• International Film Festival Rotterdam opens with 38 Témoins and closes with The Hunter

    The world premiere of Lucas Belvaux’s 38 Témoins (38 Witnesses, France), starring Yvan Attal, Sophie Quinton and Nicole Garcia will open the 41st International Film Festival Rotterdam on January 25, 2012; the festival will close on February 4 with the screening of Daniel Nettheim’s The Hunter (Australia) starring Willem Dafoe, Frances O’Connor and Sam Neill.

    In 38 Témoins, Louise (Sophie Quinton) returns home to discover that while she was away on business in China her street was the scene of a crime. There were no witnesses. Apparently everybody was asleep. Pierre, Louise’s husband (Yvan Attal) was at work. Apparently.

    The Hunter is a powerful psychological drama that tells the story of Martin (Willem Dafoe) a mercenary sent from Europe by a mysterious bio-tech company to the Tasmanian wilderness on a hunt for the last Tasmanian tiger. Next to Willem Dafoe (Spiderman, The English Patient, Platoon), The Hunter stars Frances O’Connor (Blessed, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, Mansfield Park) and Sam Neill (Jurassic Park, The Piano) in the principal roles. The Hunter is based on the novel of the same name written by Julia Leigh.

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  • A Separation, We Need to Talk About Kevin, The Artist Among London Critics’ Circle 2011 Nominees

    [caption id="attachment_1389" align="alignnone" width="552"]WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN[/caption]

    The London Critics’ Circle announced the nominations today for its 32nd annual Film Awards and the nominations were lead by TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY and DRIVE, which both receive 6 nominations each

    Asghar Farhadi’s Golden Bear (Berlin) winner A SEPARATION and Lynne Ramsay’s WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN have received 5 nominations each whilst Michel Hazanavicius’ THE ARTIST and Steve McQueen’s SHAME have received 4 apiece.

    The London Critics’ Circle Film Awards in partnership with Virgin Atlantic will reveal its full list of annual award winners at the glittering ceremony on Thursday 19 January at BFI Southbank.

    Voted for by over 120 UK film critics, broadcasters and writers, the 32nd London Critics’ Circle Film Awards nominations are as follows:

    FILM OF THE YEAR

    The Artist (Entertainment)

    Drive (Icon)

    A Separation (Artificial Eye)

    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    The Tree of Life (Fox)

     

    The Attenborough Award:

    BRITISH FILM OF THE YEAR

    The Guard (StudioCanal)

    Kill List (StudioCanal)

    Shame (Momentum)

    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

     

    FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM OF THE YEAR

    Mysteries of Lisbon (New Wave)

    Poetry (Arrow)

    Le Quattro Volte (New Wave)

    A Separation (Artificial Eye)

    The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)

     

    DOCUMENTARY OF THE YEAR

    Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Picturehouse)

    Dreams of a Life (Dogwoof)

    Pina (Artificial Eye)

    Project Nim (Icon)

    Senna (Universal)

     

    DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR

    Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)

    Terrence Malick – The Tree of Life (Fox)

    Lynne Ramsay – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

    Nicolas Winding Refn – Drive (Icon)

     

    SCREENWRITER OF THE YEAR

    Asghar Farhadi – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist (Entertainment)

    Kenneth Lonergan – Margaret (Fox)

    Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon & Jim Rash – The Descendants (Fox)

     

    The Virgin Atlantic Award:

    BREAKTHROUGH BRITISH FILM-MAKER

    Richard Ayoade – Submarine (StudioCanal)

    Paddy Considine – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)

    Joe Cornish – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)

    Andrew Haigh – Weekend (Peccadillo)

    John Michael McDonagh – The Guard (StudioCanal)

     

    ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    George Clooney – The Descendants (Fox)

    Jean Dujardin – The Artist (Entertainment)

    Michael Fassbender – Shame (Momentum)

    Ryan Gosling – Drive (Icon)

    Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

     

    ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Kirsten Dunst – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)

    Anna Paquin – Margaret (Fox)

    Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé)

    Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

    Michelle Williams – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)

     

    SUPPORTING ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    Simon Russell Beale – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)

    Kenneth Branagh – My Week With Marilyn (Entertainment)

    Albert Brooks – Drive (Icon)

    Christopher Plummer – Beginners (Universal)

    Michael Smiley – Kill List (StudioCanal)

     

    SUPPORTING ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Sareh Bayat – A Separation (Artificial Eye)

    Jessica Chastain – The Help (Disney)

    Vanessa Redgrave – Coriolanus (Lionsgate)

