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E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
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The Diaries, because sometimes life needs more. 

Bennett Miller conducts a masterclass during Qumra 2018

Bennett Miller conducts a masterclass during Qumra 2018

The Qumra Dairies: Wisdom from a Master with Bennett Miller

E. Nina Rothe March 13, 2018

When Oscar-nominated American filmmaker Bennett Miller sat down to give his masterclass during this year's Qumra in Doha, he immediately apologized for his voice. "It doesn't hurt, it just sounds bad," he admitted, about the husky sound that appeared to be a really bad case of laryngitis. Maybe they could stop a bit early, said his moderator, who instead then actually proceeded to go overtime with the talk. 

Living on the edge, this idea that the masterclass could be cut short by Miller's loss of voice altogether actually added an extra layer of urgency to everything that the talented, kind, thoughtful and wonderfully candid filmmaker had to say.

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Qumra, Bennett Miller, Doha Film Institute, Brad Pitt, Philip Seymour Hoffman, USA, Hollywood, Oscar nominated, Academy Awards, Oscars, The Cruise, Timothy Levitch, LA Indie Film Festival, Capote, Moneyball, Stanley Kubrick, Alfred Hitchcock, Foxcatcher
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Gianfranco Rosi gave a Masterclass at this year's Qumra

Gianfranco Rosi gave a Masterclass at this year's Qumra

The Qumra Diaries: Wisdom from the Masters with Tilda Swinton and Gianfranco Rosi

E. Nina Rothe March 12, 2018

The greatness of Qumra, the annual industry event held by the Doha Film Institute to help connect, inspire and encourage filmmakers, lies in its diversity of activities. From the daily working breakfasts with some of the most well-respected festival directors and programmers, sales agents and producers to the Masterclasses with cinema greats, from its Qumra Talks to the networking sessions held each afternoon just around the corner from my hotel, there is a buzz of activity at any given moment and even a non-filmmaker like me can feel the excitement of great cinema in the making. 

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Qumra, Doha Film Institute, Doha, Okja, Tilda Swinton, Cameron Bailey, TIFF, Gianfranco Rosi, acting, filmmaking, industry, Richard Pena, masterclasses, documentaries, Oscar-nominated, Fire at Sea, Fuocoammare, art, Oscars, Academy Awards, Charles Bowden, Venice Film Festival, Sacro GRA, Boatman, Benares, India, California, Below Sea Level, El Sicario room 164
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Sofia Coppola (left) and Kirsten Dunst on the set of 'Marie Antoinette', photographed by Brigitte Lacombe

Sofia Coppola (left) and Kirsten Dunst on the set of 'Marie Antoinette', photographed by Brigitte Lacombe

The Qumra Diaries: Brigitte Lacombe and the power of a photograph

E. Nina Rothe March 11, 2018

I know that a Diaries series is meant to go chronologically, yet there are moments when the rules need to be broken.

For me, hearing master photographer and longtime Doha Film Institute collaborator Brigitte Lacombe talk about cinema and fashion from a photographic point of view was one such moment. I could not wait to get home and write about the pleasant afternoon I spent in her company -- along with a theater-full of attendees of this Qumra talk -- and her sister's, video photographer Marian Lacombe.

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In Cinema, Fashion, The Diaries Tags Brigitte Lacombe, Marian Lacombe, photography, Qumra 18, Qumra, Doha, Doha Film Institute, film, Meryl Streep, Qatar Museum, Hey'Ya Arab women in sport, The Female Lead, Christiane Amanpour, Ava DuVernay, Jo Malone, Birdman, Instagram, Mick Jagger, Martin Scorsese, Anne Roth, Nicole Kidman, Gangs of New York, Leonardo Di Caprio, Marie Antoinette, Sofia Coppola, All the President's Men, Jennifer Lawrence, Dior, Cannes Film Festival, Nadine Labaki, Omar Sharif, I AM FILM, Arab filmmakers, Katara, Julian Schnabel, Emma Jones, Emma Pritchard Jones
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Tilda Swinton and Cameron Bailey

Tilda Swinton and Cameron Bailey

The Qumra Diaries: Tilda Swinton, the Museum of Islamic Art and to Doha, with love

E. Nina Rothe March 10, 2018

From the moment I boarded the Qatar Airways plane in Fiumicino, I realized I was being transported somewhere special. I also knew my journey, as both a film writer and a human being, would be a life changing one.

