A Tribute to Marina Anna Eich

Wishing all you guys a Very Happy New Year..! 🙂

And why not we start the year with a celebration, to one of the most beautiful and multi-faceted actresses from Germany, Marina Anna Eich.

Apart from being a talented actress, she’s a film producer, spokesperson and PR Manager, and had been a member of the Jury at several film festivals. Through my interactions with her, apart from coming across as a knowledgeable and diligent professional, she strikes me as a genuinely kind and warm-hearted person. A beauty both on the outside and from within had to be celebrated, and even though this tribute may focus overtly on the physical in keeping with the blog’s theme, I had to say it had been a pleasure to get to know a person more than her characters reveal on screen.

The Tribute:
The compilation covers most of her films with WTP International:
Dann nenn es halt Liebe
The Dark Side of Our Inner Space
24/7 The Passion of Life
– Mein Traum oder Die Einsamkeit ist nie allein

The soundtrack is from Wolfgang Edelmayer’s awesome title, “Du fehlst mir sehr”, taken from his album “22/6”. I had run this tribute past Ms. Eich before posting it and her feedback has been quite positive, but let us know what you guys think as well… 🙂

Download Links:
Mirror 1 | Mirror 2

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Elizabeth Cervantes & Joana Rañé in “Volverás” [Spain, Mexico 2002]

I’ll finish the year with Antonio Chavarrías’ thriller, “Volverás” [Eng. Title: You’ll be Back]. While it is an engaging film that keeps your attention through, it will leave you a bit deflated towards the end. It is nevertheless, Recommended Viewing.

Amazon.com DVD Link


Storyline:
Ignasio is an aspiring architect – hoping to join his father’s firm one day, and has been offered a scholarship to further his studies in America. He invites girlfriend Claudia to come along but she’s undecided, weary of being dependent upon him. Ignasio bumps into elder brother Carlos whom he hadn’t seen in a few years. Carlos is now a washed up and down-on-luck gambler who just doesn’t know how to quit, and his Mexican girlfriend Marta is increasingly getting frustrated with him. The dynamic between Carlos and Ignasio is firmly established, as we see the elder brother had always enjoyed pushing Ignasio towards danger since childhood. The younger sibling meekly does whatever he’s asked to do, so he win his brother’s approval. Carlos is now in great debt with people hunting for him, and he decides to drag Ignasio too along the precipice.

Compilation: Elizabeth Cervantes and Joana Rañé

Elizabeth Cervantes & Joana Rane in Volveras

Feisty Joana Rañé and Mexican beauty Elizabeth Cervantes both shed their clothes in the thriller "Volverás".


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Valeria Golino in “Storia d’Amore” [1986 Italy]

The title of veteran director Francesco Maselli’s drama “Storia d’Amore” [Eng. Title: A Tale of Love] could mislead you into believing it to be one of those mushy romances – it ain’t. There may be a bit of romancing going on, but the film’s more than that.

It is first and foremost a social drama, centred around nineteen year old Bruna living in a poor neighbourhood of suburban Rome, working as a cleaning lady from the age of thirteen to support her family. Considerable screen time is dedicated to portray her daily chores that start before dawn, every single day. But she’s resourceful, and seemingly in command of her life. She meets Sergio and falls in love, and lets him move in with her family thanks to her egalitarian father. But when she meets Mario, Bruna falls in love with him and had to end the relationship with Sergio. She also moves out of home to live independently with her new lover. While it all seems tranquil on the outside, we could pick up clues of angst attributable to her drudgery, which starts taking its toll…

The film reminds me of another social drama from a famous director in the early seventies, also set among the shanties of Rome (a bit more grim however) – Ettore Scola’s Brutti, sporchi e cattivi. But interestingly the film’s treatment is atypical of Italian cinema. Almost Argentinian in style – it flows fluidly between drama and melodrama, giving us little hint as to what to expect. Shot in full frame with some interesting urban cinematography, the film retains your attention even during the most mundane of scenes, thanks to one gorgeous Valeria Golino who plays Bruna – this was only her second film as lead actress – the first, Piccoli Fuochi, has been in my wish list for a while but I doubt it’ll ever be released on DVD. Her performance belies her twenty years – utterly captivating in all her scenes, Sig.ra Golino enchants and endears us from the word ‘go’. It’s baffling to have seen her appear in some nonsensical films like Hot Shots afterwards – she must have caught the Hollywood bug, I suppose. Despite this film being unique and unconventional, it is made extra special due to Valeria Golino. Needless to say, Highly Recommended Viewing..!
Amazon.it DVD Link


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Compilation: Valeria Golino
I’m so glad they finally brought this film out on DVD. This is a young, devoid of make-up, and totally natural looking, incantevole Valeria Golino. Nice to see that the director has also paid attention to little details, like her manicure-free ‘working class’ fingernails..! 🙂

Valeria Golino in Storia d'Amore

Valeria Golino in Storia d’Amore

Scene Guide:

  • Bruna getting in and out of bed – bellissima..!
  • Her friendship with fellow commuter Sergio develops into love, and pretty soon he moves into her home.
  • No nudity – but interesting! Sergio introduces Bruna to his mom, whom he still considers attractive. He invites Bruna to feel her legs to find out for herself. The mother is played by Gabriella Giorgelli.
  • It’s break-up time – Bruna admits she couldn’t help thinking about Mario – the lad who’s just taken up work at the local cafe. They cry in each others arms.
  • Bruna has moved in with Mario at a squat. He serves her breakfast in bed. I guess October nights in Rome could still be warm enough to allow sleeping in the nude.
  • A mini montage of some other interesting scenes of Valeria Golino who plays Bruna, with the film’s soundtrack.

