#vitalina varela
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Vitalina Varela (2019)
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Vitalina Varela (2019), dir. Pedro Costa
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hi it's the anon again, after watching the servant i watched Salo and copkiller thanks to @falsenote's suggestion lol if you have more films matching this vibe i'd be grateful ❤️
Omg you really went and did it… and both of them too! Slay I’m assuming you liked both since you’re asking for others. The servant and salo are very different vibes to me but lemme think.
The valley of the bees (1968)
wake in fright (1971) (warning for real animal death in this one)
conversation piece (1974)
the night Porter (1974) - I highly recommend watching Cavani’s short doc ‘women of the resistance’ first. If you can see the value in salò you can likely get something meaningful from this otherwise very controversial film though
chess of the wind (1976) is very underseen but it got restored recently and i think matches the vibe perfectly
The cremator (1969)
Cure (1997)
Accident (1967)
The female prisoner scorpion series
I also think on a related note to salò some postcolonial films might hit for you in how confrontational they can be. Soleil ô (1970), the sp*ok who sat by the door (1973), Soy Cuba (1963), blood of the condor (1969). Perhaps even Vitalina Varela (2017).
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258. Vitalina Varela (Vitalina Varela, 2019), dir. Pedro Costa
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Japanese posters for Pedro Costa
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Cinema without people: Vitalina Varela (2019, Pedro Costa, dir.)
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Vitalina Varela | Pedro Costa | 2019
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Pedro Costa - Vitalina Varela (2019)
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Lead Performance, 2020
Michaela Coel as Arabella, I May Destroy You
Julia Garner as Jane, The Assistant
Lee Kang-Sheng & Anong Houngheuangsy as Kang & Non, Days
Andrea Riseborough as Tasya Vos, Possessor
Vitalina Varela as Vitalina Varela, Vitalina Varela
Patrick Foley & Michael Breslin as Jurgen Yionoullis / Patrick Foley / Troll & Lord Baby Bussy / Michael Breslin / Honney Corden, Circle Jerk
Jack Dylan Grazer as Fraser Wilson, We Are Who We Are
Maren Eggert as Mutter Astrid, I Was at Home, But...
Aubrey Plaza as Allison, Black Bear
Kate Lyn Sheil as Amy, She Dies Tomorrow
Joe Keery as Kurt Kunkle, Spree
Maya Erskine & Anna Konkle as Maya Ishii-Peters & Anna Kone; PEN15, Season 2.1
Deragh Campbell as Anne, Anne at 13,000 Ft.
Sidney Flanigan as Autumn, Never Rarely Sometimes Always
Kenyah Sandy as Kingsley Smith (Age 12), Small Axe: Education
Enrique Salanic as José, José
Sierra McCormick as Fay Crocker, The Vast of Night
Stephanie Hayes as Stephanie, Slow Machine
Tilda Swinton as Herself, The Human Voice
Christian Vazquez & Armando Espitia as Gerardo & Iván, I Carry You With Me
Evan Rachel Wood as Old Dolio, Kajillionaire
Paloma Petra as Paloma, The Dove and the Wolf
Levan Gelbakhiani as Merab, And Then We Danced
Yuichi Ishii as Yuichi Ishii, Family Romance, LLC
Hong Chau as Kathy, Driveways
#Michaela Coel#Julia Garner#Lee Kang-Sheng#Anong Houngheuangsy#Andrea Riseborough#Vitalina Varela#Patrick Foley#Michael Breslin#Jack Dylan Grazer#Maren Eggert#Aubrey Plaza#Kate Lyn Sheil#best of 2020#lists#personal#best of
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Cavalo Dinheiro / Horse Money Pedro Costa. 2014
Fountain Alameda Dom Afonso Henriques, 1900-221 Lisboa, Portugal See in map
See in imdb
#pedro costa#cavalo dinheiro#horse money#vitalina varela#fountain#lisbon#portugal#movie#cinema#statue#sculpture#film#location#google maps#street view#2014
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Vitalina Varela
Pedro Costa
2019
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Vitalina Varela (2019) Pedro Costa
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what's your favourite pedro costa film? i love vitalina sm, but horse money as an anti-colonial piece is phenomenal
those are the only two ive seen rn hdfjskghfdjkghfh i love both but i watched horse money first and i wasnt fully prepared for its style but the scene w the soldier statue really blew me away. vitalina varela is my fave of the two but probably biased bc i was more prepared for what i was getting into
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BEST FILMS of 2020- #20-11
20. THE WOLF HOUSE, dir. Joaquín Cociña, Cristóbal León
Totally arresting, Cociña and Lèon’s grotesquely beautiful, truly unsettling animation lives and breathes, constantly metamorphosing in style and form as it quite cleverly engages with questions of authoritarianism and propaganda.
