I S S N  1979 - 5009   KILAS:  
Indonesian

Download.Torrent_!

  • Germany Anno Zero | 1948 | 78 menit | BW | Roberto Rosselini
  • La Strada | 1954 | 104 menit | BW | Federico Fellini
  • La Terra Trema | 1948 | 160 menit | BW | Luchino Visconti
  • Ladri di Biciclette | 1948 | 93 menit | BW | Vittorio de Sica

Torrent.Softwares_!

Torrent Client is an application or software that possesses the ability to request, upload, or share a file via BitTorrent protocol. Examples of this are uTorrent, Azureus (Vuze), Transmission, BitTorrent or BitComet. Below are links to get the application. After downloading torrent files above, use this torrent client as a file transfer media. Below are links of the applications.

software-bittorrent
software-transmission
software-utorrent
software-vuze

Click here for more information

Figure_!

abduh-aziz
alexis-tioseco

bronnt-industries-kapital
budi-darma
chaerul-umam
chris-marker
eric-rohmer
fritz-lang
garnet-hertz
ingmar-bergman
intan-paramadhita
jean-epstein
jim-henson
jonas-mekas
jussi-parikka
komunitas-filem
von-trier
namjunepaik
nia-dinata
nicolas-echevarria
rafael-rozendaal
riri-riza
toshio-matsumoto

In Memoriam: Alexis Tioseco (1981-2009) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jurnal Footage   
Thursday, 03 September 2009 14:57

Compiled by Jurnal Footage

It was a great shock, having heard the news about the tragic murder of one of the best Southeast Asia Film Critics, Alexis A. Tioseco. He was so young. So passionate. When it come to talk about film, he will eagerly speaks for hours, with great attention also. The words of condolence may not be enough for the tragic death of this great youngman, and his lover, Nika Bohinc. Alexis Tioseco. He was born in Manila, Philippines, 1981. Founder and editor-in-chief of www.criticine.com, an online journal of Southeast Asian Cinema. They say, the good always die young, and yes, Alexis is the good one who gone too soon. To commemorate him, Jurnal Footage is very proud to spread his legacy. Here are some of Alexis Tioseco’s notes in his film journal.


alexis1


On Film Journal

For what purpose does a film journal exist today? Is it necessary? What function should it serve?
These questions, seemingly simple but with answers that are fiercely debatable, are ones that I began to think about after listening to the podcast called "Tracking Film Cultures" from a recent CD-ROM issue of Vertigo. The podcast, a dialogue between Cahiers Du Cinema editor Jean-Michel Frodon and the editors of UK-Based film magazine Vertigo, spoke mostly in reference to print-film journals, but I believe many of the points addressed are relevant for online publications as well. Jean-Michel made a strong point, and one that I agreed with, standing firm that the critical journal:

.. is now more necessary than ever, because everything is more accessible than ever, which means that everyone is left... is not alone, but is left facing all the opportunities, and we know that none of us is alone, there is someone very close to our ear, and that someone is called 'the market'. The market is whispering in everybody's ear what [they] should see, and we know that the more things are accessible, the more everybody is tempted to see the same thing. And then facing that there are different structures, not only magazines but obviously magazines, to propose, to build the access to desire to other things than what the market is telling you to see at this very moment, which is showing in all multiplexes at the same time...

I do believe that with other bodies, including film festivals [and] including teachers, there is more work for us to do now than ever to build this alternative relationship with cinema.
And the other thing which has to be done, I think, which Cahiers is trying to do and I see Vertigo is also trying to do, is to use cinema to understand the world we live in.

