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‘Fever Dream’ Review: Director Claudia Llosa Goes Into the Mystic Again, This Time With Netflix Polish - variety.com - Peru - Poland
variety.com
27.09.2021 / 10:51

‘Fever Dream’ Review: Director Claudia Llosa Goes Into the Mystic Again, This Time With Netflix Polish

Guy Lodge Film Critic“Fever dream” has lately become an overused term in film marketing and criticism alike, often generically applied to anything faintly strange or surreal with fractured storytelling trickery and a lick of gauzy ambience.

Salma Hayek once had depression so severe she 'couldn't leave the house or pay the rent' - hellomagazine.com - Poland
hellomagazine.com
21.09.2021 / 15:26

Salma Hayek once had depression so severe she 'couldn't leave the house or pay the rent'

Salma Hayek might seem like she's got it all, but a past interview reveals that she hasn't always been so together.It came in 2012, during an interview with now-defunct magazine, Lucky, in which Salma spoke out about her struggles with acne that meant her mental health was compromised.MORE: Salma Hayek mourns devastating death of family memberWATCH: Salma Hayek pole dances in the middle of a restaurant"This acne was so bad it sent me into severe, severe depression," she explained.

‘The Survivor’ Review: Ben Foster Excels in Barry Levinson’s Searching Holocaust Boxing Drama - variety.com - Poland - county Barry
variety.com
15.09.2021 / 07:03

‘The Survivor’ Review: Ben Foster Excels in Barry Levinson’s Searching Holocaust Boxing Drama

Owen Gleiberman Chief Film CriticBarry Levinson is 79, so it doesn’t seem much of a leap to say that he made “The Survivor,” a true story of the Holocaust, as a late-career reckoning. The central character, Harry Haft, played by the remarkable Ben Foster, is a Polish Jew who gets sent to Auschwitz in 1943, where he sees the lowest circle of the inferno of the death camps.

Ridley Scott’s ‘The Last Duel’: An Enjoyably Ripe Slab Of Historical Hokum That Proves Men Have Been Awful For At Least 7 Centuries [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - city Venice
theplaylist.net
10.09.2021 / 23:05

Ridley Scott’s ‘The Last Duel’: An Enjoyably Ripe Slab Of Historical Hokum That Proves Men Have Been Awful For At Least 7 Centuries [Venice Review]

In shades of the gunmetal gray that has become the grading palette of choice for Serious Historical Epics — possible because arterial blood spray shows up so nice and red against it —Ridley Scott‘s starry, surprisingly engaging “Rashomon“-inflected “The Last Duel” opens on the wintry December day of the duel in question.

‘Ennio’: Giuseppe Tornatore Makes The Epic Case For Legendary Film Composer Ennio Morricone’s Legacy [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Italy
theplaylist.net
10.09.2021 / 20:57

‘Ennio’: Giuseppe Tornatore Makes The Epic Case For Legendary Film Composer Ennio Morricone’s Legacy [Venice Review]

The talent and influence of Italian composer Ennio Morricone, who died in 2020 aged 91, is undeniable. Synonymous with Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns and the instantly-recognizable “wah-wah-wow” theme-tune to “The Good, The Bad and The Ugly,” the extent of his output was phenomenal at over 500 film scores.

‘Leave No Traces’ Review: Police Brutality Triggers a Chain of Systemic Corruption in This Solemn Polish Procedural - variety.com - Poland
variety.com
10.09.2021 / 19:33

‘Leave No Traces’ Review: Police Brutality Triggers a Chain of Systemic Corruption in This Solemn Polish Procedural

Guy Lodge Film Critic“Leave No Marks” would be a more apt translation from the Polish title of “Leave No Traces,” referring as it does to a horrifying command from one police officer to another, heard early on in this marathon fact-based drama: “Hit the stomach so you leave no marks, not on the back.” They’re in the middle of administering a merciless, unprovoked beating — a hard rain of combat boots and handheld batons — to a very soft target in 18-year-old student Grzegorz Przemyk, holding

‘Freaks Out’: Gabriele Mainetti’s Circus-y Nazisploitation Fantasy Caper Is A Hot Mess [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Italy - Rome
theplaylist.net
09.09.2021 / 22:35

‘Freaks Out’: Gabriele Mainetti’s Circus-y Nazisploitation Fantasy Caper Is A Hot Mess [Venice Review]

Where to begin with “Freaks Out,” a Nazisploitation fantasy caper with circus trappings and a tin-ear for taste. The puzzling thing about Italian director Gabriele Mainetti’s feature set in 1943 in German-occupied Rome is that, rather than embracing tastelessness a la John Waters, it guns for earnestness despite not having a thoughtful bone in its body.

