Quantcast
Channel: Search Results for “nitroflare”– Cinema of the World
Viewing all 16494 articles
Browse latest View live

Joseph Losey – Time Without Pity (1957)

$
0
0

Quote:
One of the powerhouses of the 1950s, Time Without Pity is the first film that Joseph Losey signed with his own name after being blacklisted and fleeing the U.S. In effect, it’s the film in which Losey proclaimed himself a Brit, as eager and willing to skewer the establishment there as he had done on the other side of the Atlantic. It’s the one with Michael Redgrave, in a bravura performance, as the alcoholic father in a race against the clock to save his son, whom we know is innocent, from being executed for murder. The film takes aim at capital punishment.It does so unsteadily, it seems to me, and stridently, and its explanation of war—another blacklistee, Ben Barzman, wrote the script—is odd. A character says that the object of war is to defend one’s own life, not kill the enemy; but more often, battle by battle, it is to take and hold territory, which indeed requires killing the enemy that currently holds the territory. So there’s an entire aspect of the film that fails to convince me at least.
But the human drama! In a telling moment the father shouts out, “I am not a detective!”—and indeed he isn’t, but that is what he has to make himself into in order to try to save his son’s life. The whole adventure is emotionally spectacular as he stretches himself to the limit as only hours remain to find some tangible piece of evidence that might exonerate his son, and as he more than once, in despair, dips into the well of alcohol that had prevented him from being a responsive father in the past.
Redgrave is phenomenal. On the other hand, Leo McKern, as the father of the convicted boy’s best friend, is shrill and over the top. But McKern’s character is desperate, too. We are able thus to compare desperation with moral grace and desperation without it; one father loves his son, while the other loves only himself.
Joan Plowright: you will not believe your eyes, how young, how cute she is here—and magnificent as the murdered girl’s sister, who at first is hateful towards Redgrave’s character for the sake of her sister’s memory, but later, when it becomes obvious to her that the boy is innocent, so sincerely, humbly apologetic. (This is a 1957 film—that’s the year Plowright fell in with Larry O. on stage, playing his daughter in Osborne’s The Entertainer.) Ann Todd! This is wicked of Losey—a glorious inside joke. Todd, looking lovely, acts in a different key from everyone else: she gives a Hollywood performance, a fact underscored by the luminous closeups that Losey applies to her famous face. It’s a dig; it would be interesting to know whether Todd herself was in on it.
The narrative is resolved in a jaw-dropping manner, with a resolution that no one could possibly see coming. Indeed, although I had seen the film before, it came again as a surprise. What a finish!
Alec McCowen plays the boy who is headed for a hanging.
If you’ve been a neglectful or emotionally distant parent, be buoyed by the fact that, so long as your son or daughter hasn’t yet ascended the scaffold, redemption is possible. The father that Redgrave plays gives his all! (Correctly, the film leaves undetermined whether his monstrous/gracious ploy works.)
One thing more: the music in this film is madness! But it becomes one more distancing device in an unsentimental film by a man who had been mentored by Brecht himself. — Dennis Grunes.

2.71GB | 1 h 28 min | 960×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/148D4AF29012A81/Joseph_Losey_-_%281957%29_Time_Without_Pity.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/FAF82CF8E10A94D/Joseph_Losey_-_%281957%29_Time_Without_Pity.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/8C79B58B6A1E108/Joseph_Losey_-_%281957%29_Time_Without_Pity.part3.rar

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None


Denys Arcand – Le déclin de l’empire américain AKA The Decline of the American Empire (1986)

$
0
0

Quote:
Sexual revelations emerge when a group of academics and their partners spend a weekend at a country retreat.

Roger Ebert wrote:
Here is a movie where everybody talks about nothing but sex, and the real subject is wit. The movie takes place during a little more than 24 hours in the lives of some friends, who either work in the history department of a Canadian university, or sleep with people who do. They meet for dinner, and as they prepare and eat the food and drink the wine, they talk and talk about sex. But if you listen carefully, you will find that their real subject is not sex, but verbal cleverness, and that their real passion comes in the area of intellectual competition.