How does one go about facing this challenge, of building this alternative relationship to cinema? First by covering and writing about it (this issue includes new reviews of Amir Muhammad's The Last Communist, Azharr Rudin's The Amber Sexalogy, Dennis Marasigan's Sa North Diversion Road, a feature on Uruphong Raksasad and a reflection on recent highlights from a foreign SEA cinema chronicler), and then trying to make it come alive (with engaging pieces on older films that deserve an audience wider than the ones they have gotten, like Apichatpong's Tropical Malady- which has never shown in the Philippines- and Mysterious Object at Noon, Lino Brocka's Bona, and the cinema of Thai experimental filmmaker Sasithorn Ariyavicha), but also to look at what is happening critically (as is done in the review of the film Singapore Dreaming and the newly pressed book Singapore Cinema, and a piece that looks critically on the current cinematic resurgence in the Philippines).

Criticine is proud to announce a new partnership with the Thai language film journal Bioscope, a wonderful journal whose activities and reach extend beyond the written page into the organization of screenings, contest organizing, book publishing, DVD producing, and film commissioning. Criticine will be translating into English selected Bioscope articles on Thai cinema, and Bioscope in turn will have permission to translate selected Criticine articles into Thai for their publication. An exciting exchange, and I feel an important one, that is directly in the spirit of the vision we have for Criticine.

With the release of this fourth issue this November 2006, Criticine celebrates its first birthday. We'd like to thank all of our contributors for their challenging ideas, our copy-editor and translators for their gracious service, and our readers for making it all worthwhile. We hope we've helped you understand the world we live in just a little bit better, and look forward doing so more in the future.

Alexis A. Tioseco
Editor, Criticine
[This issue is dedicated to Leonardo Lilles Tioseco.]
15 November 2006

 


alexisondiscussionsession2

On Representation

Representation is a huge issue in Southeast Asia, and while it encompasses cultural diversity, it certainly isn’t limited to it.

What guides our lines of sight? The politics that decide what we see, and the obstacles that block us from seeing more.

What gets represented? The honesty (or dishonesty) in the images we do see, and the sins of omission.
How to make visible corners that are blind? The dual challenge of re-shaping perspectives through works that matter, and seeking an audience for them.

Criticine 3 tackles a few of these issues.

The reviews section features three pieces you won't find in other places: Noel Vera is given space to continue his chronicling of the oeuvre of Filipino auteur Mario O'Hara, with his review of the forgotten classic Uhaw Na Pag Ibig. Short filmmakers never get any attention! Hassan Muthalib introduces you to the kinetic energy of the work of Aaron Chung, one of Malaysia's up and coming cinema artists. Khoo Gaik Cheng addresses some topics programmers and critics have brought up with regard to Ho Yuhang's 2004 Min, but never elaborate on.

Thailand is a country that has been severely underrepresented in this journal, and there's a reason for that. Thailand has never been colonized; a fact they are quite proud of. Perhaps because of this, they are far less bi-lingual than most other major SEA filmmaking countries (Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, Vietnam), and therefore a large part of good writing about Thai cinema by Thai authors appears only in Thai language. Meaning: we are deprived of insight into Thai cinema from a local perspective. We are taking steps to correct this, one article at a time. For this issue, we have fresh translations of a trio of interviews by Thai filmmaker Thunska Pansittivorakul with leading figures in contemporary Thai cinema: the brilliant director Apichatpong Weerasetheakul, critic and translator Kong Rithdee, and Suparp Rimtheparthip and Thida Plitpholkarnpim, editors of the Thai-language film magazine Bioscope.

While news broadcasts and political leaders continue to throw around the word "terrorism" with reckless abandon, constructing images of fear about the other, Philip Cheah reminds us of a different kind of horror: state-led terrorism. We reprint two articles produced for the catalogue of Spaces and Shadows, a two-month programme on contemporary Southeast Asian Art culture held at the House of World Cultures in Berlin. The first is Cheah's introduction to Whose Terror is it Anyway? the programme he curated, the second Shaheen Merali's interview with him about it.

