When the repetition of dialogue creates such intimacy, Hiroshima mon amour is very intimate.
Tag: Romance (Page 5 of 6)
La Jetée lowers the gap between still pictures while transforming them into kinetic space.
In the Mood for Love maintains the universality of its formula as art, despite the Hong Kong modernity that once characterized Wong’s style as being the same site he uses.
The tentative but experimental quality of Contempt sees what the audience doesn’t see.
In many works of fiction, universalism transcends the scope of a single setting, especially in Millennium Actress.
Chungking Express becomes a rarity, showing a different but proper perspective on life about lost romance.
Paul Thomas Anderson takes the audience through such chapters in Licorice Pizza.