List of Film Journals and Magazines
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_journals_and_magaz...
Film journals and magazines combine discussion of individual films, genres and directors with in-depth considerations of the medium and the conditions of its production and reception. Their articles contrast with film reviewing in newspapers and magazines which principally serve as a consumer guide to movies. Here is a long list of such journals and magazines and links to their site. (ml)
http://www.world-newspapers.com/film-magazines.html
Here is a very good list of leading film magazines and journals with links to their online sites.
Film, Journals, Festivals, Screen Organizations, Dis...
http://archive.sensesofcinema.com/links.html
Senses of Cinema is an online journal devoted to the serious and eclectic discussion of cinema. Here is Sense of Cinema's links which include links magazines critics screen organisations directors/films asian cinema distributors film festivals miscellaneous A superb list
http://www.britfilms.com/festivals/
This site is produced by the Arts Group of the British Council and it provides and extraordinarily in depth listing of festivals. You can list your own here as well.
http://www.alabamafilm.org/foundations%20&%20grants.htm
A very nice list of film foundations and grants.
Nagisa Oshima and the Struggle for a Radical Cinema
http://hcl.harvard.edu/hfa/films/2008novdec/oshima.html
An unflinchingly iconoclastic and ceaselessly inventive filmmaker, Nagisa Oshima (1932- ) has scorched an indelible path across postwar Japanese cinema. Oshima is one of Japan’s original outlaw masters – a rebellious and instinctively anti-establishment artist whose apprentice work bears a resemblance to the films of such contemporary enfant terribles as Sejun Suzuki (1923- ), Koji Wakamatsu (1936- ) and Kiju Yoshida (1933- ), maverick and fiercely independent directors who, like Oshima, all began under studio contracts. Oshima quickly established himself as one of the most politically committed and driven filmmakers of his generation, beginning with the remarkable elegy to the failed student-led protest movement offered by his controversial third feature, Night and Fog in Japan (1960), which was almost immediately pulled from theatrical distribution by his studio, Shochiku, and banned from public and private exhibition. (continue at link)
Current is about what's going on in your world: all the things you and your friends are actually interested in -- that you won't find on any other news site or cable TV channel.
Carlos Mayolo for the last time (Spanish)
http://www.elespectador.com/impreso/arteygente/cultu...
A recap from an interview he did before the release of his autobiography "La vida de Mi Cine y Mi Televisión"