the title, in prison. His writing skills earn him privileges from the governor and he is spared the inhumane treatment meted out to other prisoners. Porter is very much aware of the brutality around him but, mindful of his better conditions, refuses to write about prison life. He prefers to console his less-well-treated friends, and indeed all his readers, with excessively romantic fantasies in which good invariably triumphs.

One of these stories, “The Metamorphosis of James Valentine,” creates an alter-ego for a wrongly imprisoned convict friend, who suffers the worst injustices of the prison and is dying of tuberculosis. The story flatters Valentine with an unrealistic degree of attractiveness, charm and intelligence. With his endless optimism, Porter tries to make this story come true by brokering a deal between the governor and Valentine, which will give the latter a pardon. The governor, however, deceives Valentine, who dies in prison. Furious, Valentine’s friend, Al, starts a riot and the film closes with Porter’s admission that his artistic philosophy has failed.

The film is nominally based on three text sources: a biography of the American author O Henry by his fellow prisoner, Al Jennings, Beating Back: Through the Shadows with O Henry, and two works by O Henry himself, “A Retrieved Reformation” and “An Unfinished Story.” O Henry was the nom de plume of William Porter and there is a character who appears under both names in the film.[13] Al Jennings also plays a role in the character of Al.








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Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English, Francais, Deutsch, Italiano

Michel Mardore – Le mariage à la mode (1973)

Lukas Valenta Rinner – Los decentes AKA A Decent Woman (2016)

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A housemaid working in an exclusive gated community in the outskirts of Buenos Aires embarks on a journey of sexual and mental liberation in a nudist swinger-club.

Nodding to Greek Weird Wave’s godfather Lanthimos and Austrian provocateur Seidl, Valenta Rinner finds a voice of his own depicting Argentina’s class tensions in this hilariously deadpan social satire. A perfect blend of mordant humour, formal meticulousness, eccentric anarchy and nudist tableaux.








http://nitroflare.com/view/8A54996A74BFDAF/Los.decentes.AKA.A.Decent.Woman.2016.720p.FANDOR.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/1ead930c804a8/Los.decentes.AKA.A.Decent.Woman.2016.720p.FANDOR.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mp4

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:English [Hard]

Nejc Gazvoda – Izlet AKA A Trip (2011)

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Quote:
Ziva, Andrej and Gregor are best friends since high school. Gregor is a soldier who is about to embark on a mission to Afghanistan and Ziva is going to study abroad. Andrej is their gay friend who hates everything, himself included. They decide to go to a road trip to the seaside like they did when they were in high school. When they arrive, they get drunk and Ziva and Gregor kiss each other, what brings tension to their relationship, while Andrej doesn’t know anything and just makes fun of everything, mostly of Gregor and his army ideals. The conflict erupts when Ziva, in a fit of rage, destroys their tent and tells a secret that enrages Andrej. Only then the true problem is revealed – Ziva is not going to study abroad, she was lying because she didn’t want to pity her.









http://nitroflare.com/view/85A839ADCE5CC22/Nejc_Gazvoda_-_%282011%29_A_Trip.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/af255d888fc52/Nejc_Gazvoda_-_%282011%29_A_Trip.mkv
>https://publish2.me/file/af255d888fc52/Nejc_Gazvoda_-_%282011%29_A_Trip.mkv

Language(s):Slovenian
Subtitles:Croatian, English

Eduardo Williams – El auge del humano AKA The Human Surge (2016)

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Quote:
An ingeniously shape-shifting debut from director Eduardo Williams, The Human Surge looks at today’s idle youth in an age of exploitative labour practices and illusory hyper-connection, observing the millennials, we journey through 3-countries, mostly young men in disparate parts of the world who are bored by (or released from) their jobs, experimenting with technology and seeking fulfillment elsewhere.

Buenos Aires. Young Exe, has just lost his job and is not looking for another one. His neighbors and friends seem as odd to him as they always do. Online, he meets Alf, a boy from Mozambique. He joins the world webcam community in supply of live on demand group sex performances for the western gay male clients. Alf who is also bored with his job and who is about to follow Archie, another boy who has run away into the jungle. Through the dense vegetation of the forest, Archie tracks ants back to their nest. One of them wanders off course and comes across Canh, a Filipino, sitting on top of a giant who is about to go back to his strange, beautiful home town.

