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John Huston – The Maltese Falcon (1941)

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Synopsis:

‘Spade and Archer is the name of a San Francisco detective agency. That’s for Sam Spade and Miles Archer. The two men are partners, but Sam doesn’t like Miles much. A knockout, who goes by the name of Miss Wanderly, walks into their office; and by that night everything’s changed. Miles is dead. And so is a man named Floyd Thursby. It seems Miss Wanderly is surrounded by dangerous men. There’s Joel Cairo, who uses gardenia-scented calling cards. There’s Kasper Gutman, with his enormous girth and feigned civility. Her only hope of protection comes from Sam, who is suspected by the police of one or the other murder. More murders are yet to come, and it will all be because of these dangerous men – and their lust for a statuette of a bird: the Maltese Falcon.’
– J. Spurlin (IMDb)





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Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish (idx/sub)


Ira Cohen – The Invasion of Thunderbolt Pagoda [+Extras] (1968)

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Quote:
J. Hoberman in the Mar. 16, 2006 Village Voice: “Part ‘Dr. Strange,’ part ‘Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome,’ [‘The Invasion of Thunderbolt Pagoda’ is] so High ’60s that you emerge from its 20-minute vision perched full-lotus on a cloud of incense, chatting with a white rabbit and smoking a banana…. ‘Invasion’ is a languidly opiated costume ball in which an assortment of masked and painted bohos, some sporting outsize elf ears, loll about a candlelit, Mylar-lined set, blowing soap bubbles and nibbling majoon. …In lieu of action, Cohen uses all manner of superimposition and prismatic image-splitting; his big effect, however, is the deliquescent Mylar reflection. What saves ‘Invasion’ from preciosity is the vague menace of Angus MacLise’s improvised pan-piping, tabla-tapping, creature-yipping score. Although this masterpiece of Tibetan-Moroccan-Druidic trance music was reissued on CD several years ago, it truly blossoms in conjunction with the exotic smorgasbord served at Cohen’s psychedelicatessen.”



Quote:
I must say this is the most chemically abused piece of cinema I’ve ever seen – I actually feel under the influence now, I don’t know if I’m safe to walk home. It’s so narcotic that I’m surprised it’s legal to buy over the counter… all this and it was made in 1968 – one year before Woodstock? Well I’m surprised, I was sure people were still locking up their daughters back then, not injecting them with Opium and feeding them sheets of acid… All the same, this is an essential document of the period by director Ira Cohen, and has been lovingly repackaged and issued by the folks at Arthur magazine on their label Bastet (who were responsible for issuing Sunburned Hand of the Man’s ‘No-Magic Man’ if you want any more background). Here’s the technical bit > High-quality transfer from the original 16mm film, with colour correction supervised by the director. The legendary soundtrack has been newly remastered by Tim Barnes, featuring The Universal Mutant Repertory Company (Loren Standlee, Ziska Baum, Angus MacLise, Raja Samayana, Tony Conrad, Henry Flynt and Jackson MacLow). Contains two new, never-before-released alternative soundtracks to “Invasion” by Sunburned Hand of the Man and Acid Mothers Temple SWR (Tsuyama Altsushi, Yoshida Tatsuya and Kawabata Makoto). Also packaged is “Brain Damage,” a new film directed by Ira Cohen and produced by Bastet created from never-before-seen original 16mm outtakes, featuring a new soundtrack composed by Will Swofford with the Expanded Instrument System. “From The Mylar Chamber,” an original slideshow of 60 mylar photographs with soundtrack by Angus MacLise and original poetry by Ira Cohen. And as if this wasn’t enough, there’s a director’s commentary track by Ira Cohen. Phew… are you stoned already?




