tagged w/ Not for US
-
Martedì 22 settembre, nell’ambito della seconda parte della rassegna Questi fantasmi, la Cineteca Nazionale, in collaborazione con Cineteca Italiana e Carlo Montanaro, dedica un omaggio a Glauco Pellegrini e ai fratelli Francesco e Pier Maria Pasinetti con una giornata di proiezioni al Cinema Trevi
Programma delle proiezioni:
ore 17.00
Omaggio a Francesco e Pier Maria Pasinetti
Entusiasmo (1932)
Regia: Francesco Pasinetti; fotografia: Mario Damicelli; interpreti: Marino Rocchetto, Franco Bressan, Nina Simonetti; origine: Italia; produzione: Cine G.U.F. di Venezia; durata: 26’
Primo film a soggetto prodotto dai Cine G.U.F. e realizzato da Pasinetti appena ventenne, Entusiasmo è interpretato da attori non professionisti e girato dal vero. Il cortometraggio, incompleto perché privo della parte finale, narra di una gita in montagna di un gruppo di universitari veneziani. Dopo piacevoli discese sulla neve e corteggiamenti giovanili alcuni studenti si perdono nel bosco. Gli altri, fiaccole in mano, vanno alla loro ricerca. «Una delle maggiori abilità del direttore sta nell’aver condotti gli attori con la maggiore aderenza alla vita; ne è riuscita una interpretazione viva in cui piace ricordare la maschera bonaria e cordiale dello studente Marino Rocchetto, e quella sempre misurata del Bressan» (Mario Liani).
Versione restaurata a cura di Cineteca Nazionale e Regione Veneto
a seguire
Venezia in festa (1947)
Regia: Francesco Pasinetti; fotografia: Antonio Schiavinotto, Bruno Barcarol, Giuseppe Caracciolo, Antonio Marzari, Alberto Pasinetti, F. Pasinetti; origine: Italia; produzione: Filmeuropa, Frabeart; durata: 10’
Breve documentario sulla festa del Redentore di Venezia, celebrata con la nota regata storica sul Canal Grande. La folla festante, le gondole che si inseguono lungo il canale si alternano a scorci solitari e silenziosi di calli e palazzi. Il film fa parte di una serie di documentari dedicati a Venezia e realizzati da Pasinetti dopo la seconda guerra mondiale. «L’analisi di Francesco Pasinetti sui diversi aspetti della realtà veneziana trova una componente molto importante nell’architettura della luce, un’organizzazione per creare nuovi stimoli al racconto visivo in una “partitura” fatta di ombra e luce che conferisce risalto alle zone di pietra e di acqua ed ai protagonisti che le percorrono» (Miriam Botter).
Versione restaurata a cura di Cineteca Nazionale e Regione Veneto
a seguire
Arte Contemporanea (1948)
Regia: Francesco Pasinetti; soggetto e sceneggiatura: Rodolfo Pallucchini; fotografia: Paolo Gregorig; musica: Gino Gorini; montaggio: F. Pasinetti; origine: Italia; produzione: Filmus; durata: 10’
Film a lungo considerato perduto è un documentario sugli stili e gli orientamenti della pittura contemporanea e dei suoi principali esponenti. Il ritrovamento presso la Cineteca Nazionale di una copia lavoro ha permesso la ricostruzione filologica dell’opera.
a seguire
Nuvola (1935)
Regia: Pier Maria Pasinetti, Roberto Zerboni; soggetto e sceneggiatura: R. Zerbini, P. M. Pasinetti; fotografia: Francesco Cerchio; interpreti: Giorgio Balboni, Liliana della Valle; origine: Italia; durata: 18’
Film sperimentale e unica esperienza registica per i due autori, ha come protagonisti un bambino e una bambina, che, come due novelli Adamo ed Eva, giocano su una spiaggia. Le piccole avventure che i due bimbi affrontano costruiscono una dimensione favolistica e simbolica, accentuata dall’attenzione verso gli elementi naturali che li circondano: l’acqua, la luce, le piante.
Versione restaurata a cura di Cineteca Nazionale e Regione Veneto
a seguire
Omaggio a Glauco Pellegrini
Lo scultore Giacomo Manzù (1950)
Regia: Glauco Pellegrini; fotografia: Romolo Garroni; musica: Roman Vlad; origine: Italia; produzione: Lux Film; durata: 11’
a seguire
Ritratto di Alberto Sughi (1971)
Regia: Glauco Pellegrini; fotografia: Aldo Barcella; musica: Carlo Rustichelli; montaggio: Massimo Gozzano; origine: IMartedì 22 settembre, nell’ambito della seconda parte della rassegna... more
-
-
Un montaggio di corti realizzati in questi ultimi anni da studente all'istituto "The Arts Institute at Bournemouth" in Inghilterra.Un montaggio di corti realizzati in questi ultimi anni da studente all'istituto... more
-
-
Turbo-charged action thriller "Fast and Furious" raced to the top of the UK box office over the Easter weekend, taking nearly five million pounds in the process, according to Screen International on Wednesday.
