Cesare Deve Morire

Caesar Must Die is a  poetic expression of freedom and life. The story takes place at the high - security Rebibblia Prison in Italy. The real inmates prepare a performance on stage "Julius Caesar" by William Shakespeare.

“Caesar Must Die” is a really poetic film in addition to being realistic. It’s also notable that three of the inmates taking part in the play became involved with art after being released; two of them wrote books on freedom, while Striano started acting. The film transformed both actors and the audience, allowing them to peer beneath the surface. This could lead us to the notion that art will be our savior, even if Caesar must die!

Directors: Paolo and Vittorio Taviani

Wild Tales

Wild Tales is  a story about love, deception, the return of the past, a tragedy, or even the violence contained in as everyday detail, appear themselves to push them towards the abyss, into the undeniable pleasure of losing control.

Wild Tales is a great new movie from Argentina, nominee for Oscar Best Foreign Language Film 2015.  Don't miss it! Enjoy!

Photography

Two great artists are showing their work in Chelsea this week. Don't miss them!

JOSEF KOUDELKA at Pace Gallery

Julian Cox observes:  There is something somber and disquieting about Koudelka’s panoramas. On the one hand, they are statements of fact and unstintingly particular in what they describe, but, on the other, they also function as a system of ideas as well as a ravishing feast for the eyes. Their beauty captivates, even if they do not provide an entirely hopeful picture for today or tomorrow. . . .

ERWIN OLAF at Hasted Kraeutler 

Describing Olaf’s work, the gallery’s website explains, “A compelling frisson is generated in the space between his superficially sleek surfaces and the depth of emotion they convey; between their expressive power and their formal silence. Every work Olaf produces is characterized by an almost overpowering energy of potential and poise, hovering in a place where all action is merely suggested or insinuated”.
 

Just Kids

Passion for art; love tribute for New York!

"It was the summer Coltrane died, the summer of love and riots, and the summer when a chance encounter in Brooklyn led two young people on a path of art, devotion, and initiation."

Just Kids begins as a love story and ends as an elegy. It serves as a salute to New York City during the late sixties and seventies and to its rich and poor, its hustlers and hellions. A true fable, it is a portrait of two young artists' ascent, a prelude to fame.