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E. Nina Rothe

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The Diaries, because sometimes life needs more. 

James Gray

James Gray at 2018 Marrakech Film Festival, as Head of Competition Jury

E. Nina Rothe September 20, 2018

That I’m excited about the upcoming Marrakech Film Festival — which will take over the Moroccan city from November 30th to December 8th — is no secret. Apart from loving this country of spices, colors and incredible food, the Marrakech Film Fest has always held a special kind mystique for me. And with their new reorganized staff and crew, some of the most prestigious names in cinema circles (see all of them listed at the bottom of this post) my excitement has only grown stronger.

But this morning, when the festival announced director James Gray at the helm of their Competition Jury, I burst into downright joy. Let me explain.

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In Festival, The Diaries Tags Morocco, Marrakesh, James Gray, Two Lovers, Little Odessa, Rasha Salti, Anke Leweke, Remi Bonhomme, Ali Hajji, Christoph Terhechte, Melita Toscan du Plantier, HRH Prince Moulay Rachid, Marrakech Film Festival
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Nebbia — Filippo Sorcinelli

Nebbia — Filippo Sorcinelli

City of Fragrances, Part Two: Scents, Art and Sensibility

E. Nina Rothe September 18, 2018

Sight and sound are definitely a part of our earliest memories. They say children can remember only from the age of three and a half upward and I have to say, my first memory has to do with sticking my finger in the electric socket and feeling the jolt. I remember feeling like someone had pushed me and apparently — this is my parents’ memory of the event — I ran to the living room crying holding my index finger, utterly frightened.

But how much does scent, the smells around us, have to do with our individual memory bank? Personally, I can’t help but remember my favorite uncle Pippo every time I smell a certain brand of cigarette smoking up the air. And I go back to my childhood quickly, as soon as I step off the train in Florence and smell the city’s distinctive scent of, well how do I put it nicely, sewer… Just recently I was told why that smell is so intrinsically Florentine and it has to do with the lack of a sewage system dating back to Medici time. Apparently, every time the system fills up, giant trucks come to gather up the goodies and carry them away. There are serious studies done on it!

So it’s no surprise that the Florentines were some of the first people to use scents, ambiance fragrances and perfume to change the air around them.

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In Fashion, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Pitti Fragranze, Firenze, Florence, perfume, Nero Divino, Teatro Fragranze Uniche, Saskia Wilson-Brown, IAO, The Institute for Art and Olfaction, Los Angeles, Filippo Sorcinelli, San Miniato Al Monte, music, ECooking, Tina Søgaard, Danish, beauty products, Paride Vitale, Parco 1923, Abruzzi, Parco Nazionale dell'Abruzzo, Scarpetta di Venere, Santa Maria Novella Carta d'Armenia, Scent memories
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Frescoes by Mariotto di Nardo, inside the Santa Maria Novella shop in Florence

Frescoes by Mariotto di Nardo, inside the Santa Maria Novella shop in Florence

City of Fragrances, Part One: Florence at the scent-er of this year's Pitti Fragranze

E. Nina Rothe September 17, 2018

This year, the iconic once-a-year fragrance fair Pitti Fragranze, which is held in Florence every September, incorporated the entire city into its scent design. Thus, in the process, let the select audience of buyers and journalists that attended the event, in on the secret nooks and crannies of the great renaissance town. From the Officina Profumo Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella, to the church of San Miniato al Monte, from the center to the outskirts, Florence became the “City of Fragrances” and in the process, reclaimed its scent, health and beauty heritage.

Following are a few personal highlights from this incredible journey of scent.

