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  • Berlinale 2017: Festival to Honor John Hurt with a Screening of “An Englishman in New York”

    [caption id="attachment_20481" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]John Hurt in An Englishman in New York by Richard Laxton John Hurt in An Englishman in New York by Richard Laxton[/caption] The Berlin International Film Festival will present a special screening of An Englishman in New York by Richard Laxton to commemorate the recently deceased actor John Hurt.  In 2009 Hurt received the Teddy Award for his outstanding performance in this film. Since the 1990s he had attended the Berlinale with regularity and starred in twelve films presented at the festival. The British actor is know for his roles in Midnight Express (dir: Alan Parker, 1978) and The Elephant Man (dir: David Lynch, 1980), for which he garnered Oscar nominations. Younger audiences are acquainted with Hurt from his portrayal of Mr. Ollivander in the Harry Potter films, and more recently in Jackie directed by Pablo Larraín. Berlinale entries with John Hurt that screened in the Competition include The Commissioner (dir: George Sluizer, 1998), V for Vendetta (dir: James McTeigue, out of competition in 2006), and Jayne Mansfield’s Car (dir: Billy Bob Thornton, 2012). John Nossiter’s Resident Alien (1991) and Owning Mahowny by Richard Kwietniowski (2003) were shown in the Panorama.

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  • IndieCan Entertainment to Release Indie Films VICTOR WALK, THE WILL TO FLY and BROKEN from 2016 Whistler Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_18642" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Theo Fleury, Victor Walk Theo Fleury, Victor Walk[/caption] Two months following the Whistler Film Festival’s 16th edition, IndieCan Entertainment has acquired VICTOR WALK,  THE WILL TO FLY, and the documentary feature film BROKEN.  IndieCan Entertainment has acquired the North American and International rights to VICTOR WALK, the North American distribution rights to THE WILL TO FLY, and the Canadian distribution rights to  BROKEN. Michael David Lynch’s VICTOR WALK, which had its Canadian premiere at the 2016 Whistler Film Festival, followed former NHL All-Star, 1989 Stanley Cup winner (with the Calgary Flames) and Olympic Gold Medalist Theo Fleury’s ten day 400 kilometre walk from Toronto to Ottawa to draw attention to the light sentences meted out to convicted pedophiles in Canada. The statistics are horrific: one out of five males and one out of three females in Canada will be sexually molested before they are adults, and very few people ever report the crime. The response that Fleury and Lynch captured along the journey captured in VICTOR WALK is truly astounding. Every step of the way, hockey fans came out to show their support for Fleury, who believes that talking about it is the first step, not only to personal healing, but to changing the laws of the country so that child abuse is no longer treated as a minor crime. Fleury was in the news last fall when the coach who sexually molested him, and many other young hockey players, was let out of prison after a relatively short incarceration for his pedophilic crimes. Fleury’s walk brought attention to the plague of child sexual abuse, promoted healing amongst the survivors and aimed to lobby for stiffer laws against predators. Fleury received WFF’s 2016 Humanitarian Award for his commitment to making a difference. IndieCan Entertainment will release the film theatrically in Spring 2017 following its run on the festival circuit THE WILL TO FLY, by Australian directors Katie Bender and Leo Baker’s, received its Canadian Premiere at the 2016 Whistler Film Festival, and won both WFF’s Mountain Culture Award and World Documentary Award. This extraordinary sports documentary focuses on the Olympic ambitions of Australian female skiing champion Lydia Lassila. Using a rich treasure trove of archival footage and more recent interviews with coaches and family members, the film presents a well-rounded portrait of sports determination and ambition. Even after fulfilling her dream of going to the Olympics three times, including winning a gold medal at the Vancouver 2010 Games, and becoming a young mother, the former gymnast pursues her ambition even further. She strives to perform the most dangerous and complex manoeuvre of any Olympic event: a quadruple twisting, triple somersault on skis. This jump has only been accomplished by male competitors prior to the 2014 Sochi Olympics. Even if you know little about the sport of ski jumping, this is a sight to behold, as Lydia trains to marry the beauty of ski jumping with the grace of acrobatics. Lynne Spencer’s debut documentary feature BROKEN, which had its world premiere at the 2016 Whistler Film Festival, is an extraordinarily intimate portrait of Simone Orlando, Ballet BC’s lead dancer for twelve years. Can injury destroy a life’s passion? This is a question that affects every dancer, performer (or athlete) who is completely devoted to a single pursuit and is faced with an injury that threatens that very way of life. During rehearsals for a new ballet, Simone suffered an injury that was so severe; she could hardly walk, let alone dance. Hiding her affliction with painkillers, she struggled on, but an MRI made it all too evident that hip surgery was required. “All the work and all the years, and for it to suddenly just slip away, it wasn’t acceptable,” said Ms. Orlando. Simone fought for the chance to make a comeback and the film features absorbing interviews, intimate access to doctor’s appointments and stunning never-before-seen photos and footage of both rehearsals and Ballet BC’s stage performances and behind the scenes politics. This film is a one of a kind study of the devotion and dedication that artists, performers and even athletes and musicians bring to their vocation, and what happens when fate intervenes to threaten their life’s work – and their identity. From November 29 to December 3, 2017 the Whistler Film Festival will welcome film fans and filmmakers to experience its 17th edition featuring fresh films, special guests, epic events, unique industry and talent programs, and time to play in North America’s premier mountain resort destination. The Whistler Film Festival combines an international film competition with a focused Industry Summit dedicated to the art and business of filmmaking in the digital age.  

