- 58
- 533 933
Amir Hossein Nazari
United States
Registrace 30. 04. 2018
It's all about MOVIES
Vive le cinéma!: Jeanne Moreau talks with Orson Welles (1972)
Vive le cinéma! S01E02
Aired on March 26, 1972
Jeanne Moreau dines with Orson Welles at the Ritz
"Vive le cinéma!" was a monthly programme created by André S. Labarthe and Janine Bazin, who invited a personality - director, actress or actor, writer, politician, lawyer, etc. - to follow then comment freely on one month of cinema news.
Aired on March 26, 1972
Jeanne Moreau dines with Orson Welles at the Ritz
"Vive le cinéma!" was a monthly programme created by André S. Labarthe and Janine Bazin, who invited a personality - director, actress or actor, writer, politician, lawyer, etc. - to follow then comment freely on one month of cinema news.
zhlédnutí: 701
Video
MasterClass with Michael Haneke 2017 [English Subtitle]
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 6 měsíci
At Cinéma Utopia Bordeaux 20 September 2017 Host: Philippe Rouyer #MichaelHaneke #MasterClass #HappyEnd #FunnyGames #TheWhiteRibbon #ThePianoTeacher #Amour #cache #TheSeventhContinent #CodeUnknown #71FragmentsofaChronologyofChance #TimeoftheWolf #TheCastle #BennysVideo
اکران فیلم جنایت بیدقت شهرام مکری توسط انجمن فیلم آمریکا در واشنگتن دی سی
zhlédnutí 193Před 2 lety
فیلم #جنایت_بی_دقت، ساخته #شهرام_مکری از سوی انجمن فیلم آمریکا در پایتخت این کشور اکران شد. این فیلم درباره آتشسوزی در سینما رکس آبادان است که در شامگاه ۲۸ مرداد ۵۷ با تماشاگرانش که به تماشای فیلم گوزنها نشسته بودند، سوخت گزارش نیلوفر رستمی، ایران اینترنشنال
Stanley Kubrick asks Robert Altman about McCabe & Mrs. Miller's Opening Scene
zhlédnutí 22KPřed 2 lety
#StanleyKubrick #RobertAltman #Kubrick #Altman #CriterionCollection McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)
Klute in New York: A Background for Suspense (1971)
zhlédnutí 13KPřed 2 lety
A promotional short film back in the 1970's that in current days can be viewed as a closer look at the making of Klute (1971). The project follows the complex shooting on multiple locations in New York with major stars Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland, under the direction of Alan J. Pakula. The two actors and the director share a little about their perspectives on the film and the experience of...
گفت و گوی امین پاک پرور با شهرام مکری و نسیم احمدپور
zhlédnutí 497Před 2 lety
#شهرام_مکری سابقه کارگردانی فیلمهای کوتاه و بلند بسیاری همچون طوفان سنجاقک، محدوده دایره، اشکان،انگشتر و چند داستان دیگر، ماهی و گربه، هجوم و...را دارد. ایشان تاکنون برای مجموعه آثارشان جوایز بسیاری همچون سیمرغ بلورین بهترین فیلم کوتاه از جشنواره فجر، برنده بهترین فیلم کوتاه تجربی از جشنواره فیلم کوتاه تهران، برنده جایزه بخش ویژه جشنواره ونیز، برنده جایزه بهترین فیلم از جشنوارههای فرایبورگ، ل...
Blood Simple: A Conversation with Coen Brothers and Dave Eggers
zhlédnutí 41KPřed 2 lety
A new conversation between author Dave Eggers and the Coen Brothers (Ethan Coen and Joel Coen) about the production, from inception to release, of 'Blood Simple'. #EthanCoen #JoelCoen #CoenBrothers #DaveEggers #BloodSimple
گفتگو فیلم خوره با شهرام مکری درباره فیلم جنایت بیدقت
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 2 lety
لایو با شهرام مُکری درباره «جنایت بی دقت» pCXy-rEQjg7Z/ . shahrammokri_mokri filmkhoree #شهرام_مکری #نسیم_احمدپور #جنایت_بی_دقت
مراسم اكران خصوصى فيلم جنايت بى دقت در موزه سینمای ایران
zhlédnutí 158Před 2 lety
خرید بلیت از سینما تیکت cinematicket.org/movie/detail/3521 در اکران افتتاحیه «جنایت بی دقت» مطرح شد در روزگار امروز هنر بهترین پناه است مراسم اکران افتتاحیه فیلم سینمایی«جنایت بی دقت» به کارگردانی شهرام مکری شب گذشته پنجشنبه 18 آذر با حضور سینماگران، بازیگران، عوامل فیلم و اهالی رسانه در موزه سینما برگزار شد. به گزارش روابط عمومی نمایش گستران، در ابتدای این مراسم نگار اسکندرفر تهیه کننده فیلم ض...