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http://keep2s.cc/file/22742ee5dd48c/The_Invasion_of_Thunderbolt_Pagoda_%28Extended_Cut%29_-_2006_-_Ira_Cohen.mkv
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http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5DD3792B483808D/The_Invasion_of_Thunderbolt_Pagoda_%28Extended_Cut%29_-_2006_-_Ira_Cohen.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Julie Taymor – Frida (2002)

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Frida chronicles the life of artist Frida Kahlo (beautiful Salma Hayek) with her mentor and husband Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina), as they took the art world by storm. From their own complex and enduring relationship to her illicit and controversial affair with Leon Trotsky, to her provocative and romantic entanglements with women, Frida Kahlo lived a bold and uncompromising life as a political, artistic, and sexual revolutionary. Also starring Ashley Judd and Antonio Banderas.



http://www.nitroflare.com/view/821A9B9F8E9DDEC/Frida.xVid.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/97cd04141bceb/Frida.xVid.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Ursula Puerrer & A. Hans Scheirl & Dietmar Schipek – Flaming Ears (1992)

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FLAMING EARS is a pop sci-fi lesbian fantasy feature set in the year 2700 in the fictive burned-out city of Asche. It follows the tangled lives of three women — Volley, Nun and Spy. Spy is a comic book artist whose printing presses are burned down by Volley, a sexed-up pyromaniac. Seeking revenge, Spy goes to the lesbian club where Volley performs every night. Before she can enter, Spy gets into a fight and is left wounded, lying in the streets. She is found by Nun–an amoral alien in a red plastic suit with a predilection for reptiles, and who also happens to be Volley’s lover. Nun takes her home and subsequently must hide her from Volley. It’s a story of love and revenge, and an anti-romantic plea for love in its many forms. An avowedly underground film which was shot on Super 8 and blown up to 16mm, FLAMING EARS is original for its playful disruption of narrative conventions (the story is a thread rather than a backbone in the film), its witty approach to film genre, and its visual splendor.







http://www.nitroflare.com/view/1BB378B66D442BC/Flaming_Ears.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/9732b55e323b8/Flaming_Ears.mkv

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

Amos Kollek – Fiona (1998)

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Quote:
Fiona is a crack-smoking prostitute. She lives a reckless life outside the law where she kills three cops with the same nonchalance with which she turns tricks… Gritty and unsparing, the film blends an original screenplay with actual documentary footage shot in a Lower East Side crack-house with prostitutes playing some of the key roles. The tender relationship between these women is felt without descending into voyeurism or pity and depicted with an authenticity that transcends the line between fiction and documentary.







http://keep2s.cc/file/e771ae24f9c10/Amos_Kollek_-_%281998%29_Fiona.mkv

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/E672F25C2ADD64D/Amos_Kollek_-_%281998%29_Fiona.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:none

Frank Ripploh – Taxi zum Klo (1980)

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Quote:
In this autobiographical feature, Frank Ripploh plays himself: a German elementary-school instructor who lives a double life in his beloved Berlin, socializing with his fellow teachers only when he has to, and venturing into a world of anonymous sex whenever he can. In-between bathroom encounters and trips with his colleagues to the bowling alley, Ripploh manages to forge a steady relationship with a handsome, sad-eyed theater manager named Bernd Broaderup. As Ripploh’s sexual ardor for Broaderup gives way to a wandering eye, and Broaderup begins pressuring Ripploh to give up the city and its many temptations, the couple’s relationship replays a scene that was occurring in urban areas across the world and was satirized in such cultural snapshots as the Larry Kramer novel Faggots. Ripploh, who wrote, directed, and starred in Taxi Zum Klo, which, unlike most German films at the time, received no state funding, saw the picture become an international art-house hit after it played at 1981’s New York and Berlin film festivals.





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Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

Pierfrancesco Campanella – Bugie rosse aka The Final Scoop (1993)

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Pierfrancesco Campanella’s first giallo (also his directorial debut). The plot is about a series of murders among homosexuals, but the erotic element is mostly represented in heterosexual couplings, so no worries there. Starring the always excellent Tomas Arana, with Alida Vali, Gioia Scola, Lorenzo Flaherty, Natasha Hovey and Barbara Scoppa.



http://keep2s.cc/file/16d37c2a570fa/Bugie_Rosse.avi
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Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English (.srt)

Jean Rollin – Le frisson des vampires aka Shiver of the Vampires (1971)

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Quote:
Jean Rollin’s third feature film Le Frisson des Vampires, alternately known as Thrill of the Vampires, Shiver of the Vampires and Sex and the Vampire, is one of the key works in his impressive filmography. A perfect melding of all of Rollin’s thematic obsessions, Le Frisson des Vampires is the director’s first masterpiece and one of his greatest achievements.





