Sunday, 6 April 2025

CINEMA REBORN - RESTORED EUROPEAN CLASSICS - Films by Julien Duvivier, Roberto Rossellini, Rene Clement, Carlos Saura and Robert Bresson

 

EUROPEAN CLASSICS FROM THE 30s TO THE 70s

Cinema Reborn 2025 presents the Australian premieres of five restored European classics from France, Italy and Spain. The work of renowned film-makers Julien Duvivier, René Clément, Robert Bresson, Roberto Rossellini and Carlos Saura will be screened for the first time in the Cinema Reborn program



PÉPÉ LE MOKO (Julien Duvivier, France, 1937)

“Julien Duvivier was once considered one of the world’s great filmmakers.  He was idolised by Orson Welles and Michael Powell, while Ingmar Bergman once admitted that of all the careers that he would have liked to have had, it would be Duvivier’s. The classicism of his mise en scène, his core thematic concerns – deception, misanthropy, the fragility of the (male) group, the dangerous woman – and his ability to coax fevered or fragile performances by both established stars and new actors place Duvivier at the apex of French Classical Cinema.”  – Ben McCann, Senses of Cinema

Introduced by Max Berghouse in Sydney and Kevin Cassidy in Melbourne.




PAISAN (Roberto Rossellini, Italy, 1946)

“…a milestone in the expressiveness of the screen. … it is not an ordinary film—neither in form nor dramatic construction nor in the things it has to say. In some ways, it is the antithesis of the classic "story film," and certainly it throws off glints of meaning which are strangely unfamiliar on the screen.” – Bosley Crowther, New York Times

Introduced by Gino Moliterno in Sydney and Cristóbal Escobar in Melbourne




FORBIDDEN GAMES (René Clément, France, 1952)

“Over the years countless films have been made about war, its horrors and its devastations. Few, however, have been as moving and heartfelt as René Clément’s Forbidden Games. The Academy Award winner for Best Foreign Language Film in 1952, this deeply touching French drama has stirred the emotions of every moviegoer who has had the good fortune to see it… Fossey’s is quite simply one of the most uncanny pieces of acting ever attempted by a youngster. Clément’s sensitivity doubtless accounts for much of what we see here, but the rest is clearly Fossey’s own.” David Ehrenstein

Introduced by John McDonald in Sydney and Paul Harris in Melbourne




CRÍA CUERVOS (Carlos Saura, Spain, 1976)

Winner of the Grand Prix, Cannes Film Festival, 1976. “Still as moving and compelling as when it was made, Cría cuervos seems now not diminished but enhanced by its growing distance in time, benefiting from a retrospective perspective that, appropriately enough, is subtly explored within the film itself.” Paul Julian Smith

Introduced by Geoff Gardner in Sydney and by Will Cox in Melbourne




THE DEVIL, PROBABLY (Robert Bresson, France, 1977)

The Devil Probably expresses the malaise of our time more profoundly and more magnificently than any work of art in any medium.” – Andrew Sarris

“This film will be more important than all the rubbish which is now considered important but which never really goes deep enough…The questions Bresson asks will never be unimportant.” – Rainer Werner Fassbinder

Introduced by Megan Nash in Sydney and Emma Fajgenbaum in Melbourne


For more information on all the films, full program notes, session times in Sydney and Melbourne and links to bookings https://cinemareborn.com.au/


CHARITABLE DONATIONS

Cinema Reborn has established a page to enable our supporters to make tax-deductible donations to support our work. Our organisation is run by a group of film industry professionals, working critics, curators and film conservation specialists. All work in an entirely voluntary capacity. Nevertheless there are significant costs, most notably our screening fees, which have to be met each year and we are always grateful for the financial support we receive that defrays these costs and charges. If you would like to make a donation you may do so via via the attached link established by the Australian Cultural Fund which enables small unincorporated organisations like ours to use a service which would otherwise not be easily accessible. To make a donation any time between now and the end of Cinema Reborn 2025 click on this link https://artists.australianculturalfund.org.au/s/project/a2EMn00000FDsl8MAD/cinema-reborn-2025


CINEMA REBORN MAILING LIST

Please forward this email to any friends who may be interested in our presentations of restored cinema classics. Invite them to join our mailing list by sending an email to cinemareborn2025@gmail.com





Thursday, 27 March 2025

CINEMA REBORN - Seven newly-restored Australian films in the 2025 program.

