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Flávio Moreira, Leon Hirszman, Rubens Maia & Luiz Rosemberg Filho – América do Sexo (1969)

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Film in four segments: “Colagem”, “Balanço”, “Bandeira Zero” and “Sexta-Feira da Paixão, Sábado de Aleluia”, having in common a strongly allegorical and gross protest tone in the approach of its subjects.

Quote:
Acreditava-se àquela epoca que aliberação política deveria vir juntocom a liberação sexual. “Esporrarjatos de napalm”, a frase de PrataPalomares (André Faria Jr.)posteriormente repetida emCrônica de um industrial (LuizRosemberg Filho) simbolizavamais do que uma metáfora: oinstinto sexual vinha junto com opolítico, e a angústia surgia porque o gozo social era mais difícil do que o individual. No título do filme América” e “sexo”; e sua tentativa é justamente a de exorcizar sexualmente aquilo que não pode ser resolvido no Brasil de 1969, menos de seis meses depois da promulgação do AI-5, ou seja, a política.






http://nitroflare.com/view/6DE12B70C85F540/Am%C3%A9rica_do_Sexo_%281969%29_FMC.LH.LRF.RM.TVRip.lucmor.MKO.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/c4F1037247aa9eDf/América do Sexo 1969 FMC.LH.LRF.RM.TVRip.lucmor.MKO.mkv

Language(s):Portuguese
Subtitles:None


Eric Rohmer – La femme de l’aviateur (1981) (HD)

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François (Philippe Merlaud) loves Anne (Marie Rivière), but he has doubts whether she loves him in return. His job, working nights at the post office, means he can’t see her as often as he’d like. One day, Anne is visited by her ex, airline pilot Christian (Matthieu Carrière), who tells her he is returning to his wife. Seeing Anne and Christian leave her apartment together, François becomes jealous and thinks that Anne is cheating on him. Then he sees Christian with a blonde woman and he begins to follow them…

The 1970s were Eric Rohmer’s least productive decade. He completed his Six Moral Tales in 1972 with Love in the Afternoon. In the rest of the decade, he made two films, The Marquise of O (1976) and Perceval (1978). In both of these, Rohmer experimented, departing from his usual subject matter and techniques by making two historical-set literary adaptations. The former was made in German rather than French; in the latter, Rohmer and his regular DP Nestor Almendros introduced considerable, and uncharacteristic, visual stylisation. Then, with a new decade, Rohmer returned to basics and his New Wave roots. The Aviator’s Wife (La femme de l’aviateur) was the first of a series of six Comedies and Proverbs, a witty comedy of errors shot quickly and cheaply, using a lightweight camera, direct sound, minimal crew and real Parisian locations. (I haven’t been able to confirm that it was shot in 16mm by DP Bernard Lutic, but it certainly looks that way.) The proverb the film illustrates is “On ne saurait penser à rien” (You can’t think of nothing). Incidentally, Mary Stephen, who would become Rohmer’s regular editor from A Winter’s Tale, plays one of the Canadian tourists.

The Comedies and Proverbs differ from the Moral Tales in having young women, rather than somewhat older men, at their centre. However, for much of The Aviator’s Wife we are with François. The film is tightly structured in three acts of roughly equal length, and in the second Anne is nowhere in sight as we watch François track Christian and the mysterious blonde woman, with the help of a teenage girl, Lucie (Anne-Laure Meury), who takes the opportunity to play detective. However, it is Anne who is really at the centre of this story, as the song at the end of the film (sung by Arielle Dombasle) indicates. Rohmer’s characteristic irony is most unsparing when it comes to his male characters, and François is no exception: he’s unperceptive to a fault, choosing on at least two occasions to disregard the truth when it’s told to him. As he slowly realises, Anne is fond of him and feels partly responsible for him, but love him she does not.

With a Rohmer film, the emphasis is not on what happens (though quite a lot does) but on what the characters say and do and feel while it happens. Few directors have such an ear for dialogue, which is often witty and always revealing of character, helped by pitch-perfect acting. This was my third viewing of The Aviator’s Wife, and my first for nearly eighteen years, and I find that it’s a film I see more in each time I watch it. With this film, Rohmer kicked off a second phase in his career, proving himself at the age of sixty one of the finest makers of films about young people on the planet.