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Language(s):French
Subtitles:English (idx/sub)


Claude Gagnon – Keiko (1979)

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Keiko is a 23-year-old lonely virgin who lives in a tiny room, and hopes to meet someone in the cafe she frequents. After a bad affair with one of the other diners, she vows to give up men. She then begins a happy lesbian relationship with her co-worker Kazuyo. However she is under constant pressure from her father to marry.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/E373BEBF501C369/Keiko.mkv
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http://keep2s.cc/file/5224669f98be7/Keiko.mkv
http://keep2s.cc/file/220f0e6c07e77/Keiko_PROOFREAD_v2.srt

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

José Ramón Larraz – Vampyres (1974)

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“The 1970’s was the decade of the gothic lesbian vampire film. The exploitation efforts of Jean Rollin (LIPS OF BLOOD), Jess Franco (VAMPYROS LESBOS), and Hammer (LUST FOR A VAMPIRE) were enormously popular at the time. These films successfully combined the fear of death and eroticism, which struck a cord with male audiences. Many of the films merely hinted at the overt sexuality, and most never fully explored the sexual aspects of the genre’s premise. That all changed in 1974, when upstart Spanish director Jose Ramon Larrez (or Joe as he is called stateside) raised the bar with the ultimate depiction of sex and horror, VAMPYRES. Larrez teamed with producer Brian Smedley-Astin to film their adult vampire epic in England. By the time VAMPYRES was released there, the censors cut out most of the offensive scenes, castrating the power of this artsy exploitation picture. Luckily when the film played the Drive-In circuit in America (as DAUGHTERS OF DRACULA), we got to see what the British audience didn’t–powerful sex trysts and disturbing death scenes. Thanks to Larrez’s scripting and directing skills, VAMPYRES rose to top of its genre. Today, VAMPYRES is a highly regarded classic in Euro horror-circles, and rightly so…

VAMPYRES is quite simply the greatest lesbian vampire movie ever made. This can all be attributed to director/screenwriter Joe Larraz, (who allowed his wife D. Daubeney to take credit for the screenplay he wrote). Larraz’s script tosses out the vampire cliches and these creatures of the night do not have sharp teeth, don’t turn into bats, don’t sleep in coffins, and don’t get staked through the heart. This is a fresh approach of vampirism, which is treated more like a disease. When these vampires attack, it is in an intensely gruesome manner. Like sharks kicked into a frenzy by the smell of blood, Fran and Miriam drink (and lick) the blood of their victims, then engage in sexual activities when their blood lust has subsided. They have sex in a bed, in the cellar, and in (my favorite) the shower.” – Phil Chandler, DVDCult




Extras:
– An mp3 of the (highly regarded) audio commentary with Jose Larraz and producer Brian Smedley-Aston.
– A lively interview with actresses Marianne Morris and Anulka

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/CAA8C067B9610F2/Vampyres.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/42E47D637337E55/interview_with_Marrianne_Morris_and_Anulka.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/C646C05A25F4921/Vampyres_%28audio_commentary%29.mp3

http://keep2s.cc/file/e8cbbe37e7a4c/Vampyres.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/178cac515de1d/interview_with_Marrianne_Morris_and_Anulka.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/d667e794453de/Vampyres_%28audio_commentary%29.mp3

Language(s):English
Subtitles:none

Paul Newman – Rachel, Rachel (1968)

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Paul Newman made his directorial debut and Newman’s wife, Joanne Woodward, stars as Rachel Cameron, a 35-year-old unmarried schoolteacher who feels as though she’s wasted her life. Rachel’s best friend, Calla Mackie (Estelle Parsons), invites her to attend a religious revival meeting. Here Rachel is swept up in the emotional fervor orchestrated by a young guest preacher (Terry Kiser). This is the first of several cathartic incidents which convince Rachel to kick over the traces and express her own needs and emotions. She has a brief sexual liaison with an old family friend (James Olson), and is delighted at the notion that she might have become pregnant. Rachel ends up alone and childless (her “pregnancy” was nothing more than a benign cyst), but still determined to forge a new life for herself. Based the novel A Jest of God by Margaret Laurence, Rachel, Rachel won New York Film Critics awards for both Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman, and an Oscar nomination for Joanne Woodward.