    Octavia Spencer – The Help (Disney)

    Jacki Weaver – Animal Kingdom (StudioCanal)

     

    BRITISH ACTOR OF THE YEAR

    Tom Cullen – Weekend (Peccadillo)

    Michael Fassbender – A Dangerous Method (Lionsgate), Shame (Momentum)

    Brendan Gleeson – The Guard (StudioCanal)

    Peter Mullan – Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal), War Horse (Disney)

    Gary Oldman – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

     

    The Moët & Chandon Award:

    BRITISH ACTRESS OF THE YEAR

    Olivia Colman – The Iron Lady (Fox/Pathé), Tyrannosaur (StudioCanal)

    Carey Mulligan – Drive (Icon), Shame (Momentum)

    Vanessa Redgrave – Anonymous (Sony), Coriolanus (Lionsgate)

    Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

    Rachel Weisz – The Deep Blue Sea (Artificial Eye)

     

    YOUNG BRITISH PERFORMER OF THE YEAR

    John Boyega – Attack the Block (StudioCanal)

    Jeremy Irvine – War Horse (Disney)

    Yasmin Paige – Submarine (StudioCanal)

    Craig Roberts – Submarine (StudioCanal)

    Saoirse Ronan – Hanna (Universal)

     

    The Sky 3D Award:

    TECHNICAL ACHIEVEMENT

    Manuel Alberto Claro, cinematography – Melancholia (Artificial Eye)

    Paul Davies, sound design – We Need to Talk About Kevin (Artificial Eye)

    Maria Djurkovic, production design – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (StudioCanal)

    Dante Ferretti, production design – Hugo (Entertainment)

    Alberto Iglesias, original score – The Skin I Live In (Fox/Pathé)

    Chris King & Gregers Sall, editing – Senna (Universal)

    Joe Letteri, visual effects – Rise of the Planet of the Apes (Fox)

    Cliff Martinez, original score – Drive (Icon)

    Robert Richardson, cinematography – Hugo (Entertainment)

    Robbie Ryan, cinematography – Wuthering Heights (Artificial Eye)

     

    The Dilys Powell Award:

    EXCELLENCE IN FILM

    Nicolas Roeg

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  • 39 Original Songs Eligible to compete for Oscar for Original Song

    [caption id="attachment_2092" align="alignnone" width="550"]POM Wonderful Presents The Greatest Movie Ever Sold[/caption]

    Thirty-nine songs from eligible feature-length motion pictures are in contention for nominations in the Original Song category for the 84th Academy Awards®, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced today.

    The original songs, along with the motion picture in which each song is featured, are listed below in alphabetical order by film and song title:

    “The World I Knew” from “African Cats”
    “Lay Your Head Down” from “Albert Nobbs”
    “Star Spangled Man” from “Captain America: The First Avenger”
    “Collision of Worlds” from “Cars 2”
    “Dakkanaga Dugu Dugu” from “DAM999”
    “DAM999 Theme Song” from “DAM999”
    “Mujhe Chod Ke” from “DAM999”
    “Rainbird” from “Dirty Girl”
    “Keep On Walking” from “The First Grader”
    “Where the River Goes” from “Footloose”
    “Hello Hello” from “Gnomeo & Juliet”
    “Love Builds a Garden” from “Gnomeo & Juliet”
    “Bridge of Light” from “Happy Feet Two”
    “The Mighty Sven” from “Happy Feet Two”
    “Never Be Daunted” from “happythankyoumoreplease”
    “Hell and Back” from “Hell and Back Again”
    “The Living Proof” from “The Help”
    “Coeur Volant” from “Hugo”
    “It’s How We Play” from “I Don’t Know How She Does It”
    “When the Heart Dies” from “In the Land of Blood and Honey”
    “Ja Nao Estar” from “José and Pilar”
    “The Keeper” from “Machine Gun Preacher”
    “Life’s a Happy Song” from “The Muppets”
    “Man or Muppet” from “The Muppets”
    “Pictures in My Head” from “The Muppets”
    “Summer Song” from “The Music Never Stopped”
    “Imaginary Friends” from “Olive”
    “Sparkling Day” from “One Day”
    “Taking You with Me” from “Our Idiot Brother”
    “The Greatest Song I Ever Heard” from “POM Wonderful Presents The Greatest Movie Ever Sold”
    “Hot Wings” from “Rio”
    “Let Me Take You to Rio” from “Rio”
    “Real in Rio” from “Rio”
    “Shelter” from “Take Shelter”
    “Gathering Stories” from “We Bought a Zoo”
    “Pop” from “White Irish Drinkers”
    “Think You Can Wait” from “Win Win”
    “The Backson Song” from “Winnie the Pooh”
    “So Long” from “Winnie the Pooh”

    On Thursday, January 5, the Academy will screen clips featuring each song, in random order, for voting members of the Music Branch in Los Angeles.  Following the screenings, members will determine the nominees by an averaged point system of voting.  If no song receives an average score of 8.25 or more, there will be no nominees in the category.  If only one song achieves that score, it and the song receiving the next highest score shall be the two nominees.

