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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. 

The title shot of Zeina Sfeir’s film

The title shot of Zeina Sfeir’s film

Living in Times of Coronavirus screens on Daraj: Dispatches from Lebanon on lockdown

E. Nina Rothe April 30, 2020

The five filmmakers featured in this omnibus of shorts, featuring life in the ghost town and home shelters of Beirut, are the brightest of the new wave of directors from Lebanon.

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In Film, review Tags Ghassan Salhab, Zeina Sfeir, The Valley, Living in Times of Coronavirus, Lebanon, Beirut, Lebanese cinema, Daraj, Lamia Jreij, Carol Mansour, Mahmoud Hojeij, Orson Welles, Covid-19, BBC, CNN, Nadine Labaki
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truthtop.jpg

'Truth' in Journalism, Honesty in Life with James Vanderbilt

E. Nina Rothe April 11, 2020

I was always a huge fan of the CBS news show 60 Minutes. To this day, there are some indelible segments that have stayed with me, like the Mike Wallace interview with tobacco industry insider Jeffrey Wigand and the Dan Rather expose on George W. Bush and how the 43rd President of the United States of America came to be in the Air National Guard during the time of the Vietnam War.

Incidentally, both those segments have been made into films and these days 60 Minutes continues to be a trailblazer in US news reporting, with an analytical twist, though perhaps today they do what they do with a bit more caution.

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In Film, Film Festivals, Interviews Tags Mary Mapes, Truth and Duty, 60 minutes, Dan Rather, Mike Wallace, James Vanderbilt, Dubai International Film Festival, Robert Redford, CBS, Rathergate, Cate Blanchett
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Josef Hader as Stefan Zweig

Josef Hader as Stefan Zweig

Peace Is for the Brave: Maria Schrader’s Stunning Austrian Entry to the Oscars ‘Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe’

E. Nina Rothe April 8, 2020

Long before signing on to direct ‘Unorthodox’ on Netflix, Maria Schrader made another beautiful film about a Jewish figure, Stefan Zweig. I interviewed her in 2016 as she was nominated to represent Austria as the country’s Academy Award’s entry. I wanted to revisit that interview and my love for her work. The interview and my own thoughts about the film are as current today as they could ever be. Just read on.

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In Film, Interviews, review Tags Maria Schrader, Stefan Zweig Farewell to Europe, Jewish stories, Unorthodox, Academy Awards, Austria, Josef Hader, Wolfgang Thaler
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The Disappearance of My Mother

The Greatest Beauty: Discovering the true Benedetta Barzini in 'The Disappearance of My Mother'

E. Nina Rothe March 23, 2020

In a world where most of us compete to be noticed, Benedetta Barzini wants to disappear. But before the former model, slash journalist, slash women’s rights activist goes quietly into that horizon rowing her wooden boat, or climbing through the woods backpack in tow, her son Beniamino Barrese wants to film her for all to see. And to remember her always. Or, as he says off camera at the start of his stunning documentary ‘The Disappearance of My Mother’ — “I was not ready to let her go.”

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In Film, review Tags Benedetta Barzini, Beniamino Barrese, The Disappearance of My Mother, Kino Lorber, Andy Warhol, Salvator Dali, documentary, women, women's rights, women's cinema, model, mother and son, Breaker
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Curveball_Sebastian Blomberg_Michael Wittenborn_Dar Salim_copyr_Sten Mende.jpg

Johannes Naber throws us a 'Curveball' and hits the perfect shot with his haunting film

E. Nina Rothe March 11, 2020

Where were you in 1997? Well, that was more than 20 years ago, some may have just been born, others living their day-to-day life and chances are you can’t remember that year at all. I know I can’t. And yet that was the beginning of the end of the Arab world as we know it, and the start of the diplomatic chaos we find ourselves in these days, throughout the globe.

In his latest film ‘Curveball’, Johannes Naber does what he does best, tell a story inspired by the headlines yet in a narrative and human way. With humor and great insight thrown in.

