684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

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Aunt Peg
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#226 Post by Aunt Peg »

Chess of Wind in playing on MUBI but it is good enough to recommend a blind-buy.
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L.A.
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#227 Post by L.A. »

Beaver’s review for the fourth set.
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colinr0380
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#228 Post by colinr0380 »

Just wanted to add a couple of nerdy statistics. Out of the twenty individual countries in the WCP boxset releases so far Mexico, India, Turkey, Brazil and Iran each have two films represented in this series (Iran and India reached that mark with the fourth volume). In terms of years, releases have spanned from 1931 to 2000 - 5 from the 1930s; 1 from the 1940s; 1 from the 1950s; 4 from the 1960s; 8 from the 1970s; 4 from the 1980s; and 1 from 2000. The years 1939, 1972, 1973 and 1976 are those which have had two films released.
FlickeringWindow
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#229 Post by FlickeringWindow »

Might want to also include the stats of the individually released WCP films...

Black Girl (1966, Ousmane Sembène) [Senegal] - 2017 release
A Brighter Summer Day (1991, Edward Yang) [Taiwan] - 2016 release
The Cloud-Capped Star (1960, Ritwik Ghatak) [India] - 2019 release
The Color of Pomegranates (1968, Sergei Parajanov) [Armenia] - 2018 release
Manila in the Claws of Light (1975, Lino Brocka) [Philippines] - 2018 release
Memories of Underdevelopment (1968, Tomás Gutiérrez Alea) [Cuba] - 2018 release
The Phantom of the Monastery (1934, Fernando de Fuentes) [Mexico] - 2022 release from Indicator US/UK

and per the WCP website, here's what remains to be released:

Alyam, Alaym (1978, Ahmed El Maanouni) [Morocco]
Badou Boy (1970, Djibril Diop Mambéty) [Senegal] - 56 min
The Boys from Fengkuei (1983, Hou Hsiao-hsien) [Taiwan]
Contras' City (1968, Djibril Diop Mambéty) [Senegal] - 22 min short
Chronicle of the Years of Fire (1975, Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina) [Algeria] - 177 min
Eight Deadly Shots (1972, Mikko Niskanen) [Finland] - 4-part television series
Él (1953, Luis Buñuel) [Mexico]
The Eloquent Peasant (1969, Shadi Abdel Salam) [Egypt) - 21 min short
Kummatty (1979, Aravindan Govindan) [India]
The Night of Counting the Years (1969, Shadi Abdel Salam) [Egypt]
Lucia (1968, Humberto Solás) [Cuba]
Lumumba, Death of a Prophet (1990, Raoul Peck) [France]
Los olvidados (1950, Luis Buñuel) [Mexico]
Pickpocket (1997, Jia Zhang-ke) [China]
Raid Into Tibet (1966, Adrian Cowell) [United Kingdom] - 28 min short
Thamp (1978, Aravindan Govindan) [India]
The Treasure (1973, Lester James Peries) [Sri Lanka]
The Woman With the Knife (1969, Timité Bassori) [Cote D'ivoire]

Most of these seem to have 4K restorations. Also looks like the two Govindan films and Él survive with heavily compromised film elements (theatrical prints, dupes of prints). 14 feature films, three shorts, and one miniseries.
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swo17
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#230 Post by swo17 »

Lucia is in one of the WCP boxes and Contras City is on Touki bouki
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colinr0380
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#231 Post by colinr0380 »

The Boys From Fengkuei has also received a release in the UK, in the Masters of Cinema Early Hou Hsiao-hsien Three Films 1980-83 set.
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therewillbeblus
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#232 Post by therewillbeblus »

I made my way through vol 4, and it's a mixed bag per usual with these (vol 3 is still far and away the best and most consistent set). I thought Prisioneros de la tierra and Muna moto were pretty paint-by-numbers melodramas that weren't as off the beaten track as they wanted to be. Sambizanga fared better, though it's hard to give it a strong recommendation, since the strengths ultimately get drowned out by its funneled messaging. I admired the curious switching of surrogates to invade corners of this milieu in search of information via personal and collective quests, and there was a raw intimacy to some of the formal choices, but overall it didn't really fulfill its ambition with cohesion. It's unfair to critique the last act's devolution into didactic propaganda since the art is being used as weaponry for this function, but the transformation away from cultural depths and toward political simplicity erases a lot of the sprawling examination that made the picture special. Oh well. The score is great too.

