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Personal Cyber Botanica (Free subscription) | 09/11/2008
When it’s about Christopher Doyle’s photography, I’m most of the time speechless… I think, it’s better than to live Doyle to speak for himself… with photographs and wordz… at least for tonight… ‘I have the most wonderful job in the world because I’m looking. Every day I notice the light on your face.’ Photo: Christopher Doyle (c) ‘I [...]
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GreenCine Daily (Free subscription) | 01/12/2008
Interview 's just relaunched its site, turning what was once a placeholder ad for the magazine into a romping, content-rich and photo-heavy fun browse. Jack White talks with Cate Blanchett for the cover; Spike Lee interviews Martin Scorsese ; David Cronenberg talks with Charlie Kaufman , Brigitte Lacombe with Christopher Doyle and Wong Kar-wai , Thurston Moore with Spike Jonze (and by...
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Explore : Actors and Actresses, Cate Blanchett, Cinema, David Cronenberg, Directors, Entertainment, Jack White, James Franco, Josh Brolin, Martin Scorsese, Spike Jonze, Spike Lee, Spike Lee
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Some Came Running (Free subscription) | 26/11/2008
I have to admit: when I learned that the first Blu-ray release from Criterion would be of their newly remastered version of Wong Kar-Wai's 1994 Chungking Express , I was slightly puzzled. Don't get me wrong—the film, shot by Andrew Lau and Christopher Doyle, is breathtakingly beautiful. But its beauty is largely of an impressionistic sort. The blurred slow-motion (produced via optical...
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Variety.com (Free subscription) | 25/11/2008
Disc also includes a 12-minute gem of an episode from the British TV series "Moving Pictures," in which Wong takes viewers on a tour of the film's locations -- from the sweaty, cramped corridors of Chungking Mansions to cinematographer Christopher Doyle's apartment (occupied in the film by Leung). Wong and Doyle, whose collaboration produced one of the most distinctive and influential...
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 23/10/2008
"Ashes of Time Redux," starring Maggie Cheung and the late Leslie Cheung, is Wong Kar Wai's extensively reworked version of his only martial-arts movie. Music, editing and Christopher Doyle's cinematography have all been revised, and the images are very nearly everything.