A musical journey through Jewish History.
Black Mass: Exclusive 666 Limited Edition
The box set features Gamlet (Hamlet) and Korol Lir (King Lear).
Peliculas Musicales (Musical Films)
All'onorevole Piacciono Le Donne (The Senator Likes Women)
Abhimaan -Bachchan plays Subeer a pop singer who dominates India's music scene. He meets Uma (Jaya Bhaduri) a country girl with a beautiful singing voice. Subeer brings Uma back to the city and makes her a star. Main Azaad Hoon -Gokuldas has taken over Rajnagar's leading newspaper and would like to increase it's circulation.Subhashini Saigal on her last day at work she writes a letter from one Azaad threatening to kill himself by falling from an under-construction hospital site. This story captures the interest of the people. Yaarana -Young Bishan Kumar lives a wealthy lifestyle with his widowed mom his best friend Kishan and both are virtually inseparable.Bishan's uncle was partly responsible for his dad's death.Years later Bishan returns home to renew his friendship bond with Kishan
The Right of Weakness
Between 1961 and 1963 Ingmar Bergman embarked on three films thematically concerned with man's relationship to God and the futility of spiritual belief. Together The Faith Trilogy proved a turning point for the director securing his collaboration with cinematographer Sven Nykvist and exhibiting his mastery for direction. Through a Glass Darkly (1961): A schizophrenic girl has visions believing that God's presence is ever closer. However as her descent into madness deepens she becomes the focal point for the emotions of three men. In challenging the traditional notions of God Bergman's Academy Award Winning film is a devastating harrowing portrayal of the uneasiness and creeping paranoia of contemporary life. Winter Light (1962): A susceptible and disillusioned fisherman is urged by his wife to seek solace from his local priest. However the priest is struggling to regain his own belief. Bergman's desire to define man's relationship to God is beautifully played out in the film with stunning character performances and cinematography from the director's favoured collaborator Sven Nykvist. The Silence (1963): The intimacy of two sisters threatens to destroy them both mentally and physically. Travelling to a foreign city on the brink of war and whose language they do not understand the setting becomes a metaphor for the relationship between the women. This is a shattering vision of emotional isolation and despair in a claustrophobic spiritual world.
A radio presenter starts chatting to a girl over the internet and a romance blossoms between them. They are desperate to meet each other in the flesh but both are fearful of what the effect will be when they eventually do... The Contact is a meticulously constructed melodrama starring Han Suk-kyu (Shiri Tell Me Something) Jeon Do-yoen (Untold Scandal) and Park Yon-soon (H; Whispering Corridors). Hailed as The Korean version of You've Got Mail the film picked up a string of awards and became the second highest-grossing film of the year.
Franco Zeffirelli directs an energetic performance of Verdi's classic opera recorded at the Teatro Verdi in Busseto (Verdi's home town) under the baton of Placido Domingo.
Regarded as Godard and Gorin's return to so-called mainstream cinema after a period of four years with the Marxist, Dzigha-Vertov Group making short films and videos for political groups and student campuses, during which time Godard had been forced to make TV commercials. Four years after the 1968 student riots, Godard's film directly addresses both the revised expectations of earlier radicals and the difficulty of trying to say anything radical in a conventional film form within a capitalist system. Jane Fonda and Yves Montand star as an American journalist and French ex-New Wave film director who get caught up with a factory strike and a sit-in where the bosses are held captive. With the ironic use of its stars, the film manages to be both politically astute, formally self-reflexive and entertaining.
Abel Gance's silent masterpiece looks at the life and exploits of one of history's greatest leaders the French Emperor and conqueror of Europe Napoleon Bonaparte.
Claude Chabrol's Les Bonnes Femmes is a deft blend of frank eroticism Hitchcockian suspense and cinematic derring-do that characterizes the best films of the French New Wave. In the drab and dingy Paris of the early sixties four shop-keeping girls are looking for love - of one kind or another. While their lecherous and petty boss savors every opportunity to deliver a dressing down the girls find emotional escape by flirting with delivery men wandering the nightclubs and gossiping about the enigmatic motorcyclist who hangs about following Jacqueline (Clotilde Joano) the doe-eyed romantic. For the vulnerable timid Jacqueline his dogged persistence can only signify the true love in which she fervently believes. But when she finally decides to speak to the mysterious stranger her dreams of romantic bliss are marred only by nagging suspicions...
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