Quantcast
Channel: Search Results for “nitroflare”– Cinema of the World
Viewing all 16439 articles
Browse latest View live

Aneta Leshnikovska – Boli li? Prvata balkanska dogma aka Does it hurt? (2007)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

The Dogma 95 film movement appeared out of the need to make low budget films that will be concentrated on the storytelling and the acting. No long preparations, no stylish million-dollar bullshitting. Just film. For many years most of the filmmakers in the Balkan have been doing exactly the same. It is just that they haven’t made a manifesto and most of them have never even heard of Dogma 95. Does it hurt? The First Balkan Dogma is a no budget mockumentary shot on HDV according to the dogma rules.

Synopsis:
A Macedonian filmmaker wants to make the first official Balkan Dogma film in Macedonia. She lies to her friends that she got financial support from the Zentropa producers. The film starts from the moment that she gathers her closest friends and asks them to join her in the quest for finding the right story for the film. She has decided to film the whole process from the very beginning and use it later for the making off. Following the four characters in their quest we discover Macedonia and the Balkans in 2006. The camera captures visual sequences of the absurdity, humour and survival techniques of a land and people in transition. The making of project ultimately becomes the true subject of the film.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A0BB5B8C6171894/Dali_boli_aka_Does_it_hurt.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/94fbf96aa4a84/Dali_boli_aka_Does_it_hurt.avi

Language(s):Macedonian
Subtitles:English


Francoise Wolff – Jacques Lacan Speaks (1971)

$
0
0

Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) is widely regarded as one of the most influential psychoanalysts of the 20th century, one whose work has refashioned psychiatry both as a theory of the unconscious mind and as a clinical practice. His seminars and writings have also had a widespread influence throughout the humanities and social sciences, especially in education, legal studies, literary and film studies and women’s studies.

As JACQUES LACAN SPEAKS, a rare filmed documentary record of a 1971 university speaking appearance, makes clear, Lacan was also a highly controversial figure, with legions of both worshipful adherents and scornful critics. Appearing before a packed lecture hall, Lacan discourses—in his slow, deliberate, often circumlocuitous speaking style—on such subjects as death, language, psychoanalysis, love, alienation, paranoia and life itself.

At one point his talk is disrupted by a young student, who contributes his own Situationist-inspired ridicule of self-styled public intellectuals such as Lacan. Rather than allowing security personnel to remove him, Lacan allows the young man to speak and later attempts to “respond” to his criticisms and to incorporate them into his presentation.

The following morning, Lacan submits to a filmed interview—interspersed with images of the various apartments, consulting rooms and lecture halls he used throughout his career—in which he responds to the filmmaker’s questions about psychoanalysis, discussing how delirium reveals the unconscious, the role of the psychoanalyst, the relationship between doctor and patient, the process of transference, and the close bond between love and hate.




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/29D5353FA21339E/Jacques_Lacan_Speaks_1971.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/f3a72994488a4/Jacques_Lacan_Speaks_1971.avi

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English (hard sub)

Manoel de Oliveira – Um Século de Energia (2015)

Ernst Lubitsch – Broken Lullaby (1932)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

From the AFI Catalog:

After World War I, Frenchman Paul Renard is haunted by the memory of Walter Holderlin, a German soldier he killed in the heat of battle. Having read and signed Walter’s last letter and memorized his home address, Paul goes to Germany to confess his deed to the soldier’s family. Anti-French sentiment is strong in Germany and Dr. Holderlin will not suffer Paul’s presence in his home until Walter’s fiancée Elsa recognizes Paul as the man who has been leaving flowers on Walter’s grave. Paul reveals that he knew Walter, but is unable to confess his past, and tells the grateful family he and Walter were friends during the war. Paul and Elsa fall in love and a close bond grows between Paul and the Holderlins, despite the entire town’s disapproval. When Elsa shows Paul Walter’s former bedroom, he is unable to contain himself any longer and confesses the truth to her. Paul also reveals his plans to tell Dr. and Mrs. Holderlin his secret and then leave, but Elsa intervenes and advises him that his confession and departure would deprive the Holderlins of their second “son.” Eventually, Elsa convinces Paul to sacrifice his conscience and stay to make the Holderlins happy. After Paul consents, Dr. Holderlin gives him Walter’s violin to play to Elsa’s accompaniment.




