• World Premiere of JEREMIAH TERMINATOR LEROY Starring Laura Dern to Close Toronto International Film Festival

    Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy from director Justin Kelly, based on one of the most famous literary gambits in American history will close this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. Adapted from the memoir Girl Boy Girl: How I Became JT LeRoy by Savannah Knoop, the film promises a boundary-breaking Closing Night Gala bursting with intrigue. “With Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy, Justin Kelly brings to the screen a truly unbelievable story that captivated a nation,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of TIFF. “The storytelling is powerful and the characters are vivid, really evoking the idea that you have to see it to believe it. “I am beyond honored that my film Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy will premiere at TIFF as the Closing Night Film,” said Justin Kelly, director of Jeremiah Terminator LeRoy. “I can’t wait for people to see the fascinating true story behind JT LeRoy, brought to life via incredible performances by a total dream cast.” This captivating true story goes beyond the headlines to reveal the most compelling literary hoax of our generation. Laura Albert (Laura Dern) is an author who writes under a fictionalized persona, a disenfranchised young queer man named JT LeRoy. When her debut novel becomes a bestseller and JT becomes the darling of the literary world, she comes up with a unique solution to preserve her anonymity while giving life to her nom-de-plume. Enter her boyfriend’s androgynous sister, Savannah Knoop (Kristen Stewart), who connects with Laura’s punk, feminist, outsider universe and agrees to be JT in the public eye. Together, they embark on a wild ride of double lives, infiltrating the Hollywood and literary elite — and discovering who they are in the process. The 43rd Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 6 to 16, 2018.

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  • World Premiere of Period Drama OUTLAW KING Starring Chris Pine to Open Toronto International Film Festival

    Outlaw King The World Premiere of Outlaw King , David Mackenzie’s anticipated period drama chronicling the rise of 14th-century Scottish hero Robert the Bruce, will be the Opening Night Gala Presentation for the 43rd Toronto International Film Festival on Thursday, September 6, at Roy Thomson Hall. This epic David-versus-Goliath tale reunites award-winning director David Mackenzie ( Starred Up , Young Adam) with his Hell or High Water actor Chris Pine, who takes on the starring role of the legendary Scottish king who leads a band of outlaws to reclaim the throne from the clutches of the English crown and its army. The film also stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Florence Pugh, and Billy Howle. “TIFF’s Opening Night Film, Outlaw King , tells a powerful story that is rich in drama, excitement, romance, and adventure,” said Piers Handling, Director & CEO of TIFF. “Audiences are promised a thrilling journey back in time, as David Mackenzie masterfully unwraps history with taut dramatic flare and brings to life the true story of Scottish hero Robert the Bruce. Gripping performances led by Chris Pine and Aaron Taylor-Johnson make this a classic, entertaining, and action-packed Festival opener.” “Thank you, TIFF, for welcoming our film into the world. The Festival is the perfect launch pad for our realistic epic, and we are delighted to be the first Scottish film ever to open Toronto,” said director David Mackenzie. “I cannot imagine a better place to have our World Premiere. Scotland and Canada’s histories are bound together, forged in the crucible of the struggles of history, bringing this day an affinity and sensibility that I hope will translate to a profound, visceral, and riotously entertaining experience. We have an amazing cast and crew working at the top of their game, and we are really looking forward to spreading some Scottish goodwill on the great city of Toronto.” Outlaw King follows the untold, true story of Robert the Bruce, who transforms from defeated nobleman to outlaw hero during the oppressive occupation of medieval Scotland by Edward I of England. Despite grave consequences, Robert seizes the Scottish crown and rallies an impassioned group of men to fight back against the mighty army of the tyrannical King and his volatile son, the Prince of Wales. The 43rd Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 6 to 16, 20

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  • 2018 New York Film Festival Announces Projections Lineup of Innovative and Experimental Films

    [caption id="attachment_31380" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Diamantino Diamantino[/caption] The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced the complete lineup for the Projections section of the 56th New York Film Festival – comprised of seven features, seven shorts programs, and two short works. Drawing on a broad range of innovative modes and techniques, including experimental narratives, avant-garde poetics, crossovers into documentary realms, and contemporary art practices, Projections brings together a diverse offering of short, medium, and feature-length work by some of today’s most essential and groundbreaking filmmakers and artists. Among the highlights are Gabriel Abrantes and Daniel Schmidt’s Diamantino, Projections Opening Night film and winner of the top prize at Cannes Critics Week this year; the North American premiere of Roi Soleil by Albert Serra (The Death of Louis XIV, NYFF54); and the fifth NYFF appearance from Tsai Ming-liang, who returns for the first time since 2013 with Your Face. The lineup also features the NYFF debuts of several Film Society of Lincoln Center alumni: Laura Huertas Millán (The Labyrinth), whose work was previously shown in Art of the Real and Neighboring Scenes; Akosua Adoma Owusu (Mahogany Too), whose short films have played both the New York African Film Festival and New Directors/New Films; Mariana Caló & Francisco Queimadela (Luminous Shadow), who screened as part of Art of the Real in 2016; and Ted Fendt (Classical Period) and Helena Wittmann (Ada Kaleh), both alum of New Directors/New Films. Two films in Projections will be shown on 35mm, including James Benning’s 1977 debut feature 11×14, in a new restoration by the Austrian Film Museum, and eight will be exhibited on 16mm celluloid, including a rare screening of Ericka Beckman’s short films Cinderella and You The Better, restored by the Academy Film Archive. A number of contemporary artists are featured in Projections, including new work from Jeremy Shaw, whose Quantification Trilogy imagines a dystopian social order; Ben Thorp Brown, studying Walter Gropius’s shoe warehouse in Gropius Memory Palace; Lawrence Abu Hamdan, whose Walled, Unwalled is staged within two soundproof booths; Beatrice Gibson, intimately reframing the current political climate in I Hope I’m Loud When I’m Dead; Andrew Norman Wilson, whose Kodak imagines a dialogue between George Eastman and a blind former film technician; James Richards, collaborating for the second time with Steve Reinke for their mid-length film What Weakens the Flesh Is the Flesh Itself; and Dora Garcia, making her feature film debut with Second Time Around, which shared the grand prize at FIDMarseille with Roi Soleil. Projections also showcases returning filmmakers Laida Lertxundi (Words, Planets), Ben Rivers (Trees Down Here), Janie Geiser (Valeria Street), Sylvia Schedelbauer (Wishing Well), Sky Hopinka (Fainting Spells), Mary Helena Clark (The Glass Note), and Jodie Mack, making her fifth Projections appearance with her debut feature The Grand Bizarre.

