Mubi has announced its lineup of streaming offerings for next month, including an epic six-film series dedicated to the brand new restorations of the films of Nina Menkes. The slate also includes a Brian De Palma double bill with Obsession and Body Double as well as Paul Schrader’s Hardcore.
Additional highlights include the Andrea Riseborough-led Please Baby Please, three films by Eugene Kotlyarenko, a Ghost in the Shell double bill, and, ahead of their release of Passages later this year, Ira Sach’s Little Men.
Check out the lineup below and get 30 days free here.
March 1 – Glass Life, directed by Sara Cwynar | Brief Encounters
March 2 – The Great Sadness of Zohara, directed by Nina Menkes | Phantom Cinema: The Films of Nina Menkes
March 3 – Please Baby Please, directed by Amanda Kramer | Mubi Spotlight
March 4 – Hardcore, directed by Paul Schrader
March 5 – Kedi, directed by Ceyda Torun
March 6 – Magdalena Viraga, directed by...
Additional highlights include the Andrea Riseborough-led Please Baby Please, three films by Eugene Kotlyarenko, a Ghost in the Shell double bill, and, ahead of their release of Passages later this year, Ira Sach’s Little Men.
Check out the lineup below and get 30 days free here.
March 1 – Glass Life, directed by Sara Cwynar | Brief Encounters
March 2 – The Great Sadness of Zohara, directed by Nina Menkes | Phantom Cinema: The Films of Nina Menkes
March 3 – Please Baby Please, directed by Amanda Kramer | Mubi Spotlight
March 4 – Hardcore, directed by Paul Schrader
March 5 – Kedi, directed by Ceyda Torun
March 6 – Magdalena Viraga, directed by...
- 2/21/2023
- by Leonard Pearce
- The Film Stage
The film explores the young queer generation of Colombia.
German director Theo Montoya’s documentary Anhell69 has won the €10,000 Golden Dove prize of the international competition of the Dok Leipzig documentary and animation film festival in Germany.
Austria’s Square Eyes is handling international sales on the film.
The festival took place from October 17-23 in Germany.
Inspired by the director’s own past, Anhell69 explores the young queer generation of Colombia and the violence of the city they reside in. It is a co-production between Colombia, Romania, France and Germany.
The film had its world premiere in Venice’s...
German director Theo Montoya’s documentary Anhell69 has won the €10,000 Golden Dove prize of the international competition of the Dok Leipzig documentary and animation film festival in Germany.
Austria’s Square Eyes is handling international sales on the film.
The festival took place from October 17-23 in Germany.
Inspired by the director’s own past, Anhell69 explores the young queer generation of Colombia and the violence of the city they reside in. It is a co-production between Colombia, Romania, France and Germany.
The film had its world premiere in Venice’s...
- 10/24/2022
- by Ellie Calnan
- ScreenDaily
The 7th Lumière Film Festival’s International Classic Film Market (Mifc) is expanding its international scope this year with more foreign companies than ever before taking part in the event, high-profile guests and an examination of Germany’s heritage cinema sector.
With 17 international firms from 25 countries at the event, the Mifc has reported a 20% increase over 2018 – so far the most international companies to ever to attend the market, according to Mifc project manager Gérald Duchaussoy.
Organizers have worked hard over the years to attract more international exhibitors, distributors, DVD/Blu-ray publishers, producers and other film professionals to the market, which examines the global prospects for heritage film in theatrical exhibition, video, TV and Svod.
Criterion Collection CEO Peter Becker opens this year’s Mifc on Tuesday, Oct. 15, with the event’s traditional Keynote of the Great Witness address. Criterion Collection’s distribution, DVD/Blu-ray publishing business and its recently launched...
With 17 international firms from 25 countries at the event, the Mifc has reported a 20% increase over 2018 – so far the most international companies to ever to attend the market, according to Mifc project manager Gérald Duchaussoy.
Organizers have worked hard over the years to attract more international exhibitors, distributors, DVD/Blu-ray publishers, producers and other film professionals to the market, which examines the global prospects for heritage film in theatrical exhibition, video, TV and Svod.
Criterion Collection CEO Peter Becker opens this year’s Mifc on Tuesday, Oct. 15, with the event’s traditional Keynote of the Great Witness address. Criterion Collection’s distribution, DVD/Blu-ray publishing business and its recently launched...
- 10/14/2019
- by Ed Meza
- Variety Film + TV
Retrospective to include around 20 East and West German feature and documentary films from cinema and television.
The Retrospective of the 66th Berlin International Film Festival (Feb 11-21) is to be dedicated to the year 1966, a year considered to be a turning point in German cinema.
“The year 1966 stands for extraordinary films in the West and the East, films which broke new artistic ground,” said Berlinale festival director Dieter Kosslick.
“The Retrospective 2016 shows the audacious revolt and tentative exploration in a time of transition.”
The strand will include around 20 East and West German feature and documentary films from cinema and television. Additionally, more than 30 films of short and medium length - a typical format at the time - will feature in film programmes and as supporting films.
In 1966, the New German Cinema wave received critical acclaim at major film festivals for the first time.
At the Berlinale, Peter Schamoni’s debut No Shooting Time for Foxes (Schonzeit für Füchse) won a...
The Retrospective of the 66th Berlin International Film Festival (Feb 11-21) is to be dedicated to the year 1966, a year considered to be a turning point in German cinema.
“The year 1966 stands for extraordinary films in the West and the East, films which broke new artistic ground,” said Berlinale festival director Dieter Kosslick.
“The Retrospective 2016 shows the audacious revolt and tentative exploration in a time of transition.”
The strand will include around 20 East and West German feature and documentary films from cinema and television. Additionally, more than 30 films of short and medium length - a typical format at the time - will feature in film programmes and as supporting films.
In 1966, the New German Cinema wave received critical acclaim at major film festivals for the first time.
At the Berlinale, Peter Schamoni’s debut No Shooting Time for Foxes (Schonzeit für Füchse) won a...
- 11/17/2015
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
Three classics get digital restoration for Berlin festival.
The Berlinale has announced the first trio of titles to screen in its Berlinale Classics strand.
Varieté, the 1925 silent movie by director E. A Dupont, features Emil Jannings, the world’s first winner of an Oscar.
In Jahrgang 45, director Jürgen Böttcher takes a look at young people’s lives in the Berlin district of Prenzlauer Berg in the 1960s.
Ula Stöckl’s 1968 debut fictional feature, 9 Leben hat die Katze (The Cat Has Nine Lives) revolves around five women and asks the extent to which the emancipation of women can succeed in a male dominated society.
Each film has benefitted from full digital restoration.
Berlinale Classics will also present a panel discussion titled Digitising Film Heritage in the Future.
The full Classics lineup will be announced in January.
The Berlinale has announced the first trio of titles to screen in its Berlinale Classics strand.
Varieté, the 1925 silent movie by director E. A Dupont, features Emil Jannings, the world’s first winner of an Oscar.
In Jahrgang 45, director Jürgen Böttcher takes a look at young people’s lives in the Berlin district of Prenzlauer Berg in the 1960s.
Ula Stöckl’s 1968 debut fictional feature, 9 Leben hat die Katze (The Cat Has Nine Lives) revolves around five women and asks the extent to which the emancipation of women can succeed in a male dominated society.
Each film has benefitted from full digital restoration.
Berlinale Classics will also present a panel discussion titled Digitising Film Heritage in the Future.
The full Classics lineup will be announced in January.
- 12/19/2014
- ScreenDaily
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