 AUSTRALIAN FILM-MAKERS AT CINEMA REBORN 2025

Cinema Reborn 2025 will present seven films by Australian film-makers. All will be presented in the presence of the directors or in the case of the films of the late Anna Kannava, the producer. All have been restored by the film-makers themselves working in conjunction with renowned Australian director and director of photography Ray Argall and his company Piccolo Films. For information about session times, bookings and credits CLICK HERE



WHAT I HAVE WRITTEN (John Hughes, (1996)

Cast: Martin Jacobs,Gillian Jones, Jacek Koman, Angie Milliken


“In the hands of director John Hughes this material is transformed into a fragmented, cool film that utilises many techniques, associated with art cinema….an impressive film that provides many entry points for the viewer by supplying just enough character development and narrative motivation to engage on an emotional level.” Geoff Mayer, The Oxford Companion to Australian Film


There are very few Australian films which draw their style and inspiration from European art cinema and the work of such masters as Alain Resnais and Chris Marker. What I Have Written, based on a novel by John Scott, is however such a film. It draws on those sources to present a twisting and complex narrative, intertwining two love stories – the first an erotic drama set in Australian academia, the second a story which draws on, using black and white photography and the Parisian setting, from Marker’s legendary La Jetée. John Hughes, otherwise a master documentary maker for close to fifty years, took a detour into fictional drama that resembles the literary work of Marguerite Duras and  Alain Robbe-Grillet. As such it stands almost alone in the Australian cinema. The world premiere of this 4K restoration will be both a unique experience and a reminder that the Australian cinema has occasionally been more than echoes of BBC drama, broad comedy and American genre re-treads.


John Hughes will introduce his film at its Sydney and Melbourne screenings and take part in a post-film conversation




HOW THE WEST WAS LOST (David Noakes, 1987)


"will always be the best, most honest and most entertaining record of the 1946 Strike... It is an exhilarating, inspirational documentary that shows what people can achieve when they have vision, courage and solidarity." - Jerry Roberts, Pearls and Irritations


On 1 May 1946, 800 Aboriginal station workers walked off sheep stations in the north-west of Western Australia, marking the beginning of a carefully organised strike that was to last for at least three years, but never officially ended.


The strike was more than a demand for better wages and conditions. It was, in the words of Keith Connolly in the Melbourne Herald, 'a well-considered statement by a grievously exploited people, standing up for their rights and dignity'.


How The West Was Lost tells the story of a shameful yet still largely unknown piece of Australia’s tangled history…


David Noakes and Rose Murray will introduce this film at its Sydney and Melbourne screenings and take part in a post-film conversation. Rose Murray is a Nyangumarta woman whose family were part of the 1946 Pilbara Strike. 




THE MINISKIRTED DYNAMO (Rivka Hartman, 1996)


“Dora emerges as afascinating character… a very personal piece of film-making” – David Stratton


The Miniskirted Dynamo  is a lively, often hilarious, film as well asa moving personal document…This is not a film for those who believe in the mythof happy families – or perhaps it is the perfect film.” - Barbara Creed, The Age


Rivka Hartman’s The Miniskirted Dynamo focuses on her mother, Dr Dora Bialestock, an extraordinary figure inMelbourne’s medical community. Dora studied Medicine at the University of Melbourne and published widely on her specialist research subjects . She became a figure of some controversy when she attacked the state government’s management of children in care. She was a public thorn in many sides of government. Hartman’s film is a remarkable autobiographical and biographical documentary about the intense and tangled relationship between the film-maker and her mother, both of whom had ambitions and goals that did not mix well.


Rivka Hartman will introduce her film at its Sydney and Melbournescreenings




THE BUTLER (Anna Kannava, 1997) + TEN YEARS AFTER…TEN YEARS OLDER (Anna Kannava, 1986)


“I was very moved by The Butler, a portrait of Anna's brother, Nino. This film has one of those unexpected moments of grace that totally won me over – it brought tears to my eyes (not of sadness, but of happiness and liberation).” – Cristina Álvarez López


“I was struck by the absolute coherence of her relatively small but impressive and enduring output.” – Adrian Martin


Celebrating the filmmaking of Anna Kannava (1959-2011) with two remarkable autobiographical documentaries, recently restored in 4K.


Born in Cyprus, Kannava migrated to Melbourne with her family in 1974. In the meditative Ten Years After…Ten Years Older, the director tenderly reflects on returning to her homeland after a decade away. In the deftly comedic and deeply affecting The Butler, Kannava impressionistically portrays the life she shared with her devoted younger brother Nino. These two key works reveal a gifted filmmaker deserving of widespread recognition.


Anna Kannava’s films were produced by John Cruthers who has supervised their restoration. The films will be introduced by John Cruthers in Sydney. 