Gary Couzens





http://nitroflare.com/view/549D7C83E1A6435/La.Femme.de.l%27Aviateur.1981.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/b2b590e763cE25Cf/La.Femme.de.lAviateur.1981.720p.BluRay.AVC-mfcorrea.mkv

Language(s):French, English, German
Subtitles:English (sup and srt)

William Friedkin – The Exorcist [Director’s Cut] (1973)

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Plot summary
A movie actress taking up temporary residence in Washington D.C. has her troubles. The script for the movie she’s filming seems inadequate. Her ex, who is also the father of her adolescent daughter, Regan, neglects to call the girl on her birthday. And the attic has rats. Meanwhile, Father Karras, a priest and a psychiatrist, is losing his faith; and he’s dealing with a sick mother who needs medical care he hasn’t the money to provide. Another priest, the old and ailing Father Merrin, has just returned from Iraq with forebodings of evil. These three persons meet when the sweet and cheerful Regan turns foul-mouthed and violent. But her sickness is beyond the reach of a medical doctor or a psychiatrist. What Regan needs is an exorcist








http://nitroflare.com/view/B69EA8F34AD4908/The.Exorcist.1973.DC.720p.BluRay.x264-SiNNERS.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/87efcf8ba2D70785/The.Exorcist.1973.DC.720p.BluRay.x264-SiNNERS.mkv

Language(s):English, Latin, Greek, French, German, Arabic
Subtitles:English

Michael Dudok de Wit – La tortue rouge AKA The Red Turtle (2016)

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As the lights dimmed a hand-drawn Totoro flashed up on screen. The friendly furry beast adorns Studio Ghibli’s familiar logo. Normally it has a sky-blue wash behind it. But in honour of Dutch animator Michael Dudok de Wit’s The Red Turtle, the studio’s first non-Japanese production, here it was bathed in red.

“If one day Studio Ghibli decides to produce an animator from outside the studio, it will be him,” was Miyazaki’s pronouncement after watching Dudok de Wit’s Oscar-winning animated short Father and Daughter. The eight-minute film has a lot of Ghibli-isms: it’s about loss; it tackles its melancholy subject with deceptively simple drawings; above all, it pays close attention to nature. Miyazaki, the lover of clouds, no doubt saw the many different and luminous ways Dudok de Wit sketched the sky using just sepia tones and recognised a kindred spirit.

Sixteen years after Father and Daughter, Studio Ghibli and Dudok de Wit’s collaboration has come into being. Dudok de Wit initially turned down the offer to make a feature, believing it to be too complicated, until he heard who was producing it. And even then he thought it was a cruel joke. The Red Turtle was made in France, with Ghibli co-founder Takahata Isao acting as artistic producer, and a script co-written by French director Pascale Ferran.

Cinephile heresy it may have been, but while I was watching The Red Turtle I wanted to whip my phone out and take away some of the images that had been so painstakingly drawn and painted by Dudok de Wit, and breathed into digital motion by a legion of French animators. (I resisted.)

It begins in the middle of a storm. Grey waves and raindrops engulf the screen. In the corner, a tiny head surfaces and then sinks. The nameless man is washed up on a beach with bits of his broken boat. A crab crawls up his leg. When he goes to explore, the view pulls right back so all we see is a remote island while his cries ring out. His only company is a cast of crabs (such an apt collective noun!). Several times he tries to escape with a makeshift bamboo raft, but each time a mysterious force in the water breaks up his boat. Eventually he discovers his secretive aggressor: the titular red turtle.

I’ll leave it there with the plot, because you don’t really want to know much more about a mythical fantasy like this one before you see it. The film is 80 minutes long and is completely wordless.

It has dream sequences and weighty allegories about life that seem to have put the odd Cannes viewer off – but don’t worry, they’re not too neat!

