The Forgotten: Better Loving Through Science
David CairnsL’inhumaine is Marcel L’Herbier’s ultimate triumph of design over narrative, drama, logic, and life and death.
L’inhumaine is Marcel L’Herbier’s ultimate triumph of design over narrative, drama, logic, and life and death.
Anarchist cartoonist Charles Boyer shoots movie songstress Gaby Morlay, and she falls in love with him. Well, he is Charles Boyer.
Marcel L'Herbier's L'Inhumaine screens tonight as part of the film series running in conjunction with Cinema Across Media: The 1920s, the First International Berkeley Conference on Silent Cinema. "L
“Brute!” exclaims wife Danielle Darrieux, fainting; “Comédienne!” accuses husband François Périer, lowering his pulled punch. So goes the first—and finest—10 minutes of Marcel L’Herbier’s Au petite
Above: Patricio Guzman's Nostalgia for the Light. Aurora (Cristi Puiu, Romania) This film is so long it deserves two notes: (1) If you are watching an ostensibly realist film (as we understand the
"The restoration of this hefty, propulsive, and preposterous 1928 film comes with an irresistible tag of relevance. The story - 'inspired' by Emile Zola's 1891 novel of the same name - concerns