To begin with, the airline offers Karak chai -- a milky tea infused with cardamom or saffron to taste -- and a choice of films that included 'Murder on the Orient Express', the new version by Kenneth Branagh. Not what I would have gone to the movies to watch it but at 30 thousand feet, flying over lands and bodies of water I'll probably never set foot on or swim through, cup of fragrant tea in hand one's taste adjusts. And I even found myself crying through some of Branagh's Hercule Poirot moments. 

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Qumra, Doha Film Institute, Doha, Qatar, Qatar Airways, Museum of Islamic Art, Souq Waqif, cinema, Arab Cinema, Murder on the Orient Express, Kenneth Branagh, karak chai, Hercule Poirot, tea, date festival, I. M. Pei, Qatari Film Fund, TIFF, Toronto International Film Festival, Cameron Bailey, Elia Suleiman, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Gianfranco Rosi, Fatma Al Remaihi, Oscar's best dressed list, Jio MAMI, Mumbai Film Festival, Smriti Kiran, masterclasses
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Elia Suleiman, photo courtesy of the Doha Film Institute

Elia Suleiman, photo courtesy of the Doha Film Institute

"If a director can come away from the event enchanted and inspired": Elia Suleiman and Hanaa Issa talk Qumra 2018

E. Nina Rothe March 9, 2018

They say if you want to learn about something, go to the source. 

For filmmakers in the Middle East, but also around the world, Elia Suleiman has long been the Oracle, the man with a knowledge to create momentous cinema, cinema that can change the world. Suleiman is the most brilliant source today of modern Arab cinema, the kind that breaks across borders and tears down the divide -- as his frequent trips to international film festivals and award ceremonies have proved. 

So I thought, if it works for filmmakers, it could work for me. I shall ask Suleiman about Qumra myself, so I can unravel the mystery of this yearly event held in Qatar, under the auspices of the Doha Film Institute. I mean, the DFI has been very open and forthcoming about their week-long-mentorship-slash-industry-meet-and-greet-slash-film-connection event, but I still hadn't found a fascinating enough explanation of it in the media. One that would hold my attention and really explain the ins and out of Qumra.

Until I met Suleiman, DFI's Artistic Advisor and Hanaa Issa, Deputy Director of Qumra and Director of Strategy and Development at Doha Film Institute during Berlinale. One Sunday morning in Berlin, a leisurely breakfast talk later and now eagerly anticipating the start of Qumra in Doha, I finally understand.

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In The Diaries, Cinema, Interviews Tags Qumra, Doha Film Institute, Doha, Qatar, Elia Suleiman, Hanaa Issa, Berlinale, Berlin, filmmaking, arab cinema, Middle East, DFI, masterclass, film, cinema
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Tilda Swinton photographed by Brigitte Lacombe

Tilda Swinton photographed by Brigitte Lacombe

Iconic Masters and golden projects featured at this year's Qumra in Doha

E. Nina Rothe March 5, 2018

Qatar is the couture state of the Arab world. They watched and learned from the mistakes of all the other Gulf countries that were declared as states before them, and then Qatar set about to reinvent how we view culture, fashion, art and film. You can't watch an award ceremony these days without the presence for the Doha Film Institute in the credits of at least one of the films nominated, the Museum Authority of the peninsular state has assembled and created, and is set to unveil more beauty than my eyes can hold -- just a visit to the Islamic Art Museum will confirm my words -- and of course, the Emir's family owns some of the fashion world's most beloved brands. 

