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Olivier Assayas – Clouds of Sils Maria (2014)

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Quote:
At the peak of her international career, Maria Enders is asked to perform in a revival of the play that made her famous twenty years ago. But back then she played the role of Sigrid, an alluring young girl who disarms and eventually drives her boss Helena to suicide. Now she is being asked to step into the other role, that of the older Helena. She departs with her assistant to rehearse in Sils Maria; a remote region of the Alps. A young Hollywood starlet with a penchant for scandal is to take on the role of Sigrid, and maria finds herself on the other side of the mirror, face to face with an ambiguously charming woman who is, in essence, an unsettling reflection of herself.








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http://www.nitroflare.com/view/085B34CEBA7A1CF/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part2.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/F8BDADB86ECA574/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part3.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/07A212AC8C20CF9/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part4.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/BAB30A095D1753F/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part5.rar
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/2F598F370474408/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part6.rar

http://keep2s.cc/file/5c40f1a106b8d/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part1.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/abda9c2fb94bb/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part2.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/c42d7c8c0e512/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part3.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/9b12c1d316ad8/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part4.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/706592c7965b3/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part5.rar
http://keep2s.cc/file/28b5b7d886608/Clouds.Of.Sils.Maria.2014.720p.BluRay.x264.DTS-RARBG.part6.rar

Language(s):English, French, German, Swiss German
Subtitles:None

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Rainer Werner Fassbinder – Bolwieser aka The Stationmaster’s Wife (1977)

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Jim’s Reviews/Fassbinder
From Slant:
By Fernando F. Croce
October 4, 2005

The Stationmaster’s Wife’s first image sets up the template for Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s magnificently excruciating study of romantic degradation-frozen in embrace over the opening credits, newlyweds Xaver (Kurt Raab) and Hanni Bolwieser (Elisabeth Trissenaar) kiss and grope ardently, until she abruptly pushes him away (“We don’t want a baby for the moment, all right?”). Watched from outside the bedroom window, the couple is framed in pitiless flat space, Fassbinder’s camera movements terse and entrapping, distilling the director’s maxim of love as “the best, most insidious, most effective instrument of social repression.” The love is Xaver’s, the titular stationmaster and arguably the greatest of Raab’s stump-like petit bourgeois jobs for the director; infatuated with his new wife, he’s unable (or, given Fassbinder’s preference for characters implicit in their own misery, unwilling) to believe the sensation-hungry Hanni is enjoying affairs with various men in their provincial burg in late-1920s Bavaria. Actually, “enjoying” is a misleading word: Hanni’s promiscuity, rather than liberating her, plunges depths of self-loathing, as when, fresh from some afternoon delight with handsome butcher Merkl (Bernhard Helfrich), she gazes at her new Garbo locks in the mirror and spits at her reflection. Venomous gossip promptly spreads throughout the town, derisive cackling ringing in Xaver’s ears as he leaves the pub and marches home to confront his wife, only to be inevitably shouted back into hen-pecked submission.

The pattern’s repetition evokes a ritualized circle of mutual torment, which, set to the filmmaker’s heightened choreography, can be compared to a delirious waltz. Fassbinder nudges the point at an early costume party, as Xaver watches Hanni twirl with Merkl and is told by a guest “it’s a shame you don’t dance,” although the sequence’s most important detail lies in the same man’s eye-patch costume, further sign of the husband’s obscured vision. “Blind in both eyes” is the blunt verdict of a cleaning lady (played, naturally, by Fassbinder’s mother) for the man who refuses to believe his wife is fucking other men, yet the remark could just as easily apply to Xaver’s unquestioning acceptance of society norms in exchange for an uniform and a handful of workers to order around, or, for that matter, Weimar Germany’s myopic playing into the hands of the Nazi regime ominously waiting in the wings. Fassbinder obfuscates the characters’ visions with a panoply of curtains and grids, but to call the film misogynistic would be no less short-sighted: Merkl and Hanni are locked in a continuous cycle in which the wife’s so-called shrewish nature is given just as much emotional fullness as the husband’s regressive masochism, and, indeed, Hanni is arguably the strongest, most assertive female character of Fassbinder’s late-career period pieces (tellingly, Hanni is the narrative’s focal point in the original 200-plus minute version made for German TV).

