Exhibition cocurators Naomi Beckwith and Valerie Cassel Oliver discuss Howardena Pindell's multifaceted life, career, and activism as a black woman and artist in this short
documentary featuring archival images and documents, and artworks made throughout Pindell's fifty - year career.
Alex Gibney's
documentary features archival footage and interviews with former high ranking officials about the history of the church and the alleged practices it uses to keep or punish members.
Not exact matches
Special
Features High - definition digital transfer from the 2004 Film Foundation restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
Archival introduction to the film by director Jean Renoir «Around the River,» a 60 - minute 2008
documentary by Arnaud Mandagaran about the making of the film Interview with filmmaker Martin Scorsese from 2004 Audio interview with producer Ken McEldowney from 2000 «Jean Renoir: A Passage Through India,» a new video essay by film writer Paul Ryan Trailer Plus: An essay by film scholar Ian Christie and original production notes by Renoir
Featuring a slew of interviews with big figures like Spike Jonze, Tony Hawk, Johnny Knoxville, Bam Margera, and more, this celebration of 90s counterculture combines
archival footage and intriguing chats makes for a one - of - a-kind
documentary.
Blu - ray and DVD, with plenty of supplements: new interviews with Otto Preminger biographer Foster Hirsch and music critic Gary Giddins, a featurette on graphic designer Saul Bass and his long collaborative relationship with Preminger, excerpts from a 1967 episode of «Firing Line»
featuring Preminger, newsreel footage from the set, and excerpts from a work - in - progress
documentary on the making of the film, plus stills, a trailer and booklet with a new essay and an
archival article.
Home Video Notes: The Breakfast Club Release Date: 2 January 2018 Criterion releases The Breakfast Club on home video (Blu - ray) with the following extras: - Audio commentary from 2015
featuring actors Anthony Michael Hall and Judd Nelson - New interviews with actors Molly Ringwald and Ally Sheedy - New video essay
featuring director John Hughes's production notes, read by Nelson -
Documentary from 2015
featuring interviews with cast and crew - 50 minutes of never - before - seen deleted and extended scenes - Rare promotional and
archival interviews and footage - Excerpts from a 1985 American Film Institute seminar with Hughes 1999 radio interview with Hughes - Segment from a 1985 episode of NBC's Today show
featuring the film's cast - Audio interview with Molly Ringwald from a 2014 episode of This American Life - Trailer - PLUS: An essay by critic David Kamp
New to this edition are the 2000
documentary «Hitchcock: The Early Years,»
archival interview footage with Alfred Hitchcock from Mike Scott's 1966 television interview, excerpts from François Truffaut's 1962 audio interview with Hitchcock, a visual essay by Hitchcock scholar Leonard Leff, original production design drawings, and a booklet
featuring an essay by film critic David Cairns.
Special
Features Audio commentary from 2002
featuring director Robert Altman and producer David Foster New making - of
documentary,
featuring members of the Cast and Crew New conversation about the film and Altman's career between film historians Cari Beauchamp and Rick Jewell Featurette from the film's 1970 production Art Directors Guild Film Society Q&A from 1999 with production designer Leon Ericksen Excerpts from
archival interviews with cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond Gallery of stills from the set by photographer Steve Schapiro Excerpts from two 1971 episodes of The Dick Cavett Show
featuring Altman and film critic Pauline Kael Trailer PLUS: An essay by novelist and critic Nathaniel Rich
Special
Features New 4K digital restoration New interview with cinematographer John Bailey about director of photography Conrad Hall's work in the film New interview with film historian Bobbi O'Steen on the film's editing New interview with film critic and jazz historian Gary Giddins about Quincy Jones's music for the film New interview with writer Douglass K. Daniel on director Richard Brooks Interview with Brooks from a 1998 episode of the French television series «Cinema Cinemas» «With Love From Truman,» a short 1966
documentary featuring novelist Truman Capote, directed by Albert and David Maysles Two
archival NBC interviews with Capote: one following the author on a 1966 visit to Holcomb, Kansas, and the other conducted by Barbara Walters in 1967 Trailer Plus: An essay by critic Chris Fujiwara
The second disc houses the abovementioned
documentary along with recent interviews and reminiscences
featuring the surviving Pythons in fine form, going on candidly about disappointments (Cleese had wanted to play Brian) and tensions, although the highlight is
archival footage of a British chat program wherein the Pythons score points on a pair of Catholic assclowns.