19. VITALINA VARELA, dir. Pedro Costa
Mesmerizing. The claustrophobic, editorial visual language only serves to underline the profound grief and resentment in Vitalina Varela’s wonderfully expressive eyes that so effectively carry the entire emotional weight of the film.
18. BLACK BEAR, dir. Lawrence Michael Levine
What is going on with this weird, stilted, combative tone? Do I endorse *any* of the ideas being expressed in this?- Guided more by mood than by any logic, it takes a minute to figure out that the movie is fucking with you, just like how Abbott and Gadon conspire to manipulate Plaza in the film’s second act. Bizarrely compelling.
17. THE ASSISTANT, dir. Kitty Green
More than just “the Weinstein movie,” The Assistant is interested in all the toxically hierarchical systems and pernicious practices of the film and television industry, observing and critiquing them with damning accuracy.
16. WOLFWALKERS, dir. Tomm Moore, Ross Stewart
As predictably gorgeous as all of Cartoon Saloon’s previous films, with the delicately hand-drawn animation and lush, immersive design that has become the studio’s calling card. Where this one transcends those others is in its capturing of the magic of folklore, harnessing its full capacity to teach and to transfix. It keeps things simple narratively while never talking down to its viewer or underestimating their ability to appreciate nuance or assess thematic intent, as happens so often in children’s animation. Spellbinding.
15. SONG WITHOUT A NAME, dir. Melina León
A tremendously soulful, gorgeously composed journalistic procedural that deftly dissects profound institutional disfunction in late 1980’s Peru, subtly detailing the myriad of ways its government failed its people, particularly indigenous communities. Unafraid to take formal risks. All The President’s Men one moment, Eraserhead the next.
14. FIRST COW, dir. Kelly Reichardt
Beautifully juxtaposes the unlikely compassion, burgeoning cross-cultural community, and misplaced promise of opportunity in the American Frontier with the harsh inequities and brutal inhumanity of Capitalism, subtly but clearly delineating how the former is undone by the latter.
13. BEANPOLE, dir. Kantemir Balagov
A virtuosic vision of the utter devastation of post-war Russia that is intimately observed and intricately, richly textured. It can be brutal, punishingly so, but is an undeniably captivating cinematic feat.
12. IN MY BLOOD IT RUNS, dir. Maya Newell
Staggeringly observes the ongoing devastation to indigenous communities brought by colonialism in Australia’s Northern Territory, paying close attention to the stunning failures of its public school system and its impact on indigenous youth. That the film is so pointedly political feels like a slight of hand given the tenderness with which Newell treats her subjects, allowing the film to also be a celebration of family and community.
11. THE FATHER, dir. Florian Zeller
Immersive and deeply disorienting by design, using perspective in strikingly inventive ways to craft an at times terrifying, always deeply empathetic vision of living with dementia.
#2020 Film Awards#The Father#Florian Zeller#In My Blood it Runs#Maya Newell#Beanpole#Kantemir Balagov#First Cow#Kelly Reichardt#Song without a name#Melina León#Wolfwalkers#Tomm Moore#Ross Stewart#The Assistant#Kitty Green#Black Bear#Lawrence michael Levine#Vitalina Varela#Pedro Costa#The Wolf House#Joaquín Cociña#Cristóbal León
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Vitalena Varela (Pedro Costa, 2019)
reaching across. Light falling on nothing necessary, just pieces of a world he knew but she didn’t.
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