"At the end of the 1800s a new art form flickered into live." "It looked like our dreams." "Movies are multi-billion dollar global entertainment industry now." "But what drives them isn't box-office or showbiz." "It's passion, innovation!" "So let's travel the world to find this innovation for ourselves." "To discover it in this man, Stanley Donen, who made Singing in the Rain." "And in Jane Campion in Australia." "And in the films of Kyôko Kagawa who was in perhaps the greatest movie ever made." "And Amitabh Bachchan, the most famous actor in the world." "And in the movies of Martin Scorcese and Spike Lee," "Lars Von Trier and Akira Kurosawa." "Welcome to the story of film, an odyssey." "An epic tale of innovation across twelve decades, six continents and a thousand films." "In this chapter we discover that in the days before digital fantasy films, directors had a final love affair with real emotions in movies like In the mood for love and Japanese horror." "This is the story of the end of an era." "For a 100 years movies had been shot on this: celluloid." "Paper thin." "Shiny." "Perforated." "A medium so sensitive that it could capture the subtle colors in snow." "But in the '90s the digital image and Terminator 2 came along and reality got less real." "In these last days before that happened, as if to stave off the moment when the link between reality and the movies would finally be broken, filmmakers around the world made passionate movies about emotions, not spaceships or other worlds." "The story starts here in snowy Iran." "Take this extraordinary film, The Apple, [Sib] based on a true story." "A handheld camera moves into the enclosed world of this girl." "Her father thinks that the outside world is so scary and dangerous that he's done something remarkable to her and her sister." "The film's director Samira Makhmalbaf:" "This is the scene where the girls come blinking back out into the real world." "They taste it." "They're shy." "Makhmalbaf captures the gentleness of the moment." "It's remarkable that she didn't judge the parents for doing this to the girls." "But what's even more remarkable is that these aren't actors playing the girls." "The girls and the dad play themselves." "Not in a straight documentary about what happened, but in a kind of self-role play or re-enactment." "A risk that worked because the family found the process therapeutic." "And the film feels like an extraordinary intimate myth about modern parental love gone wrong." "The real life event was so fertile, so moving, that Makhmalbaf used film to double back over it." "This doubling back so that the real experience can fertilize the film, was unique to Iranian cinema of this time." "This is Makhmalbaf's dad, Mohsen, in exile from Iran in Paris." "He double backed on reality too." "His film, A Moment of Innocence [Nun va Goldoon], is even more remarkable than his daughter's." "In the early '90s, Mohsen Makhmalbaf put an advert in a newspaper asking for non-professionals to come to a casting call." "Nothing unusual in that." "But one of the people who showed up to audition for a part in Makhmalbaf's film was a policeman, who Makhmalbaf had stabbed way back in the '70s when Makhmalbaf was a teenager fighting the shah's regime." "Makhmalbaf loved this." "He scrapped his planned film and decided, instead, to make one about the stabbing." "He recreated the events on camera from his, the attacker's, point of view, and, even more unusually, he asked the policeman, who of course had never made a film before, to recreate them from his, the victim's, point of view." "Here's a scene from the film, directed by the policeman, who films himself, he's the taller of the two guys here, telling a young actor who is playing him in the '70s, how to behave." "The policeman films in a panning shot from far away and has cast quite a handsome actor as his younger self." "Already, he is trying to make what happened, a touch more glamorous." "Again we have doubling back on the found experience to imbue it with extra intensity." "In this case the doubling back revealed something unexpectedly moving." "In the days of the stabbing, the policeman was in love with a girl and he thought that she might love him back." "During the shooting of the film, 20 years later, the policeman discovered, to his dismay, that she was only pretending to like him to distract him because she was a revolutionary too, and in cahoots with Makhmalbaf." "Here's Makhmalbaf's restaging of the moment when the real policeman discovers that the love was not real." "An actress playing the girl walks quickly with the actor playing the young Makhmalbaf." "The real policeman has now seen that she was with the young Makhmalbaf, and upset, he puts his hand in front of the camera to stop the filming." "He's carried a flame for her all these