    If two or more songs (up to five) achieve that score, they shall be the nominees.  A DVD copy of the song clips will be made available to those branch members who are unable to attend the screening and who request it for home viewing.  A mail-in ballot will be provided.

    Under Academy rules, a maximum of two songs may be nominated from any one film.  If more than two songs from a film achieve a score of 8.25 or more, the two songs with the highest scores will be the nominees.

    To be eligible, a song must consist of words and music, both of which are original and written specifically for the film.  A clearly audible, intelligible, substantive rendition of both lyric and melody must be used in the body of the film or as the first music cue in the end credits.

    The 84th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Tuesday, January 24, 2012, and the Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2011 will be presented on Sunday, February 26, 2012.

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  • Le Havre Awarded France’s Louis Delluc Prize

    [caption id="attachment_2090" align="alignnone" width="550"]Le Havre[/caption]

    Aki Kaurismaki’s Le Havre, starring Andre Wilms, Jean-Pierre Darroussin and Kati Outinen was awarded one of France’s top film honors, the winner of the 69th annual Louis Delluc Prize. Le Havre, Finland’s submission to the Academy for consideration for the Best Foreign Language Film, beat out a strong field of contenders that included The Artist, House of Tolerance, Hors Satan, Declaration of War, The Snows of Kilimandjaro, Tomboy and The Minister.

    In this warmhearted portrait of the French harbor city that gives the film its name, fate throws young African refugee Idrissa (Blondin Miguel) into the path of Marcel Marx (Andre Wilms), a well-spoken bohemian who works as a shoeshiner. With innate optimism and the unwavering support of his community, Marcel stands up to officials doggedly pursuing the boy for deportation. A political fairy tale that mixes the classic cinema of Jean-Pierre Melville and Marcel Carne with wry Kaurismaekian comedy, Le Havre is a charming, deadpan delight.

    Djinn Carrenard’s Donoma was awarded the the Louis Delluc prize for Best First Film. The film was reportedly made for only $200.

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  • 265 Feature Films Eligible to Compete for 2011 Best Picture Oscar

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced yesterday that two hundred sixty-five feature films are eligible for the 2011 Academy Awards®.

    To be eligible for 84th Academy Awards® consideration, feature films must open in a commercial motion picture theater in Los Angeles County by midnight, December 31, and begin a minimum run of seven consecutive days.

    Under Academy rules, a feature-length motion picture must have a running time of more than 40 minutes and must have been exhibited theatrically on 35mm or 70mm film, or in a qualifying digital format.

    Feature films that receive their first public exhibition or distribution in any manner other than as a theatrical motion picture release are not eligible for Academy Awards in any category.

    The 84th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Tuesday, January 24, 2012, and the Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2011 will be presented on Sunday, February 26, 2012.

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  • Jake Gyllenhaal, Mike Leigh Among International Jury at 2012 Berlin International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_2086" align="alignnone"]Jake Gyllenhaal in Love and Other Drugs[/caption]

    Anton Corbijn, Asghar Farhadi, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Jake Gyllenhaal, François Ozon, Boualem Sansal and Barbara Sukowa will join already announced Jury President Mike Leigh as the International Jury who will decide who will receive the Golden Bear and Silver Bears as well as the Alfred Bauer Prize of the 2012 Berlinale Competition.

    Mike Leigh (Jury President)
    Mike Leigh has made a name for himself as one of the most outstanding filmmakers of auteur cinema and protagonists of New British Cinema. Leigh portrays British society in a bluntly realistic but humorous manner. His films have received countless international awards and Oscar nominations.
    Trained as an actor, dramatist and screenwriter, he has directed more than 20 films, including Bleak Moments (1972, Golden Leopard in Locarno), Naked (1993, Award for Best Director in Cannes), Secrets and Lies (1996, Palme d’Or in Cannes) and Vera Drake (2004, Golden Lion in Venice).
    Nominated for several Oscars, director Mike Leigh has been invited several times to different sections of the Berlin International Film Festival: Meantime screened in the Forum in 1984; the short film The Short and Curlies, in the Panorama in 1988; as did Life Is Sweet in 1991. His latest contribution was to the Competition in 2008: his social comedy Happy-Go-Lucky featured Sally Hawkins, who won the Silver Bear for Best Actress.

