The animated film Anomalisa directed by Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson has been added to the lineup for the 51st Chicago International Film Festival. The film will screen on Wednesday, October 21, 2015.
A beautifully tender and absurdly humorous dreamscape, from the brilliant minds of Charlie Kaufman (Synecdoche, New York) and Duke Johnson (“Community” episode, Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas), this stop-motion animation wonder features the vocal cast of Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tom Noonan and David Thewlis and a stirring strings-based score by Carter Burwell. The darkly comedic and surreal stop-motion journey of a man’s long night of the soul, Anomalisa confirms Charlie Kaufman’s place amongst the most important of American filmmakers, and announces Duke Johnson as a major creative force.
Michael Stone, husband, father and respected author of “How May I Help You Help Them?,” is a man crippled by the mundanity of his life. On a business trip to Cincinnati, where he’s scheduled to speak at a convention of customer service professionals, he checks into the Fregoli Hotel. There, he is amazed to discover a possible escape from his desperation in the form of an unassuming Akron baked goods sales rep, Lisa, who may or may not be the love of his life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYbKJfls6WMFilm Festivals
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Animated Film ANOMALISA by Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson Added to Chicago International Film Festival
The animated film Anomalisa directed by Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson has been added to the lineup for the 51st Chicago International Film Festival. The film will screen on Wednesday, October 21, 2015.
A beautifully tender and absurdly humorous dreamscape, from the brilliant minds of Charlie Kaufman (Synecdoche, New York) and Duke Johnson (“Community” episode, Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas), this stop-motion animation wonder features the vocal cast of Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tom Noonan and David Thewlis and a stirring strings-based score by Carter Burwell. The darkly comedic and surreal stop-motion journey of a man’s long night of the soul, Anomalisa confirms Charlie Kaufman’s place amongst the most important of American filmmakers, and announces Duke Johnson as a major creative force.
Michael Stone, husband, father and respected author of “How May I Help You Help Them?,” is a man crippled by the mundanity of his life. On a business trip to Cincinnati, where he’s scheduled to speak at a convention of customer service professionals, he checks into the Fregoli Hotel. There, he is amazed to discover a possible escape from his desperation in the form of an unassuming Akron baked goods sales rep, Lisa, who may or may not be the love of his life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYbKJfls6WM
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SPOTLIGHT Starring Michael Keaton is Closing Night Film of Chicago International Film Festival
Spotlight has been added to the 51st Chicago International Film Festival as its Closing Night selection. Spotlight will be shown at the 51st Chicago International Film Festival on Thursday, October 29, 2015.
Starring Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, Brian d’Arcy James and Stanley Tucci, Spotlight tells the riveting true story of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Boston Globe investigation that would rock the city and cause a crisis in one of the world’s oldest and most trusted institutions. When the newspaper’s tenacious “Spotlight” team of reporters delves into allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church, their year-long investigation uncovers a decades-long cover-up at the highest levels of Boston’s religious, legal, and government establishment, touching off a wave of revelations around the world. Directed by Academy Award-nominee Tom McCarthy, Spotlight is a tense investigative dramatic-thriller, tracing the steps to one of the biggest cover-ups in modern times.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXymzwz0V2g
Spotlight adds to the list of Oscar contenders screening at the 51st Chicago International Film Festival, which also includes Carol, Brooklyn, Where To Invade Next, and 45 Years.
“Spotlight has everything we love about movies -a great cast, an intriguing story, and just the right dose of controversy,” says Founder & Artistic Director Michael Kutza. “Each year, we make a point to bring films to Chicago that aren’t just entertaining, but important and vital works of art. ‘Spotlight’ is one of those movies.”
“We are thrilled to bring the 51st Festival to a close with such a strong film,” added Programming Director Mimi Plauché.
Spotlight opens in select Chicago theaters on November 6, 2015.
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First Irish Screen America Film Festival is a Hit, Featuring Irish Films and Directors
The inaugural 2015 Irish Screen America Film Festival (ISA) took place recently in Los Angeles and New York, attracting more 3,000 attendees. Launched in 2015, ISA is an organization created to seek out and promote influential and emerging Irish talent to the U.S. and showcase the very best of contemporary Irish film, TV, animation, video games and interactive media.
The festival’s Executive Director and Curator, Kilmacanogue native and Emmy-winning producer/director Niall McKay and Deputy Directors Clodagh Bowyer and Marissa Aroy welcomed guests on both coasts to the festivals which came to a close in New York on Monday, October 5.
