Posted by Will Noble on March 23, 2011
What began as a cautious, relatively small-scale experiment in June 2009, has burgeoned into something that’s revolutionized the world of performing arts.
National Theatre Live now broadcasts top-notch London theatre directly (in some cases, slightly staggered) into 325 cinemas and art houses across the world, five of which are in the Czech Republic.
The Prague Post was on the edge of Kino Aero’s seats for Danny Boyle’s much-anticipated Frankenstein, and also at the Světozor’s screening of King Lear last month. Here’s what we’ve learned about NT Live so far.
Posted by Will Noble on February 16, 2011
Rodrigo Cortés’ enclosed thriller makes Aron Ralston’s canyon disaster look like a minor mishap.
But there are plenty of other, lighter (in all senses of the word) films at La Película, which is at Světozor from Feb. 15-20.
Posted by James Walling on October 1, 2010
* For more than 80 years opera lovers worldwide have been able to get a regular taste of The Metropolitan Opera via a Saturday matinee radio broadcast. These days, one can visit local movie theaters in more than 40 countries around the world and enjoy a live broadcast in HD. The Met’s Peabody and Emmy [...]
Posted by James Walling on September 7, 2010
* R. Adriel Vasquez and Fred Robinson’s Apple and Paul will screen for the public Sept. 12 at Kino Světozor. The doors open at 4 p.m. and admission is free. Shot in Prague earlier this year, the short film concerns a chance encounter between a wayward American writer (The Prague Post’s Stephan Delbos) and a [...]