    Dutch photographer, designer and filmmaker Anton Corbijn won international fame with his photos of musicians: the Rolling Stones, U2, Frank Sinatra, Luciano Pavarotti, Tom Waits and others. For bands such as U2 or Depeche Mode, he became like a fifth member and shot and/or designed eight album covers for each of them. Since 1993 he has also designed the stage sets for Depeche Mode`s tours. He started directing music videos in the early 1980s, later also for artists such as Herbert Grönemeyer, Johnny Cash, Coldplay and Nirvana. He made his directorial debut with the film Control about lead singer Ian Curtis of the British post-punk band Joy Division. The film opened Cannes’ Quinzaine section in 2007. It was followed in 2010 by his film The American, a thriller with George Clooney in the lead. Most recently Corbijn has collaborated with Berend Strik on the charitable project “Mandela Landscape”. As a major source of inspiration for the popular culture of his generation, Corbijn was awarded the most important cultural award of the Netherlands in November 2011: the Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Prijs. His next cinema project will be a screen adaptation of John LeCarré’s A Most Wanted Man which will be shot in Germany.

    Iranian director and screenwriter Asghar Farhadi shot his first 8-mm and 16-mm films as a teenager, and had already made five short films by the time he went to Tehran University and got his Bachelor and Master degree in theatre directing. He also worked for radio and television. In 2003, he won the Special Jury Prize for his feature film debut Raghs dar ghobar (Dancing in the Dust) at the Moscow International Film Festival. His second feature film Shahr-e ziba (A Beautiful City, 2004) was awarded the Grand Prix as best film in Warsaw. In 2009, he won the Silver Bear for Best Director with his Berlinale Competition film Darbareh-ye Elly (About Elly). About Elly also won at the Tribeca Film Festival and went on to receive another ten awards. His latest work, Jodaeiye Nader az Simin (Nader and Simin. A Separation) took home the Golden Bear and two Silver Bears for the performances of the ensemble at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2011. It was an international success, and after winning the Berlinale it won awards at 22 international festivals. Iran has selected the film as its official entry for the Academy Awards. In summer 2011, Asghar Farhadi was invited to participate in Berlin’s Artist-in-Residence programme of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).

    French-British actress Charlotte Gainsbourg, daughter of French artist Serge Gainsbourg and British actress and singer Jane Birkin, made her motion picture debut as a teenager in Parole et Musique (Love Songs, 1985; directed by Élie Chouraqui). She then worked with many different filmmakers, such as Agnès Varda, Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, Jacques Doillon, Eric Rochant, Bertrand Blier and Andrew Birkin. In 1986 she won a César as Most Promising Young Actress for L’éffrontée (Charlotte and Lulu, 1985; directed by Claude Miller). In 1998, she gave a breakthrough performance in La petite voleuse (Little Thief, directed by Claude Miller). In 2001, she starred in Yvan Attal’s Ma femme est une actrice (My Wife Is an Actress) and played the lead in Félix et Lola (Felix and Lola, directed by Patrice Leconte), which also screened in the Berlinale Competition. She has made many other films for the screen, including 21 Grams (2003, directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarittu), Prête-moi ta main (I Do, 2006, directed by Eric Lartigau), Michel Gondry’s La science des rêves (The Science of Sleep, Berlinale Competition 2006), Golden Door (2007, directed by Emmanuele Crialese, Golden Lion in Venice) and Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There (2007). In 2009, she played in Patrice Chereau’s Persécution (2009) and won the Best Actress award in Cannes for her role in Lars von Trier’s Antichrist. Most recently she starred in L’Arbre (The Tree, 2010, directed by Julie Bertucelli) and in Melancholia (directed by Lars von Trier), which won the 2011 European Film Prize for Best Film. Charlotte Gainsbourg also performs as a vocal artist and has just released her fourth album “Stage Whisper”.

