This article places Joseph and His Brothers—Scenes from a Peasant Bible (József és testvérei—Jelenetek egy parasztbibliából, 2003) by Hungarian experimental filmmaker András Jeles within the social, institutional and cultural context of Hungarian film production. It surveys the sociopolitical conditions that gave rise to the formal and political radicalism of Hungarian experimental cinema; it provides an insight into the workshop of the Béla Balázs Studio, which played a determining role in shaping the various alternative discourses of Hungarian filmmaking, and suggests that András Jeles’s work is a particular manifestation of form-breaking radicalism. Two different narrative and stylistic modes of expression in the film are examined: shado...
Kékesi, Zoltán. 2015. Agents of Liberation – Holocaust Memory in Contemporary Art and Documentary Fi...
CZECH FILM IN EXILE (ČESKÝ FILM V EXILU). Jiří Voráč. Brno, Host 2004. 192pp, stills, index, English...
The present study examines three versions of Tóték (commonly translated as The Toth Family; literall...
This article places Joseph and His Brothers—Scenes from a Peasant Bible (József és testvérei—Jelenet...
This article places Joseph and His Brothers—Scenes from a Peasant Bible (József és testvérei—Jelenet...
In the following article, I examine the originality of Hungarian director Miklós Jancsó’s (1921–2014...
Slitfilm (Résfilm, 2005) and The Gravedigger (A sírásó, 2010) are two Hungarian experimental films m...
The silent weekly newsreel series Vörös Riport-Film/Red Report-Film was published by the leftist rev...
The study examines the “personalness” of Hungarian creative documentary films, and compares this new...
The article explores the main cases of Hungarian neo-avant-garde cinema in terms of re-emergence of ...
During almost twelve years after the Soviet regime crushed the Hungarian Revolution, the Warsaw Pact...
Hungarian cinema has often been forced to tread a precarious and difficult path. Through the failed ...
This article will examine the position of critical cinema in socialist Yugoslavia by analysing the a...
This article discusses communism in the film titled Čeburaška by Eduard Uspenskij. The study aims to...
This article analyses the development of Conceptual Art in Bratislava during the communist period, w...
Kékesi, Zoltán. 2015. Agents of Liberation – Holocaust Memory in Contemporary Art and Documentary Fi...
CZECH FILM IN EXILE (ČESKÝ FILM V EXILU). Jiří Voráč. Brno, Host 2004. 192pp, stills, index, English...
The present study examines three versions of Tóték (commonly translated as The Toth Family; literall...
This article places Joseph and His Brothers—Scenes from a Peasant Bible (József és testvérei—Jelenet...
This article places Joseph and His Brothers—Scenes from a Peasant Bible (József és testvérei—Jelenet...
In the following article, I examine the originality of Hungarian director Miklós Jancsó’s (1921–2014...
Slitfilm (Résfilm, 2005) and The Gravedigger (A sírásó, 2010) are two Hungarian experimental films m...
The silent weekly newsreel series Vörös Riport-Film/Red Report-Film was published by the leftist rev...
The study examines the “personalness” of Hungarian creative documentary films, and compares this new...
The article explores the main cases of Hungarian neo-avant-garde cinema in terms of re-emergence of ...
During almost twelve years after the Soviet regime crushed the Hungarian Revolution, the Warsaw Pact...
Hungarian cinema has often been forced to tread a precarious and difficult path. Through the failed ...
This article will examine the position of critical cinema in socialist Yugoslavia by analysing the a...
This article discusses communism in the film titled Čeburaška by Eduard Uspenskij. The study aims to...
This article analyses the development of Conceptual Art in Bratislava during the communist period, w...
Kékesi, Zoltán. 2015. Agents of Liberation – Holocaust Memory in Contemporary Art and Documentary Fi...
CZECH FILM IN EXILE (ČESKÝ FILM V EXILU). Jiří Voráč. Brno, Host 2004. 192pp, stills, index, English...
The present study examines three versions of Tóték (commonly translated as The Toth Family; literall...