Cannes 2013. "Did you eat my daughter?": Jim Mickle's "We Are What We Are"
Marie-Pierre DuhamelThe American remake of the Mexican horror film (programmed in Quinzaine in 2010) unfolds a complex meditation upon family and foundation.
The American remake of the Mexican horror film (programmed in Quinzaine in 2010) unfolds a complex meditation upon family and foundation.
Adam Cook & Daniel Kasman discuss Steven Soderbergh’s “last” film, another work of alternately digital and classical pleasures.
Jean-Luc Godard filming his next feature, Adieu au langage.
Serge Bozon’s follow-up to La France six years later is a modestly scaled what’s-it, a deadpan burlesque pseudo-detective film.
Anthony Chen’s first feature is a heartfelt, lived-through vision of the 1997 Asian crisis in Singapore.
Adam Cook & Daniel Kasman discuss Johnnie To’s madcap new film, a crime-comedy-romance that (joyously) doesn’t know when to quit.
Rithy Panh’s autobiographical/historical recount stages memories and history under the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia with clay figurines.
The filmmaker talks about one of the highlights of the Festival de Cannes, Stranger by the Lake in Un Certain Regard.
Satyajit Ray’s pure cinema, the Coen Bros. half-hearted Llewyn Davis, and van Warmerdam’s oddball Borgman.
Decisively on the “fun” side of To’s films, a wild blending of thriller, comedy, burlesque and fantasy starring Andy Lau and Sammy Cheng.
Short takes on two major titles in Competitions, an Indian genre film in Directors’ Fortnight, and Alejandro Jodorowsky’s return to cinema.
The chauffeur-passenger story of the poor and the rich is given an extra dimension this debut: the border between Shenzen and Hong Kong.