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Wim Wenders's Perfect Days is now showing on MUBI in many countries.
Sofia Coppola’s Priscilla (2023) is deceptively soft to the touch. In adapting Priscilla Presley’s 1985 Elvis and Me memoir, the filmmaker brings an astonishing life story to the big screen, but also all of the beautiful, enviable objects that line the cage of celebrity. From luxurious Cadillacs to a lush array of sparkly designer dresses, accessorized with equally shiny handguns, these markers of luxury hum with palpable allure. At the same time, a sense of foreboding looms large. The opening shot lingers on the…
There’s maybe no working filmmaker more associated with film fashion than Sofia Coppola. But in this brief history of her super stylish body of work, we figure out the thematic stitching inside those perfect fits.
On a recent visit to Zagreb in Croatia, I was stopped in my tracks by this poster, above, in the Museum of Contemporary Art. It is a design for the First Science Fiction Fair held in 1972 in the museum’s previous incarnation as the Gallery of Contemporary Art. The poster’s artist, Mihajlo Arsovski, had been designing exhibition posters for the Gallery for more than a decade and this poster was awarded the Gold Medal at the International Poster Exhibition in Varese,…
Legend has it that the art of memory was born from death—when the ceiling of a Thessalian nobleman’s dining hall collapsed and killed all but Simonides of Ceos. He was able to identify his fellow guests, smooshed beyond recognition, by remembering their seat at the table, thus associating each person with a locality. The pre-Socratic poet soon began to experiment with localizing abstract ideas to objects in an imaginary house, which he could pick up one by one—each a symbol of…
When T.S. Eliot famously asked “Do I dare to eat a peach?” in The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, he was alluding to social and bodily anxiety, and the sticky traps that can ensnare the unsuspecting. Eliot’s J. Alfred finds a reason to be anxious about even the most mundane objects or situations—though eating in public (especially syrupy fruits) is a common anxiety. And while a peach should be an innocuous, enjoyable object, in practice a ripe peach can spontaneously…
The artist known as Plakiat, real name Maks Bereski, is one of a couple of incredibly talented poster designers currently spearheading a revival in the art of the Polish movie poster. The heyday of the Polish poster was from the early 1950s through the late 1980s, but the demise of Communism and the opening of borders brought about the end of a movement that used metaphor and surrealism as a form of subversion. In the age of the internet, however, appreciation…
WALL-E (2008) is just one in a growing tradition of films that depict artificial intelligence by anthropomorphizing it, an inclination that originated along with the concept. When the field was launched at a Dartmouth conference in 1956, the name was selected over alternatives like cybernetics, automata theory, and complex information processing because the notion of intelligence oriented machines toward a human metric—the conference’s organizer, John McCarthy, believed that the differences between human and machine tasks were merely “illusory.” Twenty years later,…
Oliver Sim is the star and co-writer of Yann Gonzalez's Hideous, now showing exclusively on MUBI in the series Brief Encounters. In this three-part queer horror movie, Sim is the main guest on a talk show that soon slides into a surreal journey of love, shame, and blood. The film also features songs from Sim’s debut album, Hideous Bastard.
In a world where certain expectations of femininity are still thrust upon women, the possibility of liberation from societal norms…
Like a breath of fresh air, a new generation of directors are heralding an exciting era of British filmmaking with…
Strange creatures, writers—and no two are quite the same. Scribblers of all kinds are at work across this collection, in…
Impossible not to fall head over heels for, Ryan Gosling has launched a thousand memes with his suave good looks,…
Few activities can bring the whole family together quite like a fun movie night. It is never too early to…
Hold up! There are spanners in the works: the dream machines of cinema and theater cough and splutter across this…
Adapated from the novel by Ryu Murakami—who also wrote Audition—this psychosexual thriller is laced with a tincture of dark humour. With knockout turns from Christopher Abbott and Mia Wasikowska, Piercing’s wickedly sleazy, neo-giallo vibe is ripe enough to make even Brian De Palma blush.
Now showing here.
With striking imagery and a star-making turn from Nabhaan Rizwan, Naqqash Khalid’s audacious feature debut captures the uncanniness of life under late capitalism with staggering accuracy. Formally and structurally bold, In Camera fiercely satirises the hall of mirrors that is consumer society.
Now showing here.
Gaspar Noé’s Tokyo-set audio-visual experience is stunning and scandalous—a hallucinatory techno trip exemplar of Noé’s brand of divisive filmmaking. An intoxicating first-person crawl through the city by night, Enter the Void is sensational cinema at its most phenomenal and visceral.
Now showing here.
Ewan McGregor and Tilda Swinton star in David Mackenzie’s second feature, an emotionally volatile study in guilt and sexual tension. Adapted from the cult novel by Scottish beat author Alexander Trocchi, and with a score by David Byrne, Young Adam is a moody, booze-sodden tale of unchecked desire.
Now showing here.
A mysterious object from David Cronenberg, this adaptation of J.G. Ballard’s scandalous novel charts the deepest chasms of human desire. One of the great films of the ’90s, Crash is a transgressive, psychopathological reckoning with sex, death, and the anesthetizing effects of parasitic connection.
Now showing here.
No stranger to the sensual and medical contours of the body, horror icon David Cronenberg turns to 18th-century wax cadavers as his new muses for this poetic short. Sonically caressed by a chorus of pleasurable sighs, these anatomical Venuses are both alluring and uncanny in their voluptuousness.
Now showing here.
A kaleidoscopic portrait of life on the margins, this neorealist gem from Palme d’Or winner Sean Baker adopts a child’s perspective to ask what makes a good childhood, and what precludes it. This compassionate film is propelled to exuberant heights by Brooklynn Prince’s effervescent performance.
Now showing here.
With sharp wit and cathartic intensity, Coralie Fargeat turns toxic beauty culture inside out in her mind-blowing latest feature. Powered by a career-best performance from Demi Moore, The Substance fearlessly bulldozes its way into the midnight-movie pantheon and the feminist canon.
Now showing here.
In a world where certain expectations of femininity are still thrust upon women, the possibility of liberation from societal norms is a tricky one. Instead of being molded into ladylike ideals, the plucky heroines in our collection dare to carve out their own paths. Their battles in these decades-spanning films are stunningly varied. From the hurdles of workplace discrimination to economic hardships and racial prejudices, these powerful characters face the obstacles of the day with inspiring determination. Read as “difficult” in the eyes of the patriarchy, their actions here instead signal a rousing desire to break free from sexist constraints. Emphasising the perspectives of young women, these formidable performances form a radical vision of womanhood, one that refuses to bend the controlling gaze of others.
Stream the selection here.