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In Fashion, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Pitti Fragranze, Saskia Wilson-Brown, The Institute for Art and Olfaction, Paride Vitale, Parco 1923, Ludmila Bitar, IDEO Perfumeurs, Frances Shoemack, Abel Odor, Florence, Firenze, 401 è Amatrice, Lorenzo Dante Ferro, Amatrice, earthquake, Marina and Roberto Serafini
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A still from ‘The Man Who Surprised Everyone’ by Natalya Merkulova and Alexey Chupov

A still from ‘The Man Who Surprised Everyone’ by Natalya Merkulova and Alexey Chupov

The Venice Diaries: 'The Man Who Surprised Everyone' is the antidote to intolerance

E. Nina Rothe September 11, 2018

How would you cope with being told you have a terminal illness?

That is a question I’ve asked myself often these days, as I deal with people I love getting ill and the recent death of my father. Where do you find the strength to go on, when you know the days are numbered and how do you continue to be a functioning member of society when probably all you wish to do is go into the woods and hide?

Well, in Natalya Merkulova’s and Alexey Chupov’s haunting, beautiful and at times painfully truthful film ‘The Man Who Surprised Everyone’ which screened in the Orizzonti section in Venice, the real life husband and wife team tackle the difficult question.

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Natalya Merkulova Alexey Chupov, Natalya Merkulova, Alexey Chupov, The Man Who Surprised Everyone, Natalya Kudryashova, Orizzonti, Best Actress award, Venezia 75, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice Film Festival, Russian cinema, Russia, Moscow, Siberia, Evgeniy Tsiganov, Shaman, Magic, Yuriy Kuznetsov
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A still from 'Roma' the Venice Golden Lion winning film by Alfonso Cuarón which will be in theater and on Netflix in December 2018

A still from 'Roma' the Venice Golden Lion winning film by Alfonso Cuarón which will be in theater and on Netflix in December 2018

The Venice Diaries: The mixtape of Venezia 75 is an homage to creativity's soundtrack

E. Nina Rothe September 10, 2018

This year's Venice Film Festival seemed to carry a special soundtrack, like a mixtape of our collective thoughts and hopes and wishes. For a future where we are finally able to learn from our past and stop thinking that our opinions count individually. For a world where we will discover, finally, a middle ground in shades of grey, instead of living everything in either black or white.

Here is my Venezia 75 Mixtape. 

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In The Diaries, Festival, Cinema Tags Roma, Alfonso Cuaron, Venezia 75, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Golden Lion, Netflix, A Tramway in Jerusalem, Amos Gitai, Voyage en Palestine, Gustave Flaubert, Israel, Palestine, Palestinian rapper, I don't know how to love him, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Jesus Christ Superstar, What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?, Roberto Minervini, Chief Kevin and the Mardi Gras Indian, Somebody Gotta Sew, spirituals, A Star is Born, Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Shallow, SIA, Spotify, Natalie Portman, Vox Lux, Brady Corbet, Willem Dafoe, The Greatest, C'est ça l'amour, Claire Burger, Venice Days, Giornate degli Autori, Paolo Conte, Sparring Partner, film, music, mixtape
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Sawsan Arsheed in a still from Soudade Kaadan's 'The Day I Lost My Shadow' 

Sawsan Arsheed in a still from Soudade Kaadan's 'The Day I Lost My Shadow' 

The Venice Diaries: Lion of the Future winner Soudade Kaadan's 'The Day I Lost My Shadow'

E. Nina Rothe September 9, 2018

'The Day I Lost My Shadow' by Soudade Kaadan won the Lion of the Future – “Luigi De Laurentiis” Venice Award for a Debut Film Jury at the 75th Venice Film Festival. It's a win to be celebrated for all women filmmakers, of course, but also for Syrian filmmakers who, since the start of the war in 2011 have all but disappeared. Scattered around foreign lands, their voices and visions have become the true casualties of this conflict. 

In her film, which world premiered at the festival in the Orizzonti section, Kaadan uses the metaphor of personal shadows as a way to show how the war strips people of their humanity and hope. When Sana, played by the beautiful Sawsan Arsheed, goes out looking for a gas canister so she can cook for her son, she is pulled into a three day nightmare that eventually ends the way everything ends in Syria... I'll leave that to your imagination and perhaps your first viewing of the film. 