    Academy Award nominee Jake Gyllenhaal won BAFTA and National Board of Review awards for his poignant performance as Jack Twist in Ang Lee’s timeless classic Brokeback Mountain (2005, Golden Lion in Venice).
    He was last seen starring in Duncan Jones’ critically acclaimed sci-fi thriller Source Code (2011, R: Duncan Jones) and Ed Zwick’s Love And Other Drugs (2010), for which he received a Golden Globe nomination for “Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical.” Gyllenhaal recently wrapped production on David Ayer’s End of Watch, a gritty drama shot on the streets of South Central Los Angeles. The film is expected for release in 2012. Working with some of Hollywood’s greatest filmmakers, Gyllenhaal has also starred in Richard Kelly’s cult hit Donnie Darko (2001), Jim Sheridan’s Brothers (2009), David Fincher’s Zodiac (2007), Sam Mendes’ Jarhead (2005), John Madden’s Proof (2005), Miguel Arteta’s The Good Girl (2002), Brad Silberling’s Moonlight Mile (2002), Nicole Holofcener’s Lovely And Amazing (2001), and Joe Johnston’s October Sky (1999). Gyllenhaal made his stage debut starring in Kenneth Lonergan’s revival of “This is Our Youth” on London’s West End. For his performance he won an Evening Standard Theatre Award for “Outstanding Newcomer”.

    After making several highly regarded short films (Summer dress, 1996; See the Sea, 1997), French director and screenwriter François Ozon’s first feature film was Sitcom (1998). He celebrated his international breakthrough with the musical comedy 8 Femmes (8 Women) in 2002. A star-studded ensemble with Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Huppert, Ludivine Sagnier, Emmanuelle Béart, Firmine Richard, Danielle Darieux, Fanny Ardant and Virginie Ledoyen who sing and dance throughout the film, won a Silver Bear for their performances. Ozon had already participated in the Berlinale Competition in 2000 with Gouttes d’èau sur pierres brulantes (Water Drops on Burning Rocks) which took home the Festival’s queer prize, the Teddy Award for Best Feature. Further great hits by Ozon followed, including Sous le sable (Under the Sand, 2000) and Swimming Pool (2003) with Charlotte Rampling, as well as his drama about death Le temps qui reste (Time to Leave), which premiered at Cannes in 2005. He presented Angel in the Berlinale Competition in 2007 and Ricky in 2009. In 2010, Potiche (Trophy Wife), his satirical and rather biting comedy about emancipation, screened at the festival in Venice; the film went on to top the French movie charts.

    Algerian writer Boualem Sansal received his doctorate in economics and worked for the Ministry of Industry, as well as authored a number of technical books, before publishing his prize-winning debut novel “Le serment des barbares” in Paris in 1999. Four novels have followed, all of which have been translated into German. After publishing “Journal intime et politique, Algérie 40 ans après”, a critical political diary about the situation in Algeria 40 years after independence, he was forced to quit his job in the ministry. Ever since he has worked exclusively as a writer and focused increasingly on historical subjects. His most recent publications include the 2008 novel “Le village de l’allemand ou le journal des frères Schiller”. This work is the first of his novels to be translated into English; it was published in the US as “The German Mujahid” and in the UK as “An Unfinished Business”. In 2011, Sansal was awarded the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association at the Frankfurt Book Fair.

    Barbara Sukowa is a prize-winning German film and theatre actress, as well as a singer. She was first discovered for the screen by Rainer Werner Fassbinder who after casting her in Berlin Alexanderplatz (1980) gave her the title role in Lola (1981), one of his most successful films. Barbara Sukowa became known internationally for starring in Die bleierne Zeit (Marianne and Juliane, 1981; Award for Best Actress in Venice) and Rosa Luxemburg (1986, Award for Best Actress in Cannes), both by Margarethe von Trotta. She made The Sicilian (1987) with Michael Cimino and starred in Lars von Trier’s dark thriller Europa (1991). Her most recent German films include Hierankl (2003, directed by Hans Steinbichler); the screen adaptation of the novel, Die Entdeckung der Currywurst (The Invention of the Curried Sausage, 2008; directed by Ulla Wagner, Award for Best Actress in Montreal); and Vision – Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen (Vision, 2009; directed by Margarethe von Trotta). Sukowa, who lives in New York, started her singing career in the late 1980s. She has won an Echo and been nominated for a Grammy.

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  • First Films for the Competition and Berlinale Special of 2012 Berlin Film Fest

    [caption id="attachment_2084" align="alignnone"]Werner Herzog’s documentary series Death Row from the USA[/caption]

    The first five films for the Competition of the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival and the Berlinale Special have been announced. The films for the Berlinale Special include the Indian-German co-production Don – The King Is Back, the documentary Marley by Kevin Macdonald from Great Britain and the USA, the Spanish film La chispa de la vida by Álex de la Iglesia, Guy Maddin’s Keyhole from Canada, as well as Werner Herzog’s documentary series Death Row from the USA.