The working titles of the film were The Man I Killed and The Fifth Commandment. According to a news item in Film Daily, the title was changed to The Fifth Commandment because the original title “caused wrong impressions in the minds of the public about the character of the story.” Although the film was billed initially as The Man I Killed, it was copyrighted and released as Broken Lullaby. Although Motion Picture Herald lists the film’s running time as 94 minutes, this time is probably an error. The Censorship Dialogue Script in the Paramount script files at the AMPAS Library, lists Phillips Holmes’s character as “Pierre.” According to an article in Variety the film was dubbed into French under the supervision of Jacob Karrol at Joinville studios in France. The dubbed version was released in Franch under the title L’homme que j’ai tue, but the English version was also available for distribution in France. According to a news item in Hollywood Reporter, Czechoslovakia banned the film because of its “pacifistic theme.” Photo voted Lionel Barrymore for best individual performance of 1932. A modern source notes that shooting took place September-October 1931.

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/ACC0D3515AF7E09/Broken_Lullaby_%28Ernst_Lubitsch%2C_1932%29.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/1c6eff55ce10c/Broken_Lullaby_%28Ernst_Lubitsch%2C_1932%29.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:French hard subs

If you enjoy this blog, you can support it by buying a premium account from the links above.Thanks in advance for your support.

Jordan Belson – Samadhi (1967)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
Notable film theorist Gene Youngblood has this to say about the “Cosmic Cinema” of Jordan Belson in his classic book “Expanded Cinema”:

“Certain phenomena manage to touch a realm of our consciousness so seldom reached that when it is awakened we are shocked and profoundly moved. It’s an experience of self-realization as much as an encounter with the external world. The cosmic films of Jordan Belson possess this rare and enigmatic power.

“The essence of cinema is precisely ‘dynamic movement of form and color,’ and their relation to sound. In this respect Belson is the purest of all filmmakers. With few exceptions his work is ‘abstract.’ Like the films of Len Lye, Hans Richter, Oskar Fischinger, and the Whitneys, it is concrete. Although a wide variety of meaning inevitably is abstracted from them, and although they do hold quite specific implications for Belson personally, the films remain concrete, objective experiences of kinaesthetic ad optical dynamism. They are at once the ultimate use of visual imagery to communicate abstract concepts, and the purest of experiential confrontations between subject and object.”

Furthermore, he calls Samadhi a “Documentary on a Human Soul.”

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/DDCAFFE88DBDEB0/Samadhi_%28Belson%2C_1967%29.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/66bc4ebfa53ec/Samadhi_%28Belson%2C_1967%29.avi

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

If you enjoy this blog, you can support it by buying a premium account from the links above.Thanks in advance for your support.

Hongqi Li – Hao duo dami aka So Much Rice (2005)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Synopsis:
An indifferent man with an unusual outlook on life embarks on a strange journey while carrying a large bag of rice. Mr. Mao is playing a game of hide-and-seek with his wife when he uses the opportunity to run away from home. Upon arriving at the home of his friend Xiao He in the nearby town of Liaocheng, Mr. Mao’s new life begins. Gradually, Mr. Mao and Xiao He are drawn into a mysterious love affair. In the end, mysterious drifter Mr. Mao takes his bag of rice and disappears into the hills to find his true fate.



http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5C207E8EA731AB6/So_Much_Rice_%282005%2C_Li_Hongqi%29-JM.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/1e7cad11110f6/So_Much_Rice_%282005%2C_Li_Hongqi%29-JM.mkv

Language(s):Mandarin
Subtitles:English, Simplified Chinese

If you enjoy this blog, you can support it by buying a premium account from the links above.Thanks in advance for your support.

