Tarr

Friday Foster  Movies

Posted by at June 30, 2023
Friday Foster

Friday Foster (1975)
Friday Foster, a magazine photographer, goes to Los Angeles International airport to photograph the arrival of Blake Tarr, the richest black man in America. Three men attempt to assassinate Tarr. Foster photographs the melee and is plunged into a web of conspiracy involving the murder of her childhood friend, a US senator, and a shadowy plan called "Black Widow".
Action  Thriller 

Pripyat (1999) [repost]  Movies

Posted by ParRus at April 26, 2017
Pripyat (1999) [repost]

Pripyat (1999)
DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | PAL 4:3 | 01:39:58 | 3.04 Gb
Audio: Russian, French - AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps (each) | Subs: English, German
Genre: Documentary

After 1986, a restricted zone was erected at a radius of 30km around Chernobyl. More than 100.000 people have been evacuated from there, but some have remained or returned. "Pripyat" follows four protagonists who live or work in this zone.

Kárhozat [Damnation] 1988  Movies

Posted by galmuchet at May 22, 2017
Kárhozat  [Damnation] 1988

Kárhozat [Damnation] 1988
DVDrip | MKV H264-1051 | mp3@160 | 720x424 | Audio: Hungarian | Subs: French, German, English, Spanish, Dutch (idx/sub) | DVD Cover | 1h55 | 1.0 Gb
Drama | Hungary 1988 | Director Bela TARR

Damnation tells the story of Karrer (Miklos B. Szekely), a depressed man in love with a married torch singer (Vali Kerekes) from a local bar, the Titanik. The singer broke off their affair, because she dreams of becoming famous. Karrer is offered smuggling work by Willarsky (Gyula Pauer), the bartender at the Titanik. Karrer offers the job to the singer's husband, Sebastyen (Gyorgy Cserhalmi). This gets him out of the way, but things don't go as Karrer plans. Betrayals follow. Karrer despairs.

Violet (2014)  Movies

Posted by Helladot at Sept. 13, 2017
Violet (2014)

Violet (2014)
BDRip 720p | MKV | 960 x 720 | x264 @ 6081 Kbps | 1h 22mn | 4,37 Gb
Audio: Dutch DTS 5.1 @ 1509 Kbps | Subtitles: English (embedded)
Genre: Action, Drama | Director: Bas Devos

Grief, and its many stages of evolution, is the focus of “Violet,” which marks the feature-length directorial debut for Bas Devos (who also scripts). Following a chain of artistic freedom that wraps around the works of Bela Tarr and, soon after, latter-era Gus Van Sant, Devos devotes himself to the power of film imagery, telling as much of the story in silence, permitting cinematographer Nicolas Karakatsanis full command of the effort, dictating moods with shots that either ripple with meaning or trail off into nothingness….