tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle October 8, 2019 7:45pm-8:01pm CEST
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we begin with a new film about the most legendary woman in science maggie kookery radioactive is currently doing the festival circuit so now man scott rocks for a quarter with it's a rain in director marjon satrapi zurich film festival in switzerland he'll be here in the studio in a minute but 1st his reports about fellow scientists changing. careers scientists rebel and feminist and a new film from mars also topping this extraordinary look at the 2 time nobel prize winner and pioneer of the science of radioactivity change the world. so tropic remembers her own mother holding scientists up as a role model for any mother who was preparing care daughter not to make it would not each and become a good wife and wanted a better thing for. to become independent and be someone then you know something this is the example she's one of they sampled he would give to your cherished.
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surprise piece portrait of cure a is warts and all for cheapens our segments the nucular destruction her discoveries will unleash peace and leave my love for actress rosamund pike place curious headstrong bordering on america. everybody would say open castle with the one with him and with us and she genius is ok but as it comes to women women they always have to be perfect they always have to be sweet and they have to be nice and . i don't know any any sweet woman. trap easy on screen curry is definitely not sweet radioactive is a portrait of a complex contradictory woman whose ideas transformed our world. and scott writes for joins me now very true what she just said that as you mentioned in the report when i korea double nobel prize winner alleged great figure in science so does this fill do her justice my foot in unfortunately not quite i mean it's a perfectly decent film and of course. really is. astroid marry
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a woman who did an extraordinary things but this for me is a bit too much of an ordinary biopic for such an amazing woman i mean it's quite sort of by the numbers by the book style film that we've seen numerous times with with male protagonist what i find interesting though toppy she originally was a graphic artist she was originally a cartoonist and she is incredible visual style and this film is also very impressive visually and i think it's most interesting when she sort of breaks away from the traditional bio pic and she does include interesting things visually and and connects cories achievements in science with what will come after her and links it to the disasters that come afterwards including the nuclear bomb which probably wouldn't be possible without some of this coverage she made and she does that sort of breaks the balance of the traditional biopic i think really really works unfortunately she does it too doesn't do it too often and usually it's a fairly by the numbers job there seems to be a trend for biopics about famous women of the moment yeah very much so in fact it's interesting i'd even call the subject matter of feminist biopics you have
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a series of films which are about famous women who are very influential in inventing the cause of women so we have this film we have a ruth bader ginsburg there was a great documentary on her the supreme court justice now there's a biopic out on her you have harriet tubman the african-american abolitionist even even helen reddy the australian singer who created the feminist anthem i am woman she has a new a new film about her interesting though or sadly i think with the 1st wave of feminist biopics what seems to unite them is that they're all kind of conventional and not really that good none of them are horrible i've seen all of them but they're they're a bit too too conventional too too safe and it seems almost as if these directors and they're all female directors have made these films are a bit too respect full of their of their subject and are really taking a taking of chances in my pain but still talking about byron pitts the director is this director's 1st film was was almost flat wasn't it. yes interesting her. as i
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said she was a cartoonist a graphic artist and she had a great graphic novel persepolis which she dropped it herself as her 1st try as a director and this is her own story it's a story of her a growing up in iran she was born just after the iranian revolution she lived through the rain around iraq war and then she emigrated to europe where she experienced some cultural and sexual liberation but also a new forms of prejudice and oppression an amazing film an amazing debut and it was won the jury prize in cannes when it debuted was nominated for an oscar really really impressive work i remember i remember through chemo and i'm sure remember the film we can see from those films that from those pictures that really innovative is this what's lacking in such properties new movies yeah i think so i mean i remember seeing persepolis it just blew me away also because it was such an interesting new story but the way she told it i mean she took so much from her own work as a graphic artist and put was able to tell incredible scenes with just
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a simple squiggle or a certain line really taking the cartoon a static and bringing it into film which i'd never seen before i'm used to glimpse of that in radioactive some of the visual elements that she brings into the film but the film fortunately for me is far too conventional really wish you'd she was able to break loose ok now you interviewed some length in spite of your problems with the new film is she going to be a name to watch out for i think so yeah i don't think she's ever lived up to the last couple of films that she's made doesn't live up to early promise but we see with this film that she can do a sort of by the numbers a biopic she can sort of make a bigger picture with bigger stars i hope that means hollywood have the confidence to give her more money to tell her own stories and to take more risks meeting her she's a force of nature i definitely think the new and better things are to come for ok school i was always a mine of information thanks very much. all this year there are various exhibitions and events taking place around the world celebrating the genius
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of leonardo da vinci who died 500 years ago the last 3 years of his life spent in the valley in france now we joined today in our experts who introduced us to some of the amazing ideas he dreamt up as well as some architectural influences leonardo left behind in the region. the most beautiful castles in the wild valley completely in the style of leonardo da vinci. the italian renaissance man spent the final years of his life at the chateau de clue see him. at the invitation of king france's the 1st now 2 experts from france and germany have come to follow in the renascence geniuses footsteps in the basement of the palace exhibits machines fashioned after some of the vinci sketches the principle behind his designs was always the same he and lies what he saw broke it down and rearrange them into something new to.
