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- Modern society has an enormous debt to the painter Edvard Munch, from Andy Warhol to Ingmar Bergman, from Marina Abramovic to Jasper Jones. His paintings have become symbols, but also a sign of the tragedies in the twentieth century.
- 1918. As the roar of the First World War cannons is dying out, in Vienna, the heart of Central Europe, a golden age comes to an end. The Austro-Hungarian Empire is beginning to disintegrate. On the night of October 31st, in the bed of his home, Egon Schiele dies, one of the 20 million deaths caused by the Spanish flu. He dies looking at the invisible evil in the face, in the only he can do: painting it. He is 28 years old. Only a few months earlier, the main hall of the Secession building had welcomed his works: 19 oil paintings and 29 drawings. His first successful exhibition, a celebration of a new painting idea that portrays the restlessness and desires of mankind.A few months earlier, his teacher and friend Gustav Klimt had died. From the turn of the century, he had fundamentally changed the feeling of art and founded a new group: the Secession. The documentary film Klimt & Schiele - Eros and Psyche, will recount this extraordinary season: a magical moment for art, literature, and music, in which new ideas are circulated, Freud discovers the drives of the psyche, and women begin to claim their independence. An age that revealed the abysses of the ego, in which today we're still reflecting ourselves.The film will take us through 3 stunning exhibitions:- Vienna 1900. Klimt - Moser - Gerstl - Kokoschka (Leopold Museum);- Egon Schiele. The Jubilee Show (Leopold Museum);- Stairway to Klimt. Eye to Eye with Klimt & Nuda Veritas (Kunsthistorischesmuseum).
- It is based on five women who did survive the Holocaust but shared her same fate of "deportation, suffering and being denied their childhood and adolescence," according to promotional materials.
- It's not only a museum of Spain. It's the museum of Spain.
- A new look at Van Gogh, through the legacy of the largest private collector of artworks by the Dutch painter: Helene Kröller-Müller (1869-1939), who, in the early 20th Century, ended up buying nearly 300 of his works.
- The secret world of Egyptian mythology and religion, interweaving Egyptian history with that of the museum, which was founded in 1824 and is the oldest in the world devoted to Egyptian culture.
- An extraordinary report on how Hitler looted 'the great beauty' of Europe: the art that was the expression of its culture.
- Born in Livorno, Tuscany, Dedo or Modi, lived a short, tormented life, narrated here from an original point of view, that of his young common-law wife, Jeanne Hebuterne
- Explores the complex relationship between Napoleon, culture and art.
- History of Hermitage Museum - Winter Palace in St Petersburg.
- The documentary traces the history of our country through the cinema of Francesco Rosi, starting from the film that the director thought told the mother of all negotiations between the State and the mafias: "Lucky Luciano". By lining up his works most linked to the news, politics and Italian society: Salvatore Giuliano, La sfida, Le mani sulla città, Il caso Mattei, Cristo si è fermato a Eboli, Cadaveri eccellenti, Tre Fratelli, Uomini contro, Dimenticare Palermo, we obtain one of the most lucid analyses of Italian history. It is a journey in the civil cinema of Rosi, of the Citizen Rosi, as he liked to call himself. A journey that applies his method of work, the one that has allowed his films to resist the elements of novelty brought over time by investigations and historical analysis. As Rosi did, we worked on documents, desecrated materials from Italian and foreign archives, sentences, qualified testimonies of scholars, magistrates, men of cinema. The documentary is also a sentimental journey because the story of Francesco Rosi's life and cinema is told by his daughter Carolina, who has witnessed her father's work since she was a child and who assisted him with love until his death.
- A look into the love story between post-impressionist painter Gauguin and the French Polynesia.
- A biographical portrait of french noir writer Jean Claude Izzo: a cult author whose work many consider as the original inspiration of the so-called 'mediterranean noir'.
- This is a journey through the last match of Pelé, a long farewell reported by those who were there and left a mark on an era.
- With the first and groundbreaking "Venere degli Stracci," dated 1967, Michelangelo Pistoletto introduced waste materials and refuse into museums, critiquing consumer society and beginning to address the theme of recycling. The father of Arte Povera, also known for his Mirror Paintings and the Terzo Paradiso, is also responsible for a more recent version of the work intended for the city of Naples. As is well known, the monumental version of "Venere degli Stracci" was destroyed in an arson fire during the night of July 11-12, 2023. The documentary "La rinascita della Venere" is dedicated to its "second life."