Pictures are the film’s currency and they are, without exaggeration, sublime. There aren’t really too many facial close-ups – actually, about as many of the man as there are of spiders and caterpillars, crabs and leaves. The motif from Romantic painting of a lone person subsumed by a nature is a recurring one: what changes is the island. The attention to detail shown to the sky (its magic-hour glow tinging the whole island), water (grey and angry one moment, an azure palimpsest the next), even the sand (at times you can see the grains in what looks like a smudge of charcoal) is quite extraordinary. The film is a masterclass in chiaroscuro: shadows are just as intricately sketched as the life forms that cause them. Even from a distance, a bottle washed up on the beach has a lighter shadow than a human’s.

A lot of digital animation, with its blocks of colour, can feel flat. But the depth and texture on show here – conjured from a surge of pencil marks and watercolour washes – is remarkable. The film is a must for the big screen. “I am a big softie. I’m a Romantic. I like to cry,” said Michael Dudok de Wit in an interview last year. You have been warned: pack tissues.







http://nitroflare.com/view/AE3A7230F0CB131/Michael_Dudok_de_Wit_-_%282016%29_The_Red_Turtle.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/0d876418A348dcAc/Michael Dudok de Wit – 2016 The Red Turtle.mkv

Language(s):None
Subtitles:None

Xavier Dolan – Juste la fin du monde AKA It’s Only the End of the World (2016)

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Louis (Gaspard Ulliel) is a successful writer returning home after an absence of twelve years. The purpose of his visit is to announce his imminent death, though this being context-light we’re not granted much insight into the nature of the illness, why Louis left home, why elder brother Antoine (Vincent Cassel) is perpetually angry or anything much that would have helped us care about these people one way or another. Instead, we have Suzanne (Lea Seydoux ), his stoner sister, Antoine’s mousy and inarticulate, slightly spaced-out wife Catherine (Marion Cotillard) and Louis’ mother (Nathalie Baye), with blue eye shadow and a smoker’s laugh.




http://nitroflare.com/view/8C5EC74647CCE1A/It%27s.Only.the.End.of.the.World.2016.1080p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H.264.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/7c0eF90d41c4E87c/Its.Only.the.End.of.the.World.2016.1080p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H.264.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French

Knud Leif Thomsen – Gift AKA Venom (1966)

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Lucian Pintilie – Un été inoubliable AKA An Unforgettable Summer (1994)

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In 1925 Romania, young Marie-Therese Von Debretsy refuses the flirtatious advances of her husband’s commanding officer. As a result, the cosmopolitan family is reassigned to a brutally bleak and dangerous outpost on the Bulgarian/Romanian frontier whereboth their relationship and humanity are severely tested.





http://nitroflare.com/view/E629BFA75AB0626/Lucian_Pintilie_-_%281994%29_An_Unforgettable_Summer.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/40bDBeafABb06ac9/Lucian Pintilie – 1994 An Unforgettable Summer.mkv

Language(s):Romanian, English
Subtitles:Romanian, English

Ben Hopkins – The Nine Lives of Tomas Katz (2000)

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A sadly neglected gem of British Cinema, this stunningly inventive film takes in German Expressionism, the pop promo, the docudrama and film noir. And that’s just for starters. The story of a mysterious man who creates chaos and anarchy in his wake, this has buckets of sly humour and a pleasingly dark edge. With brilliant performances from Thomas Fisher and Ian McNeice, this is an astounding reminder that UK cinema is much more than gangsters and girls in corsets.

