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Magellan (2025)

Through Lav Diaz’s rigorously composed tableaux stretching from Portugal to Indonesia, Magellan deconstructs the mythology of its infamous explorer, applying an austere, postcolonial lens to the hubris which underlies such violent acts of conquest.

Woman in the Dunes (1964)

Through Hiroshi Teshigahara’s elemental metaphor in Woman in the Dunes, sand becomes the formless structure of one man’s existential imprisonment, trapping him in a Sisyphean struggle of labour that slowly absorbs him into a primordial, ever-shifting desert.

Marketa Lazarová (1967)

Although the Christianity of medieval Europe encroaches upon a primordial pagan world in Marketa Lazarová, František Vláčil does not grant moral authority to any single religion, but rather dissolves historical certainty into a fragmented, mythic haze.

Orphan (2025)

The tragedy of innocence persevering through historical turmoil underpins the vulnerable heart of Orphan, as through László Nemes’ intimate, subjective camerawork, one young boy grapples with the dissonance between an imagined father and reality in postwar Budapest.

The Travelling Players (1975)

Against the political turmoil of mid-century Greece in The Travelling Players, Theo Angelopoulos’ theatrical microcosm captures a fragmented nation caught between competing powers, dissolving time through long takes that conjure a swirling, ceaseless nightmare.

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