Devil Doll (Lindsay Shonteff, 1964)
Mar
15
sandwiches

A large knife amongst rather minuscule triangular tea sandwiches. A miniature wooden barrel holding toothpicks is right there for your sandwich stabbing convenience. DP: Gerald Gibbs.
@settima@zirk.us
Devil Doll (Lindsay Shonteff, 1964)
Mar
15
sandwiches

A large knife amongst rather minuscule triangular tea sandwiches. A miniature wooden barrel holding toothpicks is right there for your sandwich stabbing convenience. DP: Gerald Gibbs.
“I look into the distance to the end of the world. Before the day is over, the end will come. First, time will tumble, and then the earth. The clouds will begin to race… the earth boils over; this is the sign. This is the beginning of the end. The world's edge begins to crumble… everything starts to collapse… tumbles, fall, crumbles and collapses. I look into the cataract. I feel an undertow, it draws me, it sucks me down. I began to fal, a vertigo seizes upon me.”Herz aus Glas [Heart of Glass] (Werner Herzog, 1976)
Mar
13
tea

A young maid (Sonja Skiba) holding a heavy tray with cups, plates, and various tea-related pottery. There's a somnambulist quality to her bearing. DP: Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein.
– Hias
“Can we not admit that certain skilled men, gifted with intelligence, talent or even genius, and thus indispensable to society, rather than stagnate, should be free to disobey laws in certain cases?”Pickpocket (Robert Bresson, 1959)
Mar
12

Michel (Martin LaSalle) in a busy café, observing. An emptied water glass next to the thief should make him look like a paying guest. DP: Léonce-Henri Burel.
– Michel
Talpuk alatt fütyül a szél [The Wind Blows Under Your Feet] (György Szomjas, 1976)
Mar
11
wine

German lobby card. Two rough-looking Hungarian cowboys drink from wooden beakers at a small, wooden table. The man who has the carafe, also has the knife. DP: Elemér Ragályi.
“I'm young, hot and pissed off!”Avere vent'anni [To Be Twenty] (Fernando Di Leo, 1978)
Mar
9
sandwiches

Lia (Gloria Guida), one of the young, hot and pissed off 20-somethings, enjoys a sandwich with her espadrilles resting on a small restaurant table. Just visible in the background are multiple men on their lunchbreak. DP: Roberto Gerardi.
– Tina
Mord und Totschlag [Degree of Murder] (Volker Schlöndorff, 1967)
Mar
4
juice

A pensive Marie (Anita Pallenberg) drinking something red from a bottle with a green straw. DP: Franz Rath..
“Let's be different. Let's not hate anyone.”The World's Greatest Sinner (Timothy Carey, 1962)
Mar
1
eggs

Clarence “God” Hilliard (Timothy Carey) sitting at a round dinner table talking to his wife who's leaning against a counter holding a carton of eggs and crockery. DPs: Frank Grande, Robert Shelfow, Ray Dennis Steckler & Edgar G. Ulmer.
– Clarence “God” Hilliard
“If an old man can't even have a glass of wine, what's left to live for?”I fidanzati [The Fiancés] (Ermanno Olmi, 1963)
Feb
29
leftovers

Giovanni (Carlo Cabrini) in a restaurant. It's near closing time. Cooks scape the pans. DP: Lamberto Caimi.
Dwaj panowie 'N' [Two Gentlemen 'N'] (Tadeusz Chmielewski, 1962)
Feb
29

Elzbieta Brylska (Joanna Jedryka) and Sgt. Jan Dziewanowicz (Stanislaw Mikulski). DP: Jerzy Stawicki.
Les scélérats [The Wretches] (Robert Hossein, 1960)
Feb
26
canapés

Maid Louise (Perrette Pradier) holding a platter with canapés at a black tie party. Observing her is the master of the house, Jess Rooland (Robert Hossein). DP: Jacques Robin.