• Documentary RAT FILM, Uses Rats to Explore History of Baltimore, Gets September Release Date | Trailer

    Rat Film Rat Film is a feature-length documentary that uses the rat to explore the history of Baltimore. The film directed by Theo Anthony will open in theaters on September 15, in New York at Film Society at Lincoln Center, and Baltimore at Parkway Theater. Across walls, fences, and alleys, rats not only expose our boundaries of separation but make homes in them.  Rat Film is a feature-length documentary that uses the rat—as well as the humans that love them, live with them, and kill them–to explore the history of Baltimore. “There’s never been a rat problem in Baltimore, it’s always been a people problem.” Rat Film director Theo Anthony is a writer, photographer, and filmmaker currently based in Baltimore, MD. His work has been featured by the The Atlantic, Vice, Agence-France Presse (AFP), and other international media outlets. His films have received premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival, Locarno International Film Festival, Rotterdam International Film Festival, and Anthology Film Archives. In 2015, he was named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 New Faces of Independent Film”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mDy3Mtot7IA

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  • Sundance 2017 Documentary SCHOOL LIFE on Irish Boarding School, Sets Release Date | Trailer

    School Life The documentary School Life is a charming portrait of a year in the life of the only primary-age boarding school in Ireland and the two inspirational teachers at its heart. Directed by Irish husband-and-wife filmmakers Neasa Ní Chianáin and David Rane, the documentary was a favorite of the 2017 Sundance Film Festival (where it was known as In Loco Parentis).  School Life will open in New York at the IFC Center on Friday, September 8, with additional cities to follow. School Life Poster Headfort, a school not unlike Hogwarts with its 18th century buildings, secret doors and magical woodlands, has been home to John and Amanda Leyden for 46 years and a backdrop to their extraordinary careers. For John, rock music is just another subject alongside math, English and Latin, all of which are taught in a collaborative and often hilarious fashion. For his wife Amanda, the key to connecting with children is the book, and she uses all means to snare the young minds. The level of attention and the concern the Leydens have for their students lead to some remarkable developmental transformations as the children journey from being homesick and afraid to confident young people, tearful upon realizing that school is over and they must go home. As John and Amanda ponder retirement, the film poses a quietly profound question: Will their intimate and caring cultivation of future generations live on, or will it vanish like so many community-centered practices?

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  • Watch Trailer + Poster for Sundance Award-Winning Indie Drama CROWN HEIGHTS

    Crown Heights The official trailer and poster is here for the 2017 Sundance Film Festival award-winning indie drama Crown Heights, directed by Matt Ruskin and starring Lakeith Stanfield as Colin Warner, a man wrongful convicted in New York in the 1980s.  The film also starring Nnamdi Asomugha, Nestor Carbonell, Natalie Paul, Bill Camp, and Amari Cheatom, is adapted from the popular “This American Life” podcast. Crown Heights will open in select theaters on August 25th.  Crown Heights Poster In the spring of 1980, a teenager is gunned down in the streets of Flatbush, Brooklyn. The police pressure a child witness to identify a suspect. As a result, Colin Warner, an 18-year-old kid from nearby Crown Heights, is wrongfully convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. Colin’s childhood friend Carl ‘KC’ King devotes his life to fighting for Colin’s freedom. He works on appeals, takes loans for lawyer fees and becomes a legal courier to learn the court system. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgrFRyMsWiY

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  • SFFILM Selects 10 Finalists for 2017 SFFILM Documentary Film Fund Grants

