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

Jacek Borcuch’s All That I Love (Wszystko, co kocham, 2009)

Vol. 7 (July 2011) by Colette de Castro
Jacek Borcuch's feature follows Janek, the member of a punk band, who tries to resist the obstacles of Socialist Poland in the '80s.
Review

Radu Jude’s The Happiest Girl in the World (Cea mai fericită fată din lume, 2009)

Vol. 7 (July 2011) by Ana Ribeiro
Radu Jude's first feature is a coming of age story about a girl whose life changes when she wins the main prize in an advertising campaign.
Review

Cristi Puiu’s Stuff and Dough (Marfa şi banii, 2001)

Vol. 7 (July 2011) by Konstanty Kuzma
In Cristi Puiu's debut, two young men get involved in a pursuit when trying to make quick money with a dubious job.
Review

Cristi Puiu’s Cigarettes and Coffee (Un cartus de kent si un pachet de cafea, 2004)

Vol. 7 (July 2011) by Moritz Pfeifer
Cristi Puiu's Cigarettes and Coffee is a short about a father asking his son for a job.
Review

Cristi Puiu’s The Death of Mr Lazarescu (Moartea domnului Lăzărescu, 2005)

Vol. 7 (July 2011) by Ana Ribeiro
Ana Ribeiro looks at The Death of Mr. Lazarescu in the light of a trip to Bucharest she made some years ago.
Review

Constantin Popescu’s Principles of Life (Principii de viaţă , 2010)

Vol. 6 (June 2011) by Konstanty Kuzma
Constantin Popescu focuses on an anti-hero who tries to deal with his environment.
Review

Sergei Loznitsa’s My Joy (Schastye moe, 2010)

Vol. 6 (June 2011) by Moritz Pfeifer
Sergei Loznitsa’s My Joy is the story of a truck driver whose journey ends up in an abandoned village.
Review

Alexander Mindadze’s Innocent Saturday (V Subbotu , 2011)

Vol. 6 (June 2011) by Konstanty Kuzma
Alexander Mindadze’s feature is set in the night of the catastrophe in Chernobyl ’86.
Review

Mikhail Kalatozov’s The Cranes Are Flying (Letyat zhuravli, 1957)

Vol. 6 (June 2011) by Stefania Marghitu
Mikhail Kalatozov's The Cranes Are Flying follows the fate of a couple separated by the outbreak of the Second World War.
Review

Boris Despodov’s Corridor No. 8 (2008)

Vol. 6 (June 2011) by Konstanty Kuzma
This documentary follows a infrastructural project launched and subsequently dropped by the European Union in 2007.
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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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