Emir Baigazin – Uroki garmonii AKA Harmony Lessons (2013)

Edgar Reitz – Die andere Heimat – Chronik einer Sehnsucht AKA Home from Home: Chronicle of a Vision (2013)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
When Edgar Reitz made the Heimat film series in 1984 he created an incredible chronicle of German rural life in the 20th century. He went on to release another couple of mini-series, bringing events up to the modern era. At over 53 hours they were beautifully made and together are an epic saga of the Simon family and the village of Schabbach. He returns to familiar ground for this prequel, charting the fortunes of the same clan between 1840-1844, in Home From Home: Chronicle of a Vision.

Jacob (Jan Dieter Schneider) dreams of escaping the hard, oppressive and poor life in Schabbach by emigrating to the tropics. His father (Rüdiger Kriese), the local blacksmith, despairs that his son is stuck with his nose in a book whilst there so much work to do. His mother (Marita Breuer) on the other hand, is happy to indulge his daydreaming. He falls for Jettchen (Antonia Bill), the daughter of a mill owner, but they are fated not to be together. When his brother Gustav (Maximilian Scheidt) returns from war, a drunken night with Jettchen leads to her getting pregnant, whilst Jacob is arrested after his first brush with rebellion.

Home From Home: Chronicles Of A Vision is even more beautiful than its predecessor. Once again Reitz films in black and white, using the odd touch of colour to wonderful effect. At 231 minutes it’s a long film but it’s completely immersive and enthralling, never feeling stretched or dragging. Reitz encapsulates the era of discovery and period of hardship and poverty in tumultuous political times. More than any other European nation, Germany has an entrenched fascination with the lives of the common people. Home From Home: Chronicles Of A Vision is a stunning document of a snapshot in time of a rural family.






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/7627AAD4EC37203/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part1.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5D9048849A6BA53/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part2.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/60DA2198B3170B1/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part3.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/E73B950E7260A8B/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part4.rar

http://keep2s.cc/file/dca415983041c/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part1.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/4e282ba01b515/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part2.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/480cc8b9d5b67/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part3.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/bdab272532d22/Die_andere_Heimat_-_Chronik_einer_Sehnsucht.2013.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.part4.rar

Eng srt:
http://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitles/6216068/die-andere-heimat-chronik-einer-sehnsucht-en

Pass:www.worldscinema.org

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English


Luchino Visconti – Le notti bianche AKA White Nights [+extras] (1957)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Synopsis:

A chance encounter on a canal bridge results in a series of twilight rendezvous between a lonely city transplant (Marcello Mastroianni) and a sheltered woman (Maria Schell) haunted by a lover’s promise. Their hesitant courtship soon entangles both of them in a web of longing and self-delusion. Adapted from the Fyodor Dostoyevsky short story, director Luchino Visconti’s Le notti bianche—shot in ravishing black and white—is a romantic, shattering tale of the restlessness of dreamers.



Review:

Le notti bianche (White Nights) occupies a central position within Luchino Visconti’s body of work. In appearance at least, it consummates a break with the neorealism of the 1940s and early 1950s and looks forward to The Leopard (1963), in its rendering of subjectivity by visual style, and to Vaghe stelle dell’orsa (Sandra; 1965), in its dependence on metaphor as a structuring device. But appearances can be deceptive, for in 1960, Visconti returned to realism with Rocco and His Brothers, and in its way, Le notti bianche is also fundamentally a realist film, in spite of its excursions into fantasy.

Visconti always liked to work from literary originals, which he would then adapt with varying degrees of freedom. Le notti bianche is a particularly successful example of the mixture of freedom and respect with which he and his scriptwriters approached their task. It takes its title and its basic plot from Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s 1848 short story. In both the story and the film, a lonely young man meets a lonely young woman. Mario (Marcello Mastroianni) is lonely for social reasons: he is a stranger and a newcomer to town. Natalia (Maria Schell) is lonely because she has always lived in isolation, even in the heart of the city, and her loneliness is intensified because she is in love with a man (Jean Marais) who may or may not ever return to her but who continues to occupy her life to the exclusion of any other possible relationship. Over a time span of four nights (late spring in the short story, winter in the film), Mario gets to know her, falls in love, and in the end loses her when the lover she has been waiting for returns as promised, after a year’s absence.

