MICHAL BONCZA recommends a minimalist installation that prompts intriguing connotations
WHEN Lenin, according to Lunacharsky, the Soviet Union’s first Commissar for Education, referred to film in 1922 as “the most important of the arts,” he wasn’t simply expressing a preference for one art form over another. Rather, he was acknowledging that in a country of differing ethnicities and high levels of illiteracy, cinema provided the simplest and most effective medium for political education; in particular, the distribution of revolutionary propaganda.
LEO BOIX, ANGUS REID and MARIA DUARTE review Night Stage, Two Women, Kim Novak’s Vertigo, and Fuze
LEO BOIX, ANDY HEDGECOCK and MARIA DUARTE review Dreamers, It Was Just An Accident, Folktales, and Eternity
New releases from The Dreaming Spires, Bruce Springsteen, and Chet Baker
ANDY HEDGECOCK and MARIA DUARTE review The Ceremony, Eddington, The Life of Chuck, and The Thursday Murder Club


