Bressonian Artificial Eye
matthew swiezynskiA Man Escaped (Robert Bresson, 1956)Artificial Eye DVD Lancelot du Lac (Robert Bresson, 1974)Artificial Eye DVD Subtleties in 2 films by Robert Bresson, with moments of darkness
A Man Escaped (Robert Bresson, 1956)Artificial Eye DVD Lancelot du Lac (Robert Bresson, 1974)Artificial Eye DVD Subtleties in 2 films by Robert Bresson, with moments of darkness
"The directors admitted outright that they had made a film of the sort that neither of them would normally go see—both of them preferred 'Hollywood' to 'art' movies..." So notes David Bellos in his
I see from the newsletter from the good people at Second Run that over in Britain they're having a theatrical screening of Valerie a tyden divu (Valerie and Her Week of Wonders), which the company has
Roberto Rossellini’s mid-career output is best known for The Flowers of St. Francis or his Ingrid Bergman collaborations like Voyage to Italy. But we should welcome two films from the period have come
Reputations resurrected, re-contextualized, and revitalized: even as the future of home video, at least in the form of the DVD medium, is starting to look uncertain, at the very least cinephiles must