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The Tulse Luper Suitcases, Part 1: The Moab Story

Spain, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Russia, Hungary, Germany, United Kingdom

2003

127 Min
Color
1.85:1
Dutch, French, German, Spanish, English
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DIR Peter Greenaway

EXEC Wouter Barendrecht, Michael Werner

PROD Kees Kasander

SCR Peter Greenaway

DP Reinier van Brummelen

CAST JJ Feild, Caroline Dhavernas, Jordi Mollà, Steven Mackintosh, Raymond J. Barry, Valentina Cervi, Scot Williams, Drew Mulligan, Yorick van Wageningen, Jack Wouterse, Deborah Harry, Michèle Bernier, Isabella Rossellini, Keram Malicki-Sánchez, Ana Torrent, Nigel Terry, Francesco Salvi, Tom Bower

ED Elmer Leupen, Chris Wyatt

PROD DES Márton Ágh, Davide Bassan, Billy Lelieveld, Pirra Jesús Lorenzo, Bettina Schmidt

MUSIC Borut Krzisnik, Eduardo Polonio

Cannes (In Competition), Toronto, Venice, Tribeca

Synopsis

Tulse Luper, a writer and a project-maker, is caught up in a life of prisons all over the world. From the south of Wales to Moab in Utah, Antwerp, Vaux, Budapest, Kyoto and Manchuria. The story covers some sixty years of the Twentieth Century from 1928 with the discovery of Uranium in Colorado, up to 1989 and the break-up of the Berlin wall at the end of the Cold War. –Cannes Film Festival

Director

Original

Peter Greenaway

An avant-gardist who earned surprising access to the mainstream, Peter Greenaway is among the most ambitious and controversial filmmakers of his era. Trained as a painter and heavily influenced by theories of structural linguistics, ethnography, and philosophy, Greenaway’s films traversed often unprecedented ground, consistently exploring the boundaries of the medium by rejecting formal narrative structures in favor of awe-striking imagery, shifting meanings, and mercurial emotional tension; fascinated by formal symmetries and parallels, his material displayed an almost obsessive interest in list-making and cataloguing, earning equal notoriety for its provocative eroticism as well as its almost self-conscious pretentiousness. Born April 5, 1942, in Newport, Wales, Greenaway was raised primarily in nearby Chingford. After deciding at the age of 12 to become a painter, he entered the Walthamstow College of Art. By 1965, Greenaway had begun working as a film editor for the Central Office… read more

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