Caroline Leaf Out on a Limb, Handcrafted Cinema (2010)

Download Download Torrent Opens in your torrent client (e.g. qBittorrent)
Category Movies
Size1.35 GB
Added1 year ago (2025-03-16 18:48:01)
Health
Dead0/0
Info Hash6D4D9CE26773EEC6FB218D6CCF79A8FC7F52DF72
Peers Updated12 hours ago (2026-03-23 22:39:38)
Caroline Leaf Out on a Limb, Handcrafted Cinema

Caroline Leaf Out on a Limb, Handcrafted Cinema

2010 · 1h 27m · Animation
10.0
1 votes

5 Films Directed by Caroline Leaf

Caroline Leaf’s films are renowned for their emotional content and graphic style, which evolves from the innovative hand-crafted animation techniques she invented: beach sand and painting on glass and scratching in the emulsion of film stock. The medium is always at the service of a dark and brooding storytelling touched by flashes of humour. This box set celebrating the talents of a master animator comprises all her classics: The Owl Who Married a Goose, The Street, The Metamorphosis of Mr. Samsa and Two Sisters, as well as Interview, made with Veronika Soul. The DVD includes a student film, an animated video done for MTV, a comprehensive biofilmography and a brand-new director’s commentary on Two Sisters.

Cast: Caroline Leaf

Report Torrent

0 / 300

Description

[img]https://i.postimg.cc/YqpS6M5P/image.png" class="img-responsive descrimg lazy"/>[/img]
5 Films Directed by Caroline Leaf
Caroline Leaf’s films are renowned for their emotional content and graphic style, which evolves from the innovative hand-crafted animation techniques she invented: beach sand and painting on glass and scratching in the emulsion of film stock. The medium is always at the service of a dark and brooding storytelling touched by flashes of humour. This box set celebrating the talents of a master animator comprises all her classics: The Owl Who Married a Goose, The Street, The Metamorphosis of Mr. Samsa and Two Sisters, as well as Interview, made with Veronika Soul. The DVD includes a student film, an animated video done for MTV, a comprehensive biofilmography and a brand-new director’s commentary on Two Sisters.

×