DVD Review: The Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus (Deluxe Edition)
More than 50 years after it was recorded and almost 25 years after it was first released, The Rolling Stones infamous Rock And Roll Circus gets the deluxe treatment.
More than 50 years after it was recorded and almost 25 years after it was first released, The Rolling Stones infamous Rock And Roll Circus gets the deluxe treatment.
The New Zealand International Film Festival featured World Premiere screening of Herbs: Songs Of Freedom as its closing night film at Auckland’s Civic Theatre. But the event was more than a film screening; it was a joyous celebration of a band that changed the New Zealand scene forever.
At over 800 minutes – not including its five, 15-minute intermissions – La Flor is a cinematic experience unlike any other, one that transcends any rational critique of film or cinema into something entirely of its own. It is a journey of trust, doubt, beauty, and sacrifice – but ultimately, it is a film that […]
Acclaimed music documentary director Thom Zimny stopped by The 13th Floor to discuss his new film, The Gift: The Journey Of Johnny Cash, with Marty Duda.
Get out your hankies! If you’re not wiping away at least a few tears at the end of this meditation on the relationship between Leonard Cohen and his “muse” Marianne Ihlen, then I would serious question your humanity.
David Robert Mitchell’s “comedic neo-noir mystery” is either a completely bonkers mess of a film, or a work of pure genius. Having sat through all 139 minutes of it, I’d say it is a bit of both.
Listen up, do your ears a favour and catch this fascinating and educational look at the underappreciated art of cinematic sound design.
For fans of South Korean television, The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil will serve nicely as a feature-length spiritual companion to the 2014 and 2017 series Bad Guys and Bad Guys 2 (Nappeun Nyeoseokdeul and Nappeun Nyeoseokdeul: Akui Doshi) which shares a similar premise and features many of the film’s lead actors in similar roles. […]
In Fabric is a cut above, a deliciously laugh-out-loud black throwback to 70’s horror that’s as blood red as the demented dress of the movie.
Following up on his festival fave, The Lunchbox, director Ritesh Batra returns with Photograph, a charming romance set in the middle of bustling Mumbai.