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  • Portland International Film Festival Announces 2017 After Dark Lineup

    [caption id="attachment_20266" align="aligncenter" width="1350"]THE INVISIBLE GUEST THE INVISIBLE GUEST[/caption] The After Dark program of the 40th Portland International Film Festival (PIFF) will showcase late night movies like Emiliano Rocha Minter’s We Are the Flesh, Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s (Pulse) Daguerrotype, André Øvredal’s (Troll Hunter) The Autopsy of Jane Doe, Nicholas Pesce’s The Eyes of My Mother, and Oriol Paulo’s (The Body) The Invisible Guest. As in past years, PIFF After Dark presents films chosen with adventurous festival attendees in mind.

    40th Portland International Film Festival After Dark Lineup

    The Invisible Guest (Dir. Oriol Paulo) – Spain/South Korea As a suspect is prepped for court testimony, the story of the crime, a murder in a hotel room where only two people—the accused and the victim—were present, deepens as new details emerge with each retelling. Director Oriol Paulo’s (The Body) film is Rashomonic in structure, but keeping the action centered entirely on one person’s shifting account of the abominable act. An exquisitely intelligent and tense thriller crafted for adult audiences. “Early on, certain points are so ridiculously made and ‘on the button’ that they elicit laughter. Rest assured, that’s intentional. The Invisible Guest goes beyond locked rooms into the forbidden territory of adult motivations.” – Peter Martin, Screen Anarchy In Spanish with English subtitles. (106 mins.) https://vimeo.com/185461129 PRECEDED BY: Manoman Dir. Simon Cartwright | United Kingdom A man undergoing primal scream therapy releases his own Mr. Hyde, and then hits the town with him. (11 mins.) We Are the Flesh (Dir. Emiliano Rocha Minter) – Mexico The most transgressive film in this year’s program, Minter’s trance-inducing debut feature concerns a brother and sister drawn into an underground sanctuary inhabited by a lone stranger. In return for shelter, the man demands they push themselves into a series of shocking ritualistic actions with each other, their newfound guardian, and those who visit the subterranean and fleshy, womb-like structure they begin constructing. “His thoroughly arresting vision could squat quite comfortably alongside Hieronymus Bosch’s depiction of hell.”—Variety. (79 mins.) Adult Audiences. “Serving as co-editor as well as writer and director, Emiliano Rocha Minter is very much the author of all the chaos wrought here, and his thoroughly arresting vision could squat quite comfortably alongside Hieronymus Bosch’s depiction of hell.” – Catherine Bray, Variety In Spanish with English subtitles. (79 mins.) https://youtu.be/hC_wtrAdF2E PRECEDED BY: Judy Ariel Gardner, Alex Kavutskiy | United States “A film about male entitlement and the role of women in society—a smart and funny movie that says a whole lot in ten minutes.”—Catherine Bray, Birth. Movies. Death. (11 mins.) Directors Ariel Gardner and Alex Kavutskiy in attendance A Dark Song (Dir. Liam Gavin) – Ireland/United Kingdom A grieving mother (Catherine Walker) hires a man (Steve Oram) well-versed in the occult to help bring her son back to life. The genius of writer/director Liam Gavin’s film is how, unlike most films with a supernatural conceit, it paints its character’s attempts to break on through to the other side as humorous, highly questionable, and above all, time consuming. Favoring the notion that the journey is just as important as the destination, A Dark Song upends audience expectations of how horror films about people trying to resurrect their loved ones ought to operate. “A Dark Song is more concerned with psychological demons than the supernatural kind, and all the stronger for it.” – Stephen Dalton, The Hollywood Reporter (100 mins.) https://youtu.be/IeZ9OQ6ocP0 PRECEDED BY: The Man from Death Stephen Reedy | United States A manic homage to spaghetti Westerns, video game iconography, and ADHD. (13 mins.) The Eyes of My Mother (Dir. Nicolas Pesce) – United States A young girl named Francisca witnesses a terrible act of violence perpetrated by a stranger upon her mother. Years later, the child has grown into a solitary woman whose life on the same farm where those events occurred has devolved into a cycle of caring for her family’s livestock and a mysterious figure sequestered away in the barn. When Francisca finally opens herself up to human contact, however, it threatens to both break the patterns she’s established and rip the precariously hung safety net out from below her feet. Director Nicolas Pesce’s debut film is a visual treat, filled with breathlessly orchestrated passages, and forbidden fruit that’s rotten to the core. “If Ingmar Bergman had helmed The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, it might look something like this exquisite nightmare.”