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In Cinema, The Diaries Tags Qatar, Doha, Doha Film Institute, Okja, Masters, filmmakers, Brigitte Lacombe, Tilda Swinton, Gulf countries, Arab world, Islamic Art Museum, Qumra, Gianfranco Rosi, E. Nina Rothe, feature narrative, documentaries, Berlinale, Golden Bear, Fuocoammare, Fire at Sea, Oscars, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thai, Thailand, Cannes Film Festival, Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, Palme d'Or, Leviathan, Loveless, Russia, Golden Globes, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Sandy Powell OBE, The Young Victoria, Shakespeare in Love, The Aviator, Bennett Miller, Capote, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Truman Capote, Elia Suleiman, Hanaa Issa, DFI
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J'adior Dior

Be an insider thanks to La Maison Dior: Live Stream their A/W 2018-19 Ready-To-Wear show

E. Nina Rothe February 27, 2018

Doesn't get much better than sitting in the front row of the hottest show in town, for this season's Paris Fashion Week. Yes, I'm talking to you. 

Maria Grazia Chiuri has made Christian Dior hot and hip again and personally, there is nothing I adore more than her "J'Adior" ribbons, whether on shoes or bags or even worn as bangles.

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In Fashion Tags Christian Dior, Maria Grazia Chiuri, Paris Fashion Week, fashion, J'adior, shoes, accessories, live stream, La Maison Dior, A/W 2018-19, ready-to-wear, fashion show, Front row
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Filmmaker Mani Haghigi and Berlinale Director Dieter KosslickPhoto courtesy of Berlinale

Filmmaker Mani Haghigi and Berlinale Director Dieter Kosslick

Photo courtesy of Berlinale

The Berlinale Diaries: 'The Interpreter', the phenomenal Beki Probst and enlightenment from Mani Haghighi

E. Nina Rothe February 23, 2018

Thankfully, at this year's Berlinale, there are a couple of films in Competition which go against everything that a "competition film" should be. Whatever that definition is. I applaud the festival organizers for having had the courage to show them, and their continued support of indie voices.

One such film is Mani Haghigi's 'Pig' ('Khook') a wild colorful, humorous, dark and fresh ride through the Iranian film industry. Now wild and colorful, with women protagonists who run the show is hardly a definition one would typically associate with Iranian cinema and yet Haghigi manages it all.

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In The Diaries, Cinema, Festival Tags Berlinale, Berlin Film Festival, Berlin, Berlinale Camera, Beki Probst, The Interpreter, Mani Haghighi, Khook, Pig, independent cinema, competition, Payman Maadi, Rakshan Bani-Etemad, Iranian cinema, A Separation, Leila Hatami, women, Locarno, Jiří Menzel, Peter Simonischek, Martin Šulík, Toni Erdmann
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Lav Diaz at the press conference for 'Season of the Devil' held during the 68th BerlinalePhoto courtesy of the Berlinale

Lav Diaz at the press conference for 'Season of the Devil' held during the 68th Berlinale

Photo courtesy of the Berlinale

The Berlinale Diaries: Eric Khoo's 'Ramen Teh', Lav Diaz is my hero and the 'Pig' that's conquering Berlinale

E. Nina Rothe February 22, 2018

When I sat with the maestro Lav Diaz for our interview for his Competition film 'Season of the Devil', he pointed to the film critics, the journalists who write about cinema, as an integral part of the filmmaking process. And I agree wholeheartedly with the genius that is Diaz, a man who, in this age of everything fast and immediate, still makes films that lull us into watching them for four and a half hours! He teaches us how to watch his cinema, and I believe as film writers, we hold a responsibility to teach audiences to find those films. 

