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When word began circulating on Friday, August 19, 2011, that Ruiz had passed, David Hudson began rounding up the response, which he periodically updated through early September. Then MUBI launched a retrospective series "Blind Man's Bluff" unfurling a series of tributes to Ruiz, along with some previously published articles. "Blind Man's Bluff" proceeded through the decades: the '60s-'70s; the '80s; the '90s; the '00s. Filmmaker and critic Luc Moullet contributed his piece, written for a 2003 retrospective, on Ruiz's 1987 short, Brise-Glace. Several of these contributions were published in English for the first time, but MUBI made sure to include the original language versions as well.
Danny Kasman then compensated for what MUBI itself was not able to provide in streaming by gathering up YouTube playlists for The Hypothesis for the Stolen Painting (1979), On Top of the Whale (1982), Three Crowns Of A Sailor (1983), Love Torn In A Dream (2000), Exiles (1988): Jill Evans' Documentary on Ruiz, and, finally, a YouTube playlist for Jorge Arriagada's music for Ruiz's films.
Last but not least, Adrian Curry discusses the poster for Lines of Wellington (Linhas de Torres, 2012).
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