In a world with so much streaming content on demand, it’s sometimes easy to forget about the unique experience of watching a film in a cinema, where every audience brings a different energy. While it could be argued that any film gains from that dynamic, there were several films from the past year for which it was particularly notable, including Oppenheimier, Society Of The Snow (ironically sent almost immediately to Netflix) and The Zone Of Interest. In among these big hitters, however, was another, equally innovative film that positively demands to be seen on a big screen where it can be best appreciated.
All of which is to say, don’t miss the opportunity to catch Samsara onscreen, a film that is special not least because you won’t actually be watching the screen itself when it’s at its most immersive. Lois Patiño proved he understood the capabilities of the big screen.
All of which is to say, don’t miss the opportunity to catch Samsara onscreen, a film that is special not least because you won’t actually be watching the screen itself when it’s at its most immersive. Lois Patiño proved he understood the capabilities of the big screen.
- 2/9/2024
- by Amber Wilkinson
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Spanish sales company to handle Spanish director’s third feature.
Spanish sales company Bendita Films has acquired international rights to Lois Patiño’s third feature Samsara, which plays in the Berlinale’s Encounters section
Samsara is a Sanskrit word referring to the cycle of birth, life, death and re-incarnation. Patiño’s film travels from the temples of Laos to the beaches of Zanzibar, accompanying a soul in transit from one body to another.
Patiño’s Red Moon Tide premiered in the Berlinale Forum in 2020 while Coast of Death won the best emerging director prize at Locarno in 2013. His short film...
Spanish sales company Bendita Films has acquired international rights to Lois Patiño’s third feature Samsara, which plays in the Berlinale’s Encounters section
Samsara is a Sanskrit word referring to the cycle of birth, life, death and re-incarnation. Patiño’s film travels from the temples of Laos to the beaches of Zanzibar, accompanying a soul in transit from one body to another.
Patiño’s Red Moon Tide premiered in the Berlinale Forum in 2020 while Coast of Death won the best emerging director prize at Locarno in 2013. His short film...
- 2/7/2023
- by Emilio Mayorga
- ScreenDaily
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