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French srt
http://subscene.com/subtitles/rachel-rachel/french/208837

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, French (vobsub),French srt

Nancy Meckler – Sister My Sister (1994)

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Such Devoted Sisters
The true story behind “Sister My Sister” has intrigued artists for 50 years, and who can blame them? It is an irresistible dark tale of murder, incest and class struggle, an event so bizarre that a novelist might hesitate to invent it. In 1934, in a provincial village in France, two sisters named Christine and Lea worked as maids for a stern middle-aged matron and her grown daughter. The sisters began an incestuous relationship. One day, when Madame and her daughter returned home, sure to be on a rampage because the iron had blown the fuses in the house, the maids murdered their employers.

“Sister My Sister,” which opens today at Cinema Village, gives this story a far different treatment from its most famous telling, in Jean Genet’s play “The Maids.” This is an emotional Gothic, a psychological horror story that focuses on the sisters’ increasingly tortured relationship in the claustrophobic house. It is a small film, but a chillingly effective one.

From the start, it is clear that this is less a tale of class struggle than of misplaced emotion and twisted psychology. A brief opening sequence shows two little girls, the older inordinately concerned with caring for the younger. The camera then travels along the bloody, curved stairway of the cluttered Victorian house, and flashes back to the day when Lea (Jodhi May) arrived to join her elder sister, Christine (Joely Richardson), at the home of the woman the film calls Mme. Danzard (Julie Walters). The sisters share a bed in a cramped attic room, speaking only to each other, seeing only the demanding Madame and her frumpy daughter, Isabelle (Sophie Thursfield).

Nancy Meckler, the director, and Wendy Kesselman, who based this script on her own play, “My Sister in This House,” create a strong inbred atmosphere by limiting the cast to four characters. Even the male photographer who takes the sisters’ picture is heard but never seen. It is this extreme isolation, the film suggests, that provokes the sisters to turn their thwarted desires toward each other.

Christine is a perfectionist about her work. Lea, it seems, is too young to know much about anything. Christine resents their mother, who sent her out to work at a young age, and is jealously possessive of her sister.

The sisters’ passion develops slowly and discreetly. The film makers realize that what is suggested, or shown briefly, is often more powerful than what a camera might capture by intruding on every private moment. It is Lea who first reaches for her sister physically, and Ms. May is masterly at capturing the psychological mystery behind this story. Is Lea a true innocent, or preternaturally mature and depraved? Ms. Richardson is equally good, as Christine resists what is obviously a forbidden attraction for her, at least for a while. Eventually their affair becomes an obsessive escape and torment for them both.

The film’s major flaw is that Mme. Danzard and Isabelle are so flat and functional. The mother is so self-absorbed she blows out the candle on her own daughter’s birthday cake. Isabelle, a young woman with a Buster Brown haircut, clomps around eating chocolates. Presented as the sisters’ opposites, the Danzards are silly women with benign secrets, nattering away at a card game while in the attic Christine is languorously kissing her sister’s legs. Though “Sister My Sister” is played for its sense of emotional menace rather than sexual titillation, there is enough of that to add an erotic edge.

The strangest twist of all comes at the end, when the film reveals what became of the murderous sisters. Christine died in an insane asylum four years after the killings. Lea served 20 years in prison, then worked as a chambermaid until her death in 1982. Where she got her references is another mystery altogether.
Caryn James, NY Times, June 23, 1995




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/91F76B63B5516C9/sister_my_sister.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/f1b0ad8f33406/sister_my_sister.avi

Spanish srt:
http://www.subdivx.com/X6XMjYwMjU5X-sister-my-sister-1994.html

Language(s):English
Subtitles:Spanish

Tom Kalin – Savage Grace (2007)

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Synopsis:
“Savage Grace,” based on the award winning book, is the incredible true story of Barbara Daly, who married above her class to Brooks Baekeland, heir to the Bakelite plastics fortune. Beautiful, red-headed and charismatic, Barbara is still no match for her well-bred husband. The birth of the couple’s only child, Tony, rocks the uneasy balance in this marriage of extremes. Tony is a failure in his father’s eyes. As he matures and becomes increasingly close to his lonely mother, the seeds for a tragedy of spectacular decadence are sown.

