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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. 

Francis Ford Coppola's 'Megalopolis' Cannes "review": For the love of cinema (and America)

E. Nina Rothe May 17, 2024

If you go into Coppola’s opus without a heavy belief in romance and a huge cultural knowledge of cinema, you’ll miss the point. Once you’ve got that sorted, all you need is to sit back, relax and enjoy the show — because what a show it is!

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In Features, Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Lonely Planet The The, Francis Ford Coppola, Cesar, Adam Driver, Aubrey Plaza, Megalopolis, Studio 54, NYC, New York, New Rome, Jon Voight, Laurence Fishburne, Giancarlo Esposito, Talia Shire, James Remar, D.B. Sweeney, Nathalie Emmanuel, Dustin Hoffman, Shia LaBeouf, Napoléon vu par Abel Gance, Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane, Sidney Lumet’s Twelve Angry Men, Fairy tale, Fable, BBC, Debussy, Festival de Cannes, world premiere
Comment

'Wild Diamond' Cannes Review: A woman's story for the age we live in

E. Nina Rothe May 16, 2024

Agathe Riedinger’s Competition title shows us the contradictions and pressures of being a modern woman. And the resulting film is a work of the seventh art not to be missed.

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In Features, review, Film Festivals Tags Wild Diamond, Festival de Cannes, Silex Films, France, french Cinema, Malou Khebizi, Andréa Bescond, J'attends Jupiter
Comment

'Taking Venice' review: An art caper documentary that feels like a thriller

E. Nina Rothe May 14, 2024

When the US wanted to use art to conquer the world, they enlisted the help of an up-and-coming American artist, a Jewish Italian art dealer and a woman with political connections. The result was a victory like no other, the story told in a wondrous documentary which is releasing this weekend in NYC, with LA and other cities to follow.

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In Film, review, Features Tags Taking Venice, review, Art Biennale, Amei Wallach, USA, USIA
Comment

Jeremy Xido's 'The Bones' follows CPH:DOX premiere with Hot Docs Surprise Screening

E. Nina Rothe May 2, 2024

And the film importantly holds proof that in order to understand our future, we must look at the past — the very distant, millions of years ago, dinosaurs and all, past!

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In Features, Film Festivals, Film, review Tags Jeremy Xido, The Bones, CPH: DOX, Hot Docs, Death Metal Angola, Dubai International Film Festival, Angola, Heavy metal music, Detroit, Triassic period, dinosaurs, Gobi Desert, Bolor Minjin, Mongolia, Nizar Ibrahim, Paleontologist, Morocco, Sahara desert, Africa, South Africa, fossils trade, Francois Escuillier, France, Jack Horner, Jurassic Park, Ina Fichman, Intuitive Pictures, Fire of Love, The Wanted 18, Amer Shomali, Palestine, Sundance, Toronto, Canada, Kaveh Nabatian, Bettina Borgfeld, Johan Legraie, Claire Sanford, Étienne Roussy, Léna Mill Reuillard, Sarah Blum, Nick Taylor, Tom Randaxhe, Jacob Thusen, Boban Chaldovich, Cabula6, Ramachandra Borcar
Comment

Highest grossing Italian film of 2023 hits UK cinemas this weekend

E. Nina Rothe April 23, 2024

And no, while it does have pink lettering on the poster, it’s not ‘Barbie’. But it is female-directed and features a woman who proves an inspiration to women young and old…

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In Features, review, Film Tags There's Still Tomorrow, Paola Cortellesi, Vue distribution, Valerio Mastandrea, Furio Andreotti, Giulia Calenda, Barbie, Oppenheimer, Nastro Argento, Rome Film Festival, Vue Distribution, Testaccio, Roma, Romana Maggiora Vergano, Francesco Centorame, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Italian cinema, Uk, Ireland, film distribution, Lele Marchitelli
Comment

Re-evaluating the power of cinema: Amos Gitai's 'Shikun' at Berlinale

E. Nina Rothe April 9, 2024

If you’d asked me a year ago did I believe cinema could change the world, I would have answered you with an enthusiastic “yes!” Now? Read on to find out…

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In Features, Film, review, Interviews, Film Festivals Tags Amos Gitai, Irene Jacob, Berlinale, Shikun, Eugene Ionesco, Israel, Palestine, Benjamin Netanyahu, Alexei Kochetkov, Paris, Tel Aviv, Louis Sclavis, Hebrew, Haaretz, Ramallah, West Bank, Gaza, Mahmood Darwish, Umberto Eco, Think of Others, Rhinoceros, Hamas, Wag the Dog, Adlon Kempinski, October 7th 2023, Cannes, Gene Wilder, Zero Mostel, Ely Landau, Hollywood, No Other Land, Yuval Abraham, Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal, Panorama Audience Award winner, documentary, Berlinale Special, Cannes Film Festival, Thierry Fremaux, Variety, Elsa Keslassy, cinema with a conscience
Comment

Franz Rogowski in a still from ‘Disco Boy’ by Giacomo Abbruzzese

'Disco Boy' -- a US release review

E. Nina Rothe January 31, 2024

In a hippy, trippy kind of way, filmmaker Giacomo Abbruzzese’s debut feature echoes fellow Italian Francis Ford Coppola’s ‘Apocalypse Now’, as he journeys to the heart of darkness, with the help of spellbinding German actor Franz Rogowski.