آنونس رسمی جنایت بی دقت | فیلمی از شهرام مکری
zhlédnutí 3,8KPřed 2 lety
رونمایی از آنونس جنایت بی دقت همزمان با آغاز اکران خرید بلیت از سینما تیکت cinematicket.org/movie/detail/3521 . آنونس رسمی فیلم جنایت بی دقت به کارگردانی شهرام مکری رونمایی و منتشر شد اکران فیلم سینمایی جنایت بی دقت از 17 اذر ماه در سینماهای سراسر کشور اغاز شده است . بابك كريمي، محمد ساربان عادل يراقي فريبا كامران بهزاد دوراني سياوش چراغىپور ابوالفضل كاهاني، راضيه منصوري، الاهه بخشي، معصومه بي...
Ennio Morricone: Music in His Blood (2010)
zhlédnutí 344Před 2 lety
An interview with film composer Ennio Morricone discussing his music for Elio Petri’s 1970 film INVESTIGATION OF A CITIZEN ABOVE SUSPICION. Ennio Morricone: La Musique au corps 2010 #EnnioMorricone #ElioPetri #InvestigationofaCitizenAboveSuspicion
بخشی از جلسه پرسش و پاسخ شهرام مکری در نمایش «جنایت بی دقت» سالن بيلى وايلدر لس انجلس
zhlédnutí 317Před 2 lety
جنايت بى دقت در ادامه نمايش هاى بين المللى اش روز شنبه بيست ونهم ابان ماه در سالن «بيلى وايلدر» لس انجلس به نمايش در آمد. اين نمايش كه توسط دانشگاه «يوسى ال اى» برگزار شد همراه با جلسه پرسش و پاسخ با شهرام مكرى كارگردان فيلم بود. #جنایت_بی_دقت #carelesscrime #شهرام_مکری #Shahrammokri #امیر_نادری carelesscrime shahrammokri_mokri
صحبت های امیر نادری درباره شهرام مکری در نمایش «جنایت بی دقت» سالن بيلى وايلدر لس انجلس
zhlédnutí 472Před 2 lety
صحبت های امیر نادری درباره شهرام مکری در نمایش «جنایت بی دقت» سالن بيلى وايلدر لس انجلس
Noah Baumbach and Peter Bogdanovich on Frances Ha (2012)
zhlédnutí 4,6KPřed 2 lety
Noah Baumbach and Peter Bogdanovich on Frances Ha (2012)
John le Carré on "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1965)"
zhlédnutí 182KPřed 2 lety
John le Carré on "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1965)"
A Discussion with Peter Bogdanavich on "The Last Picture Show"
zhlédnutí 316Před 2 lety
A Discussion with Peter Bogdanavich on "The Last Picture Show"
DE PALMA (A Tribute to Brian De Palma)
zhlédnutí 903Před 2 lety
DE PALMA (A Tribute to Brian De Palma)
شهرام مکری: سینمای تجربی و فرم (چرا فیلم تجربی بسازیم؟)
zhlédnutí 508Před 2 lety
شهرام مکری: سینمای تجربی و فرم (چرا فیلم تجربی بسازیم؟)
MOKRI + RAW (A Tribute to Shahram Mokri)
zhlédnutí 200Před 2 lety
MOKRI RAW (A Tribute to Shahram Mokri)
Code Name Melville | Sous le nom de Melville (2008)
zhlédnutí 4,9KPřed 2 lety
Code Name Melville | Sous le nom de Melville (2008)
Jean-Luc Godard and Anna Karina at Venice Film Festival (1965)
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 2 lety
Jean-Luc Godard and Anna Karina at Venice Film Festival (1965)
Passion and Reason: Michel Ciment on Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon
zhlédnutí 3,5KPřed 2 lety
Passion and Reason: Michel Ciment on Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon
Rosso Recollections: Dario Argento's Deep Genius
zhlédnutí 145Před 2 lety
Rosso Recollections: Dario Argento's Deep Genius
The Unsane World of Tenebrae: Interview with Dario Argento
zhlédnutí 735Před 2 lety
The Unsane World of Tenebrae: Interview with Dario Argento
A Lost Art: Brian De Palma and Noah Baumbach on Dressed to Kill (1980)
zhlédnutí 29KPřed 2 lety
A Lost Art: Brian De Palma and Noah Baumbach on Dressed to Kill (1980)
بزرگداشت استاد ناصر تقوایی در خانه هنرمندان | سخنرانان: شهرام مکری، محسن آزرم و حسن توکلنیا
zhlédnutí 130Před 2 lety
بزرگداشت استاد ناصر تقوایی در خانه هنرمندان | سخنرانان: شهرام مکری، محسن آزرم و حسن توکلنیا
Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Michael Mann Reflect On 20 Years Of ‘Heat’ With Christopher Nolan
zhlédnutí 82KPřed 2 lety
Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Michael Mann Reflect On 20 Years Of ‘Heat’ With Christopher Nolan
24:08 😂
A great man and intelligent in every way.
Brilliant man.
I love how De Niro has almost no insight to contribute lol. Great actor but doesn't really have a way with words
I saw Woody at Michael's in 1978 NYC
بهترین فیلمساز زنده ایرانی در دنیا
Angie Dickinson should have won an oscar . She was so Great in this movie.
New York City was always bound to change good or bad. Happens everywhere.
This bit is included on the VHS movie tape. I had it before DVDs took over the market.
من اللي جاي من حلقة سينماتولوجي ؟
Kubrick was a control freak, and Altman was more 'whimsical'. So, obviously Kubrick had a hard time understanding how Altman could just leave things to chance without knowing for sure they got the shot. The truth is, this shot looks so beautiful in this film because it is an Altman film where some other shots (and even sounds) do not seem so perfect. In a film like 'Barry Lyndon', that kind of a shot would hardly have stood out, since every shot in that film is like a painting.
5:52 ❤
In other words, Kubrick should have called the film's cinematographer instead.
Thank you for the english subtitles
Remember when Jane's daughter was busted scoring drugs on the lower east side? She claimed it was part of a school project! Yeah, and l'm the Easter Bunny.
My favorite movie! What a treasure is this video! Thank you for the upload!
One of my favorite films ever! Shot outside the town where I now live. I have a custom made wooden bench made by the son to one of the set builders who helped build the in-film town and sets. I figured that relationship out after I got the bench made, from videos and articles on the inet. All based around the location of the Maplewood mud Flats on the Vancouver north shore.
absolutely loved this. I'm 32 but my God the 70s were fascinating
crazy how good blood simple is for a debut feature. May not be the Coen Brothers’ best film but it’s pretty darn close
Nolan's questions were like exam questions. I invite him to stick to making movies.
Thanks a lot.
بسیار عالی! اما بسیار تاسف انگیز 😢. میشه بفرمایید از کجا میتونیم فیلم کامل را بطور رایگان ببینیم! سپاسگزارم.😊
Blow Out is a great film.
Heat..after..miami vice...after..i think starsky & hutch join anthony yerkovich....great
Saw Blood Simple as a double feature in downtown Denver with The Elephant Man. Two classic films by three classic writer/directors. I absolutely fell in love with both the Coen brothers and David Lynch that. I was on a day day with someone that did not get either films. I knew that person would never be right for me. Blood Simple is what film is and has always been to me. It was a Hitchcock film that did all Hitchcock films other than maybe Psycho. But Blood Simple is just as good as Hitchcock's Psycho. The Coen brother's earliest works were by far their best. I do hope they return to that before exiting this world. Blood Simple also made me life long lovers of the beyond earthly M. Emmett Walsh and Francis McDormand. I just never had time for people that did not have the psychological ability to appreciate Blood Simple. So many elements of this film were original and brilliant.