    56th New York Film Festival Projections Lineup

    FEATURES

    Opening Night Diamantino by Daniel Schmidt and Gabriel Abrantes U.S. Premiere, Portugal/France/Brazil, 2018, 92m When he misses the big goal on the world’s largest stage, chiseled fútbol star Diamantino (Carloto Cotta) flees the public eye; no longer able to conjure the giant fluffy puppies that guided him to superstardom, he is rendered a vessel without a purpose. And thus begins an unexpected journey toward love and enlightenment that involves cloning, the CIA, a Syrian refugee, and Diamantino’s nefarious twin sisters. A perversely pleasurable sendup of Brexit, genetic science, and the ongoing refugee crises, this dazzlingly original feature from longtime collaborators Daniel Schmidt and Gabriel Abrantes skewers its subjects with loving cinematic gusto. Walter Reade Theater, 165 W. 65th St. 11 x 14 by James Benning USA, 1977, 35mm, 82m James Benning’s first feature-length film announced the arrival of a radical new voice in the evolution of moving image art, and remains a landmark of the American avant-garde. Composed of 65 beautifully framed shots of provincial life and suburban domesticity, this 16mm-shot travelogue of the Midwestern United States advanced notions of structuralist cinema while forming a visual tapestry of the American heartland in all its rugged glory. Restored by the Austrian Film Museum in collaboration with Arsenal – Institute for Film and Video Art. Classical Period by Ted Fendt North American Premiere, USA, 2018, 16mm, 62m A group of young intellectuals partake in playful rounds of academic sparring in Fendt’s second feature, an über-cinephilic treatise on language, literature, and theology. Between Dante discussion groups and solitary linguistic exercises, Cal (Calvin Engime) engages his friends in a series of discursive debates that, while reaching far and wide across history, eventually correlate to more interpersonal concerns. Shot on rough-hewn 16mm with a formal rigor to match its characters’ studied personas, Fendt’s encyclopedic take on cinema stimulates the mind as much as it does the senses. The Grand Bizarre by Jodie Mack U.S. Premiere, USA, 2018, 16mm, 61m A film of boundless energy and ingenuity, the first feature by American animator Jodie Mack is a color-coordinated, rhythmically tuned fantasia for the senses. Filmed over five years and in as many countries, this all-analog travelogue finds thousands of textiles and printed designs dancing across locations from Mexico to Morocco to India. With handmade charm and a topical touch, Mack traces the industrial cogs of fabric production and consumption that make our material world turn. A motion picture in the truest sense. Roi Soleil by Albert Serra North American Premiere, Spain/Portugal, 2018, 62m Catalan director Albert Serra’s follow-up to his magisterial The Death of Louis XIV (NYFF54) is another forensic documentation of the Sun King’s final breaths. Here, however, Versailles is replaced with the glow of the gallery. Featuring Lluís Serrat (Sancho from Serra’s Honor of the Knights) in a filmed performance of a 2017 installation, Roi Soleil boldly crossbreeds performance art and observational cinema. As we watch the King writhe and moan—sometimes painfully, sometimes humorously—in mortal agony, his prone body bathed in bloodred fluorescents, the spectator’s role is increasingly called into question, implicating the viewer in the public consumption of this very private experience. Second Time Around / Segunda Vez by Dora García North American Premiere, Belgium/Norway, 2018, 94m Spanish contemporary artist Dora García’s first feature explores the intersection of politics, psychoanalysis, and performance as developed through various texts and artistic stagings of the 1960s and ’70s. Through evocative reconstructions of Argentinian theorist Oscar Masotta’s storied “happenings,” and lightly dramatized vignettes based on contemporaneous writings by Macedonio Fernández and Julio Cortázar (whose story “Segunda Vez” lends the film its title), García nimbly interweaves narrative and nonfiction devices to arrive at something wholly distinct from either––cinema as historical intervention. Your Face by Tsai Ming-liang North American Premiere, Taiwan, 2018, 76m Radically rethinking the tired talking-heads template, Tsai Ming-liang’s latest digital experiment turns the human face into a subject of dramatic intrigue. Comprised of a series of portrait shots of mostly anonymous individuals (Tsai devotees will no doubt recognize his long-time muse, Lee Kang-sheng), the film shrewdly deemphasizes language while reducing context to a bare minimum. In their place, the beauty and imperfections of each face take center stage. Accompanied by Ryuichi Sakamoto’s soundtrack of dynamically modulating drone frequencies, Tsai’s subjects variously speak, stare, and, at one point, sleep as the camera quietly registers the weight of personal history and accumulated experience writ beautifully across every last pore and crevasse.

    SHORTS

    Ericka Beckman Program Cinderella, USA, 1986, 16mm, 27m You The Better, USA, 1983, 16mm, 31m TRT: 58m Incorporating elements of theater, dance, and performative fantasy, the films of Ericka Beckman are unique documents of the conjoined trajectory of Pop Art and the American avant-garde. Whimsically examining issues of self-image, gender, and female sexuality, Beckman’s surrealist odysseys employ universal narrative threads as allegorical building blocks for ambitiously staged productions that variously utilize optical printing, in-camera editing, and early 3D mapping technology. Following a number of Super 8 shorts made while studying at CalArts, Beckman moved to 16mm for the proto-interactive gameplay adventure You The Better (1983) and a musical reimagining of Cinderella (1986), pocket epics that speak to her infectious creativity. Restored by the Academy Film Archive and BB Optics. Quantification Trilogy by Jeremy Shaw Quickeners, Germany, 2014, 37m Liminals, Germany, 2017, 31m I Can See Forever, Germany, 2018, 43m U.S. Premiere, TRT: 111m Under the guise of nonfiction, Shaw’s vérité-style trilogy imagines a dystopian—and increasingly familiar—social order in which marginalized societies strive against extinction. Through transcendental experiments and cathartic rituals, these future humans seek feelings of desire and faith that have been expunged from the species’ capacities. The medium-length Quickeners (2014), Liminals (2017), and his latest, I Can See Forever (2018), redefine the bounds of archival cinema, conveying sci-fi narratives through various retro-analogue formats and clinical voiceover narration.

