We mentioned last April that Ingmar Bergman's intense, Oscar - winning
chamber drama Through a Glass Darkly, about a young woman's emotional crack - up, was being adapted for the London stage.
Ingmar Bergman's intense, character - based
chamber drama Through a Glass Darkly has always seemed like it would make for a great, intimate theater piece.
Not exact matches
Those willing to enter The Club will discover an original and brilliantly acted
chamber drama in which Larrain's fiercely political voice comes
through as loud and clear as ever.
«Blue Jay» (Alex Lehmann) The official synopsis: «Meeting by chance when they return to their tiny California hometown, two former high - school sweethearts (Mark Duplass and Sarah Paulson) reflect on their shared past
through the lens of their differently dissatisfied presents, in this tender, wise and affecting
chamber drama from first - time feature director Alex Lehmann.»
But those willing to enter «The Club» will discover an original and brilliantly acted
chamber drama in which Larrain's fiercely political voice comes
through as loud and clear as ever.
Set against the heavenly hills of Sils Maria, Switzerland, this
chamber drama traps an aging actress (Juliette Binoche), her raw and responsive assistant (Kristen Stewart), and an ingenue gunning for fame (Chloë Grace Moretz), as they swirl
through each other's lives like a mist.
Married to the swooning, hypnotic camerawork that has been the hallmark of Park's collaboration with DP Chung Chung since Oldboy, it has about it the perversity of a Victorian
chamber drama squeezed
through the filter of a very Korean take on class and sex — attitudes partly shaped by living in the shadow of one of the two or three most unstable regimes in the world.
A pot boiler of a
chamber drama, Tarantino pushes the action and raises the tension
through words for its first half and explosions of extreme violence for its second.