years and it's just gone out." "Makhmalbaf ends this film about life, reworked exquisitely." "Beautiful close ups, haunting music, the girl asks the policeman the time." "Will he be stabbed?" "Will he shoot her?" "A moment of innocence." "Then, Makhmalbaf improves on what really happened in the '70s, he offers "flowers for Africa " as he put it, and " bread for the poor."" "A Moment of Innocence is the single greatest work of autobiography in cinema." "It brilliantly shows that not only fantasy films, like The Matrix, are fascinating but, fasten your seat belts, because the story of reality in the last days of celluloid is about to get even more complicated." "In the '90s, this Iranian filmmaker, Abbas Kiarostami, seemed to worship reality in a way that few artists ever did." "He started by trying to reduce all falseness from the process of filmmaking." "This film, Where is the Friend's Home?" "[Khane-ye doust kodjast?" "]" "is a triumphant result of Kiarostami's filming like a football coach." "He selected a great young player actor, Babek Ahmed Poor, put him in a world that he knew, this ordinary courtyard house in northern Iran." "Kept the camera on the sidelines, and asked Babek to do scenes he could understand." "Here he talks to his mother about his homework book." "Where is the Friend's Home?" "was one of the greatest films about childhood and friendship." "But then tragedy struck." "A terrible earthquake hit the region where Where is the Friend's Home?" "was filmed." "50,000 people died, including 10,000 kids." "Kiarostami and his crew drove there at once, in tears, to look for Bebak." "Instead, when they got there, they found something else: human resilience." "In looking for one thing, they found another." "And so, Kiarostami decided to make a film about them going to an earthquake zone to look for the boy." "Reality doubling back on itself again." "It was called:" "And life goes on." "[Life and Nothing More...] [Zendegi va digar hich]" "This man is playing Kiarostami." "In this shot, it was Kiarostami himself who was behind the camera talking to the man." "The second film's mostly set in the car." "On the second shoot, Kiarostami met a man called Hussein, who had a passionate story about life going on." "Hussein got married just days after the earthquake." "Kiarostami loved this." "Here in the second film, using a static camera and naturalistic dialogue, Kiarostami depicts himself meeting Hussein and hearing this story." "Whilst filming this small scene, Hussein, despite being married, became rather infatuated with the woman playing his fiancée." "She, however, did not return his feelings." "Kiarostami was fascinated by this." "His response to it was unique in movie history." "Two years later, he made this whole third film about the feelings during Hussein's small scene in the second film." "The same actors, the camera's still static, but it's further back this time." "We see a director who's playing the man who was playing Kiarostami." "Hussein goes upstairs to try to woo the new woman." "An objective frontal shot." "And then Kiarostami films from her position, and then his point of view." "Through the olive trees [Zire darakhatan zeyton] was about Hussein's infatuation but also, you could say, about Kiarostami's love of his love and how he tried to film it, and how cinema can film the complex layers of reality." "And how cameras can change lives." "This complex trilogy about the circle of life and love had started 7 years earlier with this reserved boy filmed from the sidelines." "Seven years later filmed from a car." "Kiarostami's favorite way of looking at the world." "Bebak suddenly appears again, taller, but still serious." "He was still alive after all." "A country that didn't invent cinema, that wasn't rich enough to have a major film industry." "A country, whose religion, Islam, was in some way suspicious of imagery, was, in the last days of celluloid, using film devotionally, as if it's sacred." "As if what it films is sacred." "One critic said, "we're living in the era of Kiarostami."" "Just as the Lord of the Rings movies were coming at us, like an express train, Kiarostami's love of simple reality captured the spirit of his times." "Far away from the snowy north of Iran, film was also being used to transfigure, to focus on real people not hobbits or virtual reality." "So far in the story of film, Hong Kong has been associated with action movies of Bruce Lee and what came after." "But one team of Hong Kong new wave filmmakers made films with such an intoxicating look and texture, that they seemed to be celebrating the sheen of celluloid itself, and the romantic melancholia of real life." "To watch even a few frames of Days of Being Wild, [Ah fei zing zyun] the first distinctive film of Wong Kar-Wai, his designer-editor muse, William