censorship
A Mirror, Trafalgar Theatre review - puzzle play with an empty coreSaturday, 03 February 2024Take dollops of Orwell and Kafka, with a sprinkling of Pirandello for a lighter texture, then bake. That could be the recipe for Sam Holcroft’s A Mirror, now transferred from the Almeida to the West End for a limited run.It will probably be bait for... Read more... |
A Mirror, Almeida Theatre review - unconvincing and contrivedFriday, 25 August 2023This is a play about censorship in a totalitarian state – but, no, I’m not reviewing The Pillowman again. Instead, I’m watching A Mirror by Sam Holcroft, a playwright who – as her 2015 play Rules for Living amply illustrated – is interested in... Read more... |
Masha Karp: George Orwell and Russia review - dystopia's realityThursday, 10 August 2023The war in Ukraine, which Russia’s President Vladimir Putin insists on calling a “special military operation”, may have given fresh urgency to George Orwell’s warning in Nineteen Eighty-Four of the dangers of totalitarian newspeak. Yet, as Masha... Read more... |
Anna Maria Maiolino: Making Love Revolutionary, Whitechapel Gallery review – a gentle rebellionThursday, 10 October 2019Now in her mid-seventies, Anna Maria Maiolino has been making work for six decades. Its a long stretch to cover in an exhibition, especially when the artist is not well known. Perhaps inevitably, then, this Whitechapel Gallery retrospective seems... Read more... |
DVD/Blu-ray: The PostFriday, 18 May 2018Spielberg’s prequel to All the President’s Men was filmed at speed, and aimed squarely at the press-hating Trump, not the late Tricky Dick. This contemporary intent is already fading. What remains is the director’s second return, after Munich, to... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Minsk: feasting with Belarus Free TheatreMonday, 26 February 2018Budzma! (Cheers!) At a long, food-laden table in a noisy room of Minsk, the capital of Belarus, a toast is proposed. We clink glasses and drain moonshine. This happens once, twice, five, 10 times. Between the toasts comes a wave of passionate... Read more... |
Taxi TehranFriday, 30 October 2015Taxi Tehran is Iranian director Jafar Panahi’s third film since the 2010 prohibition that, among other restrictions, forbade him from working in cinema for 20 years. While its very existence may count as an achievement in itself, much more... Read more... |
Censored VoicesThursday, 15 October 2015Israeli director Mor Loushy's documentary Censored Voices grapples with the weight of history. It draws on interviews taken by the future writer Amos Oz with Israeli soldiers immediately after the end of the Six Day War in 1967 which were heavily... Read more... |
PasoliniWednesday, 09 September 2015It’s somehow unsettling that, while the physical resemblance between Willem Dafoe and Italian writer and filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini is remarkable to the point of being almost uncanny, Abel Ferrara’s Pasolini almost consciously avoids elucidating... Read more... |
Closed CurtainThursday, 03 September 2015Any consideration of Iranian director Jafar Panahi’s Closed Curtain will inevitably be through the prism of how it was made, and the director’s current position in his native country. It’s his second work, after This Is Not a Film from 2011, to be... Read more... |
DVD: War and PeaceTuesday, 04 August 2015Indian documentarist Anand Patwardhan is far less known outside his native country than he deserves to be, and his 2002 film about nuclear proliferation on the subcontinent War and Peace (Jang aur Aman) is a good introduction to a filmmaker who has... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Moscow: Free thought vs cultural politicsSunday, 05 July 2015Last year’s Moscow International Film Festival (MIFF) played out in the shadow of conflict in Ukraine and Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and a year on you could be forgiven for wondering if anything’s really changed. International sanctions remain... Read more... |
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