Disc
Features - High - definition digital restoration, approved by cinematographer Mark Lee Ping - bin, with 5.1 surround DTS - HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu - ray edition - @ «In the Mood for Love,» director Wong Kar - wai's
documentary on the making of the film - Deleted scenes with director's commentary — Hua yang de nian hua (2000), a short film by Wong -
Archival interview with Wong and a «cinema lesson» given by the director at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival - Toronto International Film Festival press conference from 2000, with stars Maggie Cheung Man - yuk and Tony Leung Chiu - wai - Trailers and TV spots - The music of In the Mood for Love, presented in an interactive essay, on the DVD edition - Essay by film scholar Gina Marchetti illuminating the film's unique setting on the DVD edition - Photo gallery on the DVD edition - Biographies of key cast and crew on the DVD edition - Two new interviews with critic Tony Rayns, one about the film and the other about the soundtrack, on the Blu - ray edition - A booklet
featuring the Liu Yi - chang story that provided thematic inspiration for the film, an essay by film critic Li Cheuk - to, and a director's statement (DVD edition); a booklet
featuring an essay by novelist and film critic Steve Erickson and the Liu Yi - chang story that provided thematic inspiration for the film (Blu - ray edition)
In between there are (at last count) 161
feature films, 58
documentary features, 14
archival films, and 163 short films.
Carried over from the earlier DVD edition are two commentary tracks (one by co-writer Jean Gruault, Truffaut collaborator Suzanne Schiffman, editor Claudine Bouche, and Truffaut scholar Annette Insdorf, the other
featuring actress Jeanne Moreau and Truffaut biographer Serge Toubiana), excerpts from the 1985
documentary The Key to Jules and Jim about the author Henri - Pierre Roche, an episode of Cineaste de notre temps from 1965 dedicated to Truffaut, and a segment from the series L'Invitie du Dimanche from 1969 with Truffaut, Moreau, and filmmaker Jean Renoir, footage of Truffaut interviewed by Richard Roud at the 1977 New York Film Festival, excerpts from Truffaut's presentation at a 1979 American Film Institute «Dialogue on Film,» a 1980
archival audio interview with Truffaut conducted by Claude - Jean Philippe, video interviews with cinematographer Raoul Coutard and co-writer Jean Gruault, and a video conversation between scholars Robert Stam and Dudley Andrew.
Blu - ray Highlight: The Blu - ray doesn't actually
feature any bonus material, but the accompanying DVD version does, although the only extra of note is a
documentary from 2004 that combines
archival footage with survivor interviews about the Holocaust.
It
features commentary (in French, with English subtitled) by Truffaut's co-screenwriter Jean - Louis Richard and Truffaut scholar Serge Toubiana (originally recorded in 2000), the half - hour 1999
documentary Monsieur Truffaut Meets Mr. Hitchcock (about the famous interview book), a new video essay by film critic Kent Jones, and an
archival interview with Truffaut from 1965 about the film, plus a leaflet with an essay by Molly Haskell.
This year, SIFF will screen 421 films representing 85 countries: 181
features (plus 4 secret films), 75
documentaries, 8
archival films, and 153 shorts.
Previously available in a movie - only edition from MGM, Criterion delivers a stunning DVD and Blu - ray two - disc edition with a magnificent transfer and the correct aspect ratio (1.66:1, not the open - matte 1.33 as previously released, which reveals the top of the set in at least one scene), on a two - disc set
featuring with commentary, an original 40 - minute
documentary, new and
archival interviews and clips, but the great treasure is the 159 - minute
documentary Charles Laughton Directs The Night of the Hunter, an unprecedented look at a director directing composed almost entirely of recently discovered outtakes and production footage from the film.
421 films 85 countries 181
feature films 75
documentary features 8
archival films 153 short films 4 secret films 54 World Premieres (29
features, 25 shorts) 56 North American Premieres (42
features, 14 shorts) 27 US Premieres (15
features, 12 shorts)
In between there are (at last count) 193
feature films, 70
documentary features, 19
archival films, and 164 short films: all told, 450 films representing 92 countries.
Via
archival footage and present - day interviews, the
documentary features reflections by Dominic Dunne, Truman Capote, Henry Geldzahler and rocker Patti Smith.
The exhibition
features documentary, analytical, and interpretive drawings that provide an alternative understanding of modern architecture as an evolving language, together with stunning
archival photography of some of the iconic architectural projects of the period.
Featuring new scholarship by art historian Robin Clark, it includes reproductions of fascinating
archival and
documentary material that was discovered during the curatorial process, from the artist's sketches to gallery invitation cards, early catalogue covers, historic photographs, as well as installation views of the exhibition.
The book also
features new scholarship by Diedrich Diederichsen and Bob Nickas, an illustrated timeline for both cities and compelling
archival material — from
documentary photographs from the period and reproductions of Cologne's historic Spex Magazine to reviews of exhibitions from the period.
Featuring an interview with the artist by Anne Reeve and new scholarship by art historian Robin Clark, it also includes reproductions of
archival and
documentary material discovered during the curatorial process, from sketches by the artist to gallery invitation cards, early catalogue covers, and historic photographs, as well as installation views of the show.