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Jul 3, 2024 |
theglobeandmail.com | Mark Peranson
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May 27, 2024 |
theglobeandmail.com | Mark Peranson
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May 20, 2024 |
theglobeandmail.com | Mark Peranson
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Antoine Thirion |Mark Peranson
By Antoine Thirion A teenaged girl is texting her boyfriend from her bedroom, seeking compassion: “I’m just in a really bad place right now.” The boy responds: “Oh, what are you doing in Germany?” Many can relate to this fierce meme which appeared on social media following the silencing of voices in Germany condemning Israel’s destruction of Gaza.
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Jordan Cronk |Mark Peranson
By Jordan Cronk “The problem is that it then goes off on tangents and the plot becomes secondary.”—A Mysterious WorldUntil recently a somewhat forgotten figure of the New Argentine Cinema, director Rodrigo Moreno has, with The Delinquents, asserted himself as perhaps that movement’s most underestimated talent.
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Adam Nayman |Mark Peranson
By Adam Nayman Two movies, both alike in indignity, in the ’90s, where we lay our scene. Because neither Videoheaven nor Pavements—both putatively non-fictional pop-culture essay films written and directed by Alex Ross Perry—have officially been released, programmed at a festival, or even announced via trailers or posters, it’s tricky to write about their intricacies, either as standalone works or in conversation with one another.
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Mark Peranson
By Mark Peranson I feel like I’ve explained enough in this space over the last year, so that announcing this is the final issue of Cinema Scope is in no way surprising. But let me reiterate that the time has long passed to envision a way of making this magazine sustainable financially without begging for money, or sustainable emotionally without driving me to a premature death; if anything, I should have pulled the plug in 2020, so consider the last few issues as gravy.
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Beatrice Loayza |Mark Peranson
By Beatrice Loayza Hamaguchi Ryusuke’s sublime eco-fable, Evil Does Not Exist, begins and ends with the plangent score by Ishibashi Eiko, played fortissimo over an extended tracking shot facing skywards. A forest canopy, stark and stripped of its foliage by winter’s spell, appears like latticework through which daylight passes with an eerie vibrancy.
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Erika Balsom |Jay Kuehner |Haden Guest |Mark Peranson
Face the Music: Hamaguchi Ryusuke on Evil Does Not Exist by Beatrice Loayza Your Own Hall of Fame: Alex Ross Perry on Videoheaven and Pavements by Adam Nayman Objects of Desire: Rodrigo Moreno on The Delinquents by Jordan Cronk From the Vision to the Nail in the Coffin, and the Resurrection: Dimitris Athiridis on exergue – on documenta 14 by Antoine Thirion Last of the Independents: A Roundtable on Charley Varrick with Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala by Christoph Huber Deep Cuts: The First...
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Jan 28, 2024 |
cinema-scope.com | Phil Coldiron |Mark Peranson
By Phil Coldiron It requires relatively little mental strain to imagine a world in which all that can be photographed has been; it requires, I think, considerably more to imagine one in which every possible photograph has been made. I find that both of these little thought experiments imply comic narratives—that is, to borrow a definition, ones which resolve in favour of their protagonists. And who might these protagonists be? In the former, I suppose the answer is obvious enough: us.