In turning the Dostoyevsky story into a film, Visconti got rid of the first-person narration and made the girl less of an innocent and, in fact, at times something of a hysteric and a tease. In the course of these changes, he also made the ending sadder. In the story, the narrator is allowed a little coda, in which he thanks the girl for the moment of happiness she has brought him. In the film, the hero is left alone, befriending the same stray dog he met at the beginning, back at square one, with no sense that the love he briefly felt has transformed him in any way.



Extras included:

1. Visconti’s Collaborators
— A collection of interviews, from 2003, with screenwriter Suso Cecchi D’Amico, film critics Laura Delli Colli and Lino Miccichè, cinematographer Giuseppe Rotunno, and costume designer Piero Tosi
2. Screen Tests
— Rare screen-test footage of Mastroianni and Schell
3. Original theatrical trailer
4. New audio recording of Dostoyevsky’s “White Nights”

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/B2C4F7D9A43BECC/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.mkv
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/1337DC797BABF6E/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.idx
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/D264B5B28463406/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.srt
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/D77B531F2ABC163/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.sub
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/039B30EA4066CA5/White_Nights_Extras.rar

http://keep2s.cc/file/ae65f6bb2fd27/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.mkv
http://keep2s.cc/file/39c3684110c7e/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.idx
http://keep2s.cc/file/d1e788dc0c1e0/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.srt
http://keep2s.cc/file/de96f2d8845c3/White_Nights_%281957%29_–_Luchino_Visconti.sub
http://keep2s.cc/file/6ae1a8dc3f040/White_Nights_Extras.rar

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English (idx, sub, srt)

Jerzy Skolimowski – Moonlighting (1982)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
Nowak (Irons) leads a small team of Polish building contractors, hired by a wealthy Pole to illegally refurbish his London home. They slip into England under false pretenses and squat in the house as they work on it–but shortly after they arrive, the military take over Poland and declare martial law (this real event happened in December of 1981). Only Nowak speaks English, so only he knows this has happened; fearing that if the others find out, they’ll stop working, he decides not to tell them. As he starts stealing and scamming to stretch their rapidly vanishing money, Nowak grows increasingly paranoid and mentally fragile. Moonlighting is a political allegory and a psychological portrait, but thanks to Irons’ sympathetic performance, the movie is also rivetingly suspenseful.

Jerzy Skolimowski’s “Moonlighting” is an outstanding achievement in many respects. Not only does it contain one of the most fulfilling performances that has ever been put to the screen, but it also serves as a political allegory, a smartly-told drama, and a unique exercise in creating suspense.







http://www.nitroflare.com/view/25A7D1481CFB302/Jerzy_Skolimowski_-_%281982%29_Moonlighting.mkv
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5CB07AECC858F90/Moonlighting.ENG.srt

http://keep2s.cc/file/b207f983e2fab/Jerzy_Skolimowski_-_%281982%29_Moonlighting.mkv
http://keep2s.cc/file/198da6f4c8777/Moonlighting.ENG.srt

Language(s):English, Polish
Subtitles:English

Christian Petzold – Polizeiruf 110: Kreise (2015)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

German review by T. Groh:

Quote:
[…] Ein Meta-Fernsehkrimi. Für dieses Vorhaben bietet der BR-“Polizeiruf” um Kommissar von Meuffels einem etablierten Auteur wie Christian Petzold das ideale Experimentierlabor: Schon die Initialzündung im Jahr 2011 (Dominik Grafs “Cassandras Warnung”) setzte einen deutlichen Akzent, der sich im weiteren Verlauf der Reihe bestätigte: Der Münchner “Polizeiruf” (mit weiteren Beiträgen u.a. von Hans Steinbichler, Leander Haußmann, Hendrik Handloegten, Jan Bonny, nochmal Graf) ist im Wesentlichen ein Regieformat, das Reibeflächen zwischen Formatvorgabe und individueller Handschrift nicht nur zulässt, sondern offen sucht. In verlässlicher Regelmäßigkeit entstanden hier die besten oder wenigstens interessantesten Fernsehkrimis der vergangenen Jahre. Und mit dem von Matthias Brandt kongenial verkörperten Kommissar von Meuffels etablierte sich eine der spannendsten, trotz gedämpftem Spiel facettenreichsten Ermittlerfiguren. […]




