Raoul Ruiz

  • Raoul Ruiz – Poetics of Cinema 2 (2007)

    2001-2010BooksFranceRaoul Ruiz

    Quote:
    “Eleven years separate these lines from the first part of my Poetics of Cinema. Meanwhile the world has changed and cinema with it. Poetics of Cinema, 1 had much of a call to arms about it. What I write today is rather more of a consolatio philosophica. However, let no one be mistaken about this, a healthy pessimism may be better than a suicidal optimism.” Following his research in Poetics of Cinema, 1 on new narrative models as tools for apprehending a fast-shifting world, Ruiz makes an appeal for an entirely new way of filming, writing and conceiving the image. “‘Light, more light,’ were Goethe’s last words as he died. ‘Less light, less light,’ Orson Welles cried repeatedly on a set–the one and only time I saw him. In today’s cinema (and in today’s world) there is too much light. It is time to return to the shadows. So, about turn! And back to the caverns!”Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – Colloque de chiens AKA Dog’s Dialogue (1977)

    1971-1980ExperimentalFranceRaoul RuizShort Film

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    Synopsis:
    A charming tale of murder, perversity and narrative echoes told through shots of barking dogs and a La jetée-like series of stills.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – Ahora te vamos a llamar hermano (1971)

    1971-1980ChileDocumentaryRaoul Ruiz

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    Quote:
    Raoul Ruiz shot this film on March 28th, 1971, during the big peasant march in Temuco, Chile, when the bill that gave the full citizenship and civil rights to the Mapuche Indio people was approved. Raoul Ruiz listens to their painful stories.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – El realismo socialista AKA Socialist Realism (1973)

    Drama1971-1980CubaDocumentaryRaoul Ruiz

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    Quote:
    A people’s court dictates that a laborer kept some tools for himself and thus deserves derision. “But, can’t we improve?” he asks, without blushing, at the moment they decide his expulsion. The story of the laborer that becomes more and more conservative runs along with another one about a conservative publicist who thinks he can foresee a solution by embracing the revolutionary cause; and what relates both reverse paths is Raúl Ruiz’s systemic pleasure for paradoxes. El realismo socialista is not a politic film but a film about politics, rough and uncomfortable in its will to demolish mythologies at the time they were being generated. These 70s Ruiz is showing are not only not glorious, but he’s also guessing they never will be, almost prophesizing the end of that (fake) utopia, all in this film that works as a parallel story to the great Palomita blanca. Oscillating between documentary record and fiction –the concept key reveals itself, or closes the film’s door, towards the end–, and with a notorious use of improvisation, Ruiz seems to confirm what he once said: “The problem with an iron script is that it gets rusty”.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – Treasure Island (1985)

    1981-1990AdventureArthouseRaoul RuizThe Cannon GroupUnited Kingdom

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    Raoul Ruiz’s surrealistic modern-day riff on Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic novel.

    Review by timmy_501 @IMDb:
    While this film is related to the Robert Louis Stevenson book of the same title, it certainly doesn’t resemble a traditional adaptation. The entire film is about the relationship between people and works of fiction. Treasure Island is the most important and notable of these works, but it isn’t the only one. A substantial part of the plot is about a group of people who attempt to reenact Treasure Island each year; they get so caught up being their characters that they sometimes forget they are just acting and none of them seem surprised when the bodies start piling up.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – Les Trois couronnes du matelot AKA Three Crowns of the Sailor (1983)

    1981-1990ArthouseDramaFranceRaoul Ruiz

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    In this classically surreal fantasy, a sailor, known for telling tales, sees a student killing his teacher and decides to spin a few yarns for him. He tells the boy of his many adventures in exotic South American ports where he visited opium dens and stayed in cathouses. In such dark, dreamlike places, the sailor meets many strange, mystical characters.” — Sandra Brennan, All Movie GuideRead More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – La Ville des pirates AKA City of Pirates (1984)

    Drama1981-1990FantasyFranceRaoul Ruiz

    City of Pirates
    (La Ville des pirates, France/Portugal, 1983)

    Raúl Ruiz’s City of Pirates is (de)composed under the sign of Surrealism, with its trust in ecstasy, scandal, the call of the wild, mystification, prophetic dreams, humour, the uncanny. Given the surprising swerves and disorientations evoking Buñuel and Dalí, and the confidence in a poetic discourse recalling Eluard and Péret, one wonders if Ruiz didn’t elaborate his scenario using the Surrealist mode of automatic writing. Troubled, graceful Isidore – Ducasse and Duncan? – is a purely Surrealist heroine, part Ophelia, Salomé, Bérénice, prone to trances, somnambulism, hysterical seizure, contact with the ‘other side’.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – La noche de enfrente AKA Night Across the Street (2012)

    2011-2020ArthouseChileRaoul Ruiz

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    Quote:
    On the verge of a forced retirement, Don Celso, an elderly office worker begins to relive both real and imagined memories from his life – a trip to the movies as a young boy with Beethoven, listening to tall tales from Long John Silver, a brief stay in a haunted hotel. Stories hide within stories and the thin line between imagination and reality steadily erodes, opening up a marvelous new world of personal remembrance and fantastic melodrama. A playfully elegiac film from the great Raul Ruiz, conceived to be seen only after his death, Night Across the Street is a beautiful final masterwork exploring the director’s favorite subjects: fiction, history and life itself.Read More »

  • Raoul Ruiz – La Chouette aveugle AKA The Blind Owl (1987)

    1981-1990DramaFantasyFranceRaoul Ruiz

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    Quote:
    One of Raul Ruiz’s most obscure and enigmatic films, very loosely based on a novella by Sadeq Hedayat, “The Blind Owl”

    In French and other languages. (Roughly halfway through the movie, the spoken language shifts from French (with snatches of German and Italian) to Old Spanish and Arabic—both of which are subtitled in fake Old French, but, not in a manner that corresponds to anything remotely resembling a correct translation. )

    Jonathan Rosenbaum has said that this films “defies synopsis”.

    Recorded almost 20 years ago from a cable broadcast, and obviously poor quality.
    Much of the film is very dark, but what we see is Ruiz at his most visually imaginative. Transferred from a Betamax recording.Read More »

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