Filmboxd Logo

Filmboxd

2002

The Hedge Theater

Directed by Robert Beavers

Beavers shot The Hedge Theatre in Rome in the 1980s. It is an intimate film inspired by the Baroque architecture and stone carvings of Francesco Borromini and St. Martin and the Beggar, a painting by the Sienese painter Il Sassetta. Beavers’ montage contrasts the sensuous softness of winter light with the lush green growth brought by spring rains. Each shot and each source of sound is steeped in meaning and placed within the film’s structure with exacting skill to build a poetic relationship between image and sound.

Duration

0h 19m

Released

November 17, 2002

You´re not logged yet? Do it here

6.4

Rating9

Views0

Likes0

Lists1

Cast2

  • Robert Beavers
  • Gregory J. Markopoulos

Part ofThe My Hand Outstretched to the Winged Distance and Sightless Measure

Includes Winged Dialogue (1967), Early Monthly Segments (2003), Plan of Brussels (1968), The Count of Days (1969), Palinode (1970), Diminished Frame (1970), Still Light (1971), From the Notebook of... (1972), The Painting (1972), Work Done (1973), Ruskin (1974), Sotiros (2000), Amor (1980), Efpsychi (1983), Wingseed (1985), The Hedge Theater (2002), The Stoas (1997), and The Ground (2001).

View the collection

Recommended Films

  • Berlin: Symphony of a Great City
  • Gaudí, le génie visionnaire de Barcelone
  • Richard Meier in Rome Building a Church in the City of Churches
  • Amancio Williams
  • The Power of Utopia: Living with Le Corbusier in Chandigarh
  • Bydlo
  • Bliss
  • Architects Herzog and deMeuron: The Alchemy of Building & The Tate Modern
  • Bauhaus 100
  • The Oyler House: Richard Neutra's Desert Retreat
  • Coast Modern
  • Moriyama-San
  • PROTOTYPE
  • Valldaura: A Quarantine Cabin
  • Eero Saarinen: The Architect Who Saw the Future
  • Reimagining A Buffalo Landmark
  • Brasilia, Contradictions of a New City
  • The Mutability of All Things and the Possibility of Changing Some
  • Cologne Cathedral: The French Cathedral on the Rhine
  • Einstein on the Beach: The Changing Image of Opera