“The Decline of the American Empire” has been described, far and wide, as a French-Canadian version of “The Big Chill.” It reminded me more of “My Dinner With Andre.” It is about people whose private lives are mostly kept off-screen, so that we have to picture the adventures and exploits, the scandals and disappointments, as they describe them.

The movie is filled with words, lots of words, all of them in French with English subtitles. In a curious way, the subtitles are a bonus; they double the number of words contained in the movie, and underline the way that these intellectuals have been able to locate their sex lives mostly between their cerebral cortexes and their larynxes.

Sex itself is a very simple thing – so simple that it can be adequately discussed in such limited vocabularies and basic images as those used by Charles Bukowski or Henry Miller. But it is not the physical activity of sex that the characters in this movie are really talking about. They’re discussing the meaning of sex, the object of sex, the embarrassment and guilt, the ambition and silliness of sex. To them, as to so many civilized people, good sex boils down to winning the admiration of someone you admire. They’d rather have a mediocre time in bed with the right person than a great time with the wrong one.

Not all of the people in the movie are so distanced. The director and writer, Denys Arcand, first establishes all of the intellectuals and then introduces two characters who function as loose cannons below deck, so to speak. One is Mario, a rough, rude punk who turns up uninvited, looking for Diane, who is writing a book and does not seem at all the kind of woman to be attracted to such a clod. The other is Claude, a homosexual, who frankly confesses his hunger for dangerous sex with strangers. The appetites of Mario and Claude – and, by implication, Diane – are vaguely disturbing to the other characters, reminding them of a time long ago when their own sex drives were that urgent and compelling.

Meanwhile, however, they continue their verbal dance, trying to shock and surprise each other; top points go to the person who can put himself down while at the same time revealing what a fabulous person he really is. It turns out that not all of the people at the party have been faithful; some have cheated, and the revelations inspire the usual heartbreak and tears. Truth time is painful, but what’s fascinating is that the hurt comes from the words themselves: One character seems wounded not so much because her partner has been unfaithful as much as because he has chosen to tell her so.

The mistake, in viewing “The Decline of the American Empire,” is to think it’s about sex. It is really about what has replaced sex in our society – thinking and talking about sex. The movie is wise, deep, and painful, and it is filled with words. Used to be, a “sex film” contained lots of nudity and steamy scenes. That kind of stuff would just slow this one down.

2.57GB | 1 h 41 min | 1024×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/514DDFE8BF9B904/The.Decline.of.the.American.Empire.1986.576p.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/1710D0E150DC72E/The.Decline.of.the.American.Empire.1986.576p.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/0412EA848407E78/The.Decline.of.the.American.Empire.1986.576p.part3.rar

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French

Dominik Graf – Bittere Unschuld AKA Bitter Innocence (1999)

$
0
0

Bittere Unschuld AKA Bitter Innocence
Andreas Brandt is the head of the research department in a pharmaceutical company. He earns enough to build a future with his wife Monica and his daughter Eva. But a merger puts his position in jeopardy. Brandt randomly observes Larssen, who’s responsible for the merger, raping the waitress Vanessa. Instead of helping her, he takes a file which has previously been stolen by Larssen. It contains incriminating evidence against Larssen. Brandt tries to blackmail Larssen, but Larssen is capable to shift the buck back to Brandt. Slowly Brandt’s family becomes involved…

1.13GB | 1h 27mn | 624×352 | avi

https://nitroflare.com/view/8452C83B1447033/Dominik_Graf_-_Bittere_Unschuld_%281999%29.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/9434B79C48FA4FE/Dominik_Graf_-_Bittere_Unschuld_%281999%29.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/EE643030D00D372/Dominik_Graf_-_Bittere_Unschuld_%281999%29.srt

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

Nuri Bilge Ceylan – Iklimler aka Climates (2006)

$
0
0

Quote:
Turkish filmmaker Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s cinema studies alienation through mainly minimalist means. Since Clouds of May (Mayis Sikintisi) and Distant (Uzak), which won the Grand Prix and a double prize for Best Actor at Cannes, the most conspicuous trait that makes him an auteur is his personal touch. Emotional distances filled in with long silences and uncertainties on faces in close-ups, supported by beautifully shot landscapes, are his trademarks. With a poetic, yet almost painfully honest approach, he passionately continues depicting the complexity of the human soul and its divine dilemmas. His talent is often comparable to great directors such as Bergman, Antonioni, Bresson, Tarkovsky and he clearly emphasizes the motto “less is more.”

