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Tuesday, October 31, 2006

[Non-]Narrativity

It is common among directors, when asked why is it that they make movies, to answer: "Because I have stories and I want to tell them". And that simple answer explains the richness of plot and devices through which it is executed. But it fails to cover another field of (modern) cinema, namely contemplative film. As Harry suggested, it can be subgrouped, in terms of narrativity, in "contemplative narration" and "non-narrative contemplation", but again, I wonder, isn't it plot that is spoken of in these definitions? Plot is the sequence of events that can be summarised but it is the narrative through which this plot is fulfilled. Narrativity is something broader - it could be plot, in its primal meaning, but it is also the sense, the pre-notion of plot that could never finish itself into a complete story. Narrativity speculates about the possibility of a plot and does not deal with events but movements, gestures and details that are encompassed in a story.

So, let me propose a transfiguration of these two definitions into "contemplative plot" and "plotless contemplation", in the first place. And since the first one is quite clear, I'd like to dwell more on the second one. The absence of plot does not deny narrativity. On the contrary, it contributes to its full manifestation. Narrativity is found in the chosen camera angle, shot duration and length of camera movement as opposed to camera stillness. To make things clearer, here's an example: Angelopoulos' Eternity and a Day (from which I've only seen bits and pieces) offers a magnificents shot [present-past], or in the words of prof. Horton - "It's as if the present has the past in it and he's telling you that in one visual shot." In this shot, the protagonist (Bruno Ganz) tells the young boy he's met of a poet, Solomos, that used to live there in the 19th century. In one shot the camera slides over the river from the present-poet to the past-poet and that discloses much more than the single story of the past - a cut to history. Yes, we could "translate" this shot as if "the present has the past in it", but we could also become aware of the inevitable bond between the two historical poets. From there, we could speculate about the nature of poetry and art - how the thread between past and present should never be torn, how almost nothing has changed, etc. And this subtle nuances are achieved through one single shot! The plot is left somewhere behind, while the camera hovers over it's narrativity. Narrativity means possibilities. It can be contrary to plot, or the actual situation of a frame. Imagine a bar scene - a quiet gang of drunken villagers, dozing over bottles of beer and wine. Everyone's silent, there's no sound whatsoever. Thus positioned, the shot speaks of calmness, dullness even, a monotonous living. But now let's shift the camera and place it from the point of view of the bar keeper - towards the door. A still shot of a silent crowd, waiting for someone to come, for something to happen. The atmosphere becomes more tense and this tension is seemingly contrary to the calmness of the drunken people. Through the camera, the plot/event/situation is transfigured into a hidden narrativity.

This hypothetic shot comes from my idea of Bela Tarr's Satantango, while reading Krasznahorkai's novel, which very luckily is translated in Bulgarian. And it is regarding the book that I want to pose a few more speculations on narrativity and contemplation. The book is written in 6 chapters forward, 6 chapters backward, as in tango and includes no paragraphs, or - every chapter is one single paragraph, no new lines or special stylistic layout. Thus, this simplicity becomes a stylistic design and much more - a second narrativity beyond the meaning of the words. It's as if the life of the village is a whole life - entire and complete. There's no individuality as in the alienated city. Everyone's a part of something identical, everyone's words and thoughts are a wave of a similar flow. No wonder why, Irimias is ascended as a saviour, the one who, having been considered dead, is now considered ressurected - a saint who has chosen to come back to the village - the outsider/the one who speaks differently (and truly his speech is designed in narrower paragraphs). This diversion can be perceived through the look of the text and from the fragments I've seen of the film, through the monotony of the camera [movement]. This compostition creates a second narrativity. As in poetry and short films - the form is more indicative than the narrative-plot and this form becomes a narrative-notion. As in abstract painting where the composition of the fragments is the narrativity and the possibility of numerous narratives [interpretations].

And to sum it up, I'd like to place the question of plot and narrativity. Isn't it the style, the form, the composition in contemplative plotless cinema that is the narrativity? And because it is easily subject to countless interpretations, its general plot is lost among the narratives - the subtle notions that are open?

Monday, October 30, 2006

The State of Cinema (M. Ciment)

For keeps : the online page disappeared. At the 46th San Francisco International Film Festival (2003)


Michel Ciment: The State of Cinema

The State of Cinema address, delivered by guest programmer Michel Ciment at the 46th San Francisco International Film Festival

If the title of this address sounds portentous, I will immediately downplay it by stressing that my speech will express a very subjective viewpoint nourished by my 40- year-old involvement in film criticism, festival attendance and of course, reading experts and speaking with them. One of the striking features of the state of cinema at any time is to see how the atlas of cinema is ever changing. If we look at the map of the film world, we will see that the red zone of intense creativity, the gray zones of intermittent presence and the white zones of desertification have witnessed enormous variations if we look at them in the ‘60s, for instance, or today. Forty years ago Eastern European countries, Italy, later Germany, offered a host of talented directors and some of the major artists in the world: Tarkovsky, Wajda, Skolimowski, Makavejev, Jancsó, Forman, Passer, Chytilova, Fellini, Antonioni, Visconti, Rosi, Pasolini, Wenders, Herzog, Fassbinder and so many others. Today these countries have stopped playing a significant role even if interesting films are still being produced there.

On the map we see the appearance of new cinematographic territories, which had attracted almost no attention 40 years ago such as Australia, Iran, Taiwan, China, South Korea, or Hong Kong. The focus on them has replaced the one on Quebec, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, or Brazil. This is, to be sure, somewhat unfair when the concentration of interest on some is at the expense of others. We–and particularly the critics–should be on the lookout and pay attention to whomever reveals a potential talent and not ignore it because his country is not in fashion. More than ever it is the film and not the credits that deserve attention. Recently and unexpectedly Diego Lerman, Lucrecia Martel, Pablo Trapero, Carlos Sorín and others have revealed a new wave in Argentinian cinema. Without excluding the factor of snobbism one must acknowledge that the shift in cinematographic geopolitics corresponds to an observable reality. Directors like Abbas Kiarostami, Im Kwon-Taek, Hou Hsiao-hsien, Edward Yang, Tsai Ming-liang, and Wong Kar Wai have put Asia on the map and experiment fruitfully in film style.

There is something mysterious about the comatose state into which an art form falls all of a sudden. Why did great painting disappear from Russia during four centuries, and music from England (except for German immigrant composers) for more than 200 years? One thing is sure for cinema: When a country has been under a totalitarian regime and starts to breathe again, even within certain limits, the artistic flowering is almost immediate. This is what happened in Eastern Europe with the thaw in the Communist regime during the late ‘50s and ‘60s. This is what happens today in Iran, South Korea, Taiwan and Argentina. The economic factor plays also a major role. When the state stopped being involved in film production as it occurred in Eastern Europe after 1990, the industry collapsed.