The topic of terrorism comes up again in the work of Filipino filmmaker John Torres, but in a completely different context. Where Cheah talked about state-led terrorism, Torres brings it to a much more intimate level: terrorism of the heart. In my interview with him, Torres opens up about the making of his first feature, Todo Todo Teros, and about the pain we inflict on the ones we love.
In another personal piece, Maguindanaon filmmaker Teng Mangansakan recounts how he fell into and for cinema, his first forays into filmmaking, and the challenge of re-shaping a Moro image that has been grossly misrepresented by popular media.

For the final journal entry of his residency in Cannes Cinefondation before returning to Manila, Raya Martin sends us a series of diary entries, scattered but no less engaging, touching on a number of topics, including how he was received in France.

Tan Pin Pin's Singapore GaGa, a brilliant 55-minute sketch of a Singapore often ignored, has audiences paying attention. Special films require special methods of distribution; Pin Pin generously outlines hers. Tracking the journey of GaGa across Singapore, her piece serves as a testament to the resolve and fortitude independent filmmakers need to adopt in order to ensure their works get seen. Your work isn't done when the final dub is finished.

Alexis A. Tioseco
Editor, Criticine
16 May 2006


alexisondiscussionsession4

On Cinema Today

One beautiful thing about the world of cinema today is that the borders that separate us are becoming thinner and thinner. As the speed and ways by which we communicate become faster and more sophisticated, so too does the transmission of culture— of images and sounds, news and art.

Our understanding of Asian Cinema is slowly expanding past Kurosawa and Ozu, Wuxia and Yimou, and beginning to encompass many of the smaller countries and cultures in the territory. But with this new-found interest comes new-found questions and new-found responsibility.

In his timely and poignant essay We Come From Afar and We Will Go Further written for the summer 2005 issue of the Slovenian journal Ekran (edited by Jurij Meden and featuring an inspired collection of articles on World Cinephilia, and the first wide and detailed analysis of Filipino director Lav Diaz’s work), German critic Olaf Möller raises several important questions, one among them dealing with the topic of film writing. Taking to task the Jonathan Rosenbaum and Adrian Martin edited Movie Mutations, Möller questions the book’s theme, scope, authors, and choice for authors on subjects. How important is it for writers and critics to share in defining what works from their country are deemed of importance, and enter the global canon? As the world-at-large becomes more affluent with cinema from smaller pockets of the globe, the question then looms— who do we read?

While writing of western critics on eastern cinema is no doubt invaluable, to allow it to be in a monologue with itself in the dominant discourse is dangerous. It is necessary that the written word of writers native to a country’s cinema reach the world at large, for their insights— that can only be gleaned from one that lives and breathes the history, culture, and air of the work’s origin— is important. Cinema must be dialogue. Through dialogue, we will have so much more to learn.

Criticine is our contribution to this discourse.

Started through the kind assistance of Khristine Consunji, Criticine is a bi-monthly online publication that will focus on Southeast Asian cinema in all its forms (short, long, narrative, documentary, experimental), examining the present while looking at the past, with writers from within or specializing in the region.

But Criticine is not only for the western world.

Every September for the past 5 years, The Substation, an independent arts space in Singapore, has been playing host to an intimate event called the Asian Film Symposium. One key element of this event is S-Express: specially commissioned sixty to ninety minute curated programmes of recent short films from countries in the Asian region. These programmes are prefaced combined with themed talks by the curator dealing with the current state of independent cinema in their country, and followed by a Q&A session with the curator and one of the filmmakers with a film in the programme. When S-Express first began in 2001 there were three participating countries— Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand, before it expanded to include Indonesia in 2004, and China and the Philippines in 2005.

I had the pleasure of curating the initial S-Express Philippines programme, and in the process of doing so, wondered to myself why it was only now, in the 5th year of the event, that the Philippines was involved. Why hadn’t we taken part in it before? The answer soon became clear—communication. We weren’t in dialogue with our brothers and sisters in the region, and knew very little about them; just as they knew little about us. While putting together the programme I took this idea a step further, acknowledging that, in a Philippine context, we weren’t communicating with ourselves—weren’t in dialogue with our own country beyond our urban Manila shells.

