To Each His Own Cinema

To Each His Own Cinema(2007)

10/31/2007 (US)Comedy, Drama1h 40m
6.5

"A declaration of love on the big screen"

Overview

Commissioned to mark the 60th anniversary of the Cannes Film Festival, "To Each His Own Cinema" brought together 33 of the world's pre-eminent filmmakers to produce short pieces exploring the multifarious facets of cinema and their perspective on the state of their chosen artform in the early 21st century.

Theo Angelopoulos

Director

Olivier Assayas

Director

Bille August

Director

Jane Campion

Director

Chen Kaige

Director

Michael Cimino

Director

David Cronenberg

Director

Jean-Pierre Dardenne

Director

Luc Dardenne

Director

Manoel de Oliveira

Director

Raymond Depardon

Director

Atom Egoyan

Director

Amos Gitai

Director

Alejandro González Iñárritu

Director

Hou Hsiao-hsien

Director

Aki Kaurismäki

Director

Abbas Kiarostami

Director

Takeshi Kitano

Director

Andrei Konchalovsky

Director

Claude Lelouch

Director

Ken Loach

Director

David Lynch

Director

Nanni Moretti

Director

Roman Polanski

Director

Raúl Ruiz

Director

Walter Salles

Director

Elia Suleiman

Director

Tsai Ming-liang

Director

Gus Van Sant

Director

Lars von Trier

Director

Wim Wenders

Director

Wong Kar-Wai

Director

Takeshi Kitano

Screenplay

Youssef Chahine

Director

Joel Coen

Director

Ethan Coen

Director

Joel Coen

Writer

Ethan Coen

Writer

Zhang Yimou

Director

Zou Jingzhi

Writer

Zhang Yimou

Writer

Wong Kar-Wai

Writer

Nanni Moretti

Writer

Andrei Konchalovsky

Writer

Aki Kaurismäki

Writer

Alejandro González Iñárritu

Writer

Amos Gitai

Writer

Luc Dardenne

Writer

Jean-Pierre Dardenne

Writer

William Chang

Writer

Olivier Assayas

Writer

Atom Egoyan

Writer

Manoel de Oliveira

Writer

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A review by CRCulver
5.0

Written on August 14, 2018

TO EACH HIS OWN CINEMA is a 2007 collection of 3-minute shorts by some 36 directors around the world on the theme of what cinema means to them. So many auteurs already make films about films inasmuch as they allude to classics, but here most of the shorts are actually set in cinemas, with audiences in rows of seating. You'll need to have a decent familiarity with the arthouse canon before watching this, though. It's fascinating how so many of the directors, regardless of what continent they hailed from, choose to have French New Wave films playing in the background as their stories are told.

It opens with Raymond Depardon's "Open-Air Cinema", where a crowd of Egyptians watched an outdoor projection in Alexandria, and in spite of the unusual writing and the women's veils, they seem to be just like us. Zhang Yimou later does much the same in a Chinese village.

One of the remarkable aspects of this collection are the similar ideas. Two stories deal with thieves stealing purses in dark cinemas. Three deal with the blind and how they perceive cinema. Many look back to childhood/earlier eras. Hou Hsiao-Hsien's short recreates 1950s Taiwan on an elaborate set to show the typical visit to a cinema of his youth. Amos Gitai's film juxtaposes 1930s viewers of Yiddish cinema, a vibrant tradition destroyed by the Holocaust, with a modern Israeli audience in wartime. Youssef Chahine's looks back at his first visit to Cannes 47 years before.

Some of the films deal with serious political themes: Amos Gitai on the Israeli-Arab relations, David Croneberg on anti-semitism, and Bille August with Danish–immigrant relations. However, there are also a number of overtly funny shorts, like Takeshi Kitano's, where a working man's chance to unwind by watching a film keeps getting interrupted by problems with the projector. In Lars Van Trier's contribution, Jacques Franz plays an annoying businessman who can't stop bragging about his success, though the extreme gore and violence that follows makes for very black humour. Elia Suleiman's is Buster Keatonish physical comedy in the modern world.

Some shorts are notable for continuing an aesthetic that the director had already established in an earlier film. Kaurismäki's short is his usual style of an ostensibly contemporary setting, but with 1950s rock music and working class people who speak utterly deadpan. (Unusually, however, it uses none of his typical troupe of actors.) Abbas Kiarostami's "Where is My Romeo?" is a sort of follow-up to his experimental film SHIRIN, which showed only the faces of numerous women as they watched a classic Iranian tale of love; here these women are watching "Romeo and Juliet" instead.

All in all, this proved a continuously engaging film, whose 2-hour running time just flew by for me. Nearly all the shorts were entertaining, the sole exceptions for me being Jane Campion's oddball short, where an adult woman plays an insect that vexes a projectionist, and Gus Van Sant's film with a randy teenager entering into the film being projected. Nothing here seems a must-see classic, but if you like a few of the directors here, you're sure to enjoy this set.