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In Film, review Tags Morr Ndiaye, Disco Boy, Laëtitia Ky, Franz Rogowski, Giacomo Abbruzzese, Belarus, Poland, France, French Foreign Legion, Michał Balicki, Britain, MEND, Niger Delta, Nigeria, Hélène Louvart, Africa, Antoneta Alamat Kusijanović, Alice Rohrwacher, Murina, Francis Ford Coppola, Apocalypse Now, Vietnam, Edith Piaf, Vitalic, Leon Lučev, Berlinale, THR, Leslie Felperin, Silver Bear, Claire Denis, Beau Travail, NYC, New Plaza, Quad cinema, Los Angeles, Laemmle Glendale, San Francisco, Landmark's Opera Plaza, Big World Pictures
Comment

One of Roman Vishniac’s haunting photographs, courtesy of his archives

The documentary 'Vishniac' reminds us why we should never forget

E. Nina Rothe January 18, 2024

In a haunting documentary film by Laura Bialis, the story of Jewish photographer Roman Vishniac is captured in a way that pushes us to finally revisit the history of the past, in order to never make the same mistakes again.

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In review Tags Roman Vishniac, Mara Vishniac Kohn, Jewish life, Russia, Laura Bialis, Roberta Grossman, Nancy Spielberg, The Quad, NYC, Laemmle Royal, Town Center, Los Angeles
1 Comment

Fabrizio Rongione and Lubna Azabal in a scene from 'Amal’

'Amal' by Jawad Rhalib -- US premiere review

E. Nina Rothe January 6, 2024

Moroccan-Belgian filmmaker Jawad Rhalib tackles Islamic intolerance and the results of forced multiculturalism in Belgian society. The result is a film which will leave you breathless.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Amal, Jawad Rhalib, Palm Springs International Film Festival, Lubna Azabal, Hany Abu Assad, Paradise Now, The Blue Caftan, Ralph Fiennes, Carl Marx, Abu Nuwas, Fabrizio Rongione, Islam, Quran, Theo Van Gogh, Infidel, Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Comment

My issues with 'Killers of the Flower Moon' and what I liked about it

E. Nina Rothe January 3, 2024

I have to say, for a film I immediately disliked, it has stayed with me for a looooong time.

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In Film, review Tags Martin Scorsese, Killers of the Flower Moon, Ama, John Ford, Michael Cimino, Lily Gladstone, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Qumra, Jacqueline West, Apple pictures, Osage Nation, Indigenous Americans, The Guardina, The Guardian, Devery Jacobs, David Smith, David Grann, Burning Woman Designs, Cannes Film Festival
1 Comment

'Toxicily' -- Festival dei Popoli review

E. Nina Rothe November 12, 2023

There is no place in Italy as beautiful and as filled with diverse culture as the southern Italian island of Sicily. And yet no place has been abused more — by wars, invasions and more recently, pollution — the latter pointed out hauntingly by filmmakers François-Xavier Destors and Alfonso Pinto in their impressive ode to this modern “wasteland.”

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In review, Film Festivals Tags Toxicily, Festival dei Popoli, Firenze, Italy, Sicily, Siracusa, Mafia, Camorra, documentaries, François-Xavier Destors, Alfonso Pinto
Comment

'Bella' -- a review

E. Nina Rothe November 6, 2023

In her important, must-watch documentary ‘Bella’, filmmaker Bridget Murnane proves that you can’t keep a good woman down.

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In Film, review Tags Bella, film, modern dance, Bella Lewitzky, Lester Horton Dance Group, Martha Graham, Alvin Ailey, Carmen De Lavallade, Bridget Murnane, Laemmle Royal, Los Angeles, PBS SoCal
Comment

'High & Low: John Galliano' London review

E. Nina Rothe October 16, 2023

There are so many layers to filmmaker Kevin Macdonald’s film that it would take more than a few hundred words to get to them all. At the core of this stunning must-watch documentary is a fashion hero turned antihero who could be a poster child for explaining our current times.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags High & Low John Galliano, documentary, Kevin Macdonald, John Galliano, Christian Dior, LVMH, Vogue, MUBI, BFI London Film Festival, fashion, film, Conde Nast, Jonathan Newhouse, Maison Margiela, Tabi Mary Janes, Steven Robinson, Saint Martins College of Art and Design, Hubert de Givenchy, La Perle, Paris, Robin Givhan, Telluride
Comment

Masculinity, fashion and biker culture decoded : Jeff Nichols' 'The Bikeriders' examined

E. Nina Rothe October 7, 2023

Apart from the great look of the film and the immediate immersion for the viewer into the late 1960’s biker culture of the American midwest, ‘The Bikeriders’ also offers insight into masculine insecurities and strengths and in the process, becomes yet another favorite Jeff Nichols work of seventh art.

