alr alr alr

Nanni Moretti:
A Life on Film

With the awarding of the Palme d’Or at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival to Nanni Moretti’s new film, The Son’s Room, a wider international community has begun to learn what many have long known: that Moretti is a bellwether of contemporary Italian cinema. From the early 1970s, when his first Super-8 shorts were a hit with Roman cinema clubs, to this most recent success, the forty-seven-year-old Moretti has written, directed, and starred in each of his films—most often as Michele Apicella, a resilient alter ego in the tradition of Chaplin’s Little Tramp. An intellectual even amidst low-brow slapstick, Moretti, best known in this country for his celebrated Dear Diary, practices the art of balancing comedy with deeper metaphysical concerns and a political consciousness informed by his close involvement in the Italian Communist Party. This retrospective provides a long-overdue opportunity to discover the work of this idiosyncratic auteur, an artist whose charming restlessness and quest for ideological solutions has made him one of the most influential filmmakers of his generation in Europe.

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Albert Serra, or Cinematic Time Regained

Read more

Wang Bing’s Youth Trilogy

Read more

Planet at 50

Read more

The Yugoslav Junction Continues!

Read more

Theo Anthony, Subject to Review

Read more

The Ideal Cinematheque of the Outskirts of the World

Read more

From the collection – Satyajit Ray

Read more

Mother’s Day Mini-Marathon