Adapted from Oskar Maria Graf’s novel, the film is often compared to Madame Bovary, but the overall effect is closer to that of Von Sternberg’s The Devil is a Woman, where a couple not only remains obsessively stuck in infatuation-degradation gear, but the visual beauty of the images is rigorously questioned by purposeful dissonance, surface lyricism ruthlessly undercut by a caustic inquiry into the nerves underneath. (Fassbinder’s acid-bath is aural as much as visual-see the shrieking pet bird subtly placed in the domestic skirmishes.) Raab’s lumpy cuckold is eventually dragged to prison while Trissenaar’s hausfrau takes off with her greasy hairdresser (Udo Kier), yet even when the loop is finally broken, the characters are still unable to sort hate from love-Hanni sobbingly rushes to get one final kiss from Xaver then later files for divorce, while Xaver’s prison rants against Hanni invariably shift from growling threats to yearning endearments. The naked, transcendental catharsis of In a Year of 13 Moons is still one year away for the director; the characters in The Stationmaster’s Wife are to remain incarcerated in the artist’s cruel-tender gaze, denied freedom yet exalted into a cosmic luminosity, puppets yet irretrievable projections of Fassbinder himself.







http://www.nitroflare.com/view/AC56FFCCD37C562/The_Stationmaster%27s_Wife.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/602880a220e07/The_Stationmaster%27s_Wife.mkv

This is an upgrade.Old rip here

Language(s):German
Subtitles:English

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Yasuzô Masumura – Manji (1964)

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Synopsis

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A dutiful, unhappy lawyer’s wife falls in love with a young, mysterious woman she encounters at an art class. Soon their affair involves her husband and the young woman’s impotent lover and together the four slowly descent into a web of tangled passions.

Masumura was the first Japanese student to attend Italy’s prestigious Centro film school, whose alumni include the likes of Michaelangelo Antonioni, Liliana Cavani and Dino de Laurentiis. Filmed in glorious scope, Masumura fills his screen with simple, yet effective compositions. The direction is even, with his cast of players, most of whom have a long association with the director, embodying their roles wonderfully, exuding the passion and turbulence caused by their tangled affair. The exposition is well paced, as twists in the plot emerge with each meeting. The melodrama is high in true Japanese fashion, as pacts and allegiances shift the balance of power throughout the picture. While able to capture the sensuality of his subjects, Masumura does so without excessive voyeurism or blatant sexuality. The result is an exquisite photoplay, rich in the pitfalls of human desire, with interesting and dire unexpected.

With a masterful sense of exposition, Yasuzo Masumura’s Manji delves into the taboo of forbidden sexuality, weaving an intricate web of circumstances and relationships from which the only escape is in death. Splendid performances, exquisite cinematography, and an engaging storyline combine to create a very interesting film. Its only drawback for western audiences may be its reference to cultural ideologies, whose societal importance may not be as easily perceived by cultures less steeped in tradition.









http://www.nitroflare.com/view/449DD580C474381/Manji_%E2%80%93_1964%2C_Yasuzo_Masumura.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/9d86a93beb8ad/Manji_%D0%91%E2%94%80%E2%8C%A0_1964%2C_Yasuzo_Masumura.mkv

Language(s):Japanese
Subtitles:English

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Jan Svankmajer – Kyvadlo, jáma a nadeje AKA the pendulum, the pit and hope (1984)

Jean Valère – Mont-Dragon (1970)

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Quote:
For the sake of completeness with regard to the Jacques Brel (feature films) filmography as an actor, I’m uploading this movie though it is a poor quality rip, presumably from a vhs.

Mont-Dragon is probably the most obscure of the movies in which Jacques Brel starred. This goes for its current unavailability as well for its dark and filled with perversion plot. It’s a typical stylish movie of the beginning of the 70s, with many at-the-time shocking dialogues and situations that nowadays has become very much out-of-time and out of fashion, and with the recurrent aim to reveal the hidden dirty affairs of the bourgeoisie.

Biographers said that Brel himself was quite bored during the shooting, nonetheless it served him to gain more knowledge in making movies in view of its debut as a director. Surely his acting is a bit too emphasized, as his character, led by a sense of vengeance and hate, is totally detestable and thus very far from Brel’s attitude.