—The A.V. Club. (76 mins.) https://youtu.be/H5cmrW-Ej84 PRECEDED BY: The Dog Hallvard Holmen, Aleksander Nordaas | Norway A child watches as a squabble between neighbors unfolds. (10 mins.) Daguerrotype (Dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa) – Japan Japanese horror master Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s continues his winning stream with this patient and elegantly rendered ghost story set in modern-day France. Jean (Tahar Rahim) is hired as the assistant to Stéphane, a former fashion photographer who wallows in grief for his late wife while stubbornly clinging to the antiquated, long-exposure process of daguerreotype photography. As Jean learns the ropes, he begins to fall for Stéphane’s daughter Marie who endures, as her mother did in the past, the painful and physically demanding role of modeling for her father’s images. In French with English subtitles. “You’ll need patience for it to work on you, but all effort’s repaid tenfold, thanks to Kurosawa’s murmur-soft, immaculate craft and a trio of gorgeous central performances.” – Robbie Collin, The Telegraph https://vimeo.com/180867219 PRECEDED BY: Overtime Craig D. Foster | Australia Workplace stresses conspire to bring out the inner beast when mandatory overtime comes into play. (9 mins.) Without Name (Dir. Lorcan Finnegan) – Ireland Eric, a surveyor by trade, is hired by a corporate developer to assess a large plot of ancient forest. Superstitious warnings from the locals about the area, the discovery of a handwritten book filled with hallucinogenic recipes and half-mad ravings about trees, and a shadowy figure have Eric on edge. First time director Lorcan Finnegan’s eco-horror tale not only offers up the most vivid dose of paranoia tied to location since Polanski’s The Tenant, it also throws down the gauntlet for the creepiest trees captured on film this decade. “Without Name is the truest, and perhaps finest, example of the Lovecraftian sensibility ever put on film.” – Peter Gutierrez, Screen Anarchy (93 mins.) https://youtu.be/cd4K6qICqC8 PRECEDED BY: Strangers in the Night Conor McMahon | Ireland While protecting his grandmother from a banshee, Damien is overcome by unexpected feelings for the creature. (12 mins.) The Autopsy of Jane Doe (Dir. André Øvredal) – United Kingdom/United States A father (Brian Cox) and son (Emile Hirsch) coroner team delve into the mystery of a body discovered at a site of multiple murders. Unlike the other casualties of the crime, the corpse delivered to them is untouched by the multiple traumas visited upon the other victims. The deeper the two dig into this fleshy puzzle, the more disturbing secrets, residing tantalizingly below the surface, are revealed. “The Autopsy of Jane Doe is proof that Trollhunter was no fluke – André Øvredal is one of the most clever guys making genre movies today and he’s refusing to let himself get boxed into a corner.” – Jacob Hall, Slash Film (86 mins.) https://youtu.be/mtTAhXuiRTc PRECEDED BY: Limbo Will Blank | United States Stranded in the desert, a man is given a chance to wish for anything he wants. (8 mins.) For the first time, all seven PIFF After Dark shows are scheduled to happen at the Bagdad Theater (3702 SE Hawthorne Boulevard) and will include short, After Dark-themed films presented before each feature.

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  • Film Director Joseph Losey to be Honored with a Retrospective at San Sebastian Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_20469" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Joseph Losey Joseph Losey[/caption] Film director Joseph Losey will be honored with a retrospective at the 65th edition of the San Sebastian Film Festival and the Spanish Film Archive. 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. After its screening in San Sebastian, the retrospective will run at the Filmoteca Española in Madrid.