Chang, and their cinematographer, Chris Doyle, is to notice the soft shadowing and shallow focus and gorgeous colors." "The beauty of the sad, lonely people." "Wong trained as a graphic designer." "He found the martial arts films of the Shaw brothers too bright eyed and bushy tailed." "Young people were sadder than that." "Fluorescent light, saturated color, and the landscape of faces, together, create the beauty of the Wong world." "To travel around Hong Kong today is to feel Wong's sense of time, and color, and composition." "Time drags its heels." "This exquisite film, In the Mood for Love, [Faa yeung nin wa] sums up the night-time celluloid vision of Wong's team." "Time's slowed down." "A woman slaloms past a man." "He glances." "We're in Hong Kong in 1962." "Music in 3/4 time." "Suddenly it rains like in a movie." "Steam and rain." "We feel the sultry heat." "The man and the woman are in separate marriages but are unhappy." "Lonely." "Heads lowered." "They're in the mood for love." "As in the films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Terrence Davies, hope has left the building, so rapture has migrated into the imagery and sound." "Maggie Cheung and Wong's team had created one of the most striking personas in world cinema." "Soon, Cheung was playing a silent movie icon in France." "In a telling comment on what directors sometimes do to actors, the director, Olivier Assayas, literally scribbled on the celluloid." "And in neighboring Taiwan, moviemakers seemed haunted by slow, photographic truths, and real, not fantasy worlds, too." "Bernardo Bertolucci said that this Taiwanese director," "Tsai Ming-liang, reinvented film language." "Tsai is influenced by Taiwanese history." "Along with Edward Yang, Hou Hsiao-hsien used film to stare intensely at Taiwanese society." "This is his movie, A City of Sadness." "[Bei qing cheng shi]" "It's the late 1940s." "An uneasy moment of stasis in Taiwan's turbulent history." "Hou captures this stasis by using long static shots." "They average more than 40 seconds each." "Hou said that holding a long shot has a certain kind of tension." "The pleasure and intellectual distinction of Hou's films lies in their rigor." "Take this scene for example." "One of the brothers in the story is treated in a local hospital." "The story takes us back to the hospital several times." "An ordinary director might want to vary the shots on each return but Hou shoots from the exact same camera angle." "Reality, doubling back on itself again." "Not a reverse angle or alternative shot." "If A City of Sadness is about national recall," "Hou seems to suggest that we remember places in just one way." "Hsiao-hsien revered the other master of special rigor:" "Yasujiro Ozu." "His frames within frames, square on imagery, no camera moves." "Like Ozu, Hou seldom uses big close-ups." "Space in Hou is not something to move through at speed, as it was for most '80s directors and, later, films like The Matrix." "This makes Hou the great classicist of cinema's modern era." "Hou's bold seriousness paved the way for Tsai." "Tsai's second film, Vive l'Amour, [Ai qing wan sui] is about the loneliness of life in modern cities." "At its end, a young woman walks to a park bench and cries." "We don't know exactly why." "Waves of emotion cross her face as the sun comes out." "Tsai's camera remains static." "A scene that's the opposite of fantasy cinema like "Terminator 2."" "Tsai believes in the fascination of the human face." "James Cameron's, Avatar, was coming soon and was great fun." "But Tsai's focus on real human bodies was timely indeed." "Move from Taiwan to Japan in the '90s, and you find movie makers who were using film in the opposite way to those we've met so far in the last days of celluloid." "Many of Japan's best directors used film to scare us." "Their movies were so distinctively made, and so often re-made by Hollywood, that a new term, "J-horror," was coined." "To get under the skin of '90s J-horror let's start with one of its pioneers, this man, Shin'ya Tsukamoto, Japan's movie cyberpunk." "In Tsukamoto's film, Tetsuo, an ordinary Japanese man starts to turn into metal." "The handheld, punky, black and white imagery, captures the man's terror and disorientation." "And in the sequel to Tetsuo, in which a man is transformed into a gun," "Tsukamoto used 43 seconds of single frame images of biology and women and space." "The technique of Abel Gance way back in 1923." "One-thousand images to represent the flickering decay in the man's cellular life." "Tetsuo's wild energy was a brilliant expression of modern life's fear of machinery and computerization." "But then came Hideo Nakata's, Ringu." "The most influential horror movie of its time." "Imagery colored Navy blue, a haunted young woman, industrial noise, and screeching." "It was