To confirm that this movie was at complete pace with its time, Mont-Dragon was a good box-office success, with more than 400.000 tickets sold only in the Parisian region, more than La Bande à Bonnot and Mon oncle Benjamin together (info taken fron Marc Robine’ biography on Jacques Brel).




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/CE0D1591961622B/4_-_Mont_Dragon_%281970%29.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/8428af29048e2/4_-_Mont_Dragon_%281970%29.avi

Language(s):French
Subtitles:none

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Alejandro González Iñárritu – Birdman (2014)

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Erden Kiral – Hakkâri’de bir mevsim AKA Eine Saison in Hakkari (1983)

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The movie tells the story of a teacher who spends one winter in a mountain village of Hakkari, a city in the farest South-eastern vorner of the Turkey. Erden Kıral depicts his struggle for teaching Turkish to children who can only speak Kurdish and the loneliness of Zazi in a poetic way and also using the landscape as a further character. The screenplat is based on the novel by Ferit Edgü and adapted by Onat Kutlar with contributions from Tezer Özlü, another famous Turkish writer. The film was awarded with Silver Berlin Bear at 1983.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/16F04A5A2F4F848/Hakkari%27de_Bir_Mevsim.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/8F2A8A1CAE86A30/Hakkari

http://keep2s.cc/file/21f5781a2e3f9/Hakkari%27de_Bir_Mevsim.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/6b414063b3ae9/Hakkari

Language(s):Turkish
Subtitles:Turkish

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Gus Van Sant – Paranoid Park (2007)

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synopsis

A teenage skateboarder has a run-in with a security guard that results in the man’s death. Confused, fearful, and evasive, the teen wanders the streets of Portland as his life takes a turn for the worse in director Gus Van Sant’s screen adaptation of author Blake Nelson’s grim coming-of-age tome. Alex (Gabe Nevins) is a withdrawn 16-year-old boy who has recently discovered Paranoid Park — a massive skate park in Portland, OR. The Portland skate punks built Paranoid Park so they could have a place to cruise the concrete without being hassled by the cops. One day, after befriending a local skater and anarchist at the park, Alex decides that a little adventure might be just the thing to help him forget about his problems back home. When Alex and his new friend attempt to hop a train and a security guard gives chase, tragedy strikes so quickly that the two teens are barely able to comprehend what has just happened. In the aftermath of the fatal accident, one man is robbed of life and two teens are left to ponder the consequences of their youthful recklessness. Alex doesn’t think that anyone will believe him if he explains how events really unfolded that night, but why would anyone have cause to think he wasn’t telling the truth in the first place? As the police launch an investigation into the death and Alex begins to express himself in a deeply personal diary, the audience is able to experience the pain and confusion of adolescence from the perspective of a young boy who was only seeking to escape from reality when suddenly confronted by the concept of mortality. from allmovie.com





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http://www.nitroflare.com/view/EDA3A28A04262B9/Paranoid_Park_%282007%29-DVDRip-Xvid-French.zip

http://keep2s.cc/file/d2df0d750c65a/Paranoid_Park_%282007%29-DVDRip-Xvid.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/8f531c97e1f4c/Paranoid_Park_%282007%29-DVDRip-Xvid-French.zip

Eng srt:

http://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitles/3268044/paranoid-park-en

Portuguese srt:

http://www.opensubtitles.org/pt/subtitles/3268655/paranoid-park-pb

Language(s):English
Subtitles:French (VobSub),Eng srt,Portuguese srt

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Tim Blake Nelson – The Grey Zone (2001)

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At once brutally realistic and highly theatrical, Tim Blake Nelson’s screen version of his play “The Grey Zone” may well evoke the mechanized horror in the bowels of the Nazi death camps more vividly than any fictional film to date.

But its staccato, Mamet-style dialogue exchanges, breathless pacing and remarkably healthy, well-fed-looking actors create a cumulative sense of artificiality that seriously undercuts the devastating effect clearly being sought in this fictionalized dramatization of the only organized uprising ever attempted by the prisoners at Auschwitz.