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  • South African Film THE WOUND to Open the Panorama Program of Berlin International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_18693" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Wound, John Trengove The Wound, John Trengove[/caption] Just after celebrating its selection to have its world premiere in competition at the Sundance Film Festival, the film-makers of the South African film The Wound, have received news that the film has been selected to open the Berlin International Film Festival’s Panorama section in February 2017. Produced by Urucu Media, directed by John Trengove and co-written by Trengove, Thando Mgqolozana and Malusi Bengu , The Wound stars multi-talented musician and novelist, Nakhane Touré in his acting debut, with Bongile Mantsai and Niza Jay Ncoyini. The Wound tells the story Xolani, a lonely Xhosa factory worker who joins the men of his community in the mountains of the Eastern Cape to initiate a group of teenage boys into manhood. When a defiant initiate from the city discovers his best kept secret, Xolani’s entire existence begins to unravel. Speaking from Cape Town, producer Elias Ribeiro said “We could not have wished for a stronger start for The Wound. We will have the spotlight in the two top festivals in North America and Europe, and that bodes well for its future, as Pyramide, our International Sales Agents will be representing the film at their booth inside the European Film Market in Berlin in February.” “The fabrication of masculinity has long been a consistent theme in Panorama,” said the statement from the festival. “Producer Elias Ribeiro previously delighted festival audiences in Panorama 2015 with Necktie Youth.” John Trengove commented: “I was interested in what happens when groups of men come together and organize themselves outside of society and the codes of their everyday lives. I wanted to show the intense emotional and physical exchanges that are possible in these spaces and how repressing strong feelings leads to a kind of toxicity and violence. As an outsider to this culture, it was important that I approach this story from the perspective of characters who are themselves outsiders, who struggle to conform to the status quo of which they are part.”

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  • From Seoul to NYC – Architecture & Design Film Festival Announces Lineup of Events for 2017

    Architecture & Design Film Festival The Architecture & Design Film Festival (ADFF) will host its most extensive programming yet in 2017, with events around the country and the globe, culminating with the ninth edition of its main festival in NYC from November 1 to 5 at Cinépolis Chelsea. With a diverse range of feature-length and short films expertly curated by festival Director Kyle Bergman, ADFF 2017 puts architecture and design films on the big screen and brings together industry professionals and fans alike. Festival Director Kyle Bergman says, “We are thrilled to be expanding ADFF’s programming to new destinations across the US and the world. The success of last year’s festival reminds us that great film has the power to bring people together to form new ideas, gain new perspective, and share common experiences. We are looking forward to another great year of architecture and design on the big screen.” 2017 Locations and Dates for the Architecture & Design Film Festival: ADFF: Seoul January 10 – February 20 Presented by the Hyundai Card Design Library, ADFF will host five weeks of film screenings drawn from ADFF’s archive of past films. Each of the five weeks will feature films centered on one of the following themes: Pritzker Prize Winners, Residential Architecture, My Father Was an Architect, Women in Architecture, and Building Community. ADFF: Seoul provides the opportunity for ADFF to tap into the range of incredible films it has shown in the past and share them in the beautifully design Hyundai Card Design Library. http://library.hyundaicard.com ADFF Screening at A/D/O Opening Event January 27- 29 ADFF Screening at A/D/O Design Festival January 27- 29, 2017 ADFF has partnered with The Design Academy at A/D/O as part of its inaugural program, a three-day festival entitled “Utopia vs. Dystopia: Designing our Imagined Futures.” Feature length films highlighting the inaugural program’s theme will be screened on Sunday, January 29 and short films will be shown throughout the weekend. For more information and tickets, visit https://a-d-o.com. ADFF Tulsa April 20 – 23 ADFF has partnered with the Tulsa Foundation for Architecture as it heads to the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma for the first time. A selection of films will play at the Circle Cinema, an historic 1928 theater and art gallery. Tulsa’s rich architectural history dates back to the 1920s and includes a wealth of mid-century structures and several buildings by Bruce Goff. The final lineup of films will be announced in February. ADFF New Orleans August 24 – 27 The second annual ADFF New Orleans, presented with the Louisiana Architecture Foundation, will again take place at the Broad Theatre in Tremé, a historic section of the city. The festival’s return highlights a deep interest in the intersection of architecture and film in historic New Orleans. The full lineup of films will be announced in July. ADFF New York – Short Films Walk October 11 A favorite every year, the fourth annual Short Films Walk brings crowds of ADFF fans to SoHo’s Design District, where attendees move from showroom to showroom, sipping drinks and previewing films from the upcoming ADFF New York. This past year’s Short Films Walk brought over 2,000 attendees to watch 30 films spread across 14 showrooms. Participating showrooms will be announced in 2017. ADFF New York November 1 – 5 The ninth edition of ADFF’s central festival kicks off on November 1st at the centrally located Cinépolis Chelsea for a four-day weekend of short and feature films. Festival director Kyle Bergman has already secured several interesting films and this year’s festival is sure to bring an increasingly fascinating depth of topics, stories, filmmakers, and architects to the forefront. Film submission closes July 17, 2017.