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Iwona Bielska & Grazyna Dylag in “Na Srebrnym Globie” [1976-1987 Poland]

Andrzej Zulawski had to halt production on his sci-fi epic, “Na Srebrnym Globie” [Eng. Title: On the Silver Globe] due to objection from Polish authorities – they had also destroyed the sets and any material they could lay their hands on. The film never actually got completed – but was nevertheless released a decade later in 1987, as winds of change swept across the Eastern Block. The screenplay for roughly a fifth of the film had never been filmed, which is instead narrated by Zulawski himself using some roving outdoor footage of modern-day Poland.

Storyline:
A group of humans crash-land at a habitable planet they were heading for, and some of the crew die in the process. The survivors – three men and a woman, with no way of communicating with their space stations let alone harbouring thoughts of returning to earth, decide to stay put and foster their own new civilisation. They take turns bearing children through the lone woman to increase the population, but notice the newly born age significantly faster than themselves, and within a matter of years, they had already fathered several generations, which hints at widespread incest. The children are puzzled as to why their parents don’t die – and begin to perceive them as Gods, and a new religion is formed, later to even branch out into several sects.
Despite the fact that the ‘elders’ never acknowledge their ‘divinity’, they could do very little to persuade and change the course of events. Some later day humans also arrive at the planet and find a tribal population, and learn that some women are captured and forced to interbreed with a conquering bird-like species who communicate telepathically. The ‘Sherns’ treat humans as inferior, and the half-breeds called Morques are used as drones to attack humans and kidnap more women.

Based on a novel written by Zulawski’s own uncle some sixty years earlier, it explores in anthropological detail a different take on human evolution, religion, and civilisation itself. It is a film of its time, and in many ways resonates with the works of directors like Alejandro Jodorowsky and Federico Fellini, more so the former in its audacity and confrontational nature. Unfortunately the English subtitles are sometimes confusing and you’d have to rewind to try and make sense of some of the dialogues. But while there are instances of genuine insight, some of the ramblings appear to be of someone totally confused. But whatever it is, it is a magnificent piece of visual art – particular care had been taken with the cinematography and lighting to project this ‘alien’ world. This is not a low-budget production – a lot of effort had been put into the production design, make-up, and art direction – for e.g., even the fire in the planet is deemed to be of a different colour – and why not. The film is also a visual feast with highly stylised characters, stunning scenery, and the magnificent costumes which would have done a Fellini or Jodorowsky proud.

Most of the scenes have been put together with surviving footage, what they could keep away from the government’s hands – they had to be stashed away in studio staff and lab technician’s homes. As a result of this some scenes have jump cuts, sometimes with just a single word of dialogue in a segment patched with another to make a coherent sentence. And it is partly because of its incompleteness that the message it carries is far more potent than it may be otherwise. The film has been lovingly restored for posterity in the Zulawski box-set, from which the below compilation was made. For lovers of independent cinema, this will be an excellent addition to their library. Needless to say, Recommended Viewing..!
Amazon DVD Box-set


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Marisol Centeno & co in “La Última Mirada” [2006 Mexico]

Mexican writer, director and producer Patricia Arriaga-Jordán made her feature film debut in the romantic drama, “La Última Mirada” [Eng. Title: the Last Gaze]. This may be a simple albeit charming little number for a debut, but it also has something rather interesting to say.

Storyline:
The film explores the idea of learning to cope with impending loss using two people of diverse backgrounds – their stories run in parallel until the penultimate scene when they meet. Homero, a successful painter discovers one day that he’s suffering from a rare form of luminous blindness – he had already lost the ability to distinguish the colour green, and it was only a matter of time before he will fail to sense the colours blue and finally red. He struggles to come to terms with this inevitability. Meanwhile, young Mei is a maid working at a brothel at a neighbouring town – her mother was a prostitute there before abandoning Mei in order to elope with a truck driver. One day, when an important client is expected at the brothel, the star attraction disappears, and the brothel’s madame persuades Mei to step in to the oldest profession.

While it is decently directed and ably acted by the main cast, what sets this film apart is the characterisation and screenplay. A fair amount of time is spent in developing the characters and their motives – time well spent. But judging purely from my DVD, I feel the cinematography and lighting could perhaps have been more imaginative because it is so crucial to the film’s theme. The sound track is however well put together without unwanted distractions. The actress who plays Mei, Marisol Centeno, gives an excellent performance as a young girl beginning to make sense of adulthood. Overall, this is a well made, above-average cinema, and therefore, Recommended Viewing..!

Amazon.com DVD Link


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