Japan's biggest ever international box office hit." "In the last days of celluloid, in the country of Sony and Panasonic, the object of fear was the video image itself." "A human emotion about a digital future." "The scary thing, the girl, climbed out of the video image into our homes." "Nakata saw and loved The Exorcist." "He borrowed its domestic setting, innocent girl possessed by the devil, it's banging and sudden violence." "Alright, let's see what the deal is." "And he borrowed, too, the eerie calm of the dreamlike female ghost with the long black hair in Ugetsu Monogatari." "Nakata put this demonism and grace into his film, which was about people who die after watching a videotape." "The sound in the videotape combined a remarkable 50 tracks FX." "Real sound doubling back over itself." "Ringu's scenes of the dead walking amongst us and its avoidance of the Christian idea of the human soul, made it distinctly Asian." "Takashi Miike's film, Audition, [Ôdishon ] also seemed to take place in a floating world." "A TV producer has advertised for actresses." "A shy young woman with long black hair shows up." "Echoes of Ugetsu Monogatari and Ringu." "The camera is as stable as Ozu's." "Miike uses such blankness and minimalism to wrong foot us before the terror." "We visit the woman's apartment." "She is waiting for the TV producer to call." "He does." "She smiles." "In the background of the shot is a sack." "Horrific realization that she has tied someone in it." "Japanese directors of the '90s were using stillness as a counter point to violence in an almost Buddhist way." "This and a chain of Japanese fears of the atomic bomb, of machinery, of video, and of women, had led to the most distinctive horror films in a generation." "If the Iranian's worshipped reality in the last days of celluloid and the Japanese were scared of it, here in Copenhagen, movie makers made a revolutionary manifesto about it." "They wanted to get back to the basics of filmmaking and to human nature and to distance themselves from fantasy cinema." "A group of filmmakers who work in this sleepy looking, former army barracks outside Copenhagen, led the revolution, carried the banner." "These filmmakers had won scores of international awards." "They call this wall their wall of shame, not fame." "They only hire lawyers if they can also play a musical instrument." "They swim naked in this unheated pool." "They've quotations from chairman Mao on their walls." "This editing table, which belonged to the world's most quietly spoken filmmaker," "Carl Theodor Dreyer, sits like a shrine in their corridor." "What sort of filmmakers live here?" "Hippies?" "Punks?" "Provocateurs?" "Yes, yes, and yes." "And their leading light is this man, Lars Von Trier." "Von Trier works in this former ammunitions bunker, backed up against the world." "In 1995, he and Thomas Vinterberg, took a leaf out of the books of Bresson and Pasolini, by arguing that cinema had to become primitive again." "They said that the new wave had turned to muck." "In their manifesto, they pledged a "vow of chastity"" "to the following daunting rules:" "The camera must be taken off the tripod." "The shape of the screen must not be wide." "No sets should be built." "Real locations should be used." "No props should be brought to those locations." "No music should be used." "No lighting can be added." "No flashbacks, and the director must not take credit." "All reminiscent of what Abbas Kiarostami was doing at this time in Iran." "A celebration of the primitive in cinema, in the days before computer generated imagery." "I know you love me." "Von Trier's best film of the '90s, Breaking the Waves, broke many of the Dogma rules, but was revelatory and fresh." "It's about the suffering of this naive young Scottish woman, Bess." "Von Trier follows her with mostly handheld shots as life does its worst to her." "Is there anything I can do for you?" "Anything at all?" "I'd like you to go to Jan and pray for him to be cured, and to rise from his bed and walk." "The actors were free to move anywhere." "Trier did take after take." "Then edited together the moments of each take, which seemed to him most true, even if they were out of focus or broke the 180 degree axis rules." "The ultimate movie roughness." "We saw a thing on an American television thing, called Homicide, which I'm sure you know that was kind of a "ground-breaker" so to say." "There was a lot of time cuts and no continuity and all this stuff." "And that was really a burden to be freed of, I think." "And I've kind of toyed around with that ever since." " Are there people like Goddard had done something similar?" "Yeah, but that was kind of more in a stylized way, and this was kind of more to..." "kind of be free of the whole thing and more like, you know, if you cut a documentary you