Only two countries have remained ever present–artistically speaking--–in the long history of cinema, not knowing any period of eclipse as it happened to every other national industry. The American and the French cinema in fact offer, as in so many other issues concerning our two countries, two almost opposite points of view. The American cinema believes totally in the market, in the strength of the liberal economy, and it has won over audiences all around the world thanks sometimes due to the quality of its performers and directors, and always due to its technical proficiency and recently its mastery of special effects. The French cinema for better and for worse has maintained the idea of director as an auteur (with the filmmaker’s right to final cut) and has tried to survive the roller coaster of Hollywood films by protecting its industry. During the last 45 years, a tax of little more than ten percent is being levied on every ticket, and the money is being reinvested in French films. Thus a film is not considered an industrial product but rather a part of the culture of the nation, and as such, should not be submitted to the same economic laws that rule subsidies for wheat or cars. This position—called the cultural exception—has been fought against strongly by the American negotiators during the GAAT discussions, but France, with the support of Germany, Italy and Spain, has been able to maintain its singularity which explains partly the resistance of its cinema and its popularity (30-40 percent of the French audience sees French films). It has thus been able to produce or co-produce foreign directors who had difficulties being financed exclusively by their own countries: David Lynch, Angelopoulos, Almodóvar, Kaurismaki, Lars von Trier, Moretti, Wong Kar Wai, Tsai Ming Liang, Mike Leigh, Ken Loach, Kiarostami, Pintilie and many central Asian or African directors.

Some countries like South Korea are following the French example to support their most ambitious directors but other countries with a weaker spirit or less possibility of resistance abandon any kind of protection under the pressures of Hollywood interests and American diplomacy. We are here at the center of the nature of cinema which is both an art and an industry, and which is nourished by the tensions between the aesthetics and the economics. As the great art theoretician Erwin Panofsky said, “There are two dangers for the artist: if he caters too much to the audience, he may end up as a prostitute, but if he shuts himself in an ivory tower, he will remain a virgin.” Which explains why there are too many prostitutes in Hollywood and too many virgins along the Seine River.

The great lesson of the Hollywood of the past was its ability to produce films that could appeal to a great variety of spectators. You could recommend a Hitchcock or a Wilder, a Kazan or a Minnelli, to a farmer or to a professor, to a worker or a doctor. As André Gide said watching a Chaplin movie, “What a thrill to be in tune with the responses of a mass audience.” This was also true of Kurosawa, Renoir, Visconti, Bergman or Lean. It seems that in the present state of the cinema this is less and less true. There have been, of course, glorious exceptions, particularly in Hollywood with Coppola, Scorsese, Kubrick or Altman, to name but a few, but it seems that more and more a dichotomy prevails between great cinema stylists with a limited audience–the regulars of film festivals- and mindless escapist movies with eye–boggling visuals, deafening sounds, and limited substance.

The popular success of an original artist–take for example, Pedro Almodóvar–is a comfort for those who hope that the best of cinema is not going to follow the path of contemporary painting with its limited public and whose seal of approval is applied by a small group of art dealers, critics and curators. If the current state of Hollywood cinema worries me, I am not one of those who bemoan American films as an opiate of the people and a vapid form of creation. It has always been looked down upon–even in its golden years–and there are enough talents today, more than anywhere in the world: Altman, Scorsese, Malick, Spielberg, De Palma, Eastwood, Woody Allen, David Lynch, Spike Lee, Michael Mann, Steven Soderbergh, the Coen brothers, Tim Burton, Tarantino, Oliver Stone, Philip Kaufman, James Cameron, John Carpenter, Tod Solondz, Paul Thomas Anderson, Larry Clark, John Sayles, Todd Haynes, Lodge Kerrigan, Milos Forman, to prove its creativity. However, in the last two decades, a tendency has surfaced in the industry to produce fragmentary sounds and images in a cumulative way and in a manner very much akin to the world of videogames. The development of digital imagery has made even more potent and possible this new relationship to space, to time, to our body, a kind of derealization of the world, of a desensitization of our feelings which make us less aware of the reality around us. Reality indeed has become like a film. “Vietnam, the movie,” announced sardonically and prophetically one character in Full Metal Jacket. This delicate balance between image and idea, between our sense and our intellect which has been at the core of the great masters of the cinema from Lang to Kubrick, from Hawks to Rossellini, from Walsh to Resnais, from Dreyer to Mizoguchi, seems to have been tipped in so many films aimed at a young audience–which is the future–in favor of a flux of lights and colors without constraint, a cinema ruled exclusively by pulse and energy without the slightest critical distance. In France Luc Besson’s films or Gaspar Noe’s Irreversible testify to this irresponsible trend.


Geoffrey King, in his book New Hollywood Cinema, has commented on this impatience of the audience by measuring the duration of a shot in a classical Hollywood film and in a contemporary one. Where it lasted 7.85 seconds in Spartacus, it was only 3.36 seconds long in Gladiator, 8.72 seconds in The Fall of the Roman Empire and 2.07 seconds in Armageddon.

Facing this lack of patience and themselves made impatient by the bombardment of sound and image to which they are submitted as TV or cinema spectators, a number of directors have reacted by a cinema of slowness, of contemplation, as if they wanted to live again the sensuous experience of a moment revealed in its authenticity. Angelopoulos in Greece, Nuri Bilge Ceylan in Turkey, de Oliveira and Monteiro (who died a few weeks ago) in Portugal, Béla Tarr in Hungary, Abbas Kiarostami in Iran, Tsai Ming-liang and Hou Hsiao-hsien in Taiwan, Philippe Garrel and Bruno Dumont in France, Souleymane Cissé and Idrissa Ouedraogo in Africa, Sharunas Bartas in the Baltic state, Aleksandr Sokurov in Russia, and several directors in Central Asia have been proponents in recent years of a resistance to the fetishism of technology. Kubrick, himself a master of technology, has produced antidote films such as 2001: A Space Odyssey, Barry Lyndon and Eyes Wide Shut with their provocative slowness.

If the Hollywood industry—with its market studies, sneak previews, belief in sequels and series—sees the audience at its lowest common denominator as its primary target (“If you run after the audience, you will only see its ass,” Max Ophuls used to say) it would be wrong to believe that European cinema is not prone to the same commercial self-censorship. Its financing is so closely indebted to TV that the small screen imposes its criteria–particularly for primetime viewing–to greenlight a script to be co-produced. It is probable that some of the great European films of the ‘60s: 8 1/2; Pierrot le Fou; Au Hasard, Balthazar; Viridiana; Persona; The Servant; l’Avventura; Salvatore Giuliano; Last Year at Marienbad; Shoot the Piano Player, would not have a chance to obtain the approval of today’s TV committees. The result is that these aforementioned films are still, 40 years later, bolder in their narrative structure, more complex in their layers of meaning, more original visually than the best films of today which, if at times excellent, seem tame and so rarely experimental, avoiding controversial issues or stylistic challenges.

