The Noteworthy: New Lola, "2013" by Apichatpong, On the Set of "The Assassin"

LOLA releases new content, Apichatpong's mini-short "2013", images from the new Hong Sang-soo, a visit to Hou Hsaio-hsien on set.
Notebook

Edited by Adam Cook

News.

  • LOLA, one of our favorite film journals, has released some content from their third issue. The articles include a piece by Dana Linssen on the film Nadine, among others, and the nature of feminist cinephilia. Also, you shouldn't miss this collective approach (part one of two) to Holy Motors.

 Finds.

  • Above: new images from Hong Sang-soo's new film, Nobody's Daughter Haewon, set to debut in Berlin next month.

"As I see it, Manuel is the one great Portuguese filmmaker who has been denied the international acclaim he is due; but I am not alone in feeling strongly for him and his films."

  • Above: David Bordwell hosts a guest post by James Udden, who visits the set of Hou Hsiao-hsien's highly anticipated feature, The Assassin:

"The budget, currently reported at between US$12 and 14.5 million, had to be raised from various sources. Above all, though, it took time for Hou’s team to master all of the period details of the Tang dynasty. When it comes to mise-en-scène, no stone is left unturned. In fact, just about every stone, and everything else, is at some point toyed with by Hou himself."

  • R. Emmet Sweeney on the First Look series at the Museum of the Moving Image, which he describes as "a relatively youthful version of the New York Film Festival...an attempt to clue its audiences in to the possible future of the medium." Don't forget to also read Fernando F. Croce on the program, here in the Notebook.

"Daily life may be swinging toward two-minute YouTube videos and brutally succinct tweets, but there’s still one place where time practically stands still: the multiplex. Extra-long films have proliferated this holiday season, a consequence of “final-cut” directors who wield near unilateral control over their films’ running times and digital filmmaking tools that allow for longer and repeated takes."

  • Above: the Swedish poster for Safety Last!. Head over to 50 Watts for more Swedish posters for Hollywood movies.

"In Haneke’s film, the style is the premise for the setup: the willful exclusion of the characters’ inner life (yes, there is a dream sequence and a brief fantasy—both generic) throws the burden of interpretation on viewers. It’s Haneke’s usual strategy: to make viewers complicit with morally dubious deeds while keeping his own hands resolutely clean."

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Tags

The NoteworthyNewsApichatpong WeerasethakulHou Hsiao-hsienHong Sang-sooMiguel GomesManuel MozosCharlie ChaplinSatyajit RayMichael HanekePier Paolo PasoliniOlivier AssayasJean EpsteinHayao MiyazakiJean-Marie StraubDanièle HuilletStraub-HuilletVideos
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Notebook is a daily, international film publication. Our mission is to guide film lovers searching, lost or adrift in an overwhelming sea of content. We offer text, images, sounds and video as critical maps, passways and illuminations to the worlds of contemporary and classic film. Notebook is a MUBI publication.

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