Top 100 Poetry movies
You are now browsing page 4, where we continue to showcase even more compelling content linked to "Poetry". If you’ve already sampled a few highlights on previous pages, now is the perfect time to delve deeper into this fascinating keyword. Keep exploring and enrich your understanding!
The Angelic Conversation (1985)
1
The Angelic Conversation is a lyrical, haunting film about a young man’s search for love in a dreamlike landscape. Its tone is set by the juxtaposition of slow moving homo-erotic images and opaque landscapes through which two men take a journey into their own desires. Offscreen, Dame Judi Dench recites a sequence of Shakespeare's sonnets that counterpoint the action. Jarman called it, “My most austere work, but also the closest to my heart.”
Mirror (1975)
1
A dying man in his forties recalls his childhood, his mother, the war and personal moments that tell of and juxtapose pivotal moments in Soviet history with daily life.
The Inner Scar (1972)
0
A composition of symbolic, surreal and almost mystic images.
Elsa the Rose (1966)
0
Images and poems of the celebrated couple Louis Aragon and Elsa Triolet. Elsa’s youth as recalled by Aragon, with commentary by Elsa.
The Beat Generation (1959)
0
A group of beatniks unwittingly harbor a serial rapist. A cop goes after him after his wife is attacked.
Lured (1947)
2
Sandra Carpenter is a London-based dancer who is distraught to learn that her friend has disappeared. Soon after the disappearance, she's approached by Harley Temple, a police investigator who believes her friend has been murdered by a serial killer who uses personal ads to find his victims. Temple hatches a plan to catch the killer using Sandra as bait, and Sandra agrees to help.
Come Live with Me (1941)
0
Seeking US citizenship, a Viennese refugee arranges a marriage of convenience with a struggling writer.
Wife! Be Like a Rose! (1935)
0
Kimiko, a Tokyo white-collar working girl, lives with her serious, intellectual, haiku-writing mother. Kimiko seeks to marry her boyfriend but needs her absent father to act as the go-between and negotiate the marriage. Kimiko travels and finds her father living with a second family.