Francis Ford Coppola's TETRO (2010)

Title: TETRO (2010) Director/Writer: Francis Ford Coppola Cast: Vincent Gallo, Maribel Verdu, Alden Ehrenreich Review: TETRO is the sto...



Title: TETRO (2010)

Director/Writer: Francis Ford Coppola

Cast: Vincent Gallo, Maribel Verdu, Alden Ehrenreich

Review:

TETRO is the story of a tortured artist, a man who’s been beaten by life, who has decided that he doesn’t want to be a part of this world. So he lives like a recluse, with his girlfriend in a little apartment in Argentina. Family rivalry has taken its toll on TETRO, so he has decided to as he puts it: “divorce my family”. Problem is, family just wont stay away. One day, his long estranged little brother suddenly appears in his home, disrupting his “writing sabbatical”. Will TETRO open the doors to his family once again? Will he ever finish working on his masterpiece? Will his play ever hit the stage?


This is a movie that’s very close to my heart, its one of those movies that I immediately made a connection with as soon as I watched it. I made such a strong bond with TETRO because I am an artist myself, and I understand the suffering, the frustrations and the mental anguish involved with the creative process. Often times artists are troubled souls, they feel more than the usual person, they see things from a completely different angle. So I understood this dichotomy of the artist, trying to be true to himself as an artist, of wanting to express himself through his art, and having to deal with the crap that life can throw your way from time to time. I also understood how TETRO unites his own personal life with his art. Because it’s what I have always believed in, that no matter how out there your movie, your play or your book is, it should always have something of your own life experiences laced within it. I never went to filmschool (and I doubt Ill ever have the money to) so I picked up my own camera, wrote my own scripts, and filmed my own movies. And I still do it. But it isn’t easy when you aren’t a millionaire, often times, making a film can be a struggle, but one continues, because it’s a fulfilling experience, its what makes me feel truly alive. Much like TETRO’s struggle with writing his play.


On this movie, TETRO, the tortured artist, the angst ridden soul, is writing a play based on his life experiences. It’s a tragic tale filled with love, treachery and tragedy. It’s a story of rivals. TETRO hates his father, who is a famous musical conductor. He is so famous that people refer to him as “the maestro”. His fathers ego is so huge that when TETRO expresses his desires to become a writer his father replies “there is only room for one genius in this family”. So this familial rivalry is what fuels the films main story. Old hatred, secrets, and tragedy. TETRO hates his family so much, that he wants absolutely no contact with them. The thing is that you might not want to see your family, but family doesn’t just go away. As they say, ‘blood is thicker than water’. This is probably why Benny, TETRO’s long lost brother, is so determined to “save” TETRO from his great depression.

Benny is on a quest to "save" TETRO

The theme of family and family rivalry has been a favorite of Coppola’s for a long time now. The whole Godfather series of films was centered on this theme, and now TETRO readdresses it. Coppola says that this is a very personal film, that nothing that happens in the film happened, “but it’s all true”. By that I guess he means the films themes were inspired by real life, but things didn’t happen exactly the way we see them on the film. The Coppola family is one filled with lots of Hollywood talent. Coppola’s own father (Carmine Coppola) was a famous arranger/composer, so it’s easy to see why TETRO’s father is a music conductor. Talia Shire, the actress better known for playing Adrianne, Rocky’s wife in the Rocky films is Coppola’s sister. Director Sofia Coppola is his daughter, heck, even his nephews are famous, you might have heard of them: Nicolas Cage (born Nicolas Kim Coppola) and Jason Schwartzman. So it’s easy to see why the theme of family is so important in Coppola’s films. There is a lot of talent, a lot of art in Coppola’s family, and that struggle to be successful and famous was apparently a great pressure on Coppola’s family. “We were so promising, what happened to us?” asks one of the characters in the film. The answer: “rivalry”. It’s also easy to see why films made by Coppola’s family also deal with sibling rivalry. Films like for example The Darjeeling Limited (2007) also deal with this subject manner, probably because Francis Ford Coppola’s son Roman Coppola had a stab at writing it. So this is a family of talented individuals, who’s art creates a tension between them, and Coppola has reflected this tension on TETRO.