Shot largely in black-and-white, The Nine Lives of Thomas Katz tells the story of a mysterious man (Thomas Fisher) who climbs out of a hole and hails a cab to London, where he takes on the identities of various people he encounters over the course of the day. A total eclipse of the sun is due to take place later in the day, and as the stranger assumes various identities, chaos overtakes the capital. It’s all observed literally with a blind eye by a fat police chief (Ian McNeice) who harbors a connection with the Astral Plane.







http://nitroflare.com/view/0A43DC3C1531795/Ben_Hopkins_-_%282000%29_The_Nine_Lives_of_Tomas_Katz.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6e0494f8adb68bb6/Ben Hopkins – 2000 The Nine Lives of Tomas Katz.mkv

Language(s):English, French
Subtitles:English, French


Clarence Brown – Emma (1932)

Adolfo Arrieta – Flammes (1978)

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Synopsis: A girl’s obsession with firemen causes her to start a fire at her own home in order to trap a fireman in her room. The film features the last onscreen performance by Dionys Mascolo (writer, political activist, known for his voiceover in India Song and for his love affair with Marguerite Duras) and one of the earliest appearances of Pascal Greggory.






http://nitroflare.com/view/A4E1B9A507ABD4F/Flammes.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/5b74b22883709632/Flammes.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

Jennifer Montgomery – Art for Teachers of Children (1995)

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Synopsis:
Jennifer, an intelligent but insecure 14-year-old student at a boarding school, seduces her married dormitory counselor, a photographer who has offered to teach her about his art and winds up shooting her in the nude. She is naive, and he manipulates her into an affair that eventually is discovered. Years later, as the photographer is being investigated by the FBI, the adult woman remembers her first love as a case of herself watching the artist who watched her.

Review:
Jennifer Montgomery’s autobiographical Art For Teachers Of Children is creepy and difficult to watch: The film documents the director’s affair, at the age of 14, with a boarding-school dorm counselor, a photography enthusiast who made a habit of taking pictures of his students in the nude. Art For Teachers Of Children is presented in a detached manner that never seems sensationalistic, an effect that can at least partly be attributed to the amateurish performances of its two leads. (It’s difficult to suspend disbelief when there doesn’t seem to be any actual acting going on.) This and the taboo subject matter conspire to make it a tough movie to endure—nothing here can in any way be classified as entertainment—but it’s not tough to appreciate, both for the courage it took to make and for the political issues it addresses. This is particularly true in the film’s final section: It’s here, in which an adult Montgomery is harassed by the FBI following the arrest of her former lover, that Art For Teachers Of Children becomes something more than a confessional piece: Broader issues of censorship and civil liberties come to the fore. Is what has transpired child molestation and child pornography? The film doesn’t present it as such, but it would be difficult to imagine it as anything but had the story been told from any other perspective. Thought-provoking, if nothing else, Art For Teachers Of Children may not be an especially well-made film, but it’s not easily forgotten.

— Keith Phipps (The Onion A.V. Club)






http://nitroflare.com/view/245094A488BAE7B/Art.For.Teachers.Of.Children.1995.VHSRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/202bF64459bc0a02/Art.For.Teachers.Of.Children.1995.VHSRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:(none)

Juho Kuosmanen – Hymyilevä mies AKA The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki (2016)

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The true story of Olli Mäki, the famous Finnish boxer who had a shot at the 1962 World Featherweight title. Immensely talented and equally modest, Olli’s small town life is transformed when he is swept into national stardom and suddenly regarded as a symbol of his country. There’s only one problem: Olli has just fallen in love. Inside of the ring, it’s Finland vs. the USA, but outside, boxing and romance become unlikely adversaries vying for Olli’s attention. This charming feature debut from Juho Kuosmanen was awarded the Un Certain Regard Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.



A low-key historical snapshot of a relatively obscure Finnish sporting figure, shot on monochrome 16mm stock, may sound on paper like a non-starter for international distribution. Yet “Olli Mäki’s” warm, crinkled humanity, cockeyed humor and gorgeous, utterly immersive evocation of a less-distant-than-it-looks past exert a surprisingly universal arthouse pull — while its popular, well-deserved triumph in Cannes’ Un Certain Regard competition will further boost its appeal to international buyers.