    [caption id="attachment_23721" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Feeling of Being Watched The Feeling of Being Watched[/caption] SFFILM has selected ten finalists for the 2017 SFFILM Documentary Film Fund which will award $125,000 to support feature-length documentaries in postproduction. The SFFILM Documentary Film Fund is a partnership with the Jenerosity Foundation and was created to support singular nonfiction film work that is distinguished by compelling stories, intriguing characters and an innovative visual approach. Finalists were selected from more than 300 applicants, and winners will be announced in early September. The SFFILM Documentary Film Fund has an excellent track record for championing important films that have gone on to earn great acclaim. Previous DFF winners include Peter Nicks’s The Force, which won the 2017 Sundance Film Festival Directing Award for documentary and SFFILM Festival’s Bay Area Documentary Award, and will be released this fall by Kino Lorber; Peter Bratt’s Dolores, which won the 2017 SFFILM Festival Audience Award for Documentary Feature following its Sundance premiere; Jamie Meltzer’s True Conviction, which won a Special Jury Mention for Documentary Feature at the Tribeca Film Festival; and Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer, which won Sundance’s Directing Award for documentary and was nominated for the 2014 Academy Award® for Best Documentary Feature; among many others. Since its launch in 2011, the SFFILM Documentary Film Fund has distributed nearly half a million dollars to advance new work by filmmakers nationwide. The 2017 Documentary Film Fund is made possible thanks to an expanded gift from the Jenerosity Foundation.

    2017 DOCUMENTARY FILM FUND FINALISTS

    The Feeling of Being Watched Assia Boundaoui, director/producer; Jessica Devaney, producer When a filmmaker investigates rumors of surveillance in her Arab-American neighborhood in Chicago, she uncovers one of the largest FBI terrorism probes conducted before 9/11 and reveals its enduring impact on the community. Hale County, This Morning, This Evening RaMell Ross, director; Joslyn Barnes and Su Hyeon Kim, producers What is the experience of coming-of-age in the Black Belt region of the US? This film presents the lives of two young men in a series of visual movements that replace narrative arc with orchestral form. Heaven Through the Back Door Anna Fitch and Banker White, co-director/producers; Sara Dosa, producer Heaven Through the Backdoor is a contemplative documentary that tells the story of Yo (Yolanda Shae), a fiercely independent 88-year old woman whose unique brand of individualist feminism impacts how she chooses to live in the final years of her life. (Former SFFILM FilmHouse Resident) How to Have an American Baby Leslie Tai, director/producer; Jillian Schultz, co-producer There is a city in Southern California that abounds with pregnant women from China. Told through multiple perspectives, How to Have an American Baby is a kaleidoscopic voyage behind the closed doors of the Chinese birth tourism industry. (SFFILM FilmHouse Resident, SFFILM fiscally sponsored filmmaker) The Judge Erika Cohn, director/producer; Sara Maamouri, co-producer The Judge provides rare insight into Shari’a law (Islamic law), an often misunderstood legal framework for Muslims, told through the eyes of Kholoud Al-Faqih, the first woman judge to be appointed to the Middle East’s religious courts. (SFFILM fiscally sponsored filmmaker) El Lugar de la Memoria Juan Pablo González, director; Makena Buchanan, Jamie Gonçalves, and Ilana Coleman, producers As economic and social conditions become dire, a wave of suicides among young people disrupts life in a small Mexican town. Through daily rituals and ceremonies amongst the people in this community, El Lugar de la Memoriapresents a reflection on the reconfiguration of rural life in Mexico. A Machine to Live In Yoni Goldstein and Meredith Zielke, co-directors; Sebastian Alvarez, producer; Andrew Benz, co-producer Hovering over what remains of Brazil’s modernist future, this film looks at how social control, rational design, and space-age architecture gave rise to a vast landscape of transcendental and mystical utopias. Midnight Family Luke Lorentzen, director; Kellen Quinn, producer; Daniela Alatorre,and Elena Fortes, co-producers In Mexico City, 16-year-old Juan Ochoa struggles to legitimize his family’s unlicensed ambulance business, as corrupt police in the neighborhood begin to target this cutthroat industry. Pahokee Ivete Lucas and Patrick Bresnan, co-director/producers; Maida Brankman, producer Pahokee, Florida (pop. 6,094): one hour by car across Palm Beach County from the presidential opulence of Mar-a-Lago. Against a backdrop of industrial agriculture and economic isolation, high school students from different racial and cultural backgrounds forge a sense of meaning and community via elaborate and colorful rites of passage. Pigeon Kings Milena Pastreich, director/producer; Michael Sherman and Matthew Perniciaro, producers Keith London, the godfather of Birmingham Rollers, and his mentee, Choo Choo, survive life in South Central LA through their dedication to somersaulting pigeons. image via The Feeling of Being Watched

