Showing posts with label Victoria Abril. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victoria Abril. Show all posts

July 10, 2015

101 Reykjavík (2000) Trailer

101 Reykjavík



30° below zero, five hours of daylight, what else can you do but get wrecked

101 Reykjavík  is a 1996 novel by Hallgrímur Helgason which found international fame in 2000 when made into a film.

Watch the Trailer!


It's easy to emphasise with adolescent apathy when it's 30 degrees below zero, nightfall at four o'clock in the afternoon, and you're knee-deep in greying snow sludge. But at 28 years old, HYLNUR's a little long in the tooth to be making Nintendo, cyber porn and getting wasted his vocation. In addition to successfully resisting employment, adulthood and even an inkling of responsibility, HYLNUR has managed to stave off any committed commingling with the opposite sex -- with the exception of his mother, that is, under whose authority and dotage he still lives. But its amazing how a boy will snap to when he's aroused. Enter LOLA, a spirited Spanish Flamenco teacher and an old friend of his mother. After LOLA and HYLNUR share a drunken one-night stand, Hylnur is mortified to learn that Lola's been making house calls, only she's bypassed his door in favour of his mother's. and to add insult to injured astonishment, the happy couple are expecting their first child. In this off-the-wall, affectionate comedy about sexual confusion and coming of age, Kormakur shares the same droll wit and ribald energy as Fridik Thor Fridriksson and Aki Kaurismaki. Featuring a wonderful soundtrack by Blur singer Damon Albarn and former Sugarcubes member Einar Orn Benediktsson, this is a prodigious debut: a winning slice-of-life tapestry that gives insight not only into its winning characters but into a unique northern youth culture.

October 12, 2014

Oscar: The Color of Destiny (2008) Trailer

Óscar. Una pasión surrealista



The touching portrayal of a cursed painter.

Watch the Trailer!



"Óscar. The Color of Destiny" is a revealing portrayal of a forgotten icon of French 
Surrealism: Spanish painter Óscar Domínguez, contemporary of Picasso. The film
 rediscovers the life of a talented artist who was ignored after he committed suicide,
 fifty years ago, victim of a serious illness which had disfigured his body: the 
Elephant Man's disease. The film is stirring and touching and compels admiration
 for the bohemian painter whose fate was self-destruction, after a wild crazy life. 
Lucas Fernández turns the life of a debauchee, who regarded himself a monster
 because of his disfiguring disease, into a universal story where art is the
 product of love and loneliness, of sex and violence before, during and after
 the Nazi invasion of Paris. 
Written by Daniel

Rumble

Unordered List

PageRank Checker