The best Boris Lehman’s movies

Boris Lehman

Boris Lehman

03/03/1944 (80 años)
Today we present the best Boris Lehman’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Boris Lehman’s movies.

Brussels-Transit

Brussels-Transit
7.9/10
Samy Szlingerbaum made his film Dakh-Brisel (Brussels-Transit) in 1980, thirty years after any Yiddish feature film had been produced. Szlingerbaum felt that the only way he could relate the story of his family’s search for refuge after World War II was in Yiddish. This Belgian-based filmmaker, deeply impacted by New York experimental cinema, gives us a masterful blend of powerful drama and stark documentary to tell the story of postwar European Jewry. Home, as it had been, no longer exists, and all that Samy’s family wants is a place in which to sink new roots.

Autour de Jeanne Dielman

Autour de Jeanne Dielman
7.3/10
During the filming of "Jeanne Dielman" Sami Frey recorded what was happening on the set. A film about a film in the making.

Trying to Describe Oneself

Trying to Describe Oneself
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 04/11/2005
  • Character: Himself
Trying to describe oneself is a movie about representation. How it is possible, through film, to describe oneself and describe others. With the camera as mirror and third eye. At first, a collage-like combination of letter-writing, investigation and journey, something between documentary and feature film. Finally, a portrait of Boris Lehman from 1989 to 1995, part II of BABEL.

Earthen Man

Earthen Man
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Release: 01/01/1989
  • Character: le modèle
From the construction of a sculpture "life size" in the earth, the director Boris Lehman imagines a story that staged a sculptor (Paulus Brun) struggling with an impossible order. The man of land is "golemise", takes life in the countryside, and ends up dying on an opera stage.

My Conversations on Film

My Conversations on Film
8.7/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 13/10/2013
  • Character: Himself
This distinctly personal journey into the artistic possibilities of independent film is not to be missed. Jonas Mekas, Jean-Pierre Gorin, Robert Kramer and many other visionaries and mavericks of the silver screen – as well as a book seller, a critic and a psychoanalyst – discuss what cinema has meant to them, what it is and what it could be and, implicitly, how it has changed over the 18 years in which this film was shot. Director Boris Lehman leads the charge, drawing in moments of absurdist humour and inventive camera work; he keeps things raw and spontaneous. His encounters with the now much-missed Jean Rouch and Stephen Dwoskin are particularly touching and stand testament to their personal playfulness and candour. An engaging, absorbing, epic odyssey of a movie.

Man Carrying

Man Carrying
The man carrying his body, his reels of film, his bag and his old Nikon, is Boris Lehman, he's also Sisyphus, Jesus Christ, and Ixion as told by Alfred Jarry in La Chandelle Verte. An essay on heaviness and lightness. The carrying man would like to fly, vanish into thin air, into light. When he meets another machine-man, who carries electronic pictures, his dream will come true.

Lapses, Regrets and Qualms

Lapses, Regrets and Qualms
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 15/10/2016
  • Character: Himself
A day in the life of director Boris Lehman: he wanders from cafe to bookshop, cinema to museum, writer to musician, and into the storeroom of the film archive... He celebrates his birthday in an alleyway, with a friend, and finishes his journey with an escapade to Bruges and a stroll by the North Sea. The camera plays dirty tricks and the sound recorder gets carried away, to the point that both are clearly telling Boris to stop filming. Yet he persists…

Story of My Life Told by My Photographs

Story of My Life Told by My Photographs
Through many photographs, he tells the story and allows his story to be told by those photographed. This is where the brilliant documentary reversal takes place.

Jean-Gina B.

Jean-Gina B.
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/01/1984
  • Character: apostle
This film is based on the true story of Jean Bella, who served as an officer in the Belgian Marine while being convinced, from an early age, that he was in fact a woman. Director Jean-Pol Ferbus follows Jean Bella and makes him talk about his life, psychological and spiritual experiences and reveals the true poet who remained undisclosed for most of this person's life. The film ultimately isn't about transexuality but about loneliness one can experience when he/she feels very deeply that she/he belongs to the two sexes and this in a deep, almost religious, fashion, to such an extent that sexuality itself is being erased from one's life. Jean-Gina Bella is a woman in the body of a man who bravely lived a life on the sea, eventually fighting the elements, talking to God when lost on the immense solitary ocean. This testimony is a very touching and poetic one.

La Marelle et les Epouvantails

La Marelle et les Epouvantails
  • Release: 22/09/2011

The Dead Tree

The Dead Tree
6.4/10
  • Genre: DramaRomance
  • Release: 01/01/1987
  • Character: Le patron du cabaret
The veneer of the story is a tale of chance love: two French expatriates strike up a chance romance when they meet on a ship headed back to South America.

Vie

Vie

Le journal de Joseph M.

Le journal de Joseph M.

Babel - A Letter to My Friends Left Behind in Belgium

Babel - A Letter to My Friends Left Behind in Belgium
8.6/10
  • Release: 01/01/1991
  • Character: self
"Babel / Letter to my Friends who Stayed in Belgium" narrates the day-to-day existence of a filmmaker wandering through his city (Brussels) and who has a notion to follow in the footsteps of dramatist Antonin Artaud and visit the Tarahumara people of Mexico. This is a film about intimacy and friendship. Written in the first person, it places Boris and Brussels in the center of the universe, here represented by the crazy, vertiginous, endless spiral of the biblical Tower. It is Boris's diary and self-portrait. He plays himself on screen (as do the cast of a hundred who also allowed themselves to be "Babelized")

My Seven Places

My Seven Places
  • Release: 08/01/2014
  • Character: Himself
Seven apartments, seven times of life: one film. A classic diary film, Boris Lehman intimately chronicles his own existence and that of objects and places that became an essential part of his life. A truly cinematic experience that gives us a highly European sense of space, time and history itself.

Portrait of the painter at his workshop

Portrait of the painter at his workshop
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/01/1985
  • Character: Himself
The film is the cinematic encounter of two looks (that of the painter Arié Mandelbaum and that of the filmmaker Boris Lehman) with one voice: that of the singer Esther Lamandier (who goes by the same name as Arié: Mandelbaum means «I'amandier»).

The Image, The World

The Image, The World
  • Release: 01/01/1998
In a burlesque mode, the director tries to deflate the world (realized here by a globe), to level it, to put its three dimensions in two. To do this, he fights against the material and the ball, embraces it, lies down on it, twists and tramples it. Illusory victory or vain efforts?

Hérésie pour Magritte IV

Hérésie pour Magritte IV
  • Release: 04/04/1979

Boris Lehman à Toulouse

Boris Lehman à Toulouse

Cinématon n°468 : Boris Lehman

Cinématon n°468 : Boris Lehman

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