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  • 2017 Las Vegas Jewish Film Festival Reveals Lineup; Opens with ON THE MAP

    [caption id="attachment_17236" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]ON THE MAP MK MOSHE DAYAN SHAKING HANDS WITH MACABBI TEL AVIV BASKETBALL PLAYER MOTTI AROESTI, AS AULCI PERRY & MIKY BERKOVITZ LOOK ON AT THE YAD ELIYAHI STADIUM. (ON THE MAP)[/caption] The 16th annual Las Vegas Jewish Film Festival will take place January 14 to 29, 2017 and will open with “On the Map,” the true story of the 1977 Israeli Maccabi Basketball team that made history by beating the Soviet Red Army team and winning their first European title. ” Highlights of the 2017 Las Vegas Jewish Film Festival include a tribute to Kirk Douglas in honor of his 100th birthday and lifetime achievement in cinema and Jewish philanthropy. His 1953 film “The Juggler” about a Holocaust Survivor who immigrates to Israel. Other films include “The Women’s Balcony,” and “And When I Die, I Won’t Stay Dead,” a new documentary film by Billy Woodberry about black, Jewish Beat poet Bob Kaufman (1925-1986). 2017 LAS VEGAS JEWISH FILM FESTIVAL PROGRAM SCHEDULE: “On the Map” 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, Brenden Theatres in the Palms Casino Resort “The Juggler” 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 15, Adelson Educational Campus “The Women’s Balcony” 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 19, Cinemark Theatres in the South Point Hotel and Casino “And When I Die, I Won’t Stay Dead” 1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 20, Nevada State College 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 21, Adelson Educational Campus “Marvin Hamlisch: What He Did For Love” 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22, Adelson Educational Campus “Rock in the Red Zone” 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, UNLV, Alpha Epsilon Pi House “Aida’s Secrets” 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 28, Adelson Educational Campus “Wrestling Jerusalem” 1 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 29, Adelson Educational Campus

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  • Eve Ensler, Patricia Riggen, Regina K. Scully and David Oyelowo to be Honored at Athena Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_19173" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]Eve Ensler, Patricia Riggen, Regina K. Scully and David Oyelowo Eve Ensler, Patricia Riggen, Regina K. Scully and David Oyelowo[/caption] Eve Ensler, Patricia Riggen, Regina K. Scully and David Oyelowo will be honored at the 2017 Athena Film Festival (AFF), set to run February 9 to 12, 2017, at Barnard College in New York City.  Eve Ensler is a Tony Award®-winning playwright, activist, performer and author; Patricia Riggen is a director, producer and screenwriter ; and Regina K. Scully is an Emmy Award®-winning producer, media activist and social entrepreneur. Actor and producer David Oyelowo will receive the Athena Leading Man Award. The Athena Film Festival celebrates the leadership and creative accomplishments of trailblazers in the entertainment industry who continue to break boundaries. The festival showcases films about powerful and courageous women leaders in real life and the fictional world; it is a weekend dedicated to elevating female voices and stories to inspire and empower a new generation of filmmakers and individuals. Previous Athena Film Festival awardees include Jodie Foster, Ava DuVernay, Mira Nair, Diablo Cody, Kasi Lemmons, Karyn Kusama, Callie Khouri, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Sheila Nevins, Julie Taymor, Sherry Lansing and Gale Anne Hurd, among others. “Our 2017 Athena Film Festival honorees celebrate an incredible group of people whose work promotes the advancement of women in film,” said Kathryn Kolbert, co-founder of the Athena Film Festival and the Constance Hess Williams ‘66 Director of the Athena Center for Leadership Studies at Barnard College. “We are grateful to be giving our second Athena Leading Man Award to David Oyelowo. We feel it is crucial to highlight the men who support women in the industry.” “We are thrilled to highlight four individuals who are shining examples of empowering women in the industry and are role models in their fields,” said Melissa Silverstein, Athena Film Festival artistic director co-founder and and founder of Women and Hollywood. “We are delighted to add these names to the festival’s prestigious list of honorees, which shines a spotlight on the remarkable progress, and the ongoing battles of women in the entertainment industry.”