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In Film, review Tags Johannes Naber, André Zacher, Curveball, German ciinema, anthrax, CIA, USA, Germany, Dar Salim, Rafid Alwan, Sebastian Blomberg, Virginia Kull, UN, Dr. Arndt Wolf, Saddam Hussein, Berlinale, chemical weapons, Valerie Plame, Joe Wilson
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Between Heaven and Earth

She put a spell on me: Najwa Najjar's bewitching 'Between Heaven and Earth'

E. Nina Rothe February 19, 2020

One of my favorite films in Berlin this year is not in Competition. Actually it’s not even in any of the sidebars. You’ll find Najwa Najjar’s stunning, heartwarming latest feature at the Berlinale’s European Film Market, with a screening on the 22nd of February, at 9.30 in the Simon Bolivar Saal.

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In Film, Film Festivals, review Tags Najwa Najjar, Between Heaven and Earth, Berlinale, European Film Market, Berlin, Palestine, Israel, Occupied Territories, women filmmakers, EFM, Souad Massi, Yuma, Natasha Atlas, Orange Blossom, Tania Saleh, Gazal, Arab cinema, Arab women's cinema, Mouna Hawa, Firas Nassar, Eyes of a Thief, Tot Ard, al Raseef
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Lynne and Ira Sachs

"This is not a portrait": Lynne Sachs' must watch 'Film About a Father Who' screens in NYC

E. Nina Rothe February 7, 2020

To me, Lynne Sachs’ ‘Film About a Father Who’ is simply a masterpiece. And quite clearly, Sachs is someone whose own issues with her father have turned her into a phenomenal woman — full of creativity and courage.

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In Film, review Tags Lynne Sachs, Ira Sachs Sr., Film About a Father Who, Ira Sachs jr., Jean-Luc Godard, Le livre d'image, Slamdance, Museum of Modern Art, MoMA, Doc Fornight, fatherhood, dad, Ira Sachs, Park City Utah, Sundance, slamdance
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Sadaf Asgari as Maryam in a still from ‘Yalda, a Night for Forgiveness’

Sadaf Asgari as Maryam in a still from ‘Yalda, a Night for Forgiveness’

Massoud Bakhshi on his Sundance award-winning 'Yalda, a Night for Forgiveness'

E. Nina Rothe February 4, 2020

There are so many threads, themes and ideas bursting through Massoud Bakhshi’s stunning ‘Yalda, a Night for Forgiveness’ that it would take a book and not a short article to discuss them all. But within the limits of this piece, I’d like to start off by saying that the film absolutely deserved to win the World Cinema Dramatic Competition Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance, where it premiered.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Yalda, Yalda a Night for Forgiveness, Sundance Film Festival, Iranian cinema, Massoud Bakhshi, Behnaz Jafari, Sadaf Asgari, Sigheh, Alba Rohrwacher, Haifaa Al Mansour, Wagner Moura, Milad Tower, A Respectable Family, Tehran, World Cinema Dramatic Competition Grand Jury Prize
Comment
The Two Popes on Netflix

'The Two Popes' on Netflix: Sounds from a cinematic gem

E. Nina Rothe January 19, 2020

I crave for a film to do something more than entertain me, when I sit down to write about it. A work of the 7th art has to change me. I need to feel like something magical clicked deep inside me to walk out of a theater, or in this case the room where I watch my TV, and sit to pen my thoughts. ‘The Two Popes’ did that. It not only showed me a different side to a story I thought I already knew — the changing of the guard between one pope and the other in 2013 — but also reinterpreted a character, former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio now Pope Francis, in a way that changed my negative opinion of him. And I know at least one other person who felt the same way, my movie-watching partner.

