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Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 5:07 pm
by domino harvey
Looks like every other recent restoration of a color French film
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 5:47 pm
by NABOB OF NOWHERE
Proust has been rewritten where he dunks his Madelaine into a urine sample
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 8:55 pm
by zedz
I'm usually cautious about claiming a photographic memory for films I saw decades ago, but one of my clearest impressions of the 35mm print I saw on release was "crisp whites", which, um, no. With this release, it looks like the entire film has been dipped in tea.
Still, a fantastic film, and I will pick this up a.s.a.p.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sun Nov 18, 2018 4:18 am
by Murdoch
How's the Second Sight DVD fare? I always avoided the Kino but I never could find any opinions on the Second Sight's quality.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sun Nov 18, 2018 6:32 am
by feihong
The Second Sight DVD is a very nice disc. Anamorphic, great subtitles, strong picture quality...all around a quality DVD.
There is also a French blu ray from Blaq Out, but I'm not sure it's available anymore (it is part of a series of Ruiz blu rays, along with Three Lives and Only One Death and Geneaologies of a Crime). It looks beautiful in motion, very similar to the theatrical experience as I recall it. There are no English subtitles on the disc, but the picture quality is better than those shots of the Kimstim disc look. My impression is more depth, and lacking the yellow cast on the Kimstim disc.
I think Kimstim remains a company where they have great taste in acquisitions...and yet their disc authoring never does justice to the films they acquire.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Wed Nov 21, 2018 1:53 pm
by Roscoe
I got the KimStim Blu-Ray of TIME REGAINED and took a look -- it may just be my TV and my settings, but it looks a lot better on my TV with my settings than it does in those stills on DVDBeaver. Brighter, sharper more colorful. Some speckles still remained, interestingly, especially in night-time scenes.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Wed Apr 03, 2019 9:55 pm
by Calvin
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Thu Jun 20, 2019 12:08 am
by therewillbeblus
For those interested,
La Recta Provincia is on YouTube in decent quality with good English subs (I'm no subtitle expert, but they really hit the humor and ideas Ruiz throws at you in a way that's well handled compared to other "YouTube Ruiz experiences" I've had). Seemingly absent from any Ruiz discussion I've come across, this ranks up there with his better works, namely
Love Torn in a Dream in the way he plays with narrative in alternate dimensions I didn't know were possible for a mind to dream up. I wish I could include this in the upcoming Horror Redux list project because, like other Ruiz, the fantasy contains eerie elements that play with the genre, this time in a more personal milieu for the director of Chilean folklore.
Link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kNO0E8-diA
[Note: There are hardcoded Portuguese subs, which may be frustrating to some though I didn't find it disturbing since there was barely any overlap with the English subs, if at all]
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Tue Feb 25, 2020 12:43 pm
by Stefan Andersson
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Fri Jul 31, 2020 4:41 pm
by Stefan Andersson
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2021 5:25 am
by dadaistnun
New Ruiz book coming in March:
An unpublished tale by Raoul Ruiz.
A previously unpublished story by filmmaker Raul Ruiz that was found in a trunk by his wife Valeria Sarmiento, A Nine Year-Old Aviator was written in Paris when Ruiz had just fled Chile. This tale is one of a series of stories written in the 1970s for Sarmiento. As they were both living in exile and he did not have work while his wife was childminding to provide for them both, every day Ruiz would present her with a different story to read to the child she was looking after. This story is illustrated by Camila Mora-Scheihing, to whom this tale was read as a child.
Camila Mora-Scheihing is a multidisciplinary artist started her acting career with Raul Ruiz as a child in "The Territory". Growing up with Ruiz as family and a mentor, she continued to regularly work with him on short films, radio and feature films such as "Genealogy of a Crime". After working as a director and directing a documentary "The Drift", she then studied at the Royal College of Art in London as a way of cementing her artist career. Her artwork continues to be shown in the United Kingdom and internationally.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2021 5:34 am
by therewillbeblus
This story is illustrated by Camila Mora-Scheihing, to whom this tale was read as a child.
Her illustrations' cryptic essence seem to be perfectly suited for Ruiz regardless, but the idea of an adult expressing the imagery from their imagination recalled from their memories as a child when read a story by Raul Ruiz is the most Ruiz-ian thing ever. I need this now.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Wed Jun 02, 2021 7:16 pm
by Stefan Andersson
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Jul 26, 2021 4:39 pm
by dadaistnun
Mubi is currently showing
The Wandering Soap Opera, the theatrical version of
Mysteries of Lisbon, and a 2K restoration of
Three Crowns of the Sailor.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2021 10:44 am
by Stefan Andersson
dadaistnun wrote: Sat Jan 16, 2021 5:25 am
New Ruiz book coming in March:
An unpublished tale by Raoul Ruiz.