His fourth and latest film shot in HD digital video, Climates (Iklimler), also tells of the intricacy of the human psyche by way of a couple on the brink of separation. Resembling Distant, which focused on two male relatives, Climates studies the relationships between men and women. With the same style and existentialist approach along with a thinner storyline, he delicately manages to walk about in dangerous fields of the human heart.

This time, the director is both in front of and behind the camera. He stars as the lead with Ebru Ceylan (his wife in real life) and Nazan Kesal, two actresses who had already appeared in small parts in his previous pictures. The Ceylans’ performances are more than satisfying, and the director himself as the focal character of the film especially deserves most of the attention.

Climates is simply a close-up on a couple in crisis: Isa (played by the director) is a middle-aged university professor, and his young girlfriend Bahar (Ebru Ceylan) is a TV art director. As the title suggests, the film takes place during three seasons (hot summer, rainy autumn and snowy winter), and these meteorological changes symbolise the different mood and states of the couple’s relationship. (For those who might wonder about the missing season, Ceylan includes this by naming the wife Bahar, which means “Spring” in Turkish. Isa, by the way, means “Jesus.”)

The film begins with the couple on vacation in Kas, a favourite tourist resort on the southern Turkish coast, replete with historical sites. On this hot summer day, while Isa busies himself with photographing the ruins, she seems to have nothing else to do but accompany him. And next, in a single take, we see her gaze at the view and she starts to cry in a most delicate way. Followed by the opening credits, this scene gives the viewer a voyeuristic role, which includes an intimate journey to a human heart. It is also possible to argue that the bee that Isa notices as he lazily lies amidst the ruins and which later lands on Bahar’s hair as she cries, stands for the couple’s souls that do not touch one another anymore. At the same time, this scene is a clear notification that there’s very little in the script that gives much away about the characters and the reasons for the emotional distance in their relationship. Later that evening at the dinner table with Isa’s friends, we observe that Bahar is not naïve, as she exposes her unhappiness by her passive-aggressive behaviour matching Isa’s. Resisting traditional formulas, director Ceylan does not give much clue about their past or what happened earlier between them. Instead, in a subtle way, he slowly leads us to the heart of a broken relationship. The following day at the beach, in a magnificently detailed scene, it’s obvious that she feels very much drowned in this affair, but he is the first one to verbally try to end it, and suggest they remain friends. Friends? Devastated, but still proud to cry out for love, Bahar’s startling manner during the motorbike ride perfectly dramatizes the reaction to any break-up’s unbearable cruelty, and she ends up returning back home to Istanbul on her own.

In Climates’ second part, set in Istanbul during the rainy days of autumn, Isa runs into Serap (Nazan Kesal), with whom he had an affair in the past. He stalks Serap, who actually is involved with a friend of his, and waits outside her house. After Serap takes him in, we get a hint at Isa’s self-centred character through his reaction to her initially somewhat distant stance and flirtatious reproaches. Yet, it is virtually impossible to be prepared at what awaits us. In a perfectly choreographed single take, the banality of a rough sex scene between them exposes not only Isa’s general frustration of his inner self but also the director’s intention to show the much less attractive side of casual human behaviour. This painfully honest approach is shocking to the viewer while it entertains with its perfectly absorbed wit. (Any more nuts?) More witty moments resurface in a later occasion that concerns the pair in a more affectionate way, when Serap wants to make love but Isa’s already got cold feet after learning from her that Bahar has left Istanbul to work on a TV series shot in snowy, mountainous eastern Turkey. He tries to avoid having sex and excuses himself from her with a TV story about an earthquake, which is pathetically ironic. On the other hand, these scenes emphasise that the story is in favour of Isa rather than the two women. Of course, Ceylan told men’s story previously in Clouds of May and Distant, in which female characters are sidekicks of the stories. However, with her heavy make-up and her attitude, Serap, who tends to embrace Isa for the way he is and who is portrayed as a frivolous woman rather than someone open to be seduced by him, jolts and pushes the tactful balancing of the director’s approach as an excessively underlined alternative to Bahar.