One of the ways to bypass the economic constraints and to regain a freedom lost in more and more cumbersome productions has been the use of DV cameras and of high definition. The Danish Dogma may have been a forerunner of this tendency. However, its chart has always seemed to me more like a publicity stunt than a real aesthetic manifesto not only because of the foolishness of some of its rules (no static camera, no scenes set in the past, no artificial lighting) but because if an artist can (and maybe) should set rules for himself, he can’t impose rules on others. Dogma nevertheless gave probably to some (Vinterberg) the courage and the possibility to express themselves. DV on the whole will allow a number of directors, particularly in the poorer parts of the world, to direct again, or for the first time, to innovate at low cost or to deal with urgent social and political issues. But again, one should not fetishize this new technology whose limitations also exist. A true artist will always know how to choose his tool according to his project. It is at the other end of the chain that the digital technique has offered its most revolutionary instrument: the DVD. It has already created a new relationship between the audience and the film, a new way of teaching cinema and multiple possibilities of restoration and rediscovery. The DVD has given a new life to the past of the cinema, and consequently is changing its present state. It also raises some problems. With its bonuses the uniqueness of the film is put in question. If a living director decides to change the editing of one of his films (like Coppola with Apocalypse Redux), he is of course permitted to do so. But to go back to an original editing say La Ronde by Ophuls, A Star Is Born by Cukor, 2001: A Space Odyssey by Kubrick, which had been modified subsequently by its director, now dead, who is entitled to do so? Finally, the DVD may allow a director to circulate within his own film and to impinge on its integrity. Thus Agnés Varda has interviewed again, two years later, some of the people she had already met for Les Glaneurs Et La Glaneuse. In the DVD of that film, every time one of the protagonists appears you may click and his new intervention is inserted in the flow of the film, which later resumes its course. In doing so, Varda modifies her original film and elaborates a work in progress.

As I said earlier, the DVD opens new ways to the past without which there is no future. One day Truffaut said, “We have to realize that we the directors, we are soon going to be judged by critics who have never heard of Murnau.” Truffaut, like the other New Wave directors, knew Murnau of course when he was a critic and it helped him to be behind the camera. One becomes a writer by reading, a musician by listening, an artist by looking at a painting, and a director by watching films. May the choice of DVD be varied enough to allow us to go back to the classics. The state of cinema will be better if in the future filmmakers realize that in order to make a stylistic revolution, you need to know the tradition. That is the lesson of Stravinsky, Joyce, Picasso and Eisenstein. It should be the lesson of film schools.

There is maybe one last lesson to be learned from the present state of cinema. It seems that the Lumière path (the recording of reality) and the Méliès path (the animation process) have never been so trodden. With the development of TV, thousands of channels are pouring out images of the world. This reality effect has had its influence on fiction film, which centers more and more on the details of everyday life. At the other end of the spectrum, we have the Méliès syndrome of special effects and totally artificial worlds. The documentary film (Lumière tradition) and the animation film (Méliès tradition), which for a long time had their specific programs, are now integrated into mainstream cinema and festival competition. Shrek won a prize in Cannes in 2001, and a year later, so did Bowling for Columbine. Spirited Away by Miyazaki won a Golden Bear last year in Berlin, and one of the highlights of Cannes this year will be the screening of The Triplets of Belleville, an animation feature from France.

What is most missing today is the fusion of Méliès and Lumière, the lesson of the great masters of the past–Renoir, Mizogushi, Fellini, Kubrick, Lang, Bresson, Bergman, Buñuel, Tarkovsky, Welles and Ford–who blended the artificial and the real, creating through stylization a heightened realism, sometimes a surrealism, always a synthetic vision of the world. This Promethean endeavor was nourished by an intense curiosity for all the arts (painting, literature, music, architecture) by a philosophical understanding of the world and an awareness of the political and social issues of the day. It is not surprising perhaps that a number of the emerging new talents that have set themselves those standards (a Hou Hsiao-hsien, a Kiarostami) come from the East: They have a passion for the media, a high cultural education, a freshness of approach and are anything but blasé.

Copyright © 2003 San Francisco Film Society
(Retrieved from Web Archive)

Saturday, October 21, 2006

References

Find the updated bibliography here

contemplative cinema blogathon

Let's talk about "boring art films"

I'd like to call for a blogathon on contemplative cinema, the kind that rejects conventional narration to develop almost essentially through minimalistic visual language and atmosphere, without the help of music, dialogue, melodrama, action-montage, and star system. Contributors are invited to pick a film or an auteur fitting this (undefined) profile, or to ponder over the general characteristics, roots, aesthetics, significance of this emerging trend in contemporean art films. Feel free to chime in and help define this nebulous "genre" in the comments. It requires a new form of criticism because a capsule summary is usually detrimental and misrepresentative of what the film has to offer. I often find myself at loss when confronted with the description of a film where nothing is happening. How could we best give justice to these films that defeat all codes of cinema history we've been conditionned to detect and connect with?

Without imposing a final exhaustive list before the discussion, a few names to illustrate the type of films in question and to help whoever is not familiar yet to draw correspondances :
  • Bela Tarr, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Pedro Costa, Saruna Bartas, Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Carlos Reygadas, Tsai Ming-liang, Aktan Abdykalykov, Bruno Dumont, Elia Suleiman, Lisandro Alonso, Aleksandr Sokurov ... (wordless and plotless?)
  • Jia Zhang-ke, Aki Kaurismaki, Hou Hsiao-hsien, Wong Kar-wai, Hong Sang-soo, Lucrecia Martel, Theo Angelopoulos, Hirokazu Kore-eda, Claire Denis, Pen-ek Ratanaruang, Jim Jarmusch ... (contemplative narration?)
  • Marguerite Duras, Michael Snow (conceptual?)
  • And even documentarians : Wang Bing, Nikolaus Geyrhalter, Chantal Akerman, Victor Erice, Raymond Depardon ...
These films catch the critical attention of festivals around the world, every year, but aren't given much exposition or theorized much... So if you feel strongly about "boring art films", positively or negatively, or particularly like one of them, please join this collegial effort to explore, decypher and understand better this cutting edge, marginal cinema.

Maybe we could answer some questions :
  • What is/isn't a Boring Art Film? What have they in common? Is it a coherent family? How should it be (re)named?
  • Why "boredom" is the new "great"? How to champion boredom against entertainment? How to "sell" a "boring film" to the general audience? When does it become actually boring in a bad way?
  • How are these auteurs different from eachother? Is it only a formal/superficial familiarity?
  • Where this trend comes from? Cinematic filiation? Artistic influences?
New deadline : Monday, 8th January 2007.
I also would like to try an experiment to expand the blogathon experience, and open a collective blog for the occasion, during the month of January. So participants will become member-administrator and be able to post new entries.
Either you stick to the classic blogathon rules and crosspost your entry on this collective blog on deadline, or you can visit the blog all month, ask questions, suggest themes to address, add references and comment on the ongoing discussions to collect and share the most critical material around "boring art films" available.
Crossposting all entries is not meant to "steal the thunder" (and comments) each individual bloggers could get on their own blog but hopefully to help focus a productive discussion in one place. Well if this sounds inacceptable, we could always go by the traditional blogathon standard.
* * *
New Contributions to the blogathon : see here



BLOGATHON (rules reminder) :
Every blogger is welcome to join this event and write a post on the topic proposed (here, "boring art films") on the deadline fixed by the organisator/host (HarryTuttle). Simple as that. Thus creating a wealth of articles by various writers focusing on the same idea on the same day, a blogosphere mindstorming, or a thematical special issue in electronic form. Every post participating to the blogathon will be listed and linked here. You may leave a comment to this post to show your interest, or just publish your post on deadline. Don't forget to send me a link to your contribution by email or in the comments. Happy blogathon everyone!
PAST BLOGATHONS in the blogosphere during 2006 here and in 2007 here