Review:

Based on the real life story of the Baekeland family and the themes of sexuality, socialization, incest, and acceptance, Savage Grace is a richly toned film, but muddles itself in too many inconsistencies to establish what it sets out to accomplish.

The story spans from 1946 to 1972, and follows ex-actress, now socialite Barbara Daly Baekeland (Julianne Moore), who is married to Brooks Baekeland (Stephen Dillane), who is the very wealthy grandson of the actual inventor of plastic. As the film opens in New York City with Barbara now having an infant son named Tony, she still irritates Brooks with her yearning to be accepted in the social rich class society. As the film shifts to numerous European countries and years, a now adult Tony (Eddie Redmayne) sees his parents’ relationship dissolving. Eventually, an ex-fling of Tony named Blanca (Elena Anaya) actually steals away and marries his father. Barbara turns her suffocation for acceptance and happiness to Tony, who struggles to understand his mother and his sexuality. Brooks denounces Tony once he does learn that he is homosexual and Barbara does anything to give him comfort, which includes jumping in bed with him and a bisexual art dealer. Madness and confusion ensues which leads to a tragic and mysterious story of a really challenged and wealthy family.
As one can tell by the synopsis of this film, Savage Grace has a lot of baggage and director Tom Kalin does his best to sort through all of it. Kalin beautifully photographs the film from all the different locations of the family and he does pace the film on its emotions. However, so much indifferent themes hamper the film’s melodrama, and Kalin choices become drenched as well.
Based on the novel by Natalie Robins and Steven M.L. Aronson, screenwriter Howard Rodman also bashes the audience with one more disturbing concept of psycho-biological problem after another. Once Brooks takes off with Blanca, the film shifts to total focus on Barbara and Tony and it almost takes no time to get to the ‘shocking’ climax, with hardly any depth or structural roads to get there. Other choices become bleak as well, such as the drowsy voice over narration by Tony, which supposedly was crucial to the novel, but is a wasted concept in the film. The themes of the film are not for the faint at heart and not for everyone, but it is what happened with this dysfunctional family.
Julianne Moore returns to the screen with her best role in years and she masterfully holds one’s attention as the very complex Barbara. Stephen Dillane is stellar in his few scenes as Brooks, who is embarrassed by his wife and looks for an outlet with his son’s ex-flame. As Tony, Eddie Redmayne struggles with the role and his performance is nearly a cut out cardboard, when his character is the most important to the film. His climatic character discovery is neither surprising nor as effective as the script calls for it to be.
The courage of director Tom Kalin is evident in tackling a story as weird, challenging and disturbing as Savage Grace. The film is made well from a directing standpoint and has a terrific performance by Julianne Moore. However, the script adaptation stumbles and crashes trying to juggle too many elements and structural aspects of this melodramatic real life mystery.
Savage Grace has made its way around the film festival circuit; it opens in the United States on May 30, 2008 and in the United Kingdom on July 18, 2008.




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http://keep2s.cc/file/9ed65b36cdebb/Savage_Grace.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/9a3b7fa52becf/Savage_Grace.srt

Language(s):English, French, Spanish
Subtitles:English

Do not buy or renew your keep2share account. For some reasons, we’ve decided to stop uploading files to keep2share after December 2015.

Maria Maggenti – The Incredibly True Adventure of Two Girls in Love (1995)

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This enjoyable film combines features of teen movie, coming-of-age film, and lesbian flic. Made by a female director, with attractive actors, it is a role-reversal farce. The appeal is not restricted to lesbians – this is particularly suitable for the male audience, and not only because of the erotically effective love scenes (and the undeniable fact that the two main actresses are well worth looking at). Most importantly the comedy works well. There is an intriguing reversal of roles. The white girl is poor, and the black girl is rich.The poor girl belongs to a sort of “family” of lesbians that is warm and caring, while the black girl’s parents are separated and she lives with her mother. There is the gift from the rich girl of Walt Whitman’s poetry collection “Leaves of Grass” to the poor girl, who reads some of the poems while smoking grass and wakes up to the meaning of the words. The story has a satisfying ending, allowing everyone to get on with their lives.