Enhancing the dilemma of solitary and desolate souls in social and economic environments similar to Distant, Ceylan presents a further minimalist story in Climates. However, he misses the target with his protagonist’s relationship with a male colleague at the university where he teaches. Although their conversation sequences, apart from being simple transitions in the Autumn section, aim at accentuating the triviality of daily routine as an exemplar of ordinary “buddy talk”, they create a hiatus in the poetic narration’s continuity, failing to create a lasting effect on the film as a whole or as a gag.

Climates’ final part is the most spectacular and glorious cinematic experience of all. Isa is now in a small town called Agri, drowned in snowy winter, looking for Bahar. Once again, we are not sure what his main motive is for being there. Does he love Bahar? Or is it a power struggle? Because she seems to have moved on, as a stronger figure than before in the film, could it all be about him challenging the idea that he could still have her? None of these matter. Director Ceylan skillfully creates the final climate between the two protagonists, and their last (or not) decision in their relationship. The marvellous scene in the minibus, both heartbreaking and hilariously witty, is one of the great trademarks of Ceylan’s cinematic ability in minimalist storytelling. After all close-ups, the stillness of the emotional distance deeply moves us and remains in our hearts.

3.13GB | 1 h 38 min | 1024×528 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/CDB893AD8AE1E1D/Nuri_Bilge_Ceylan_-_%282006%29_Climates.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/F9491777C84AF2B/Nuri_Bilge_Ceylan_-_%282006%29_Climates.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/7F5E4AC55BADAE7/Nuri_Bilge_Ceylan_-_%282006%29_Climates.part3.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/62760F064198F68/Nuri_Bilge_Ceylan_-_%282006%29_Climates.part4.rar

Language(s):Turkish
Subtitles:English

Cristi Puiu – Aurora (2010)

$
0
0

Quote:
“There is no such thing as a murderer, only people who kill.” With these words director Cristi Puiu qualifies his careful study of contemporary Romanian society and of fatal acts such as murder. The film focuses on 42-year-old Viorel who is going through a gloomy period of life that leads him to the point of killing without it being clear whether or not it’s his divorce and his conflict with loved ones provoking him to open fire. The film attempts to demystify the act of murder, rendering it as something in no way spectacular, just as there is nothing remarkable about a person who commits murder. The director doesn’t psychologize his characters or indicate where they are heading, while his intentionally staid narrative contributes to the overall suspense and lack of certainty. Although Viorel’s behavior doesn’t make him stand out, he gives the impression of having been long divorced from reality. Or is it the whole of society that’s become detached from reality?

4.50GB | 3 h 5 min | 1024×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/10D74226F9BB5A3/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.mkv
or
https://nitroflare.com/view/D1A69AA025CF35A/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/758140C84E06306/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/BFD8A724148F6A2/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.part3.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/1A373CE51FF4C9B/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.part4.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/AD32F1AA343C20E/Cristi_Puiu_-_%282010%29_Aurora.part5.rar

Language(s):Romanian
Subtitles:English

Han Hsiang Li – Qing guo qing cheng AKA The Empress Dowager (1975)

Daniel Mann – The Rose Tattoo (1955)

$
0
0

Based on Tennessee Williams’ play, The Rose Tattoo is the story of a Southern widow (Anna Magnani) who finally stops pining for her dead husband when she falls in love with a trucker (Burt Lancaster). Williams wrote his play and this adapted screenplay with Magnani in mind, and she earned an Academy Award for her performance.

2.32GB | 1h 56mn | 888×480 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/7D16A656D7B204E/The.Rose.Tattoo.1955.DVD.AC3.2.0.x264-SaL.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/D5C0044DC2776D5/The.Rose.Tattoo.1955.DVD.AC3.2.0.x264-SaL.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/6BEC1AC1DC1CF28/The.Rose.Tattoo.1955.DVD.AC3.2.0.x264-SaL.part3.rar

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English

Paul Newman – Sometimes a Great Notion (1971)

$
0
0

Quote:
Hank Stamper and his father, Henry Stamper own and operate the family business by cutting and shipping logs in Oregon. The town is furious when they continue working despite the town going broke and the other loggers go on strike ordering the Stampers to stop, however Hank continues to push his family on cutting more trees. Hank’s wife wishes he would stop and hopes that they can spend more time together. When Hank’s half trouble making brother Leland comes to work for them, more trouble starts.

