• Perspectives
  • Retrospectives
  • Interviews
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  • Special Issues
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Perspectives
Retrospectives
Interviews
Festivals
Special Issues
ARCHIVE
Search
East European Film Bulletin -
  • Perspectives
  • Retrospectives
  • Interviews
  • Festivals
  • Special Issues
  • ARCHIVE

Retrospectives
Reflections on stand-out films of the past.

Essay

The Cinematic Man

Vol. 22 (October 2012) by Mikhail Iampolski
Mikhail Iampolski (New York University) retraces the genealogy of the cinematic man starting with Soviet films of the 1920s, and ending with contemporary Russian cinema.
Review

Goran Marković’s Tito and Me (Tito i ja, 1992)

Vol. 22 (October 2012) by Konstanty Kuzma
In this Yugoslav cult comedy from the early 1990s, a boy claims his love for Tito is greater than that for his parents.
Review

Přemysl Pražský’s Prague Seamstresses (Pražské švadlenky, 1929)

Vol. 22 (October 2012) by Moritz Pfeifer
Přemysl Pražský’s 1929 intricate comedy revolves around the faith of a young, single woman.
Essay

Bogdan Dziworski’s Ski Scenes with Franz Klammer (1980), Classical Duel (1978), The Olympics (1978)

Vol. 21 (September 2012) by Colette de Castro
Colette de Castro finds common themes in three of Polish director Bogdan Dziworski's "sports" documentaries.
Review

Juris Podnieks’ Homeland (Krustceļš, 1990)

Vol. 21 (September 2012) by Colette de Castro
A political documentary from Latvian helmer Juris Podnieks about the folk festivals in the Baltic states.
Review

Goran Paskaljević’s The Dog Who Loved Trains (Pas koji je voleo vozove, 1977)

Vol. 20 (August 2012) by Konstanty Kuzma
Paskaljević’s film starts out on board of a prison train: tired of the relentless heat in the train cabins, a group of lighthearted female prisoners decide to take their clothes off...
Essay

Karel Kachyňa’s The Ear (Ucho, 1970)

Vol. 20 (August 2012) by Julia Zelman
The Ear is one of the most politically incendiary films to emerge from the Czechoslovak Young Wave.
Review

Hermína Týrlová’s Les contes de la ferme (1972)

Vol. 20 (August 2012) by Moritz Pfeifer
Hermína Týrlová is considered one of the founders of Czech animation films...
Review

Slobodan Šijan’s Who’s Singin’ Over There? (Ko to tamo peva, 1980)

Vol. 19 (July 2012) by Konstanty Kuzma
Konstanty Kuzma saw Slobodan Šijan's debut feature from 1980.
Review

Ovidiu Bose Pastina’s One victim and many culprits (Mai mulţi vinovaţi şi o victimă, 1983)

Vol. 18 (June 2012) by Alina Popescu
Alina Popescu talks about Ovidiu Bose Pastina who began his career in the Communist period at the Documentary Film Studio, Sahia.
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The East European Film Bulletin is a journalistic and literary project dedicated to the criticism of films related to Central, Eastern and South-Eastern Europe.

ISSN 1775-3635

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