The winner of the Golden Leopard for best film in the Current Filmmakers section at this year’s Locarno Festival, The Human Surge is unquestionably one of the year’s most distinctive and accomplished first features.








http://nitroflare.com/view/F258BB025B5684D/Eduardo_Williams_-_%282016%29_The_Human_Surge.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/17f7c53fde850/Eduardo_Williams_-_%282016%29_The_Human_Surge.mkv

Language(s):Spanish, Portuguese, Visayan
Subtitles:English


Niles Atallah – Rey (2017)

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In the nineteenth century, a French adventurer sets off to establish a kingdom in the inhospitable South of Chile, uniting the feared Mapuche under him. The response of the Chilean army is devastating. Rey is both an intricately designed adventure film as well as powerful textural experiment.

We’re excited to present, in synch with its cinema release, this phantasmagorical gem of a film. An unconventional and kaleidoscopic biopic that plays with history, myth and memory attesting to the endless possibilities of cinema. Strikingly beautiful, gloriously decadent and delectably avant-garde.









http://nitroflare.com/view/9F73E4BAA610C31/Rey.2017.720p.MUBI.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/6ea95bce60880/Rey.2017.720p.MUBI.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mp4

Language(s):Spanish
Subtitles:English [Hard]

John Ford – The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)

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Review:
There are arguably no bigger cinematic icons of America than John Wayne – the right wing side of America steeped in violence and guns, and James Stewart – the left wing side of America rooted in humanity, understanding and intelligence. And there is arguably no finer chronicler of America’s mythology and past than John Ford. Put them together and you get one of the finest westerns ever made.

When high ranking senator Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart)returns to the town of Shinbone after many years away in Washington, it is with a great deal of surprise. After being put under pressure by the local newspaper he reveals that he is there for the funeral of an old friend, Tom Doniphon (John Wayne), and he begins to tell the story of how their lives intertwined when Ransom first came to town.

Ransom was a young lawyer travelling through Shinbone when his carriage was held up by the notorious bandit Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin), who deals out a brutal horsewhipping to him when he refuses to back down. Recovering in the local saloon, Ransom vows to bring Valance to justice using all the legal means at his disposal despite the fact that Valance has the town in a grip of fear and the local Marshall, Appleyard (the Foghorn Leghorn voiced Andy Devine), is a fat lazy coward. This is highly amusing to Tom, a local rancher and tough guy who wants nothing more than a quiet life and to marry local girl Hallie (Vera Miles). Tom admires the fact that Ransom is principled and resolute in his beliefs, but also knows that if you want to defy Valance you don’t do it with books, you do it with a gun – an action that Ransom won’t consider. It’s a clash of idealism against pragmatism.

John Ford is never happier than when at home with a western. Despite the fact that none of his four Oscars came for a western, it fits him like a well worn glove, and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance has the tang of authenticity throughout. You can taste the strong liquor, smell the sawdust and practically feel the horse leather underneath your hands. He litters the film with marvellous small details such as Tom lighting cigarettes from a lamp or Appleyard’s ever growing slate of free meals, and blackly comic dialogue (“Pompy, go find doc Willoughby – and if he’s sober, bring ‘im back!”). This all ties together to create a western that could only be created by someone who knows the genre inside out. Ford’s sense of playfulness and creativity still comes through however. The horsewhipping scenes are unflinchingly horrific, the revelation of Valance and his men from a newly lit lamp is a touch of noir, and there’s a standoff between Valance and Tom that you only realise is tense because when it’s over you finally remember to breath.

Like another of Ford’s masterpieces, The Searchers, this isn’t just a simple western however. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is an intelligent and thought provoking dissection of American history and western mythology. Ransom seems to be a man out of time as he is bewildered to discover that Shinbone is a town still ran by the gun and not by the law. This continues when he discovers that barely anyone can read here and no-one has taken up the option to vote either. This isn’t to say that Ford either favours Ransom’s point of view nor disagrees completely with it. As Hallie snaps at Ransom, what good are all his books when he’s wearing an apron as he helps out around the saloon? And Tom is always on hand to point out that Valance is a man who will never reach for a book, but a gun, and it’s pointless to try and escape that fact. But Ford doesn’t automatically side with Tom either. As Ransom’s attempts to set up a school and a council gather pace, Tom is increasingly left on the outside too. There are those who may not know who Valance’s eventual shooter is, so let’s just say that it’s as poignant as it is thrilling. Ideals of any kind are a great thing to have, but an even harder thing to cling onto.

