Most recent articles
16 September 2015
Rocks in My Pockets
by Ryan Ormonde
Signe Baumane’s Rocks in My Pockets is a magic realist cartoon, revelatory in its examination of the repercussions and repetitions of mental illness within a genealogy. The hand-drawn animation is flat, jerky and superimposed onto footage of (…) Continue Reading »
13 September 2015
Q&A with Jerry Rothwell, director of How to Change the World
by Abla KandalaftYour previous documentaries are all about widely varying subjects. What inspired you to make one about Greenpeace?
I try and do something different from one film to the next. I like looking at new subject matter and trying new approaches. This one emerged from the realisation that there was all this footage, all the original rushes used in Greenpeace’s campaigning films in the 1970s that (…) Continue Reading »
11 September 2015
British Urban Film Festival 2015
by Coco GreenNow in its tenth year, the British Urban Film Festival aims to celebrate and promote independent, urban cinema in the UK. This year BUFF will have free masterclasses (in addition to its usual lineup for all the budding filmmakers hoping to be selected for future festivals) and short films online.
BUFF Previews:
Still Water (2014) isn’t at all urban but brings a bit of fantasy to the (…) Continue Reading »
11 September 2015
British Urban Film Festival - Matter of Fact
by Coco GreenYears ago, in 10th grade, my World History Ms Coehlo explained the nonsensical nature of the Holocaust being that they weren’t really another race, they were German. At the time, all I could think of was myself and I interpreted this statement as racism being okay only if you’re really dealing with another race. Now, remembering this story I think of ‘folk’ notions of race. It’s common that (…) Continue Reading »
11 September 2015
Remake Film Festival
by Judy HarrisAs Hollywood’s fiscal calculations ensure it pumps out sequels, prequels and trilogies (some disguised as ‘new content’), the Remake Film Festival tried out a different relationship between old box office hits and current day moviemaking. Filmmakers across the globe were invited to reimagine, reinterpret or remake scenes from classical Hollywood movies – specifically Psycho, Casablanca and (…) Continue Reading »
7 September 2015
NEWS: Stream films from Venice Film Fest thanks to Festivalscope!
by Mydylarama teamFestival Scope have just sent us news that they’d partnered with the Venice Film Festival to set up Sala Web, an initiative that allows them to screen premieres online for 5 days.
Sala Web showcases a selection of films from the Orizzonti Competition. New films will be available for streaming until the 11 September (inc. Jake Mahaffy’s FREE IN DEED).
More info at home.festivalscope.com/ (…) Continue Reading »
7 September 2015
How To Change The World: the birth of the modern eco-movement
by Abla KandalaftThe Sheffield Doc/Fest Environmental Award winner charts the early days of Greenpeace and the eco-movement, from its humble beginnings as a ragtag band of hippies attempting to stop a nuclear test to the establishment of a media savvy, international campaign group.
The starting point is 1971, when a small group of activists, including rookie journalist Robert Hunter, set sail from Vancouver (…) Continue Reading »
1 September 2015
Pasolini
by Alice Haworth-Booth
Abel Ferrara’s Pasolini opens in the dark: the Italian director is interviewed in French, in sunglasses, in a smoky room, in 1975, about Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom, which is the last film he will make. Pier Paolo Pasolini appears suave and (…) Continue Reading »
29 August 2015
Interview with animator Richard Williams
by Ryan Ormonde
Ahead of Bristol’s Encounters Festival, Ryan Ormonde talks with Richard Williams, the award-winning animator, most famous as director of animation on the technically ground-breaking Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Encounters will be screening his new (…) Continue Reading »
23 August 2015
Leonore Schick’s TTIP&Feminist Film Saturday
by Mydylarama teamFor more on the Feminist Film Fest, check out filmmaker and Leonore Schick’s blog article...
"The London Feminist Film Festival
It Happened Here trigger warning: sexual assault, sexual violence, rape.
Initially, I only planned to go along to the Shorts screening. But my friend Emma who does the Resonance radio show with me said we should go along to a documentary about rape on US (…) Continue Reading »