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  • Lavazza Italian Film Festival Debuts Competition Section for Bulgari Critics’ Choice Award

    Lavazza Italian Film Festival 2017 Jury For the first time, at the 2017 Lavazza Italian Film Festival in Australia, will present a competition section with six Italian films in official competition for the Bulgari Critics’ Choice Award. The 18th edition of the festival has gathered esteemed members to take part on the jury – from film critics, actors and an international director – the jury all have its lust for Italian cinema in common. An official award ceremony will be held on the 20th September where the winner of the AUD $10,000 Bulgari Cinema Award for best film will be announced. “Presented by Palace, the Lavazza Italian Film Festival is proud to celebrate excellence in Italian contemporary cinema with the inaugural Bulgari Critics’ Choice Awards. This cements the festival’s place on the world film festival landscape,” said Founder and Managing Director of Palace Cinemas and Palace Films, Antonio Zeccola. “Bulgari has always been a strong supporter of creativity and passion and there is no better medium to express these attributes than through cinema,” said Bulgari Australia Managing Director Brad Harvey. “We are delighted to express this passion in Australia via the creation of the Bulgari Critics’ Choice Award, a first for Bulgari internationally, to encourage the creative art of story-telling always told best in the Italian way.” The 2017 jury members are (pictured clockwise, from top left): Greta Scacchi – Italian born Australian actress, has appeared in many films including Presumed Innocent (1990), White Mischief (1987), Looking for Alibrandi (2000) and The Player (1992) Jason di Rosso – RN’s film critic and host of the weekly film show The Final Cut Ruth Borgobello – director and 2016 festival guest for her film The Space Between Daniela Farinacci – with acting roles in film and television including Lion (2016), Lantana (2001), and ABC TV series Glitch (2016 -) Damian Walshe-Howling – with a 25 year acting career in film and television with credits including: The Secret Life of Us (2001-2006), Blue Heelers (1994 – 2006) and Mystery Road (2013) Brad Harvey – Bulgari Australia Managing Director. With a career spanning 20 years in luxury jewellery, Brad brings an eye for creativity and detail as well as a passion for Italian design and cinema.

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  • Amman Abbasi’s Debut Indie Drama DAYVEON Gets a September Release Date | VIDEO

    Dayveon Dayveon, the feature-film debut of writer-director Amman Abbasi, will open in theaters on September 13, in New York at the Quad Cinema, and in Los Angeles at the Laemmle Monica Film Center. More additional cities is expected to follow. Dayveon, an official selection of the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival and the 2017 Berlin Film Festival, stars Devin Blackmon, Kordell “KD” Johnson, Dontrell Bright, Chasity Moore, Lachion Buckingham, and Marquell Manning. Struggling with his older brother’s death, 13-year-old Dayveon (newcomer Devin Blackmon) spends the sweltering summer days roaming around his rural Arkansan town. With no parents and few role models, he soon falls in with the local gang. Though his sister’s boyfriend tries to provide stability and comfort as a reluctant father figure, Dayveon becomes increasingly drawn into the camaraderie and violence of his new world. In this impressive feature directorial debut exec produced by David Gordon Green (Pineapple Express, Prince Avalanche), multitalented filmmaker Amman Abbasi wrote, directed, edited, produced, and composed music for the film. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLZycD635w0

