Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Download QR code; Print/export ... Pages in category "Films released on YouTube" ... Life in a Day (2011 film) Lights Out (2013 film)
The Perfect Dictatorship (Spanish: La dictadura perfecta) is a 2014 Mexican black comedy political satire film, written, produced and directed by Luis Estrada and starring Damián Alcázar, Alfonso Herrera, Joaquín Cosío, Dagoberto Gama, María Rojo and Salvador Sánchez.
Ruben Brandt, Collector (Hungarian: Ruben Brandt, a gyűjtő) is a 2018 Hungarian animated crime thriller film directed by Milorad Krstić [hu; de]. [3] [4] It is the first feature film of the Slovenian-born director, [5] who previously won a Silver Bear for Best Short Film at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1995. [6]
Jamie Babbit; Héctor Babenco; Frédéric Back; Emir Baigazin; Bruce Baillie; Sean Baker; Ralph Bakshi [2]; Aleksei Balabanov; Roman Balayan; Robert Banks; Scott Barley
It is the job of classical Hollywood cinema to get the audience lost and absorbed into the story of the film, so that the film is pleasurable. In contrast the task of European art cinema is to be ambiguous, utilizing an open-ended (and sometimes intertextual ) plot, causing the audience to ask questions themselves whilst introducing an element ...
Mark Klett: Saguaros by Gregory McNamee and Mark Klett. Radius Books, 2007. ISBN 1-934435-00-7. The Half Life of History, with William Fox. Radius Books, 2011. ISBN 978-1934435397; Reconstructing the View, the Grand Canyon Photographs of Mark Klett and Byron Wolfe, with Byron Wolfe, Rebecca A. Senf, Stephen J. Pyne. University of California ...
[7] Glenn Kenny of The New York Times in a NYT Critics' Pick called it a "thrilling documentary," writing "The film’s generous views of spectacular works like Smithson’s monumental (Spiral Jetty) (the work projects into the Great Salt Lake in Utah) and Mr. Heizer’s (Double Negative) in Nevada (a huge trench bisected by a canyon) are best ...
Film d'art (French for "art film") was an influential film movement or genre that developed in France prior to World War I and began with the release of L'Assassinat du duc de Guise (1908), directed by Charles Le Bargy and André Calmettes of the Comédie Française for the Société Film d'Art, a company formed to adapt prestigious theatre plays starring famous performers to the screen. [1]