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Essays

Being 17

Elena Lazic / February 18, 2016

Being 17 is more Sciamma’s than Techiné’s film

Berlinale correspondent Elena Lazic reviews Being 17. Although it was written by Céline Sciamma and directed by André Techiné, it’s got Sciamma’s fingerprints all over it.

Liasons Dangereuses

Mary Angela Rowe / February 17, 2016

Les Liaisons Dangereuses shines at the Donmar

Josie Rourke’s production at the Donmar plays up the novel’s feminist subtext while emphasizing the genuine bond between its two dissolute protagonists. The result is a surprisingly romantic take on this cynical novel.

Lovers and the Despot

Noemi Berkowitz / February 16, 2016

The Lovers and the Despot lacks substance

The Lovers and the Despot tells what should be an interesting story without doing the work to create one. It recounts a bizarre slice of South Korean cinema history: in 1978, director Shin Sang-ok and his ex-wife, actress Choi Eun-hee, were kidnapped, separately, by Kim Jung-II from Hong Kong and held for eight years. Kim Jung-Il wanted swift improvements in the North Korean film industry, and this was his solution.

Notes on Blindness

Eloise Ross / February 14, 2016

Notes on Blindness explores the soundscape

Documentarians Peter Middleton and James Spinney use segments of John M. Hull’s actual audio tape recordings to reconstruct his experience of going blind in this experimental non-fiction film.

Things to Come

Elena Lazic / February 13, 2016

Things to Come is a less damning portrait of misfortune than Eden

Berlinale correspondent Elena Lazic examines how Mia Hansen-Løve’s last two films, Eden and L’Avenir (Things to Come), reverse-engineer seemingly cliched stories in order to find the emotional truth and realism buried within them.

A War, Tobias Lindholm

Alex Heeney / February 13, 2016

Compassion may be the enemy in A War

Tobias Lindholm continues to explore how trauma affects networks of people in this complex character study of a Danish officer whose compassion may be his undoing.

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