George Stolz

Goya and Madrid


Shamik Bag

India


Mel Campbell

Australia


Nick Frisch

Beijing, China


James Hendicott

Dublin, Ireland


Eve Hyman

Buenos Aires, Argentina


Jessica Hundley

Los Angeles, California, USA


Alexandra Ivanoff

Istanbul, Turkey


Peter Margasak

Chicago, Illinois, USA


Miles Marshall Lewis

Paris, France


Siobhan O'Leary

Berlin, Germany


Alina Simone

Russia


Meakin Armstrong

Southern USA


Lea Feinstein

Munch and Olso


Kristin Hohenadel

Van Gogh and Arles


Barbie Latza Nadeau

Caravaggio and Rome


Sandra Smallenburg

Vermeer and Delft


Mikael Awake

Ethiopia


Gemma Blackwood

Australia/New Zealand


Scarlet Cheng

Hong Kong


Eija Margit Niskanen

Japan


Mikael Awake

Iran


Elise Jongeun Yoon

Korea


Lee Middleton

Africa


Jose Lustre Jr.

Thailand/Morocco/ Puerto Rico


Andrea Chignoli

Argentina


Jason Anderson

Canada


Alvaro Ceppi

Chile


Nisha Gopalan

New York


Enrique Ramirez

Mexico City/Scandinavia


Liz Brown

San Francisco/Italy


Julien Sévéon

France


Tom Beer

UK


Laurel Maury

Russia


Pelin Turgut

Turkey


Shari Kizirian

Spain


Hannah Tucker

Germany


Extended Travel: Neuschwanstein, Germany

Less than two hours outside of Munich, along a quaint two-lane highway, sits a castle any little girl will recognize. The castle rises from amongst the treetops, high up the mountainside, looking as if it has emerged from a dream and if you were to blink, it might disappear forever. The castle is Neuschwanstein, former [...]

Back to Berlin

While the world celebrates the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall let’s take a look at the Wall on film.
 

 

Creepy Cinema: Suspiria

Dario Argento’s 1977 slasher flick ‘Suspiria‘ is one of the creepiest films of all time — and one of the most beautiful. It’s the last film ever developed at the Technicolor processing plant and ‘Suspiria’ oozes horror: the greens are more acidic, the reds bloodier and the shadows are among the creepiest ever captured on [...]

The Criterion Conversation: Part Three (On Location Edition)

All week, we’ve been chatting with the Criterion Collection’s Susan Arosteguy about Wim Wenders’ ‘Wings of Desire‘, the director’s cinematic return to his hometown, Berlin. At once heartbreaking and beautiful, Wenders’ portrait of Berlin captures a turbulent time in the nation’s history. It would take a time machine to get back to the Berlin depicted [...]

The Criterion Conversation (Part Two)

Last week we chatted with Criterion Collection producer Susan Arosteguy about the new Criterion edition of Wim Wenders’ homage to Berlin, ‘Wings of Desire’, which comes out November 3. We had so much to talk about — after all, Arosteguy has been with Criterion since the laserdisc days, working with directors like Wes Anderson and [...]

The Criterion Conversation (Part One)

On November 3, the Criterion Collection releases the newest edition of Wim Wenders’ 1987 masterpiece, ‘Wings of Desire‘. Set in post-War, pre-unification Berlin, the film is tells the story of a pair of angels — played by Bruno Ganz and Otto Sander — cursed with watching over humanity, but never experiencing it. Until, that is, [...]

A Roman (Polanski) Holiday

Roman Polanski may not be going anywhere for a while, now that (allegedly?) raping a 13-year-old has finally caught up with him and all. He may be holed up in a Swiss jail, but his films provide a trip around the world. Even after his exile from the United States in 1977, the director continued to [...]