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Line-up announced for this year s Woman with a Movie Camera summit, powered by Jaguar UK

Line-up announced for this year s Woman with a Movie Camera summit, powered by Jaguar UK
bfi.org.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bfi.org.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

BFI Southbank programme announced for July 2021

BFI Southbank programme announced for July 2021 Highlights include Wong Kar Wai, Márta Mészáros and Robert Altman seasons, and T A P E Collective’s programme exploring the nuances of being mixed heritage. 20 May 2021 In the Mood for Love (2000) © Courtesy of Janus Films The newly announced July programme at BFI Southbank will include a long-anticipated season dedicated to the World of Wong Kar Wai, presented in partnership with Janus Films and the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA). This complete retrospective of the Hong Kong master filmmaker, which will take place at BFI Southbank and the ICA, features seven brand-new 4K restorations (five overseen by Wong Kar Wai himself), and will include titles such as the offbeat love story Chungking Express (1994) and breathtaking romance In the Mood for Love (2000). 

Get Your Reps In: This Week, We re Highlighting Down-To-Earth Dramadies

Updated May 11 While local rep theaters are out of commission, we’ll be putting together weekly watchlists of films readily available to stream. This week, we’re highlighting down-to-earth, dialogue-driven dramedies that illustrate how subtlety can be a strength in and of itself. Funny Ha Ha (2002) Marnie is 23, stuck in that post-grad rut, ping-ponging between different temp jobs and crushing on her friend Alex even though he loves someone else. Shot on 16 mm and cited as the first mumblecore film in the canon, Andrew Bujalski’s naturalistic dramedy demonstrates how the seemingly trivial issues of being a 20-something can still feel monumental.

The Criterion Channel s May 2021 Lineup | The Current | The Criterion Collection

Satyajit Ray “Not to have seen the cinema of Satyajit Ray means existing in the world without seeing the sun or the moon,” observed Akira Kurosawa with regards to the Indian master who would have turned one hundred this May. Influenced by the poetic humanism of Jean Renoir and the Italian neorealist movement, Ray self-financed his landmark debut Pather Panchali the first installment of his internationally celebrated Apu Trilogy, a cycle of richly humane masterworks that traces its title character’s journey from boyhood to maturity. Over the course of a long, remarkably varied career that encompassed forays into a wide array of genres including period pieces, comedies, detective mysteries, and documentaries Ray applied his compassionate, lyrical vision to explorations of female liberation (

Blu-ray Review: Girlfriends | Under the Radar

Dec 17, 2020 Web Exclusive By Stephen Danay One of the pleasures of digging into older films is discovering movies that you’re not familiar with that are clear influences on films you love. Girlfriends, Claudia Weill’s 1978 indie about a twenty-something Jewish woman navigating professional, personal and romantic hurdles in New York City, is a clear antecedent to so much of the slice-of-life mumblecore that has dominated the indie scene of the last decade and a half. The film most indebted to it though, is the Noah Baumbach/Greta Gerwig 2012 collaboration Frances Ha, which borrows the preoccupations and structure of Girlfriends and updates it for a millennial audience.

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