This is the story of "Kenta" & "Stoffe" and their friends. We get to follow
them from when they're teenagers smoking dope and having fun. As the years
pass "Stoffe" OD's on ******e and die ! "Kenta" get's of the heavy drugs
while he still can. He is still with us.
In the last one "Misfits To Yuppies", We get to meet their children who now
is the age their parents was in the fir...
A documentary which visually captures the day-to-day routines of a husband and wife on a small farm.
Great!, 12 August 2002
Author: André Grisell
This movie was rated 8th in a ballot of the best Swedish films ever made, and I can understand it. Although nowadays a little aged, the intensity and nearness to the ones involved is universal and panchronical. The film bears a witness of how the society is unable to cope with the less well-off. The humanity is overwhelming. As assas...
Anna Casparsson (1861-1961) was a Swedish visual artist, pianist and textile artist. She spent time with and was inspired by many important artists, such as Anders Zorn and Ernst Josephsson. In 1960 the Modern Museum in Stockholm dedicated an entire exhibition to Anna Casparsson, which is exposed in the documentary. The film also features an interview with Anna Casparsson recor...
Music is not a language without borders. Shanghai. Clubs. Music. Swedish pop singer Johan Jonason finds himself challenged as he gets nothing but the silent treatment from the Chinese star producers he set out to collaborate with. An altogether humiliating experience. Jonason is forced to evaluate his methods and motifs.
Ruben vit au Danemark, Nastya en Russie, Chikara au Japon et tous pratiquent le sport de haut niveau. Pour l’un, gérer le stress et la défaite s’avère compliqué. Pour l’autre, l’entranement sans relache est rude et pour le dernier, ne pas décevoir les espoirs de son père est primordial. Trois portraits sensibles de jeunes champions.
Prolific writer Joyce Carol Oates has remained intensely private. Until now. Through a long-standing friendship, and persistent inquiry, director Stig Bjorkman is granted unprecedented access to document her mornings of longhand writing, her walks with her husband—to visit her within her solitude.
The Swedish-Iranian filmmaker Nahid Persson is known for uncompromisingly critical films about her native country. In her latest documentary, she focuses on the Iranian journalist Ruhollah Zam.
Like many of his colleagues, Zam operates from abroad, in his case France, due to the lack of press freedom in Iran. Drawing on secret sources and anonymous video footage, and constantly...