The revelation was eye-opening for me, and one that led to the discovery of burgeoning cinemas and filmmakers in various parts of the Philippines. From the Crystal Piaya Awards held annually in Bacolod, the politically-minded ST Exposure movement in Southern Tagalog, Sinebuano and Cebu Filmmakers Society in Cebu, and the inspiring Guerilla Filmmaking workshops being held by 25-year olds in Davao, one could clearly see: the country was rich with filmmaking activity and spirit in all its regions; but sorely deprived in support and exposure for these happenings

We have much, not only to share with the outside world, but also to learn about ourselves.

* * * * * * * * *
This first issue of Criticine features a healthy dose of reading. Malaysian cinema is bursting with energy, and in this initial offering there are several articles that look at its current situation from different sides. Inspired by two recent events and two particular films, Singapore-based journalist and critic Vinita Ramani looks to the past and examines the ever-important notion of plural identities in Malaysian cinema. With knowledge and perspective only gleaned with age, Hassan Muthalib narrates to us the five voices that have defined it, while also proffering up reviews of significant recent works; Ho Yuhang’s Sanctuary and Deepak Kumaran Menon’s Chemman Chaalai. Two films that, as cultural critic Khoo Gaik Cheng reveals in her essay, are breaking down barriers, but sadly, because of the dialect spoken in them, aren’t even considered Malaysian in Malaysia. Riri Riza’s Gie, a biopic about 1960’s political activist Soe Hok Gie, has been the topic of keen interest in Indonesian cinema in 2005, and critics Paul Agusta and Lisabona Rahman watch the film a second time, and share their critical conversation on its merits and demerits, and weaknesses in comparison to a curious propaganda film from the 80’s. Critic Noel Vera reviews Filipino director Mario O’Hara’s lost masterpiece Bakit Bughaw ang Langit?, prefacing the article with a note that will leave you in tears. Using the Philippines as an example, former University of the Philippines Film Institute Director and current visiting professor at the NUS in Singapore, Rolando (or Roland is he is wont to be called) Tolentino takes a critical approach to current happenings in the cinemas of Asia.

Turning our attention to specific directors, from Paris we receive the first journal entry of precocious 21-year old Filipino filmmaker Raya Martin, one among six young directors chosen for the prestigious Résidence du Festival de Cannes. On the interview front, are question and answer sessions with two of the most interesting and challenging figures in Southeast Asian cinema today. Australian scholar Benjamin McKay, who is in the midst of completing a pioneering study on early Malay cinema, speaks to one of those filmmakers stirring things up in Malaysia, the ever-witty yet no-less intelligent Amir Muhammad. And while both in Singapore; I have an extensive chat with the truly international Bangkok-based Pen-Ek Ratanaruang.
* * * * * * * * *

We know we have yet a ways to go: expanding coverage (we don’t want the certain country pages to remain bare for long) and translating texts (to different SEA languages for those not fluent in English) are two projects for the future; but we have taken the first step, and we hope that you walk along the path with us.

Alexis A. Tioseco
Editor, Criticine
23 October 2005


alexis2

alexisondiscussionsession

alexisondiscussionsession3

notes on photos:
Alexis Tioseco 1, captured by Dona Inthaxoum
Alexis Tioseco 2, captured by Mirza Jaka Suryana
Alexis on discussion 1-4, captured by Bagasworo Aryaningtyas

