The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:
- Brothers in arms (p. 12) – my contribution to the ongoing ‘Lost & Found’ series, whose contributors are given a page to extol the virtues of a film that’s been neglected for far too long – I picked Paolo & Vittorio Taviani’s 1974 film Allonsanfàn, and the piece is also available online.
- After the Apocalypse (p. 56) – review of Antony Butt’s sobering documentary about the social, cultural and biological aftermath of four decades of nuclear testing in Kazakhstan.
- Yu-Gi-Oh! 3D – Bonds Beyond Time (p. 82) – loud, shouty and (for non-devotees) borderline incomprehensible Japanese sci-fi animation.
- Apocalypse Now (p. 85) – review of Optimum’s amazing three-disc Blu-ray that combines both cuts of the main feature with the documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse and much more besides;
- Films by Ozu Yasujiro (p. 88) – namely, the new BFI dual-format editions of Late Autumn (1960) and An Autumn Afternoon (1962) plus the supporting features A Mother Should Be Loved (1934) and A Hen in the Wind (1948);
- Taxi Driver (p. 90) – Sony’s outstanding new Blu-ray crams in pretty much everything you could conceivably want, including an onscreen trivia track for people like my mother-in-law who always needs to know what else someone has been in;
- Avant-Garde to New Wave: Czechoslovak Cinema, Surrealism and the Sixties (p. 93) – review of Jonathan L. Owen’s excellent book about the relationship between the Czech and Slovak avant-garde and the New Wave filmmakers of the 1960s, revealed more often by common artistic preoccupations than close personal relationships.
Screenonline has just updated its homepage, the highlight being last year’s discovery of seventy previously missing BBC programmes at the Library of Congress (the picture is of Sean Connery and Dorothy Tutin in a 1960 production of Jean Anouilh’s Colombe). I contributed a piece about
Today sees the release of the BFI’s dual-format reissue of their 2004 DVD package containing both Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí film collaborations, Un chien andalou (1929) and L’âge d’or (1930), together with José Luis López-Linares and Javier Rioyo’s feature-length documentary A propósito de Buñuel (which is actually longer than the two main films put together). I contributed a short biography of Buñuel to the 2004 release, which has been reprinted in the booklet of the new one.
The BFI’s long-awaited dual-format edition of Jan Švankmajer’s Alice finally hits the streets today amid much anticipation and excitement: reviews so far have been mostly frothing raves. I’m credited as co-producer (though in truth my role was more of a consultant: Upekha Bandaranayake and technical supervisor James White deserve far more credit for the physical product) and also wrote several of the pieces in the booklet.
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:
The inaugural entry in Arrow’s new
The latest Sight & Sound is out, complete with the following pieces by me:
To mark the release of a mostly English-friendly
My review of Wojciech Smarzowski’s scabrous