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Lav Diaz, Ramen Teh, Eric Khoo, Pig, Khook, Berlinale, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, Season of the Devil, Golden Bear Lounge by Glashutte, Glashutte, film critics, film writers, film journalists, Hollywood, Independent cinema, celebrities, Cinema Paradiso, Leila Hatami, Hasan Majuni, Mani Haghighi, Social Media, Takumi Saitoh, Seiko Matsuda, Zhao Wei Films, Wild Orange Artists, food, Culinary Cinema, Iranian cinema, Umberto Eco, Twitter, Facebook, Social media, Ramen noodles, Japanese films, Singapore, Japan
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A still featuring Noel Sto. Domingo from Lav Diaz' 'Season of the Devil'Photo © Giovanni D. Onofrio

A still featuring Noel Sto. Domingo from Lav Diaz' 'Season of the Devil'

Photo © Giovanni D. Onofrio

The Berlinale Diaries: Hulu's 'The Looming Tower' and a Lav Diaz virgin no more!

E. Nina Rothe February 21, 2018

The 21st century version of the all-American question "where were you when JFK was assassinated?" is "what were you doing when the planes hit the World Trade Center?"

Some of us watched the towers disintegrate before our very eyes, our landscape changed forever, and it's a vision, a feeling we will carry inside our hearts for as long as we live. The smell throughout downtown Manhattan, the lines of demarcation -- complete with checkpoints -- between the northern and southern parts of the city but also the newfound sense of camaraderie we bestowed upon each other to merely get from day to day, is also what I remember from those days.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Hulu, Berlinale, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, The Looming Tower, Lav Diaz, Season of the Devil, Filipino cinema, Philippines, opera, Black and White, Ali Suliman, Tawfeek Barhom, Samer Bisharat, Omar, Martin Schmidt, Ali Soufan, Alex Gibney, Jeff Daniels, Tahar Rahim, Peter Sarsgaard, 9/11, September 11th, East Africa, Middle East, Dan Futterman, Lawrence Wright, Manhattan, NYC, World Trade Center tragedy
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Milán Csordás in a still from 'Genesis'Photo © Genesis Production

Milán Csordás in a still from 'Genesis'

Photo © Genesis Production

The Berlinale Diaries: Face to Face with German Films and 'Genesis' by Árpád Bogdán

E. Nina Rothe February 20, 2018

There are several films this year at the Berlinale that explore the theme of family. Or rather, set out to redefine it. In 'Daughter of Mine', Laura Bispuri asks, cinematically, just who our mother is -- the woman who physically brings us into this world, or the person who rears us? For most of us they are both within one person, but in rare cases, it's not. 

Also present during this 68th edition of the Berlin Film Festival is a sub current of childhood, attempting to view this chaotic, pretty damn ugly world of ours at the moment through a child's eye view. Wes Anderson kicked that off in style with the opening film 'Isle of Dogs' and now I keep finding myself looking at what I watch from his "I don't want to grow up" POV.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Berlinale, Face to Face with German Films, Genesis, Burhan Qurbani, Milán Csordás, Daughter of Mine, Laura Bispuri, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, cinema, films, Vogue Italia, Emanuele Farneti, Árpád Bogdán, Anna Marie Cseh, Toni Erdmann, Valeska Grisebach, David Wnendt, Lars Krause, 3 Days in Quiberon, Emily Atef, Anca Miruna Lazarescu, Wetlands, Shahada, women, women filmmakers
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Valeria Golino and Alba Rohrwacher in Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'© Vivo film / Colorado Film / Match Factory Productions / Bord Cadre Films

Valeria Golino and Alba Rohrwacher in Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'

© Vivo film / Colorado Film / Match Factory Productions / Bord Cadre Films

The Berlinale Diaries: Elia Suleiman talks Qumra plus Laura Bispuri's 'Daughter of Mine'

E. Nina Rothe February 19, 2018

From the fabulous women of 'Daughter of Mine' to a wondrous man, my early Sunday morning at Berlinale was spent in the company of Elia Suleiman, the Palestinian filmmaker extraordinaire and Artistic Advisor of the Doha Film Institute. 

