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Brooding Angels (1988)

Directed by Michel Auder
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6min

Overall average

5.0/10

Plot

From its fiery outset, Brooding Angles is decidedly gothic and the mood anxious. It is a dark rumination on the specter of authority, resistance and paranoia marking the close of Reagan's second term in office. Born in 1945, Auder came of age during the 1960s, a decade as tumultuous in France as it was in the United States. The decade culminated in the student/worker strikes of May 1968 that shut down the city of Paris. Auder's value system was in many respects shaped by this anti-authoritarian milieu. Its remnants are to be found in his preponderance with issues violence and conflict as they serve to question moral progress. The soundtrack's ominous melody is recycled from footage of cellist David Soyer that can be seen in A Portrait of Alice Neel.

Technical details

DetailValue
Original titleBrooding Angels
Original languageEN
Spoken languagesNo Language
Production countriesUnited States of America
StatusReleased
Release date1 gennaio 1988
Assistant directorsMichel Auder

Release dates

Theatrical release

United States / Jan 01, 1988

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