Ko ta maatau whare pikitia me to wharepukapuka whakaataata ka taea noa te rere, te tango mai ranei ma nga mema anake
Me matakitaki tonu mo te FREE ➞He iti ake te waa 1 meneti ki te Haina Mai ka pai ai ki a koe te koa ki nga Kiriata Mutunga & Taitara TV.
Impressions de New York (1956)
(auto-translation: LA CINÉMATHÈQUE FRANÇAISE ) Using a subjective camera, set to music by Bela Bartók and text by Arthur Rimbaud, François Reichenbach offers a highly singular vision of the American megalopolis. (MIFF:) These are no ordinary travel notes brought back from America by filmmakers; they are not enthusiastic records of skyscrapers and crowds. but disturbing aspects of a hallucinatory world of concrete and metal, glaring light and haunting shadow. The film is notable for its dramatic use of colour, and music from Bela Bartok's ballet "The Miraculous Mandarin". (a-t:) F.B. confides in his memoir 'Le monde a encore un visage' (1981): "When I went to New York for the first time, I'd brought along a Bell & Howell 16mm camera whose instructions I hadn't read. I didn't know how to use the film, and inadvertently loaded some rolls that had already been printed, which resulted in these strange superimposed images. A well-known process that I had reinvented by accident".
Momo: Documentary
Maka: Jacques Doniol-Valcroze, Jean Desailly
Kaimahi: Pierre Braunberger (Executive Producer), François Reichenbach (Cinematography), Béla Bartók (Original Music Composer), Renée Lichtig (Editor), François Reichenbach (Director), Jacques Doniol-Valcroze (Writer)
Subtitle: ETC.
Tuku: Nov 01, 1956
Rongonui: 0.248
Reo: Français
Studio: Les Films de la Pléiade, Meteor Film Productions
Whenua: France