Niall McKay said, “This year, we were able to showcase over 13 films to over three thousand people in both New York and Los Angeles and introduce our participating filmmakers to important industry professionals. Of course, none of this could happen if they weren’t making beautiful films that we are able to showcase. It’s really a great time for Irish filmmaking. It was also really gratifying to see that many of the projects from our local Irish program in New York, such as “You Are Beautiful,” “Creativity Requires Courage,” and “On the Lig,” sprung out of the relationships created at the prior editions of the festivals.”
Irish writer/directors Rachael Moriarty and Peter Murphy were on hand in both Los Angeles and New York to introduce guests to their confident, timely, Opening Night thriller TRADERS. Also attending ISA’s festivities, either presenting their films or participating in programs were breakthrough LA-based Irish directors Fergal Reilly (ANGRY BIRDS), Ruairi Robinson (LAST DAY ON MARS), Gary Shore (DRACULA UNTOLD); actors Peter O’Meara (TRADERS, RESIDENT EVIL: EXTINCTION), Kevin J. Ryan (PADDY’S IN THE BOOT, COPPERS), Dónall Ó Héalaí (TRADERS, SÍNTE), Glenn Keogh (LUCKY ME BOLLIX, TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION), Wallis Murphy Munn (SANDBOY); and short film directors Vittoria Colonna (SANDBOY), Marcus Fox (LUCKY ME BOLLIX), Kevin Shulman (PADDY’S IN THE BOOT) Andrew Baird (BREAKING THROUGH) Liam Hallihan (MARTIN’S LIFE); and Masterclass Instructors director Cathy Brady (MORNING, WASTED), and Oscar®-nominated screenwriter and director Naomi Sheridan, amongst others.
Other festival guests included Barbara Jones – Consul General of Ireland in New York and Kevin Byrne – Irish Vice Consul of Ireland in San Francisco; producers Jonathan Loughran and Gabrielle Kelly; former Miss Ireland and RTÉ presenter, actress Olivia Tracey; Bernadette O’Neill; Rachel Rath; Kevin Marron; Johnnie A O’Callaghan; Jasmine Jaisinghani (AFI, IFFLA); Catherine Siggins; Siobhan Flynn; Tara Halloran (SVP British Film Commission); Lisa McLaughlin-Strassman; Pascal Ladreyt (ELMA); Joan Burney Keatings (Cinemagic); poet Maureen Grady and Daniel Nyiri.
ISA presented an award at the Los Angeles Opening Night Reception to “outstanding new filmmakers & influential and emerging Irish talent”. Recipients of the 2015 ISA Rising Talent Award were Rachael Moriarty, Peter Murphy, Barry Keoghan, Liam Hallihan, Cathy Brady, Laura McGee, Naomi Sheridan and Dónall Ó Héalaí. The awards were presented to the filmmakers by Teresa McGrane, Deputy Chief Executive, Bord Scannán na hÉireann/the Irish Film Board (IFB) who said “‘What we have witnessed this weekend is the extraordinary breadth of Irish talent both living and working in the US and Ireland – Irish Screen America is an incredible platform to share stories and at the same time have a lot of fun. Thank you to Niall and the ISA team – we know the hard work they put in and we wish ISA every success in building on an amazing launch.”
Highlights of the combined program included Daisy Asquith’s documentary “After the Dance,” the Sundance Award-winning, IFTA-nominated “Glassland,” Frank Berry’s “I Used to Live Here,” the shorts program including “Wasted” by Cathy Brady, Liam Halihan’s super funny animation “Martin’s Life” and the premiere screening of Niall McKay and Marissa Aroy’s “On the Lig”.
The programs included a highly successful, sold out panel discussion entitled “Stories From the Field” with directors Ruairi Robinson (“Last Day on Mars”), Fergal Reilly (“Angry Birds”) and Gary Shore (“Dracula Untold”) in Los Angeles and packed out master classes from Academy Award® nominated screenwriter, Naomi Sheridan in Los Angeles and IFTA-award-winning director Cathy Brady in New York.
ISA’s film festival roadshow will continue to take place annually in the fall in Los Angeles and New York featuring contemporary and critically-acclaimed Irish feature films and documentaries, New Irish Talent Showcases (shorts, web shows, animation and games), a selection of filmmaker Q&A’s, master classes, industry panel discussions and filmmaker receptions.