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In Film Tags Netflix, The Two Popes, Anthony Hopkins, Jonathan Pryce, Fernando Meirelles, Juan Minujín, Argentine, Brazil, Italy, The Vatican, Cardinal Ratzinger, Pope Benedict, Jorge Bergoglio, Pope Francis, Lucrecia Martel, Ariwacumbé, Dancing Queen, Abba, Neil Fraser, Bella Ciao, The Swingle Singers, Cuando tenga la tierra, Mercedes Sosa, Sastanàqqàm, Tinariwen
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Iraq today

Why aren't we talking about Iraq? And revisiting Beth Murphy's prophetic 'The List'

E. Nina Rothe January 15, 2020

Back in 2012, I watched and wrote about ‘The List’ a haunting documentary by American filmmaker Beth Murphy. It premiered at Tribeca and immediately became a symbol of the country I called home at the time. President Bush Senior had fought Iraq on the fields of Kuwait, while Bush Junior invaded the country vouching to get back at Saddam Hussein for, and I quote the then President, “this is the guy who tried to kill my father.”

Ever since then, it’s been an unmentionable subject, Iraq. In US news,

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In Film, Interviews Tags Iraq, The List, Beth Murphy, Syria, Academy Awards, Mohamed Al-Daradji, SkyTG24 Mondo, Renato Coen, The Journey, For Sama, The Cave, USA, President George W Bush, UN, Francesca Mannocchi, Baghdad, Tahrir Square, Tribeca Film Festival
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WomanWhoLoves_homepageslider_931x377 copy.jpg

'The Woman Who Loves Giraffes': An intimate look at the extraordinary life of Anne Innis Dagg

E. Nina Rothe January 3, 2020

Let me preface by writing that I tend to be sold right away on a film that features an exceptional woman as its central heroine. When that woman is a real life figure, still going strong and advocating both women’s rights as well as nature’s preservation, well the film immediately drives up to the top position of my favorite films. More on such a film, ‘The Woman Who Loves Giraffes’ in a minute. First bear with me and my mini trip down memory lane.

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In Film Tags Anne Innis Dagg, The Woman Who Loves Giraffes, wildlife, Africa, giraffe, Nairobi, South Africa, Alexander Matthew, Tatiana Maslany, Victor Garber, David Chichilla, Lindsay Leese, Ian Dagg, Zeitgeist Films, Kino Lorber, Quad Cinema, NYC, Laemmle Theaters, Los Angeles, documentary, Alison Reid, Dian Fossey, Jane Goodall, Emily Russo, Nancy Gerstman, women's rights, Pursuing Giraffe
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A still from ‘People of the Wasteland’ photo courtesy of Jouzour Film Production

A still from ‘People of the Wasteland’ photo courtesy of Jouzour Film Production

Heba Khaled's 'People of the Wasteland': Scenes from a place of no return

E. Nina Rothe November 29, 2019

A whole lot of machine guns, a tank, a pick up truck, an empty bus. Men running, with very little dialogue. Death, casualties and destruction. And the eerie thought that even though these men fighting are the good guys, it looks an awful lot like they aren’t. Because the narrative in the West has taught us they aren’t. Whether that’s true or not, it’s up to each of us to decide. And the best way we can do that is to inform ourselves and watch as much as possible — and that includes this film I’m going to tell you about.

We have been desensitized to scenes of war, by the video games we’ve played, the images of people injured and dying on TV and violent movies. Of this I'm as sure as I am woman.

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A still from 'Fig Tree'

Aalam-Warqe Davidian's 'Fig Tree' in NYC: the power of cinema with a conscience

E. Nina Rothe June 3, 2019

There may be a woman at the helm of Ethiopia as a country, but there is still a long road to travel for women in the Ethiopian film industry. In fact, while still plentiful considering the small number of male counterparts, —Haile Gerima is probably the best known filmmaker hailing from the country in the West — Ethiopian women filmmakers can still be only counted on the fingers of one hand. Maybe two.

Aalam-Warqe Davidian defies those odds, singlehandedly, bringing a tale inspired by her own teenage years growing up in the midst of the Ethiopian civil war. In 1989, to be more exact, is when her film ‘Fig Tree’ takes place, in a remote area of the country.

