Aspects Of Japanese Cinema, London
This celebration of Japanese cinema certainly covers all the bases. On the one hand, you've got a rare screening of Kenji Mizoguchi's 1933 silent The Water Magician with live benshi narration and traditional musical accompaniment; on the other, you've got the trash double bill of RoboGeisha and Big Tits Zombie 3D. No extra narration necessary. You can split the two-month event into four main elements: back-to-back mini-retrospectives of three towering directors – Kenji Mizoguchi, Takeshi Kitano and Akira Kurosawa – and to start with, a round-up of contemporary Japanese women's cinema, including new arrivals like rock sisterhood tale Nana and eccentric comedy Instant Swamp, plus a colourful look into Tokyo's adult-entertainment industry with Lala Pipo and a special cosplay screening of cult dress up hit Kamikaze Girls.
Barbican Screen, EC2, Tue to 19 Dec
Discovery Film Festival, Dundee
It's supposed to be an educational festival of international cinema...
This celebration of Japanese cinema certainly covers all the bases. On the one hand, you've got a rare screening of Kenji Mizoguchi's 1933 silent The Water Magician with live benshi narration and traditional musical accompaniment; on the other, you've got the trash double bill of RoboGeisha and Big Tits Zombie 3D. No extra narration necessary. You can split the two-month event into four main elements: back-to-back mini-retrospectives of three towering directors – Kenji Mizoguchi, Takeshi Kitano and Akira Kurosawa – and to start with, a round-up of contemporary Japanese women's cinema, including new arrivals like rock sisterhood tale Nana and eccentric comedy Instant Swamp, plus a colourful look into Tokyo's adult-entertainment industry with Lala Pipo and a special cosplay screening of cult dress up hit Kamikaze Girls.
Barbican Screen, EC2, Tue to 19 Dec
Discovery Film Festival, Dundee
It's supposed to be an educational festival of international cinema...
- 10/15/2010
- by Steve Rose
- The Guardian - Film News
In the Generation 14 Plus section of the Berlinale, Crystal Bear for the Best Feature Film went to Neukölln Unlimited by Agostino Imondi und Dietmar Ratsch of Germany. “The winner of this year is an incredibly gripping movie that succeeds in fascinating its viewers and leaving them spellbound. It made us laugh, cry, cheer, and protest. It is a work of art that takes full advantage of the medium of cinema. This movie is a sole, wonderful choreography that leaves us breathless but not silent. We thank the directors for this great masterpiece and for making an exhilarating movie about the simple life of an extraordinary family,” the Jury said about the film.
Dooman River (Republic of Korea / France) got a special mention from the Jury for the weight of the images, the insistent message and the stillness that this movie portrays.
The Crystal Bear for the Best Short Film was...
Dooman River (Republic of Korea / France) got a special mention from the Jury for the weight of the images, the insistent message and the stillness that this movie portrays.
The Crystal Bear for the Best Short Film was...
- 2/19/2010
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
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