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/235B7BA2E11AEFB/Polizeiruf_110_-_Kreise.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/61ea11c7dbb6f/Polizeiruf_110_-_Kreise.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:None

Johannes Holzhausen – Das große Museum AKA The Great Museum (2014)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
The documentary THE GREAT MUSEUM is a curious, witty and humorous peek behind the scenes at a world-famous cultural institution. Director Johannes Holzhausen and his team spent more than two years gathering material at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. Shot in the attentive style of direct cinema – with no off-screen commentary, no interviews and no background music – the film observes the various processes involved in creating a perfect setting for art. From the managing director to the cleaning services team, from the carriers to the art historians, the staff members at the museum are all interdependent cogs in the same machine.

The film offers glimpses of the day-to-day routine at the museum, but focuses primarily on micro-dramas featuring museum employees. For example, a conservator who discovers that a Rubens painting has been painted over several times; another conservator who expresses his despair in mending a model battleship with a few expletives; a member of the guest services team who feels her team is not well integrated at the museum; an elderly head of a collection who is about to head into retirement; an art historian who experiences the thrill and frustration of an auction, and the chief financial officer who thinks the “3” on the new promotional material looks “aggressive”. All this makes the film more than a portrait of a public cultural institution trying to maintain its integrity by balancing between budgetary issues and competitive pressure. THE GREAT MUSEUM also addresses more profound issues: Is it possible to reconcile the conservation of the objects with an up-to-date presentation? What part does art play in the representation of national identity in politics and tourism?

Documentary filmmaker Johannes Holzhausen carefully balances single moments and the overall narration, reproducing the style that has distinguished his previous films. The precise camera work (Joerg Burger, Attila Boa) and poignant editing (Dieter Pichler) serve to create the atmosphere of patient observation and reflection, just as the film’s protagonists are in the service of an institution that will outlast them. And in this sense THE GREAT MUSEUM is also a film about temporality and transience. It relates the museum’s everyday business to its long tradition, which dates back to the Habsburg Monarchy, and the timelessness of art objects.

– synopsis from official website






Quote:
A look behind the scenes of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. It’s a pleasure to follow the camera on its extended forays through the magnificent halls and well-stocked storage rooms, listening in on the exhibition curators and lingering with interest by the restorers. All those working in the midst of these artistic treasures and portraits are almost on first-name terms with them and their Habsburg benefactors; for some, this stately heritage feels like a ball and chain.

Fulfilling a museum’s lofty duties in the modern day – collection, preservation, research, exhibition and communication – requires good management. As some examine paintings almost tenderly for insect damage, countless meetings revolve around budget planning, marketing campaigns and visits from politicians. The film observes this balancing act between maintaining a time-honoured institution of memory and offering modern cultural services without casting judgement. Only the now retired director of the Collection of Arms and Armour can permit himself to remark that all that smooth marketing talk could equally be applied to toothpaste. And then he feeds brie and walnuts to the pigeons on his office window sill.

– synopsis from Berlinale website

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/269C26871B387EA/The.Great.Museum.2014.BDRip.x264-BiPOLAR.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/7466540726e4a/The.Great.Museum.2014.BDRip.x264-BiPOLAR.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

David Thompson – Arena: Nicolas Roeg – It’s About Time (2015)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
The first major profile of the great British film director Nicolas Roeg, examining his very personal vision of cinema as in such films as Don’t Look Now, Performance, Walkabout and The Man Who Fell to Earth. Roeg reflects on his career, which began as a leading cinematographer, and on the themes that have obsessed him, such as our perception of time and the difficulty of human relationships. With contributions from key collaborators, including Julie Christie, Jenny Agutter and Theresa Russell, and directors he has inspired such as Danny Boyle, Mike Figgis, Bernard Rose and Ben Wheatley.



http://www.nitroflare.com/view/C35FE971D2EF675/Arena_-_Nicolas_Roeg_-_Its_About_Time.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/651119fc37488/Arena_-_Nicolas_Roeg_-_Its_About_Time.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Richard Martini – Camera (2000)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

From Imdb:
Richard Martini’s “Camera” is an ambitious – yet, addictive independent film encompassing intrigue, comedy and adventure. An inside look into the lives of several people – via the one digital camera they all buy – it’s a compulsively magnetic piece that shows flair and creativity on behalf of the helmer. It’s got no budget and it’s got no buzz – but “Camera” is a rare delight, and especially interesting to see Martini can draw in some fine cameos by people like Jack Nicholson, Oliver Stone, and Angie Everhart.
Bravo Martini – we look forward to your next project.