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/ABF1DEB8E8AF9E0/The_Incredibly_True_Adventure_of_Two_Girls_In_Love.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/b47474af1cc08/The_Incredibly_True_Adventure_of_Two_Girls_In_Love.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Luigi Comencini – La Donna della domenica aka The Sunday Woman (1975)

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Police commissioner Santamaria is investigating the murdering of the ambiguous architect Mr. Garrone. The investigations soon drive him into the Torino’s high society. Santamaria suspect Anna Carla and at the same time falls in love for her. Lello is the lover of Massimo, a homosexual platonic friend of Anna Carla. He is following another direction in order to find out the truth, and his results are confusing the Policeman. But another murdering happens…





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/8DE395A70133BCF/La_Donna_Della_Domenica_%28L_Comencini_1975%29.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5F99E4995A44597/La_Donna_Della_Domenica_%28L_Comencini_1975%29.srt

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English


Claude Chabrol – La demoiselle d’honneur aka The Bridesmaid (2004)

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A hard-working young man meets and falls in love with his sister’s bridesmaid. He soon finds out how disturbed she really is.

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the bridesmaid (First Run) Going to a new Chabrol film these days is like sitting down with an old friend who will tell you another one of his stories. Chabrol has been making films since 1958: the latest of his more than fifty features is The Bridesmaid, and another one has already been finished. He has co-written or co-adapted many of his pictures, and he has also played bit parts in some of them (as well as in the films of others). I have seen a lot of Chabrol’s films, and many others must share my sense that much of my filmgoing life is threaded throughout with his work. He has always been a director who felt that moving ahead was at least as important as polishing a single work. This has sometimes let him present less than his best, but the sheer sweep of his career warmly compensates.By now a Chabrol film has become something of a family affair. His wife, Aurore, was the script supervisor of The Bridesmaid; one son, Thomas, plays a small part; another son, Matthieu, wrote the score; his stepdaughter, Cecile Maistre, was the first assistant director. Chabrol’s career even began in family style. In the 1950s, his first wife inherited some money.The two of them were then able to produce his first picture, Le Beau Serge, and they also helped to launch what became, with Chabrol as a leader, the New Wave. Early on, too, he showed his chief thematic interest. With Eric Rohmer–and before either of them had begun directing features–he wrote a book on Hitchcock. Much more than with Rohmer, the Hitchcock influence has often been discussed in regard to Chabrol’s work because he is so continually concerned with crime and guilt and shadowed lives. Obviously among so many films by one man there are variations in quality. An occasional picture, like his Madame Bovary, has been a dud. On the other hand, Chabrol has reached such heights–or should one say depths?–as This Man Must Die, about a man who hunts down the hit-andrun driver who killed his small son, and Landru, based on the same character as Chaplin’s Monsieur Verdoux. The Bridesmaid ranks high in the Chabrol roster. The first two minutes affirm his mastery. The film opens with a ride down a seaside street in an uninteresting neighborhood that ends at a house in front of which stand some people and a television reporter. She tells us of a crime that has been committed there. As she talks, the image converts into the screen of a television set, and the camera pulls back into the living room of some people who are watching. Thus, gently, we are reminded that crime is ready to appear anywhere, at any time, and that this imminence is nowadays a subliminal part of ordinary lives. In our minds, that opening becomes increasingly freighted as the film unfolds. This is the home of Christine, a widowed hairdresser in her fifties, and her three children. Philippe, in his late twenties, is an executive in a construction firm; Sophie, twenty-three, is soon to be married; Patricia is a typically “difficult” adolescent. All of them are going to dinner that evening with Christine’s boyfriend, Gerard, a man in his fifties, and Christine asks if she may give Gerard the life-size sculptured head of a woman in their garden that her friend has admired. All agree, so they take it along, and we can be sure that this head will figure in what is to come. (The closing credits roll over that head.) Subtle touches abound. Early instance: Gerard had not expected Christine to bring her children to dinner. When they arrive, he swiftly closes the door to the dining room where a table has been set and takes them all to a restaurant. That swift door-closing is characterization by cinematic means. At Sophie’s wedding Philippe meets Senta, the bridegroom’s cousin, who is a bridesmaid. (She adopted her name from The Flying Dutchman.) She is quiet but not reticent. This is quickly demonstrated when she follows Philippe home–he had to leave the wedding early–and very soon maneuvers him into bed. Their affair continues at Senta’s house, which she owns. Though it is large, she lives in the crummy basement. On the floor above, her stepmother, a dance teacher, practices the tango with her partner; above that are large rooms filled with white-sheeted furniture. Senta’s cool-hot intensity, the force with which she tells Philippe that she has been waiting for him all her life, that she loved him at first sight, is intoxicating to Philippe and lifts him to her state of passion. In the course of time she recounts, truthfully or not, her lurid past in other countries. She says that she is now a would-be actress in (nearby) Paris and that, when she can’t get acting work, she poses for porn photos. He accepts all these matters as part of her unique being. After they are deeply involved with each other, Senta tells Philippe that they have reached the plane where each of them must kill someone to prove the sublimity of their love. This pseudoNietzschean formula, elevating them beyond good and evil, at first amuses him. But she is serious, and he is so fevered to please her that he pretends compliance. Next day a murder is committed down on the docks, and, using it as a convenience, he boasts to her that he did it. She believes him. She then feels that she must fulfill her obligation. The screenplay, adapted by Pierre Leccia and Chabrol from a novel by Ruth Rendell, dramatizes intoxication by passion–how it can take lovers, particularly when one of them is already quite strange, into places that had been unimaginable. Chabrol surrounds this affair with the quite mundane troubles of Philippe’s family, and these troubles have a double effect. They seem small compared with his consuming affair with Senta, and they also seem precious as fingerholds on normalcy. Chabrol also makes a character out of Senta’s weird house itself, where the tango sometimes goes on above the darkening lovers. Chabrol insured the power of this dangerously difficult film with perfect casting. The two lovers are so well acted that their story–and its finish–are incredibly convincing. Benoit Magimel, who was Isabelle Huppert’s young lover in The Piano Teacher, gives heat to all the shades of feeling that come Philippe’s way. Laura Smet, unbeautiful but sexy, creates a Senta who is driven by forces that she can’t control and is glad of it. Charming Aurore Clement plays Philippe’s mother, just good enough to be true. Matthieu Chabrol’s score winds enticing filaments of sound through the film. Chabrols, onward! Send us your next picture, please, along with word that you are making another.