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Doha Film Institute, Qumra, Daughter of Mine, Figlia Mia, Valeria Golino, Alba Rohrwacher, Laura Bispuri, Berlinale, Berlin, Berlin Film Festival, Hanna Issa, Elia Suleiman, Mohamed Ben Attia, Palestine, Amal Al-Muftah, Sh'hab, Basil Khalil, Ave Maria, Dora Bouchoucha, Weldi, Gianfranco Rosi, Cannes, Oscars, Sandy Powell, Bennett Miller, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Sara Casu, Italian cinema, Arab cinema, Qatar, Doha
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Edith Bouvier Beale, Caroline Lee Radziwill in a still from 'That Summer' by Göran Hugo OlssonPhoto © Peter Beard

Edith Bouvier Beale, Caroline Lee Radziwill in a still from 'That Summer' by Göran Hugo Olsson

Photo © Peter Beard

The Berlinale Diaries: 'That Summer', 'What Comes Around' and Q's 'Garbage'

E. Nina Rothe February 18, 2018

I've been a fan of Göran Hugo Olsson's filmmaking since I watched his 'The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975' quite a few years ago. He talked to me then about having a "100 percent connection with the material" which make his films not only wonderful but deeply honest. 

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In Cinema, The Diaries, Festival Tags Q, Berlinale, That Summer, Goran Hugo Olsson, Garbage, What Comes Aorund, Reem Saleh, Berlin, Gandu, The Black Power Mixtape, Edith Bouvier Beale, Sundance Selects, NY, Grey Garderns, Peter Beard, Lee Radziwill, Andy Warhol, What Comes Around, Al Gami'ya, Rod Al Farag, Cairo, Egypt, Qaushiq Mukherjee, Panorama
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68 Berlinale poster

The Berlinale Diaries: Karim Aïnouz, Jeff Goldblum, Bill Murray, Bob Balaban, Bryan Cranston and Liev Schreiber, oh boy!

E. Nina Rothe February 17, 2018

The day started with a long, leisurely talk with Algerian-Brazilian, NYC-based filmmaker Karim Aïnouz and the two men who are the center of his latest film, 'Central Airport THF' -- Ibrahim Al Hussein from Syria and Qutaiba Nafea from Iraq. I won't talk about the film itself until it premieres tonight since the festival here in Berlin is quite strict about embargoes and more power to them for that! But I will say that some films really grow more special and important once the intention of their filmmaker becomes clear. In simpler words, sitting down with Aïnouz made his latest project wildly more interesting, because of who he is but also because of his subjects' backstories -- both refugees who are in Germany after escaping from their war-torn countries.

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In Cinema, The Diaries, Festival Tags cinema, Berlinale, Karim Ainouz, Jeff Goldblum, Bill Murray, Bob Balaban, Bryan Cranston, Liev Schreiber, Isle of Dogs, Federico Fellini, Wes Anderson, cinecitta, Berlin, Eddielicious, Central Airport THF, Ibrahim Al Hussein, Qutaiba Nafae, Syria, Iraq, refugee crisis, Golden Bear Lounge by Glashutte, Glashutte, Glashutte Original Documentary Award
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Courtesy of the Berlinale

Courtesy of the Berlinale

The Berlinale Diaries: The #MeToo movement and should the carpet really have been black?

E. Nina Rothe February 16, 2018

This year, at Berlinale, the annual film festival held in Berlin, there is media chatter of a red carpet that should have been black in honor of the #MeToo movement. In my country a black carpet means someone died so I wonder, do we want to open a film festival, a festive event by definition, with a gloom and doom parade of stars on a drab black piece of carpeting? Isn't it enough that we woke up on its inauguration day to the news of yet one more totally avoidable shooting in the US?