Kuosmanen’s unassuming yet immaculate command of tone and form here would impress at any stage of his career, but it’s entirely remarkable in a first feature. J-P Passi’s brilliantly supple, tactile lensing and Jussi Rautaniemi’s clean, crisp cutting may speak to conventions of documentary and New Wave fiction filmmaking of the era, but at no point does “The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki” feel like airless exercise or over-prettified pastiche. That said, design fetishists with a yen for Cold War kitsch should seek the film out for its production and costume design alone. Every advertising billboard, Dinky Toy-style car, stout-shouldered suit and salon-curled hairdo has been researched and recreated on screen in minute, besotted detail, yet nothing looks too new or too museum-plucked. Kuosmanen’s lovely debut has little time for easy nostalgia: It’s a period piece that shares its woebegone protagonist’s eye on better days to come.

link

http://nitroflare.com/view/F53370741532016/fico-happydays7.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/a109a697D5AcF920/fico-happydays7.mkv

Language(s):Finish
Subtitles:English

Robert Aldrich – Autumn Leaves (1956)

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In the ’50s, Robert Aldrich was a favorite of the French Cahiers du Cinema critics. In the ’60s, though, Aldrich got sloppier as his budgets got bigger. Most of his later movies are at least a half hour too long, and formulaic action films like The Dirty Dozen and Too Late the Hero tarnished his once bright reputation. But movies like World for Ransom, Kiss Me Deadly, and Attack! still hold up as harsh portraits of violence, paranoia, and a new kind of universal dread that began with the A-bomb and ended with the JFK assassination. All of Aldrich’s early work is intriguing, but Autumn Leaves is his secret gem. It’s been passed over as camp because of its star, Joan Crawford, but Aldrich brings all his hard edges to this woman’s picture. The collision of his tough style with the soapy material makes for a film that never loses its queasy tension.

It begins with a decrescendo of violins. Nat King Cole sings the title song under the credits, which play over dark, blotchy leaves that look like clusters of Rorschach tests. The camera slowly zooms into a seedy group of bungalows, and the tentative pacing of the zoom strikes a note of pure desolation. After two exhausted dissolves, we see Millicent Wetherby (Crawford) at work, a middle-aged typist pounding on her typewriter with grim determination. We learn a lot about Millie in just a few moments of screen time. Her landlady, Liz (Ruth Donnelly), pops in through Millie’s squeaking screen door. While the women chat, Aldrich frames Millie’s empty bed behind them. As Millie tries to make jaunty small talk with Liz, Aldrich takes Crawford’s rigid fakeness, apparent in all her later films, and makes it look like a cover for Millie’s quiet desperation, her huge fears, and frantic last hopes. Liz talks about her brother (“Tall and skinny and all muscle,” she muses) as if talking to herself, her forbidden sexual attraction to a sibling foreshadowing Millie’s future.

Perhaps it was a budgetary consideration, but the Los Angeles street sets of Autumn Leaves don’t have many people on them, and this adds to the weight of Millie’s despair. As she leaves a piano recital, Millie’s aloneness is palpable. Determined to enjoy her evening out, she decides to stop at a diner, and young Burt Hanson (Cliff Robertson) asks to sit down with her. After only a few words between them, Burt says, “You know something? You’re lonely.” (In the first scene, Crawford had a dark diagonal shadow running down her chest. When she opens up to Burt, the shadow is further down and much lighter. Such shadows are there to obscure Crawford’s aging neck, of course, but Aldrich, like Douglas Sirk, makes creative use of such necessities.) Millie says he should find a girl his own age, but Burt keeps coming back to her.

This is the point when a rough-edged, somewhat uncomfortable May-December love story becomes a harrowing examination of primal, even infantile urges and conflicts—a kind of Oedipal nightmare.







http://nitroflare.com/view/6160F43A75AA141/Robert_Aldrich_-_%281956%29_Autumn_Leaves.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/ac5941821090d16A/Robert Aldrich – 1956 Autumn Leaves.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Michael Truman – Touch and Go (1955)

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Plot: Touch and Go stars Jack Hawkins as the head of a British family who decides to kick over
the traces and emigrate to Australia. No one in the family, least of all wife Margaret Johnston, is
enthused over this move, but they prepare themselves with dignity. As the technical and legal obstacles
preventing their move begin to mount, even Hawkins has second thoughts about hitching his star Down Under.
Since no one behaves very believably in the film, Touch and Go rises and falls on its individual comic
sequences, some of which are quite good. The title Touch and Go has been used so often that when the
film was released in the US, it was retitled The Light Touch.






