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Search resuls for: "Michael Haneke"


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CNN —Nicole Kidman has worked with some amazing directors, but there’s one she has not. In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, the Oscar-winning actress was asked about her AFI Lifetime Achievement Award’s speech in which she listed some of the filmmakers she’s worked with. “Is there anyone you have your eye on who you haven’t worked with and want to?” Kidman was asked in her interview. “I’ve always said I want to work with [Martin] Scorsese, if he does a film with women,” Kidman said. Kidman rounded her list out in the interview by mentioning her desire to work with directors Kathryn Bigelow, Spike Jonze, Paul Thomas Anderson and Michael Haneke.
Persons: CNN — Nicole Kidman, Oscar, she’s, Jane Campion, Sofia Coppola, Stanley Kubrick, Gus Van Sant, haven’t, ” Kidman, “ I’ve, Martin, Scorsese, , Liza Minnelli, Alice Doesn’t, Ellen Burstyn, Kidman, Kathryn Bigelow, Spike Jonze, Paul Thomas Anderson, Michael Haneke Organizations: CNN, AFI Locations: York , New York
“How can I speak of love when I’m dead?” runs a powerful line in “Amour,” a stage adaptation of Michael Haneke’s 2012 film that premiered on Sunday at the Salzburg Festival, in Austria. Love and death are, of course, the two great themes of art, but rarely have they been brought together so hauntingly as in Haneke’s film, a portrait of an elderly couple forced to confront the issue of when life is no longer worth living. Told in Haneke’s characteristically severe style, the film earned the Austrian director both a Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival and an Oscar for best foreign language film. Henkel scored a triumph in Salzburg two summers ago with “Richard the Kid and the King,” a sweeping epic of Shakespeare’s bloodthirsty monarch that ran to four hours. The German director’s “Amour” — a co-production with the Münchner Kammerspiele theater, in Munich, where it will run in late October — is as affectingly tender as her earlier Salzburg outing was grimly savage.
Persons: I’m, , Michael Haneke’s, Love, Palme, Oscar, Karin Henkel, Henkel, “ Richard the Kid, Organizations: Salzburg Festival, Cannes Film Locations: , Austria, Austrian, Salzburg, Munich
Five Horror Movies to Stream Now
  + stars: | 2023-04-28 | by ( Erik Piepenburg | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Ruben Broekhuis’s propulsive thriller mixes documentary and found-footage conventions to tell a sinister and unpredictable story about surveillance and the dark web. The young siblings were in a shelter, about to be adopted, when one day Adin mysteriously disappeared. When Elias and Aisha arrive at the shelter with the camera rolling, blows are exchanged as the administrators question the visitors’ motives. But then — and here’s where the film made me sit straight up — the camera’s point of view switches. A knockout final stretch explains most everything, but the film concludes with a too-twisty coda.
Michael Haneke’s Still-Shocking Early Films
  + stars: | 2022-12-15 | by ( David Mermelstein | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
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