Friday, October 20, 2006

Chronology

Tentative Chronology for (BROAD) Contemplative Cinema

Maybe the term "Contemplative Cinema" is a little nebulous and confusing, but hopefully the following films give a better idea of what is this sort of trend, opposed to conventional narration. This tentative list doesn't cover all territories and aspects yet, so please edit/correct/add any complementary information to the list.
(in red : strict model, see the minimum profile here, and the genealogy map here)


quickscroll : 1960 - 1970 - 1980 - 1990 - 2000 - 2010

7 sub-families of C.C.C. (Contemporary Contemplative Cinema) with their figureheads :
  • [A] Contemplative Documentary (Lumière-Sokurov-Benning)
  • [B] Non-Actors (Flaherty-Costa)
  • [C] Contemplative Mundanity (Tsai-Bartas)
  • [D] Laconic Conversation (Tarkovsky-Jancso-Tarr)
  • [E] Mainstream Contemplation (Angelopoulos-Wong Kar wai)
  • [F] Stylized Contemplation (Kaurismaki-Andersson)
  • [G] Fantasized Contemplation (Barney)

1895
L'Arrivée d'un train à La Ciotat (1895/LUMIERE/France) DOC [A]
La Sortie des usines Lumière (1895/LUMIERE/France) DOC [A]
1911
La bolle di sapone (1911/OMEGNA/Italy) DOC [A]
1914
The Wishing Ring: An Idyll of Old England (1914/Maurice TOURNEUR/USA)
1921
Manhatta (1921/SHEELER/STRAND/USA) DOC [A]
1922
Nanook of the North (1922/FLAHERTY/USA) DOC [B]
1926
Rien que les heures (1926/CAVALCANTI/Brazil) DOC [A]
1927
Berlin, Symphony of a Big City (1927/RUTTMAN/Germany) DOC [A]
1928
Etude sur Paris (1928/SAUVAGE/France) DOC [A]
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc (1928/DREYER/France) [C]
1929
Finis terrae (1929/EPSTEIN/France) DOC [B]
H2O (1929/Ralph STEINER/USA) [A] 
The Line General (1929/EISENSTEIN/Russia) [B]
The Man with a Movie Camera (1929/VERTOV/Russia) DOC [A]
1930
À propos de Nice (1930/VIGO/France) DOC [A]
People on Sunday (1930/SIODMAK/ULMER/ZINNEMANN/Germany) [C]
The Salt of Svanetia (1930/KALATAZOV/Russia) DOC [B]
1931
Autumn Fire (1931/Herman G. WEINBERG/USA) [A] 
Mor vran (1931/EPSTEIN/France) DOC [A]
Douro, Faina fluvial (1931/OLIVEIRA/Portugal) [F]

1934
Man of Aran (1934/FLAHERTY/USA) DOC [B]
1936
Arigato-san (1936/SHIMIZU/Japan)
1937
A Star Athlete (1937/SHIMIZU/Japan)
1942
Four Men On A Raft (1942/WELLES/USA) DOC [B]
1947
Le Tempestaire (1947/EPSTEIN/France) DOC [B]
Spring Awakens (1947/NARUSE/Japan)
1948
The Bicycle Thieves (1948/DE SICA/Italy) [E]
Germany Year Zero (1948/ROSSELLINI/Italy) [E]
Terra Trema (1948/VISCONTI/Italy) [B]
1951
Journal d'un curé de campagne (1951/BRESSON/France)
1952
A Portrait of Ga (1952/TAIT/UK) [A]
Umberto D. (1952/DE SICA/Italy) [D]
1953
Crin Blanc (1953/LAMORISSE/France) [C]
Tokyo Story (1953/OZU/Japan) [E]

1956
Le Ballon Rouge (1956/LAMORISSE/France) [G]
1960

L'Avventura (1960/ANTONIONI/Italy) [E]
Naked Island (1960/SHINDO/Japan) [B]
1961
Accattone (1961/PASOLINI/Italy)
Last Year in Marienbad (1961/RESNAIS/France) [G]
1963
Sleep (1963/WARHOL/USA) DOC [A]
1964
A Boring Afternoon (1964/PASSER/Czech) [B]
Il Deserto Rosso (1964/ANTONIONI/Italy) [E]
Empire (1964/WARHOL/USA) DOC [A]
Peter and Pavla (1964/FORMAN/Czech) [D]
1966

Castro Street (1966/BAILLIE/USA)
The Round-Up (1966/JANCSO/Hungary)

1967
Mouchette (1967/BRESSON/France) [D]
Playtime (1967/TATI/France) [F]
The Red And The White (1967/JANCSO/Hungary) [D]
Silence and Cry (1967/JANCSO/Hungary)
Wavelength (1967/SNOW/Canada) [G]
1968
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968/KUBRICK/UK) [G]
Palo y Hueso (1968/Sarquis/Argentina) [C]
Sayat Nova / Color of Pomegranates (1968/PARAJANOV/Russia) [G]
1969
Andrei Rublev (1969/TARKOVSKY/Russia) [D]
Dillinger è morto (1969/FERRERI/Italy) [D]

1970
Le Cochon (1970/EUSTACHE/BARJOL/FR) [A]
El Topo (1970/JODOROWSKI/Mexico) [G]
Zabriskie Point (1970/ANTONIONI/USA) [D]
1971
Duel (1971/SPIELBERG/USA) [C]
Le Moindre Geste (1971/DELIGNY/MANENTI/France) [B]
La région centrale (1971/SNOW/Canada)
1972
Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (1972/HERZOG/Germany) [D]
Breaktime (1972/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [B]
La Cicatrice Intérieure (1972/GARREL/France) [G]
The Goalkeeper's Fear of the Penalty (1972/WENDERS/Germany)
Hôtel Monterey (1972/AKERMAN/Belgium) [A]
Solyaris (1972/TARKOVSKY/Russia) [G]

1973
El Espíritu de la colmena (1973/ERICE/Spain) [C]
The Experience (1973/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [C]

1974
Ali: Fear Eats the Soul (1974/FASSBINDER/Germany) [D]
Les Hautes solitudes (1974/GARREL/France) [B]
Je, tu, il, elle (1974/AKERMAN/FR/Belgium) [D]
Tabiate bijan / Still Life (1974/Sohrab Shahid Saless/Iran)

1975
Dersu Uzala (1975/KUROSAWA/Russia/Japan) [E]
Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975/WEIR/Australia) [D]
The Seasons (1975/PELESHIAN/Armenia) [A]
The Travelling Players (1975/ANGELOPOULOS/Greece)
Zerkalo / The Mirror (1975/TARKOVSKY/Russia) [G]

1976
The Ascent (1976/SHEPITKO/Russia)
Im Lauf der Zeit / King of the Road (1976/WENDERS/Germany) [D]
Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (1976/AKERMAN/Belgium) [C]

1977
Killer of sheep (1977/Charles Burnett/USA) [D]
1979
Ce répondeur ne prend pas de message (1979/CAVALIER/France) [A]
Estheppan (1979/ARAVINDAN/India)
Stalker (1979/TARKOVSKY/Germany) [G]