2.38GB | 1 h 54 min | 1024×432 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/E48603C994A2E11/Paul_Newman_-_%281970%29_Sometimes_a_Great_Notion.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/6BD64BD8B856631/Paul_Newman_-_%281970%29_Sometimes_a_Great_Notion.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/4E454CD09266969/Paul_Newman_-_%281970%29_Sometimes_a_Great_Notion.part3.rar

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English


Michael Armstrong & Adrian Hoven – Hexen bis aufs Blut gequält AKA Mark of the Devil (1970)

$
0
0

Synopsis:
Udo Kier is a witch hunter apprentice to Herbert Lom. He believes strongly in his mentor and the ways of the church but loses faith when he catches Lom committing a crime. Kier slowly begins to see for himself that the witch trials are nothing but a scam of the church to rob people of their land, money, and other personal belongings of value and seduce beautiful women.

Extra commentary track by Writer/Director Michael Armstrong is included.

2.49GB | 1 h 37 min | 942×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/470C06D6E1DFAB5/Hexen.bis.aufs.Blut.gequalt.AKA.Mark.of.the.Devil.1970.576p.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/1F3B658EA2C308E/Hexen.bis.aufs.Blut.gequalt.AKA.Mark.of.the.Devil.1970.576p.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/C9D354846560ECB/Hexen.bis.aufs.Blut.gequalt.AKA.Mark.of.the.Devil.1970.576p.part3.rar

Language(s):English, German (2 audio tracks)
Subtitles:English, German (muxed)

Nils Malmros – Kærlighedens smerte AKA Pain of Love (1992)

$
0
0

In Kærlighedens Smerte (Pain of Love) by the Danish veteran director Nils Malmros we follow the life of a young woman with a childish innocence and great impulsiveness called Kirsten. Kirsten grows up in a middle class home with sympathetic bourgeois parents. We watch Kirsten as she experiences her first innocent relationship with a rather immature boy, as she starts to lust after and date older men, as she experiences failures, as she breaks down mentally, …

1.25GB | 1:55:11 | 704×384 | avi

https://nitroflare.com/view/02D358F10A4F6E4/Kaerlighedens_Smerte_%281992-dk-Malmros%29.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/9DD87397AF04CE3/Kaerlighedens_Smerte_%281992-dk-Malmros%29.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/1ACA0292F48E52B/Kaerlighedens_Smerte.English.srt

Language(s):Danish
Subtitles:English

Jerzy Bossak & Waclaw Kazmierczak – Requiem dla 500 tysiecy AKA Requiem for 500.000 (1963)

$
0
0

A short documentary made in 1963 by soviet propagandist Jerzy Bossak and Wacław Kaźmierczak featuring unique archival footage of the Jewish Ghetto of Warsaw.

The Warsaw Ghetto (pol. “Getto Warszawskie” ) was the largest of all Jewish Ghettos in Nazi-occupied Europe during World From there, about 254,000 Ghetto residents were sent to Treblinka extermination camp during the three months of summer 1942.

The movie features special shots that can be hardly received by public in the State of Israel and Poland. Among others cuts smooth on faces Jews and extremely rare footage of Marshal Jozef Klemens Pilsudski underlining his significance for them.

97.7MB | 28 min 33 s | 480×360 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/5FB810559028F61/Requiem_dla_500_tysiecy_1963.mkv
https://nitroflare.com/view/C6ADD530A3FA9AD/Requiem_dla_500_tysiecy_1963.srt

Language(s):Polish
Subtitles:English

Vladimir Kobrin – Predmet i zadachi biofiziki AKA The Subject and Tasks of Biophysics (1982)

$
0
0

Experimental educational film reveals the emergence of some ideas of Biophysics in the historical, philosophical and methodological aspects.
First film from the biophysics cycle (1982-1989).

Quote:
In his films, Kobrin elaborates a special, metaphoric style that is “a fully achieved work of imaginative filmmaking, in which special effects, pixilation, and reverse or speed-up motion abound, a philosophical avant-garde film, entirely unexpected in terms of its country of origin”.