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  • First Wave of Films Announced for 2017 Atlanta Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_19166" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]No Light and No Land Anywhere No Light and No Land Anywhere[/caption] The first slate of programming, comprising feature length and short films, narratives, documentaries, pilot episodes, music videos, animation, puppetry, experimental and virtual reality has been revealed for the upcoming 41st Atlanta Film Festival (ATLFF). “We are really excited to release a first wave of films that represents every category of our festival programming,” said ATLFS Executive Director Christopher Escobar. “ATLFF isn’t just one thing, and by including short films, pilots and virtual reality alongside features, we are presenting a greater picture of what to expect this year.” This group of fourteen films represents the first selections out of a new ATLFF record of 6,085 submissions. Hailing from Austria, Brazil, China, France, Iran, Japan, Lebanon, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia and USA, these films showcase a tremendously diverse swath of work, both artistically and geographically. Among the feature films represented, themes range from Iranian transgender rights in “Cold Breath” to poverty-stricken Beyoncé super-fans from Brazil in “Waiting for B.” The Tunisian documentary short “El Hara” was co-directed by ATLFF ‘15 alum Mo Scarpelli, who saw great success with her debut film “Frame by Frame.” Famed Japanese animator Keiichi Tanaami created “The Laughing Spider” using inspiration from his childhood memories of air-raids. Virtual reality short film “Traces” explores memory loss and reconstruction by placing the viewer inside the mind of a woman with Alzheimer’s. These films will be joined by over 150 others for the 2017 Atlanta Film Festival, taking place March 24 through April 2, 2017. Narrative Feature Cold Breath (دم سرد) — directed by Abbas Raziji Iran, 2016, Persian, 83 minutes Maryam has just turned 30-years-old. She was born as a girl but she passed through puberty like a boy. In the way of love and subsistence, she has tried hard everyday to live just like a normal man. No Light and No Land Anywhere — directed by Amber Sealey USA, 2016, English, 75 minutes Grieving her mother’s death and her own failing marriage, Lexi boards a plane from London to Los Angeles in search of the estranged father who abandoned her when she was three-years-old. Based out of a seedy Hollywood motel, she follows a tenuous trail of breadcrumbs, beginning with his aging former in-laws, collecting numbers and addresses in the hopes that one will lead to her father. Along the way, she establishes other unexpected connections: her father’s ailing former second wife, her bitter half-sister Tanya and her caregiver girlfriend, and two local barflies. Documentary Feature Black Memorabilia — directed by Chico Colvard USA/China, 2017, English/Chinese, 62 minutes At the intersection of international commerce, racial identity, and historical narrative, BLACK MEMORABILIA follows the propagation of demeaning representations of African Americans. From industrial China to the rural American south to contemporary Brooklyn, the viewer observes people and places that reproduce, consume and reclaim black memorabilia. This feature documentary takes us on a journey into the material culture of racialized artifacts and confronts us with the incendiary features of these objects. Waiting for B. — directed by Paulo Cesar Toledo, Abigail Spindel Brazil, 2016, Portuguese, 72 minutes WAITING FOR B. takes the viewer on a journey with young Beyoncé super-fans who, lacking the money to buy their way to the front, camped out for two months in order to be closer to the front of the stage. A story about victims of hype, a community of hope, and the contradictions of humility and vanity at the heart of diva worship. Narrative Short Submarine — directed by Mounia Akl Lebanon, 2016, Arabic, 21 minutes Under the imminent threat of Lebanon’s garbage crisis, Hala—a wild child inside of a woman—is the only one to refuse evacuation, clinging to whatever remains of home. They Charge For the Sun — directed by Terence Nance USA, 2016, English, 17 minutes In a dystopian future where people live nocturnally to avoid the harmful rays of the sun, a young black girl unravels the lie that has kept her and her sister in the dark. Documentary Short El Hara — directed by Margaux Fitoussi, Mo Scarpelli Tunisia/France, 2016, French, 16 minutes EL HARA poetically explores how the places we grow up in haunt who we become, forever. Se Shin Sa — directed by Eunhye Hong Kim USA, 2016, Korean, 11 minutes A hybrid of fiction and documentary, SE SHIN SA follows an undocumented woman living and working as a masseuse in Koreatown, Los Angeles. Animated Short The Laughing Spider — directed by Keiichi Tanaami Japan, 2016, Japanese, 7 minutes A psychedelic fantasmagoria from Japan’s greatest veteran animator, based on childhood memories of air-raids. Virtual Reality Short Traces — directed by Gabriela Arp USA, 2016, English, 8 minutes TRACES is a cinematic virtual reality film exploring the meaning of memory for one woman living with Alzheimer’s disease. Puppetry Short Good Night (Gute Nacht) — directed by Henning Backhaus Austria, 2016, German, 7 minutes A sock puppet strolls through niveous winter worlds; the dark, expressionist black-and-white imagery oscillating between comedy and tragedy. Soon the protagonist will choose to end his life, while the lonesome journey by Schubert has only just begun. Experimental Short Forged From the Love of Liberty — directed by Vashti Harrison Trinidad and Tobago/USA, 2016, English, 5 minutes A visual poem about a family’s curse, and two superstitions surround it. Pilot Episode The Benefits of Gusbandry — directed by Alicia J. Rose USA, 2016, English, 9 minutes One woman, one man, a lot of weed, a little crying and NO sexual attraction whatsoever. Love is so gay. Music Video “Left & Right” by Pazes — directed by Camila Lima Brazil, 2016, 3 minutes Left and right. Fire and water. Night and day. Heavy and light. Masculine and feminine. From a divided individual in search of its whole.