TETRO is a film that I enjoyed for various reasons. Number one is that this is a film made by a director who is fully in command of his directorial powers. With TETRO Coppola didn’t have to worry about making a commercially viable film, this is Coppola doing a film in which he is completely in control of everything we see and hear on the screen. The music is superb, and the visuals! Wow. The film was shot in black and white, I’m sure this was purposely done to augment TETRO’s sadness and despair. The play that goes on screen with the blacks and the whites, the shadows and the light makes for an interesting visual feast. Whenever the films goes to a flashback or a memory, the film momentarily switches to color. Like I said, a director fully in command.


What would a review of this film be without mentioning Vincent Gallo’s masterful performance as Angelo Tetrocinni? This is one of the best performances in his career, Gallo completely engulfed himself with this character, and its one of those rare instances when a character fits the performer perfectly. Gallo himself is a director who likes to make artful films that are not at all aimed at the mainstream. Gallo’s films focus on the art side of things, rather than on the money making side of the filmmaking business. Truth be told, his films are not going to be everyone’s cup of tea, but I give him credit for being so truthful with his art. In real life, Gallo exudes this “fuck the world” aura to him, which is perfectly aligned with the character he plays on this film. TETRO is a character that hates the world for what it is, he hates ignorance, coldness, fakeness and stupidity. He is an intelligent individual that would rather live the life of a recluse than go outside and face the world. He hates his destiny in life and the only way he can communicate that is through his writing.


But as one of the character’s in the film says about TETRO: “He is an artist without many accomplishments” This line of dialog comes from Miranda, the love in TETRO’s life. I found it so beautiful that she was a lady who understood him, stood by him, didn’t give up on him. She recognized what TETRO needed in his life when she tells him: “You need success TETRO” and she is willing to stand by him, even if it means she is the only one. That was beautiful to me, such devotion to another person is a rare thing. The character was played by Maribel Verdu, the excellent Spanish actress whom some of you might remember from Guillermo del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth.


This film takes place mostly in Argentina, and that fact gives the film a surreal kind of feel. Even though the film takes place during modern times, it still feels as if it took place during the 50’s, like something out of a film noir. Speaking of film, Coppola also takes the opportunity to comment on filmmaking. In TETRO one of the characters is a critic, and TETRO has been hurt by her comments on more than one occasion because she feels he hasn’t lived up to his promise. Will he ever live up to his promise under the watchful eye of the critic? Does TETRO even care what critics say about his work? TETRO's answers to these questions more than likely reveal how Coppola himself feels about the criticism his films have received. He understands this quite well. A lot of Coppola’s films though considered classics now, received harsh criticisms under their initial release. A lot of his films have even failed at the box office. Yet with time, they’ve come to be appreciated for the great films they are. I’m sure TETRO will be remembered as one of his good ones. Coppola himself thinks this is his most beautiful looking film. And so do I. If you are in the mood for and old school film, filled with operatics, bursts of emotion and tragic, tortured characters, I suggest you give TETRO a chance.