“The cinema I’m engaged in can be called ‘phychedelic puppet action’, where the characters-both the live and the lifeless-behave according to the laws of a cosmic theater . . . To my mind, an artist is a person whose mission is to close the space between Earth and the Cosmos. Otherwise he can’t be called an artist. That is why I see my task as a film director to consist of wiping off the mirror in which man and mankind as a whole look, and to show that this world (this performance without God, that is, without the point where all our puppet threads come together) is senseless and deserves no sympathy or pity.” – Vladimir Kobrin

In the West Vladimir Kobrin is considered a father of Russian avant-garde scientific filmmaking. He was frequently invited to European film-schools with lectures (Cologne, Potsdam, Copenhagen, etc.) and in 1997 he received an invitation from Harvard University Film Achieve. Special retrospectives of his films were shown at Pesaro Festival in Italy and in Montreal in 1998.

Kobrin’s work was never officially published and did not come out in the original. The artistic heritage of Kobrin – one of the mysteries of modern cinema.

118MB | 9 min 33 s | 765×574 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/DDAE435E501B917/Vladimir.Kobrin.-.1982.-.The.Subject.and.Tasks.of.Biophysics.DVDrip.x264-Zog.mkv

Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English

Nana Dzhordzhadze – Shekvarebuli kulinaris ataserti retsepti aka A Chef in Love aka 1001 retsept iz menyu vlyublyonnogo povara aka Les mille et une recettes du cuisinier amoureux (1996)

$
0
0

A comically accented historical drama with culinary appeal, this film introduces us to Pascal Ichac (Pierre Richard), a French chef with a nose so sensitive that he can decipher the ingredients in a sauce with a single sniff. A true renaissance man, Pascal is a genius in the kitchen and a trained operatic vocalist and former gigolo. When he decides that he’s beginning to tire of his surroundings in France, he heads for Russia to find new challenges and tastes in Georgia. En route to the Georgian capitol of Tbilisi, Pascal meets Cecilia Abachidze (Micheline Presle), a princess who is charmed by the suave chef; although he is in his 50s and she in her 20s, love is soon in the air. When Pascal’s keen sense of smell helps prevent the president from being poisoned, the chef is given carte blanche to open the restaurant of his dreams. The New Eldorado is soon the toast of Tbilisi, but the arrival of the Soviet Army in 1921 puts an end to the delicious grace of Pascal’s eatery, and he is forced to leave Cecilia, who is in turn forced to marry an Army captain. This film was Georgia’s official 1997 entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.

1.18GB | 01:35:16 | 640×352 | avi

https://nitroflare.com/view/C8606CE56E06EB7/Shekvarebuli_kulinaris_1001_retsepti.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/67496F1BDC8440C/Shekvarebuli_kulinaris_1001_retsepti.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/7924456AC1FD697/Les_Milles_et_Une_Recettes_du_Cuisinier_Amoureux_English.zip

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

Radu Jude – Cele Doua Executii Ale Maresalului AKA The Marshal’s Two Executions (2018)

$
0
0

The films confronts two different views of the execution of General Ion Antonescu, Romania’s leader during the Second World War. On one side is silent black-and-white footage of the execution as recorded in 1946 by cameraman Ovidiu Gologanl; on the other are scenes from a biographical film shot in 1994 by director Sergiu Nicolaescu.

235MB | 9mn 23s | 768×576 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/F99D97D5C09734E/The.Marshals.Two_Executions.2018.DVDRip.x264-iKHON.mkv
https://nitroflare.com/view/EA18A8F94110930/The.Marshals.Two_Executions.2018.DVDRip.x264-iKHON.srt

Language(s):Romanian
Subtitles:English

Jessica Hausner – Little Joe (2019)

$
0
0

Little Joe follows Alice (Emily Beecham), a single mother and dedicated senior plant breeder at a corporation engaged in developing new species. She has engineered a special crimson flower, remarkable not only for its beauty but also for its therapeutic value: if kept at the ideal temperature, fed properly and spoken to regularly, this plant makes its owner happy. Against company policy, Alice takes one home as a gift for her teenage son, Joe. They christen it ‘Little Joe.’ But as their plant grows, so too does Alice’s suspicion that her new creation may not be as harmless as its nickname suggests.