1980
The Falls (1980/GREENAWAY/UK)
Permanent Vacation (1980/JARMUSCH/USA) [C]

1981
Il pianeta azzurro (1981/Franco PIAVOLI/Italy) [A] 
Pokkuveyil / Twilight (1981/ARAVINDAN/India) [C]
1982
Koyaanisqatsi (1982/REGGIO/USA) DOC [A]
1983
L'argent (1983/BRESSON/France) [D]
Le bal (1983/SCOLA/IT/FR/Algeria) [B]
Nostalghia (1983/TARKOVSKY/Italy) [D]
The great sadness of Zohara
(1983/MENKES/Israel/Morocco)
Un été à Saint Tropez (1983/HAMILTON/France) [C]
1984
De illusionist (1984/STELLING/Netherlands) [F]
The Legend of the Suram Fortress (1984/PARAJANOV/Georgia) [F]
Paris, Texas (1984/WENDERS/France) [D]
Stranger than Paradise (1984/JARMUSCH/USA) [D]
1985
A Time to Live and a Time to Die (1985/HOU/Taiwan)
Angel's Egg (1985/OSHII/Japan) Anim
Chidambaram (1985/ARAVINDAN/India)
Come and See (1985/Elem KLIMOV/Russia)
Elle a passé tant d'heures sous les sunlights... (1985/GARREL/France)
1986
The Beekeeper (1986/ANGELOPOULOS/Greece) [D]
Magdalena Viraga (1986/MENKES/USA)

Shadows in Paradise (1986/KAURISMAKI/Finland) [F]
De wisselwachter (1986/STELLING/Netherlands) [F]
1987
Kelid / The Key (1987/FOROUZESH/Iran) [B]
The Lonely Human Voice (1987/SOKUROV/Russia) [G]
1988
Ashik Kerib (1988/PARAJANOV/Georgia) [G]
Damnation (1988/TARR/Hungary) [D]
Landscape in the Mist (1988/ANGELOPOULOS/Greece)
Mariya (1988/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]

1989
Aab, baad, khaak (19889/NADERI/Iran)
Elephant (1989/CLARKE/UK) [B]
Freeze, Die, Come to Life! (1989/KANEVSKY/Russia)
Save and Protect (1989/SOKUROV/Russia) [E]
The Seventh Continent (1989/HANEKE/Austria) [C]
Used Innocence (1989/BENNING/USA) DOC [A]
Why has Bodhi-Dharma left for the East? (1989/BAE Yong-kyun/Korea) [C]

1990
A Simple Elegy (1990/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]
The Match Factory Girl (1990/KAURISMAKI/Finland) [C]
Twilight (1990/György FEHER/Hungary)

1991
A scene at the sea (1991/KITANO/Japan) [C]
Days of Being Wild (1991/WONG/HK) [E]
Queen of diamonds (2008/MENKES/USA)
Primer Intonacii (1991/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]

1992
Baraka (1992/FRICKE/USA) [A]
Kairat (1992/OMIRBAYEV/Kazakhstan)
El Sol del membrillo / Quince Tree of the Sun (1992/ERICE/Spain) DOC [B]
Embracing (1992/KAWASE/Japan) DOC
Le silence de l'été (1992/AUBOUY/France)
The Stone (1992/SOKUROV/Russia) [F]
Vacas (1992/MEDEM/Spain)

1993
Abraham's Valley (1993/OLIVEIRA/France/Portugal) [E]
Calendar (1993/EGOYAN/Canada) [E]
D'Est (1993/AKERMAN/Belgium) DOC [A]
The Elegy From Russia (1993/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]
Libera me (1993/CAVALIER/France)

The Scent of the Green Papaya (1993/Anh Dung TRAN/Vietnam) [D]
Whispering Pages (1993/SOKUROV/Russia) [F]
1994
Ashes of Time (1994/WONG/HK) [G]
Chungking Express (1994/WONG/HK) [F]
Clean, Shaven (1994/KERRIGAN/USA) [D]
The Corridor (1994/BARTAS/Lithuania)
Fate / Verhängnis (1994/KELEMEN/Germany)
Like the Relentless Fury of the Pounding Waves (1994/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [A]
Sátántangó (1994/TARR/Hungary) [D]
Through the olive trees (1994/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [F]
Vive l'Amour (1994/TSAI/Taiwan) [D]
Woyzeck (1994/SZASZ/Hungary)
1995
Dead Man (1995/JARMUSCH/USA) [G]
Good Men, Good Women (1995/HOU/Taiwan) [F]
Institute Benjamenta, or This Dream People Call Human Life (1995/QUAY/UK) [G]
Kardiogramma (1995/OMIRBAYEV/Kazakhstan)
Koza/Coccon (1995/CEYLAN/Turkey) [B]
Maborosi (1995/KORE-EDA/Japan) [D]
[Safe] (1995/HAYNES/USA) [D]
Spiritual Voices (1995/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]
Ulysses' Gaze (1995/ANGELOPOULOS/Germany)
1996
The bloody child (1996/MENKES/UK)
Chronicle of a Disappearance (1996/SULEIMAN/Palestine) [F]
Few of Us (1996/BARTAS/Lithuania) [C]
Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996/HOU/Taiwan) [D]
Nénette et Boni (1996/DENIS/France) [D]
Oriental Elegy (1996/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]
La Rencontre (1996/CAVALIER/France)

Voci nel tempo (1996/Franco PIAVOLI/Italy) [A] 
1997
A Humble Life (1997/SOKUROV/Japan/Russia) DOC [A]
A Taste of Cherry (1997/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [C]
Frost (1997/KELEMEN/Germany)
Happy Together (1997/WONG/HK) [E]
The House (1997/BARTAS/Lithuania) [C]
Moe no suzaku (1997/KAWASE/Japan) [D]
Mother and Son (1997/SOKUROV/Russia) [C]
Ossos (1997/COSTA/Portugal)
Rag and Bone (1997/PARRIOTT/USA)
The River (1997/TSAI/Taiwan) [C]
Roes' Room / Pokój saren (1997/MAJEWSKI/Poland) [G]
Thirdworld (1997/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]
Xiao Wu (1997/JIA/China) [E]
1998
The Adopted Son (1998/ABDYKALYKOV/Kyrgyzstan) [C]
Confession (1998/SOKUROV/Russia) DOC [A]
Eternity and a Day (1998/ANGELOPOULOS/Greece) [D]
The Hole (1998/TSAI/Taiwan) [F]
License to Live (1998/KUROSAWA K./Japan)
Lost in a moment | Shrift (1998/WHEATLEY/McCLEAN/USA) [A]
Mala época (1998/DE ROSA/MORENO/ROSELLI/SAAD/Argentina)
Passion (1998/György FEHER/Hungary)
Tokyo Eyes (1998/LIMOSIN/France)
La vie sur terre (1998/SISSAKO/Mali/Mauritania/FR) 