Rating: 5 out of 5

Part of the Cast and Crew of TETRO alongside director Francis Ford Coppola

TetroTetro [Blu-ray]Youth Without Youth

COMMENTS

Nama

'Final Girl',1,'Noughties films',1,'Sixth-Generation' Chinese filmmaking,1,[REC] 2 (2009),1,16 Ghost Movies to Enjoy on Halloween Night,1,16 Unusual Vampire Movies,1,1940s Hollywood,3,1995,1,1996,1,1999,1,20 Demon Movies,1,20 Werewolf Movies,1,2002,1,2003,1,2007,1,2008,1,2011,3,2012,2,2013 Movie List,5,2014,13,2014 Movies,11,2015,12,2016,29,2017,45,2018,1,23 More Oddities and Strange Creatures from Film Land,1,23 Oddest and Strangest Monsters of Filmland,1,35 Rhums,1,40 Memorable Movie Cars,1,720p,13,A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010),1,A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge,1,A Simple Plan,1,Aaron Hillis,1,Abbas Kiarostami,2,Academy Awards,1,Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,1,Action,64,Action Films,4,Adam Curtis,1,Adoration,1,Adrian Martin,8,Adrien Brody,1,Adventure,34,Agnès Varda,3,Alain Cohen,1,Alden Ehrenreich,1,Alec Baldwin,1,Aleck Bovick,1,Alejandro Amenabar,1,Alejandro Amenábar,1,Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu,1,Alejandro Jodorowsky,2,Álex de la Iglesia,1,Alfred Hitchcock,1,Ali Larter,1,Alice Braga,1,Alison Butler,1,Aliya Mortel,1,Allan Shiach,1,Allan Smithee,1,Alma Soriano,1,alphabet meme,1,Alternative DVD Commentaries,1,Amanda Bearse,1,Amanda Page,1,Amando Ossorio,1,Amy Adams,1,Ana Capri,1,André Bazin,1,André Habib,1,Andrea del Rosario,1,Andrew Garfield,1,Andrew Horton,1,Andrew McCarthy,1,Andrzej Zulawski,1,Angela Ortiz,1,Angela Velez,1,Angelina Jolie,1,Angels Poster Gallery,1,Angie Everhart,1,Animated Films,5,Animation,15,Anna Marie Gutierrez,1,Anne Helen Petersen,1,Anthony Hopkins,1,Anthony Minghella,1,Antichrist (2009),1,Antoine et Colette,1,Anton Walbrook,1,Anton Yelchin,1,Anya Soler,1,Ara Mina,5,Arnold Schwarzenegger,3,Art House Films,11,Artists' film and video,3,Atom Egoyan,3,Aubrey Miles,1,audience research,1,Audio Commentaries,1,auteurism,5,Avant-Garde and Experimental Cinema,3,Aya Medel,4,Barack Obama,1,Barbara Crampton,1,Barbara Milano,1,Barbara Stanwyck,1,Barbarella,1,Barry Lyndon (1975),1,Barry Sullivan,1,Barton Byg,1,BBC,1,Beau Travail,1,Béla Balázs,1,Bela Tarr,1,Belinda Bright,1,Ben Goldsmith,1,Benicio del Toro,1,Best scholarly blogs poll,3,Bette Davis,1,Beyond Rangoon (1995),1,Bill Hader,1,Biography,4,Biutiful (2010),1,Black Swan (2010),1,Blade Runner,1,blogathons,1,blogging,1,BluRay,6,Bollywood,2,book reviews,1,Book to Film Comparison,1,Box Office,2,Brad Dourif,1,Brad Pitt,1,Bret Easton Ellis,1,Brian Yuzna,1,Bridget Fonda,1,Brigitte Nielsen,1,British cinema,4,Bronson (2008),1,Bruce Robinson,1,Bruce Willis,1,Bruno Ganz,1,Buffy Studies,2,Burial Grounds: Nights of Terror (1981),1,Caligula (1979),1,Calls for Papers,1,Cameron Diaz,2,Canada,2,capturing stills from video,2,Carl Theodor Dreyer,1,Carla Gugino,1,Carol Clover,1,Caroline Munroe,1,cartoons,1,Category D,1,Catherine Breillat,1,Catherine Deneuve,2,Cecelia Condit,1,Chang Cheh,2,Charisma Carpenter,1,Charles Band,1,Charles Musser,1,Charlie Boorman,1,Charlie