Exclusive: The festival will show eight films directed by Young under the name Bernard Shakey.
After Cph Pix revealed last week that it will open with Marvel’s Doctor Strange, the Copenhagen festival has unveiled that it will host world premieres of eight Danish films as well as hosting a retrospective of works by musician and film-maker Neil Young.
The eighth edition of Cph Pix, which is now in new autumn dates (Oct 27 – Nov 9), will offer world premieres of Morten Bh’s Anti, Mads Erichsen’s Vindmøllernes Sus, Frederik Barington’s Nar Solen Skinner, Anders Fløe’s Afskaret, Philippe Lesage’s Copenhague, A Love Story, David Noel Bourke’s Bakerman and Dariusz Steiness’s De Vildfarne.
The other Danish offerings are all debut features: Christian Tafdrup’s Parents, Ulrich Thomsen’s In Embryo, Ali Abassi’s Shelley and Puk Grasten’s 37.
“We’re excited to present such a diverse roster of Danish films this year,” festival director...
After Cph Pix revealed last week that it will open with Marvel’s Doctor Strange, the Copenhagen festival has unveiled that it will host world premieres of eight Danish films as well as hosting a retrospective of works by musician and film-maker Neil Young.
The eighth edition of Cph Pix, which is now in new autumn dates (Oct 27 – Nov 9), will offer world premieres of Morten Bh’s Anti, Mads Erichsen’s Vindmøllernes Sus, Frederik Barington’s Nar Solen Skinner, Anders Fløe’s Afskaret, Philippe Lesage’s Copenhague, A Love Story, David Noel Bourke’s Bakerman and Dariusz Steiness’s De Vildfarne.
The other Danish offerings are all debut features: Christian Tafdrup’s Parents, Ulrich Thomsen’s In Embryo, Ali Abassi’s Shelley and Puk Grasten’s 37.
“We’re excited to present such a diverse roster of Danish films this year,” festival director...
- 9/12/2016
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
Last month, shortly after the New York Film Festival premiere of Paul Thomas Anderson's "Inherent Vice," the full list of songs in the movie made their way online (listen to them right here). The cuts run the gamut from classic rock to an unreleased Radiohead song (recorded by members of Supergrass). Well, the details of the official soundtrack are here, and they mix most of the tracks from the movie with the score by Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood. Among the tunes, you'll find Can's "Vitamin C," Minnie Ripperton's "Les Fleur," and Neil Young's "Journey Through The Past" (a cut from the soundtrack to the Young-directed 1972 film "Journey Through The Past" which PTA has cited as an influence on "Inherent Vice"). And of course, there a healthy handful of score selections by Greenwood. And let's not forget "Spooks," the Radiohead-sourced tune, though it's unclear right now how it will be credited on the.
- 11/15/2014
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
At The Dissolve, Noel Murray writes about The dovetailing music and film careers of Neil Young. He writes,
Instead, Young released a cinematic sketchbook, combining shapeless “a day in the life of Neil Young” scenes and elaborately staged dream sequences into an Alejandro Jodorowsky-esque “head movie” that doubled as a memo on the state of hippiedom circa 1972. In his memoirWaging Heavy Peace, Young writes, “My favorite filmmaker was Jean-Luc Godard. I loved long, uninterrupted shots that played out and told a story. I was not a big fan of fast cutting and preferred to not use dissolves.” His Journey Through The Past had no script, and little in the way of structure. Read More
Jake Cole at Film.com undertakes the task of ranking every Brian De Palma film.
“The Untouchables” provided De Palma with a much-needed box-office hit just as it he was running out of studio goodwill.
Instead, Young released a cinematic sketchbook, combining shapeless “a day in the life of Neil Young” scenes and elaborately staged dream sequences into an Alejandro Jodorowsky-esque “head movie” that doubled as a memo on the state of hippiedom circa 1972. In his memoirWaging Heavy Peace, Young writes, “My favorite filmmaker was Jean-Luc Godard. I loved long, uninterrupted shots that played out and told a story. I was not a big fan of fast cutting and preferred to not use dissolves.” His Journey Through The Past had no script, and little in the way of structure. Read More
Jake Cole at Film.com undertakes the task of ranking every Brian De Palma film.
“The Untouchables” provided De Palma with a much-needed box-office hit just as it he was running out of studio goodwill.
- 8/23/2013
- by Justine Smith
- SoundOnSight
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