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags The Day I Lost My Shadow, Soudade Kaadan, Amira Kaadan, Lion of the Future, Venice 75, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Syria, Lebanon, Doha Film Institute, SANAD, Abu Dhabi, Damascus, Orizzonti, Sawsan Arsheed, Debut Film Jury, Luigi de Laurentiis
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Bouli Lanners, flanked by Justine Lacroix, right and Sarah Henochsberg in Claire Burger's 'C'est ça l'amour'  

Bouli Lanners, flanked by Justine Lacroix, right and Sarah Henochsberg in Claire Burger's 'C'est ça l'amour'  

The Venice Diaries: Giornate degli Autori winner Claire Burger on her film 'C’est ça l’amour' (Real Love)

E. Nina Rothe September 8, 2018

Think back to the last time a film redefined love for you. That felt like a magical discovery then, didn't it? For me, cinema exists at its best when it does something that changes me -- and of course I want that change to be for the better.

In Claire Burger's touching follow up to her Cannes Camera d'Or winner 'Party Girl' -- which she co-directed with Marie Amachoukeli and Samuel Theis -- I found a new fatherhood role model. For a woman whose own father was at best unavailable throughout my teenage years and beyond, Burger's wondrous father figure Mario (played by the spellbinding Bouli Lanners) is a revelation and offers a sense of newfound hope. His quest to be a good father to the young Frida (the perfectly rebellious Justine Lacroix) and the teenage Kiki (cool and flirty Sarah Henochsberg) takes the audience on a journey of discovery along with the characters. 

But 'C'est ça l'amour' is a multilayered film and so it's no surprise that, among quite a few strong and beautiful stories featured in this year's Giornate degli Autori line up, Burger's film ended up walking away with the top prize -- the GdA Director's Award.

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Claire Burger, C'est ça l'amour, Real Love, Venice Days, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Giornate degli Autori, Cannes Film Festival, Camera d'Or, Bouli Lanners, Sarah Henochsberg, Justine Lacroix, Jonas Carpignano, GDA Director's Award, European Union, Karel Och, Karlovy Vary Film Festival
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JOY-Photo11.jpg

The Venice Diaries: Sudabeh Mortezai's 'Joy' wins multiple awards, and conquers hearts, in Venice

E. Nina Rothe September 7, 2018

As we watch our nightly dose of immigration porn fed to us by the local news channels, particularly those of us who live in Europe we see row after row of young men stepping off boats and assorted vessels. We could be mistaken into thinking that they left their women safe at home, in their country of origin, the wives and girlfriends and mothers awaiting their return, as well as their paycheck. That's so far from the truth and if you ever held such a wrong opinion, 'Joy' by Sudabeh Mortezai will set you straight. 

In her beautifully shot and perfectly told film premiering in the Giornate degli Autori, Venice Days sidebar at the Venice Film Festival, Mortezai shows us the complex network of Nigerian women who virtually invisibly inhabit our European streets. 'Joy' is as much about the oldest profession in the world, the prostitution networks these women get sucked into and then, once they have paid off their debts, also manage and run in Europe, as it is about womanhood itself. We follow the story of these young women from the juju ritual they are subjected to at home, in Benin City Nigeria, to the streets of Vienna where they owe their traffickers the kind of money one wouldn't spend traveling around the world for a year and staying at the best hotels. 

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Precious Mariam Sanusi, Joy, Sudabeh Mortezai, Joy Anwulika Alphonsus, Venice Days, Giornate degli Autori, Hearst Film Award 2018 for Best Female Direction, Europa Cinema Label Award, Label Europa Cinema prize, Nigeria, prostitution, Benin City, Human trafficking, Venice 75, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Iran, Austria, Vienna, Klemens Hufnagl
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Vincent Lacoste and Isaure Multrier in 'Amanda' by Mikhaël Hers

Vincent Lacoste and Isaure Multrier in 'Amanda' by Mikhaël Hers

The Venice Diaries: Stacy Martin and Vincent Lacoste redefine family in Mikhaël Hers' 'Amanda'

E. Nina Rothe September 6, 2018

I'm a sucker for a great love story. But often, the films that hit me deepest aren't filled with happily ever after endings and the perfect romance between a handsome boy and a beautiful girl. It's the redefinition of true love that gets me to my core.

