Kage Baker: Sky Coyote
Cartaceo I have it ★★★
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Kasper Barfoed: Sommeren '92
File Video I lack ★★★
Rightly looked upon in the days following the end of Euro 2016. The film by Kasper Barfoed reconstructs the incredible journey of the Danish National Team (reinstated after the exclusion of Yugoslavia) at the European Championships in Sweden in 1992. It is particularly the story of coach Richard Moller Nielsen, who passed away in 2014 and to whom the film is ideally dedicated, and how he managed to win over the skepticism of fans and his own players, among them the uncompromising Brian Laudrup. Inside, there are obviously the stories of Peter Schmeichel, Flemming Povlsen, John 'Faxe' Jensen, and of course that of the hero of heroes Kim Vilfort, who scored the second goal in the final and was grappling with his daughter suffering from leukemia, who unfortunately would die a few weeks after the end of the tournament. Beautiful and light, without any pretension of being dramatic or overly moving.
Kenneth F. Gantz: Not in solitude
Cartaceo I have it ★★
Kevin Connolly: Gardener of Eden
File Video I lack ★★★
Following themes already explored in cinema, starting from 'Taxi Driver' or the very Italian 'Il giocattolo', and concluding with the entire series of 'Death Wish' featuring Charles Bronson, this film tells the story of a boy like many others, a misfit, expelled from college and thrown out of his home by his parents, who by sheer coincidence commits a heroic act. An act that changes his life. An act that sparks in his mind the idea that the only way to improve himself and the society he lives in is through violence or – better – what he defines as 'justice'. But as always, the concept of justice has a definition too broad to be grasped and cultivated by a single person. Beautiful. Perhaps the ending is a bit weak.
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Kikagaku Moyo: Forest of Lost Children
File Audio I have it ★★★
Perhaps the most famous album of the Tokyo-based psych band, Japan. Originally released in 2014 on Beyond Beyond is Beyond Records, it has become something of a cult object and has already been reissued three times. A complex devoted to particularly acid-tinged psychedelic sounds while simultaneously vintage, echoing the rock of the seventies. Some tracks like 'Smoke and Mirrors' and 'White Moon' are practically masterpieces of the genre.

#levitation
I believe this is the fourth album released by this band of crazy Australians in just 18 months. Four albums that, among other things, are each in some way different from one another in terms of structure, concept, and even listenability. In this context, 'Nonagon Infinity' (Heavenly Recordings) stands out as an acid chapter with frenetic rhythms. It’s a loud album featuring some riffs played at lightning speed and a certain garage aftertaste. In my opinion, they are difficult to pin down and define (if not as a collective of wild fools), but I think this is precisely their main strength. They're always ready to shock the listener, and this is a quality, a virtue that few possess.