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  • Mia Spengler’s BACK FOR GOOD to Open Perspektive Deutsches Kino 2017 at Berlin Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_19143" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Angie (Kim Riedle) in Back for Good von / by Mia Spengler © Zum Goldenen Lamm Angie (Kim Riedle) in Back for Good von / by Mia Spengler © Zum Goldenen Lamm[/caption] The first seven films have been invited to participate in Perspektive Deutsches Kino program at the 2017 Berlin International Film Festival, and Back for Good, Mia Spengler’s graduation film will open the program.  “More so than ever it’s worth going to the Perspektive’s opening film and then making yourself comfortable in Berlinale cinemas for the subsequent nine days. Coming and staying guarantees you’ll feel lucky ten times over,” section head Linda Söffker says in anticipation of these ten fiery days in icy February. Mia Spengler’s graduation film, Back for Good (prod: Zum Goldenen Lamm Filmproduktion, co-prod: Filmakademie Ludwigsburg) will open the Perspektive with the story of Angie, a former trash-TV starlet (Kim Riedle), her despised mother (Juliane Köhler), and her pubescent sister (Leonie Wesselow). By returning to the hick town of her childhood, Angie wreaks havoc on their relationships, so that all three have to redefine their roles in life. Back for Good is an ode to humanity – softly hummed while an auto-tuned pop song blares from the radio. The fiction film Ein Weg (Paths, dir: Chris Miera, co-prod: Miera Film, Hildebrandt Film) was made while studying at the Filmuniversität Babelsberg Konrad Wolf and is the cautious exploration of a long love relationship that ends in separation. Over 15 years, as son Max gradually grows up, we accompany Andreas (Mike Hoffmann) and Martin (Mathis Reinhardt) through the highs and lows in the daily life of a partnership. Shot like a documentary, with a small team and budget at real locations, Ein Weg develops with great intensity and flexibility – and through the process of editing finds its special form of telling a story over time. Director Tian Dong grew up in China and attended the KHM in Cologne. He has now completed his studies with the documentary Eisenkopf (Ironhead), about a young soccer team skilled in Shaolin kung fu. Tian Dong visits its young members at their sports school, and talks to them about their everyday lives and dreams. In doing so he paints an unsettling picture of China’s political situation. In Julian Radlmaier’s new film, Selbstkritik eines bürgerlichen Hundes (Self-criticism of a Bourgeois Dog, prod: Faktura Film, co-prod: dffb), a bourgeois dog confesses how he has gone through multiple transformations, from a love-struck filmmaker, to an apple picker, a traitor of the revolution, and, last but not least, a four-legged creature. In a political comedy full of burlesque escapades, we meet Camille, a young Canadian (Deragh Campbell); Hong and Sancho, a pair of proletarians who believe in miracles; a mute monk with magical powers; and a bunch of strange field labourers who indulge in idealistic visions. All three of the medium-long works contemplate Europe and its future in quite similar yet different ways. What would happen if one day people in Europe had to flee, director Felicitas Sonvilla asks in her poetic science fiction film, Tara (prod: MOTEL Film Kollektiv; co-prod: HFF Munich). A young woman called Mira (Sasha Davydova) tells of her flight from Paris. In search of a different life she takes a train heading east to the utopianesque town of Tara. Kontener (Container) was the first medium-long fiction film that Sebastian Lang made at the Filmuniversität Babelsberg Konrad Wolf. In it he portrays “two Polish ladies” who work at a dairy in Brandenburg. From the perspective of Maryna (Joanna Drozda), who narrates the story, the film depicts the last night before Tava (Anka Graczyk) disappears. The third film, titled Mikel, is about a young refugee who has left Nigeria for Berlin in search of a decent life with a properly paid job. It is the first medium-long film by Cavo Kernich, who with this work has completed his studies in “narrative film” under Thomas Arslan at the Universität der Künste in Berlin. The following films have been invited so far: Back for Good By Mia Spengler With Kim Riedle, Juliane Köhler, Leonie Wesselow Feature film World premiere Eisenkopf (Ironhead) By Tian Dong Documentary film World premiere Kontener (Container) By Sebastian Lang With Joanna Drozda, Anka Graczyk Medium-long feature film World premiere Mikel By Cavo Kernich With Jonathan Aikins Medium-long feature film World premiere Selbstkritik eines bürgerlichen Hundes (Self-criticism of a Bourgeois Dog) By Julian Radlmaier With Julian Radlmaier, Deragh Campbell, Beniamin Forti, Kyung-Taek Lie, Ilia Korkashvili Feature film German premiere Tara By Felicitas Sonvilla With Sasha Davydova, Leo van Kann, Lena Lauzemis Medium-long feature film World premiere Ein Weg (Paths) By Chris Miera With Mike Hoffmann, Mathis Reinhardt Feature film World premiere