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  • Valeski Grisebach’s WESTERN Wins Poland’s New Horizons International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_23704" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Western, Valeski Grisebach Western[/caption] Western directed by Valeski Grisebach was awarded the Grand Prix and the cash prize of 20 thousand euros at the 2017 T-Mobile New Horizons International Film Festival. Trailer: Western directed by Valeski Grisebach https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8f8zHDwv_c A distinction award was given to All the Cities of the North directed by Concerned Komljena. Trailer: All the Cities of the North directed by Concerned Komljena https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEJuE9LtzvM Valeski Grisebach’s Western was also awarded the prestigious FIPRESCI Prize, a prize affiliated with the International Federation of Film Critics. Honorable mention went to Hlynur Palmasona, director of the film Winter Brothers. The Audience Award to the film Photon directed by Normana Leto, second place to A Heart of Love directed by Ronduda Luke, and third place went to The Impossible Picture directed by Sandry Wollner. Trailer: Photon directed by Normana Leto https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9xQrdMAfhE Trailer: A Heart of Love directed by Ronduda Luke trailer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ql4EmylJvJ0

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  • 2017 Locarno Festival Awards: MRS. FANG by Wang Bing Wins Pardo d’oro

    [caption id="attachment_23700" align="aligncenter" width="1024"]Wang Bing, Mrs Fang, 2017 Locarno Festival Award Winners Wang Bing[/caption] The documentary Mrs. Fang directed by Wang Bing was today crowned the winner of the Pardo d’oro at the 2017 Locarno Festival. Also at the awards ceremony, the Prix Public UBS was awarded to The Big Sick, by Michael Showalter. When asked, how did he feel about the award, Wang Bing responded, “I’ve been working on documentaries for over ten years but this is the first time I am receiving such a great prize. It is a great and deep honor for me to get this award for Mrs. Fang. I want to see it as a start of my future projects. A very good one! Locarno is the best platform to show art films, because here there is an audience, coming from all over the world, which is attentive to every single film that is screened.” The 71st Locarno Festival will take place from August 1 to 11, 2018.

    2017 Locarno Festival Awards

    Concorso Internazionale

    Pardo d’oro (Gran Premio del Festival) della Città di Locarno MRS. FANG by WANG Bing, France, China, Germany Premio Speciale Della Giuria (Special Jury Prize) AS BOAS MANEIRAS by Juliana Rojas, Marco Dutra, Brazil, France Pardo per la Miglior Regia (Best Direction) F.J. OSSANG for 9 DOIGTS, France, Portugal Pardo per la Miglior Interpretazione Femminile (Best Actress) ISABELLE HUPPERT for MADAME HYDE by Serge Bozon, France, Belgium Pardo per la Miglior Interpretazione Maschile (Best Actor) ELLIOTT CROSSET HOVE for VINTERBRØDRE by Hlynur Pálmason, Denmark, Iceland

    Concorso Cineasti del presente

    Pardo d’Oro Cineasti del Presente 3/4 (Three Quarters) by Ilian Metev, Bulgarien, Germany Premio Speciale della Giuria Ciné+ Cineasti del Presente (Special Jury Prize) MILLA by Valerie Massadian, France, Portugal Premio per il Miglior Regista Emergente – Città e Regione di Locarno (Prize for the Best Emerging Director) KIM DAE-HWAN for CHO-HAENG (The First Lap), South Korea Special Mention DISTANT CONSTELLATION by Shevaun Mizrahi, USA, Turkey, Netherlands VERÃO DANADO by Pedro Cabeleira, Portugal

    Signs of Life

    Signs of Life Award ELECTRONIC-ART.FOUNDATION for Best Film COCOTE by Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias, Dominican Republic, Argentina, Germany, Qatar Fundación Casa Wabi – Mantarraya Award DANE KOMLJEN for PHANTASIESÄTZE, Germany, Denmark Special Mention ERA UMA VEZ BRASÍLIA by Adirley Queirós, Brazil, Portugal