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In The Diaries, Festival Tags MeToo, Berlinale, Berlin Film Festival, Berlin, gun violence, black carpet, red carpet, Liev Schreiber, Isle of Dogs, Instagram, US gun laws, NRA, Stefan Sagmeister, Ted Talks, The Power of Time Off, HuffPost, cinema, film, bloggers, No to Discrimination!
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Photo courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

Photo courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox

The Berlinale Diaries: I Love Dogs -- AKA Wes Anderson's 'Isle of Dogs' is finally here (and not a moment too soon!)

E. Nina Rothe February 15, 2018

A movie festival is nothing without films and I kicked off my first full day at Berlinale by watching Wes Anderson's animated treasure 'Isle of Dogs' featuring puppets like you've never seen them before, beloved actors giving voices to fantastical dogs and a message of humanity hidden within a film that is so darn entertaining to watch, I may have to go back for seconds. Or thirds even. I know you've heard me talk like this before, but this time I mean it in a whole new and different way: If I went home today, I'd be happy, after watching 'Isle of Dogs'.

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In The Diaries, Cinema, Fashion, Festival Tags Wes Anderson, Berlinale, Berlin, film, Isle of Dogs, fashion, Zara, Gucci, Calvin Klein, Raf Simons, NYFW, Pitti Uomo, Atari, Margot Tenenbaum, street food, Eddielicious, Culinary Cinema, Dieter Kosslick, mexican food truck, Matteo Garrone, Dogman, Chinese Year of the Dog, Twentieth Century Fox, Fox Searchlight
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PHOTO BY VANNI BASSETTI, COURTESY OF PITTI IMMAGINE Backstage at Magliano

The Pitti Uomo 93 Diaries: M1992’s Paninaro Reinvented, Magliano’s Everyday Rockstar and ‘The Day The World Went Away’

E. Nina Rothe February 7, 2018

My third and last day of Pitti Uomo 93, Fall/Winter 2018-19 collections held some surprises. Most were pleasant, welcomed discoveries of designers who hadn’t been on my radar, and now forever more will be. Yet one, at the very end of the day was a disturbing reminder that the #MeToo movement needs to evolve, and include models, young men and children. If we don’t protect every victims — not just the attractive women stars of Hollywood who are looking for a second wind in their career — we are failing allthe injured.

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In Fashion, The Diaries Tags fashion, menswear, Pitti Uomo, Pitti Immagine, Pitti Uomo 93, M1992, Magliano, Vanni Bassetti, Dorian Stefano Tarantini, Paninaro, El Charro, American Psycho, Giovanni Giannoni, Elle South Africa, Luca Magliano, Palazzo Medici Riccardi, O32c, hipsters, Berlin, Undercover, Jun Takahanshi, Takahiromiyashita The Soloist, Guest Designers, Nine Inch Nails, The Day the World Went Away, Stazione Leopolda, Florence, Hotel Excelsior
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PHOTO COURTESY OF ETONA look from Eton’s Fall/Winter 2018-19 collection ‘Kyoto Anywhere’

PHOTO COURTESY OF ETON

A look from Eton’s Fall/Winter 2018-19 collection ‘Kyoto Anywhere’

The Pitti Uomo 93 Diaries: Eton’s Kyoto Anywhere, Concept Korea and Les Benjamins at the Pyramids

E. Nina Rothe February 7, 2018

On my second full day of Pitti Uomo, I went on a journey eastward to Egypt, Korea and Japan, thanks to the vision and wit of four fashion brands.

I’ll start with Eton, because for me Pitti Uomo always begins with Eton. The Swedish shirt brand has become synonymous with fashion with a conscience, and a symbol of how great ethics and cool designs can make for a powerful, winning combination in today’s market. While some designers with attitudes, and their ungrateful PRs can create attention for almost anything for a season or two before disappearing into oblivion, these days it’s with principles and great artistic vision that fashion houses thrive, time and time again. The inclusive atmosphere I experienced at the Gucci Garden launch party here in Florence only confirmed my theory.