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  • Artemis Women in Action Film Festival to Honor Tom Cruise and Nichelle Nichols

    [caption id="attachment_19156" align="aligncenter" width="1024"]Tom Cruise Tom Cruise[/caption] The Artemis Women in Action Film Festival will present The Artemis Action Rebel Award to actor/producer Tom Cruise for his illustrious body of work which, in addition to cementing his place in Hollywood acting history, has also championed strong female heroes in film.  Mr. Cruise’s films commonly feature women in physically strong, empowered action roles offering an opportunity for worldwide audiences to see powerful women on screen. The 2016 recipient of the Action Rebel Award was given to Mr. Paul Feig (director Ghostbusters, Spy, The Heat). Also being honored is sci-fi film and TV legend, Nichelle Nichols, the beloved Lt. Uhura from Star Trek. Her role as Uhura shattered barriers for women, particularly women of color, in the sci-fi genre and created an icon which inspired generations of girls. Ms. Nichols has also championed breaking barriers in the wider culture beyond film and as such has been a model of dignity and strength for her millions of fans. The festival’s headlining event will be the Friday April 21, 2017 Red Carpet Gala featuring the Honoree Award Ceremony and premiere headlining screenings. Our Honoree Award ceremony will also recognize iconic stunt legends Andy Armstrong, a renowned stuntman and stunt coordinator for over four decades (Ragtime, Hoffa, Highlander, Planet of the Apes, The Amazing Spider-Man) will receive the Artemis Stunt Rebel Award and beloved stuntwoman Jennifer Caputo (Batman Forever, From Dusk Till Dawn, Charlie’s Angels, Thor, Paranormal Activity) will receive the Artemis Stunt Lifetime Achievement Award for her two plus decades of breathtaking stunt performances and stunt choreography respected by stunt men and women throughout the industry. World renowned stuntwoman Tammie Baird (Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Iron Man, Taken 3) will receive the Artemis Stunt Warrior Award for her unique and fearless stunt expertise ranging from car hits to high heeled stunt fights. “Our modern day has all but stripped physicality, save sex out of femininity. We have not explored female physical potential, and we do not encourage its exploration,” said film festival Founder Melanie Wise. “I’ve said for quite a while, until women are seen as physically equal, we will always be seen as less.” “Women in action are nothing new. Women have been in action since the dawn of time. The films we screen reflect that,” remarks Co-Founder Sean Marlon Newcombe. “Female action films are popular, profitable and people are clamoring for them.”

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  • Jeff Bridges to Receive SBIFF’s 2017 American Riviera Award for Role in HELL OR HIGH WATER

    [caption id="attachment_19152" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Jeff Bridges in Hell or High Water Jeff Bridges in Hell or High Water[/caption] Jeff Bridges will be honored with the American Riviera Award at the 2017 Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF). Bridges will be fêted with a Tribute, moderated by Scott Feinberg, celebrating his illustrious career, culminating with his captivating performance in David Mackenzie’s Hell or High Water, a CBS Films release. The film opened in August to critical acclaim. For his role in Hell or High Water, Bridges has received Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Award nominations for Best Supporting Actor, as well as the National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actor. Bridges’ renowned career includes celebrated roles in films such as The Big Lebowski, Fearless, The Contender, The Mirror Has Two Faces, The Fabulous Baker Boys, The Door in the Floor, True Grit, Starman, The Morning After, Jagged Edge, The Last Picture Show, Against All Odds, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, The Fisher King, Seabiscuit, and Crazy Heart (for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor). “Jeff Bridges shows us in Hell or High Water that an already great artist can continue his growth. I may go as far as saying that this is his best performance,” stated SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling. “It’s truly special to be able to celebrate Jeff – for he’s not only a dear friend of SBIFF – but he is a timeless legend in our industry.” The American Riviera Award was established to recognize actors who have made a significant contribution to American Cinema. Bridges will join a prestigious group of past recipients, including last year’s honorees Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, and Mark Ruffalo (2016), Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke (2015), Robert Redford (2014), Quentin Tarantino (2013) and Martin Scorsese (2012), Annette Bening (2011), Sandra Bullock (2010), Mickey Rourke (2009), Tommy Lee Jones (2008), Forrest Whitaker (2007), Philip Seymour Hoffman (2006), Kevin Bacon (2005) and Diane Lane (2004).

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