Catch this commentary Fridays during Morning Edition at 6:42 a.m. The filmmaker is Dutch journalist and historian Bianca Stigter, who brought to life traces of the Second World War in Amsterdam in her book Atlas van een bezette stad (”Atlas of an Occupied City,” 2019). Robin Holabird reviews the latest films streaming and showing in Reno-area theaters. During the aftermath of the storm, you gain a real understanding of just how destructive these forces of nature can be and how crucial it is to heed the warnings and take cover.
Off camera, a survivor and a descendant talk about the village and its inhabitants, remembering these lives to create a moving cinematic monument. The film could have benefited from having a third of those characters removed, as you are left wondering when the actual weather part of the movie is going to start. Who are the people who appear before the camera? What do the grainy letters above the store say? By zooming in, showing the footage frame by frame, or enlarging details, the end of the film is constantly postponed-and with it the fate of the villagers. In this quest for answers, the three-minute color film is closely analyzed by repeating it over and over. This electrically charged and sharply funny play proves that everything you know can changeit’s just a matter of minutes. There are so many pearls beyond price as the three young coureurs being put to a stop by a vision in 2003 by Nicolas Provost or the film from 2006 by Belgium artist Pavel Dundas, known for his humorous cinematography and short films.
The grim, inevitable reality is that hardly any of them survived the Holocaust. THIS RECORD-BREAKING HIT from the award-winning Steppenwolf Theatre follows the inner-workings of a city council meeting in the small town of Big Cherryand the hypocrisy, greed, ambition and devious doings that ensue. For The One Minutes Series 49, The One Minutes team selected One Minutes from the elaborate collection. In a found holiday film from 1938, the Jewish inhabitants of a small Polish village crowd in front of the camera.