Sheen,1,Charlotte Gainsbourg,1,Cheech Marin,1,children's film and TV,1,Chinese cinema,1,Chistopher Plummer,1,Chiwetel Ejiofor,1,Chloe Sevigny,1,Chris Cagle,2,Chris Hemsworth,1,Chris Sarandon,1,Chris Tucker,1,Christian Bale,1,Christian Keathley,2,Christoph Waltz,1,Christopher Mintz Plasse,1,Christopher Nolan,1,Christopher Plummer,1,Christopher Sarandon,1,Chuck Russell,1,Chuck Tryon,1,Cinemalaya 2014,15,Cinematech,1,Cinephilia,1,cinetrix,1,Claire Denis,3,Classic,3,Claude Chabrol,3,Clint Eastwood,1,Clint Howard,2,Clio Barnard,1,Cloverfield,1,Coca Nicolas,1,Colin Farrell,1,Colin Firth,1,Collin Farrell,1,Comedy,61,Comedy Films,6,Conceptual Artwork for films that never got made,1,conference papers online,2,Cool Movie Weapons,1,Coppolas,1,copyright,5,Corey Feldman,2,courtesan film,1,credit sequences,1,Crime,20,crime films,1,Criselda Volks,2,Cristina Crisol,1,Cristina Gonzales,1,Dan Hedaya,1,Dan Jardine,1,Dan North,3,Dan O’Bannon,1,Danger: Diabolik (1968),1,Daniel Frampton,1,Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub,1,Daniella,1,Danny Boyle,1,Danny McBride,1,Danny Trejo,2,Dante Tomaselli,1,Dardenne brothers,1,Dark House (2010),1,Dark Star (1974),1,Darren Aronofsky,1,David Attenborough,1,David Bordwell,6,David Bowie,1,David Cronenberg,3,David Gordon Green,1,David Hasselhoff,1,David Hudson,1,David Lynch,2,David O. Russell,1,David Sorfa,1,David Sterritt,1,David Tenant,1,David Trotter,1,Dean Devlin,1,Dennis Miller,1,Diana Ross,1,Diana Zubiri,4,Diane Salinger,1,Diasporic Film,1,Dina Iordanova,2,Dindi Gallardo,2,Dinner for Schmucks (2010),1,Director's Cut,1,Directors' Notes,1,Divina Gracia,1,documentary filmmaking,5,documentary resources,8,Dolph Lungdren,1,Don Omar,1,Donald Pleasance,1,Donald Richie,2,Douglas Sirk,1,Drama,127,Drama Films,28,du_01.34,1,du_01.41,1,du_1.14,1,du_1.21,1,du_1.26,1,du_1.33,1,du_1.34,1,du_1.44,1,du_1.56,1,du_2.03,1,du_2.06,1,du_2.15,1,du_2.47,1,Dwayne Johnson,1,e-books,9,e-journals,12,early and silent cinema,1,Ed Howard,2,Edit Room,1,Edward Furlong,1,Eija-Liisa Ahtila,2,Eleanor Coppola,1,Elias Koteas,1,Eliseo Subiela,1,Elliot Silverstein,1,Elmore Leonard,1,Elsa Pataki,1,Emeric Pressburger,1,Emily Blunt,1,Emily Browning,1,Emmanuelle Beart,1,Enter the Void (2010),1,Enzo Staiola,1,Eric Faden,1,Erich Auerbach,1,Erich Kuersten,1,Erika Eleniak,1,Ernie Reyes Jr.,1,Eurocentrism,1,European cinema,2,European Graduate School,1,Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,1,Evilspeak (1981),1,exilic cinema,1,Expanded Cinema,2,Eyes Wide Shut (1999),1,Fabrice Du Welz,1,Failed Franchises,1,fair dealing,1,fair use,7,Family,4,fan studies,1,Fantasy,17,Fantasy Films,4,Farrah Fawcett,1,Fast Five (2011),2,Faye Wong,1,Federico Fellini,1,feminist film studies,3,Fernando Meirelles,1,film adaptation,1,film and literature,1,Film and Philosophy,1,film authorship theory,3,film co-production,1,film criticism,5,film directing,2,film directors,2,film endings,1,film festivals,2,film historiography,1,film history,3,film melodrama,1,film music,6,film pedagogy,8,film philosophy,1,Film practice as research,5,film programming,1,film protagonist,1,Film