Image 1: Los Angeles – Olivia Tracey (fmr Miss Ireland), Niall McKay (ISA), Naomi Sheridan (screenwriter), Teresa McGrane (Irish Film Board)
Image 2: Los Angeles Irish Directors Panel – L-R Fergal Reilly (Director Angry Birds), Gary Shore (Dracula Untold), Niall McKay (IFA), Ruairi Robinson (Last Day on Mars)
Image 3: New York Reception for opening of ISA New York Film Festival – Niall McKay (ISA), Barbara Jones, Consul General of Ireland in New York (1)
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2015 Stockholm Film Festival unleashes Twilight Zone Film Lineup, incl. GREEN ROOM
The 2015 Stockholm Film Festival reveals the titles in the film section Twilight Zone. Twilight Zone is the film section that offers the most adrenaline-filled and nerve wrecking cinema experiences. “This year’s Twilight Zone presents more realistic and present dangers without being detached from the dark and the fantastic. Neo-nazis and punks clash in Green Room, a virus outbreak in Denmark triggers military action against middle class suburbia and a giant tsunami hits Norway,” says George Ivanov, program director at Stockholm Film Festival.
A selection of titles:
Baskin (2015) Can Evrenol, Turkey. Nordic premiere.
Crumbs (2015), Miguel Llansó, Ethiopia, Spain. Scandinavian premiere.
Demon (2015), Marcin Wrona, Poland, Israel. Nordic premiere.
Green Room (2015), Jeremy Saulnier, USA. Scandinavian premiere.
I am a Hero (2015) Shinsuke Sato, Japan. Nordic premiere.
Island City (2015) Ruchika Oberoi, India. Nordic premiere.
Office (2015) Won-Chan Hong, South Korea. Nordic premiere.
The Devil’s Candy (2015) Sean Byrne, USA. Swedish premiere.
The Invitation (2015), Karyn Kusama, USA. Nordic premiere.
The Wave (2015) Roar Uthaug, Norway. Swedish premiere.
Violator (2014) Dodo Dayao, Philippines. Nordic premiere.
What We Become (2015) Bo Mikkelsen, Denmark. Nordic premiere.
With The Lips Closed (2015) Carlos Osuna, Colombia. World premiere.
Yakuza Apocalypse: The Great War of the Underworld (2015), Takashi Miike, Japan. Nordic premiere.
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NO ONE’S CHILD, LEMON, THE LOOK OF SILENCE Among 2015 Milwaukee Film Festival Jury Award Winners

The 7th Milwaukee Film Festival announced its 2015 Jury Award Winners on Sunday, with awards given out in both the Competition and Cream City Cinema programs. No One’s Child directed by Vuk Ršumović is the winner of the Herzfeld Competition Award. No One’s Child, based on a remarkable true story, takes us deep into the mountains of Bosnia, where we’re introduced to a feral child living among the wolves. Upon his discovery in 1988, he is sent to a Belgrade orphanage. There, he struggles to relate to his peers until a friendship allows him to embrace humanity, only for the Balkan War to put pressure on his caretakers to return him to his homeland.
Lemon directed by John Roberts is the winner of the Cream City Cinema, this is the second win for John Roberts, who also won the award in 2009. In Lemon, a girl saves money to buy a bicycle, but is swindled by an old man.
The Look of Silence directed by Joshua Oppenheimer is the winner of the Documentary Jury Award. A critically acclaimed companion piece to the breathtaking look into the heart of darkness that was THE ACT OF KILLING (the sensation of MFF2013), THE LOOK OF SILENCE approaches the 1960s Indonesian genocide not from the perspective of its perpetrators but the survivors.
Brico Forward Fund top honors were awarded for continued production of a feature documentary based on local filmmaker Erik Ljung’s Mothers For Justice, a short film included in the 2015 Cream City Cinema’s Milwaukee Show II. Mothers for Justice follows Maria Hamilton, mother of Dontre Hamilton who was shot by a police officer in 2014 in Milwaukee’s Red Arrow Park. In 2015, Maria Hamilton founded the organization Mothers for Justice dedicated to uniting mothers who have lost children in police related deaths and demanding further investigation and accountability from law enforcement.
