Daisy von Scherler Mayer’s 1995 cult favorite starring Parker Posey comes to Blu-ray for the first time, thanks to a new 4K restoration from Fun City Editions.
Found at least 250 stories matching “dora and the lost city of gold”
-
-
James Gray on Armageddon Time and being “a complete shithead”
After exploring the Amazonian jungle of The Lost City of Z and cruising the lunar surface of Ad Astra, writer-director James Gray heads to his most unnerving location yet: a private school in Reagan-era Manhattan.
-
Countdown: our Top 10 films for 2021 so far
Two Filipino indies lead the Letterboxd Top 25 at the 2021 halfway point, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to shake—and reshape—the film industry.
-
Win Tickets to the ‘Some Like It Rare’ Premiere on October 7th in Los Angeles or New York City
Letterboxd's Horrorville is giving away five (5) tickets to the premiere of Some Like it Rare, which will exclusively open on October 7, 2022 at Alamo Drafthouse in both DTLA (Los Angeles) and Lower Manhattan (New York City).
-
How I Letterboxd: Darren Carver-Balsiger
List maestro Darren Carver-Balsiger chats with Letterboxd's head of platform content Jack Moulton about arthouse cinema, enduring The Room, obscure essential horror films from around the world and tips for how to conduct a Letterboxd community poll.
-
Telluride 2021: Coming Down From The Mountain
Brian Formo ends his time at Telluride with a royal, a card counter, a lost daughter, some dog power, and his favorite film of the fest.
-
“Chess of the Wind” Gets 4K Restoration and Theatrical Release
Long thought lost after the Iranian Revolution at the end of the 1970s, Mohammad Reza Aslani’s debut narrative feature has been restored in breathtaking 4K by Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Foundation and Cineteca di Bologna at L’Immagine Ritrovata.
-
Sound Obsession: Sharing Breath with Apichatpong
As his Tilda Swinton-starring film Memoria begins its infinite, one-cinema-at-a-time U.S. tour, Apichatpong Weerasethakul wants us to stop obsessing about ourselves.
-
Four Favorites with Dolly de Leon
As Palme d’Or winner Triangle of Sadness hits VOD in the US, actress Dolly De Leon shares with us her four favorite films.
-
Best of Sundance 2022
Traveling from bar mitzvahs and hotel rooms to volcanoes and haunted colleges, the Letterboxd crew highlights the Sundance premieres that made the biggest impact out of the year’s first major festival.
-
The Power of the Still: The Photography Behind the Scenes
The most iconic and lasting film images come from split-second decisions by unit stills photographers. In this feature from editor-in-chief Gemma Gracewood, Jane Campion and her photographer Kirsty Griffin, David Lowery and Eric Zachanowich, and Joachim Trier and Christian Belgaux open up about capturing the heart of a movie.
-
2022 Sundance Selects
The Letterboxd team selects the fifteen titles we’re most excited to see at this year’s all-virtual Sundance Film Festival.
-
The (Janus) Films They Didn't Want You to See!
In celebration of the theatrical release of Mohammad Reza Aslani’s Chess of the Wind, currently playing a two-week run at Film Forum, Janus Films put together a Letterboxd list of ten more titles from their library which were banned at one point.
-
15 Picks from Sundance 2023
From Jonathan Majors to Nicole Holofcener, these are the films and filmmakers we’re most excited to see at this year’s hybrid Sundance Film Festival.
-
Lena Dunham on Making Movies for Her Inner Teenager
Returning to cinemas with Sharp Stick and Catherine Called Birdy, Lena Dunham chats about grappling with the internet’s attention and filming sex from a feminist viewpoint (and the husband gets a word in about soundtracks).
-
Filmmaker Nikyatu Jusu on creating a new cinematic language with ‘Nanny’
Nanny writer and director Nikyatu Jusu talks about centering Black women, navigating the edit and retaining power when creative intention meets business reality.
-
Urban Islanders: The Friendships Behind Every Day in Kaimukī
The team who brought the hazy skateboard indie Every Day in Kaimukī to Sundance talk nineties movies, leaving Hawai’i, and human-cat rivalry with our Indigenous editor Leo Koziol (Ngāti Kahungunu, Ngāti Rakaipaaka).
-
Aftersun’s creative team on massive cakes, karaoke and inner peace
Filmmaker Charlotte Wells and stars Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio on the tender bonds and fast friendships at the heart of Aftersun. Interviews and photographs by Ella Kemp.
-
Lockdown Log: What You Watched During a Year with Covid
Gemma Gracewood takes a look at the top 200 films that were added to Letterboxd members’ diaries during a year-long period of stay-at-home orders.
-
Diverse and Strange: A Brief Introduction to the Cinema of the Philippines
As two Filipino indie films top our Halfway 2021 list, Manila-based film critic Philbert Dy unpacks how Cleaners and Ode to Nothing fit in the Philippines cinematic landscape.