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/81CD467A86531BF/Camera_%282000%29_Richard_Martini.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/c928da672e406/Camera_%282000%29_Richard_Martini.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Celso Ad. Castillo – Virgin People (1984)


Ozan Aciktan – Silsile AKA Consequences (2014)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Cenk has just arrived back to Istanbul from the United States. Suppressed love slowly begins to resurface after he encounters Ece, a woman whom he had a romantic relationship with in the past. Suddenly, there is a robbery attempt in a quiet and gloomy house, which results in a crime being committed. Ece flees the scene of the crime and in comes Faruk, Cenk’s best friend and Ece’s fiancé. The two best friends struggle to keep their secrets hidden from one another. Intertwining chain of events follow as these three urban lives are put to the ultimate test; their sufferings and disappointments being exposed to the surface for all to see.




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/150659A1478719A/Silsile.2014.720p.WEB-DL.H.264.DD5.1-LTRG.mkv
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/0D98ECAA634DAD7/English.srt
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A4264617F9FCA5E/Germany.srt

http://keep2s.cc/file/2cd7a266dc42b/Silsile.2014.720p.WEB-DL.H.264.DD5.1-LTRG.mkv
http://keep2s.cc/file/0aa216f711687/English.srt
http://keep2s.cc/file/808e420139411/Germany.srt

Language(s):Turkish
Subtitles:English, German

Vera Chytilová – Sedmikrásky AKA Daisies (1966) (HD)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Description:

Two teenage girls, both named Marie, decide that since the world is spoiled they will be spoiled as well; accordingly they embark on a series of destructive pranks in which they consume and destroy the world about them. This freewheeling, madcap feminist farce was immediately banned by the government.


http://www.nitroflare.com/view/29B04F75F35391F/Sedmikrasky_%28Daisies%29_-_1966_-_Vera_Chytilova.m4v

http://keep2s.cc/file/cda0f5510f3f6/Sedmikrasky_%28Daisies%29_-_1966_-_Vera_Chytilova.m4v

Language(s):Czech,English
Subtitles:none

Don Levy – Herostratus (1967) (HD)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
In British director Don Levy’s Herostratus, a young poet, Max (Michael Gothard, The Devils), decides to commit suicide in public as a form of protest. He hires a prestigious marketing company to capture the event and promote it to the masses. As preparations begin, however, Max realizes that his plan might be flawed – he doubts that the company would cover the event as he wishes. With only a few days left, the young rebel is faced with an impossible dilemma – finish what he has started, or abandon his plan and run away.

Herostratus reminded me about two very powerful films: Marco Bellocchio’s Fists in the Pocket (1965) and Bernardo Bertolucci’s Partner (1968). In the former, a young epileptic (Lou Castel), frustrated with the world around him, goes on a family killing spree. In the latter – a film loosely based on Fyodor Dostoevsky’s work The Double – a passionate revolutionary’s (Pier Clementi) plan to commit suicide issuddenly thrown into turmoil when a mysterious double appears.

There are plenty of similarities between Max and the main protagonists from the other two films (there is even a striking physical resemblance between Gothard and Clementi). Max is as paranoid as they are – aside from a lonely prostitute, with whom he talks to in the very beginning of the film, his world is mostly populated by violent and difficult to comprehend images (a black leather-clad woman appears randomly whenever he bursts into violent fits of anger; very disturbing close-ups of animals being gutted out, etc).

Max also appears to be as socially aware as the main protagonist in Bertolucci’s film. It is true that he does not produce blunt political statements – more or less, Partner is a propaganda film with a very clear message and as a result its main protagonist does a great deal of slogan shouting – but what drives him to hire the marketing company to film his suicide is very much related to his political beliefs. As mentioned earlier, Max perceives it as a form of protest.