Laudably avoiding cheap sentimentality and phony heroics in its aggressive investigation of an all-but-impossible moral quandary, this is a relentless, hard-edged, tough-minded picture that, even with supportive reviews, faces an uphill commercial struggle upon planned release by Lions Gate next spring.

Resisting any “Hollywood” impulse to provide uplift, fourth feature by Nelson (“Eye of God,” “Kansas,” the current “O”) centers upon the Sonderkommandos, Jews who helped prepare their fellow prisoners for the gas chamber and then “processed” their remains afterward; in exchange for their cooperation with the Nazis, members of these “special squads” were given privileges and immeasurably better living conditions than the norm, although they knew that they, too, would follow in their doomed comrades’ footsteps within four months at most.

Out of this wrenching and fundamentally hopeless dilemma arises the pivot of the story — the only known concentration camp prisoners’ revolt, on Oct. 7, 1944. Essentially framing the dramatic argument are two points of view — that of Dr. Nyiszli (Allan Corduner), a brilliant, fastidious Jew whose pact with the devil has him working on medical experiments with the notorious Dr. Mengele and who believes that “We’re all just trying to make it to the next day,” and that of Nazi Oberschaarfher Erich Muhsfeldt (Harvey Keitel), the blunt and dissolute crematorium overseer who despises the Jews for being such “easy” and willing victims.

With a low industrial hum churning ominously in the background as the gas chambers and ovens relentlessly mete out oblivion, a number of the mostly Hungarian prisoners in Auschwitz II-Birkenau argue over their planned revolt. These are not the meek, sheeplike inmates of many Holocaust pictures, but feisty, combative men who know their fates but believe they might be able to take part of the Third Reich down with them. To this end, makeshift weapons, a few guns and some gunpowder smuggled in by some women (Natasha Lyonne, Mira Sorvino) at a nearby munitions factory are being amassed, although there is much to-and-fro about goals, tactics, timing and so on.

Meanwhile, the 12th Sonderkommando, which includes Hoffman (David Arquette), Abramowics (Steve Buscemi), Rosenthal (David Chandler, who appeared in the stage production) and Schlermer (Daniel Benzali), goes about its grisly task of jamming prisoners into the death chambers, shoveling the corpses into ovens and disposing of the ashes. Obviously desensitized to an almost inhuman degree by his work, Hoffman is nonetheless stirred when a 14-year-old girl is found to have miraculously survived the gassing; he hides her from the Nazis, and her presence both complicates and inspires the rebellion that the prisoners are plotting.

The setting and situation are intrinsically compelling, to be sure, and visually the emphasis is on intense realism; working in near-full-sized replicas of sections of the camp on location in Bulgaria, Nelson and lenser Russell Lee Fine aggressively push the camera to the very depths of this hell on Earth, into the barracks, anterooms, gas chambers, ovens, graves and prison yards where executions for infractions were regularly carried out.

There are also various macabre and ironic touches — classical music being played by prisoners to “welcome” fresh arrivals, an enraged Hoffman beating an upstart newcomer to death despite the Sonderkommandos’ proud self-distinction of doing no actual killing, the arrival of Allied bombers overhead merely inspiring the Nazis to set a faster schedule for killing Jews. As for the rebellion itself, it’s a briefly rousing but ultimately sorry affair with a grim aftermath.

The use of American accents for the Hungarians and German inflections for the Nazis works plausibly enough, but Nelson’s dialogue is predominantly composed of short sentences spat out with speed and precision; conversational tones and underlying thought processes don’t exist. Effect of verbal unreality is augmented by the generally hyper-active mode of the thesping, although on a case-by-case basis the actors — notably Arquette in an unusually dramatic role, Buscemi as a professional cynic and Keitel (who also came onboard as an exec producer) as the bloated, thoroughly jaded crematorium overseer — do solid, intense work. The character of Dr. Nyiszli, on whose memoirs the play and script are partly based, stands apart for his meticulous demeanor and reasoned behavior under enormous pressure, and Corduner commandingly portrays him as if he were acting in a particularly corrosive Harold Pinter play.

by Todd McCarthy





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/771F9519127A4A5/dmd-greyzone.avi

http://keep2s.cc/file/9f34e1adbbfc7/dmd-greyzone.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson – Puberty (2014)

