Ways to End a Movie #1
Daniel KasmanAn explosion and a kiss from Luc Moullet’s Shipwrecked on Route D 17.
An explosion and a kiss from Luc Moullet’s Shipwrecked on Route D 17.
Swiss director Alain Tanner, who turned 80 last December, is one of the forgotten men of European art cinema. Though his films were regularly distributed in the US in the 1970s and ’80s, Tanner has not
The only thing I would wish different about this gorgeous Japanese poster for P.T. Anderson’s Punch-Drunk Love is that it were bigger.
Anne-Marie Stretter (Delphine Seyrig) in Marguerite Duras' India Song (1975). Cinematography by Bruno Nuytten.
With Movie Poster of the Week mastermind Adrian Curry on vacation this week, we thought we'd give a little homage to some of the films from the Cannes Film Festival currently playing for free on The
Our first moga is Ryuko Umezono in Mikio Naruse's Three Sisters with Maiden Hearts (1935), with cinematography by Hiroshi Suzuki. (Brief background on modern girls.)
One of my favorite films of last year, and a favorite of many at The Auteurs, Maren Ade’s Everyone Else is finally getting a theatrical opening on April 9th at the IFC Center in New York. The film premiered
Prof. Alvah Jesper (Gary Cooper), after his first kill, in Fritz Lang's Cloak and Dagger (1946); cinematography by Sol Polito.
For the second year running, the South by Southwest film festival in Austin Texas has presented an award for Excellence in Poster Design. As far as I know this is the only major film festival that has
Glory to the Filmmaker indeed. As reported on The Auteurs yesterday, Takeshi Kitano is currently the toast of Paris, prompting Movie Poster of the Week to take a look at Kitano’s career in one-sheets
Images of melancholy, void, and terror.
An exclusive at The Auteurs, this is the superb new poster for the long-awaited new Aaron Katz feature which will have its world premiere at SXSW on March 13. Katz made a name for himself with his first