don't care if the cigarette has, you know, is as long as in the other shot." "Or you know, you don't care." "And if you film, when you film these jet planes coming flying into twin towers, you know, you don't care which side of the axis you are." "And nobody in doubt of where the planes are coming from or you know." "It was, for me, anyway, very nice to get rid of." "At the end of Breaking the Waves, Bess dies, and then this happens." "The most audacious moment in the whole of world cinema of the '90s." "Bess' partner realizes she's gone to heaven." "Then the camera is suddenly in heaven." "A static shot with heavenly bells on either side of the screen." "Most movies are secular, but Breaking the Wave's ending was Christian." "The good thing about going too far, you know, is that if you kind of..." "If you see films that are going too far you kind of you kind of make a mark, "how long did I stay with it?"" "Right?" "A lot of people didn't stay with the bells." "And they..." "But they... some of them said that it was a good film, the rest of it." "In Breaking the Waves, and in this later Von Trier film, Dogville, he sometimes operated the camera himself, often touching Nicole Kidman during a scene like this." "This intimacy between director and actor was new in film history." "Dogville was even more innovative than Breaking the Waves." "Trier used no sets, buildings or props." "A technique as daring as it must have been scary." "No, I was not scared, no, no." "Because I've you know, if you go back to the '70s there was a lot of..." "People did much more strange things and they worked." "You know?" "So, I was..." "No, I was pretty sure that it would work." "But it only of course works if you want it to work, as an audience." "And no, I was not..." "I remember, one of Nicole's friends, Russell Crowe, came to the set and he said" ""this demands an explanation!"" "And I said, "not from me!"" "You know?" "No, no." "I'm very pleased with "Dogville"." "Again we follow the suffering of a woman." "This time in an America village." "The villagers start to enslave the woman." "In the end they shackle her, like a dog." "It was quite unlike "Dogville" to restrain its indignation on any point." "Perhaps things had turned out well after all!" "Good morning, Mrs. Henderson" "Oh!" "Morning." "I would have come earlier but I overslept" "Oh, never mind." "Liz put her back into it this morning." "Von Trier again breaks the editing rules." "Like his Scandinavian heroes, Ingmar Bergman and Carl Dreyer, many of Von Trier's films are about suffering women." "But whereas in most movies the women are distant objects of desire," "Von Trier's women seem to be versions of himself." "I think I must admit that I'm..." "That it's very much me in the women." "I don't know why it has become this way." "But first of all, for me, it's much easier to work with actresses." "Whereas men, I think..." "Or can be more difficult because they want to confront you, you know?" "And want to discuss which way we're going which is something that's difficult because sometimes you don't know, you just have a feeling, which is something that actresses for some reason has..." "It's easier for them to accept, I think." "Or, it's easier for them to accept that they cannot give in to the project in another way." "Von Trier once said that a film should be like a pebble in a shoe." "No, I..." "The films that I like, they hurt a little bit." "A lot of films are, you know, reproductions." "And I don't believe so much in doing that." "A lot of people do that, so I'm trying to make something that in some sense makes a little mark or a little pain." "The primitive radicalism of the Dogma manifesto and the searing, sometimes mocking emotions of Von Trier made it and him amongst the most talked about artists of their time." "In the days before wizards and hobbits, the Dogma films showed human nature, warts and all." "Jump from Copenhagen to this train in France in the '90s, and you find a bunch of French language directors reacting, like Lars Von Trier, against glossy fantasy cinema." "Celebrating truth and celluloid, but doing so with more working class and ethnically diverse characters." "This film, La Haine, was shot in contrast-y black and white." "It's sometimes static camera stared at its blank characters." "It was filmed here." "Not in fancy Paris but in the banlieue, the housing estates on the outskirts, at the end of the train line." "Director Mathieu Kassovitz, took as his starting point, the real life shooting whilst in police custody of a black teenager." "Kassovitz shows us the day in the life of several youths." "The first we meet, Said, is Islamic." "Not for Kassovitz the hand held, unplugged cinema of Lars Von Trier." "He tracks into Said, in slow-mo." "Then cranes over his head, like Sergio Leone." "The