Quarterly,1,film research by practice,3,film sets,1,film sound,1,film spectatorship,1,film studies,2,film studies blogs,4,film studies publishing,2,film technique,1,film technology,1,film theory,2,film-industry studies,1,Filmmakers' Websites Of Note,1,Filmosophy,1,Films about Films,3,Fire and Ice (1983),1,first post,1,Five Element Ninjas (1982),1,Flickhead,1,Flow,1,For Ever Godard,1,Foreighn Movies,1,Forum,1,FPJ Movies,3,frame grabs,2,Frances McDormand,1,Francine Prieto,3,Francis Ford Coppola,1,François Ozon,1,François Truffaut,1,Frank Frazetta,1,Fred Dekker,1,free film downloads,4,Free Online Films,7,French cinema,3,French New Wave,4,Fright Night (1985),1,Fright Night (2011),1,Fritz Lang,2,FSFF Video Essays,1,full disclosure,1,Gael Garcia Bernal,1,Galaxy of Terror (1981),1,Gary Hall,1,Gary Sinise,1,Gaspar Noe,2,gay films,1,Gay Movie,1,gender studies,2,Gene Hackman,1,Gene Youngblood,1,Geoffrey Kantaris,1,Geoffrey Rush,2,George A. Romero,2,George Clooney,1,George Lucas,1,George Nolfi,1,German Cinema,2,German film,2,Germany,1,Ghost in the Shell (1995),1,Ghost Movies,1,Giorgio Agamben,1,Giovanni Arrighi,1,Girish,1,global film blogging,1,Glydel Mercado,2,Godzilla Films,6,Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah (1991),1,Godzilla vs. Mothra: The Battle for Earth (1992),1,Godzilla: Final Wars (2004),1,Gojira (1954),1,Gordon Liu,1,Grace Zabriskie,1,graduate film and media studies journals,5,graphic design,1,Greg Mottola,1,Guerilla (2009),1,Guillermo del Toro,1,Gus Van Sant,1,Guy Pearce,1,Gwen Garci,3,Haline Perez,2,Harold Pinter,1,Harrison Ford,1,Harry Tuttle,2,Harun Farocki,1,Hazel Cabrera,1,Heath Ledger,1,Heaven and Earth (1993),1,Helen Mirren,1,Helena Bonham Carter,1,Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988),1,Hellraiser Series,1,Henry Jenkins,2,Hindi cinema,1,History,5,Hito Steyerl,1,Holiday Greetings 2010,1,Hollywood,8,Holocaust on film,1,Horor,5,Horror,20,Horror Cinema,2,horror television,2,House of the Devil (2010),1,Howard Hawks,2,I Screen Studies,1,I Stand Alone (1998),1,I Vitelloni (1953),1,Ian Mc Shane,1,If… (1968),1,Ilonah Marquez,1,Imogen Poots,1,implied authorship,1,Ina Raymundo,2,India,1,Indian cinema,1,IndianAuteur,1,Indie Films,11,Individual Authors' Online Film Studies Writing,1,Individual Authors' Online Writing Of Note,2,Indonesia,9,Ingmar Bergman,2,intellectual property rights,1,Internet Archive,4,Introduction to Film Studies,1,introduction to television studies,1,Intute,1,Invasion of the Astro-Monster (1965),1,Isabelle Adjani,2,Ishiro Honda,2,It's a Wonderful Life,1,Italian Horror Films,2,Italian Rip Offs Poster Gallery,1,Jack Sholder,1,Jackie Brown (1997),1,Jackie Chan,1,Jackie Earle Haley,1,Jacques Rancière,1,Jaden Smith,1,James Brolin,1,James Cameron,1,James Franco,1,James Mangold,1,James Spader,1,James Woods,1,Jami Gertz,1,Jan De Bont,1,Jan Leyda,1,Jan Švankmajer,1,Japan,1,Japanese Animation Films,3,Jason Bateman,1,Jason Behr,1,Jason Isaac,1,Jason Martin Scott,1,Jason Mittell,2,Jason Sperb,1,Jason Statham,1,Jaume Balaguer,1,Javier Bardem,1,Jay Chou,1,Jaycee Parker,1,JC Parker,1,Jean Baudrillard,1,Jean Vigo,1,Jean-Luc