    Competition

    Captive
    France/Philippines/Germany/Great Britain
    By Brillante Mendoza (Serbis, Kinatay, Lola)
    With Isabelle Huppert, Katherine Mulville, Marc Zanetta
    World premiere

    Dictado (Childish Games)
    Spain
    By Antonio Chavarrías (Susanna, Volverás, Las vidas de Celia)
    With Juan Diego Botto, Barbara Lennie, Mágica Pérez
    World premiere

    Extremely Loud And Incredibly Close
    USA
    By Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours, The Reader)
    With Tom Hanks, Sandra Bullock, Max von Sydow, Thomas Horn
    International premiere / Out of Competition

    Jin líng Shí San Chai (The Flowers Of War)
    People’s Republic of China
    By Zhang Yimou (The Red Lantern, Hero, A Woman, A Gun And A Noodle Shop)
    With Christian Bale, Ni Ni, Atsuro Watabe
    International premiere / Out of Competition

    Kebun binatang (Postcards From The Zoo)
    Indonesia/Germany/Hongkong, China
    By Edwin (Kara, Anak Sebatang Pohon, The Blind Pig Who Wants To Fly)
    With Ladya Cheryl, Nicholas Saputra
    World premiere


    Berlinale Special

    Death Row – Documentary series in four parts
    USA
    By Werner Herzog (Fitzcarraldo, Cave Of Forgotten Dreams)
    World premiere

    Don – The King Is Back
    India/Germany
    By Farhan Akhtar (Dil Chahta Hai, Lakshya, Don)
    With Shah Rukh Khan, Priyanka Chopra, Boman Irani, Om Puri, Florian Lukas
    German premiere

    Keyhole
    Canada
    By Guy Maddin (My Winnipeg, The Saddest Music In The World, Brand Upon The Brain)
    With Jason Patric, Isabella Rossellini, Udo Kier, Brooke Palsson
    International premiere

    La chispa de la vida
    Spain
    By Álex de la Iglesia (El día de la bestia, Perdita Durango, The Last Circus)
    With Salma Hayek, José Mota, Fernando Tejero, Blanca Portillo, Juan Luis Galiardo
    International premiere

    Marley – Documentary
    Great Britain/USA
    By Kevin Macdonald (The Last King Of Scotland, Life In A Day, Touching The Void)
    World premiere

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  • Jury of 7 Young Filmmakers Selected for Dialogue en perspective Award at 2012 Berlinale

    [caption id="attachment_2082" align="alignnone" width="550"]2011 Dialogue en perspective Award Winner – Die Ausbildung (The Education) by Dirk Lütter[/caption]

    The Berlin International Film Festival (February 9 to 19, 2012) and the French-German Youth Office, is once again giving young film-lovers a chance to help decide who receives the “Dialogue en perspective” Award. For the second time, a jury member from a third country – Slovakia – is taking part.

    The seven jurors are:

    • Deniz Sertkol, 26, European mediastudies, Berlin
    • Franziska Hessberger, 25, freelance at Westdeutscher Rundfunk, Münster
    • Philipp Wolf, 24, studies literature, culture and media, Siegen Weidenau
    • Sandra Jumel, 22, European and intercultural studies, Sautron (Nantes)
    • Gustave Shaïmi, 20, European and film studies, Montélimar
    • Baptiste Cogitore, 25, studies German-French journalism, Strasbourg
    • Matus Krajnak, 23, studies filmdirection, Presov (Bratislava), Slovakia

    This year, the jury will be chaired by director, actor and screenwriter Jan Henrik Stahlberg.

    The aim of the film award for the DFJW is to promote dialogue between young German and French people and to bring them closer to current German cinema. At the Berlinale 2011 the film Die Ausbildung (The Education) by Dirk Lütter received the prize.

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  • Four New Films Added to 2012 Sundance Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_2078" align="alignnone"]Predisposed [/caption]

    Four new films have been added to the lineup for the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The Festival will be January 19 through 29 in Park City, Salt Lake City, Ogden and Sundance, Utah.

    John Cooper, Director of the Sundance Film Festival, said, “Each of these four films is an accomplishment in its own right, and collectively, their addition to our program allows us to present a broader look at independent filmmaking. With these four films, we will present a total of 117 feature-length films at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival – a strong indication of the vitality of the independent film community.”

