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Sunday, November 15, 2009

Filming a Friendship, Founded on Film: No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo and Vilmos

By Matt Zoller Seitz


Vilmos Zsigmond and Laszlo Kovacs, whose cinematography would help change the look of American movies in the late 1960s and 1970s, first met in 1953 on a Budapest street corner near the Academy of Drama and Film, where both men were enrolled as cinematography students. Three years afterward — on Nov. 11, 1956, a week after Soviet troops poured into the city to crush the Hungarian uprising — they ran into each other again on the same corner.

“The Russian tanks were going up and down the street,” recalled Mr. Zsigmond, 79, in a recent phone interview to promote the documentary “No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos,” an account of their long friendship that will be broadcast Nov. 17 on “Independent Lens” on PBS. “I said, ‘Laszlo, you know the Arriflex camera, you have it up in the film school in college.’ He said, ‘Yes, that’s where I have it.’ He knew what we were about to do.”

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To read the rest of the New York Times article, click here.

1 comments:

displacedbrett said...

After seeing this film, I can’t believe I didn’t already know who Kovacs and Zsigmond were. As a huge fan of a number of the films they worked on, I think it’s a tragedy that more people don’t know who they are and I hope this documentary changes things.

Even for people who aren’t cinemaphiles, there’s lots of good stuff in this documentary - just the story of their friendship and escape from Hungary was interesting enough. The breathtaking footage they have of the Soviet invasion really strikes an emotional nerve.

I also loved the film’s musical selections. JJ Johnson’s “Seven Days in Tahiti” was a perfect mood setter to conjure up 1960s Hollywood, and I’ve always been a big fan of Jolie Holland was happpy to hear “Sascha” in the end credits. Overall, a great job by everyone involved.