    First Feature

    Swatch First Feature Award (Prize for Best First Feature) SASHISHI DEDA (Scary Mother) by Ana Urushadze, Georgia, Estland Swatch Art Peace Hotel Award METEORLAR (Meteors) by Gürcan Keltek, Netherlands,Turkey Special Mention DENE WOS GUET GEIT (Those Who Are Fine) by Cyril Schäublin, Switzerland

    Pardi di domani

    Concorso Internazionale Pardino d’Oro for the Best International Short Film – Premio SRG SSR ANTÓNIO E CATARINA by Cristina Hanes, Portugal Pardino d’Argento SRG SSR for the Concorso Internazionale SHMAMA by Miki Polonski, Israel Locarno Nomination for the European Film Awards – Premio Pianifica JEUNES HOMMES À LA FENÊTRE by Loukianos Moshonas, France Medien Patent Verwaltung AG Award KAPITALISTIS by Pablo Muñoz Gomez, Belgium,France Special Mention ARMAGEDDON 2 by Corey Hughes, Cuba

    Concorso Nazionale

    Pardino d’Oro for the Best Swiss Short Film – Premio Swiss Life REWIND FORWARD by Justin Stoneham, Switzerland Pardino d’Argento Swiss Life for the Concorso Nazionale 59 SECONDES by Mauro Carraro, Switzerland Best Swiss Newcomer Award LES INTRANQUILLES by Magdalena Froger, Switzerland Variety Piazza Grande Award DREI ZINNEN by Jan Zabeil, Germany, Italy

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  • Romantic Comedy KITA KITA is Now Philippines’ Highest-Grossing Independent Film | Trailer

    Kita Kita Kita Kita, a romantic comedy about two Filipinos living in Japan, is now reportedly the Philippines’ highest-grossing independent film ever, surpassing the previous record holder 2015’s Heneral Luna. The film, directed by Sigrid Andrea P. Bernardo, reached ₱300 millions (US $5.9million) in tickets sales on August 8. In Kita Kita, Lea, played by Alessandra de Rossi, and Tonyo, played by Empoy Marquez, are two Filipinos living in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan. Lea is a Velo taxi tour guide. She suffers an accident which leads to her being affected by temporary blindness. Her blindness, if not cured in a few weeks, could become permanent. Tonyo is also a Filipino who lives right across from Lea. Lea tries her best to ignore him at first because she is scared of not seeing him. But Tonyo is persistent and is determined to be her friend, using humor and kindness to make a connection. With every effort that he makes the two gradually become closer. In an ironic way, becoming blind allows Lea to see the true character of Tonyo. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZYq2k_jljg

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  • VIDEO: Watch New Trailer for Dark Comedy THE DEATH OF STALIN

    The Death of Stalin Directed by Armando Iannucci Here is the trailer for the new comedy/drama film, The Death of Stalin, directed by Armando Iannucci, creator of Veep, surrounding events in the days following the fall of Stalin in 1953. The film stars Steve Buscemi, Jeffrey Tambor, Jason Isaacs, Rupert Friend, Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough, Michael Palin, Paddy Considine and Simon Russell Beale; and is set to world premiere at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival, kicking off the festival’s Platform Program. The internal political landscape of 1950’s Soviet Russia takes on darkly comic form in a new film by Emmy award-winning and Oscar-nominated writer/director Armando Iannucci. In the days following Stalin’s collapse, his core team of ministers tussle for control; some want positive change in the Soviet Union, others have more sinister motives. Their one common trait? They’re all just desperately trying to remain alive. A film that combines comedy, drama, pathos and political maneuvering, The Death of Stalin is a Quad and Main Journey production, directed by Armando Iannucci, and produced by Yann Zenou, Kevin Loader, Nicolas Duval Assakovsky, and Laurent Zeitoun. The script is written by Iannucci, David Schneider and Ian Martin, with additional material by Peter Fellows. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukJ5dMYx2no

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  • The Joseph Losey Retrospective at San Sebastian Film Festival to Showcase ALL of His Feature Films