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Maddin’s frequent collaborator Evan Johnson (who is co-director on The Forbidden Room) presents four visuals essays, ranging from one and a half to four minutes in length: Puberty, Colours, Elms, and Cold, each representing a visual exploration of a specific theme.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/50B6323E6D39BA1/Guy_Maddin_%26_Evan_Johnson_-_%282014%29_Puberty.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/ee44bd88ce73e/Guy_Maddin___Evan_Johnson_-_%282014%29_Puberty.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson – Elms (2014)

Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson – Colours (2014)

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Maddin’s frequent collaborator Evan Johnson (who is co-director on The Forbidden Room) presents four visuals essays, ranging from one and a half to four minutes in length: Puberty, Colours, Elms, and Cold, each representing a visual exploration of a specific theme.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/145E7CA443C6032/Guy_Maddin_%26_Evan_Johnson_-_%282014%29_Colours.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/470d56cf69a02/Guy_Maddin___Evan_Johnson_-_%282014%29_Colours.mkv

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Guy Maddin & Evan Johnson – Cold (2014)

Sergei M. Eisenstein – Stachka AKA Strike (1925)

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Russia, 1912. Sick of the conditions under which they have to toil for a meagre salary, the workers at a factory are on the brink of rebellion. The flashpoint comes when one of their number hangs himself after having been unjustly accused of stealing a tool by his foreman. The workers walk out on mass, refusing to return until their managers have agreed to their terms. The factory owners, fat industrialists with a taste for luxury, are infuriated by this illegal revolt and resolve to bring the workers to heel – by any means possible…

It was whilst he was engaged with the Proletkult Theatre in Moscow that a young theatre director and film theorist named Sergei Eisenstein conceived a series of films that would celebrate the Russian revolution. The first of these would be Strike, a piece of pure Communist propaganda that showed the necessity for the proletariat to work together to overcome exploitation by their capitalist paymasters. Whilst the series was not completed as intended, it did provide Eisenstein with subject matter for two other films – Battleship Potemkin (1925) and October (1928). These three films established Eisenstein as the most important filmmaker of the Soviet Union and earned him his reputation as one of the greatest cineastes of all time.

What is most striking about Eisenstein’s early films is their sheer emotional intensity and energy, which the director achieves through his ingenious editing techniques, known as montage. The sequence in which the strike commences, with the workers throwing down their tools and storming out of the factory, consists of numerous frantic short cuts edited together in such a way that you can feel the adrenalin surge and hear the sounds of a world falling into anarchy. There are no individual characters a spectator can identify with, but his sympathies are well and truly with the collective mass of the oppressed who dare to take a stand against their exploiters.

A later sequence in the film illustrates one of the best known examples of what Eisenstein termed dialectic montage – the juxtaposition of unrelated shots to create an impression which is far more than the sum of the individual shots. Here, explicit images of cattle being butchered are inter-cut with pictures of the striking workers being shot dead by Cossack soldiers. The visceral impact of the former magnifies the senseless brutality of the latter, thereby accentuating the emotional response of the audience.

As in his subsequent Soviet propaganda films, Eisenstein uses shocking images abundantly in this film to reinforce his political messages. One of these, which appears in several of his films, is the thoughtless killing of a small child – the innocence of the child confers on its killer, and those he serves, the mask of Satan himself. Whilst much of the symbolism is crude and painfully obvious, it is hard to sit through an Eisenstein film without becoming involved, both emotionally and intellectually, and feeling a very real sense of anger against the tyrannous regime depicted in the film.