beauty of old style film techniques in the last days of celluloid." "Then we meet Vinz, we see him dancing." "It turns out to be a dream sequence." "Vinz is filmed in deep space, like Orson Welles or John Ford." "Vinz gets up and goes to the bathroom." "Kassovitz uses two actors mimicking each other." "There's no mirror." "If there was we'd see the camera reflected in it." "There are two sets of toothbrushes to enhance the illusion." "Then Vinz starts to mimic Robert de Nero in Taxi Driver." "Kassovitz had been influenced by Spike Lee's, Do the Right Thing, whose precise framing and heightened color, showed that films about street life didn't have to be hand held, or without style." "Far from it." "The street was style, form, grace." "La Haine used the old beauty of film to show new truths about multicultural, working class France." "This film, Bruno Dumont's L'Humanité, is also about working class France but its film style is totally different." "It's shot in color." "Its camera hardly moves." "None of the craning of La Haine." "This opening shot shows a distant police man walking across a landscape." "But then, we see him on the ground." "He's been traumatized by something." "A girl has been raped." "The blank face of people in Robert Bresson films." "The film has a cold stare, like marble." "It's as un-glossy as an early silent film, shot on celluloid." "Later, astonishingly, the man seems to levitate." "Dumont has the shot framed far back so we just clock that his feet are off the ground." "Maybe he's a Saint." "And in the very last image the man is filmed in medium long shot, turned away from us, and we glimpse handcuffs on him." "Could the policeman be the rapist?" "Or maybe he's a simple, innocent man who's suffering for all our sins." "As devoted to real, not fantasy people, were the Belgian, former documentarists," "Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne." "Like Kassovitz and Dumont, they took as their subject disenfranchised life in contemporary Europe." "Rosetta was about this feral teenage girl who's desperate for a job." "The brother's brilliantly simple stylistic innovation was to have her run throughout the film and follow her with a hand held camera." "Like Dumont they seldom used the shot-reverse shot techniques which were established in the movies by about 1913." "Always moving forward with their camera, gave a unique sense of being at the shoulder of the girl as she runs through the world looking for work." "It's a very easy thing to learn, you know." "Perhaps the greatest French language director of celluloid in the '90s and since has been this woman:" "Claire Denis." "She worked with Wim Wenders, and is thought of as an art movie director, but insists that film is universal." "I would love, in a second life, to be a sort of James Cameron, you know?" "For me there is no difference between a James Cameron and a Claire Denis, you know?" "I want to make film." "Denis grew up in Africa and greatly admired this film, in which the rebellious young man slaughters oxen then puts their horns on his motor bike." "Old and new Africa in a single image." "I saw "Touki Bouki" which for me, it still is, one of the greatest films I've seen about hope." "Teenage hopes, you know, something like that." "I am a white person who grew up in Africa and it's a very powerful experience." "We, people, growing in a country possessed by white people but knowing we were not from there, and it was wrong, make us immensely not willing to be giving lessons." "This is Denis's extraordinary African film, Beau Travail." "Its colors are beautiful, burnt umber earth, azure sea." "Jean-Luc Godard said that the history of cinema is the history of men photographing women." "But in "Beau Travail," a woman photographs men." "French legionaries, intrinsically." "Here they walk around each other like they're in a classic western gunfight, but Denis is more interested in the choreography than the aggression." "They fight." "Denis films the fight minimally without testosterone." "A single punch, slow motion." "The main character decides to kill himself." "Close-ups of his body." "We see the blood pumping in his veins." "The rhythm of his life." "And then, apparently after his death, we see a final scene, this extraordinary dance sequence." "He's filmed full height, as Fred Astaire was in Hollywood musicals." "The last days of disco." "The last days of celluloid." "This scene, it was written in the script that he was going to the night club." "Empty." "Dancing a goodbye to his life of a legionnaire." "Dance to death." "And then, in the script after, in Marseilles, he was killing himself, you know?" "But I shot the dance scene in Djibouti before shooting Marseilles." "And when we did it, I was so moved, and Denis was moved too." "We were all moved." "Only one take, you