All pictures are taken at Oberhausen, Germany, May 2009
Hits
Comments
Add New Search
Anwaruddin Saleh  - In Memoriam: Alexis Tioseco (1981-2009)   |110.139.213.xxx |2009-12-02 22:19:07
Turut Berduka Cita Atas Kematian Alexis Tioseco.Kritikus Film Terbaik Asia Tenggara.Monster Kekerasan Boleh Merenggut Nyawanya Namun Karya Dan Pikiran-Pikirannya Tetap Abadi Di Jiwa Kami.Seuntai Doa Untukmu.Terlelaplah Dalam Damai KasihNya.Amin.
Anwaruddin Saleh  - In Memoriam: Alexis Tioseco (1981-2009)   |110.139.213.xxx |2009-12-02 22:17:58
Turut Berduka Cita Atas Kematian Alexis Tioseco.Kritikus Film Terbaik Asia Tenggara.Monster Kekerasan Boleh Merenggut Nyawanya Namun Karya Dan Pikiran-Pikirannya Tetap Abadi Di Jiwa Kami.Seuntai Doa Untukmu.Terlelaplah Dalam Damai KasihNya.Amin.
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Title:

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

Last Updated on Wednesday, 10 March 2010 21:38
 
More articles :

» Filem Pendek Sudah Mati, Tapi Tidak di Oberhausen

(Only in Bahasa Indonesia) Selama 55 tahun festival filem pendek Oberhausen telah menjadi ajang bertemunya sutradara, distributor, pembeli dan peminat filem pendek dari seluruh dunia. Sebagai bekas kota industri, dengan tingkat pengangguran yang...

» Revolutions Happen Like Refrains in a Song*

*(Or rather, are declared as often):Amidst a State of Dependence, A New Philippine Cinema is Born.The term independent once meant something in Philippine Cinema. It was reserved for such luminaries as Rox Lee (the great animator), Raymond Red (the...

» Aminuddin TH Siregar: We Excel Other Countries in Southeast Asia

Why do you pick the theme ‘Comedy’ for the fourth OK. Video?We believe the theme comedy correlates to the socio-political state our country is now in. It’s an attempt to look for collective ways of catharsis, not to burden ourselves with...

» Yang Muda yang Bercinta: Early Montage in New Order Regime

A young man rides in a bajaj with his pregnant lover, passing through Jakarta’s slums in the 1970s. Child beggars in the city’s labyrinths become a syntagmatic connection to bajaj. The young man is a university student named Sony (W. S. Rendra)1...

Musikvideo-poster

lossofthereal-fotoage

Today.Quotation_:

"Very often, footage that you have shot develops its own dynamic, its own life, that is totally unexpected, and moves away from your original intentions."

[Werner Herzog]

Stats_!

Members : 420
Content : 145
Content View Hits : 136831

More.Articles_!

Video Mashup: A Remix Culture
Thursday, 28 January 2010

Few times ago, I was shown a video from YouTube. It was a music video Metallica Tribute to Rhoma Irama1. It may sound impossible, but all my expectations turned upside down and inside out watching this video. It’s originally a video of...

Yang Muda yang Bercinta: Early Montage in New Order Regime
Wednesday, 07 October 2009

A young man rides in a bajaj with his pregnant lover, passing through Jakarta’s slums in the 1970s. Child beggars in the city’s labyrinths become a syntagmatic connection to bajaj. The young man is a university student named Sony (W. S. Rendra)1...

The 54th Oberhausen: The Oldest But Somehow Actual
Thursday, 12 June 2008

Labors all around the world come down to the street in May Day, celebrating The International Labor Day in the first of May. They sounding their rights to the rulers. All governments aware and increasing the security level. Even in Indonesia, the...

House of Cards: Dari Kino Eye Ke Kino Brush
Tuesday, 26 January 2010

(Temporarily available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Apa yang menarik dari sebuah videoklip? Seperti yang kita kenal selama ini, industri hiburan (musik) selalu menempatkan videoklip sebagai pelengkap untuk mempresentasikan penyanyi/grup musik yang...

ScreenDocs! di Goethe Institut Jakarta
Monday, 13 July 2009

(Only available in Bahasa Indonesia) Selasa, 7 Juli 2009 program screenDocs! Regular kembali diputar di Goethe Institut, Jakarta. Program ini diselenggarakan oleh In-Docs, sebuah organisasi di bawah Yayasan Masyarakat Mandiri Film Indonesia....

