Christian Petzold: “My mother told me all the fairy tales by the Brothers Grimm, by [Wilhelm] Hauff and [Hans Christian] Andersen when I was very young.” Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Christian Petzold’s Undine (screening virtually in the Main Slate of the New York Film Festival through Wednesday and in London on Monday), starring Paula Beer and Franz Rogowski, is built on the legacy of centuries-old tales and myths. Stories need to change in re-telling in order to remain relevant, otherwise they too will turn to sea foam. Heinz Emigholz has two films in the Currents programme, The Lobby, shot in Buenos Aires during the fall of 2019, featuring solely John Erdman (credited as Old White Male) and The Last City (Die Letzte Stadt) with Erdman, Jonathan Perel, Young Sun Han, Dorothy Ko, and Susanne Sachsse.
John Erdman in Heinz Emigholz’s The Lobby
Jean Cocteau in his Beauty And The Beast used the...
Christian Petzold’s Undine (screening virtually in the Main Slate of the New York Film Festival through Wednesday and in London on Monday), starring Paula Beer and Franz Rogowski, is built on the legacy of centuries-old tales and myths. Stories need to change in re-telling in order to remain relevant, otherwise they too will turn to sea foam. Heinz Emigholz has two films in the Currents programme, The Lobby, shot in Buenos Aires during the fall of 2019, featuring solely John Erdman (credited as Old White Male) and The Last City (Die Letzte Stadt) with Erdman, Jonathan Perel, Young Sun Han, Dorothy Ko, and Susanne Sachsse.
John Erdman in Heinz Emigholz’s The Lobby
Jean Cocteau in his Beauty And The Beast used the...
- 10/12/2020
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
John Erdman in The Lobby, directed by Heinz Emigholz
Christian Petzold, the director of Undine (screening in the Main Slate of the 58th New York Film Festival), starring Paula Beer and Franz Rogowski, will participate in a Free Talk presented by HBO with Heinz Emigholz, the director of The Lobby, featuring solely John Erdman and The Last City with Erdman, Jonathan Perel, Young Sun Han, Dorothy Ko, and Susanne Sachsse (both films in the Currents programme).
Undine director Christian Petzold: "I will also have a rehearsal week with the actors where we'll just look into cinema" Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
In The Lobby, shot in Buenos Aires during the fall of 2019, the man (Erdman), called Old White Male in the credits, is at times angry, at others laconic, seldom scary. He believes that neither Jesus, nor the Ramones will be with us after death, and we will have no relatives. “Dying...
Christian Petzold, the director of Undine (screening in the Main Slate of the 58th New York Film Festival), starring Paula Beer and Franz Rogowski, will participate in a Free Talk presented by HBO with Heinz Emigholz, the director of The Lobby, featuring solely John Erdman and The Last City with Erdman, Jonathan Perel, Young Sun Han, Dorothy Ko, and Susanne Sachsse (both films in the Currents programme).
Undine director Christian Petzold: "I will also have a rehearsal week with the actors where we'll just look into cinema" Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
In The Lobby, shot in Buenos Aires during the fall of 2019, the man (Erdman), called Old White Male in the credits, is at times angry, at others laconic, seldom scary. He believes that neither Jesus, nor the Ramones will be with us after death, and we will have no relatives. “Dying...
- 9/28/2020
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
The 70th Berlin International Film Festival (Feb 20 – March 1) unveiled its Encounters program today, featuring the premieres of new works by Tim Sutton and Romanian director Cristi Puiu.
Also screening is Josephine Decker’s Shirley with Elisabeth Moss and Michael Stuhlbarg, marking the film’s international premiere after its upcoming Sundance bow, and Gunda by Victor Kossakovsky, whose last pic was the 2018 Venice doc Aquarela.
Encounters is a newly-created competitive section at the Berlin festival that looks to highlight “new voices in cinema and to give more room to diverse narrative and documentary forms.” A three-member jury will choose the winners for Best Film, Best Director and a Special Jury Award.
“As a result of passionate research, the 15 titles chosen for Encounters present the vitality of cinema in all of its forms. Each film presents a different way of interpreting the cinematic story: autobiographical, intimate, political,...
Also screening is Josephine Decker’s Shirley with Elisabeth Moss and Michael Stuhlbarg, marking the film’s international premiere after its upcoming Sundance bow, and Gunda by Victor Kossakovsky, whose last pic was the 2018 Venice doc Aquarela.
Encounters is a newly-created competitive section at the Berlin festival that looks to highlight “new voices in cinema and to give more room to diverse narrative and documentary forms.” A three-member jury will choose the winners for Best Film, Best Director and a Special Jury Award.
“As a result of passionate research, the 15 titles chosen for Encounters present the vitality of cinema in all of its forms. Each film presents a different way of interpreting the cinematic story: autobiographical, intimate, political,...
- 1/17/2020
- by Tom Grater
- Deadline Film + TV
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