    Program 1: Place Revisited

    A Return by James Edmonds Germany, 2018, 16mm, 6m James Edmonds’s intricately constructed 16mm montage film brings two disparate settings—Berlin and a village in the South of England—into the same cinematic headspace. Locating likenesses between soft light and overcast coasts, the comfort of sun-dappled interiors and the warmth of a tree-lined field, Edmonds both summons natural juxtapositions and creates unexpected harmony through deft superimpositions. Valeria Street by Janie Geiser North American Premiere, USA, 2018, 11m Initiated by an unearthed photograph of her father and his colleagues around a conference table in a generic mid-century office, Geiser’s evocative collage film charts a personal-political path through the recesses of America’s industrial ecosystem. Using animation and re-photography effects, Geiser presents an array of images (geometric diagrams, blueprints, live-action landscape shots) in a prismatic reflection on power structures in the workplace. Mahogany Too by Akosua Adoma Owusu USA/Ghana, 2018, 3m This vibrant, Nollywood-inspired spin on the 1975 Motown-produced movie Mahogany, features actress Esosa E vogueing through the city streets under the sign of Diana Ross’s iconic fashionista Tracy Chambers. Shot on warm 16mm, Akosua Adoma Owusu’s contemporary gloss on a beloved character celebrates her ever-progressive sense of style and self-assurance. Between Relating and Use by Nazli Dinçel Argentina/USA, 2018, 16mm, 9m In this ethical examination of ethnographic art, Dinçel dissects the thin line separating unconscious fantasy from cultural appropriation. Pairing the words of scholars Laura Mark and D.W. Winnicott with sensual 16mm images of the human body in direct contact with the natural environment, the film slowly turns the notion of fetishization into a tool for reflexive thought. Trees Down Here by Ben Rivers U.S. Premiere, UK, 2018, 35mm, 14m Ben Rivers investigates the oak-paneled buildings and birch-lined grounds of Cowan’s Court at Churchill College in this serene architectural study. His rhythmic montage—comprising site plans and construction models, images of animals and architecture—sketches an expansive view of a solitary environment. Eye of a Needle by Katherin McInnis World Premiere, USA, 2018, 5m Archival stills of the Great Depression come shuddering to life in Katherin McInnis’s work of photographic montage. Rapidly alternating, minutely offset images of young farm laborers in the American South create the illusion of movement around a cut-out focal point, matched by a scratch beat built on chasms of negative space. Wishing Well by Sylvia Schedelbauer Germany, 2018, 13m Sylvia Schedelbauer’s previously monochrome world comes bursting forth in full color in this hypnotic trip through the landscape of memory and adolescence, which conjoins original HD imagery and 16mm found footage of an anonymous young boy in the throes of discovery. Through superimpositions and flicker effects, the film traces a simultaneously interior and exterior path across disparate temporalities that nonetheless retains a bracing immediacy.

    Program 2: Strategies for Renewal

    Key, washer, coin by Alan Segal World Premiere, Argentina, 2018, 14m The formal and semantic languages of advertisements are dissected in this investigative essay that breaks the marketing model down to its component parts, highlighting the complex capitalist infrastructure that fuels our economic reality. Words, Planets by Laida Lertxundi U.S. Premiere, USA/Spain, 2018, 10m An ode to motherhood and nature’s cosmic energies, Laida Lertxundi’s enchanting diary film presents disparate scenes gathered from rural locales ranging from Havana to Devil’s Punchbowl. Inspired by the compositional strategies of Chinese painter Shih-t’ao, Lertxundi links her warmly saturated imagery through the words of Lucy Lippard and R.D. Laing and the recurrent skip of an infectious pop song, and in the process offers a gentle reminder of (mother) Earth’s boundless gifts. Life After Love by Zachary Epcar North American Premiere, USA, 2018, 8m In this serene study of lost love and natural light, parked cars in public spaces become sanctuaries for emotional renewal. Paired with reflective voiceover and strangely comforting self-help recordings, Zachary Epcar’s casually inventive images, highlighting sun-baked glass and asphalt surfaces, imbue the mid-afternoon heat with the promise of a better tomorrow. I Hope I’m Loud When I’m Dead by Beatrice Gibson U.S. Premiere, UK, 2018, 20m Reframing our current political moment in intimate terms, Gibson’s urgent snapshot of worldwide social calamities doubles as a document of practical resistance. In Gibson’s hands, the music of Pauline Oliveros and the words of poets CA Conrad and Eileen Myles imbue images of street riots, the Grenfell Fire, and the mass refugee migration with complexity and grace. The Air of the Earth in Your Lungs by Ross Meckfessel U.S. Premiere, USA/Japan, 2018, 16mm, 11m The real and the virtual fold together and apart until space itself is rendered immaterial in this slipstream of digital-modulated environments that brings together landscape photography, video game interfaces, and drone-conducted land surveys in brisk montage.

    Program 3: Trips to the Interior

    Fainting Spells by Sky Hopinka World Premiere, USA, 2018, 11m Sky Hopinka looks to native lore to take up the legend of the Xąwįska, or Indian Pipe Plant, a root used by the Ho-Chunk tribe to revive people who have fainted. Framed as an epistolary correspondence between imagined subjects, the film braids apocalyptic imagery and elegantly scrolling text into a hypnotic consideration of myth and memory. Chooka by Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour, and Ryan Ferko U.S. Premiere, Iran/Canada, 2018, 21m Shot in the Gilan Province of northern Iran, a region that saw the influx of hundreds of North American engineers commissioned to build a paper factory in 1973, Chooka meditates on the lingering effects of the era’s industrial expansion. Guided by the recollections of those whose roots stretch back to before the Revolution, the film creates illuminating connections between archival footage, new images of the factory ruins, and excerpts from a pair of contemporaneous films shot in the same area by Bahram Beyzaie. Ada Kaleh by Helena Wittmann U.S. Premiere, Germany, 2018, 14m This precisely calibrated domestic diorama alights upon the imagined futures of a group of anonymous young adults. In Helena Wittmann’s warmly rendered feat of formalist filmmaking, questions of time and the realities of space convene in languid interior pans, incremental shifts in light, and the private reflections of her subjects. The Labyrinth / El Laberinto by Laura Huertas Millán U.S. Premiere, Colombia/France, 2018, 21m A notorious drug lord leads the viewer on a tour of the bloodstained Colombian jungle and a most curious architectural landmark: an exact replica of the villa from ’80s soap opera Dynasty. Seamlessly intercutting enigmatic clips from the show with original 16mm landscape imagery, this revealing ethnographic study bridges an uncanny pop-historical divide.