Improving from there, Two Girls on the Street is a strong early entry in the classic Women's Picture subgenre. Its politics are progressive, material risqué, it's well-acted, technically proficient, and attentive to the layers of platonic rapport in same-sex dynamics. Tragic and jovial edges complement one another to arrive at a smooth depiction of fluid social-emotional engagement. It's not extraordinary, but close to a best-case scenario for a meal prepared with these ingredients at this time. Stage Door, this is not, but that masterpiece is not where the bar is. Chess of the Wind is the hidden gem everyone is claiming it to be, though I'm not sure I adored it as much as others. For the majority of its runtime, the film functions as a gothic noir as imagined by Manoel de Oliveira, oscillating between murder mystery and family melodrama before descending into a wallop of a final act that slowly bleeds out with psychological menace. The sustainment of this key change rivals most horror films' finales, and it's not even a genre-qualifier!

Even more impressive is Kalpana, whose premise+runtime may appear as an endurance test on paper, but it’s an incredibly-involving dance fantasy epic. Although occasionally hokey, the film continually uproots expectations as it postures at dead-ends of banality, only to deliver unpredictably experimental flourishes and narrative turns that coast on that rhythm until the film shifts into another bizarre fugue state. The middle portion plays things straighter than its punk-rock first hour of madness, and occasionally extended sections of plot outstay their welcome, but the entire effort is very creative and surreal while maintaining a groundedness to the delicate corporeal pleasures of showmanship. It's kind of like Fantasia if it weren't a cartoon and set in India, and it's particularly cool if you know what was happening in this country at the time the film was made, where expressions of liberation and oppression take on entirely new meaning (although this is outright proclaimed in the film's final moments, it doesn't take away from the less literal nuance sewn into the celluloid preceding it). I don’t think every choice works, but there are so many more choices being made here than in your average movie, so it’s hard to fault it for running away with its imagination and not landing a perfect record.
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Matt
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684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#233 Post by Matt »

Limite is playing on TCM right now and I’m wondering if anyone knows about the choice of music for the soundtrack. It’s all fashionable, modernist classical (Debussy, Satie, Stravisnky, et al) that would have been 20-30+ years old in 1931. Was this how it would have been presented at the time of its release, or were these selections made at the time of the restoration (circa 2010)? For me, it detracts from the originality of the film, and I wish it had something more in line with its South American origins (thinking Villa-Lobos if not an original score).
Last edited by Matt on Mon Jan 16, 2023 6:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Ogre Kovacs
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#234 Post by Ogre Kovacs »

Matt wrote: Mon Jan 16, 2023 6:32 am Limite is playing on TCM right now and I’m wondering if anyone knows about the choice of music for the soundtrack. It’s all fashionable, modernist classical (Debussy, Satie, Stravisnky, et al) that would have been 20-30+ years old in 1931. Was this how it would have been presented at the time of its release, or were these selections made at the time of the restoration (circa 2010)?
According to the details on Criterion's release:
Criterion Film Description wrote: This avant-garde silent masterpiece centers on a man and two women lost at sea, their pasts unfolding through meticulously orchestrated flashbacks propelled by the music of Erik Satie, Claude Debussy, Igor Stravinsky, and others.
Criterion Edition Details wrote:Remastered digital soundtrack of Limite created almost entirely from archival recordings of the same musical performances director Mário Peixote and his musical arranger Brutus Pedreira originally selected to accompany the film, presented in uncompressed monaural sound on the Blu-ray
Not sure exactly what "originally selected" refers to in terms of time frame but hope this helps a little.
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Matt
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684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#235 Post by Matt »

Thank you! I’m sure Shazam is not infallible, especially when it comes to popular orchestral selections with hundreds of recorded performances, but it identified a couple of the recordings as coming from the 1980s and was completely unable to identify some others. I did imagine that the film could have been “soundtracked” for screenings by someone disc-jockeying a bunch of 78s. That’s what was done for Un Chien Andalou before an authorized sonorization was made.
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Gregory
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#236 Post by Gregory »

