Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. www.criterionforum.org › Review › still-walking-the-criterion-collection-blu-rayStill Walking Review - Criterion Forum

    Feb 15, 2011 · The lyrical, profoundly moving <I>Still Walking</I> (<I>Aruitemo aruitemo</I>) is contemporary Japanese master Hirokazu Kore-eda’s most personal work to date. Created as a tribute to his late mother, the film depicts one day in the life of the Yokoyamas, gathered together for a commemorative ritual whose nature only gradually becomes clear. Rather than focus on big dramatic moments, Kore-eda relies on simple gestures and domestic routines (especially cooking) to evoke a family’s entire ...

  2. www.criterionforum.org › Video › still-walking-the-criterion-collection-dvdStill Walking Details - Criterion Forum

    Feb 8, 2011 · The lyrical, profoundly moving Still Walking (Aruitemo aruitemo) is contemporary Japanese master Hirokazu Kore-eda’s most personal work to date. Created as a tribute to his late mother, the film depicts one day in the life of the Yokoyamas, gathered together for a commemorative ritual whose nature only gradually becomes clear.

  3. www.criterionforum.org › Video › still-walking-the-criterion-collection-blu-rayStill Walking Details :: Criterion Forum

    The lyrical, profoundly moving Still Walking (Aruitemo aruitemo) is contemporary Japanese master Hirokazu Kore-eda’s most personal work to date. Created as a tribute to his late mother, the film depicts one day in the life of the Yokoyamas, gathered together for a commemorative ritual whose nature only gradually becomes clear.

  4. New video interviews with Hirokazu Kore-eda and Yutaka Yamazaki Documentary on the making of the film, featuring on-set footage Trailer A booklet featuring a new essay by film critic Dennis Lim and recipes for the food prepared in the film

  5. www.criterionforum.org › Review › after-life-the-criterion-collection-blu-rayAfter Life Review - Criterion Forum

    Sep 19, 2021 · I’m still a bit let down other material mentioned throughout the commentary and interviews hasn't been included here, but they’re still worth going through. The disc then closes with a trailer while the included insert features an essay on the film by Viet Thanh Nguyen, who sounds to be revisiting the film for the first time since its release.

  6. Nov 4, 2004 · still walking: the cinema of hirokazu kore-eda March 15–17 at the Brattle The Chlotrudis Society for Independent Film turns 30 this year, and they are celebrating by bringing legendary Japanese director (and multiple IFFBoston alum) Hirokazu Kore-eda to Boston for their award ceremony on Sunday, March 17.

  7. 554 Still Walking #1 Post by kinjitsu » Mon Nov 15, 2010 9:22 pm Still Walking The lyrical, profoundly ...

  8. www.criterionforum.org › Review › nikkatsu-noir-eclipse-from-the-criterionNikkatsu Noir Review - Criterion Forum

    Aug 10, 2009 · They still have a few flaws but they’re infrequent. The transfers could have benefitted from more room on a dual-layer disc but they are acceptable overall. Other than I Am Waiting detail is sharp across all of the films, except where limited by the source materials (a few car chases found across the films look a little soft and out of focus, but I suspect this is inherent in the source materials used.)

  9. Oct 20, 2022 · Called Walking Like the Dead the 13-minute compilation features Ella Mae Smith, Charles Craig, Lee Hartman, Herbert Summer, William Mogush, Dave James, Regis Survinski, William Burchinal, Kyra Schon (who played Karen), and S. William Hinzman (the cemetery ghoul), all talking about their zombie performances. It’s an amusing feature with the performers explaining how they came to get the roles (they were simply in the area and approached in most cases), the direction they received from ...

  10. www.criterionforum.org › Review › the-thin-red-line-the-criterion-collection-blu-rayThe Thin Red Line Review - Criterion Forum

    Sep 29, 2010 · After directing two of the most extraordinary movies of the 1970s, <I>Badlands</I> and <I>Days of Heaven</I>, American artist Terrence Malick disappeared from the film world for twenty years, only to resurface in 1998 with this visionary adaptation of James Jones’s 1962 novel about the World War II battle for Guadalcanal. A big-budget, spectacularly mounted epic, <I>The Thin Red Line</I> is also one of the most deeply philosophical films ever released by a major Hollywood studio, a thought ...