http://www.nitroflare.com/view/623969964B01014/La.demoiselle.d.honneur.AKA.The.Bridesmaid.2004.DVDRip.x264-HANDJOB.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French

John Cromwell – Caged (1950)

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Caged, considered the best woman’s prison film ever made, represents a union between realistic socially conscious drama and the more stylized world of film noir. Marie, (Eleanor Parker), is sentenced to prison for helping her husband in a small robbery. The prison is run by the sadistic matron Evelyn (Hope Emerson) who is secure in her position due to corrupt political influence. The film shows Marie’s slow disillusionment with society and her eventual decision to become a prostitute in order to gain parole after observing her friend and fellow inmate Kitty (Betty Garde) lose her sanity and murder their oppressor Evelyn. With this uncompromisingly pessimistic statement on human nature, John Cromwell reaches his peak as a director. Under his expert direction, Eleanor Parker gives the best performance of her career and creates a convincing metamorphosis from a innocent young girl to a hardened criminal. Her performance is nuanced, low-keyed and emotionally charged. Equally impressive is Cromwell’s visual realization of the claustrophobia of prison life, aided by the high-contrast photography of Carl Guthrie. This excellent, grim drama is uncompromising in its refusal to sentimentalize the plight of Marie as a victim or to absolve her of her role in her fate, nor does it absolve society as it shows the results of desperation and brutalization on human dignity. — Linda Rasmussen






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/C92EF979E91206A/Caged.1950.John_Cromwell.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/851F40425AF0E74/Caged.1950.John_Cromwell.idx
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A8C43A50433EEB9/Caged.1950.John_Cromwell.sub

Language(s):English
Subtitles:French, English, Spanish vobsubs

Lizzie Borden – Born in Flames (1983)

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Plot Summary for
Born in Flames (1983)
Set ten years after the most peaceful revolution in United States history, a revolution in which a socialist government gains power, this films presents a dystopia in which the issues of many progressive groups – minorities, liberals, gay rights organizations, feminists – are ostensibly dealt with by the government, and yet there are still problems with jobs, with gender issues, with governmental preference and violence. In New York City, in this future time, a group of women decide to organize and mobilize, to take the revolution farther than any man – and many women – ever imagined in their lifetimes.