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the feet i think we can take from you now though to be capable of challenging ideas that have been carried on for 4 years fincher reason even 1000000 the reefer and some 50 kilometers away. everything centers around the vinci as an engineer trying contraptions based on theoretical designs by the renaissance artist his idea started with a pair of wings that a human could. when that didn't work the artist simply thought up something else. this is very very close to what a modern hang glider is the man is here on his feet out here so with his hands so he can control the peach. this way of the entire machine and with his feet and he's
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sweet he can control the roll this way. the paying to da vinci has a large exhibition dedicated to him in the gardens of thriller you say you can also see a tapestry of vinci's fresco the last supper on loan from the vatican. dublin she's the last large scale project in france was the chateau de boer many of his early architectural designs from italy were incorporated in the construction. we are not trying to mix different knowledge is and knowledge is coming from different places and you know there was a master and i think this is the biggest lesson we should take now just right now from the amount of. even 500 years ago leonardo da vinci was a modern european his drive to reinvent the world created some of the most impressive morning months that will continue to delight generations to come.
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how good so much genius being one anyway the german photographer. like vinci has had a lifelong fascination with the elements in sebastian's case particularly with water after many years working in the advertising industry he decided to turn his passion into a job and travels the world trying to capture on film what can be difficult to grasp in reality and that's water. rudy sebastian travels all over the world that is own expense he has no sponsor and no commission here he's getting to know the song in slovenia he's scouting for the perfect shot his goal is to capture kind of permanence in the ever changing. whenever rivers appeared in pictures
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beginning way back with the vision she has a symbolic power it's a time for transients for change for the eternal flow of thing was. for some short she's inspired by claude morning only the water lilies are absent at lake by karl in russia minus 40 degrees. whispers in his ear smoove ice is paradise for those who dance with expertise. for the only philosopher's water was one of the for primal elements tireless of my latest recognized in it the primary substance of all being a revolutionary idea he was the 1st to seek a basic principle of all things beyond the world of gods water is the origin of life and its basic condition. water was the blood of the mountain the
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driving force of nature. a stroke of luck among cosmic coincidence is. run. by that when you work in the water when you are right there at the water and using the term allies it's movement then you synchronize your internal clock with that of the water and they train a kind of unison on the art class time. china a ship where the harvest of. giant. corn it's way to the floating villages. in. the loop verde so playing can believe we are the salt in the air attacks the photographer like a sandblaster. rudy sebastian's a photographic journey has taken him all over the group planets capturing more in
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kickoff. welcome to the real world byron munich suffer a humiliating last time. welcome to the top mark on our culture for moving the 1st place and not making. minutes on the. temple of technology. markets. the momentum of the board. made in germany. your business magazine d w. the world unto itself.
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with its own gravitational pulls out. the finest musical compositions. with some mysteries trees. bill means a few wasn't. don't tell me that that's enough. for you and the joint you come off and i'm only playing. reveal the symphonies of the hottest bombs. how did the romantic master come up with such a pacifist. the brahms code. cover 11th on w enough. this
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is the they'll be news live from baghdad charges brought against the man suspected of hijacking a try. and crashing it into a line of cars in germany injuring several people in iran from the country from syria and 2015 police are now looking for a motive for the update from also on the program the e.u. accuses britain of launching a stupid blame game following the call between german chancellor angela merkel and u.k. prime minister barak's johnson souls in london says chancellor merkel told mr johnson his plans to leave the the.
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