BREAD AND DRIPPING (Vic Smith, Margot Nash, Elizabeth Schaffer,Wendy Brady and Donna Foster, 1981)


Four women recount their lives during the bleak years ofthe Depression of the 1930s. Tibby Whalan, Eileen Pittman, Beryl Armstrong andMary Wright describe their struggles to survive and maintain families whenfaced with widespread unemployment, evictions and hardship.


Bread and Dripping screens with How the West was Lost in Sydney and Melbourne. It will be introduced by Vic Smith and Elizabeth Schaffer in Sydney


ON A FULL MOON (Lee Whitmore, 1997)


This "poem to my mother", features memories of childhood and family lovingly animated frame by frame by pencil and pastel on paper. 


On a Full Moon screens with The Miniskirted Dynamo  and will be introduced by Lee Whitmore in Sydney.




Friday, 21 March 2025

Streaming on Disney+ - Rod Bishop finds much to admire in the film-making of Alice Rohrwacher, including the recent LE PUPILLE (2022, Italy/USA)

  

Alice Rohrwacher and Alfonso Cuarón


After the magic realism and rural working-class exploitation of her third feature Happy as Lazzaro (2018), Alice Rohrwacher returned to the children and female adolescents of her first two features.

Le Pupille (2022), a 38-minute short produced by Alfonso Cuarón, set in a Catholic orphanage during World War Two was nominated for an Oscar in 2023.

The orphan girls in Le Pupille just wanna have fun, but are subjected to a religiously inspired disciplinary regime led by a particularly nasty nun (Alba Rohrwacher). She labels one girl as “wicked” and the softly spoken student responds by inspiring her classmates to rebel. 

Le Pupille

Children’s stories are, by and large, disguised lessons in morality. But here, there’s a deliberate avoidance of any moral teaching and if the audience is missing this intention, the girls are happy to burst into song, singing straight to camera to tell us the film has no moral perspective. 

It takes only a couple of minutes with Rohrwacher’s first feature Heavenly Bodies (2011) to realize her filmmaking talents were fully-formed from the very start of her career. 

As was her view of Italian Catholicism, and she follows the 13-year-old Marta, living in rural poverty and suffering through her training for Communion – both as a supplicant raising her head for a blessing and as a prisoner transitioning from the wonders and innocence of her childhood to the expectations of her gender role in adult life.

Heavenly Bodies

In The Wonders (2014), the 14-year-old Gelsomina resolutely struggles with the love and responsibilities she feels for her rural working-class bee-keeper family, yet experiences a desire to outgrow this narrow world and experience ‘the beyond’. She transgresses by secretly joining her family up as contestants in a reality TV show based around peasants who still live like Etruscans, those mysterious peoples whose civilization and language disappeared into the formation of the Roman Empire. 


The Etruscans are even more central to Rohrwacher’s fourth feature La Chimera, based around the tombaroli, contemporary Italian graverobbers who fall into conflict with the capitalistic, international art market. In both films, Etruscan art is presented as wondrous, spell-binding, enriching - indicating a world of marvel beyond the confines of rural poverty.

The girls and female adolescents are replaced by the man-child Lazzaro in Happy as Lazzaro (2018). Perhaps ‘somewhere on the spectrum’, Lazzaro lives in an impoverished rural community of indentured labourers growing tobacco for down-at-heel, titled nobility. They are out of time and place, but discovered by an astonished carabinieri. 

Josh O'Connor, La Chimera

Used as a compliant slave by his community, Lazzaro’s childlike innocence and sense of pragmatic wonder at the natural world belies his true age. Accidently dying, but woken by a wolf, Lazzaro resurrects decades later and searches for what’s left of his community, some of whom kneel down and venerate him like a saint.

It’s the same religious divinity, magical realism and ancient worlds that her girls and female adolescents reach out for in Heavenly BodiesThe Wonders and Le Pupille.

It’s Rohrwacher’s distinctive world where she focuses on her main characters as they transition from their wondrous childhoods into the rigors and disappointments of adult life.

My viewing partner describes Rohrwacher as “a visionary with a courageous sense of conviction, her films all delivered with a light-handed exultation”. 

Tuesday, 18 March 2025

On DVD - David Hare catches up with Clint Eastwwod - JUROR#2 (USA, 2024)



Not yet seen by me, this seemingly final work from a master hardly had any theatrical release last year at all, certainly none in this corner of the planet. Ditto no streaming. 

Warner/Discovery under Zaslav has seen fit to give it minimal release on a Blu-ray in the States, and here in Aus/NZ in a PAL DVD, avec the usual semitone audio and video speedup.