Strike is an extraordinary first film and was quite unlike anything seen in cinema up until this point. Few films prior to this had anything like its impact; it has a sense of realism, drama and immediacy that seizes the spectator in an iron grip, and never lets go. We sympathise with the bitterness of the workers before the strike, we sense their desperation when they begin to go hungry, and we feel only anger when the forces of capitalism begin a war against them that they cannot win. You can argue about the ethics of an artist manipulating his audience in such a flagrant manner (particularly when the Soviet system which Eisenstein was happy to glorify ultimately proved to be little better than what went before it), but this film demonstrates the power of cinema to convey a point of view and possibly alter the way we think. (James Travers)











http://filepost.com/files/e27cf317/Strike.avi
http://filepost.com/files/4c741a99/Strike_(En).srt
http://filepost.com/files/d933234c/Strike_(Fr).rar

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/37B2682F303BD3F/Strike.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/724EA2C78B9A862/Strike_%28En%29.srt
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/F63DE3640CF5A9E/Strike_%28Fr%29.rar

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http://keep2s.cc/file/25b53eb1bc6e3/Strike_%28En%29.srt
http://keep2s.cc/file/f6508641b4e0c/Strike_%28Fr%29.rar

spanish srt.

http://www.opensubtitles.org/es/subtitles/3859172/stachka-es

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

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Mélanie Laurent – Respire (2014)

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Plot:

It is tale of two teenage girls who develop an intense and dangerous friendship. Charlie is a 17-year-old girl tortured by doubt, disillusionment and solitude. When the beautiful and self-confident Sarah arrives and the two become inseparable, Charlie is thrilled to feel alive, fulfilled and invincible in their intense friendship. But as Sarah tires of Charlie and begins to look elsewhere for a new friend, their friendship takes an ominous turn.





http://www.nitroflare.com/view/E85B3D4E6FCC67E/Respire.2014.720p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H.264-iNViSiVEiS.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/146c47a6749eb/Respire.2014.720p.WEB-DL.DD5.1.H.264-iNViSiVEiS.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:english, spanish, brazilian portuguese

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Hsiao-hsien Hou – Nanguo Zaijan, Nanguo AKA Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996)

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After spending much of the decade making films about Taiwan’s complex and troubled history, Hou Hsiao Hsien turns his attention to its money-obsessed present with this gangster drama. Tattooed mobster, Kao (Jack Kao), and his quick-tempered, aptly named protégé, Flathead (Lim Giong), along with their girlfriends, Ying (Hsu Kuei-ying) and Pretzel (Annie Shizuka Inoh), are desperately trying to make it big. Their master plan is open a disco in Shanghai, but that scheme seems less and less likely with each call they get from their cell phone. Corrupt mainland potentates want a king’s ransom in kickbacks while Pretzel racked up a king’s ransom of debt herself at the mahjong table, prompting her to make a half-hearted suicide attempt. To make ends meet, these would-be entrepreneurs make a stab at swindling the government over swine — selling sows when they are supposed to be the more valuable studs. They wine and dine the farmers in rural backwater Chiayi only to get cut out of the deal and kidnapped by the corrupt police. (All Movie)

Goodbye South Goodbye opens to the image of a dour and impassive entrepreneur and marginal gangster named Gao (Jack Gao), his volatile and image-conscious associate, Flathead (Giong Lim), and a lackadaisical, drug addicted occasional prostitute named Pretzel (Annie Shizuka Inoh) riding on a passenger train to an unspecified destination. Gao receives a telephone call, but is unable to obtain a clear signal from his cellular phone, and loses contact. It is a subtle reflection of the protagonists’ own unarticulated sense of profound disconnection. Without a clear sense of purpose or direction, Gao and his friends seemingly exist only through the pursuit of money: anonymous transactions, back room gambling, get-rich-quick schemes, ill conceived business ventures, exploiting government subsidies, and racketeering. Alone with his girlfriend Ying (Hsu Kuei-Ying), Gao reveals his latest plan to finalize an investment in Shenyang to open a restaurant as a means of getting into the profitable entertainment business with his friends, rationalizing that their success is guaranteed as long as they have the proper “relationships”. Yet in a later, subtly humorous scene, the friends are shown operating their own restaurant, and quickly find themselves ill suited, unmotivated, and incompetent in managing the day to day affairs of the business, as Flathead shirks his duties by impolitely barking out orders in front of customers, and Pretzel attempts to convince the patrons into accepting an incorrect drink order. Despite their inexhaustible quest for money, their ultimate dream proves to be undefined, intangible, and ultimately elusive.

