Berlin sleep-debt snatches : 3—Friday/Saturday
Neil YoungRainy midnight at the lost and found - a.k.a. a 6th floor room of the Etap hotel, just along the amazing ruin that was the Anhalter Bahnhof, about 5-8 minutes' walk from the Berlinale
Rainy midnight at the lost and found - a.k.a. a 6th floor room of the Etap hotel, just along the amazing ruin that was the Anhalter Bahnhof, about 5-8 minutes' walk from the Berlinale
Waking up halfway through Ermanno Olmi's Terra Madre, one will find a most mysterious kind of documentary emerging. The anonymous first half—unimaginative footage of the Terra Madre conference
Over my cornflakes, I peruse the Berliner Zeitung - specifically its story marking the passing of the individual who came into the world as Eric Lee Purkhiser (or, according to BZ, "Pruiksher") on 21st
Above: Clive Owen in Tom Tykwer's The International. One down, who knows how many to go before I depart a week on Sunday. Actually, this isn't going to be a "cram-em-in", six-film-a-day festival for
Above: Abraham H. Foxman, National Director of The Anti-Defamation League, in Hashmatsa. Friends may know that documentary makes me uneasy—well, any form that frequently pretends to be unmediated
Images © Fabrizio Maltese / fabriziomaltese.com
The Berlin Film Festival is a challenge. Actually, any normal film festival is a challenge. Attending the rather select (and often limited) New York Film Festival as my first major metropolitan
I don't know how companies like Netflix can or will make money with such bargain rates, while celluloid exhibitors complain when they charge the same price for only one movie and make even more profits
Sorry to be relatively absent from the conversation. While I've been occupied with other things, I've been reading these entries about distribution with fascination, and not entirely sure of how to respond
W.O.W. Historically, Valerie and Her Week of Wonders can be seen as Czech New Wave director Jaromil Jires's attempt to run for cover and make a safe, inoffensive fantasy film in communist Czechoslovakia
Thanks for your response to my post Harry, but if I may, a brief clarification is in order. Although I do prefer to watch films made on film projected on celluloid—as I do films shot on HD video projected
There is nothing inherently wrong with digital screening, on big and small screen, I agree with that Edwin, and purist celluloid lovers alone won't do anything about this inevitable transformation of the