Most Popular Andrei Ujică Trailers
Total trailers found: 10
TWST / Things We Said Today Trailer (2025)
25 April 2025
A time capsule of New York City between August 13-15, 1965, framed by the Beatles’ arrival in the city and their first concert at Shea Stadium.
The Autobiography of Nicolae Ceausescu Trailer (2010)
29 October 2010
The three-hour-long documentary covers 25 years in the life of Nicolae Ceaușescu and was made using 1,000 hours of original footage from the National Archives of Romania.
Kids Trailer (2011)
06 March 2011
In Bettina Büttner’s exquisitely lucid documentary Kinder (Kids), childhood dysfunction, loneliness, and pent-up emotion run wild at an all-boys group home in southern Germany.
2 Pasolini Trailer (2021)
05 August 2021
Andrei Ujică’s 2 Pasolini follows the Italian auteur and his theological advisor, Don Andrea Carraro, on a trip through 1960s Palestine to scout locations for his 1964 biblical masterpiece The Gospel According to Saint Matthew.
Playboys Trailer (1998)
01 January 1998
A group of men shoot their mouths off in a pub. Their animated talk is all action-packed yarns and, of course, about women.
Videograms of a Revolution Trailer (1992)
08 August 1992
A minute-by-minute chronology of the Romanian revolution in December 1989 in Bucharest. This cinematic montage of live footage from the state television company TVR and video taken by numerous amateurs becomes a new media-based form of historiography.
Unknown Quantity Trailer (2005)
03 February 2005
In the immediate aftermath of the 11 September Paul Virilio suffered from a malaise found very seldom among philosophers, which was caused by an excessive degree of confirmation on the part of reality.
Out of the Present Trailer (1997)
06 January 1997
In May 1991 Soviet cosmonauts Anatoly Artsebarksy and Sergey Krikalev visit space station Mir in space mission Ozon.
Camera and Reality Trailer (1992)
07 December 1992
Harun Farocki and Andrei Ujica discuss the visual material of the 1989 Romanian revolution they used for Videogramme einer Revolution (1992) in a round table discussion with Andrei Pleșu, Romania’s first cultural minister after the revolution, and media scholars Friedrich Kittler, Manfred Schneider and Peter M.