1999
Abendland (1999/KELEMEN/Germany)
Beau Travail (1999/DENIS/France)
Clouds of May (1999/CEYLAN/Turkey) [C]
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999/JARMUSCH/USA) [E]
L'Humanité (1999/DUMONT/France) [D]
Juha (1999/KAURISMAKI/Finland) [E]
Kikujiro (1999/KITANO/Japan) [E]
M/Other (1999/SUWA/Japan)
Molock (1999/SOKUROV/Russia) [C]
Mundo grúa (1999/TRAPERO/Argentina) [B]
Nas correntes de luz da ria formosa (1997-99/JOST/Italy)
Rosetta (1999/DARDENNE/Belgium) [C]
The Straight Story (1999/LYNCH/USA) [D]
Su tutte le vette è pace (1999/GIANIKIAN/RICCI LUCCHI/Italy) [A]
The Virgin Suicides (1999/S.COPPOLA/USA) [E]
The Wind Will Carry Us (1999/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [E]

2000
Breaking the Silence (2000/SUN Zhou/China) [E]
Das Himmler Projekt (2000/KARMAKAR/Germany) DOC
Eureka (2000/AOYAMA/Japan) [C]
Father and Daughter (2000/DUDOK DE WIT/Netherlands) Short Anim [G]
Freedom (2000/BARTAS/Lithuania) [C]
Hotaru (2000/KAWASE/Japan)
In The Mood For Love (2000/WONG/HK) [E]
In Vanda's Room (2000/COSTA/Portugal) [D]
Muri Romani (2000/JOST/Italy)
Mysterious Object at Noon (2000/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]
Platform (2000/JIA/China) [D]
Roma - un ritratto improvvisorio (2000/JOST/Italy)
Songs From the Second Floor (2000/ANDERSSON/Sweden) [F]
The Vertical Ray of the Sun (2000/Anh Dung TRAN/Vietnam) [D]
Werckmeister harmóniák (2000/TARR/Hungary) [D]
Yi Yi (2000/YANG/Taiwan) [E]
2001
La Ciénaga (2001/MARTEL/Argentina) [D]
Distance (2001/KORE-EDA/Japan) [D]
L'Emploi du Temps (2001/CANTET/France) [D]
H Story (2001/SUWA/Japan) [C]
In Public (2001/JIA/China) DOC [A]
Jol / The Road (2001/OMIRBAYEV/Kazakhstan)
Kairo / Pulse (2001/K. KUROSAWA/Japan) [G]
La Libertad (2001/ALONSO/Argentina) [B]
Lovely Rita (2001/HAUSNER/Austria) [D]
Millennium Mambo (2001/HOU/Taiwan) [E]
My Brother Silk Road (2001/SARULU/Kyrgyzstan) [D]
The Orphan of Anyang (2001/WANG Chao/China) [C]
Profils paysans: l'approche (2001/DEPARDON/France) DOC [A]
Solitude (2001/SCHLAHT/Canada)
Sky, Wind, Fire, Water, Earth (2001/KAWASE/Japan) DOC [A]
Taurus (2001/SOKUROV/Russia) [C]
Ten Minutes Older (2001/KIAROSTAMI/Iran/FR) [A]
Trouble Every Day (2001/DENIS/France) [G]
What time is it over there? (2001/TSAI/Taiwan) [C]
2002
Al primo soffio di vento (2002/Franco PIAVOLI/Italy) [A] 
Blissfully Yours (2002/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [C]
De l'autre côté (2002/AKERMAN/France) DOC [A]
Divine Intervention (2002/SULEIMAN/Palestine) [G]
Elegy of a Voyage (2002/SOKUROV/Russia)
Gerry (2002/VAN SANT/USA) [D]
Dolls (2002/KITANO/Japan) [D]

Heremakono / En attendant le bonheur (2002/SISSAKO/Mauritania/FR) [B]
Hukkle (2002/PALFI/Hungary) [B]
Japon (2002/REYGADAS/Mexico) [C]
Jukeodo joha / Too young to die (2002/PARK Jinpyo/Korea) [B]
The Man Without a Past (2002/KAURISMAKI/Finland) [E]
Oasis (2002/LEE Chang-Dong/Korea) [C]
Russian Ark (2002/SOKUROV/Russia) [G]
Unknown Pleasures (2002/JIA/China)
Uzak /Distant (2002/CEYLAN/Turkey) [D]
La Vie Nouvelle (2002/GRANDRIEUX/France) [F]
WTC the first 24 Hours (2002/SAURET/USA) [A]
2003
A Talking Picture (2003/OLIVEIRA/Portugal)
All Tomorrow's Parties (2003/Nelson YU Lik-wai/China) [G]
Blind Shaft (2003/LI Yang/China) [D]
Bright Future (2003/K. KUROSAWA/Japan) [E]
The Brown Bunny (2003/GALLO/USA) [C]
Café Lumière (2003/HOU/Taiwan) [C]
Crimson Gold (2003/PANAHI/Iran) [D]
Demi-Tarif (2003/Isild LE BESCO/France)
Doppleganger (2003/Kiyoshi KUROSAWA/Japan) [E]
Elephant (2003/VAN SANT/USA) [D]
Father and Son (2003/SOKUROV/Russia) [D]
Five Dedicated to Ozu (2003/KIAROSTAMI/Iran) [B]
The Forest (2003/FLIEGAUF/Hungary)
Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003/TSAI/Taiwan) [C]
Las Horas del dia (2003/ROSALES/Spain) [D]

Koktebel (2003/KHLEBNIKOV/POPOGREBSKY/Russia) [D]
Last Life in the Universe (2003/RATANARUANG/Thailand) [D]
Letter from a Yellow Cherry Blossom (2003/KAWASE/Japan) DOC
Nobody Knows (2003/KORE-EDA/Japan) [B]
The Return (2003/ZVYAGINTSEV/Russia) [D]
Shara (2003/KAWASE/Japan) [C]
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ... and Spring (2003/KIM ki-duk/Korea) [D]
Struggle (2003/MADER/Austria) [C]

Twintynine Palms (20003/DUMONT/France) [C]
Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks (2003/WANG Bing/China) DOC [A]
2004
3-iron (2004/KIM Ki-duk/Korea) [C]
13 Lakes (2004/BENNING/USA) DOC [A]
2046 (2004/WONG/HK) [G]
La Blessure (2004/KLOTZ/Belgium) [B]
Dealer (2004/
FLIEGAUF/Hungary)
The Hand (2004/WONG/HK) Short [D]
Hotel (2004/HAUSNER/Austria) [D]
Keane (2004/KERRIGAN/USA) [E]
Lu Cheng/Passages (2004/CHAO Yang/China) [D]
Marseille (2004/SCHANELEC/Germany)
Los Muertos (2004/ALONSO/Argentina) [B]
La Niña Santa (2004/MARTEL/Argentina) [D]
La Peau Trouée (2004/SAMANI/France) DOC [A]
Ten Skies (2004/BENNING/USA) DOC [A]
Tickets (2004/KIAROSTAMI/Italy) [E]
Tropical Malady (2004/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [C]
Vergessensfuge (2004/JOST/USA)
The Weeping Meadow (2004/ANGELOPOULOS/Germany) [D]
Whisky (2004/REBELLA/STOLL/Uruguay) [D]
The World (2004/JIA/China) [C]
2005
4h30 (2005/TAN/Singapore) [D]
Afternoon Time (2005/BOONSINSUKH/Thailand) [C]
April Snow (2005/HUR Jin-ho/Korea) [E]
Batalla en el cielo (2005/REYGADAS/Mexico) [C]
Be With Me (2005/KHOO/Singapore) [E]
The Bow (2005/KIM Ki-duk/Korea) [D]
Un Couple Parfait (2005/SUWA/Japan) [D]
Drawing Restraint 9 (2005/BARNEY/USA) [G]
Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani? (2005/AOYAMA/Japan) [E]
The Forsaken Land (2005/JAYASUNDRA/Sri Lanka) [D]
Grain in Ear (2005/Zhang Lu/China) [D]
Last Days (2005/VAN SANT/USA) [C]
Our Daily Bread (2005/GEYRHALTER/Germany) DOC [A]
Oxhide (2005/LIU/China) [A]