Yes, Limite had a cue sheet so that whoever was screening it could use widely commercially available Gramophone discs, but after the premiere in 1931 the film failed to be picked up for commercial distribution, and (as far as I've read) Peixoto went into seclusion in remote areas of the country for years, bringing the sole copy of the film with him.
But Matt, in 2011 a group called Ensemble Cine Mudo did something a lot like you were wishing for, creating a new score for the film using Villa-Lobos (specifically the Piano Trio no. 2), choros, etc. Only a fragment is available on the Internet Archive, not the complete score, but it gives us an idea of how different it could have been.
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Matt
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#237 Post by Matt »

The restoration of Mario Soffici's PRISIONEROS DE LA TIERRA (1939) will be streaming free via the Film Foundation’s website the weekend of April 8. Pre-registration is required
Stefan Andersson
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Re: 684-690, 873-879 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#239 Post by Stefan Andersson »

jwd5275 wrote: Thu Feb 16, 2017 4:01 am I emailed the Film Foundation about Forest of the Hanged a year and a half ago and they said that the restoration is on hold. I have heard it has to do with the Romanian film authorities not cooperating.
Romania´s National Film Center did not offer support to WCF, so no restoration. In 2015, the director´s son "decided to forbid his father’s and his own work to be screened in Romania except for educational purposes starting with 19 October 2015."

Source:
https://www.filmneweurope.com/news/roma ... ctor-s-son
https://www.romaniajournal.ro/spare-tim ... n-romania/
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ryannichols7
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#240 Post by ryannichols7 »

while this thread is bumped, I wanna just express my frustration that the fourth box is still not on the channel. I'd really like to try some of these before buying them
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swo17
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#241 Post by swo17 »

Can you not get them from your local library?
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ryannichols7
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#242 Post by ryannichols7 »

swo17 wrote: Fri May 24, 2024 2:24 am Can you not get them from your local library?
unfortunately not, as they don't carry discs at all. here is their appalling explanation
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dwk
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#243 Post by dwk »

Sambizanga is on The Criterion Channel, but it is the only one from Volume 4 on there.
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#244 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Mohammad Reza Aslani has directed a 120-min. director´s cut of his TV series The Dust of Light (1998):
https://www.moma.org/calendar/events/10029
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Finch
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#245 Post by Finch »

Established by Martin Scorsese in 2007, the World Cinema Project has maintained a fierce commitment to preserving and presenting masterpieces from around the globe, with a growing roster of more than sixty restorations of works by essential filmmakers. This collector’s set gathers four groundbreaking and innovative films, ranging from the epic to the intimate, from Algeria (Chronicle of the Years of Fire), Burkina Faso (Yam Daabo), India (Kummatty), and Kazakhstan (The Fall of Otrar). Each title is a significant contribution to the art form and a window onto a cinematic tradition that international audiences previously had limited opportunities to experience.

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Film Info
Spine #1296
Films In This Set
Chronicle of the Years of Fire
Chronicle of the Years of Fire 1975
Burning with passion, poetry, and a nation’s fervent spirit of resistance, Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina’s stirring revolutionary epic vividly dramatizes the pivotal decades leading up to Algeria’s War of Independence through the harrowing saga of Ahmed (Yorgo Voyagis), a proud farmer seeking a dignified life, whose experience of brutal oppression and systemic injustice leads him, like so many others, to take a stand against the seemingly indomitable might of French colonialism. Winner of the Palme d’Or at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival, this awe-inspiring landmark of Arab cinema is an at once personal and expansive vision of a country awakening from despair to build an unbreakable movement of liberation.

Yam Daabo
Yam Daabo 1986
A family’s quest for self-determination mirrors a nation’s struggle in the sensitively observed feature debut by titan of Burkinabe cinema Idrissa Ouédraogo, who cast an ennobling gaze on ordinary Africans navigating the upheavals of the postcolonial era. Made amid revolutionary leader Thomas Sankara’s push to create a self-reliant Burkina Faso, Yam Daabo follows an impoverished family as they leave behind a life in the city reliant on Western aid to start anew in the more verdant countryside, quietly capturing the rhythms of everyday life as well as its devastating tragedies and intimate joys. Featuring music by the legendary Francis Bebey, Yam Daabo imbues an elemental human story with profound political weight.

