For the Love of Cinema

J'adore le cinema.

defamiliar:

My movies are body-conscious. The first fact of human existence is the human body. If you get away from physical reality, you’re fudging, in fantasy land, not coming to grips with what violence does.

David Cronenberg

(Source: fyodor-haneke)

(Source: binoches)

Possession (1981)

(Source: cammiecat, via binoches)

abstiegundzerfall:

The hole (dir. Tsai Ming-liang, 1998)

abstiegundzerfall:

The hole (dir. Tsai Ming-liang, 1998)

(via pyotra)

Paul Thomas Anderson behind the scenes of The Master [x]

(Source: joaquinphoennix, via distantly)

“Why do people go to the cinema? What takes them into a darkened room where, for two hours, they watch the play of shadows on a sheet? The search for entertainment? The need for a kind of drug? All over the world there are, indeed, entertainment firms and organizations which exploit cinema and television and spectacles of many other kinds. Our starting point, however, should not be there, but in the essential principles of cinema, which have to do with the human need to master and know the world. I think that what a person normally goes to the cinema for is time: for time lost or spent or not yet had. He goes there for living experience; for cinema, like no other art, widens, enhances and concentrates a person’s experience—and not only enhances it but makes it longer, significantly longer. That is the power of cinema: ‘stars’, story-lines and entertainment have nothing to do with it.”

“I see it as my duty to stimulate reflection on what is essentially human and eternal in each individual soul, and which all too often a person will pass by, even though his fate lies in his hands. He is too busy chasing after phantoms and bowing down to idols. In the end everything can be reduced to the one simple element which is all a person can count upon in his existence: the capacity to love. That element can grow within the soul to become the supreme factor which determines the meaning of a person’s life. My function is to make whoever sees my films aware of his need to love and to give his love, and aware that beauty is summoning him.”

Andrei Tarkovsky
April 4, 1932 — December 29, 1986

(Source: strangewood, via binoches)

Maggie Cheung wears a different cheongsam (qipao) dress in each scene of Wong Kar-Wai’s In the Mood For Love. There were 46 in all, though not all made it to the final cut.

(Source: changchens, via binoches)

(via vantine)

I’m very worried about the depiction of women on the screen. It’s gotten worse than ever and it’s related to their being either high- or low-class concubines, and the only question is when or where they will go to bed, with whom, and how many. There’s nothing to do with the dreams of women, or of woman as the dream, nothing to do with the quirky part of her, the wonder of her.

John Cassavetes (via aloofshahbanou)