It’s better than nothing. Eastwood, as only he can, curated a cast for this - Nicholas Hoult who still looks barely more than a baby, like his startled deer in Tom Ford’s A Single Man. Toni Collette who just gets better with everything she does now. Kiefer Sutherland, his character an emorional mess (again).
It’s another reflection by Eastwood on “justice”, a concept that seems terribly unsafe in a world now dominated by liars, con artists and psychopathic billionaires. Eastwood may be the last of the great classical American directors. At least, after he goes, a formidable filmography.

Thursday, 13 March 2025

CINEMA REBORN - 2025 PROGRAMME LAUNCHED + ANDREI TARKOVSKY, CHARITABLE DONATIONS

THE CINEMA REBORN 2025 PROGRAM LAUNCHED

Our biggest ever selection of restored classic cinema is now revealed on the Cinema Reborn website. All sessions for our Sydney and Melbourne seasons are set out with short notes on all of the films. The selection ranges from the 1920s with the newly-restored silent masterpiece STELLA DALLAS to the 1990s. We have four programs of films by Australian directors and another superb selection of Hollywood classics, European award-winners and some remarkable works from the Philippines, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Lebanon. To explore the whole program head for our website at cinemareborn.com.au

There are links on each page enabling you to book at the Ritz and the Lido.


BOOKINGS NOW OPEN

If you were one of those who ordered an advance copy our 24 page program booklet you may already know just what you want to see and when. If so you can head straight to the Ritz and Lido websites and start booking now. Members of the Ritz and Lido Movie Clubs receive concessions at all sessions.

Cinema Reborn offers student concession tickets of $15 for all sessions except for THE SACRIFICE.


For the Ritz https://www.ritzcinemas.com.au/events/cinemareborn-2025  

For the Lido

https://www.lidocinemas.com.au/events/cinema-reborn-2025

If you would like a digital Pdf copy of the program booklet emailed to you just send an email to cinemareborn2025@gmail.com


SCULPTING IN TIME: THE FILMS OF ANDREI TARKOVSKY


Leading up to Cinema Reborn 2025 we are  delighted to announce a collaboration with Ritz, Lido and Classic Cinemas in presenting a complete retrospective of the feature films of master filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky. These will be the first ever screenings in Australia to be devoted to a full career review of this master filmmaker. Tarkovsky’s work was previously at Cinema Reborn in 2022 when his masterpiece Mirror was presented in a superb 4K restoration.


The retrospective will begin at the Ritz Cinemas in Sydney on March 20 and Lido and Classic Cinemas in Melbourne on March 27, where Tarkovsky’s debut feature Ivan’s Childhood will be screened at 7pm on those dates. In Sydney there will be an introduction to the season at the Ivan’s Childhood screening by Sydney University film studies scholar Matilda Mroz and the main screening of The Sacrifice during the Cinema Reborn 2025 season will be preceded by an introduction by actor, educator and film-maker Richard James Allen. In Melbourne, critics Grace Boschetti (Ivan’s Childhood) and David Heslin (The Sacrifice) will introduce those sessions at the Hawthorn Lido. The Sacrifice will be a part of the 2025 Cinema Reborn season at the Ritz on Thursday 1 May and at Lido on Thursday 8 May, and will  also screen at Classic Cinemas, Elsternwick on Thursday 8 May.


Full details of the Tarkovsky retrospective, with links to bookings at each of the cinemas, may be found here0.


The Hawthorn Lido

https://www.lidocinemas.com.au/events/sculpting-in-time-the-films-of-andrei-tarkovsky

The Randwick Ritz

https://www.ritzcinemas.com.au/events/sculpting-in-time-andrei-tarkovsky

The Elsternwick Classic https://www.classiccinemas.com.au/events/sculpting-in-time-the-films-of-andrei-tarkovsky



CHARITABLE DONATIONS

Cinema Reborn has established a page to enable our supporters to make tax-deductible donations to support our work. Our organisation is run by a group of film industry professionals, working critics, curators and film conservation specialists. All work in an entirely voluntary capacity. Nevertheless there are significant costs, most notably our screening fees, which have to be met each year and we are always grateful for the financial support we receive that defrays these costs and charges. If you would like to make a donation you may do so via via the attached link established by the Australian Cultural Fund which enables small unincorporated organisations like ours to use a service which would otherwise not be easily accessible. To make a donation any time between now and the end of Cinema Reborn 2025 click on this link https://artists.australianculturalfund.org.au/s/project/a2EMn00000FDsl8MAD/cinema-reborn-2025


CINEMA REBORN MAILING LIST

Please forward this email to any friends who may be interested in our presentations of restored cinema classics. Invite them to join our mailing list by sending an email to cinemareborn2025@gmail.com


Sunday, 9 March 2025

The Current Cinema - David Hare's nostalgia bells get rung by QUEER (Luca Guadagnino, Italy, 2024)


I revisited last night these tattered remnants of my youth (bought way back in my palmy days of hustling, acid trips and “moral” abandon in 1968.) Back then William Burroughs felt like an endorsement, the smart older brother we never had to simply scorn the establishment, all the while shouting from the barricades “eat shit motherfuckers.” Being queer then was another proud crime and adjunctive slap in the face to bourgeois society.