Kummatty
Kummatty 1979
Beautifully photographed amid the lush pastoral landscapes of southern India’s Kerala region, this enchanting child’s-eye fable conjures a folkloric world in which the magical exists side by side with the everyday. When Kummatty, a kind of shamanic bogeyman, arrives in a small village, he captivates the children with his music and colorful masks—until he casts a spell that has unexpected consequences for one boy. Bursting with exuberant songs and children’s chants, this fantasy from G. Aravindan, a pioneer of India’s art-house “parallel cinema” movement, is a treasure of imagination and entrancing visual lyricism.

The Fall of Otrar
The Fall of Otrar 1991
Kazakh New Wave iconoclast Ardak Amirkulov’s hypnotic thirteenth-century epic is a feverish vision of one of history’s most decisive battles—Genghis Khan’s siege of the now-lost city of Otrar—engraved in images of stunning, hallucinatory power. When his warnings about an imminent invasion are taken for insolence, a former Mongol scout (Dokhdurbek Kydyraliyev) must escape imprisonment to stop an escalating diplomatic crisis and avert a clash of civilizations. With a panoramic scope that encompasses intimate palace intrigue and the merciless sweep of battlefield carnage, The Fall of Otrar is a monumental imagining of seismic historical upheaval—and a terrifying, electrifying feast for the senses.

THREE-BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES
4K digital restorations of Chronicle of the Years of Fire, Yam Daabo, Kummatty, and The Fall of Otrar, overseen by The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project in collaboration with the Cineteca di Bologna, with uncompressed monaural soundtracks
New introductions to the films by World Cinema Project founder Martin Scorsese
New interviews featuring film scholar and producer Ahmed Bedjaoui (on Chronicle of the Years of Fire); film and African-studies scholar Aboubakar Sanogo (on Yam Daabo); and photographer Ramu Aravindan, director G. Aravindan’s son, and film editor and festival programmer Bina Paul (on Kummatty)
The Making of “The Fall of Otrar,” a new program featuring interviews with director Ardak Amirkulov, actor Tungyshbai Dzhamankulov, art director Umirzak Shmanov, and film critic Gulnara Abikeyeva
Updated English subtitle translations
PLUS: Essays by critics and scholars Joseph Fahim, Chrystel Oloukoï, Ratik Asokan, and Kent Jones
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brundlefly
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#246 Post by brundlefly »

Happy to see Kummatty finally get its release. My write-up from the 1979 List:
brundlefly wrote: Tue Nov 28, 2023 4:01 pm This is the second Aravindan film (after Thamp̄) restored through a Film Foundation/Film Heritage Foundation partnership, and the only three things you need know before watching it are: (a) that you should, and should do so without reading anything about the plot; (b) that you can; and (c) that while translating “Kummatty” as “The Bogeyman” is surely incomplete, it’s a fine enough starting point. “Kummatty will get you” is effective playground curse and possible summoning spell.

There’s a child’s-eye view of a world where all sources of information – superstition and legend, science and school, tradition and performance and experience – seem valid, exciting, terrifying. Blissfully, Aravindan is averse to exposition and embraces simplicity. Anything can happen, anything can be true. And though for a while a lot of what happens is children peering around corners or children running or dancing through vast spaces, anything does happen and the important things are true.
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Never Cursed
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#247 Post by Never Cursed »

Correct me if I'm wrong, but is the Fall of Otrar restoration not missing material? There is a longer cut on back channels
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Mr.DarjeelingLimited
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#248 Post by Mr.DarjeelingLimited »

Never Cursed wrote: Wed Oct 15, 2025 4:10 pm Correct me if I'm wrong, but is the Fall of Otrar restoration not missing material? There is a longer cut on back channels
The cut I saw was 171 minutes.
Last edited by Mr.DarjeelingLimited on Wed Oct 15, 2025 5:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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therewillbeblus
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#249 Post by therewillbeblus »

I saw the extended 171 minute cut. Didn't care for the film unfortunately, though I know it's beloved by many
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yoloswegmaster
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Re: 684-690, 873-879, 1044-1050, 1142-1148, 1296 Martin Scorsese's World Cinema Project

#250 Post by yoloswegmaster »

Bit disappointed that this only has 4 titles instead of the usual 6. Still glad to see this series coming back though after a hiatus.
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