    Program 4: Form and Function

    Mixed Signals by Courtney Stephens North American Premiere, USA, 2018, 16mm, 8m Stricken with an undisclosed illness, the narrator of this reflexive work draws evocative parallels between the darkened hulls of an industrial ocean liner and an increasingly disorienting mental state. Courtney Stephens was inspired by the nautical imagery and turbulent inner monologue of Hannah Weiner’s maritime code poems. Luminous Shadow / Sombra Luminosa by Mariana Caló and Francisco Queimadela North American Premiere, Portugal, 2018, 22m A meditation on the human form and its many representations over the centuries, this archaeological essay compiles images of statues, photos, sketches, and news clippings from Portugal’s Jose de Guimarães International Arts Centre. The filmmakers conjure a slipstream of interrelated origin stories via brief bits of narration and tableaux of various animal and mineral elements. The Glass Note by Mary Helena Clark U.S. Premiere, USA, 2018, 9m In this elliptical audiovisual diary, cinema’s extrasensory capacity is given surprising form. Here, what we see (the human throat, Gothic statuary, digitally generated furniture) often contradicts what we hear (birdsong, tightly wound rope, lithophonic stones), but the combined effect speaks to a utopian and universal ideal of filmic language. Walled, Unwalled by Lawrence Abu Hamdan U.S. Premiere, Germany, 2018, 21m Lawrence Abu Hamdan finds in a former GDR state radio station a perfect conduit for his ongoing cinematic interrogation of the political dimensions of sound. Centered on a series of court cases that used auditory or sensory evidence based on information gathered through walls, the film is staged within two soundproof booths, in which a live narrator recites witness testimonies while projected text and images create organic superimpositions. It’s an exploration of the fundamental abstractions of seeing and listening.

    Program 5: Persistent Analogues

    Kodak by Andrew Norman Wilson World Premiere, USA, 2018, 29m A semi-biographical fiction inspired by his father’s work at one of Kodak’s first processing labs, Wilson’s speculative gloss on the evolution of photochemical science entwines multiple perspectives and personas. Co-written by James N. Kienitz Wilkins, Kodak imagines a dialogue between a blind, mentally unstable former film technician and George Eastman himself, recordings of whom play out over a procession of photographs, home video footage, vintage Kodak ads, and animations. What Weakens the Flesh Is the Flesh Itself by Steve Reinke and James Richards U.S. Premiere, Wales/Germany/USA/Canada, 2017, 40m The second collaborative work by Steve Reinke and James Richards begins as an intimate look at the autoerotic photography of Albrecht Becker, an artist imprisoned by the Nazis for homosexual behavior. Soundtracked by a mix of free jazz percussion, acoustic balladry, and droning synth patches, the work blossoms into a meditation on masculinity and the relationship between the human form and its persistent analogues, forever preserved in archives.

    AMPHITHEATER

    From Its Mouth Came a River of High-End Residential Appliances by Jon Wang U.S. Premiere, USA, 2018, 13m Hundreds of feet in the air, a drone approaches a row of skyscrapers along Hong Kong’s affluent southern coast. The target: giant holes in the buildings’ facades kept clear for the passage of mythological dragons. Over three successive trips, an affectless voice offers thoughts on feng shui architecture, ideological resistance, and notions of queer identity. Gropius Memory Palace by Ben Thorp Brown North American Premiere, USA, 2017, 20m Part architectural film, part ASMR exercise, this observational study of Walter Gropius’s famed shoe warehouse, The Fagus Factory, is a meditation in every sense. Opening against soft white light and the soothing sounds of a hypnotherapist’s voice, Ben Thorp Brown’s film transports the audience inside Gropius’s landmark. Droning ambience and languid images of laborers at work foster a psychoanalytic space through which the viewer may deeply consider the nature of memory and its constant negotiation between context and content.

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  • Venice Film Festival to Screen Vanessa Redgrave’s Latest Film THE ASPERN PAPERS [Trailer]

    The Aspern Papers, Vanessa Redgrave The 2018 Venice Film Festival will host a special screening of Vanessa Redgrave’s latest film The Aspern Papers, directed by Julien Landais, as part of Tribute to Redgrave on the occasion of her Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement 2018 award. In addition to Vanessa Redgrave, the film stars Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Joely Richardson. Julien Landais directed The Aspern Papers from a script he wrote with Jean Pavans and Hannah Bhuiya, which is based on Pavans’ adaptation of the novella by Henry James. Poppy Delevingne, Jon Kortajarena and Lois Robbins co-star alongside Morgane Polanski, Barbara Meier, Alice Aufray, and Nicolas Hau. The Aspern Papers The Aspern Papers is a story of obsession, grandeur lost, and dreams of Byronic adventures. Set in Venice in the late 19th century, it centres on Morton Vint (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), an ambitious editor who is fascinated by the romantic poet Jeffrey Aspern (Jon Kortajarena) and by his icon’s short and wildly romantic life. Having travelled from America to Venice, he is determined to get his hands on the letters Aspern wrote to his beautiful lover and muse, Juliana Bordereau (Vanessa Redgrave). Now the ferocious guardian of their secrets Juliana lives in a Venetian palazzo with her niece (Joely Richardson) who she seems to control and Morton tries to manipulate. But when the ambitious adventurer trifles with Miss Tina’s affections she learns to see through his scheme. The 75th Venice International Film Festival will be held from August 29th to September 8th, 2018 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NssUm89BXII

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  • 2018 Locarno Festival Awards – Yeo Siew Hua’s A LAND IMAGINED Wins Golden Lepoard

    [caption id="attachment_31373" align="aligncenter" width="1200"] A Land Imagined by Yeo Siew Hua[/caption] The 2018 edition of the Locarno Festival ended with A Land Imagined by director Yeo Siew Hua being crowned the winner of the Golden Lepoard for Best Film. In A Land Imagined, Wang, a lonely construction worker from China, goes missing at a Singapore land reclamation site after forming a virtual friendship with a mysterious gamer. Lok, a police investigator, has to uncover the truth in order to find him. Carlo Chatrian, Artistic Director commented “Held in extremely high temperatures, Locarno71 was a rich and diversified edition, just as it is in the tradition of a festival which is not afraid to approach extremes and to combine a smile with reflection. The guests who brought their experience and congeniality, were joined by new ideas that were well received, I think about the critical success of the film La Flor or the wonderful response of the audience to the night screening of the television series by Bruno Dumont, for example. In the aesthetic search for a form suited to a rapidly changing actuality, where images seem omnipresent, the award-winning films tell of a world where man is still the measure of all things. With 12 award-winning women – among two Swiss directors – out of 25 awards, the 71st edition confirmed that Locarno is a festival where one plans the future”. The 72nd Locarno Festival will be held from August 7 to 17, 2019.

