All the screenshots (literal photos of the screen, bc I'm ghetto like that) of the script fragments from the new Renfield documentary. I especially recommend the alternate dance/dream sequence!
seen from United States

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seen from United States
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seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Saudi Arabia
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seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from France
seen from Malaysia
All the screenshots (literal photos of the screen, bc I'm ghetto like that) of the script fragments from the new Renfield documentary. I especially recommend the alternate dance/dream sequence!
Walt Disney’s Cinderella (1950)
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days: Criterion 4K Edition
Dir. Cristian Mungiu Score: 9.4
At various times in Cristian Mungiu's blistering drama, lights are turned on, but the dim, low-wattage bulbs used in late '80s Romania do little to brighten up the surroundings. Any illumination comes directly from the exquisite rendering of Mungiu's characters.
Over the course of a single day, Otilia (Anamaria Marinca), has to help her dorm mate, Gabriela (Laura Vasiliu), set up an abortion, involving booking a hotel room, meeting the awful "doctor" (Vlad Ivanov) and organizing the money. She also has to go to a party for the mother of her boyfriend, Adi (Alexandru Potocean), and do it all while dealing with the idiotically repressive and inefficiently bureaucratic system of her country. Mungiu's film is drab and colorless, echoes of cold and exhaust fill almost every frame, and snow can be seen falling outside, but the intensity of the situation -- abortion being highly illegal in Catholic Romania -- and the desperation of the characters, drives every extended scene.
To play off that anxiety, Mungiu cleverly shoots in extremely long takes, following Otilia for minutes at a time as she tries to negotiate with hotel clerks, or is forced to listen to her boyfriend's parents' friends as they ramble on at a dinner party. At times, the takes go on so long, and are so fraught with tension, you find yourself clutching at the armrests of your seat in helpless apprehension.
To Mungiu's credit, we also find more and more about the characters as the film goes on -- Gabriella's ungracious manipulativeness, for example -- and most of it negative, but it still doesn't dim our sympathies for their plight. The end result is a Dogme-style naturalistic masterpiece, as intricately woven and delicately put together as an ancient tapestry. The lives of the characters are fully invested, imbued with ambiguity and shimmering with verisimilitude. They won't soon leave you. By the time the screen cuts to black at the end of this harrowing night, you get the sense that the characters will continue on in their haphazard fashion without us: Only the camera gets shut off.
Disc Extras: Included in this 4K digital restoration edition are some key extras, including a new (and engrossing) interview with the understated director, an interview with critic Jay Weissberg on the explosion of Romanian cinema, some deleted scenes, and the press conference after it debuted at Cannes in 2007.
The Hunger Games movies in 4k Ultra HD Blu-Ray - available on November 8th (U.S.)
All 4 Hunger Games will be available in a 4k combo edition incl. a normal Blu-Ray and and Digitl HD) on November 8th in the USA.
There will be a new audio commentary for The Hunger Games. The other extras were already available in the older editions.
We expect this edition also be available in other countries, but there are no informations out yet.
Pre-order them on amazon here:
The Hunger Games - 22.99$
Catching Fire - 22.99$
Mockingjay Part 1 - 22.99$
Mockingjay Part 2 -42.99$