Hou Hsiao Hsien presents a visually breathtaking, hypnotic, and understatedly poignant examination of rootlessness, secularity, and alienation in Goodbye South Goodbye. Using a kinetic, Western-influenced soundtrack, long takes, and mesmerizing, interstitial traveling shots, Hou encapsulates the fluidity of movement as a visual metaphor for the escapism and drug induced haze of the aimless protagonists: the image of a constant velocity train traversing the railroad tracks; Gao, Flathead, and Pretzel weaving through near empty suburban streets on motorcycles; the color tinted perspective from a windshield as a car navigates through traffic. Through the characters’ repeated pursuit of oblivion, Hou captures the transience and generational disconnection of contemporary Taiwanese from their traditional and cultural past. Inevitably, Goodbye South Goodbye is a haunting reflection of the confusion and pain of a lost national identity – an intoxicating elegy of motion and stasis, modernization and tradition, hope and nihilism. (Strictly film)








http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A4D8795230397D2/Goodbye_South%2C_Goodbye.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/99AF293DCD24961/Goodbye_South%2C_Goodbye_Subs.rar

http://keep2s.cc/file/8f6e52e5d9bbf/Goodbye_South%2C_Goodbye.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/bb42e411b1895/Goodbye_South%2C_Goodbye_Subs.rar

Language(s):Mandarin, Hokkien
Subtitles:English, French

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Aleksandr Sokurov – Odinokiy golos cheloveka aka The Lonely Voice Of Man (1987)

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29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

Made in 1977, and only finally released in 1987, this is Sokurov’s first feature-length film. Extraordinarily beautiful, utilising an array of unusual stylistic devices, it seems as if Sokurov’s style was fully formed from the outset. A sublime meditation on love, loneliness, life and death, it still stands as one of his finest achievements.

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/F606E744D12A61A/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man__1987_.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/42C49CCB244F1B8/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man__1987__-_Italian.srt
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/9E825298F345106/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man__1987_.srt

http://keep2s.cc/file/556c258cc30d1/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man_%5B1987%5D_-_Italian.srt
http://keep2s.cc/file/9b37ca049e46e/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man_%5B1987%5D.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/3f8449b308aeb/Aleksandr_Sokurov_-_The_Lonely_Voice_Of_Man_%5B1987%5D.srt

Castellano srt:

http://www.opensubtitles.org/en/subtitles/3345270/odinokiy-golos-cheloveka-es

Language(s):Russian
Subtitles:English, Italian,Castellano

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Daniel Gordon – North Korea World Cup 1966 (2014)

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Eusebio scores four goals to help Portugal come back from 3-0 down to defeat underdogs North Korea 5-3 at Everton’s Goodison Park in the 1966 World Cup quarter-finals.

The football legend has died at the age of 71.

Widely considered one of the best players of all-time, he scored 733 times in 745 professional matches

Even in defeat, the North Koreans were, by now, undoubted ambassadors for their country. The warmth was shared on both sides.

When Dan Gordon visited the players in North Korea, they were eager to return to Middlesborough. But were they just victims of a Communist system that had driven them to do well?

Not according to Dan Gordon, who says that modern football has only just caught up with the fast-paced style that the Koreans played:

“Football in 1966 was incredibly slow, and nowadays teams play like the Koreans did in 1966… I wouldn’t call them victims at all… they were visionaries.”






http://www.nitroflare.com/view/A234F84E4C08503/North_Korea_world_cup_1966.mkv

http://keep2s.cc/file/af246455b859f/North_Korea_world_cup_1966.mkv

Language(s):English Korean
Subtitles:English

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Marie Amachoukeli-Barsacq & Claire Burger & Samuel Theis – Party Girl (2014)

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Angelique is a 60-year-old bar hostess. She still likes to party, she still likes men. At night, she makes them drink, in a cabaret by the French-German border. As time goes by, clients become rare. But Michel, her regular client, is still in love with her. One day, he asks Angelique to marry him.




http://www.nitroflare.com/view/3C8B79F6A0FCB4C/Party.girl.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/FE7821E5FE03F8B/Party.girl.srt

http://keep2s.cc/file/849c726e9a396/Party.girl.avi
http://keep2s.cc/file/6afc69b7653ec/Party.girl.srt

Language(s):French
Subtitles:Italian

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Mario Gariazzo – Schiave bianche: violenza in Amazzonia aka White Slave (1985)

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