http://nitroflare.com/view/F54916A46E2556A/Touch_and_Go_%281955%29_KG.avi

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/C2D9eAEbc8b89063/Touch and Go 1955 KG.avi

Spanaish srt:
http://www.subdivx.com/X6XNDUwNzE5X-touch-and-go-1955.html

Language(s):English
Subtitles:Spanish

Jeff Nichols – Loving (2016)

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The story of Richard and Mildred Loving, an interracial couple, whose challenge of their anti-miscegenation arrest for their marriage in Virginia led to a legal battle that would end at the US Supreme Court.
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Loving is a 2016 American historical drama film which tells the story of Richard and Mildred Loving, the plaintiffs in the 1967 U.S. Supreme Court decision Loving v. Virginia, which invalidated state laws prohibiting interracial marriage. The film was produced by Big Beach and Raindog Films, and distributed by Focus Features. The film takes inspiration from The Loving Story (2011) by Nancy Buirski, a documentary which follows the Lovings and their landmark case.

The film was directed by Jeff Nichols, who also wrote the screenplay. Joel Edgerton stars as Richard Loving, with Ruth Negga co-starring as Mildred Loving. Marton Csokas, Nick Kroll, and Michael Shannon are all featured in supporting roles. Principal photography began in Richmond, Virginia on September 16, 2015 and ended on November 19. The locations used for Loving were mainly based in Richmond, also in King and Queen County, Caroline County, Central Point, and Bowling Green.

Loving began a limited release in the United States on November 4, 2016, before a wide release on November 11, 2016. The film received critical acclaim, and was named one of the best films of 2016 by several media outlets. The film was selected to compete for the Palme d’Or at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival,and has been nominated for numerous awards, including a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor for Edgerton and Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations for Negga.





http://nitroflare.com/view/EB85963D5F420D5/Loving.2016.576p.BluRay.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/bB95294a84628Ad7/Loving.2016.576p.BluRay.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):English + Commentary by Writer & Director Jeff Nichols
Subtitles:English Spanish Finnish


Reza Dormishian – Lantouri (2016)

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Quote:
A Girl is attacked by her lover with Acids.



Lantouri is the name of a gang that mugs people in broad daylight on the streets of Tehran and breaks into homes in the city’s rich northern district. The gang also kidnaps children from families who have become wealthy through corruption and embezzlement of state funds.

Read more: link

http://nitroflare.com/view/04CB30188C539E9/Lantouri.2016.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/b0507a97fff48e96/Lantouri.2016.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):Persian
Subtitles:English

Hirokazu Koreeda – Umi yori mo mada fukaku AKA After the Storm (2016)

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A prize-winning author that wastes his money on gambling struggles to take back control of his existence as his aging mother and ex-wife move on with their lives, until a stormy summer night offers him a chance to bond with his young son once again.

Tara Judah wrote:
From sentiment to scenario and across his characters, places, imagery and impressions, Kore-eda’s films have a melancholic tonality that represents the aching of the human soul.

Familiar themes are revisited here including; broken families, the problem of the patriarch, strained relationships between fathers and sons, coming to terms with grief, as well as the unutterable bond that is created and strengthened through taking time to share a meal together.

Here, Ryota (Hiroshi Abe) returns home after a patriarchal death in the family, hoping to find the strength to take up his own role within the flimsy structure of gendered society. The territory is well trodden as Abe played another son trying to become a symbol of the patriarch after a familial death, also named Ryota, in Kore-eda’s 2008 film, Still Walking.

Divorced, living in a tiny, unkempt apartment and spending more of his private detective income at the race track than on child support, Ryota is struggling to get a handle on life. Desperate for money but, unwittingly, even more desperate for the nourishment of his soul, Ryota must face the incoming typhoon with a strong heart, filled with what he does not have: honesty and resilience. It is not enough to blame “the times, this petty age we live in” for his shortcomings, we are told. Kore-eda wants us all – in the audience as much as his characters onscreen – to reflect upon the responsibilities we assume for both the beauty and harm we enact upon each other.

