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Joren Seldeslachts

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Joren Seldeslachts

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Revisiting Naseer-Shabana’s Sparsh As It Clocks 45 Years
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The year 1980 was crucial for Naseeruddin Shah. It was the year when two of his career’s most decisive films, Saeed Mirza’s Albert Pinto Ko Gussa Kyon Aata Hai and Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh, were released within months of each other. While in Mirza’s film, the indomitable Naseer played a very angry member of a minority community, in Sparsh, he again played an extremely marginalized character from another minority community. The community of the blind. Unlike Albert Pinto, who was perpetually angry, Anirudh Parmar in Sparsh loses his cool only when reminded of his physical specialness.

Back then, blindness was known as a handicap. And Anirudh, steeped in righteous pride, won’t bear with the ‘h’ word. What makes Sai Paranjpye’s Sparsh such a special film about a specially-abled character is Anirudh’s stubborn refusal to be slotted as a victim. So dogged is Anirudh in circumventing...
See full article at Bollyspice
  • 1/31/2025
  • by Subhash K Jha
  • Bollyspice
Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster in L'odyssée du sous-marin Nerka (1958)
Official Us Trailer for Submarine Thriller 'Torpedo U 235' from Belgium
Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster in L'odyssée du sous-marin Nerka (1958)
"We've got to pilot this ourselves?" Epic Pictures has released an official Us trailer for a submarine thriller called Torpedo U 235, which is an amalgamation of two other titles for this: Torpedo (the original Belgian title) and U235 (the sub's name). The film is about a small team of Belgian resistance fighters that kidnap a German submarine during WWII and accept a mission to bring uranium, needed for the Manhattan Project, from the Belgian Kongo to New York. Based on a true story, of course. This looks like it has some awesome action in addition to the wicked cool story of some Belgians wrangling a stolen German sub for a top secret mission. This stars Koen De Bouw, Thure Riefenstein, Ella-June Henrard, Joren Seldeslachts, Sven De Ridder, Stefan Perceval, and Bert Haelvoet. The dialogue is cheesy, but the rest seems solid. Here's the official trailer (+ posters) for Sven Huybrechts' Torpedo...
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 4/21/2020
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
Blind
Bavaria Film International

Toronto International Film Festival

TORONTO -- Interweaving strands of Hans Christian Andersen's The Snow Queen, Tamar van den Dop's Blind is a stirringly photographed, bleak midwinter's tale about a troubled, blind young man who falls deeply in love with an unattractive albino older woman who is hired to read for him.

It admittedly sounds like a pretty tall tale at that, but the Dutch actress makes a compelling feature directorial debut here, incorporating haunting images, an atmospheric soundscape and urgent performances to curious effect.

An international co-production between The Netherlands, Belgium and Bulgaria, the film could be a decent art house performer with the right domestic distributor.

Ruben (Joren Seldeslachts) is a 19th century wild boy whose violent outburst haves scared away a succession of women who have been enlisted by his ailing mother (Katelijne Verbeke) to read books to him.

But his tantrums do little to dissuade recent arrival Marie (Halina Relijn) from quitting her much-needed job.

Though Ruben is unable to see her startling-looking, pale, scarred face framed by long, witchy-white hair, there's something about her that penetrates his protective shell.

In time, that something turns into a physical relationship, and as Ruben tenderly runs his hand across the self-conscious Marie's cheek, he imagines those scars to be "frost flowers" like those that form on icy window panes.

Their intense, odd, relationship takes a fated turn when Ruben agrees to a new surgical procedure that could result in his regaining his vision.

Not willing to find out if true love is truly blind, Marie flees before Ruben recovers from the surgery, but the two ultimately cross paths one final, poignant time.

Adroitly blending the Andersen imagery with a darker, Brothers Grimm mood, writer-director van den Dop, along with her production designer Hubert Pouille, cinematographer Gregor Meerman and inspired choice of a composer Tom Holkenborg (responsible for that 2002 hit remix of Elvis Presley's "A Little Less Conversation") spin a vivid fable that casts a haunting spell long after the film ends.
  • 9/21/2007
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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