‘I See Parallels Between the Case of Grzegorz Przemyk and the Case of George Floyd,’ Says ‘Leave No Traces’ Helmer in Venice - variety.com - Poland - city Venice
variety.com
09.09.2021 / 22:01

‘I See Parallels Between the Case of Grzegorz Przemyk and the Case of George Floyd,’ Says ‘Leave No Traces’ Helmer in Venice

Marta Balaga Dedicated to the story that shook up Poland in 1983, when high-schooler Grzegorz Przemyk was beaten to death by militia, Venice’s main competition entry “Leave No Traces” is not your usual historical movie, argued helmer Jan P. Matuszyński during the press conference.“I see parallels between the case of Grzegorz Przemyk and the case of George Floyd,” he said.

‘True Things’: A Sexy Romantic Drama With No Sparks Due To Its Bland Characters [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - county Wilson - city Venice - county Burke
theplaylist.net
07.09.2021 / 17:33

‘True Things’: A Sexy Romantic Drama With No Sparks Due To Its Bland Characters [Venice Review]

“True Things” is a “romantic” drama that is not romantic in the slightest. In the tradition of films like Catherine Breillat’s “Romance” and Adrian Lyne’s “9 ½ weeks,” the focus is on what is revealed about a female protagonist by how much she is willing to sacrifice to briefly experience passion with an unreliable yet sexy man.

Ana Lily Amirpour’s ‘Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon’ is a Sweet, Scuzzy Blast of Pure Escapism [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - city Venice - county Hudson
theplaylist.net
05.09.2021 / 23:51

Ana Lily Amirpour’s ‘Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon’ is a Sweet, Scuzzy Blast of Pure Escapism [Venice Review]

Like finding a grubby, balled-up bill in your spangly g-string and uncrumpling it to discover doughy old Ben Franklin staring benignly back at you, Ana Lily Amirpour‘s third feature is a sweet, scuzzy surprise made all the sweeter/scuzzier because you don’t know quite what you did to deserve it.

‘Sundown’: Tim Roth and Charlotte Gainsbourg Play Siblings In Michel Franco’s Tragic Acapulco-Set Drama [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Mexico
theplaylist.net
05.09.2021 / 22:31

‘Sundown’: Tim Roth and Charlotte Gainsbourg Play Siblings In Michel Franco’s Tragic Acapulco-Set Drama [Venice Review]

Anyone familiar with the work of Mexican director Michel Franco, whether they be admirers or detractors, can attest to the “this is not going to end well” sentiment his sordid cinematic provocations instill. With a pensive angle, “Sundown” – a reteaming between the filmmaker and his “Chronic” star Tim Roth – upholds that tension of expecting the worst to come the characters’ way.

‘Miracle’ Lives Up To Its Name, Seamlessly Blending Narrative, Style, and Technique With Devastating Results [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Romania
theplaylist.net
05.09.2021 / 21:37

‘Miracle’ Lives Up To Its Name, Seamlessly Blending Narrative, Style, and Technique With Devastating Results [Venice Review]

A journey of discovery rooted in questions about faith, fate, and mortality, “Miracle” offers up revelations like slow drips from a faucet, building to a staggering conclusion that synthesizes all of the film’s narrative ingredients. Part two of director Bogdan George Apetri’s Romanian trilogy, the film is self-contained as a piece, yet features characters from 2020’s “Unidentified” along the edges, expanding the tapestry of this world while germinating an entirely new story.

‘The Peacock’s Paradise’: Laura Bispuri Crafts A Masterclass In Mediocre Filmmaking [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
05.09.2021 / 18:20

‘The Peacock’s Paradise’: Laura Bispuri Crafts A Masterclass In Mediocre Filmmaking [Venice Review]

“The Peacock’s Paradise” is one of the worst types of films to watch and review. Ineffectual in its style, but inoffensive in its content and execution, Laura Bispuri’s most recent directorial effort fails to move beyond the rudimentary elements that comprise the average movie.