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In Film Festivals, Film Tags Fig Tree, Aalam-Warqe Davidian, Ethiopia, Women filmmakers, Betalehem Asmamawe, Jewish Ethiopians, Falasha Jews, Ethiopian civil war, Israel Film Center Festival, Red Cow
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Hook Up 2.0 by Dana Nachman

There's an App for that! Dana Nachman on sex in the #MeToo age in 'Hook Up 2.0' at the Tribeca Film Festival

E. Nina Rothe April 22, 2019

A typical present day college party. A girl. A guy. They hook up and go the man’s pink hued apartment, yes pink you read that right, to be alone together. But this is the age of #MeToo and nothing is quite the way it used to be. I mean, and just the pink lights of the man’s apartment alone should have given that away!

‘Hook Up 2.0’ screens in the “Shorts: Funhouse” program at the Tribeca Film Festival. Check out all screening times and dates here.

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In Film, Film Festivals, Interviews Tags Hook Up 2.0, Dana Nachman, Tribeca Film Festival, NYC, MeToo, Sex, The Final Show, Lunafest, Silicon Valley, feminist satire, Veronica Dunne, Billy Meade, Dominique Martinez
Comment
Risk Julian Assange

Redefining the Hero: Laura Poitras’ ‘Risk’ and the True Julian Assange

E. Nina Rothe April 11, 2019

We’ve been tricked by popular cinema, comic books and TV into believing that heroes are mighty and great — lacking all fear and devoid of any fault. It’s easier to write a hero as an all-around perfect man. But in real life, heroes are those who defy their greatest fears to accomplish something which goes beyond anything they could ever have imagined. Real-life heroes don’t lack fear, rather they act in spite of this paralyzing instinct. And their faults usually outnumber their merits, just as they do with any of us, if we get down to the nitty gritty tally of it all.

In fact, I believe that oftentimes, heroes end up being heroes despite their best intentions.

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In Film Tags Julian Assange, Risk, Laura Poitras, Ecuador, Wikileaks, democracy, USA, UK, Iraq, Ecuadoran embassy, Sweden
Photo courtesy of Hurdle Film, LLC

Photo courtesy of Hurdle Film, LLC

Michael Rowley's 'Hurdle': The revolution will be jumped over, tumbled under, flown above and rolled around

E. Nina Rothe April 4, 2019

The Palestinian condition can be summed up in one word: Naqba — the Arabic word for “disaster”. While the Israelis celebrate their Independence Day each May, the Palestinian population mourns the loss of their land, liberty and peace on exactly the same date. It’s one of the most tragic contradictions of our times.

But the Palestinian people are nothing if not resilient. Through their ordeal they’ve made beautiful cinema, see Elia Suleiman, created mind blowing art like Nabil Anani and succeeded in sports. I could think of several examples of each. I mean, Palestinian singer Mohammed Assaf became the second ever Arab Idol in 2014 despite the fact that he wasn’t even allowed into Egypt, where the competition was filmed. While walls are built to keep them in, Palestinian figure out more and better ways to overcome those obstacles and become better, stronger and more successful.

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In Film Tags Hurdle, Michael Rowley, Parkour, Palestine, Israel, The Naqba, Al Aqsa mosque, Ramadan, PaliRoots, Launchgood, Launchgood campaign, 1948, Elia Suleiman, Nabil Anani, Mohammed Assaf, Instagram, Dallas International Film Festival
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Letizia Battaglia

A Woman, armed with courage and her camera: 'Shooting the Mafia' by Kim Longinotto

E. Nina Rothe February 12, 2019

Letizia Battaglia, her last name not incidentally means “battle,” has been a one-woman army fighting that decline. Through her photographs of the Mafia and the destruction it caused in her home city of Palermo — courageous because each one could have meant her death by execution, if only for having captured the soul of the unworthy, or the wrong moment in time — Battaglia has shown the world what courage, resilience and being Italian really does mean, at its highest form.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags Letizia Battaglia, Shooting the Mafia, Kim Longinotto, Sicily, Palermo, Italy, Italian politics, Mafia, Sundance, Berlinale, trailer, Giovanni Falcone
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Todos somos marineros

