arty foreign fuckers

..and why not?

whose work do you prefer?

Fellini
2
10%
Kieslowski
2
10%
Fassbinder
0
No votes
Bergman
1
5%
Godard
1
5%
Truffaut
4
19%
Kurosawa
3
14%
Tarkovsky
0
No votes
Kusturica
0
No votes
Forman
1
5%
Bunuel
3
14%
other
4
19%
 
Total votes: 21

Sneelock

Postby Sneelock » 02 Apr 2007, 17:52

I hope it's just that I don't read german but is "The State of Things" included in that box? good gravy, I hope so!

Bungo the Mungo

Postby Bungo the Mungo » 02 Apr 2007, 17:53

'Der Stand Der Dinge' is what you're looking for, I think!

User avatar
Mychael
Posts: 5452
Joined: 16 Jul 2003, 21:49
Location: Berlin
Contact:

Postby Mychael » 02 Apr 2007, 18:07

Sneelock wrote:good gravy, I hope so!


It is.

And they're all "Director's Cut" versions - with added interviews and docs.
Bear tracks, bear tracks comin' up to you: http://www.bearfamilyradio.com/index.php?lang=en

Sneelock

Postby Sneelock » 02 Apr 2007, 18:16

I was in a room with Alan Garfield/Goorwitz once. somebody asked him who wrote "the hollywood song" and he said that he did. he also took a lot of credit for 'the stunt man' and the films of Quentin Tarantino so I'm not sure what to make of the claim.

The Modernist

Postby The Modernist » 02 Apr 2007, 21:35

Sea Of Tunes wrote:What's the criterion for 'foreign'? Japan, Yugoslavia, Germany, Italy, France are in, but the UK is out? Did you mean 'Non-Anglo-Saxon', or 'Non-Mainstream'? I would opt for Sir Alfred Hitchcock, or Powell and Pressburger; or else the younger Coppola (as in: The Conversation).


Non english language.

winter
Posts: 15
Joined: 15 Jun 2005, 04:32

Postby winter » 03 Apr 2007, 14:09

bela tarr is the correct answer. werckmeister harmonies, anyone?


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