Tag: cinema

  • Wim Wenders’ The Salt of the Earth: Sebastiao Salgado, Photographer

    Wim Wenders’ The Salt of the Earth: Sebastiao Salgado, Photographer

    The global success of Sebastiao Salgado’s photography has been somehow condensed into one feature-length documentary, not that the film dilutes the power of his images in any way. Whether you’re a professional or amateur photographer, or just someone who appreciates photography, you’ll be amazed at the beauty and honesty of Salgado’s work. His story, as…

  • For Young and Old: The Greatest Living Directors Sorted by Age

    For Young and Old: The Greatest Living Directors Sorted by Age

    I recently wrote a piece choosing the four most significant directors from each of eleven countries. I referred to the lists as Mount Rushmores. (You can read it here, if so interested). The response I got, with dozens of fans telling me just how wrong I was, has inspired me to do it again. This…

  • The Camera on Film: Seven Films about Photographers

    The Camera on Film: Seven Films about Photographers

    Perhaps because I have long had an interest in photography, and collecting cameras, films about this subject have always attracted my attention. There have been many films about early cinema pioneers, and the ubiquitous ‘film within a film’ theme offers many examples. However, this article is about still photographers, and how they have been represented…

  • Asif Kapadia’s Amy: Amy Winehouse and the Public Eye

    Asif Kapadia’s Amy: Amy Winehouse and the Public Eye

    Legend has it that when American blues artist Nehemah James (more commonly known as “Skip”) suspected a listener of studying the way he was performing a song, he would change up the way he played it on purpose. He needn’t have bothered. Even if some rival musician could figure out Skip’s intricate finger picking, there…

  • Reviewing Maggie: Schwarzenegger acts, Maggie Muses, Zombies Zombify

    Reviewing Maggie: Schwarzenegger acts, Maggie Muses, Zombies Zombify

    Somehow or other I managed to remain entirely ignorant about the existence of Maggie until I was confronted with it in my local DVD store. The worn and tired face of Arnold Schwarzenegger on the Blu-Ray cover of a zombie film I’d never heard of was more than a little surprising. How had this happened?…