'Todos Somos Marineros' at IFFR: Addressing our global displacement with Peruvian filmmaker Miguel Angel Moulet

E. Nina Rothe February 1, 2019

It’s a fact that there has never been such a movement of global general uprooting, in the history of our planet. Most of us feel deep inside ourselves a sense of dissatisfaction and the easiest way to deal with it seems to be to pick up and leave -- for work, love or life experience. But that can also turn into the most difficult decision of our life, because sometimes you cannot go home again.

As an old friend used to remind me, in moments when even traveling to the other end of the planet hadn’t really fulfilled its purpose, “Nina, the problem is that when you travel, no matter where you go, you’ll always take yourself along.” It’s so true, our inner struggles transfer well, hidden within the deep recesses of our beings. And even the furthest journey sees us as our sometimes unfortunate travel companion.

Miguel Angel Moulet’s haunting, sultry and perfectly shot film ‘Todos Somos Marineros’ (‘We Are All Sailors’) tackles that idea, but also mixes in several other themes, including the rhythm of language and how we change depending on the words we speak, as well as the filmmaker’s own unresolved childhood family mysteries.

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In Film Festivals, Film, Interviews Tags Todos somos marineros, IFFR, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Peru, Daniel and Diego Vega, Panza de Burro, diaspora, Miguel Angel Moulet, Katitza Kisic, Rotterdam
Comment
Jean-Luc Godard

'The Image Book' at IFFR: Watching cinema as God(ard) intended it

E. Nina Rothe January 31, 2019

I’d read the reviews, both out of Cannes where the film premiered, and lately for its US release. A.O. Scott’s was my favorite for the NY Times, as it usually is. Then, I’d listened to friends — some admitted to breaking down after viewing the film, some pointed to the filmmaker’s problematic mishmosh of the Arab world with Iranian images.

But having missed ‘Le livre d’image’ (‘The Image Book’) at the Festival de Cannes, I had to view it for myself. And, it turns out, I did well to wait.

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In Film Festivals, Film Tags Jean-Luc Godard, Le livre d'image, The Image Book, International Film Festival rotterdam, Rotterdam, IFFR, cinema, Arabia, The Arab world, Iran, NH Atlanta, film festivals, Kino Lorber, NYC, IRAN
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Emilia Derou Bernal and Julien Debard in a still from Anaïs Volpe’s ‘Indemnes’

Emilia Derou Bernal and Julien Debard in a still from Anaïs Volpe’s ‘Indemnes’

Anaïs Volpé's 'Indemnes' reinvents the palette of tragedy at the International Film Festival Rotterdam

E. Nina Rothe January 24, 2019

How do you personally survive tragedy, when it hits close to home?

It’s a question that has played in my mind over and over in the last few months. Each of us has a distinct and very human way of dealing with personal tragedy, and none of it is wrong or right, I’ve figured out. It just is.

Filmmaker Anaïs Volpé says that her way of coping with terrorist attacks, which have hit very close to home, literally for the Parisian, is to turn blood into glitter and imagine that the victims have gone to a better place. We hear that time and time again, “they have gone to a better place now,” but in Volpé’s exquisite ‘Indemnes’ (which translates to “Unharmed”) that better place is filled with color, beauty, peace and harmony. It’s a beautiful view into the afterlife, complete with stylish golden jackets, from an artist who has had her own creative style from the get-go.

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In Film, Film Festivals, Interviews Tags Indemnes, International Film Festival Rotterdam, IFFR, Bero Beyer, Anais Volpe, Emilia Derou Bernal, Unharmed, tragedy, cinema, terrorist attacks, Paris, social media, HEIS: Chroniques, Leo Soesanto
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