Starring Vin Diesel and Paul Walker, the movie is the fourth in a series which has already provided rich fodder for video games with its elaborate car chases and basic plots.Turbo-charged action thriller "Fast and Furious" raced to the top of the UK... more
-
-
Don't expect to see these porcelain figurines on the back pages of Sunday magazines because they'll set you back as much as £8,000.
Artist Barnaby Barford bought porcelain figures from car boot sales for a few quid and has transformed them into modern day pieces showing the worst of British "chav" culture.
There's the happy slapping (pictured above), a family eating a bucket of KFC & kids playing with some discarded wings in a litter filled park
He said: "Most of the porcelain figures you see in the charity shops represent some ideal of childhood and I wanted to remake that to reflect today's perceptions."
Mmm. But is it art? Would you want it on your mantelpiece?Don't expect to see these porcelain figurines on the back pages of Sunday... more
-
-
Joaquin Phoenix appears to be getting into the act of being a petulant hip-hop star.
After keeping fans waiting for over four hours, he walked on stage smoking a cigarette and wearing a disheveled dark suit, sneakers and his scraggly long hair and beard, then began rapping to a beat played by the DJ and nodding to the music, although most of the lyrics were unintelligible. Then started a fight with an audience member, followed by a stage dive and security escort.
Anyone else reckon he's trying a little too hard?Joaquin Phoenix appears to be getting into the act of being a petulant hip-hop star.... more
-
-
Here's a sneek peek at the title sequence to what looks like the new Saturday morning kids TV show of the Watchmen franchise. I wonder how the comic's creator Alan Moore feels about this...Here's a sneek peek at the title sequence to what looks like the new Saturday... more
-
-
From Democracy Now! Headlines for March 16, 2005
Rachel Corrie’s Family Sues Israel & Caterpillar, Inc.
"And the family of Rachel Corrie has sued bulldozer manufacturer Caterpillar and the state of Israel in connection with her death. The 23-year-old U.S. activist was killed two years ago today in the Gaza town of Rafah. She was run over by a bulldozer operated by an Israeli soldier. We’ll speak to her family later in the show."
_____________________________________________________________________________________
This is the same Caterpillar, Inc who is getting the contract from the new Secretary of Transportation, Ray LaHood. Rahm Emmanuel, member of the Israeli army, phoned the CEO of Exelon before he took the post of White House Chief of Staff (same position Carl Rove had to Bush). Emmanuel is good friends with Ray "Radiation" LaHood, a pro-nuclear Republican from Peoria, Il - home to Caterpillar, Inc. During the Bush years, Peoria turned into a police state (They alleged a 911 highjacker was here). LaHood and Caterpillar are Bush/Cheney/ FISA/ torture/ control freaks and I guarantee all roads/ bridges/tunnels will have the latest military spying/'control the masses' technology invented. The laid off taxpayers, who are now so poor, will jump at these new transportation jobs even though it could mean an end to what freedom we have left. Returning military will also be used. Chicago mafia + Catholic mafia. This is the real corruption in Illinois, Blagojovich was just a diversion. Fitzgerald needs to come to Peoria to clean up the corruption here (or is he too busy protecting Emmanuel?). New roads to transport nuclear waste? Not the future I want.From Democracy Now! Headlines for March 16, 2005
Rachel Corrie’s Family Sues... more
-
-
So I see this article, which is linked below, and I'm reading it and it occurs to me that Current.com is nothing like what I'm reading in this article.
Shouldn't this website be more than endless junk news stories? Does anybody else realize that there are over 6,000 links on Current.com. Links to other websites? WTF? Where is the original concept that I'm reading about in this article? Also in the article it talks about Current TV being "viewer created content" Yet at the end it states that only 30% of its content is viewer created. Like, let's be honest, there is no way it's even at 30%.
If the mission was and is about viewer created content, why are we simply linking over 6,000 different stories from the same lame major websites, many of which go unread. It's recycled News. Purely unoriginal. Is endless quantity a good thing?
Viewer created content would mean that we the viewer come up with our own original content, whether in video or print format. We should be writing our own editorials, thoughts and stories, without having to link the same shitty stories that are running on the big news sites.
How do we put an end to over saturated big media, when we ourselves are linking each other to that very thing. In fact unless you link a news story from somewhere else on the web, Current flags your post as non-news and it disappears. WTF? So my own editorial is non-news, but Bill Oreilly is great.
Anyway, just something to think about. Current may flag this as non-news as well, who knows, for some reason they don't like us to talk about them. They would prefer we link each other to other websites and make redundant comments about nothing original. What are your thoughts?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/jan/23/current-tv-james-baker-sky1So I see this article, which is linked below, and I'm reading it and it occurs to... more
-
-
dabne
-
added this
-
3 years ago
- |
-