Herostratus is structured as a collage of giant cycles where director Levy gradually introduces surrealistic episodes that further enhance its already very convincing look. Some of them – such as the one where a stripper performs an unusual dance – temporarily detract from the film’s nagging sense of paranoia; others– like the one where Max is seen running through the streets of his city with an axe – add up to it.

If one looks closely at how Herostratus is framed, one would almost certainly discover some quite intriguing similarities with the works of Antonioni and Godard. Towards the end of Herostratus, Max ends up at a giant industrial zone where he sees a child playing. Before it focuses on the child, the camera zooms around and shows the surrounding area – it literally feels as if the entire scene is taken right out of Anotnioni’s Red Desert.

Then there is all the rage and anger in Herostratus that is brilliantly complimented with Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis in D Major, Op. 123. There is strange yet very effective symbiosis between sounds and images the film conveys that is easily comparable to Godard ‘s employment of Mozart’s Piano Sonata K. 576 in his charged with political innuendo Week End.

At the end, however, what is most impressive about Herostratus is the fact that it remained director Levy’s one and only feature film. Such a powerful and unique work certainly makes one wonder what could have been had the British director been with us just a bit longer.


http://www.nitroflare.com/view/1AAAFC6BBEF7ABB/Herostratus_-_1967_-_Don_Levy.m4v

http://keep2s.cc/file/59b4e2f78c2c9/Herostratus_-_1967_-_Don_Levy.m4v

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Nicolae Margineanu – Flacari pe comori aka Flames Over Treasures [+Extras] (1988)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Description
Deep in the Transylvanian Alps, the Archangels gold mine is the stage for an epic battle of characters. The arrogant owner is struggling with perceptions of ghosts in the mind of the miners. A maverick free-lance miner is helping him to find the source of terrifying noises that frightened his workers. A story of love, greed and betrayal having the rugged landscape of central Transylvania as a background. With few notable exceptions, everyone seems to have forgotten the biblical “For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also (Matthew 6:21)”

imdb User review
Still burning news, 16 April 2005
Author: tlespagnol from Romania

This movie, as well as others from Nicolae Margineanu is now available on DVD with subtitles in English, German, French and Spanish. Look for Ager-film Editions in the web. It’s seldom enough for Romanian films to be worth mentioning. Shot a year after the famous “Pandureanca”, we notice a bit of the same mysterious atmosphere produced by awesome landscapes and silent looks. Some of the landscapes shown in this film are now endangered by the project of a Canada-based mining company which projects to create there the largest open-air gold-mine in Europe. Fears for the ecological balance of the whole region is big. Gold still drives people crazy, thus making the film of a burning actuality.






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/1694B7BF7D86EA5/Flacari_pe_comori.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/DE552EE5287B462/Flacari_pe_comori_extras.rar

http://keep2s.cc/file/0f3c2043d9a01/Flacari_pe_comori.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/23322fc70ec03/Flacari_pe_comori_extras.rar

Language(s):Romanian
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish, German .srt

Frederick Wiseman – Basic Training (1971)

$
0
0

29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Quote:
BASIC TRAINING follows a company of draftees and enlisted men through the nine weeks of the basic training cycle. The varieties of training techniques used by the army in converting civilians to soldiers are illustrated in scenes of drills, M-16 and bayonet use, a gas chamber, mines, night crawls, an infiltration course and the many forms of ideological training familiar to millions of men and women who have served in the armed forces.

Quote:
Shot during the summer of 1970 at Fort Knox, Kentucky, Frederick Wiseman’s film Basic Training focuses on a group of men going through infantry training, showing how they are turned from civilians into soldiers. As well as being a unique portrait of the US army at work, the film is also a fascinating snapshot of a time and place at a defining moment in American history.

