alr alr alr

Rituals of Desire:
The Films of Daniel Schmid

A major auteur in Europe but relatively unknown in the U.S., Swiss director Daniel Schmid has fashioned a unique and fanciful body of films over the last thirty years that is ripe for rediscovery. After studying at the German Film and Television Academy in Berlin from 1966–1969, Schmid began his film career in association with the New German Cinema movement. Like the work of his friends Werner Schroeter and Rosa von Praunheim, Schmid’s films possessed, from the outset, an operatic sensibility. His remains a cinema of playfulness and longing, of voluptuousness and strong feeling, equal parts illusion and delusion. Unswayed by social or cinematic trends, Schmid has steadfastly produced an imaginative string of fiction films, documentaries, and opera productions—works suffused with sensuality and elements of melodrama and underscored by what critic Amy Taubin has called an "ironically modernist intelligence." As Schmid himself has stated, "I believe that people have a need for mythical forms, mysterious images, atavistic fairy tales, and magical symbols that take them back to the hidden memories of their childhood and their culture."

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Melville et Cie.

Read more

Psychedelic Cinema

Read more

Fragments of a Faith Forgotten: The Art of Harry Smith

Read more

The Shochiku Centennial Collection

Read more

António Campos and the Promise of Cinema Novo

Read more
sepia photo of Artie Freedman in silhouette with a video camera at show

Boston Punk Rewound / Unbound. The Arthur Freedman Collection

Read more

The Yugoslav Junction: Film and Internationalism in the SFRY, 1957 – 1988

Read more

From the Jenni Olson Queer Film Collection

Read more
a mausoleum that looks like a miniature Spanish cathedral, next to a variety of others, against an evening sky

The Night Watchman by Natalia Almada