The Daily Notebook (mubi) rakstīja, @ 2014-01-01 10:41:00 |
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Editor's Note: We're kicking 2014 off with a bit of a format change in this here column. We'll be consistently posting separate, self-contained news posts in the Notebook, so we're taking out the news section here (not that some things won't be somewhat newsy) and making this more of a freewheeling zone of new/old bits of film criticism, images, videos, and whatever else we feel is "noteworthy" on any given week (which, to be honest, is in the spirit of the initial concept). Oh, and Happy New Year, everyone!
- Boris Nelepo's Top 25
- Ben Sachs' Top 10
- La Furia Umana's Top 10 (to go along with their new issue, online now!)
- An incredible collection of best-ofs including lists by Nicole Brenez, Adrian Martin, and Jonathan Rosenabum.
- Here's Nick Pinkerton's take, the most exhaustive and persuasive of the bunch.
- The "Wild, Brilliant Wolf of Wall Street" by Richard Brody.
- What does the director himself have to say?
- For Hitfix, Kristopher Tapley interviews editor Thelma Schoonmaker about Wolf as well as her history of collaborating with Scorsese.
"In Cinema Badiou uses his philosophical meta-language in a freer, more fluid, more poetic style than in his more systematic works. Being, event, multiplicity, and truth are employed in a way not incompatible with his system but that resonates more widely. Herein lies the distinctive contribution of Cinema both to Badiou’s oeuvre and to contemporary thought. The book allows him to traverse various ideas and experiences of the cinema, and to elevate them to a poetic beauty and a synthetic power that move us both affectively and intellectually. If cinema is a 'metaphor for contemporary thought', and if we are contemporary with a movement towards 'philosophy as cinema', as Badiou concludes, then Badiou’s philosophy is itself a metaphor for that thought, a synthesis of diachrony and multiplicity which we may call 'cinematic pluralism'."