Showing posts with label hoberman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoberman. Show all posts
Thursday, March 7, 2013
The Excruciating Details of Death by Starvation
"Perhaps because of McQueen's experience making video installations, Hunger is a compelling drama that's also a formalist triumph. The opening close-up of prisoners rhythmically banging their cups is held long enough to establish the movie as something percussive, deliberate, cool, and object-like. McQueen is not just remarkably sensitive to duration, structure, and camera placement, he brings those issues to the forefront without mitigating the power of the situation being represented. In a way, the movie is also an installation—as intensely visceral as it is rigorously detached."
http://www.villagevoice.com/2009-03-18/film/the-excruciating-details-of-death-by-starvation-in-hunger/full/ Read More......
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Thursday, February 28, 2013
"The Most Remarkable New Movie"-- Tomorrow 3/1
"If there's a tougher sell than a Romanian movie by a hitherto unknown director, it's a Romanian movie by an unknown director that takes two and half hours to tell the tale of a 62-year-old pensioner's final trip to the hospital. Does it help to add that The Death of Mr. Lazarescu was the great discovery of the last Cannes Film Festival and, in several ways, the most remarkable new movie to open in New York this spring?"
Read more by J. Hoberman in the Village Voice, April 18, 2006:
http://www.villagevoice.com/2006-04-18/film/the-art-of-dying/full/ Read More......
Read more by J. Hoberman in the Village Voice, April 18, 2006:
http://www.villagevoice.com/2006-04-18/film/the-art-of-dying/full/ Read More......
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Wednesday, December 5, 2012
J. Hoberman at the Movies this Friday
We invite you to attend our final event of the season, a
special opportunity to view and discuss film clips and the future of cinema
with major film critic J. Hoberman, a contributor at the Village Voice for
more than three decades, and author of the new book about trends in 21st
century cinema, Film After Film (2012).
Among other films, Hoberman will be showing clips from
animated adult feature, Waking Life, and the Polish-Japanese video game
digital feature, Avalon.
J. Hoberman, film critic
December 7 (Friday)
Reading/Discussion — 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center, Uptown Campus
J. Hoberman, one of the most influential American film critics of recent decades, is admired for his wit, intellectual energy and incomparable knowledge of experimental, international, independent, and Hollywood cinema. His new book is Film After Film (2012), which argues among other things that the future of film is animation and digital-image-making, ending “the need for an actual world, let alone a camera.” Senior film critic at the Village Voice from 1988 to 2012, Hoberman started with the paper in the 1970s as a third stringer under critic Andrew Sarris. Jessica Winter of Time magazine praised his work as “elegant, erudite, ambitious, and wondrously droll arts and media criticism,” and credited him for teaching her generation of critics “how to think and write about popular culture.” A portion of the Writers Institute’s fall 2012 Classic Film Series was based on Hoberman’s list of his favorite 21st century films December 7 (Friday)
Reading/Discussion — 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center, Uptown Campus
(see Classic Film Series Listing).
For more
information contact 518-442-5620 or writers@albany.edu, or visit us online at http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/ . You may also wish to visit our
blog at http://nyswiblog.blogspot.com/, or to friend us on Facebook.
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