A previously unpublished story by filmmaker Raul Ruiz that was found in a trunk by his wife Valeria Sarmiento, A Nine Year-Old Aviator was written in Paris when Ruiz had just fled Chile. This tale is one of a series of stories written in the 1970s for Sarmiento. As they were both living in exile and he did not have work while his wife was childminding to provide for them both, every day Ruiz would present her with a different story to read to the child she was looking after. This story is illustrated by Camila Mora-Scheihing, to whom this tale was read as a child.
Camila Mora-Scheihing is a multidisciplinary artist started her acting career with Raul Ruiz as a child in "The Territory". Growing up with Ruiz as family and a mentor, she continued to regularly work with him on short films, radio and feature films such as "Genealogy of a Crime". After working as a director and directing a documentary "The Drift", she then studied at the Royal College of Art in London as a way of cementing her artist career. Her artwork continues to be shown in the United Kingdom and internationally.
Update re: the above -- this book is available in English and French:
https://www.lespressesdureel.com/EN/ouvrage.php?id=8096
https://www.lespressesdureel.com/ouvrage.php?id=8095
Source:
https://sabzian.be/note/new-book-releas ... ummer-2021
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Aug 22, 2022 4:02 pm
by dadaistnun
DisVoir's
newest Ruiz publication is extracts from the diary he kept from 1993-2011. Disappointingly, it is only 104 pages; the
original Spanish-language edition published by Diego Portales University is well over 2000 pages. (I can't find an exact page count anywhere, though this
Google books listing says volume 1 is 1206 pages, which sounds about right compared to the copy I have actually seen in person.)
Jaime Grijalba has been
working on a translation of the entire thing (I'm not sure how long he's been at it, but he's already into volume 2). I can't quite figure out how to peruse the old entries on his site, but you can sign up for his mailing list to receive the new ones as he does them.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Thu Apr 20, 2023 4:28 pm
by Stefan Andersson
Ruiz´s "Socialist Realism" (1973) now reconstructed and restored. Trailer:
https://www.criterion.com/current/posts ... the-making
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2023 7:29 pm
by Stefan Andersson
Ruiz retrospective in Austria.
In program notes, we learn that Daphne du Maurier´s short story The Apple Tree was the basis for Ruiz´s aborted 1967 project El tango del viudo y su espejo deformante (The Tango of the Widower and its Distorting Mirror):
https://www.filmmuseum.at/en/film_progr ... 5952219581
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Tue Aug 27, 2024 3:42 pm
by criterionsnob
The mini-series version of Mysteries of Lisbon is
coming to Mubi in September.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Tue Aug 27, 2024 6:21 pm
by beamish14
That’s excellent. So frustrating how most of the literary works Ruiz adapted have never had English translations
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sat Jan 18, 2025 7:53 pm
by dadaistnun
The 2023 reconstruction/completion of Socialist Realism is streaming on Mubi UK. I believe this is its first non-festival appearance.
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Thu Mar 27, 2025 6:56 pm
by Stefan Andersson
On La cité des ombres (1995), an unfinished film shot in Taiwan:
https://iffr.com/en/iffr/2019/films/double-ghosts
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2025 10:06 am
by Stefan Andersson
De Grands évènements et des gens ordinaires - MoMA screening:
https://www.moma.org/calendar/events/10636
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2025 1:56 am
by Murdoch
I came across
this dvd of Treasure Island and ordered it out of both interest in finally watching this and frustration over the mostly non-existence of Ruiz in HD. Anyone have any opinions on the DVD they could share? Also, how much, if any, of the film is in English (I see FNAC has English noted as a primary language)?
Re: Raúl Ruiz
Posted: Mon Jul 21, 2025 2:37 am
by Lowry_Sam
Murdoch wrote: Mon Jul 21, 2025 1:56 am
ordered it out of both interest in finally watching this and frustration over the mostly non-existence of Ruiz in HD.
FYI,
Time Regained was released on blu-ray in the US by kimstim. I was fortunate enough to pick up a copy before it disappeared. I thought it looked pretty good & would recommend it if you see it.