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    CS52

    • Magazine Table of Contents
    • Issue 52 Online Articles
    • Editor's Note
    • Digital Edition (Mobiles, tablets etc)
    • Subscribe and save

    CS51

    • Magazine Table of Contents
    • Issue 51 Online Articles
    • Editor's Note
    • Digital Edition

    CS50

    • 50 Best Filmmakers Under 50
    • Magazine Table of Contents
    • Issue 50 Online Articles
    • Editor's Note
    • Digital Edition
    • Help with the New Website
    • Cinema Scope Magazine

      This is the archive of articles selected from the print version of Cinema Scope magazine. You can help us to continue to provide this valuable resource and read many more articles by subscribing.
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    • Issue 52 Table of Contents
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      This is the complete list of articles from magazine issue of Cinema Scope issue 52. We post selected articles from each issue on the site. For the complete content please subscribe to the magazine, or consider the instant digital download version. * Articles available online Read more →

    • CS52 Editor’s Note
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      As far as I’ve been able to tell—from having had the misfortune to watch some or all of close to a thousand films so far this year—the quality of product available to festivals in 2012 is inferior to 2011. But that doesn’t excuse some of Read more →

    • Après mai (Olivier Assayas, France)
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      As one is virtually a companion piece to the other, it is only natural to begin discussion of Après mai (Something in the Air) with Olivier Assayas’ 2002 memoir A Post-May Adolescence, just published in an elegant English translation by the Austrian Filmmuseum to accompany Read more →

    • Rebelle (Kim Nguyen, Canada)
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      The year in cinema has been stamped with a modicum of magical realism. First up at Sundance was Benh Zeitlin’s Beasts of the Southern Wild, a film routinely described as “lyrical” and “heartwarming.” Now there is Montréal director Kim Nguyen’s Rebelle, arriving at fall festivals Read more →

    • The Master (Paul Thomas Anderson, US)
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      The evolution in Paul Thomas Anderson’s oeuvre towards impeccably researched, stunningly visualized mythological explorations of the American character in There Will Be Blood (2007) and The Master represents a starling 180-degree turn. Staying within a certain autobiographical comfort zone in his first four features—Hard Eight Read more →

    • Exploded View | Paul Sharits by Chuck Stephens
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      “One of his best-known works, N:O:T:H:I:N:G, features a light bulb and a chair.” Paul Sharits remains the most structurally precise and disturbingly unknowable experimental filmmaker of the late 20th century, much written about and yet still wholly enigmatic, his work spare, blunt, baffling, often enraged, Read more →

    • DVD Bonus | Upper West Side Story: Kenneth Lonergan’s Margaret
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      So, in the end, #teammargaret wins. Kenneth Lonergan’s Margaret, the first movie rescued from oblivion by Twitter, is now properly viewable. Initially released by Fox Searchlight on two screens in New York and Los Angeles last October with virtually no promotion, the famously beleaguered production Read more →

    • DVD: Some More Auteurist & Non-Auteurist Shopping Tips
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      1. IL CINEMA RITROVATO DVD AWARDS 2012 IX edition Jurors: Lorenzo Codelli, Alexander Horwath, Mark McElhatten, Paolo Mereghetti, Jonathan Rosenbaum BEST DVD 2011/2012 The Complete Humphrey Jennings (BFI). An ongoing series that has recently released the second of its three prefigured volumes. Jennings was the Read more →

    • Golden Girls: Sean Baker’s Starlet
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      The opening shot of Sean Baker’s fourth feature Starlet is beautiful, and not just because it (eventually) rests on Dree Hemingway. Underneath dreamy, faintly menacing music by Manual, we fade up on a mottled wall cast in sunlight, with some sort of tousled mass peeking Read more →

    • Wandering in Vienna: Jem Cohen and the Adventure of Museum Hours
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      “Kunsthistorisches. It’s the big old one.” This is how Vienna’s massive, venerable, lovely and, indeed, elderly central art museum is termed in Jem Cohen’s Museum Hours, and it neatly sums up the film’s warm, casual attitude toward weighty cultural institutions while serving as a way Read more →

    • Lost in the Moment: Peter Mettler on The End of Time
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      After travelling through such far-flung sites as Detroit, Hawaii, India, and the geek-tacular labyrinth that is CERN’s Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Peter Mettler’s latest documentary finally leaves the material world altogether, arriving at a ripping pool of sounds and images that rates as the Read more →

    • Role Models: The Films of Matías Piñeiro
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      Like most of his colleagues in recent Argentinean cinema, Matías Piñeiro is a graduate from the Universidad del Cine, and, like many of them, works outside the national funding system. Born in 1982 in Buenos Aires, Piñeiro, despite three features (El hombre robado, 2007; Todos Read more →

    • Burru’s Abominable Dialectic: Nicolas Rey’s autrement, la Molussie
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      In composing this essay on Nicolas Rey’s latest film, I have opted to follow a principle similar to the one that gives his film its overall shape. The essay consists of six semi-autonomous sections, which I have assigned an order using a random-number generating system. Read more →

    • Blood and Thunder: Enter the Leviathan
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      Let’s start with a coincidence. The title of Part I, Chap. 1 of Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan: “Of Sense.” The name of the Harvard project headed by Lucien Castaing-Taylor, whose new film, made in collaboration with Véréna Paravel, shares a title with Hobbes’ seminal work of Read more →

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