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/D312CFB7143EA8E/Born_In_Flames.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

Donna Deitch – Desert Hearts (1985)

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It is 1950s Nevada, and Professor Vivian Bell arrives to get a divorce. She’s unsatisfied with her marriage, and feels out of place at the ranch she stays on, she finds herself increasingly drawn to Cay Rivers, an open and self-assured lesbian, and the ranchowner’s daughter. The emotions released by their developing intimacy, and Vivian’s insecurities about her feelings towards Cay, are played out against a backdrop of rocky landscapes and country and western songs.

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Comments from IMDB
This is one of the first Hollywood movies to ever explore Lesbianism, so why shouldn’t I be allowed to shout it out? Vivian Bell, played by Helen Shaver, arrives into 1950’s Fresno for a quickie divorce, boarding with a friendly mom-like landlord and her employees of her ranch. The landlord also has a step-daughter, Cay, who Bell is curiously magnetted too, and vice versa. Soon, Vivian is surprised to find her falling for Cay’s advances and are soon lovers. But there is consequences to this, after all this is 1950’s Fresno we’re talking about here.

All the cast is great here, especially Patricia Charbonneau, who has quite a debut here, and Audra Linley, playing the landlady who I absolutely didn’t recognize. (She’s Mrs Roper on Three’s Company fer crying out loud!) Amazingly brisk and enjoyable, I haven’t seen a movie in a long time that I enjoyed without checking the time to see how much was left.






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/20156B8BCC6C850/Desert_Hearts.avi

Language(s):English dual audio with commentary
Subtitles:none

Lisa Cholodenko – High Art (1998)

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AMG: Lisa Cholodenko wrote and directed this lesbian-themed drama, winner of the 1998 Sundance Film Festival’s Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award. Ambitious photography magazine associate editor Syd (Radha Mitchell) has a ho-hum relationship with James (Gabriel Mann). Investigating a ceiling leak, she enters the apartment of her neighbor, retired photographer Lucy Berliner (Ally Sheedy), who lives with former Fassbinder actress Greta (Patricia Clarkson), a heroin addict. The friendship between the worldly Lucy and the naive, insecure Syd ripens into an affair, one destined to change the lives of both women.

Review A rather draggy melodrama bolstered by some superb acting, Lisa Cholodenko’s debut effort nevertheless has its finger on the pulse of the disaffected New York artist, and when High Art explores that walk of life, it is indelible. Ally Sheedy gives a fierce, subtly hypnotic performance in the lead role, her haunted expressions never before put to better use on the big screen. Her lesbian photographer character is anything but a stereotype, and Sheedy gives the role amazing reserves of feeling without resorting to unnecessary pathos. Radha Mitchell is rather wan as her chief love interest, but Patricia Clarkson is mordantly funny and surprisingly affecting as her German lover and drug-fiend pal. If High Art took itself a little less seriously, it might have been more involving as a whole, but Cholodenko has fashioned an interesting tale filled with recognizable truths about the nature of drug addiction and the uneasy effect it has on a community of artists. In an unforeseen comeback role, Sheedy raised quite a few eyebrows for her work here, no place more so than at the 1999 Independent Spirit Awards, where she surprisingly picked up the Best Actress trophy and gave a lengthy, profanity-laden speech about — among other things — her resurrection from straight-to-video fodder. (Jason Clark)




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/5E5D930E2D3D3B7/High.Art.1998.iNT.DVDRip.XviD-PoD.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/B34E20D2EEDA71D/High.Art.1998.iNT.DVDRip.XviD-PoD.idx
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/6EAE6F9330B8DE2/High.Art.1998.iNT.DVDRip.XviD-PoD.sub

Language(s):English
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish, Chinese

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