Godard,3,Jean-Luc Nancy,1,Jeff Bridges,2,Jeff Fahey,1,Jeffrey Combs,3,Jena Malone,1,Jennifer E. Langdon,1,Jennifer Lee,1,Jepang,1,Jeremy Butler,1,Jessica Alba,1,Jessica Chastain,1,Jet Li,1,JFK (1991),1,Jim Emerson,2,Jimmy Wang Yu,1,Joan Copjec,1,Joanne Woodward,1,Joao Ribas,1,Joe Spinnell,1,Joe Versus The Volcano (1990),1,John Akomfrah,1,John Astin,2,John Boorman,2,John Carpenter,2,John Cassavetes,1,John de Bello,2,John Fasano,1,John Gielgud,1,John Kassir,1,John M Frame,1,John Patrick Shanley,1,John Phillip Law,1,John Waters,1,Johnny Depp,2,Jon Beasley-Murray,1,Jonathan Rosenbaum,5,Jordana Brester,1,Jörg Lemberg,1,Josef von Sternberg,1,Joyce Jimenez,1,Jude Law,1,Judy Garland,1,Julia Lesage,1,Juliana Palermo,1,Juliette Lewis,1,Jump Cut,1,Justin Lin,1,Justin Theroux,1,Kamal Amrohi,1,Kant Miss Kung Fu Klassics,5,Karate Kid (2010),1,Karen Allen,1,Karla Estrada,1,Kat De Santos,2,Kat Dennings,1,Kate Winslet,1,Katrina Paula,4,Katsuhiro Otomo,1,Katya Santos,3,Keith David,1,Ken Adam James Bond films,1,Ken Foree,1,Kenneth Branagh,1,Kevin B. Lee,3,Kevin B. Lee,8,Kevin Dillon,1,Killer Tomatoes Strike Back (1991),1,Kim Akass and Janet McCabe,1,Kimberley Lindbergs,1,Knight and Day (2010),1,Komedi,1,Korea,3,Krista Ranillo,1,Kristen Wiig,1,Kristin Thompson,2,ku_HD,13,Kuhdet Honasan,1,Kuhu Tanvir,1,L. Frank Baum,1,Lamberto Maggiorani,1,Lance Henriksen,2,Lars Von Trier,1,Laserblast (1978),1,Latin America,4,Latin American film studies,2,Laura Mulvey,1,Laurence Fishburne,1,Lawrence Lessig,1,Lee Strasberg,1,legal downloads,1,Leon Vitali,1,Leonardo DiCaprio,2,Les Maitres Du Temps,1,lesbian films,1,Less Than Zero (1987),1,Letter from an Unknown Woman,1,lgbt films,1,Lianella Carell,1,Lieve Schreiber,1,Lilly Cole,1,Lindsay Anderson,1,Lloyd Bridges,1,Logan's Run (1976),1,London Film Festival,1,Lost Boys: The Tribe (2010),1,Lost film-websites,1,Lou Ye,1,Lucia Legarda,1,Lucrecia Martel,2,Ludacris,1,Luigi Cozzi,1,Luis Buñuel,3,Luke McKernan,4,M,1,M. Night Shyamalan,1,Machete (2010),1,Mads Mikkelsen,1,magic on film,1,Makhmalbafs,1,Malcolm McDowell,2,Mamoru Oshii,1,Manohla Dargis,1,Mara Lopez,1,Maria Isabel Lopez,1,María Luisa Bemberg,1,Maribel Verdu,1,Maricar de Mesa,1,Marilyn Chambers,1,Mario Bava,2,Mario Benedetti,1,Marisa Berenson,1,Marisa Mell,1,Marius Goring,1,Mark Patton,1,Mark Wahlberg,1,Martha Plimpton,1,Martin Scorsese,2,Master of the Flying Guillotine (1975),1,Matt Damon,1,Matt Zoller Seitz,4,Maui Taylor,3,Maye Tongco,1,Meaghan Morris,1,media studies,1,MediaCommons,1,Meena Kumari,1,Meg Foster,1,Meg Ryan,1,Melissa Leo,1,Memorable Horror Movie Posters,1,Memorable Movie Robots Part 2,1,Memorable Movie Robots Part I,1,Mercedes Cabral,2,Michael Anderson,1,Michael Caine,1,Michael Chanan,1,Michael Ende,1,Michael Haneke,2,Michael J Anderson,2,Michael Jackson,1,Michael Keaton,1,Michael Moore,1,Michael Powell,2,Michael Rooker,1,Michael Shannon,1,Michael Wincott,1,Michael York,1,Michel Laclos,1,Michelle Aldana,1,Michelle Estevez,1,Michelle Rodriguez,1,Mickey Mouse,1,Mickey Rourke,1,Mike Marvin,1,Mila Kunis,1,Milla Jovovich,1,Mira Nair,1,Miriam Makeba,1,Mistery,11,Miya Nolasco,1,MMFF Entries,3,Moira