The Santa Barbara International Film Festival, which begins Thursday, January 24, 2013, has added 15 films to the already stellar lineup of films being showcased at this year’s festival, including three Academy Award nominees, two World Premieres and two US Premieres.
“We’ve added some fantastic new films that broaden the scope of the program and embody the international spirit of the festival,” commented Michael Albright, SBIFF’s Director of Programming.
World Premieres being added are:
ANGELS IN EXILE, South Africa – World Premiere
Directed by Billy Raftery
Narrated by Charlize Theron
An 8-year journey that challenges viewers to look past the violent and often graphic image of homeless youth and see them for what they are…children.
RETREAT, Canada – World Premiere
Directed by David Cherniack
A documentary that follows the trials and tribulations of thirty-five Westerners as they go through an intense eight-week meditation retreat in Thailand led by Alan Wallace.
U.S. Premieres being added are:
MADDENED BY HIS ABSENCE (J’enrage de son Absence), France – US Premiere
Directed by Sandrine Bonnaire
Deeply affected by the death of his son in a car accident nine years ago, Jacques (William Hurt) struggles to come to terms with his past.
SHYAMAL UNCLE TURNS OFF THE LIGHTS, India – US Premiere
Directed by Suman Ghosh
An 80-year-old Kolkata retiree is determined to turn off the streetlights after sunrise, but finding someone to take him seriously proves a battle against indifference and complacency
Oscar nominated films added are:
A ROYAL AFFAIR (En kongelig affære), Denmark/Sweden/Czech Republic/Germany (Academy Award® nominee)
Directed by Nikolaj Arcel
This sumptuous historical drama from writer-director Nikolaj Arcel (screenwriter of the original The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) chronicles the scandalous love triangle between a queen, her German doctor, and the mad King of Denmark.
HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE, USA
Academy Award® nominee for Best Documentary
Directed by David France
A vital documentary that traces the history of the AIDS activist coalitions ACT UP and TAG, whose radical initiatives broke crucial new ground in the fight against HIV in the 1980s and 1990s.
WAR WITCH (Rebelle), Canada
(Academy Award® nominee)
Directed by Kim Nguyen
In Sub-Saharan Africa, a 14-year-old girl tells her unborn child the story of her life at war. It all started when she was abducted by the rebel army at the age of 12.
In addition, the following are also added to the program:
BEIJING FLICKERS, China– West Coast Premiere
Directed by Yuan Zhang
Dumped, fired, evicted and abandoned by everyone, a down-on-his-luck man finds solace with a circle of equally ill-fated friends, in this touching and lighthearted drama from independent Chinese auteur Zhang Yuan.
BEYOND THE HILLS, Romania/France
Directed by Cristian Mungiu
A young Romanian woman sets out to retrieve her childhood friend from her “captivity” in a remote Romanian monastery, and soon comes into violent conflict with the archaic strictures of this traditional community.
MUMBAI’S KING, India
Directed by Manjeet Singh
A young boy comes of age in a Mumbai slum while dealing with his long-suffering mother and violent father, in this gently observational portrait crafted in the tradition of the great neorealist classics.
STEEL, Italy
Directed by Stefano Mordini
In a working class town off the coast of Italy just miles from paradise, Anna and Francesca, two teenage girls spend their last summer of innocence before high school.
SOUND CITY, USA – West Coast Premiere
Directed by Dave Grohl
Multitalented musician Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters and Nirvana fronts a mission to resurrect the rapidly vanishing human touch behind the creation of music.
STILL MINE, Canada
Directed by Michael McGowan
An elderly couple fights against local authorities in rural New Brunswick to build their final home.
STUDENT, Kazakhstan – West Coast Premiere
Directed by Darezhan Omirbayev
A solitary philosophy student commits a calculated violent crime against the backdrop of Kazakhstan’s growing inequality, institutional corruption, and a ruthless underworld in this contemporary adaptation of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment.
THE PUNK SYNDROME, Finland/Norway/Sweden
Directed by Jukka Kärkkäinen, J-P Passi
Punk music is about being a voluntary outcast. What if the outcasts want acceptance? Turning punk on its head, the mentally challenged members of Pertti Kurikka’s Name Day find acceptance in the music they create.
via Santa Barbara International Film Festival