1.Ingmar Bergman’s Autumn sonata 2. 32 short movies about Glenn Gould 3. Tous les matins du monde – This is a most wonderful film. [...] Superb.Even if I was not interested in the piano, I would still find these movies fascinating and superbly made.[...] they are watchable and good entertainment:1. The pianist. 2. The piano. 3. Shine. 4. The Mephisto Waltz – Quite good actually (it has Jacqueline Bisset in top form on it).[...]3. 32 shorts about Glenn Gould – This is my all time favourite piano movie.[...]5. Great Balls of fire - Great fun.[...]1. The piano lesson – this is excellent film making, with several good piano and piano lessons scenes.[...]2. Fingers – A really mesmerising and strange movie.
Thanks for the help bernhard
1. The piano lesson – Isabelle Hupert as the teacher from hell (after a lesson with her, Madame Sousatska is fun fun fun). Not for the squeamish, this is excellent film making, with several good piano and piano lessons scenes.
If you are thinking in terms of best film – which has something to do with a piano – but the merits of the film as a movie are more important, then I would say:1. The piano lesson – Isabelle Hupert as the teacher from hell (after a lesson with her, Madame Sousatska is fun fun fun). Not for the squeamish, this is excellent film making, with several good piano and piano lessons scenes.Best wishes,Bernhard.
Well, not as bad as Barton Fink, but close. If you are ever in the mood to watch a depressing movie with little going on about a repressed, depressed nut of a bit#%$ who is two seconds away from the shower scene in psycho, then this movie is for you. Yes, run don't walk....just make sure you are running in the right direction.Remind me not to use Bernard as a movie critic. P.S. if you use the fast forward you can shave off an hour off the movie.....
Bernhard,I found that 32 Short Films on Glenn Gould was a poorly filmed, erm, film. :/ Some of the films were very vague, you never actually got to see anyone play piano, and oftentimes the music overpowered the talking and you couldn't hear anything. Also, the sound and video quality was very poor.How do the movies follow the structure of the Goldberg Variations?
Then again, maybe it is just my taste. In another thread I got criticised as a movie critic since I liked “The piano lesson”. However, all my critics can eat their words now; Elfriede Jelinek, who wrote the book on which the movie is based just won the Nobel Prize of literature.
Eat your words, Ron.Bernhard's excellent taste in movies has (sort of) been ratified by no less than the Nobel people.Elfriade Jelinek (who wrote the book on which "The PIano Lesson" is taken from) just gotthe Nobel Prize for Literature. Best wishes,Bernhard.