The film, as with his entire body of work, is peppered with succinct and telling character revelations that knowingly provide us with Kore-eda’s own voice, as a plea to the entirety of human kind; Yoshiko (Kirin Kiki), Ryota’s mother (for the second time, after Still Walking), is the spirited and surviving matriarch, and her comments are Kore-eda’s best, “A stew needs time for the flavours to sink in: so do people, ” and “You can’t find happiness until you’ve let go of something.” Thankfully, Kore-eda’s dialogue, no matter how blatantly or wilfully prophetic, is always self-aware, “I said something deep, didn’t I?” Yoshiko says and laughs, after pondering why she has never “loved someone deeper than the sea.”

But it is not the dialogue that makes the film so moving. Rather, it is that he finds subtle and poetic ways to show us the unfathomable hurt and incomprehensible love humans are capable of. We wound as well as we heal and no matter how painful the melancholy in his films can be, Kore-eda is a filmmaker in whose hands I would happily entrust my emotions every time. Through careful mid-shots and select close-ups, soft but not slow pacing and honest framing that allows the mise-en-scène to speak up without passing judgement; Kore-eda’s exploration of humanity is gentle even if the human behaviour is sometimes unkind.

Bilge Ebiri wrote:
It would be easy to make such material into a tragedy, a judgmental look at a man’s agonizing downfall. But for Kore-eda, this is just a glimpse of ordinary humanity. Shinoda’s setbacks aren’t all that different from the infidelities and failures he documents at his private-eye job. “For better or worse, it’s all part of my life,” says one woman who’s just discovered her husband is cheating on her. That gentle respect for human fallibility shines throughout After the Storm, as Kore-eda patiently charts the process by which Shinoda comes to understand that he will never become the man he wants to be — and learns to reconcile aspiration and acceptance.

Kore-eda’s stories, such as they are, unfold in unlikely ways. He doesn’t play so much with structure, but with focus: He’ll allow a scene to go on and on before slipping in a crucial bit of narrative information that leads to something else. In the hands of a lesser director, that could result in tedium, but Kore-eda’s love for his characters, his ability to imbue an exchange or glance with warmth and humor, keeps us watching. You can lose yourself in his films — wondering what’s around every corner, and what’s going on in the mind of even the most minor of characters.

Justin Chang wrote:
Set during an unusually active typhoon season, the film centers around Ryota (Hiroshi Abe), a divorced dad and onetime novelist who’s now eking out a living as a private investigator — a premise that initially sends out some intriguing noirish vibes. But Ryota’s detective work ultimately draws him back toward the family he’s long neglected, as he tries to bond with his young son (Taiyo Yoshizawa) and halfheartedly rekindle affections with his ex-wife (Yoko Maki). Nudging everyone gently from the sidelines is Ryota’s mother (Kirin Kiki, who previously starred with Abe in Kore-eda’s “Still Walking”).

After this film and his underrated “I Wish” (2011), it’s hard to think of another filmmaker who maps the emotional landscape of divorce-torn families as precisely as Kore-eda, who always steers his characters toward reconciliation and understanding without saccharine. Predicated on the revelatory power of shared meals and small talk, “After the Storm” builds to a scene of three people running around in a heavy downpour — a wistful, funny and indelible vision of a family coming together to chase an impossibly happy dream.






http://nitroflare.com/view/F4DAC04E8F68BF5/After.the.Storm.2016.720p.BluRay.x264-WiKi.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/a8dd0d4bf30Fb09B/After.the.Storm.2016.720p.BluRay.x264-WiKi.mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English, Chinese simplified, Chinese traditional

Raoul Ruiz – Mistérios de Lisboa AKA Mysteries of Lisbon (2010)