2.71GB | 1h 45mn | 1280×688 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/7D6997C2B498F13/Little.Joe.2019.720p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.H.264-NTG.mkv
or
https://nitroflare.com/view/E32A3DC54A39849/Little.Joe.2019.720p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.H.264-NTG.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/850995688DBBD5F/Little.Joe.2019.720p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.H.264-NTG.part2.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/8AB11AD7A74883F/Little.Joe.2019.720p.AMZN.WEB-DL.DDP5.1.H.264-NTG.part3.rar

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English


Mario Bonnard – Der goldene Abgrund (1927)

$
0
0

Plot:
An eccentric millionaire brings together four men who, under different circumstances, wanted to commit suicide. The proposal made to them is the following: they will travel to an islet that, according to legend, emerged from the sea when Atlantis sank and that houses a fabulous treasure buried by the Incas. But that territory is populated by the worst band of pirates and evildoers the world has ever known.

490MB | 1 h 26 min | 640×486 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/725EB5696E83FDB/Der_goldene_Abgrund_%28Rapa-Nui%29_1927.mkv
https://nitroflare.com/view/968E2EECB5794BB/Der_goldene_Abgrund_%28Rapa-Nui%29_1927.eng.srt
https://nitroflare.com/view/485494C2E8540F8/Der_goldene_Abgrund_%28Rapa-Nui%29_1927.esp.srt

Language(s):None.French intertitles.
Subtitles:Spanish,English

María Luisa Bemberg – Señora de nadie AKA Nobody’s Wife (1982)

David Greene – I Start Counting (1970)

$
0
0

A 14-year-old girl coming to terms with her sexuality, discovers that her adored older brother may be guilty of a series of bizarre sex crimes.

Quote:
Jenny Agutter is excellent as the schoolgirl who thinks her foster brother(Bryan Marshall) may be the local sex murderer and the creepy atmosphere builds up carefully helped by the location work on the wide windy stretches of an English New Town which I believe is Bracknell,Berkshire where Sean Connery’s equally disturbing film “The Offence” was shot a couple of years later.Photography ,editing and supporting cast all first class.This film deserves to be better known in the history of British film and indeed the horror/thriller genre and its continued omission in most of the weighty film guides on the market remains ,to me, the biggest mystery and injustice of them all.

980MB | 1 h 40 min | 774×516 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/9F7017A3818C78B/I.Start.Counting.1970.TVRip.x264-Zog.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Peter B. Hutton – At Sea (2007)

$
0
0

Quote:
A sweeping meditation on global commerce, labor and geography in the 21st century which chronicles the birth, life and death of a merchant ship.

“The sublime is no more strongly felt than in Peter Hutton’s magisterial At Sea. Put simply, the film tells the story (“the birth, life and death”—in the director’s words) of a container ship—but there are no words to adequately describe the film’s awesome visual expedition. Hutton knows the sea. His experiences as a former merchant seaman have informed his filmmaking practice, known for its rigor and epic beauty. At Sea begins in South Korea with diminutive workers shipbuilding. The colossal vessel is revealed in de Chirico-worthy proportions, its magnitude surreal to the human eye. Off to sea, the splendor and intensity of the water—set against the vibrant colors of the containers—causes us to see the world anew. The film concludes in Bangladesh amidst ship breakers as enthralled by Hutton’s camera as we are by his images.”—Andrea Picard

923MB | 59 min 11 s | 718×538 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/D164ED4EB92BF29/At.Sea.2007.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

Richard Proenneke – Alone in the Wilderness (2004)

$
0
0

Synopsis
Documentary tells the story of Dick Proenneke who, in the late 1960s, built his own cabin in the wilderness at the base of the Aleutian Peninsula, in what is now Lake Clark National Park. Using color footage he shot himself, Proenneke traces how he came to this remote area, selected a homestead site and built his log cabin completely by himself. The documentary covers his first year in-country, showing his day-to-day activities and the passing of the seasons as he sought to scratch out a living alone in the wilderness.

978MB | 57 min 28 s | 712×534 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/B4B5ED74AB9DA27/Alone_in_the_Wilderness_%282004%29_480p_x264_AAC_DVD.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Viewing all 16494 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>