    Concorso internazionale

    Pardo d’oro (Golden Leopard) A LAND IMAGINED by YEO Siew Hua, Singapore / France / The Netherlands Premio Speciale della giuria (Special Jury Prize) M by Yolande Zauberman, France Pardo per la miglior regia (Leopard for Best Direction) TARDE PARA MORIR JOVEN by Dominga Sotomayor, Chile / Brazil / Argentina / The Netherlands / Qatar Pardo per la miglior interpretazione femminile (Pardo for Best Actress) Andra Guți for ALICE T. by Radu Muntean, Romania / France / Sweden Pardo per la miglior interpretazione maschile (Pardo for Best Actor) KI Joobong for GANGBYUN HOTEL (Hotel by the River) by HONG Sangsoo, South Korea Special Mention RAY & LIZ by Richard Billingham, United Kingdom

    Concorso Cineasti del presente

    Pardo d’oro Cineasti del presente for the best film CHAOS by Sara Fattahi, Austria / Syria / Lebanon / Qatar Premio per il miglior regista emergente – Città e Regione di Locarno (Prize for the Best Emerging Director) DEAD HORSE NEBULA by Tarık Aktaş, Turkey Premio Speciale della Giuria Ciné+ Cineasti del presente (Special Jury Prize) CLOSING TIME by Nicole Vögele, Switzerland / Germany Special Mentions FAUSTO by Andrea Bussmann, Mexico / Canada Rose, character of L’ÉPOQUE by Matthieu Bareyre, France

    Signs of Life

    Signs of Life Award ELECTRONIC-ART.FOUNDATION to the Best Film HAI SHANG CHENG SHI (The Fragile House) by LIN Zi, China Fundación Casa Wabi – Mantarraya Award LE DISCOURS D’ACCEPTATION GLORIEUX DE NICOLAS CHAUVIN by Benjamin Crotty, France

    First Feature

    Swatch First Feature Award (Prize for Best First Feature) ALLES IST GUT by Eva Trobisch, Germany Swatch Art Peace Hotel Award RŪGŠTUS MIŠKAS (Acid Forest) by Rugilė Barzdžiukaitė, Lithuania Special Mention TIRSS, RIHLAT ALSOO’OUD ILA ALMAR’I (Erased, Ascent of the Invisible) by Ghassan Halwani, Lebanon

    Pardi di domani

    Concorso internazionale

    Pardino d’oro for the Best International Short Film – Premio SRG SSR D’UN CHÂTEAU L’AUTRE by Emmanuel Marre, Belgium / France Pardino d’argento SRG SSR for the Concorso Internazionale HEART OF HUNGER by Bernardo Zanotta, The Netherlands Pardi di domani Best Direction Prize – PIANIFICA EL LABERINTO by Laura Huertas Millán, France / Columbia / USA Medien Patent Verwaltung AG Award JE SORS ACHETER DES CIGARETTES by Osman Cerfon, France Special Mention LA MÁXIMA LONGITUD DE UN PUENTE by Simón Vélez, Columbia / Argentina

    Concorso nazionale

    Pardino d’oro for the Best Swiss Short Film – Premio Swiss Life LOS QUE DESEAN by Elena López Riera, Switzerland / Spain (Locarno Short Film Nominee For The European Film Awards 2018) Pardino d’argento Swiss Life for the Concorso nazionale ABIGAÏL by Magdalena Froger, Switzerland Best Swiss Newcomer Award ICI LE CHEMIN DES ÂNES by Lou Rambert Preiss, Switzerland Prix du Public UBS BLACKKKLANSMAN by Spike Lee, USA Variety Piazza Grande Award LE VENT TOURNE by Bettina Oberli, Switzerland, France

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  • Michael Zhang Wins 54th Chicago International Film Festival Poster Design Contest

    Michael Zhang Wins 54th Chicago International Film Festival Poster Design Contest The Chicago International Film Festival selected Chicago’s own Michael Zhang as the winner of 2018’s poster design competition.  Zhang’s design will be the signature look of the Festival, held October 10 to 21, 2018. Zhang won a truly global contest, which in the past three years has featured winners from Scotland, Taiwan and the Netherlands. His design was chosen from more than 200 submissions spanning 30 countries. The poster depicts the façade of a vintage movie theater, presenting the exciting thrill of a neon-lit marquee and a classic art deco design. This year’s event tagline, “Everybody Loves Movies,” runs across the marquee alongside the Festival’s beloved “eyes” logo. Zhang, a Chicago resident, also incorporated the City of Chicago’s time-honored four-star flag design into the poster. “This competition is meant to gather diverse perspectives on what the Festival is and what it means to people,” Cinema/Chicago Founder and CEO Michael Kutza said. “Michael’s design captures the glamour and allure of a visit to a classic movie house while also being very contemporary, and we loved his personal connection to the art, Chicago and the Film Festival itself.” “I’m honored and so excited to see it in print at the Festival. I’ve been attending the Festival for a few years now, so this really means a lot to me,” Zhang said. “No matter what theater you go to, the excitement of marquee lights are a part of every movie-goer’s experience. For me, the lights were always a sign that I was about to leave the real world behind and get lost in a story on screen. When designing this poster, I wanted to evoke a similar sense of wonder and nostalgia.” As the winner of the competition, Michael will receive a $2,500 USD prize and his design will be utilized in marketing materials throughout the city, including on the cover of the Festival guide, posters and merchandise.

    Michael Zhang

    Zhang is a graphic designer and illustrator living in Chicago. He volunteered at the 53rd Chicago International Film Festival in 2017 and studied graphic design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is currently freelancing and available for design or illustration work. You can find more of his work by following him on Instagram

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  • 12 Latin American Films to Compete for Horizontes Award at 2018 San Sebastian International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_31363" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]Florianópolis Dream (Sueño Florianópolis) Florianópolis Dream (Sueño Florianópolis)[/caption] Twelve films produced, directed or set in Latin America will compete for the Horizontes Award at the 2018 San Sebastian International Film Festival. Las herederas (Marcelo Martinessi), opening film of the section, Familia sumergida (Immersed Family, María Alché), La noche de 12 años (A Twelve-Year-Night, Álvaro Brechner), Figuras (Figures, Eugenio Canevari), Cómprame un revólver (Buy Me a Gun, Julio Hernández Cordón), Enigma (Ignacio Juricic Merillán), Sueño Florianópolis (Ana Katz), Ferrugem / Rust (Aly Muritiba), Nuestro tiempo (Our Time, Carlos Reygadas), Marilyn (Martín Rodríguez Redondo), Los silencios (Beatriz Seigner) and El motoarrebatador (The Snatch Thief, Agustín Toscano) make up the Horizontes Latinos selection at the 66th edition of the San Sebastian Festival.