know?" "I thought, "My God." "How can I have that scene before?"" "Him, in his bed, taking the gun to shoot himself down, you know?" "I think it's not fair, it's better if the gun, the last scene, comes before and I keep this dance scene as his last dream or as his last..." "The last moment he remembers, you know?" "Something..." "Plenty of life." "Denis compared this last dance scene to ending of Ozu's film Late Spring." "In that case the father alone." "He is peeling his apple like a lonely man instead of sharing the apple." "And the way he's peeling the apple is also an elegant gesture, you know?" "Like the dance of Denis Lavant at the end of "Beau Travail"." "It's very close in a way, you know?" "It's..." "You're very sad, it's the end of something and, yet, to show something that is, like this beautiful loop who is the apple skin." "And I think, of course it's the way Ozu touch us deep." "Deep in where we cannot resist." "Claire Denis was using celluloid in a non-masculine way in the 1990s and so was the Polish director of this film, Dorota Kedzierzawska." "We're on a boat." "This little girl's been kidnapped by an older girl who's always ignored by her mom." "This is the older girl." "She's pretending to be a mum herself." "Kedzierzawska uses old fashioned, almost square frames." "She keeps the filmmaking as simple as possible in order not to distract the girls to get these touchingly naturalistic performances." "The film's color coded in yellows and greens." "Crows [Wrony ] is a movie about the human face, the very thing that the coming digital age will struggle to depict." "And this film boldly shows the simple fact that photographing human beings is one of cinemas great strengths." "We're in St. Petersburg." "Director Viktor Kossakovsky, has tracked down every single person who was born in the city on the day that he was." "Wednesday, the 19th of July, 1961." "He follows a man as he walks the street." "Films others as they stand in traffic." "This person as he makes music." "And this woman as she gives birth." "All photographed naturally, documentary style." "In just 93 minutes, we feel we meet a whole generation, a huge range of people even though each is on screen on average for less than one minute." "Wednesday [Sreda] was a celebration of real human beings in the last days of celluloid." "This man, Michael Haneke, saw them as dark days." "In this documentary we see him tell the actor how to hit an actress." "The threat of violence in his work, and he's always consulting his marked up screenplay, which shows how meticulously planned his films are." "Haneke studied philosophy and started making films in 1989." "Here is his film Code Unknown." "This is one of the first shots which lasts over 11 minutes." "No cut and the camera starts to move complexly, like in a... film." "A white lad throws rubbish at a Kosovan refugee who's begging." "A black man confronts him." "A very unsettling scene of tension and conflict in modern life." "But Haneke makes his point, that we don't connect as human beings in European cities, with a brilliant stylistic coup." "Each long shot goes to black before the next comes onto the screen." "Even the shots don't touch." "This was revolutionary." "But it's this earlier film by Haneke, Funny Games, which really sums up the last days of celluloid." "The anxiety, the sense that something is on the brink, that human beings are becoming unreal." "Two youths visit their neighbors to borrow eggs." "The neighbors are a nice middle class family." "The boys are dressed in white and wear white gloves like archivists, or thieves, or angels of death." "They brutally terrorize the family." "Calmly, often off screen." "The power of suggestion." "The violence that's potentially in all of us." "To break down the barrier between them and us," "Haneke has the boys wink at the camera, the audience." "This is unsettling, but it's not ground-breaking." "But this scene is ground-breaking." "The boys take a TV handset and press rewind." "The TV in the film doesn't rewind, the film itself does, the sort of thing that people sometimes do in the privacy of their own homes, something that would never happen in the age of celluloid." "Haneke is saying that we might be enjoying vicariously the violence." "He's saying: "Go on, you know you want to, you're a degenerate, we all are."" "The film rewinding is as shocking as this scene in Ingmar Bergman's Persona, where the film melts." "In both cases, we're suddenly at a new level, in a new position." "The spell is broken and we're woken up." "To what?" "Something massive to get our heads around." "A digital world, where seeing is no longer believing." "Where suddenly the people on screen are avatars, or Neo in The Matrix, or Harry Potter, or hobbits." "Synced and corrected by job0@whatkeepsmebusy.today"