🦋
this interviewer couldn't recognise humor if it hit her in the face.... which it did... and she didn't
"End of the line rundown spook!" Excellent 👌 I went into Berlin this year 1966, mother woke us as it rolled in raining darkness, gaurds in the dark with machine guns and spotlights, are seriously unforgettable! 😮 They were shooting people who tried to cross, till 1989! Madness!
Not many books have been written by actual spies! J.LeCarre gave talks at MI 5 and the CIA, dozens of times! His father was a con-man and probably a spy! (always on the run!)
RIP. I learned so much about film reading his work.
When there was a bit of a crisis in 1996 over Di's death, I thought that if we have to have a president, it should be David Attenborough but, on this evidence, I think David Cornwell would have given him a good run for his money. Brilliant men, both of them.
The Only Version Of 1984's Blood Simple That I Prefer Is The Original 1984 Theatrical Version (99 Mins).
It’s nice to read a book and have your own imagination fill in the characters.
I never liked Burton.
fun fact: this is also in the Angst dvd and blu ray ! love it so much. oh and gaspar too hehe
Le film, Funny Game, ce n'est pas pour la curiosité de la violence que le public est restée, c'est aussi parce qu'il est normal qu'on veuille que les protagonistes (la famille) réussissent à prendre le contrôle des garçons terroristes d'une manière --peut-etre un voisin qui passe les sauve par exemple ; En tout sens, c'est un film faible par rapport à Clockwork Orange par Kubrick, autant que j'aime Haneke.
christopher nolan is just michael mann rebranded
Many thanks from the US!
I always get the feeling whenever Le Carré (Cornwell) speaks or writes about himself that he does so at least half disapprovingly, as if he regards himself clear-eyed from apart and wonders whether he isn't being just a bit too fatuous. And that's the kind of thing that makes him so likeable. This is no Le Carré-esque observation; the man probably says as much about his penchant for self-appraisal somewhere in his writing. In any event, his massive talent for assessing people is capable of being inwardly directed, and this speaks well for him.
wow allen describing the political class in the us
This was a pure joy to watch. Nolan was a fantastic moderator - you could see he was truly passionate about the film. I recently watched Heat and I’m pretty sure it’s my favorite (American) film of all time! So watching this retrospective panel was nice and wholesome even to watch 😊
همیشه استاد
In technical terms, Kubrick is asking him how he exposed for the cigar. This is a time before video monitors [for film cameras], let alone a digital viewfinder. Precise exposure was accomplished with a light meter. You only watched your footage after it was chemically processed into dailies, often a day later. So Kubrick is asking how he knew he had it in the moment, when he couldn't actually see the final result. Optical viewfinders can really fool you. And a source as small and dim as a cigar is difficult if not impossible to measure with a light meter too. So if your goal as a cinematographer is to expose for the glow of the cigar you need to create conditions that allow you to make the cigar seem brighter. This means you want to shoot wide open (widest possible aperture). To do that while not over exposing, you need to shoot at dusk so that when you open up, you're going to maximize the ambient light without blowing everything out. This is extra difficult if you can't use additional lighting. The only film lighting in this scene is at the end where the left side of his face receives a kick from a light off to the right of the camera. Without this technical context Kubrick sounds neurotic, or almost foolish. Really Kubrick is asking something very specific. He's about to go shoot a whole film lit by candles, and he's scrounging around for tips and tricks. The fact that Altman shot it himself further explains the conversation as well. If it was a cinematographer's job to get this shot, he would probably not have winged it. Because if it didn't get the shot he would have been responsible for wasting resources and would look incompetent. But as director Altman didn't have that burden, his level of effort reflected the level of importance he put on the intended effect, which clearly was relatively small. It was a little touch, not a big deal. This shows Kubrick's level of hands on technical experience and hunger for knowledge, not neurosis. This is a magician asking another magician how he did a trick, in this case Altman is basically saying "I improvised and lucked out."
Thank you. Perfect explanation.
thanks for this!
Much obliged for the context!
لعنت بر تروریست های اسلامی و مارکسیستی
Heat is probably Michael's Masterpiece, probably my top 5 movies. Robert De Niro and Al Pacino are also on my top 5 best actors.
"In those days the CIA was financing magazines, movies…” Good thing they don’t do that anymore. What a relief.
Even to this day Paul Dehn's millitary files are still classified.
Amy so nervous lol
quiet, wonderful GENIUS
The mumble squad haha