8.6.10

'A DOG'S LIFE' + Afterscreening Drinks!




Mondo Cane is an inspiring, shocking and for sure surprising Italian film that PROVES how we are living a dog's life in a dog's world.

Come and find out the most unexpected things about our planet. Or stay home and continue living a dog's life without knowing it...

MONDO CANE, by Gualtiero Jacopetti, Paolo Cavara & Franco Prosperi (2007)

June 9, 5 pm

Bushuis (Room F 0.22)

Kloveniersburgwal 48

With this 'shockumentary', BLACK&WHITE says goodbye to Amsterdam and its followers. Is there a better way to do it than with some laughter and a few drinks?? Feel free to bring your own stuff to the screening tomorrow, although afterscreening refreshments are guaranteed!
See you (there)!!

1.6.10

WAKE UP, STUPID!



Is it possible that half of the world wealth is in the hands of only 400 families? Is it possible that only a 10% of the money in circulation in the world is real? Is it possible that the real banking benefits are of a 16.500%? Tell me, do you believe such a thing is possible?



A silly question: what are the account maintenance costs? Does the bank keep your account in the basement? Does it polish it? Does it feed it? Does someone renew from time to time your account decoration? It doesn't matter if I lie to you, because you don't listen.



Do you know that with all the money you pay for your mortgage, the bank can buy two houses? Do you know that that is exactly what it does?



Robin Hood stole money from the rich to give it to the poor. If he had invested it to five years and a half to a half-yearly convertible compound interest of a 8% and then give it to the poor, he could have bought a cottage too.



Do you want to be a millionaire? Three essential rules. Buy yourself a sunbed. Pay only with big notes. Smile, so that the whole world believe you are having fun. There is a fourth rule. Never ever, under any circumstance, win the great prize in a television contest.

CONCURSANTE, by Rodrigo Cortés (2007)

June 2, 5 pm

Bushuis (Room F 0.22)

Kloveniersburgwal 48

25.5.10

'BA WANG BIE JI' or THE EPIC


Here comes the only Chinese-spoken film that has ever won Cannes' Palme d'Or. A story often put on the same level of 'epicness' as Gone With The Wind and with the attraction of being the first Chinese movie BLACK&WHITE has offered so far. It is all oriental appeal... Will you miss it?


BA WANG BIE JI, by Chen Kaige (1993)

May 26, 5 pm

Bushuis (Room F 0.22)

Kloveniersburgwal 48

'FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE' (1993). REVIEW by Diao Ying


Physically we are always located somewhere, but our mind, body and soul are often dislocated. In the Chinese Farewell My Concubine, a top prize winner at the Cannes International Film Festival, the hero -or heroine-, Dieyi, had a dislocated life.

This is an epic movie. The time runs from 1925 to 1977. The setting is Beijing. The film's title comes from a classic Peking opera, where a concubine cut her throat with the sword of the king on the night of his defeat.


The movie is mainly about the love triangle among two famous actors of the opera and a woman. They met as small boys at opera school. In those days women were not allowed to play on stage. Dieyi, a gentle, pretty and fragile boy, was chosen to play the concubine. Xiaolou, the stronger one, played the king.

Dieyi, who devoted to his role as an actress as a kid, was mentally trained as a woman. Throughout his life he was loyal to his first and only love, Xiaolou, the king on the stage, and his fellow boy in real life. Xiaolou, however, was straight. He fell in love with a beautiful prostitute and married her. He treated Dieyi as his brother, unware of his love for him.

But dislocation here is not only personal. Nation, country and the world are often in a state of dislocation. In this movie, the love story also interweaves with the history of China. From the Japanese invasion of China in the 1930's, the surrender of the Japanese at the end of World War II, the rule of the Nationalist Government, the Chinese Civil War, the victory of the communists in 1949 and, finally, the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976).

The movie is extremely subtle in showing the love, life, and arts related in the story. One is amazed at the pretty costumes, the Peking opera scene and all the fantastic dialogues. But it is also grand in that it displays the long and complex history in two hours in such a clear way.

The movie is full of memorable scenes. The Peking opera performance is beautiful. The training of the boys to be actors and actresses reminds one of the British boys in the fiction of Dickens. In the scenes describing the Cultural Revolution, decent people furiously denounce their friends and loved ones. It shows how dislocation in a society can go extreme, and makes one wonder how fragile people's souls are.

I find the review from New York Times a classic description: "It's a narrative of suicides, miscarriages, betrayals, drug addiction and sorrowful paradoxes: good intentions inevitably go wrong, which could be an observation about the Communist revolution". The last point might explain why, despite its success overseas, the movie was never publicly showed in its home country, China. That is another example of dislocation, isn’t it?

17.5.10

"SHE IS WHITE. SHE IS RACIST. SHE'S GOING TO TURN BLACK!": 'AGATHE CLÉRY' TEASER




AGATHE CLÉRY, by Étienne Chatiliez (2008)

May 19, 5 pm

Bushuis (Room F 0.22)

Kloveniersburgwal 48

'AGATHE CLÉRY' (2008). REVIEW, by Naouel Abbadi


Agathe Cléry
is a hard-working and modern marketing director from a cosmetics company, specialized in clear skin. Her colleagues find her snob, strict, and they know she is a racist.

But what would be the height of absurdity for a racist? To become as black as those whom she hates. It is what happens one beautiful day to Agathe.

We will witness how she's affected by the Addison's disease, an extremely rare condition which is going to darken her. The racist marketing director of a special cosmetics line for pale skin wakes up one morning - totally black.

Fired by her boss, dumped by her fiancé, turned away in all her job interviews, Agathe finds herself on the other side.
Faced with the reality of becoming a black person, dealing with the same vicious discrimination and taunts she used to dish out so frequently, she struggles to accept her new paradigm in life.

Agathe Cléry is one of those amazingly rare filmmaking achievements that works on nearly every conceivable level. It’s an eccentric musical, acid satire and euphoric comedy all mixed together into a capricious spicy delight.

© Produire à Paris

The film is directed by Étienne Chatiliez, a man who has been acclaimed numerous times in France for his satirical and acid comedies. With co-writer Laurent Chouchan, he manages the handling of the racism issue in a sour way: their character embraces popular French stereotypes of blacks as the only viable solution to her mess. Valerie Lemercier (Agathe Cléry) pulls off the oddball comic and dance sequences with rigor and finesse.

With Chatiliez the caricature does not avoid the reality that it denounces; it is, on the contrary, the fairest expression of it. With a cocktail of music, singing, dancing, humour, but also some truths, Agathe Cléry will make you laugh more than once...




9.5.10

DREAM IS DESTINY


"The worst mistake that you can make is to think that you are alive"



WAKING LIFE, by Richard Linklater (2001)

May 12, 5 pm

Bushuis (Room F 0.22)

Kloveniersburgwal 48

Don't forget that with this movie we will have our SPECIAL GEZELLIG EDITION: bring your pillow(s), blanket and/or cover and let's lay back together for extra cosiness!!

And don't miss out Kian's comments on the film below!