Recognised as one of America’s best documentary filmmakers, Wiseman began his filmmaking career in the late 1960s, where he embarked on a series of documentaries that dealt with American institutions: how they functioned, how people functioned within them and the effects this had on both the institutions and the people connected with them. Wiseman’s films followed in the tradition of direct cinema and observational documentary, which sought to chronicle real events with as little intervention from the filmmaker as possible. All of Wiseman’s early films were shot in black and white on lightweight, hand-held 16mm equipment, with none of the incidents staged for the camera. The resulting films seem to unfold naturally, allowing the people and events that are depicted to speak for themselves. The films in Wiseman’s ‘institutional series,’ beginning with Titicut Follies (1967), feature no voiceover, no direct to camera interviews, no music and no captions to orient the viewer within the film. The lack of these techniques, which usually serve to familiarise the viewer with the subject, allows the audience to form their own interpretation about the events they witness in the films.

Nevertheless, Wiseman does significantly shape the material in his films – principally during the editing process – while still presenting many sides to the situations he documents. In the case of Basic Training, Wiseman shows the army from a variety of perspectives and allows both the trainees and their instructors to have their own voice. However, it is clear that his main purpose is to show us how civilians are assimilated into army life and turned into fighting machines, and how some of these men attempt to maintain their individuality in the midst of the conformist attitudes of a military institution. The idea of an individual being subsumed by the system is at the core of Basic Training, and is introduced at the very beginning of the film. The first words we hear are numbers, as the new arrivals are allocated bunks to sleep in, followed by a sequence where the men are fitted for uniforms, their measurements read aloud. We then see a series of heads being shaved, one of the many sequences reminiscent of Full Metal Jacket (Stanley Kubrick, 1987). Like products on an assembly line, the trainees are quickly processed and indoctrinated in military combat techniques, and Wiseman, with skilful speed and economy, introduces us to the army way of life. We watch as the men are incorporated into a system that they are meant to serve unquestioningly. As Lieutenant Hoffman succinctly puts it, “The best way to go through basic training is to do what you’re told, as you’re told, and there’ll be no problems. When you start trying to fight the system, that’s when you get into trouble.” Most of the trainees seem to go along willingly with the training and do as they are ordered, while others – the rebels, the individualists or the ones who simply don’t fit in – are disciplined, punished and humiliated.

Throughout Basic Training we encounter a variety of people, many of them resembling stock characters from a Hollywood war film. There’s the tough drill sergeant who bellows orders to his troops, the jokers and outsiders who try to buck the system, and the more unfortunate trainees like Hickman, who, like Pyle (Vincent D’Onofrio) in Full Metal Jacket, cannot keep pace with the other trainees and is ill-suited to military life. However, the majority of trainees do fit in with the system and seem to adapt to army life very quickly. In one memorable sequence, Wiseman shows the men receiving four hours of bayonet training. They quickly progress from awkwardly thrusting their weapons to executing well-practised combat moves. The implication is clear: in a short space of time, ordinary men can be trained to kill with maximum efficiency. Wiseman also has a great eye for details, often cutting a scene off abruptly after a significant comment or action, or isolating a telling moment – a hand, a face, or a simple gesture – to make a point. Many other shots constantly reinforce the fact that these individuals are being moulded into one fighting unit. For instance, when we see a group of trainees standing side by side and shaving together in front of a row of mirrors, their reflected faces seem to blend into one image. The long scenes showing the men in training are often punctuated by shots of troops marching and singing in unison, a telephoto lens compressing the individuals into one mass. Every time we cut back to these marching troops, we are reminded that these individuals are being moulded into a group of soldiers. It is an image already familiar to us from countless films about boot camp life, summarising the army way of life and encapsulating the entire film.

Martyn Bamber


from an interview:
When Basic Training was screened here in Baltimore a few months ago, I saw it with an anthropologist who has done fieldwork in a military community. When I asked him what he thought about it, he said he liked it but didn’t find it “shocking.” I thought that was interesting, that he would feel he was being cued to be shocked. Did you see yourself as making a shocking picture?

Wiseman: No. That’s interesting, because one could argue that the thing that’s most shocking in Basic Training is the ease with which civilians can be turned into soldiers prepared to kill in the service of the state. It’s a form of education, and the Army is very good at offering that form of education. And most people are willing participants.

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/7CEF9816E73C5F9/Basic_Training.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/83cbee1737060/Basic_Training.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Viewing all 16439 articles
Browse latest View live


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