Now, nearly sixty years later the western world seems to be strangling itself again in large part thanks to cannibilistic capitalism, egocentricity and transactionalism. All sugar coated with the cancer of PC and university minted degrees on things like film and gender studies, in the process draining those noble realities into garbage salaries for deeply unworthy New Economy Tertiary “learning” with their bloodless, intellectually zombified “curricula” ” and their completely worthless “degrees”
Which is all a roundabout way of getting to the point. After dodging every Guadagnino film since Call Me By Your Name which turned me avidly against this auteur of swoondom, I finally succumbed to. his new film, Queer.
I am in shock at its ability to completely capture me and take me back to places I hadn’t revisited since I was very, very young.
Let me just get this out there. The players in this literally gorgeous movie are all so wonderful they seem to have been waiting a lifetime to get their parts. Even my beloved Lesley Manville, here unrecognizable as the Jungle Botanist-Witch who feeds the boys Telepathy enabling Yage. 

David Hare's copy

Every step up the scale of stylization that Guadagnino lays onto the visual fabric just multiplies the pleasure - the 50s linen suits, the unbelievable goofy but beautiful miniature bi-plane flying wobbly on wires against a painted cartoon sky. From the entirely Cinecittã soundstage where they rebuilt a 1951 Mexico City and a Guatamalan jungle in lurid sea green and rattlesnake copper. To the final staggering trip sequence in which, unlike Burroughs’ novel, Lee and Eugene do in fact find Yage and imbibe its powers. The epilogue which sublimely and achingly recreates the endgame of Kubrick’s 2001, set to Reznor and Ross’ Vaster than Empires it may be the greatest “death scene” I’ve seen in movies.
I’m old now and I hate what the world’s become. This movie and its incredible passion made me young again, it brought me back real joy, real pleasure, real excitement. It’s so alive with outrageous taste and feeling you seem to apprehend the excitement of all the players, whose sheer immersion in their parts has turned them on too.

Wednesday, 5 March 2025

The Current Cinema - Barrie Pattison unearths NE ZHA 2 (Yu Yang, China, 2025)


Yu Yang
’s new  Ne Zha 2 -  the0 Nezha Mo tong nao hai follow up - is, they are telling us, the most successful animated film of all time. I have to wonder about this as the one of the eight-a-day sessions I attended drew only a single figure attendance by lights down, despite all the sold seats indicated on the plan. There was also female giggling issuing from a stall in the blokes’ loo before the session, which I felt it better not to investigate.

The film might be more approachable if you see part one but what we end up with is a brain frying succession of wide screen set piece displays with a few anime characters wandering through them. The plot finally settles into a Kirikou rip off.

It  has the rebellious kid Ne Zha (Yanting Lü) who is half of the Chaos Pearl with Ao Bing (Mo Han), a more sedate character. After some gross-out bodily fluids comedy, suited to his tot aspect, we get down to what passes for a plot with the immortals battling monsters as represented by the Dragon King rulers of the Four Seas, setting their sea creatures against  the Chan Sect’s  bearded baby Wuliang from the Yu Zu Palace on a cloud, with the valiant human defenders of the Chentang Pass as victims of The Dragon Rulers of the Four Seas. The master pan is to convert opponents into immortality pearls in the mighty heavenly cauldron. Devices like the sky splitting severed hand are employed by faltering frozen parents and a chubby stone matron who ends up as rocks imprisoned in a metal cage, while hostile Badger Armies and  (impressive) underwater dragons, which are normally found only in the Eastern region, get into the combat. Will our hero be able to withstand the ice thorns which have immobilised him as the true author of the celestial  infamy is revealed?

Admirers of King Hu (Touch of Zen’s immortals on wavering bamboo stalks) and Li Han-hsiang (Love Etern’s derisive white outfit idlers) will recognise their influence. The panoramas of grotesque monsters from Asian traditional art and kiddie literature are impressive but constant barrages of them tend to have a numbing effect. The film just keeps on going long after the big screen impact of its great design and laboratory work has been absorbed. We end with a joke anachronistic routine  embedded in the end titles  Toon freaks and curious tinies are likely to enjoy it.