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In Features, Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Jeff Nichols, The Bikeriders, masculinity, fashion, biker culture, BFI London Film Festival, Jodie Comer, Killing Eve, Michael Shannon, Danny Lyon, book, photography, Austin Butler, Tom Hardy, Adam Stone, Chad Keith, Matthew Gatlin, Adam Willis, Erin Benach, Sarah Green, Antje Pauly, Wendy Mitchell
Comment

'Saltburn' by Emerald Fennell opens the BFI London Film Festival, with a twist

E. Nina Rothe October 5, 2023

The film is exactly what is needed to encourage audiences to watch more cinema in the theaters, and amazingly enough, it is an Amazon MGM Studios production — proving that streamers do know it best if given the chance to do their thing.

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In Features, Film Festivals, review Tags Saltburn, BFI London Film Festival, Emerald Fennell, Kristy Matheson, Oscar winner, Barry Keoghan, Oxford, Jacob Elordi, Archie Madekwe, Paul Rhys, Richard E. Grant, Alison Oliver, Carey Mulligan, Linus Sandgren, Murder on the Dancefloor, Amazon Prime, Amazon MGM
Comment

'Maestro' -- A personal review

E. Nina Rothe October 2, 2023

Once the absurd discourse about Bradley Cooper’s nose will have finally quieted down, those who have been lucky enough to have watched ‘Maestro’ on the big screen will realize they’ve witnessed a masterpiece.

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In Film Festivals, review Tags Bradley Cooper, Maestro, Venice International Film Festival, Golden Globes, Oscars, Academy Awards, Nina Bernstein, Leonard Bernstein, Carey Mulligan, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, Josh Singer, Lady Gaga, A Star is Born, Netflix
Comment

'Backstage' - Venice review

E. Nina Rothe September 20, 2023

At the start of ‘Backstage’, the first feature directorial collaboration between Moroccan filmmaker Khalil Benkirane and Tunisian star Afef Ben Mahmoud, the unthinkable happens. And we, the audience, are along for the ride of a lifetime.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Backstage, Nassim Baddag, Khalil Benkirane, Afef Ben Mahmoud, Giornate degli Autori, Venice International Film Festival, Nezha Dakil, Benjamin Rufi, Rawchen Mizouri, Skander Ben Ammar, Steve Shehan, Aymen Labidi, Redouane Nasserddine, Sondos Belhassen, Sofiane Ouissi, Hajiba Fahmy, Ali Thabet, Abdallah Badis, Saleh Bakri, Morocco, Atlas Mountains, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Fatma Madani
Comment

'Bye Bye Tiberias' review: A personal tribute to a global cause

E. Nina Rothe September 13, 2023

Lina Soualem’s touchingly personal documentary should be required viewing for anyone who wants to understand the Palestinian struggle, and the true emotional toll of an entire people’s displacement.

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In Film, review Tags Bye Bye Tiberias, Venice International Film Festival, Giornate degli Autori, review, Lina Soualem, documentary, family, Palestine, Amine Bouhafa, TIFF, Zinedine Soualem, Their Algeria, Deir Hanna, Nadine Naous, Gladys Joujou, Jean-Marie Nizan, Ossama Bawardi, Guillame Malandrin, Doha Film Institute, Qumra, Lightdox
Comment

Reviewing David Fincher's 'The Killer' without giving too much away...

E. Nina Rothe September 7, 2023

Starring the magnificently contained Michael Fassbender as the unnamed hitman, this is one film that must be viewed without any previous knowledge of its story and possibly on a cool Fall evening, with a shot of premium whiskey nearby. But you’ll have to see for yourself why that is.

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In Film, review, Film Festivals Tags David Fincher, The Killer, Netflix, Michael Fassbender, Keto diet, matz Alexis Nolent, Andrew Kevin Walker, Le Tueur, Home Depot, Venice International Film Festival, Erik Messerschmidt, Donald Graham Burt, Cate Adams, Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross, Ren Klyce, Ceán Chaffin, William Doyle, Peter Mavromates, Alexandra Milchan, BFI London Film Festival, Kirk Baxter
Comment

Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Poor Things' Venice review

E. Nina Rothe September 2, 2023

There are incredible Things to be said about the production value of the latest Lanthimos oeuvre, and there are beautiful Things in the film, but for me personally it was not all good Things for ‘Poor Things’.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo, Poor Things, Willem Dafoe, Ramy Youssef, Fox Searchlight, James Price, Shona Heath, Holly Waddington, Alasdair Gray, Robbie Ryan, Hanna Schygulla, Jerrod Carmichael
Comment
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