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Tuesday, 15 April 2025
CINEMA REBORN - David Noakes and Rose Murray to present HOW THE WEST WAS LOST
Thursday, 10 April 2025
CINEMA REBORN 2025 - CLASSICS FROM DISTANT SHORES - Links to website program notes.
Direct from Bologna's Il Cinema Ritrovato, Cannes Classics and the New York Film Festival. Superb new restorations of films from Ukraine, Kazakhstan, The Philippines and Lebanon. Links to notes by Laleen Jamayanne, Tony Rayns and Lucia Sorbera.
SHADOWS OF FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS (Sergei Parajanov, Ukraine,1965)
“In the temple of cinema, there are images, light, and reality. Sergei Parajanov is the master of that temple.” – Jean-Luc Godard.
“Sergei Parajanov’s extraordinary merging of myth, history, poetry, ethnography, dance and ritual remains one of the supreme works of the Soviet sound cinema, and even subsequent Parajanov features have failed to dim its intoxicating splendours.” – Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader
A masterpiece of Ukrainian cinema that bursts with life and colour, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1965) is a subtly subversive ode to folk culture characteristic of its visionary director, Sergei Parajanov.
Introduced by Nicky Hannan at Ritz Cinemas and by Amiel Courtin-Wilson at Lido Cinemas
Full program notes by film scholar Laleen Jayamanne are now posted on the Cinema Reborn website https://cinemareborn.com.au/Shadows-of-Forgotten-Ancestors
THE FALL OF OTRAR (Ardak Amirkulov, Kazakhstan, 1991
““The film restoration of the year. The new 4K restoration of Ardak Amirkulov’s intricate historical epic, … will hopefully help this monumental film to reach as many people as possible.” – Film Comment, New York
“Ardak Amirkulov’s staggering historical epic (co-written by Aleksei German) concerns the intrigues and turmoil preceding Genghis Khan’s systematic destruction of the lost East Asian civilization of Otrar. The movie that spurred the extraordinary wave of great Kazakh films in the 1990s, The Fall of Otrar is hallucinatory, visually resplendent, and ferociously energetic, packed with eye-catching (and gouging) detail and traversing an endless variety of parched, epic landscapes and ornate palaces. But this is also one of the most astute historical films ever made, its high quotient of gore grounded in the bedrock realities of realpolitik: when the Kharkhan of Otrar is finally brought before the Ruler of the World, he could be facing Stalin or, for that matter, any number of latter-day CEOs. A movie that has everything, from state-of-the-art 13th-century warfare to perfumed sex, The Fall of Otrar is truly a one-of-a-kind experience”. – New York Film Festival notes to accompany the world premiere of the 4K restoration, Lincoln Centre, NY, October 2024
Introduced by Robert Hughes at Ritz Cinemas and Lido Cinemas
Links to session times and bookings https://cinemareborn.com.au/The-Fall-of-Otrar
BONA (Lino Brocka, The Philippines, 1980)
Bona is a stark tale of a selfless middle-class Manila schoolgirl (Nora Aunor, who also produced the film) who develops a fierce, morbid attachment to a narcissistic movie extra and abandons everything to devote her life to serving the actor. No humiliation he heaps upon her deters in any way. Aunor’s performance transforms the story into a profound portrait of a woman who finally doesn’t take it anymore…
Out of sight for over forty years since it premiered at Cannes in 1981, the restoration premiered at Cannes Classics in 2024 and since then it has screened at the New York and Toronto Film Festivals.
Introduced by Russell Edwards at Ritz Cinemas and Chris Luscri at Lido Cinemas.
Full program notes by film critic, curator and film-maker Tony Rayns are now posted on the Cinema Reborn website https://cinemareborn.com.au/Bona
LEILA AND THE WOLVES (Heiny Srour, Lebanon, 1984)
“Visually, Heiny Srour’s film is a treat, combining tinted newsreel footage with memorable images and clearly loving shots of a strife-torn nation; the acts of courage she reveals, and the example she sets to other film-makers to engage their own history, are exalting.” Frances Dickinson, Time Out Film Guide
“Ignored and forgotten, the role of Arab women in the Middle East’s political history is illuminated here for the first time…Using narrative structures of the ‘mosaic’, a common device in oriental stories, Leila travels through time from the British Mandate of Palestine to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982. …Acclaimed by critics for its originality and the talent of its director Leila and the Wolves was distributed worldwide but censored in most Arab countries. Thanks to this new restoration we rediscover a work of great complexity, which even in its most imperfect moments, speaks beyond its, albeit fundamental, feminist message.” Cecilia Cenciarelli, Il Cinema Ritrovato 2023.
Introduced by Elly Carantinos at Ritz Cinemas and Samia Mikhail at Lido Cinemas.
Full program notes by Associate Professor Lucia Sorbera, Chair of Arabic Language and Cultures, University of Sydney are now posted on the Cinema Reborn website https://cinemareborn.com.au/Leila-and-the-Wolves
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
Sunday, 6 April 2025
CINEMA REBORN - RESTORED EUROPEAN CLASSICS - Films by Julien Duvivier, Roberto Rossellini, Rene Clement, Carlos Saura and Robert Bresson
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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
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)
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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 Bodies, The 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”.