    Films in Horizontes Latinos at 66th San Sebastian Festival

    LAS HEREDERAS MARCELO MARTINESSI (PARAGUAY – GERMANY – BRAZIL – URUGUAY – NORWAY – FRANCE ) Cast: Ana Brun, Margarita Irún, Ana Ivanova, Nilda Gonzalez, María Martins, Alicia Guerra, Yverá Zayas OPENING NIGHT FILM For more than 30 years, Chela and Martina have lived together, like the daughters of families in a well-placed social position: they had inherited enough money to live comfortably with no need to work. But now, when both are over 60, the money has run out. When Martina is sent to prison for being unable to pay her debts, Chela starts providing older women from well-off families with a taxi service which helps her to get by. That’s how she meets Josefina, a glamorous woman 20 years younger than herself, with whom she immediately hits it off. The connection changes the relationship Chela has with herself and with those around her, triggering an internal revolution. CÓMPRAME UN REVÓLVER (BUY ME A GUN ) JULIO HERNÁNDEZ CORDÓN (MEXICO) Cast: Matilde Hernández Guinea, Rogelio Sosa Mexico, sometime in a near future… Women are disappearing and a girl called Huck wears a mask to hide her gender. She helps her dad, a tormented addict, to take care of an abandoned baseball camp where the narcos gather to play. The father tries to protect her as he can. With the help of her friends, a group of lost boys who have the power of camouflaging themselves in the windy desert, Huck has to fight to overcome her reality and to defeat the local capo. EL MOTOARREBATADOR (THE SNATCH THIEF) AGUSTÍN TOSCANO (ARGENTINA – URUGUAY – FRANCE) Cast: Sergio Prina, Liliana Juárez, León Zelarrayán, Daniel Elías, Camila Plaate, Pilar Benítez Vibart, Mirella Pascual IV Europe-Latin America Co-production Forum In the Argentinian city of Tucumán, Miguel is making a living as a “motochorro”, a thief who snatches people’s belongings from his motorbike. When he steals the purse of Elena, an old woman, he ends up hurting her badly. After the brutal incident, Miguel is plagued by guilt and unable to forget about his victim. In an attempt to make things right, he conceals his true identity from the old woman and starts to take care of the injured and unsuspecting Elena. The closer he gets to her the more he becomes entangled in his own lies. Afraid of telling Elena the truth, Miguel continues to be haunted by his past and is unable to find true redemption. ENIGMA IGNACIO JURICIC MERILLÁN (CHILE) Cast: Roxana Campos, Rodrigo Pérez, Paula Zúñiga, Claudia Cabezas Films in Progress 33 Nancy receives the offer from a TV programme on unsolved mysteries to participate in the episode telling the story of her daughter, a young lesbian beaten to death, a crime for which no-one has been declared guilty eight years after it was committed. Nancy confronts her family and each one’s version of the events, as she decides whether or not to participate in the space and learn more about the person her daughter was. FAMILIA SUMERGIDA (IMMERSED FAMILY) MARIA ALCHÉ (ARGENTINA – BRAZIL – GERMANY – NORWAY) Cast: Mercedes Morán, Esteban Bigliardi, Marcelo Subiotto, Ia Arteta, Laila Maltz, Federico Sack Films in Progress 32 It’s summertime in an empty and heated Buenos Aires. Marcela’s world is shaken as her sister passes away, and it becomes estranged and unfamiliar. While still grieving, she will have to deal with clearing out her sister’s apartment. Willing to help out, Nacho, a young friend of her daughter’s, bursts in. His presence gives way to shared road trips and adventures. During these confusing days, people and conversations from another time will get intertwined, leading her to some self-questioning, as the imminence of everyday life pushes in. FERRUGEM / RUST ALY MURITIBA (BRAZIL) Cast: Tifanny Dopke, Giovanni Di Lorenzi, Pedro Inoue, Enrique Diaz, Clarissa Kiste, Dudah Azevedo Films in Progress 32 Tati is a 16-year-old girl, joyful and lively, who likes to share her happiest moments on social networks. She eagerly looks forward to a weekend trip with her school friends. She knows this may be a good opportunity to get to know Renet better, her mysterious classmate. Renet belongs to a family where things are not openly spoken, merely suggested, and most often in silence. The current unspoken matter between father and son is the departure of Renet’s mother, who left David, her ex-husband, caring alone for the boy. David is a teacher at the same school where Tati and Renet study. The hot topic at school is a video shared among the students in which the girl appears in a compromising situation. FIGURAS (FIGURES) EUGENIO CANEVARI (SPAIN – ARGENTINA) Cast: Stella Maris Santo, Francisco Dominguez, Valeria Ballerini Stella, an argentinian immigrant living in Spain, suffers from Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and needs constant attention. Paco, her longtime partner, helps her to move, eat, and communicate. Valeria, Stella’s daughter, visits them sporadically and, anguished by the visible deterioration of her mother, finds a manner of escape by going out to parties. While they wait for an answer about an opportunity for subsidized housing, they attempt to cope with the situation through humor and love. A real family performing in a real story. LA NOCHE DE 12 AÑOS (A TWELVE-YEAR-NIGHT) ÁLVARO BRECHNER (SPAIN – ARGENTINA – FRANCE – URUGUAY) Cast: Antonio de la Torre, Chino Darín, Alfonso Tort IV Europe-Latin America Co-production Forum September 1973. Uruguay is under the control of military dictatorship. The Tupamaros guerrilla movement has been crushed and out of action for a year. Its members imprisoned and tortured. One autumn night, three Tupamaros prisoners are taken from their prison cells in a secret military operation that will last for twelve years. From then on they will be hauled around different camps all over the country, subject to a macabre experiment; a new kind of torture aiming to break the limits of their mental resistance. The military order is clear: “since we couldn’t kill them, we’re going to drive them insane”. For more than a decade, the prisoners will be kept in isolation in tiny cells where they spend most of their time with hoods on, tied up, deprived of their basic needs, with hardly any food, and seeing how their senses are reduced to a minimum. With their bodies and minds pushed beyond the limits, La noche de 12 años (A Twelve-year Night) tells us how they managed to survive. LOS SILENCIOS BEATRIZ SEIGNER (BRAZIL – FRANCE – COLOMBIA) Cast: Marleyda Soto, Enrique Diaz, Maria Paula Tabares Peña, Adolfo Savilvino Films in Progress 33 Nuria, Fabio and their mother Amparo arrive in a small island in the middle of Amazonia, at the border of Brazil, Colombia and Peru. They ran away from the Colombian armed conflict in which their father disappeared. One day, he reappears in their new house. The family is haunted by this strange secret and discovers the island is peopled with ghosts. MARILYN MARTÍN RODRÍGUEZ REDONDO (ARGENTINA – CHILE) Cast: Walter Rodríguez, Catalina Saavedra, Germán de Silva, Ignacio Giménez, Germán Baudino, Andrew Bargsted, Rodolfo García Werner, Josefina Paredes III Europe-Latin America Co-production Forum Films in Progress 31 Marcos, a 17 year-old farmhand, discovers his sexuality in a hostile atmosphere. Nicknamed “Marilyn” by the other village teenagers, he becomes an object of desire and discrimination. Marcos feels increasingly more penned in. NUESTRO TIEMPO (OUR TIME) CARLOS REYGADAS (MEXICO – FRANCE – ALEMANIA – DENMARK – SWEDEN) Cast: Carlos Reygadas, Natalia López, Eleazar Reygadas, Rut Reygadas, Phil Burgers A family lives in the Mexican countryside raising fighting bulls. Esther is in charge of running the ranch, while her husband Juan, a world-renowned poet, raises and selects the beasts. When Esther becomes infatuated with a horse trainer, named Phil, the couple struggles to stride through the emotional crisis. SUEÑO FLORIANÓPOLIS (FLORIANÓPOLIS DREAM) ANA KATZ (ARGENTINA – BRAZIL – FRANCE) Cast: Mercedes Morán, Gustavo Garzón, Marco Ricca, Andréa Beltrão Couple Pedro and Lucrecia travel to Brazil with their teenage children. They have recently decided to separate, but to spend the holidays together as planned all the same. Marco, the Brazilian renting their summer house to the family, and Larissa, his ex-girlfriend, befriend Pedro and Lucrecia. On the beaches, among the waves, karaoke and water excursions, overlapping romances emerge together with an attraction that will rub off on the children on all sides. Parents and siblings have fun as they test the “Brazilian happiness”. While endless samba awakens the tourists from their lethargy, they separate to indulge in the passion and exploration, in the mirror, of more liberal and unexpected versions of themselves.