    Joseph Losey The 65th edition of the San Sebastian Film Festival will honor Joseph Losey with a retrospective of his 32 feature films and 6 short films. In the seventies, Joseph Losey represented the greatest expression of auteur or art-house cinema with works like The Servant (1963), King and Country (1964), Accident (1967) and The Go-Between (1971), all of which, with the exception of the second, were written by the playwright Harold Pinter. But before becoming a leading figure of European independent film, Losey endured a complicated situation like so many others affected by the reprisals of the Hollywood witch hunt from 1947 onwards. His work is divided into three periods: his early period in North American film until the early fifties, the prestige he achieved in the UK of the sixties and seventies and a later, more itinerant stage when he worked for Italian, French and Spanish production. Born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, in 1909, Losey turned his steps towards written and broadcast journalism, later moving into theatre. His openly left-wing beliefs led him to work on several mises en scène with Bertold Brecht and to spend a period in the former Soviet Union studying new theatre concepts. In the late thirties he started to direct short films with Metro Goldwyn Mayer, making his feature debut in 1948 with The Boy with Green Hair, a parable against war, totalitarianism and intransigence towards difference, produced by RKO. Although he did succeed in making a number of low-cost films noirs of undisguised social slant – The Lawless (1950), The Prowler (1951) and The Big Night (1951), all three penned by screenwriters blacklisted by the Un-American Activities Commission, Daniel Mainwaring, Daltun Trumbo and Ring Lardner Jr – and even a remake of Fritz Lang’s famous M in 1951, his name appeared on the blacklist for the tone of his early films and he was accused of belonging to the North American Communist Party. When called to testify, he was in Italy shooting Stranger on the Prowl / Imbarco a mezzanotte (1952). He decided not to return to the United States and settled in Britain. He released said film under the pseudonym Andrea Forzano and trade union issues prevented his name from featuring on the first two movies made in his country of adoption: in The Sleeping Tiger (1954), first collaboration with one of his actors fetiche, Dirk Bogarde, he is credited as Victor Hanbury and, in The Intimate Stranger (1956), as Joseph Walton. Losey took up his place in British cinema at a time of change. These were not only the days of rising Free Cinema, a trend he had no part in even if some of his earlier films made in the sixties did have a certain realistic and social angle, but also of the horror movie makers Hammer Film Productions, for which Losey started X The Unknown (1956), before he was ousted from the shooting and replaced by Leslie Norman, later directing The Damned (1962); these were Losey’s only inroads to the sci-fi domain. Following a timid attempt at integration to the great British film industry with The Gypsy and the Gentleman (1958), a Rank production headlining Melina Mercouri, his work attracted outstanding interest from the mystery movie Blind Date (1959) and the prison drama The Criminal (1961), the beginning of his collaboration with the other actor with whom he would enjoy close understanding, Stanley Baker. Until the mid-seventies, Losey alternated highly personal films reflecting on relations of power (between both men and institutional bodies) constructed around mises en scène packed with symbols (his particular use of spectacular images), with what at first glance seemed to be more commercial titles served up by the big stars of the moment and taking their inspiration from works of enormous popularity or unquestionable literary prestige. To this first group belonged the film that best defines his work, The Servant, with Pinter’s acerbic writing and the acting duel between Bogarde and James Fox, Accident (Grand Prix du Jury at the Cannes Festival), The Go-Between (Palme d’Or at Cannes) and the anti-war King and Country, played out in the British trenches of the First World War during a summary trial for desertion. The second group includes works like Eve (1962), adaptation of a novel by James Hadley Chase, starring Jeanne Moreau and which was the first of many films consecrated by Losey to female characters who irradiate a strange fascination; Modesty Blaise (1966), iconoclastic version of Peter O’Donnell and Jim Holdaway’s spy-fi comic strip featuring Monica Vitti; Boom (1968), a piece by Tennessee Williams dished up by the explosive couple Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton; Secret Ceremony (1968), a psychological and claustrophobic drama once again starring Elizabeth Taylor, with Robert Mitchum and Mia Farrow; A Doll’s House (1973), based on Henrik Ibsen’s piece and with Jane Fonda, David Warner and Trevor Howard, and A Romantic Englishwoman (1975), another of his defining movies, an intense and evil triangular game written by Tom Stoppard and performed by Glenda Jackson, Michael Caine and Helmut Berger. During this prolific period, Losey made hugely abstract works including Figures in a Landscape (1970), following the flight of two prisoners pursued by a mysterious helicopter (with a screenplay written by actor Robert Shaw, its leading man alongside Malcolm McDowell; the film competed in San Sebastian) and Mr. Klein (1976), with Alain Delon in the part of an unsavoury character accused of being a Jew during the Nazi occupation in France (winner of the César for Best Film). But he also shot films of obvious political accent such as L’assassinio di Trotsky / The Assassination of Trotsky (1972), with Delon as Ramón Mercader and Burton in the role of Leon Trotsky, and Les routes du Sud (1978), continuation of La guerre est finie (1966) by Alain Resnais, once again written by Jorge Semprún and with Yves Montand repeating his role of Spanish exile in constant ideological conflict. Losey returned to Brecht many years later with a cinema adaptation of Galileo (1974), based on the English translation by Charles Laughton and starring Topol, hugely popular at the time for his leading part in Fiddler on the Roof (1971). He also made the filmed opera Don Giovanni (1979) with Ruggero Raimondi and, in France, La Truite (1982) with Isabelle Huppert in the part of yet another of the director’s complex female characters. His last film was Steaming (1985) which, like the one before it, was never screened in Spain. This is a work of theatrical roots starring Vanessa Redgrave and Sarah Miles and set in London Turkish baths as they fight its closure on ladies day. Losey never saw the final cut of the film; he passed away in June 1984, almost a year before its presentation at Cannes. Losey’s relationship with the San Sebastian Festival was always complicated owing to the Franco dictatorship. In addition to Figures in a Landscape, the Festival screened The Sleeping Tiger, Boom and, in the informative section, The Go-Between.The Romantic Englishman was also selected, but the director and Glenda Jackson refused to come to the event in protest against the death sentences recently signed by Franco. The retrospective is organised jointly with the Filmoteca Española, and has the collaboration of the San Telmo Museum (San Sebastián), the Filmoteca Vasca and CulturArts-IVAC (Valencia). The cycle is complemented by the publication of a book about the director coordinated by Quim Casas in which different Spanish and British authors have participated. After its screening in San Sebastian, the retrospective will run at the Filmoteca Española in Madrid.

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  • COCOTE Wins Locarno Festival’s Signs of Life Award electronic-art.foundation for Best Film

    Cocote The Signs of Life Award electronic-art.foundation for Best Film at the 2017 Locarno Film Festival has been awarded to Cocote by Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias from the Dominican Republic. The Signs of Life jury awarded Nelson Carlo De Los Santos Arias’ film for “its capacity to reinvent the traditions of anthropological cinema in a creative manner”. The Fundación Casa Wabi – Mantarraya Award was given to director Dane Komljen for Phantasiesätze (Germany, Denmark) “for its rigorous and fascinating approach to landscape, language and memory”. The jury has given a Special Mention to Era Uma Vez Brasília (Brazil, Portugal) by Adirley Queirós “for its original and ambitious construction”. The Signs of Life Award electronic-art.foundation worth 5,000 Swiss francs was made possible thanks to the support of electronic-art.foundation (Zurich). The foundation’s mission is to sustain innovative cultural projects on an international scale. The Fundación Casa Wabi and Mantarraya, in collaboration with the Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia, have given support for Fundación Casa Wabi – Mantarraya Award which consists of an up to three-month-long residence in the Casa Wabi in Puerto Escondido (Mexico).

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