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Raúl Ruiz is one of the great cinematic self-perpetuators, like Louis Feuillade and Jacques Rivette—a film like this gathers a motion and a rhythm that makes it feel like it could on and on, self-generating new stories and new characters ad infinitum.  Based on the novel by Camilo Castelo Branco (whose writing has been the source for Oliveira’s similarly fatalistic romance,Doomed Love), Mysteries of Lisbon is, to paraphrase a line from one of its many characters used to describe a disastrous relationship he had, a game that turns into a bourgeois romantic drama, to which I would add, that turns into a game.  It starts—as all stories must?—with an orphaned boy questioning his parentage and falling into a fever, and out of that starting point the film evolves less as a story than a cartography of characters crossing points in space and time.  On paper it is indeed all melodrama: identities revealed, lives saved in the past coming back to haunt the saviors, secret connections, loves turns to hatreds.  But as traced by Ruiz’ oscillating tracking shots, which arc back and forth across rooms, pleating our view onto itself, folding time and space and people, the 19th century soap opera is transformed into an oneric submergence into ill-wrought fate, stories-within-stories, the nesting of all things, and the mysterious system which, quivering with ironic mirth and melancholy, holds everyone in place.  This elegantly languorous, epic film (four and a half hours long), carries with it a paradoxical sense of infinite expansion outward, with each new character, each new place a new story, a new irony, a new connection backwards and a suggestion thrown forwards, yet this expansion seems to exist within a closed system.  If this closure is not the film itself, which must end, than it is some other, secret measure of control that binds the interlocking orbits of people and their passions in space and time and does not allow them to escape.  Perhaps the Mysteries are both expanding and elastic? Certainly a model for the universe, if that’s the case.  As for the bourgeois drama, everyone’s fable-like unsurprise at the strange motions, histories, and identities of those characters around them opens their simple emotions to a greater cosmic plane, as if they have an awareness they have to live both in the elastic, restricted world (of their society, of a normal dramatic film) and one that has mysterious, expanding mind of its own.

link







http://nitroflare.com/view/8C08AB825332489/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt1%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/E8A1D9C6905E63B/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt1%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.idx
http://nitroflare.com/view/E055D761A6C9A9B/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt1%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.sub
http://nitroflare.com/view/BC4D9829112EA78/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt2%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.avi
http://nitroflare.com/view/887BD8457B90106/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt2%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.idx
http://nitroflare.com/view/846BFA6DAC100E4/Misterios_de_Lisboa_%28Pt2%29_-_2010_-_Raoul_Ruiz.sub

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/D762adA49a384404/Misterios de Lisboa Pt1 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/c840941dc21df464/Misterios de Lisboa Pt1 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.idx
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/4663c6c22C1a1813/Misterios de Lisboa Pt1 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.sub
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/bf6D68f98f0384D5/Misterios de Lisboa Pt2 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.avi
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/6ae3F3F66571682d/Misterios de Lisboa Pt2 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.idx
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/E7eFaA52fe4352e8/Misterios de Lisboa Pt2 – 2010 – Raoul Ruiz.sub

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

Masahiro Shinoda – Waga koi no tabiji AKA Epitaph to My Love (1961)

Ralf Kirsten – Käthe Kollwitz (1986)

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One dramatic event marked the life of the great German artist in particular. At the beginning of the First World War she was already world famous for her etchings, lithographs, carvings and drawings. To her horror, her youngest son, Peter, volunteered to go to war. Within a few weeks she received the dreadful news Peter fell in Flanders. Käthe Kollwitz, who had always sided with the common people, became a committed pacifist and even a socialist. She lived with her husband, a doctor to the poor, in the Berlin working-class quarter of Prenzlauer Berg, where a central square is now named after her. The bloody end of the November Revolution destroyed her hope for swift improvements in living conditions, but strengthened her convictions. The excellently cast DEFA film shows impressive images from the life of a woman who was later to be a vehement foe of National Socialism and whose work still impresses the world today.







http://nitroflare.com/view/C2FCCD3394C392B/K%C3%A4the_Kollwitz.mkv

https://uploadgig.com/file/download/dd572715Eb9EcdD2/Käthe Kollwitz.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English hardsubbed

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