Prelinger Archives: Daily Life Archives
Thursday, 03 December 2009

"The film your about to see, represence a significant breakthrough of the advancing science of the motion picture. For years, the industrial film has been pledge by the always-difficult sometime impossible-to-explain cost of the original creative...

WALL-E: Receding to Human’s Primordial Side
Monday, 08 June 2009

Upon seeing the people as depicted in Pixar/Disney’s WALL-E, I was instantly reminded of a day in anthropology class back in my university days. That day, the professor elaborated human physical evolution which is only predictable to...

Silent Film Orchestration at Gedung Kesenian Jakarta
Thursday, 12 June 2008

Originally, silent film was simply tracked by a single pianist as its sound theme. Then, in its development, silent film follow by an orchestra. Newest compositions are then, perform. Last wednesday, May 14th 2008, an ensemble from Vietnam...

Sejarah Filem Sebagai Seni (6): Mata yang Dapat Mendengar
Saturday, 19 December 2009

(Available only in Bahasa Indonesia) ANEKA, No. 17 Tahun VI 10 Agustus 1955 (VI) Sutradara Fritz Lang yang termasyhur. Filemnya, Die Nibelungen: Kriemhelds Rache, disebut orang sebagai filem jenius dan citra pictural-nya dianggap sebagai mahakarya...

Massroom Project Catalogue
Friday, 03 July 2009

[issuu layout=http%3A%2F%2Fskin.issuu.com%2Fv%2Fcolor%2Flayout.xml backgroundcolor=282828 showflipbtn=true documentid=090703095047-b1cc3157af93475ea27d16c3a1c2e0ed docname=massroom-project-catalogue username=forumlenteng...

Alex Sihar: A Challenge to Familiarize the Language of Video
Sunday, 23 August 2009

This year, Yayasan Konfiden (Independent Film Community Foundation)—a foundation focusing on the development and distribution of audio visual media knowledge and usage to sustain empowerment as well as to gain appreciation and support—by public...

Nicolás Echevarría: Myth as a Form of Creativity
Wednesday, 27 May 2009

Nicolás Echevarría is a director, producer and cinematographer who has worked in both film and television, making documentaries and fiction films. One of Mexico’s prominent filmmakers. He began to make films following the massacre at Tlatelolco,...

The Endless Steps: Transaction of Sign Agreement
Monday, 24 November 2008

‘Is there any sign?’This question asked four times by a caller in the video The Endless Steps from Maulana Adel Pasha. Question which is so important for the caller to find the house. The transaction of sign thus occur. A bargain of subjective...

Maulana ‘Adel’ Pasha: In The Future Video Will Replace Film
Wednesday, 11 June 2008

The distribution of video in the world and Indonesia in particular, is extra rapid. According to a research, one out of ten Indonesian using video for various purposes. The development of cameraphone technology making the access easier for the...

Elida Tamalagi
Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Negotiate The Discourse of Audio Visual at The Alternative Bioscope   Public demand on alternative bioscopes are numerous. Unfortunately, this huge exigency is not supported by the aspirant management of the movie place. The activity of screening...

Sejarah Seni Sebagai Seni (9): Pelajaran Rusia
Wednesday, 28 July 2010

Aneka No. 21 THN VI, 20 september 1955   (Available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Tahun 1927 pertama kali dipertunjukkan filem-filem Rusia di Eropa. Filem-filem seperti The Battleship Potemkin (1925) buatan Sergei Eisenstein, Mother (Ibunda, 1926)...

Rentjong Atjeh
Wednesday, 22 July 2009

(This article only available in Bahasa Indonesia) J.I.F SUPER SPECIAL PRODUCTION 1940"RENTJONG ATJEH"Serombongan bajak laut telah menyerang sebuah kapal layar, yang sedang berlayar di Selat Malaka. Dengan dikepalakan oleh Bintara (Bisoe), kawanan...