Giving Life to a Lost Community in ‘Three Minutes – A Lengthening’ [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - USA - county Carter - city Venice
theplaylist.net
05.09.2021 / 00:07

Giving Life to a Lost Community in ‘Three Minutes – A Lengthening’ [Venice Review]

A poetic meditation on film, history, and loss, “Three Minutes – A Lengthening” gives a glimpse into a lost world and then unpacks just how much can be learned from that brief fragment. While on a grand tour of Europe in 1938, David Kurtz, a Polish-American man, traveled to Nasielsk, the town of his birth, and brought with him a 16mm camera filled with Kodachrome, a novelty at the time.

‘Scenes From A Marriage’: Jessica Chastain & Oscar Isaac Shatter Hearts In Wrenching Divorce Series [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Sweden - Israel - city Venice
theplaylist.net
04.09.2021 / 23:13

‘Scenes From A Marriage’: Jessica Chastain & Oscar Isaac Shatter Hearts In Wrenching Divorce Series [Venice Review]

“Why does it take so long to break up? Why does no one talk about the fact that [divorce] is endless trauma?” Jessica Chastain asks in a heartbreaking moment from HBO’s devastating marital and breakup mini-series “Scenes From A Marriage.” A modern adaptation of Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman’s brutally emotionally honest 1970s series, now written, directed, and executive produced by Israeli filmmaker Hagai Levi, (“Our Boys,” “The Affair,” and “In Treatment”), this new HBO version is intimate,

Mariano Cohn and Gastón Duprat’s ‘Official Competition’ is a Crowd-Pleasing Comedy That Skewers Film-World Pretensions [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Spain - city Venice - county Bandera
theplaylist.net
04.09.2021 / 21:49

Mariano Cohn and Gastón Duprat’s ‘Official Competition’ is a Crowd-Pleasing Comedy That Skewers Film-World Pretensions [Venice Review]

There are shades of Ruben Ostlund’s “The Square”, if it were remade to target the film world, in Mariano Cohn and Gastón Duprat’s crowd-pleasing Spanish comedy “Official Competition” starring Penélope Cruz and Antonio Banderas. Controlled pacing, visual punchlines, and an insider knowledge of the varied pretensions within filmmaking make this a consistently amusing – if never downright hilarious – vehicle for the well-honed comic sides of two of Spain’s most famous exports.

Venice Review: Virginie Efira In ‘Madeleine Collins’ - deadline.com - city Venice, county Day
deadline.com
04.09.2021 / 20:47

Venice Review: Virginie Efira In ‘Madeleine Collins’

Benedetta star Virginie Efira plays a woman leading a double life in drama Madeleine Collins which premiered in the Venice Days section of the Venice Film Festival today. Also doubling up in Venice by serving on the competition jury, Efira puts in a terrific performance in Antoine Barraud’s taut relationship pic that veers into thriller territory.

Venice Review: Ruth Wilson In Harry Wootliff’s ‘True Things’ - deadline.com - county Wilson - city Venice
deadline.com
04.09.2021 / 20:47

Venice Review: Ruth Wilson In Harry Wootliff’s ‘True Things’

Ruth Wilson puts in a riveting performance in Venice Film Festival Horizons entry True Things, an impressive follow up to director Harry Wootliff’s debut Only You. Wilson and Jude Law are also among the producers for this intense story, based on the novel True Things About Me by Deborah Kay Davies.

Michelangelo Frammartino’s ‘Il Buco’ Is a Mournful Meditation on Earth’s Vanishing Mysteries [Venice Review] - theplaylist.net - Italy
theplaylist.net
04.09.2021 / 20:45

Michelangelo Frammartino’s ‘Il Buco’ Is a Mournful Meditation on Earth’s Vanishing Mysteries [Venice Review]

Near the town of Cerchiara, in a valley nestled within the Pollino massif of mountains on the border between the Calabria and Basilicata regions of lushest Italy, there is a hole. It’s not the biggest hole, but at the time of its exploration, it was the second-deepest.

‘Three Minutes – A Lengthening’ Review: A Memorial Crafted from Home-Movie Footage - variety.com - USA - Netherlands - Poland
variety.com
04.09.2021 / 17:45

‘Three Minutes – A Lengthening’ Review: A Memorial Crafted from Home-Movie Footage

Alissa Simon Film CriticRare home movie footage shot in Poland in 1938 becomes a priceless historical artifact, documenting people and places obliterated by the Holocaust in Dutch writer-director Bianca Stigter’s haunting and provocative documentary essay “Three Minutes – A Lengthening.” She utilizes the three minutes and some-odd seconds of 16mm film shot by American visitor David Kurtz in the Jewish quarter of Nasielsk to craft an original and incisive meditation on history, memory, memorials

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