-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Billy Mills on Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
- Bobby Seal on Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
- Billy Mills on Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
- Great Northern Cycle Way on Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
- Bobby Seal on Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
Archives
Categories
Blogroll
- Classic Cafes
- Cryptoforestry
- Dorothy Richardson Society
- Dry Heaves
- Fife Psychogeographical Collective
- Iain Sinclair's Official Unofficial Website
- Islingtongue > Leytonstongue
- Landscapism
- Liminal City
- Lines of Landscape
- Literary London Journal
- London Fictions
- Lost and Found in E17
- lukebennett13
- Marshman Chronicles
- Middlesex County Council
- Militant Esthetix
- Modernism in Metro-Land
- Not on Safari in Harlesden
- Particulations
- Ramblanista
- Savage Messiah
- Street Training
- The London Perambulator
- This Strange City
- Urban Adventure in Rotterdam
- Ventures and Adventures in Topography
Tag Cloud
Agnès Varda Andrew Mollo Book of the Month Charles Swain Clerkenwell derive Dorothy Richardson EF Schumacher farming Farndon Flaneur French New Wave George Gissing Hilbre Hollywood Home Iain Sinclair James Joyce Joni Mitchell Katherine Mansfield Kevin Brownlow Liz Lefroy London Los Angeles Maryland modernism Mrs Dalloway Olympics Paris Photography Poetry psychogeography Rebecca Solnit River Dee Robert MacFarlane sexuality Sky Travin Systems TS Eliot Virginia Woolf Wales walking Walter Benjamin Winstanley WrexhamMeta
Tag Archives: French New Wave
Psychogeographic Review’s Recommendations – May 2013
This past month Psychogeographic Review has been reading: ‘Scarp’ – Nick Papadimitriou Nick Papadimitriou’s meditation on walking, landscape and his upbringing in North London under the shadow of the ridge of land he refers to as Scarp … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Affinity, archeaology, Charles Swain, Christopher Houlder, Edmund Gosse, Felix Baumgartner, Felix: Lighter V.4, Ford Madox Ford, Francis Ford Coppola, French New Wave, Gapland, George Gissing, Graham Hooper, Grateful Dead, Guillermo del Toro, Helm, Iain Banks, In the Fog, James Farrar, John Hillaby, Linda Hoyle, Lost Trail, Luke Younger, Matt Dillon, modernism, Nick Papadimitriou, Pan's Labyrinth, Poetry, Rumble Fish, Scarp, Sergei Loznitsa, Travin Systems, Wales, walking
6 Comments
Cléo’s Journey
For me, the most fascinating thing about the film Cléo From 5 to 7 is Cléo’s journey through Paris. She travels on foot, by bus and in a car, her physical journey seeming to mirror her inner odyssey. Paris, as … Continue reading
Film of the Month – April 2012 – Agnès Varda’s Cléo From 5 to 7
Cléo From 5 to 7 is one of the key films of the French New Wave. Director Agnès Varda sets out to create a cinematic odyssey about our perception of time, with much of the action filmed in real time … Continue reading