Profils paysans: le quotidien (2005/DEPARDON/France) DOC [A]
Roads of Kiarostami (2005/KIAROSTAMI/Korea/Iran) [B]
Sangre (2005/ESCALANTE/Mexico) [C]
Seven Invisible Men (2005/BARTAS/Lithuania) [C]
The Sun (2005/SOKUROV/Russia) [C]
Three Times (2005/HOU/Taiwan)
The Wayward Cloud (2005/TSAI/Taiwan) [F]

Un été silencieux (2005/BRETON/France) DOC  
2006
The Amber Sexalogy (2006/RUBIN/Malaysia) [D]
The Anthem (2006/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]
Aphrodite (2006/Kilasme WU/Taiwan) [D]
Aus der Ferne (2006/ARSLAN/Germany) DOC
Avida (2006/KERVEN/DELEPINE/France) [G]
Climates (2006/CEYLAN/Turkey) [E]
Colossal Youth (2006/COSTA/Portugal) [B]
Daratt (2006/HAROUN/Chad) [D]
Day Night Day Night (2006/LOKTEV/USA) [C]
Du Levande/You, the living (2006/ANDERSSON/Sweden) [F]
Dong (2006/JIA/China) DOC [B]
El Violon (2006/VARGAS/mexico) [E]
Fantasma (2006/ALONSO/Argentina) [B]
Flandres (2006/DUMONT/France) [C]
Hamaca Paraguaya (2006/ENCINA/Paraguay) [B]
Heremias (2006/Lav DIAZ/Thailand)
Les Hommes (2006/MICHEL/France) [A]
Honor de Cavalleria / Quixotic (2006/SERRA/Spain) [C]
Huling balyan ng buhi, Ang (2006/SANCHEZ/Philippines)
I don't want to sleep alone (2006/TSAI/Taiwan) [C]
La Influencia (2006/AGUILERA/Spain) [C]
Into Great Silence (2006/GRONING/Germany) DOC [A]
Invisible Waves (2006/RATANARUANG/Thailand) [D]
It Happened Just Before (2006/SALOMONOWITZ/Austria)
Jour Après Jour (2006/POLLET/FARGIER/France) [A]

Kodak (2006/DEAN/UK) [A]
Là-bas (2006/AKERMAN/Belgium) DOC [A]
Lights in the Dusk (2006/KAURISMAKI/Finland) [F]
Love conquers All (2006/TAN Chui Mui/Malaysia) [C]
Majimak babsang/The last dining table (2006/Gyeong-Tae ROH/Korea) [D]
Nacido y criado (2006/TRAPERO/USA) [C]
Old Joy (2006/REICHARDT/USA) [D]
Passages (2006/JOST/USA)
The Outlaw Son (2006/LOWERY/USA) [C]
Pine Flat (2006/LOCKHART/USA)
Sehnsucht/Longing (2006/GRISEBACH/Germany) [C]
Still Life (2006/JIA/China) [C]
Syndrome and a Century (2006/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [D]

Time between Dog and Wolf (2006/JEONG Soo-Il/Korea) [C]
To Get to Heaven First You Have to Die (2006/USMONOV/Tajikistan) [D]
Todo Todo Teros (2006/TORRES/Philippines) [G]
Transe (2006/VILLAVERDE/Italy) [C]
Zidane, un portrait du 21e siècle (2006/GORDON/PARRENO/France) [A]
2007
Aïnour / Chouga (2007/OMIRBAEV/France/Kasakhstan) [D]
Alexandra (2007/SOKUROV/Russia) [C]
At Sea (2007/HUTTON/USA) [A]
Autohystoria (2007/Raya MARTIN/Philippines)

Breath / Soom (2007/KIM ki-duk/Korea) [E]
Buddha collapsed out of shame (2007/MAKHMALBAF Hana/Iran) [D]
Chacun son cinéma (2007/Omnibus/France)
Charly (2007/Isild LE BESCO/France) [C]

Death in the Land of Encantos (2007/Lav DIAZ/Philippines) [B]
Desert Dream (2007/ZHANG Lu/Mongolia) [D]
Emerald (2007/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [G]
El Asaltante (2007/FENDRIK/Argentina)
Help Me Eros (2007/LEE Kang-sheng/Taiwan)
Izgnanie / The Banishment (2007/ZVYAGINTSEV/Russia)
Luminous People (2007/WEERASETHAKUL/Portugal) [B]
Madonnen (2007/SPETH/Germany)
The Man from London (2007/TARR/Hungary) [D]
Mange, ceci est mon corps (2007/M. QUAY/France/Haiti)
La Marea (2007/MARTINEZ VIGNATTI/Argentina)
Mid Afternoon Barks (2007/ZHANG Yuedong/China)
Milky Way (2007/FLIEGAUF/Hungary) [B/F]
Mogari's Forest (2007/KAWASE/Japan) [C]
Paranoid Park (2007/VAN SANT/FR/USA) [E]

Phantom Love (2007/MENKES/USA)
Observando el Cielo (2007/LIOTTA/?) [A]
RR (2007/BENNING/USA) [A]
Silêncio (2007/OSSANG/France) [B]
Stellet licht (2007/REYGADAS/Mexico) [C]
La Soledad (2007/ROSALES/Spain) [E]
Tombée de nuit sur Shanghai (2007/AKERMAN/Portugal) DOC [A]
Voices, Tilted Screens and Extended Scenes of Loneliness: Filipinos in High Definition (2007/TORRES/Philippines)
Le Voyage du Ballon Rouge (2007/HOU/France) [D]
The Wind Blows Where It Will (2007/MEHRA/USA) [C]
Ye Che / Night Train (2007/DIAO Yinan/China) [D]
Yumurta (2007/KAPLANOGLU/Turkey) [D]
2008
102 minutes that changed America (2007/RITTENMEYER/SKUNDRICK/USA) [A]
L'argent du charbon (2008/WANG bing/France) DOC [A]
Los Bastardos (2008/ESCALANTE/Mexico) [D]

Crude Oil (2008/WANG Bing/China) [A] 
Delta (2008/MUNDRUCZO/Hungary) [C]
El Cant dels ocells (2008/SERRA/Spain) [C]
Day and Night (2008/HONG Sang-soo/Korea) [D]
The Last Season: Shawaks / Demsala Dawî : Şewaxan (2008/OZ/Turkey) [A]
Liverpool (2008/ALONSO/Argentina) [B]
Lunch Break (2008/LOCKHART/USA) [A]
Mobile Men (2008/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]
Münster Land (2008/JOUVE/France)
Now Showing (2008/MARTIN/Philippines) [B]