    PREMIERES

    Predisposed / U.S.A. (Directors & Screenwriters: Philip Dorling, Ron Nyswaner) – Eli Smith, a piano prodigy, is dealing with his troubled mother and enlisting help from a hapless drug dealer on the day he has an audition for a prestigious music program. Events spiral comically out of control as this gang of misfits faces the mistakes of the past, the challenges of the future, and the possibilities of love. Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Melissa Leo, Tracy Morgan, Sarah Ramos, Isiah Whitlock Jr. World Premiere.

    SPOTLIGHT

    [caption id="attachment_2079" align="alignnone" width="550"]Oslo[/caption]

    Oslo, August 31st / Norway (Director: Joachim Trier, Screenwriters: Eskil Vogt & Joachim Trier based on a novel by Pierre Drieu La Rochelle) – One man, one city, 24 hours. Oslo, August 31st is a portrait of contemporary Oslo. A visually striking and quietly shattering drama about a man in deep existential crisis. Cast: Anders Danielsen Lie, Hans Olav Brenner, Ingrid Olava, Tone B. Mostraum.

    This Must Be The Place / Italy, France, Ireland (Director: Paolo Sorrentino, Screenwriter: Umberto Contarello, Paolo Sorrentino) – A bored, retired rock star sets out to find his father’s executioner, an ex-Nazi war criminal who is a refugee in the U.S. Cast: Sean Penn, Frances McDormand, Judd Hirsch. North American Premiere

    PARK CITY AT MIDNIGHT

    [caption id="attachment_2080" align="alignnone" width="550"]JOHN DIES AT THE END[/caption]

    JOHN DIES AT THE END / U.S.A. (Director: Don Coscarelli, Screenwriter: Don Coscarelli, based on a novel by David Wong) – On the street they call it Soy Sauce – a drug that allows users to drift across time and dimensions. But some who come back are no longer human. Can John and David stop the oncoming horror? No. They can’t. Cast: Chase Williamson, Rob Mayes, Paul Giamatti, Clancy Brown, Glynn Turman. World Premiere

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  • Recycling Life and In Out Tie for Best Doc at 2011 Boston Turkish Arts and Culture Festival Documentary and Short Film Competition

     

    [caption id="attachment_2076" align="alignnone" width="525"]Recycling Life: I Found Dostoevski in the Garbage[/caption]

    The 16th Boston Turkish Arts and Culture Festival Documentary and Short Film Competition announced its winners and this year’s Best Short Film Award of the jury is split between Güçlü Yaman’s “Journey of No Return – Last Stop Frankfurt Airport” (Dönüşü Olmayan Yolculuk – Son Durak Frankfurt Havaalanı), and “Death” (Ölüm), co-directed by Uygar Şirin and Burcu Aykar Şirin.

    Best Documentary Award is also split between two films; “Recycling Life: I Found Dostoevski in the Garbage” (Çöpte Dostoyevski Buldum) by Enis Rıza, and “In Out” by Zeynep Merve Uygun.

    Audience Award in the short film category went to Güçlü Yaman’s “Journey of No Return – Last Stop Frankfurt Airport” (Dönüşü Olmayan Yolculuk – Son Durak Frankfurt Havaalanı) while Ahmet Turgut Yazman’s “Göbeklitepe: The World’s First Temple” (Göbeklitepe: Dünyanın İlk Tapınağı) received the Audience Award in the documentary category.

    This year’s competition has also recognized a number of films through Special Mentions. Short films receiving Special Mentions are; “Adam’s Well” (Adem’in Kuyusu) by Veysel Cihan Hızar’s, “Ali Ata Bak” by Orhan İnce, “Hamam” by Tunç Sahin, “Milk” (Süt) by Ayşegül Şahinbozkır, “Love is Blind” (Direk Aşk) by Ertuğ Tüfekçioğlu, and “Wedlock” (İzdivaç) by Azime Kanal. In the documentaries category, “Bodies without Soul” (Bedensiz Ruhlar) by Sabite Kaya, “Figures in the Water” (Sudaki Suretler) by Erkal Tülek, “Great Lovers” (Büyükaşık’lar) by Nagihan Çakar, “On the Road” (Yollarda/Unterwegs) by Sabine Küper-Büsch and Thomas Büsch, and “The Other Town” (Öteki Kasaba) by Nefin Dinç received the Special Mentions.

    Boston Turkish Arts and Culture Festival is organized annually since 1996 with the theme “Colors of Anatolia”, comprising of a wide range of events including exhibitions, concerts, film competition, as well as a food and wine event.

