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E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
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Favorite movies only need apply. Life is too short to write about what I didn't enjoy. 

Agnès Varda and JR on the road

Agnès Varda and JR on the road

'Faces, Places' in Cannes: “It’s the Miracle of Cinema!” -- Agnès Varda and JR Bring Us ‘Visages, Villages’

E. Nina Rothe February 25, 2018

“Did you like our little film?” 

Agnès Varda grabs my hand and holds it between hers as I try to exit the room where I’ve just spent the last ten minutes interviewing her and artist JR about their cinematic collaboration ‘Visages, Villages’ (’Faces, Places’) which premiered “Out of Competition” in Cannes. We may have learned in the film that the filmmaker has cute little feet, but I now know she also has lovely, kind hands.

“Of course I did! Why would I have wanted to interview you otherwise?!” I hear myself say, but almost as soon as the words come out, I realize I’m telling a half truth. Yes, I loved this film, its simple premise and grand cinematography and I relished the mutual respect the legendary 88 year-old filmmaker and the anonymous 33 year-old photographer show for each other throughout their road movie around the French countryside. To me, they are the new Beatles, the rockstars of cinema’s here and now. But I also craved to be in the presence of Varda and JR and would have come to interview them even if I hadn’t enjoyed the film as much as I did. It’s Madame Varda, after all, and JR, the artist — wrap your head around this — with a million Instagram followers! 

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In Film, Interviews Tags Faces Places, Visages Villages, Agnes Varda, JR, Cannes, Festival de Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Oscar nominated documentary, 2018 Oscars, documentary, women filmmakers, French countryside, The Beatles, trailer, Academy Awards, cinema, Instagram, Golden Eye prize
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A stil from Tehran Taboo

Breaking the Rules in Iran: Ali Soozandeh Talks ‘Tehran Taboo’

E. Nina Rothe February 15, 2018

‘Tehran Taboo’ is a spellbinding animated journey into the underbelly of Iranian society where nothing is what it seems from the outside. It would pay US media to watch films like Soozandeh’s once in a while. In fact, it would pay us all to do so, since we could walk away enriched by its wisdom. But the filmmaker’s genius here lies not in preaching, rather in thoroughly entertaining us, from the delicious rotoscope animation to the powerful use of characters that jump off the screen and into our conscience. 

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In Film, Interviews Tags Tehran Taboo, Cannes Film Festival, Ali Soozandeh, Iran, Animated cinema, Persepolis, graphic novel, Anna Magnani, Germany
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A still from ‘Human’ by Yann Arthus-Bertrand

A still from ‘Human’ by Yann Arthus-Bertrand

“Cinema with a Conscience”: Five Movies that Changed My Life

E. Nina Rothe February 11, 2018

We’ve all experienced the positive power of cinema. It is that moment, at the end of a movie, right before the lights come back on and as the credits roll by, when we feel we can change the world. We feel invigorated, wish to do better, want to be better and walk out of the theater with a new spring in our step. Sometimes, if we’re lucky, that energy, the magic of the movies, stays with us in our daily lives and continues to inspire a change that can become momentous.

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In Film Tags Human, Yann Arthus-Bertrand, cinema with a conscience, Batman, Loving, Jeff Nichols, Moonlight, Oscar, Midnight Special, Berlinale, Richard and Mildred Loving, Civil Rights struggle, 1967, Caramel, Nadine Labaki, Lebanon, Arab cinema, Beirut, Beauty salon, Middle East, Taxi, Jafar Panahi, Asghar Farhadi, The Salesman, Tehran, Iran, Iranian cinema, I Am Not Your Negro, Raoul Peck, Oscar-nominated, documentary, James Baldwin, America, Samuel L. Jackson, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Humanity
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The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975

'The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975' : The Revolution Will Be Documented

E. Nina Rothe February 10, 2018

I think the reason I love cinema so much is that, as a medium, it possesses the most potential for uniting the world. While we watch a DVD of a French film at home, sit in a theater being washed over by the images of an Italian B & W classic, or surreptitiously check out the recent download of a Bollywood movie on our iPad, we are undeniably transported to other lands, other eras and, most importantly, other ways of looking at things. But while the promise is there every time we choose a title, few films achieve the grand objective of forever changing our mind and enriching our world permanently.

Swedish filmmaker Göran Hugo Olsson’s documentary 'The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975' is one of those once-in-a-lifetime films which seamlessly reaches the full cinematic goal of changing its viewers’ world for good.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Goran Hugo Olsson, Sweden, The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975, film, documentary, The Black Power movement, Civil Rights struggle, The Black Panthers, Mutabaruka, Louis Farrakhan, Nation of Islam, Maya Angelou, Malcolm X, Nelson Mandela, Angela Davis, Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, USA, African-American, Danny Glover, Joslyn Barnes, Arab Spring
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PHOTO BY GIORA BEJACHLior Ashkenazi and Sarah Adler in still from Samuel Maoz’s ‘Foxtrot’

PHOTO BY GIORA BEJACH

Lior Ashkenazi and Sarah Adler in still from Samuel Maoz’s ‘Foxtrot’

Talking ‘Foxtrot’ with Lior Ashkenazi, Sarah Adler and Samuel Maoz in Venice

E. Nina Rothe February 10, 2018

In a great film, there is always a moment when things change — that instance when the viewer is caught off guard, and left with an indelible feeling to take home. I consider it the cinematic equivalent of that famous Maya Angelou quote “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” Personally speaking, a truly successful movie is one where that moment remains with me, hours later, casting a spell over my heart and soul. 

Samuel Maoz’s ‘Foxtrot’ is that film. More than twelve hours after watching it at the Venice Film Festival where it is featured in the main Competition section, I’m still only barely able to process it emotionally. Even though the filmmaker created an artful, visually stunning, sonically powerful, perfectly acted, intellectually stimulating and utterly entertaining film — I can just remember how it made me feel. I doubt I will ever forget actually.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Foxtrot, Samuel Maoz, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Lior Ashkenazi, Sarah Adler, Israel, Israeli cinema, film, Oscar entry, soldiers, war, Tel Aviv
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'Anna's War' photo courtesy of the filmmaker

'Anna's War' photo courtesy of the filmmaker

With 'Anna's War' Aleksei Fedorchenko Takes the Audience to the Frontlines

E. Nina Rothe February 2, 2018

Just what is it like to survive as a little girl in a big World War?

That is the basic, deep and haunting question that Russian filmmaker Aleksei Fedorchenko asks in his latest 'Anna's War'. I've been a big fan of the director's work since his 2011 oeuvre 'Silent Souls' because somehow, in a very grand cinematic way Fedorchenko manages to portray the most intimate of emotions, the basic core fears and passions we all carry inside. 

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In Film, Interviews Tags Film, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Anna's War, Aleksei Fedorchenko, Russian cinema, World cinema
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