Posted by Nicholas Kemp on 9.16.2011
NYFF Spotlight: Patience (After Sebald)
Grant Gee's immersive cinematic essay is a rich artistic response to W. G. Sebald’s seminal literary work The Rings of Saturn. More »
Posted by Fabian Baez on 9.19.2011
Luis Buñuel's 1962 film opened the very first NYFF and is a fitting first entry in our weekly series "50 Years of the New York Film Festival." More »
Posted by Nicholas Kemp on 9.16.2011
Grant Gee's immersive cinematic essay is a rich artistic response to W. G. Sebald’s seminal literary work The Rings of Saturn. More »
Posted by Michael Gibbons on 9.16.2011
This forgotten Latin American classic is both thrilling and stylish, and it marks the first work conceived for cinema by the great Argentine writers Jorge Luis Borges and Adolfo Bioy Casares. More »
Posted by Michael Gibbons on 9.16.2011
With breathtaking cinematography and gorgeous compositions, Melancholia is Lars von Trier in full control of his medium, with spectacular results. More »
Posted by Nicholas Kemp on 9.16.2011
Alice Rohrwacher's deceptively quiet and often darkly funny film makes for an impressive narrative debut. More »
Posted by Simran Bhalla on 9.15.2011
This animated feature based on the first comic books with origins in Islamic lore and culture is a great NYFF offering for the whole family. More »
Posted by Eugene Hernandez on 9.14.2011
A filmmaker whose first feature opened the very first New York Film Festival in 1963, returns to the festival this year with his latest feature, "Carnage," a movie that has already generated strong buzz at screenings in Venice. More »