Lee Chang-dong • South Korea • 2010 • Poetry brings transcendence in a woman’s twilight years
Mija lives in South Korea with her only grandson, Wook. Wook’s mother lives in another city, so Mija shares her small apartment and rather mundane life with the teenage boy, who is soon implicated alongside several schoolmates in a local tragedy. Mija receives tragic news of her own—she has early-stage Alzheimer's, a diagnosis she shares with no one. On a whim Mija attends a poetry course which radically changes her view of the world, as her mind slips slowly away from her.
With a quietly devastating performance by Yun Jung-hee, Poetry marvels in the beauty of ordinary existence as one woman's life enters its twilight. Lee Chang-dong’s fifth film premiered at San Sebastián, Karlovy Vary, Telluride, and Cannes, where it won Best Screenplay and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury. Poetry is a New York Times Critic’s Pick.
Richie Mehta • India-Canada • 2013 • A tale of a father's journey across India in search of his son.
Mahendra is a chain-wallah, eking out a living fixing zippers on the bustling streets of New Delhi. Out of financial necessity, he sends his twelve-year-old son, Siddharth, to work in a distant ...
Carlos Reygadas • 2007 • Mexico • Filmed with nonprofessional actors among a community of Mennonites.
Johan lives with Esther, his wife, and their seven children in rural Chihuahua state, among a community of Men...
Aleksei Fedorchenko • 2010 • Russia • A man journeys through central Russia to lay his wife to rest.
An evocative exploration of the mysteries of love, existence, and death, Silent Souls charts an unexpected jour...