     

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  • Diane Keaton’s Darling Companion to open 2012 Santa Barbara International Film Festival

    The World Premiere of the Sony Classics Pictures film Darling Companion, directed by Lawrence Kasdan and starring Diane Keaton, Kevin Kline, Dianne Wiest, Richard Jenkins, Sam Shepard, Mark Duplass, Elisabeth Moss, and Ayelet Zurer will open the 27th Santa Barbara International Film Festival (January 26-February 5, 2012).

    “We are incredibly privileged to have the world premiere of a Lawrence Kasdan film. The highly anticipated Darling Companion is a fantastic film to kick off the festival,” remarked SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling.

    In DARLING COMPANION, Beth (Diane Keaton) saves a bedraggled lost dog from the side of the freeway on a wintry day in Denver. Struggling with her distracted, self-involved husband Joseph (Kevin Kline) and an empty nest at home, Beth forms a special bond with the rescued animal. When Joseph loses the dog after a wedding at their vacation home in the Rockies, the distraught Beth enlists the help of the few remaining guests and a mysterious young woman (Ayelet Zurer) in a frantic search. Each member of the search party is affected by the adventure, which takes them in unexpected directions – comic, harrowing, and sometimes deeply emotional.

    In addition to Darling Companion, SBIFF will also feature a Lawrence Kasdan Retrospective in its 2012 program. Body Heat (1981), The Big Chill (1983), and Grand Canyon (1991) will be featured, as well as a Q&A with the filmmaker himself.

     

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  • The Descendants Named Best Film of the Year at 2011 Satellite Awards

    [caption id="attachment_559" align="alignnone"]Best Foreign Film – Mysteries of Lisbon[/caption]

    Alexander Payne’s The Descendants was named the Best Film of the year by the International Press Academy at the organization’s 2011 Satellite Awards.

    In a sharp twist from most of the other awards of the seasons, the Satellite award for Best Foreign Film was given to Mysteries of Lisbon and Best Documentary to Senna.

    The International Press Academy is a group of entertainment journalists formed by a former president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association 15 years ago.

    MOTION PICTURES

    Motion Picture: “The Descendants”

    Actress in a Motion Picture: Viola Davis, “The Help”

    Actor in a Motion Picture: Ryan Gosling, “Drive”

    Actress in a Supporting Role: Jessica Chastain, “The Tree of Life”

    Actor in a Supporting Role: Albert Brooks, “Drive”

    Director: Nicolas Winding Refn, “Drive”

    Screenplay, Original: “The Tree of Life,” Terrence Malick

    Screenplay, Adapted: “The Descendants,” Alexander Payne, Jim Rash, Nax Faxon

    Foreign Film: “Mysteries of Lisbon”

    Motion Picture, Animated or Mixed Media: “The Adventures of Tintin”

    Motion Picture, Documentary: “Senna”

    Original Score: “Soul Surfer,” Marco Beltrani

    Original Song: “Lay Down Your Head” from “Albert Nobbs,” Brian Byrne and Glenn Close

    Cinematography: “War Horse,” Janusz Kaminski

    Visual Effects: “Hugo,” Robert Legato

    Film Editing: “The Guard,” Chris Gill

    Sound (Editing and Mixing): “Drive,” Dave Patterson, Lon Bender, Robert Fernandez, Victor Ray Ennis

    Art Direction & Production Design: “The Artist,” Gregory S. Hooper, Laurence Bennett

    Costume Design: “Water for Elephants,” Jacqueline West


    TELEVISION

    Television Series, Drama: “Justified”

    Television Series, Comedy or Musical: “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”

    Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television:

    Television Series, Genre:

    Actress in a Series, Drama:

    Actor in a Series, Drama:

    Actress in a Series, Comedy or Musical:

    Actor in a Series, Comedy or Musical:

    Actress in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television:

    Actor in a Miniseries of a Motion Picture Made for Television:

    Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television:

    Actor in a Supporting Role in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television:

    SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS

    Best First Feature: Paddy Considine, “Tyrannosaur”

    Best Ensemble: “The Help”

    Outstanding Performance in a TV Series: Jessica Lange, “American Horror Story”

    Mary Pickford Award for Outstanding Contribution to the Entertainment Industry: Mitzi Gaynor

    Nikola Tesla Award in Recognition of Visionary Achivement in Filmmaking Technology: Douglas Trumbull

    Auteur Award: Peter Bogdanovich

    Humanitarian Award: Tim Hetherington (1970-2011)

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