Sinema Digital dan DVD
Monday, 28 September 2009

(available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Jurnal Footage menampilkan seri wawancara antara Eric Rohmer dan Barbert Schoeder mengenai Isu Filem dan Kisah-kisah Moral. Ini adalah bagian terakhir dari seri wawancara Eric Rohmer dan Barbert Schoeder. Ciri...

Sejarah Filem Sebagai Seni (3): Muka yang Tak Terlihat
Monday, 28 September 2009

(available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Sejak munculnya filem di Indonesia tahun 1900, banyak artikel-artikel di media massa cetak yang kritis membahas kehadiran filem di masyarakat. Penerbitan kembali artikel sejarah filem oleh Jurnal Footage adalah...

Arkeologi Seni Media
Saturday, 24 April 2010

Percakapan antara Jussi Parikka dan Garnet Hertz Artikel asli berbahasa Inggris bisa dibaca di www.ctheory.netOriginal text in English on www.ctheory.net   Pendahuluan Arkeologi media merupakan suatu pendekatan studi media yang mengemuka sejak...

The Wind Will Carry Us: Communication Redefined
Tuesday, 15 July 2008

A machine from modern civilization, consists of modern men crossing the winding cracking hills road to find hard location and no sure direction except for the signs of nature. The location to find is somehow remote. Color gradation on the sun...

Teater yang Difilemkan
Wednesday, 09 September 2009

(Available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Jurnal Footage kembali menampilkan seri wawancara antara Eric Rohmer dan Barbert Schoeder mengenai Isu Filem dan Kisah-kisah Moral. Ini adalah bagian kedua dari seri wawancara Eric Rohmer dan Barbert Schoeder....

Sejarah Filem Sebagai Seni (8): Filem La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc yang Klasik
Monday, 19 April 2010

ANEKA, No. 20 Tahun VI 10 September 1955   (available only in Bahasa Indonesia) Di tahun 1926, Dimitri Kirsanoff [1899 – 1957], seorang avantgarde berkebangsaan Rusia yang bekerja di Prancis memperkenalkan diri ke masyarakat melalui filem...

Filem Pendek Sudah Mati, Tapi Tidak di Oberhausen
Sunday, 10 May 2009

(Only in Bahasa Indonesia) Selama 55 tahun festival filem pendek Oberhausen telah menjadi ajang bertemunya sutradara, distributor, pembeli dan peminat filem pendek dari seluruh dunia. Sebagai bekas kota industri, dengan tingkat pengangguran yang...

The Ontology of Cinematography and Reflections on Cinema
Wednesday, 22 October 2008

The ontology of cinematography and the reflections on cinema addresses the question of what film is, what makes a film a film, and to examine what Wittgenstein would call the grammar of our concept of film and the role films play in the forms of our...

Éric Rohmer (4 April 1920 – 11 January 2010)
Wednesday, 20 January 2010

Pada tanggal 11 januari 2010, dunia sinema telah kehilangan seorang sutradara, yang karya-karyanya cukup memiliki siginifikansi terhadap sejarah bentuk dalam estetika film. Adalah Maurice Henri Joseph Schérer atau Jean Marie Maurice Schérer dan...

V Film Festival 2010 and an Interview with Intan Paramadhita
Saturday, 24 April 2010

V Film Festival or the International Women Film Festival was first held in 2009 with the theme “Girl Power in Action”. This year, V Film Festival 2010 carries the theme “Identity and Youth”. V Film Festival 2010 was held by the collaboration...

Under The Tree: Garin’s Failure to Renounce Modern Monism
Monday, 28 December 2009

The 2009 Jakarta International Film Festival (Jiffest) is adorned with Indonesia Feature Film Competition (IFFC) that proved the quality of our national films in the international level. Films screened in IFFC are selected based on theme, narration,...

Chronicles_!

sejarah1
sejarah2
sejarah3
sejarah4
sejarah5
sejarah6
sejarah7
sejarah-filem-8

sejarah9
var02
var03
var04
var05
var06
var07
copyleft.2009.jurnalfootage.net