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  • Lin Zi’s THE FRAGILE HOUSE Wins Locarno Festival’s Signs of Life Award

    [caption id="attachment_31358" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Fragile House (Hai shang cheng shi) The Fragile House (Hai shang cheng shi)[/caption] The Fragile House (Hai shang cheng shi) by Lin Zi, China is the winner of The Signs of Life Award ELECTRONIC-ART.FOUNDATION for the Best Film 2018 at the Locarno Festival. The Signs of Life jury awarded Lin Zi film for “an unnerving portrait of one family’s estrangement and avarice within China’s burgeoning upper-middle class”. The Fundación Casa Wabi – Mantarraya Award was given to director Benjamin Crotty for The Glorious Acceptance of Nicolas Chauvin (Le Discours d’acceptation glorieux de Nicolas Chauvin), France “a film that plays with fact, legend — and fake news — in inventively madcap ways.” Signs of Life aims to explore new grounds, narrative forms and innovative cinematic languages. Originally out-of-competition when founded in 2014, Signs of Life is a competitive section since last year. This year’s jury is composed by Emilie Bujès, festival director (Switzerland), Tiziana Finzi, curator (Italy) and Josh Siegel, curator (USA).

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  • Yorgos Lanthimos’ THE FAVOURITE Starring Emma Stone, Rachel Weisz to UK Premiere at London Film Festival [Trailer]

    The Favourite The Favourite, directed by Academy Award nominee Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Olivia Colman, Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz, will receive its UK premiere as this year’s American Express Gala at the 62nd BFI London Film Festival on Thursday October 18. It’s the early 18th century and England is at war with the French. Nevertheless, duck racing and pineapple eating are thriving at court. A frail Queen Anne (Olivia Colman) occupies the throne and her close friend Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz) governs the country in her stead while tending to Anne’s ill health and mercurial temper. When a new servant Abigail (Emma Stone) arrives, her charm endears her to both Sarah and the queen, and Abigail sees a chance at a return to her aristocratic roots. As the politics of war become intense, so too does intrigue at the palace. Abigail is determined to fulfil her ambitions and she will not let woman, man, politics or rabbit stand in her way. The Favourite, a film by Academy Award nominated Yorgos Lanthimos, starring BAFTA and Golden Globe winner Olivia Colman, Academy Award winner Emma Stone and Academy Award winner Rachel Weisz. The Favourite also stars BAFTA nominee Nicholas Hoult, Joe Alwyn, James Smith, Primetime Emmy winner Mark Gatiss and Jenny Rainsford. The Favourite will be released in cinemas across the UK and Ireland on January 1, 2019. The 62nd BFI London Film Festival  takes place from Wednesday October 10 to Sunday October 21, 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJ1cQqkdiqo

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  • Martin Sulik’s THE INTERPRETER is Slovakia’s Entry in Oscar Race for Best Foreign Film [Trailer]

    Martin Sulik’s The Interpreter has been selected by the Slovak Film and Television Academy (SFTA) to represent Slovakia in the category of Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards.

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  • Filmmaker Christi Cooper Wins Inaugural SFFILM Environmental Fellowship