This kind of social rumination is easily identified by the casting of Wayne against Stewart. Stewart’s character tends to pontificate, and even patronise as he finds out when he is incredulous at Hallie’s lack of education, but it’s because of Stewart’s natural authority, dignity and class, that he can sell such a highly principled character without making him sanctimonious. His natural flow of dialogue is keenly used here, as is his innate comic timing, such as when his lanky frame doesn’t quite fit around the debating table in the saloon. Miles is also excellent, and Marvin is a truly evil villain. The kind of vile bully that swaggers around feeling untouchable, we may know his fate from the film title, but Marvin makes it a fate truly deserving that we savour keenly.

Yet it’s John Wayne’s performance that lingers longest. Strutting through the film with an amused grin on his face, Wayne is as at home as Ford is and it shows with his character – standing still as a statue in an argument over a dropped steak with Valance, Tom lashes out with one leg to send one of Valance’s men flying, yet never lets his posture drop or break sweat. It’s a deceptively fast movement that you’d never expect from the always deliberately paced Wayne. By the end however, as events reach their climax, it’s clear that it is Tom who is the soul of the film. Left on the outside by the end as much as Ransom was at the beginning, Tom is a clear indicator that times were changing and civilisation was starting to take root in America. Men like Tom had to either adapt or be left behind and Wayne epitomises that brilliantly. He never had the greatest range as an actor, but he could find shades and subtle facets in his characters that he doesn’t get enough praise for. The Man who Shot Liberty Valance is an unexpectedly elegaic film, and it is through Wayne that we feel it.

Crammed full of comic incident, wonderful characters (look out for Lee Van Cleef), nasty violence and dialogue to savour (“Gimme a beer! A beer’s not drinkin’!”), The Man who Shot Liberty Valance is a highmark of the genre. “A man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do” may have been a creed of Wayne’s, but it’s never been meant with as much poignancy and as much thought as it has here.






http://nitroflare.com/view/94965B60634EDC1/The.Man.Who.Shot.Liberty.Valance.720p.HDTV.x264-EmU.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/5b182f0f53f17/The.Man.Who.Shot.Liberty.Valance.720p.HDTV.x264-EmU.mp4

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Juruna Mallon & Lucas Parente – Satan Satie (2016)

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Erik Satie’s work is at the heart of modern music. However, who was Satie? An elusive genius or a visionary misanthrope? The film tries to sketch an identikit of the musician through his notes and the places he lived in. Musicologists mostly agree in describing Satie’s music as inhabited by voids and holes. The long pauses between one musical passage and the other are musical structures unto themselves; therefore, the filmmakers create a dissonant Satie-like universe in which empty spaces are adjacent to eloquent passages. Like a mysterious flower visible only to the eye that is willing to dance with its charm, the film unfolds little by little through mental associations and creative juxtapositions. There are no answers in the universe inhabited by the ghosts of Satie’s creations. Architectural forms and recollections from desires and acts of creative hubris compete to create a new world, which ultimately is the image of a new and more seductive pleasure principle. Satan Satie is a film that pushes against the boundaries of cinema.








http://nitroflare.com/view/A8D683EB85B39B9/Satan.Satie.2015.720p.DOCA.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/e5f70948e70ea/Satan.Satie.2015.720p.DOCA.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Cinefeel.mp4

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English [Hard]

Roberto Minervini – Low Tide (2012)

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Quote:
A 12 year old boy and his single mother live parallel lives. The boy spends his days alone while his mother works and goes out with her friends. The boy’s solitude is both a source of freedom and a cause for grief. His explorations slowly bring to light the dark contrast between the rules of society and the laws of nature. And before long, the delicate balance of his inner world becomes shattered by unforeseen events.






http://nitroflare.com/view/326405B5C6F73D5/Roberto_Minervini_-_%282012%29_Low_Tide.mkv

https://publish2.me/file/6081ed8b3e2f1/Roberto_Minervini_-_%282012%29_Low_Tide.mp4

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

David Lowery – A Ghost Story (2017)

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