Our Media Center takes you inside Film at Lincoln Center with photos, videos, and podcasts from our screenings, talks, and events, plus announcements of upcoming programs and coverage of our artist and education initiatives.
The Belly of the Beast
By Max Nelson
on
October 12, 2012
Two festival documentaries, Amos Gitai’s Field Diary (1982) and Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel's Leviathan (2012), assault the viewers' senses by deeply immersing them in the worlds of commercial fishing and the Lebanon War, respectively.
Different Girls, Different Hair
By Caitlin Hughes
on
October 12, 2012
Frances Ha and Ginger and Rosa depict strikingly honest female friendships at a turning point: in order for their relationships to survive, these friends must learn to accept changes in each other and discover identities outside of their formerly inseparable unit.
Different Girls, Different Hair
By Caitlin Hughes
on
October 12, 2012
Frances Ha and Ginger and Rosa depict strikingly honest female friendships at a turning point: in order for their relationships to survive, these friends must learn to accept changes in each other and discover identities outside of their formerly inseparable unit.
When Living Means Leaving
By Fariha Roísín
on
October 11, 2012
Christian Petzold's Barbara and Yesim Ustaoglu’s Araf – Somewhere In Between depict women seeking to escape their oppressive lives, but whose surroundings pull them in unexpected directions.
When Living Means Leaving
By Fariha Roísín
on
October 11, 2012
Christian Petzold's Barbara and Yesim Ustaoglu’s Araf – Somewhere In Between depict women seeking to escape their oppressive lives, but whose surroundings pull them in unexpected directions.
Changing Times and Rolling Stones
By Caitlin Hughes
on
October 10, 2012
Two documentaries about the iconic rock band, Charlie is My Darling and Gimme Shelter, show just how much The Rolling Stones (and the world around them) changed in the four short but tumultuous years between 1965 and 1969.
Changing Times and Rolling Stones
By Caitlin Hughes
on
October 10, 2012
Two documentaries about the iconic rock band, Charlie is My Darling and Gimme Shelter, show just how much The Rolling Stones (and the world around them) changed in the four short but tumultuous years between 1965 and 1969.
Youth and the Beast
By Max Nelson
on
October 9, 2012
Back-to-back viewings of two NYFF films—Leos Carax's Holy Motors and Olivier Assayas' Something in the Air—make a young cinephile question the healthiness of his film fanaticism. By indulging his obsession with the depiction of life on-screen, is he letting his own youth pass him by?
Youth and the Beast
By Max Nelson
on
October 9, 2012
Back-to-back viewings of two NYFF films—Leos Carax's Holy Motors and Olivier Assayas' Something in the Air—make a young cinephile question the healthiness of his film fanaticism. By indulging his obsession with the depiction of life on-screen, is he letting his own youth pass him by?
“Heaven’s Gate” and Film Maudit Culture
By Peter Labuza
on
October 8, 2012
Once cited as the film that killed the Hollywood New Wave, a restored director's cut of Michael Cimino's unfairly-maligned masterpiece received a rapturous reception at the 50th New York Film Festival. But in the days of widespread availability and #teammargaret, is the film maudit a thing of the past?