In Mikhaël Hers' latest 'Amanda' which premiered in the Orizzonti section at this year's Venice Film Festival, the filmmaker reworks the idea of family and in the process, also rewrites the perfect romance. Of course Hers' film is not missing out on a handsome boy -- the charming Vincent Lacoste breaks hearts as David -- and a pretty girl -- with the striking Stacy Martin playing his love interest Léna. But at the center of 'Amanda' is the title character, a little girl played beautifully by Isaure Multrier, a child who suddenly goes from being an occasional playmate in the life of her somewhat immature uncle David, to being entrusted to him permanently. 

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Amanda, Mikhaël Hers, Vincent Lacoste, Stacy Martin, Venice 75, Venice Film Festival, La Biennale di Venezia, Orizzonti, Lars Von Trier, Matteo Garrone, Isaure Multrier
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Judy in a still from Roberto Minervini's 'What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?'

Judy in a still from Roberto Minervini's 'What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?'

The Venice Diaries: Roberto Minervini's 'What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?'

E. Nina Rothe September 5, 2018

Of all the films we watched at this year's Venice Film Festival Roberto Minervini's was the most important.

For two very specific reasons. One, it's a documentary, and while many narrative films did explain my own personal struggle as a modern woman in today's world, those fictional stories can be dismissed by their critics as simply made up. 'What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?' cannot, since it's real life, it's in your face and it's downright true.

Point number two follows closely my first point, in that while watching the press preview of Minervini's film, which premiered in Competition at the festival, I saw more of my colleagues shift in their seat and -- after what appeared like much inner debate and a prolonged anxiety -- leave the theater than ever before. The answer is not a reflection on the quality of 'What You Gonna Do...' which is visually stunning, features a terrific soundtrack and makes its two hours duration fly by in what seemed like fifteen minutes.

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Roberto Minervini, What You Gonna Do When the World's On Fire?, Film, Venice 75, Venezia 75, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice Film Festival, New Black Panthers Party, Black Panthers, African Americans
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La Biennale del Cinema poster

The Venice Diaries: Creativity decoded by Schnabel's 'At Eternity's Gate', Assayas' 'Non-Fiction' and 'Why Are We Creative?'

E. Nina Rothe September 4, 2018

The first ever Venice Film Festival was held in 1932, from the 6th to the 21st of August and it opened with 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' -- the Fredric March version. March went on to win favorite actor and since there were no official prizes, he was picked by the audience.

In that magical moment, during the first edition of the first ever world film festival our own profession -- film criticism and film writing -- was also born. There hadn't been a true need for it before, think about it.

When I come to Venice, I realize this is where it all comes from, and despite some problematic years in our history, we should remember the heritage of the Venice Film Festival. All journalists should take a moment and think about that when they first set foot on the Lido. Without Venice, we probably wouldn't be here. They started it. All.

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In Cinema, Festival, The Diaries Tags Venice 75, Venice, Venice Film Festival, Venice Days, La Biennale di Venezia, Why Are We Creative?, Hermann Vaske, Quentin Tarantino, Yoko Ono, Dalai Lama, David Bowie, Vivienne Westwood, Stephen Hawking, Giornate degli Autori, Arafat, Shimon Perez, Willem Dafoe, Doubles Vies, Non-Fiction, Olivier Assayas, Juliette Binoche, Guillaume Canet, Personal Shopper, Vincent Macaigne, Nora Hamzawi, creativity, favorites, At Eternity's Gate, Julian Schnabel, Vincent Van Gogh, Rupert Friend, Mads Mikkelson, Emmanuelle Seigner, Miral, Basquiat, Before Night Falls, Competition
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Robert Mitchum photographed by Bruce Weber