    [caption id="attachment_31348" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Youth v. Gov Youth v. Gov[/caption] SFFILM awarded its inaugural SFFILM Environmental Fellowship along with the $25,000 cash prize to filmmaker Christi Cooper and her documentary Youth v. Gov. Cooper will also receive a year of mentorship and services to support the development, production, and impact campaign for the film. The SFFILM Environmental Fellowship in partnership with Paul G. Allen’s Vulcan Productions is geared towards mid-career filmmakers with a feature documentary project in development or early production that focuses on pressing environmental or conservation issues. Cooper is an Emmy Award-winning cinematographer with a passion for transforming complex issues into compelling storytelling. Youth v. Gov will chronicle a landmark lawsuit brought by 21 youths who are suing the U.S. government and fossil fuel industry for creating a climate emergency and endangering their futures. Youth v. Gov was selected from a field of 70+ submissions by a committee of film and environmental experts from SFFILM, Vulcan Productions, Sierra Magazine, EarthX and the Redford Center. “Talented filmmakers are telling powerful stories about climate change and the environment, and we are proud to be able to help bring this particular story to life via this new partnership with SFFILM,” said Carole Tomko, general manager and creative director of Vulcan Productions. “We support Christi’s incredibly timely film and recognize the importance of providing filmmakers financial and creative support.” “We’re thrilled to partner with Vulcan to add to our commitment to the crucial early development stage of this documentary and elevate emerging voices tackling such significant issues of the environment and conservation,” added Caroline von Kühn, Director of Artist Development at SFFILM. “Through this process, it was really quite encouraging to see how many talented filmmakers are out there tackling these critical issues, but we are especially excited to support Christi and this timely, inspiring story of the next generation fighting for the future of our climate.” “We are incredibly honored for this needed support to continue documenting this important story,” said Cooper. “We are once again at a point in history where youth are rising up and demanding change, from gun reform to social justice. These youth plaintiffs are on the frontlines of the climate crisis in our highest courts of law, holding their government accountable to protect their rights and inspiring other youth to take action. This story also has the power to change our discourse on climate change in a time of intense partisan divide, and to reframe it as a paramount responsibility of our government to protect our future.” The SFFILM Environmental Fellowship supports a documentary filmmaker over the course of six months who is creating a powerful story about conservation and the environment. In addition to the $25,000 grant, the fellow will travel to San Francisco and Seattle to participate in filmmaking and environmental workshops and to cultivate connections within the entertainment industry. The program consists of three key components: a residency at SFFILM’s FilmHouse for artistic support and mentorship; guidance from a dedicated environmental advisor; and development of a community outreach campaign and educational plan. The fellowship will run from June to December 2018. An Emmy-award winning cinematographer, Christi Cooper grew up in Boulder, Colorado, where she was fortunate to be surrounded by people that nurtured and helped her develop a strong connection to nature and the outdoors. She obtained an M.S. in Microbiology from Colorado State University and a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the University of Regensburg, Germany. After significant time in basic research and teaching at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, she made the decision to pursue her dream of an MFA in Science and Nature Filmmaking at Montana State University. In addition to communicating sometimes very complex issues through storytelling and visual narrative, her primary goals are to combine her research skills and in-depth knowledge of science with her desire to create compelling narratives focused on raising awareness about socio-political issues. In what little “free” time she has, she enjoys being a mother and a partner, growing her own food, and relishing in the incredible beauty and lifestyle of Montana. In 2015, 21 young plaintiffs, ages 8 to 19, filed suit against the U.S. government asserting a willful violation of their constitutional rights. Youth v. Gov follows this turbulent legal battle as the government and fossil fuel industry take extraordinary measures to get the case dismissed. The case will go to trial on October 29, 2018 in Eugene, Oregon.

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  • 36 International Short Films in Short Cuts Program of 2018 Toronto International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_31342" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Ambassador's Wife The Ambassador’s Wife[/caption] 36 short films will make up the International portion of the Short Cuts program at this year’s 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. The lineup of provocative, exciting shorts includes 14 World Premieres and works from 32 countries, in 19 different languages, with a strong array of new voices. Of the 36 films in the selection, 18 were directed or co-directed by women. Highlights among the selection of live-action narrative films include Reed Van Dyk’s Interior, a bold follow-up to his recent Academy Award–nominated DeKalb Elementary ; A.V. Rockwell’s vivid and vital drama Feathers; Héctor Silva Núñez’s exceptional exploration of identity in The Foreign Body; and Charles Williams’ All These Creatures, an emotionally wrenching drama that won the Short Film Palme d’Or at Cannes. The 2018 program also includes such fascinating short documentaries as Theresa Traore Dahlberg’s The Ambassador’s Wife, an elegant study of a woman who represents the complexities of class, women’s roles, and post-colonialism, and Jayisha Patel’s Circle, a haunting documentary that tells the horrifying story of a young woman caught in a cycle of abuse. Amazing animations are also prominent at this year’s Festival. Standouts include: Emma de Swaef and Marc James Roels’ This Magnificent Cake! , a wildly ambitious and original stop-motion marvel that uses stories set in the Belgian Congo in the 19th century to reveal the absurdity and horror of European colonialism in Africa; Anca Damian’s free-flowing yet astoundingly intricate The Call; and Donato Sansone’s Bavure, a bravura display of eye-popping, mind-bending, and body-morphing ingenuity. The 43rd Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 6 to 16, 2018.

    International Films in 2018 Toronto International Film Festival Short Cuts Program

    A New Year ( Akhali Tseli) George Sikharulidze | Georgia World Premiere A Wedding Day ( Un jour de mariage) Elias Belkeddar | Algeria/France North American Premiere All Inclusive Corina Schwingruber Ilić | Switzerland North American Premiere All These Creatures Charles Williams | Australia North American Premiere The Ambassador’s Wife Theresa Traore Dahlberg | Burkina Faso/Sweden Canadian Premiere Ballad of Blood and Two White Buckets Yosep Anggi Noen | Indonesia World Premiere Bavure Donato Sansone | France World Premiere Birdie Shelly Lauman | Australia International Premiere The Call ( Telefonul) Anca Damian | Romania North American Premiere Circle Jayisha Patel | United Kingdom/Canada/India North American Premiere Dodgy Dave Charlotte Regan | United Kingdom World Premiere Dulce Guille Isa, Angello Faccini | Colombia/USA International Premiere Everything calms down ( Todo se calma) Virginia Scaro | Argentina World Premiere Facing North ( Bukiikakkono) Tukei Muhumuza | USA/Uganda World Premiere The Fall ( La Chute) Boris Labbé | France North American Premiere Feathers A.V. Rockwell | USA World Premiere The Field Sandhya Suri | France/United Kingdom/India Canadian Premiere The Foreign Body ( El Destetado) Héctor Silva Núñez | Venezuela/France World Premiere Fuck You Anette Sidor | Sweden North American Premiere Guaxuma Nara Normande | France/Brazil North American Premiere Hector Malot: The Last Day of the Year ( Ektoras Malo: I Teleftea Mera Tis Chronias) Jacqueline Lentzou | Greece North American Premiere The Imminent Immanent ( Baga’t Diri Tuhay Ta’t Pamahungpahung ) Carlo Francisco Manatad | Philippines/Singapore/Italy World Premiere Interior ( Interiør) Reed Van Dyk | Norway/USA World Premiere Judgement Raymund Ribay Gutierrez | Philippines North American Premiere L’été et tout le reste Sven Bresser | Netherlands North American Premiere Lou Clara Balzary | USA World Premiere Old Thing ( Ha’Alte-Zachen) Roni Bahat | Israel International Premiere The Orphan ( O Órfão) Carolina Markowicz | Brazil North American Premiere Reneepoptosis Renee Zhan | Japan/USA North American Premiere Shadow Cut Lucy Suess | New Zealand North American Premiere Shinaab: Part II Lyle Corbine Jr. | USA World Premiere This Magnificent Cake! ( Ce Magnifique Gâteau!) Emma de Swaef, Marc James Roels | Belgium/France/Netherlands Canadian Premiere To Plant a Flag Bobbie Peers | Norway/Iceland World Premiere Umbra ( Tariki) Saeed Jafarian | Iran North American Premiere Viktoría Brúsi Ólason | Iceland International Premiere Winners Bitch Sam Gurry | USA World Premiere

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