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In Fashion, The Diaries Tags Gucci, Gucci Garden, Florence, Firenze, Pitti Uomo, Pitti Uomo 93, Eton, Swedish brand, fashion, Egypt, Korea, Japan, Kyoto Anywhere, Fall/Winter 2018-19, Sebastian Dollinger, kabuki, sumo wrestlers, Locale, Old Fashioned, Giovanni Giannoni, Pitti Immagine, Concept Korea, Beyond Closet, Wes Anderson, Bmuet(te), Pitti Live Movie, Fortezza da Basso, The Royal Tenenbaums, Richie Tenenbaum, Margot Tenenbaum, Buckley the dog, Alessandro Michele, Vanni Bassetti, Les Benjamins, Turkey, boxing, pyramids
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PHOTO BY VANNI BASSETTI, COURTESY OF PITTI IMMAGINEThe dinner in the Sala Bianca, organized by the Centro di Firenze per la Moda Italiana

PHOTO BY VANNI BASSETTI, COURTESY OF PITTI IMMAGINE

The dinner in the Sala Bianca, organized by the Centro di Firenze per la Moda Italiana

The Pitti Uomo 93 Diaries: Light, Camera... Fashion!

E. Nina Rothe February 7, 2018

Fashion has become the most affordable of art forms. We could all wear a piece of Christian Lacroix while he designed for Spanish brand Desigual and even typically untouchable Christian Dior features a few knick-knacks under $200 in their current collection, courtesy of artistic director Maria Grazia Chiuri — whose streetwise styles have reinvigorated the Maison.

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In Fashion, The Diaries Tags Fashion, The Pitti Uomo Diaries, Pitti Uomo 93, Firenze, Florence, Made in Italy, Palazzo Pitti, Pitti Palace, Sala Bianca, Traces, Vanni Bassetti, Centro di Firenze per la Moda Italiana, Christian Dior, Maria Grazia Chiuri, Christian Lacroix, Desigual, Sartoria Piera Filippini, Pino Lancetti, Lanvin, Picasso, Salvator Dali, Guido Pasquali, Uffizi Gallery, Eike Schmidt, Boboli Garden, Andrea Cavicchi, Valentino, Roberto Capucci, Siena
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5a461ae61c00003c0068daff.jpg

Following the Dubai International Film Festival, Where Does Arabwood Go Now?

E. Nina Rothe February 6, 2018

“Are you ready for us to make history again?!”

As I stepped into one of the magnificent Majlis — literally translating as a “place of sitting” from the Arabic — a meeting room inside the Madinat Jumeirah complex to catch up with the Chairman of the Dubai International Film Festival, Abdulhamid Juma uttered those words. I was taken aback for a moment and then I remembered that throughout the six years I’ve attended DIFF, I’ve sat down with him and together, we’ve come up with some of best questions about Arab cinema, its place in the world and its importance in dispelling stereotypes and breaking down walls. 

This year, I came to DIFF with a heavy heart and I leave it still wondering if all the efforts — personal and collective have been worth it. We’ve witnessed how easily the mighty of the film stratosphere can be taken down in Hollywood when no longer of use to their business partners, destroying careers that should be looked at with respect, regardless of these men’s questionable behavior. We seem to have forgotten that “the casting couch” is a term as old as the movies themselves. Now we just “throw out the baby with the bathwater” as the old saying goes...

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags DIFF17, Dubai International Film Festival, Dubai, Arabwood, Abdulhamid Juma, Arab cinema, Cate Blanchett, Sofia Coppola, Greta Gerwig, Wajib, Annemarie Jacir, Mohammad Bakri, HH Sheikh Mansoor bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Muhr Awards, Palestine, Elia Suleiman, Hany Abu Assad, President Obama, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, Oscars, Saudi Arabia, Haifaa Al Mansour, IWC Filmmaker Award, Saad Hariri, Masoud Amralla Al Ali, Shivani Pandya, women filmmakers, women film journalist, Dubai Film Market, women journalists
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