Robert Mitchum photographed by Bruce Weber

The Venice Diaries: Bruce Weber paints a daring portrait of Robert Mitchum in 'Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast'

E. Nina Rothe September 3, 2018

As I sat down to meet legendary fashion photographer Bruce Weber I said "Mr. Weber, I can't say I grew up with your photographs because I'm older than I look, but I definitely grew into my sexuality thanks to your iconic images." It's true. Those NYC billboards in Times Square of underwear models for Calvin Klein, the Ralph Lauren "out of Africa" campaign, Kate Moss in the bathtub, the beach scenes, the catalogues I devoured before the advent of the internet, I grew into my skin thanks to Weber's images. 

Today, Weber has helped me to rediscover the beauty and genius of classic American actor Robert Mitchum. 'Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast' screens at the Venice Film Festival in the Venice Classics section and is co-produced by Weber's wife Nan Bush. In the documentary, Mitchum is shown as never before, a singer, a lover and a poet, aided in part by cameos by Johnny Depp, Benicio Del Toro, Polly Bergen, Brenda Vaccaro and Liam Neeson, among many many more.

So why a film about Mitchum, why from Weber and why now?

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In Cinema, Interviews, Fashion, Festival, The Diaries Tags Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast, Bruce Weber, Robert Mitchum, Venezia 75, La Biennale di Venezia, Venice Film Festival, documentary, Venice Classics, movie stars, Manhood, NYC, Calvin Klein, Photography, Ralph Lauren, Kate Moss, Johnny Depp, Benicio Del Toro, Brenda Vaccaro, Polly Bergen, Liam Neeson, Nan Bush, America, Judy Garland, George Cukor, A Star is Born, Lady Gaga, Bradley Cooper, political correctness, affairs, Dorothy Mitchum, Hollywood, Chet Baker, Let's Get Lost, Shelley Winters, Frank Sinatra, Johnny Mercer, Keely Smith, Pearl Bailey, Marianne Faithful, Dr. John
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Tye Sheridan and Jeff Goldblum in a still from Rick Alverson's 'The Mountain'

Tye Sheridan and Jeff Goldblum in a still from Rick Alverson's 'The Mountain'

The Venice Diaries: Rick Alverson's 'The Mountain' shows us the perils of an American "antiseptic utopia"

E. Nina Rothe September 1, 2018

Filmmaker Rick Alverson has never made films that are easily comprehensible to an audience. His work is the antithesis to the American superhero movie. From his first work 'The Builder' in 2010 he's proudly yet quietly worn the "independent filmmaker" badge of American moviemakers. In the tradition of greats like Dennis Hopper and John Cassavetes who came before him.

In his latest film 'The Mountain' which premiered in Competition at this year's Venice Film Festival, Alverson throws the audience a proverbial bone. What I mean is that 'The Mountain', starring Jeff Goldblum and Tye Sheridan, is as close to a traditional film as we will ever get from Alverson. While he still describes it as "an anti-utopian film" in his director's statement, 'The Mountain' takes the audience through a hippie trippy ride on a sparse, pastel hued rollercoaster with few words, great acting, haunting images and sounds and by the end, leaves us feeling lobotomizes. I could swear the entire crowd of the Sala Darsena, where the press and industry screening took place the day before the film's official premiere, walked out with a very specific look on their faces. Not unlike that of the leading character of Andy, played by Sheridan. 

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In Cinema, Festival, Interviews, The Diaries Tags Rick Alverson, The Mountain, Venice Film Festival, Venezia 75, La Biennale di Venezia, Jeff Goldblum, Tye Sheridan, Lobotomy, America, Make America Great Again, Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman, P.T. Barnum, Hotel Excelsior, Dennis Hopper, John Cassavetes, Walter Freeman
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