Old Partner (2008/LEE Chung-Ryoul/S.Korea) [A]
Punggok Rindukan Bulan / This Longing (2008/RUDIN/Malaysia) [C]
The Shaft / Dixia de tiankong (2008/ZHANG Chi/China)
Süt / Milk (2008/KAPLANOGLU/Turkey) [C]
Three Monkeys (2008/CEYLAN/Turkey) [D]
Time is working around Rotterdam (2008/JOUVE/France)
Tulpan (2008/DVORTSEVOY/Kazakhstan) [D]
Un Lac (2008/GRANDRIEUX/France) [F]
La Vie Moderne (2008/DEPARDON/France) [A]
Le Voyage Perpétuel (2008/LAPSUI/LEHMUSKALLIO/France) [A]
Wendy and Lucy (2008/REICHARDT/USA) [D]
2009
A Letter to Uncle Boonmee (2009/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]
Agrarian Utopia / Sawan baan na (2009/RAKSASAD/Thailand) 
Bergensbanen (2009/NRK/Norway) [A]
Craneway Event (2009/DEAN/UK) [A]
Gagma napiri / The Other Bank (2009/OVASHVILI/Georgia/Kazakhstan) [D]
Gigante (2009/BINIEZ/Uruguay) [C]
Guardini (2009/McQueen/UK)
Himalaya, where the wind dwells (2009/JEON/S.Korea) [C]
Independencia (2009/MARTIN/Philippines) [F]
Las / The Forest (2009/DUMALA/Poland) 
The Limits of Control (2009/JARMUSCH/USA) [D]
The Nymph (2009/RATANARUANG/Thailand)

Oxhide II (2009/LIU/China) [A]
Phantom of Nabua (2009/WEERASETHAKUL/Austria/Thailand) [F]
The Time That Remains (2009/SULEIMAN/Palestine) [F]
Sun Spots (2009/YANG Heng/China) [C]

Sweetgrass (2009/CASTAING-TAYLOR/BARBASH/USA) [A]
Visage (2009/TSAI/France/Taiwan) [G]

2010
Año Bisiesto (2010/ROWE/Mexico) [C]
Archipelago (2010/HOGG/UK) [D]

Aurora (2010/PUIU/Romania) [C]
Bal (2010/KAPLANOGLU/Turkey) [B]
Curling (2010/COTE/Canada) [C]
The Ditch (2010/WANG Bing/HK/BE/FR) [C]
Dooman River (2010/ZHANG Lu/S.Korea) [B]
Empty Space (2010/KHOO Wu Shaun, KWOK Li Chen, LIM De Jun/Singapore) [B]
Hi-So (2010/ASSARAT/Thailand) [C]

How I ended this summer (2010/POPOGREBSKY/Russia)
L'illusioniste (2010/CHOMET/UK/France) [F]
Indigène d'Eurasie (2010/BARTAS/France) [C]

Lo que mas quiero (2010/Castagnino/Argentina) [C]
Lumière du Nord (2010/Loznitsa/Russia) DOC
My Joy (2010/LOZNITSA/Russia) [D]
Nenette (2010/PHILIBERT/France) [A]

Ovsyanki / Le dernier voyage de Tanya (2010/FEDORCHENKO/Russia) [C]
Pig Iron (2010/BENNING/Korea) [A]
Le Quattro Volte (2010/FRAMMARTINO/Italy) [B]

R U There (2010/Verbeek/Netherlands) [B]
Un Homme Qui Crie (2010/HAROUN/Chad) [C]
Uncle Boonmee who can recall his past lives (2010/WEERASETHAKUL/Thailand) [B]

La vida útil (2010/Veiroj/Uruguay) [B]
Winter Vacation (2010/LI Hongqi/China) [C]

2011
Bovines (2011/GRAS/France) [A]
Gelecek uzun sürer / Le temps dure longtemps (2011/Özcan ALPER/Turkey) [C]
Hanezu no tzuki (2011/KAWAZE/Japan) [C]
Historias que so existem quando lembradas (2011/MURAT/BR/ARG/FR)
Hors Satan (2011/DUMONT/France) [B]
Hurtigruten Minutt for minutt (2011/NRK/Norway) [A]
Las Acacias (2011/GIORGELLI/Argentina) [B]
The Loneliest Planet (2011/Lotkev/USA)
Nana (2011/Massadian/France) [B]
Once upon a time in Anatolia (2011/CEYLAN/Turkey) [C]
The Loneliest Planet (2011/Loktev/USA) [B]
The Turin Horse (2011/TARR/Hungary) [B]
Two Years At Sea (2011/RIVERS/UK) [A]
World Cruise 2010 (2011/EIKAWA/Japan) [A]
Z daleka widok jest piękny / It Looks Pretty From a Distance (2011/SASNAL/Poland)  
2012
Bestiaire (2012/CÔTÉ/Canada) [A] 
Despues de Lucia (2012/FRANCO/Mexico) [C]
Dupã Dealuri / Beyond the Hills (2012/MUNGIU/Romania) [C]
Fogo (2012/OLAIZOLA/Mexico/Canada) [B] 
Hiver nomade (2012/Manuel von Stürler/Switzerland) [B]
Holy Motors (2012/CARAX/France) [G]
Just The wind (2012/FLIEGAUF/Hungary) [B] 
Leones (2012/Lopez/Argentina)
Leviathan (2012/CASTAING-TAYLOR, PARAVEL/FR-USA-UK) [A]
Post Tenebras Lux (2012/REYGADAS/FR/Mexico) [G]
La Sirga (2012/VEGA/Colombia) [C] 
Slow Life (2012/MERCHIOT/France)
Student (2012/OMIRBAYEV/Kazakhstan) [C]
Sueño y Silencio (2012/ROSALES/Spain/France) [C]
V Tumane / In the Fog (2012/LOZNITSA/Russia) [C]
Walker - Beautiful 2012 (2012/TSAI Ming-liang/HK) 
2013
All Is Lost (2013/Chandor/USA) [C]
Bends (2013/Flora Lau/HK) [D]
Borgman (2013/VAN WARMERDAM/Netherlands) [D]
Heli (2013/ESCALANTE/Mexico) [C]
La Jaula de Oro (2013/Diego Quemada-Diez/Mexico) [C]
Minuscule (2013/Giraud/Szabo/FR)
Norte, Hangganan Ng Kasatsayan (2013/DIAZ/The Phillipines) [D]
Only Lovers Left Alive (2013/Jarmusch/USA)
People Mountain, People Sea (2013/China)
Stray Dogs (2013/TsaiMingliang/Taiwan)


Disorder (2009/HUANG Weikai/China) DOC
Parsaj / Landscape (2003/Loznitsa/Russia) DOC
L'attente (2000/Loznitsa/Russia)
Palo y Hueso (1968/Sarquis/Argentina)
Lungo il Fiume (1992/Ermanno Olmi/Italy) DOC
[updated: April 2014]