Shearer,1,Moments of Choice,1,Monica Keena,1,Monster Blog Post,2,Monster Film,1,Monster Films,2,Movie poster typefaces,1,Moving Image Source,1,Museum of the Moving Image,1,music video,1,Musical,3,My Son My Son What Have Ye Done (2009),1,Myles Hernandez,1,Myra Manibog,2,Mystery,3,Natalie Portman,3,Natural Born Killers (1994),1,natural history film,1,Nazism on film,1,New German Cinema,1,new media studies,1,Nicholas Rombes,1,Nick Cassavetes,1,Nick Davis,1,Nick Frost,1,Nicolas Roeg,1,Nicolas Winding Refn,2,Nicole Brenez,1,Nicole Kidman,2,Night of the Demons (1988),1,Night of the Demons (2009),1,Nika Madrid,3,Nimrod Antal,1,Nina Paley,1,Nini Jacinto,1,Nöel Burch,1,Norma Bengell,1,Ntongela Masilela,1,Oliver Postgate,1,Oliver Stone,8,online searches,1,Online Training,1,Only the Cinema,1,Open Access,8,Open Library,1,opening sequences,1,Original vs. Remake,1,Orson Welles,1,Oscars,2,Ossie Davis,1,Other Voices,1,Paco Plaza,1,Pakeezah,1,Pam Cook,1,Pamela Grier,1,Pan's Labyrinth,1,Paprika (2006),1,Parasomnia (2010),1,paratextuality of films,1,Participations,1,participatory culture,1,Patricia Arquette,1,Patricia Aufderheide,1,Patricia Javier,4,Patricia Rozema,1,Patrick Keiller,1,Patrick Kilpatrick,1,Paul (2011),1,Paul Bowman,1,Paul Dano,1,Paul Julian Smith,1,Paul McGann,1,Paul Naschy,1,Paul Newman,1,Paul Ricoeur,1,Paul W.S. Anderson,1,Paul Walker,1,Paula Gomez,1,Pedro Almodóvar,2,peer-reviewing,1,Penelope Cruz,1,Pepsi Paloma,1,Peter Falk,1,Peter Firmin,1,Peter Greenaway,1,Peter O Toole,1,Peter Weir,1,Phil Fondacaro,1,Phillip K. Dick,1,Phillip Noyce,1,philosophy and film,1,Piel Morena,1,Pinewood Dialogues,1,Pirate Philosophy,1,Pirates of the Caribbean,1,Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011),1,Planet of the Vampires (1965),1,Podcasts,6,politics,3,popular,2,popular film and television,1,Possession (1981),1,Post Apocalyptic Films,2,postcolonialism,1,Poster Galleries,2,Powers Boothe,1,
ltr
item
movieholic: Francis Ford Coppola's TETRO (2010)
Francis Ford Coppola's TETRO (2010)
http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b300/spacemonkey_fg/More%20Random%20Pics/Tetro3.jpg
http://i21.photobucket.com/albums/b300/spacemonkey_fg/More%20Random%20Pics/th_Tetro3.jpg
movieholic
https://movieholic002.blogspot.com/2010/06/francis-ford-coppola-tetro-2010.html
https://movieholic002.blogspot.com/
http://movieholic002.blogspot.com/
http://movieholic002.blogspot.com/2010/06/francis-ford-coppola-tetro-2010.html
true
2561849497115890377
UTF-8
Loaded All Posts Not found any posts VIEW ALL Readmore Reply Cancel reply Delete By Home PAGES POSTS View All RECOMMENDED FOR YOU LABEL ARCHIVE SEARCH ALL POSTS Not found any post match with your request Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec just now 1 minute ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 hour ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago more than 5 weeks ago Followers Follow THIS CONTENT IS PREMIUM Please share to unlock Copy All Code Select All Code All codes were copied to your clipboard Can not copy the codes / texts, please press [CTRL]+[C] (or CMD+C with Mac) to copy