2015 MILWAUKEE FILM FESTIVAL JURY AWARDS
Abele Catalyst Award Donna and Donald Baumgartner
Herzfeld Competition Award ($10,000 cash) No One’s Child (dir. Vuk Ršumović)
Cream City Cinema ($5,000 cash) Lemon (dir. John Roberts)
Cream City Cinema Special Jury Prize The Sound Man (dir. Chip Duncan)
Documentary Jury Award ($5,000 cash) The Look of Silence (dir. Joshua Oppenheimer) Shorter Is Better Award ($1,000 cash) Giovanni and the Water Ballet (dir. Astrid Bussink)Shorter Is Better Special Jury Prizes We Can’t Live Without Cosmos (dir. Konstantin Bronzit) De Smet (dirs. Thomas Baerten, Wim Geudens)
Kids Choice Short Film Award ($1,000 cash) A Place in the Middle (dirs. Dean Hamer, Joe Wilson) Kids Choice Special Jury PrizesPapa (dir. Natalie Labarre) Johnny Express (dir. James Woo)
Pitch Us Your Doc! Contest Winner (initially announced October 3) Wingman Dad (Elizabeth Ridley)
Brico Forward Fund Winners Mothers for Justice (working title) (Erik Ljung) $25,000 cash and $10,000 from Independent After her black, unarmed, schizophrenic son, Dontre, is shot 14 times and killed by a Milwaukee Police Officer in a popular downtown park, Maria Hamilton attempts to rally grieving mothers from across the country to join her in a Million Moms March on Washington D.C. The Night Country (Oliver Franklin Anderson) $10,000 cash, $15,000 from North American Camera, $15,000 from the Electric Sun Company and $10,000 from RDI StagesSmoke from an industrial fire brings the residents of a small Midwestern town into communion with spirits preying on their fears and desires on a stormy summer night.
When Claude Got Shot (Brad Lichtenstein) $10,000 cash, $6,000 from RDI Stages, $5,000 from the Electric Sun Company, $5,000 from Independent When Claude Got Shot’s story of three strangers brought together by gun violence humanizes and disrupts the narrative about so-called “black on black” crime in America. Never Home (working title) (Pang Yang Her) $5,000 from Independent Why do cities continue to struggle in treating those with Sexual Assault within minority communities? Through the journey of Joua Yang, a Hmong American women sexually assaulted at the age of nine, Never Home examines a survivor’s strength to both unravel cultural confusion and use her story to help other heals from their past. Just Eat (Laura Dyan Kezman) $5,000 from North American Camera Just Eat opens up the guarded world of the estimated 30 million people affected by eating disorders in our country. We follow the stories of prominent researchers, grieving parents fighting for recognition, and the diagnosed sufferers, crying out for help. Lunar Man (Kyle V. James) $5,000 cash for script development After stealing a time-travel suit on a desert planet, a lawless miner must seek help from a beautiful young hunter to help him escape from a dangerous group of bandits called The Sharks.
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IMPERIAL DREAMS, 3 1/2 MINUTES, TEN BULLETS, TIME TO GO, Win Top Honors at 2015 Montreal International Black Film Festival
The 2015 Montreal International Black Film Festival held from September 29 to October 4, 2015, announced its prize winners at the Festival’s closing ceremonies on Sunday. Malik Vital’s Imperial Dreams won the award for Best Narrative Feature, Marc Silver’s 31/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets won the award for Best Documentary Feature, and Loîc Barché’s Le Commencement won the award for Best Narrative Short.
Winners of 2015 Montreal International Black Film Festival
BEST NARRATIVE FEATURE: Malik Vital’s Imperial Dreams (USA)
In Imperial Dreams, a 21-year-old reformed gangster’s devotion to his family and his future is put to the test when he is released from prison and returns to his old stomping grounds in Watts, Los Angeles.
Honorable mentions to: Ernest Nkosi’s Thina Sobabili (South Africa)
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE: Marc Silver’s 3 1/2 Minutes, Ten Bullets (USA)
3 1⁄2 MINUTES, TEN BULLETS dissects the shooting death of 17-year old Jordan Davis by Michael Dunn in Jacksonville, Florida on Black Friday 2012. The film examines the aftermath of this systemic tragedy, the contradictions within the American criminal justice system—particularly the implications of the “Stand Your Ground” self-defence law— and the racial prejudices that ensued. With intimate access, the film follows the trial of Dunn and its deep impact on Jordan’s family and friends.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKbCoRA__UI
Honorable mention to: Michiel Thomas’ Game Face (USA) and Stanley Nelson’s Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (USA)
BEST NARRATIVE SHORT: Loîc Barché’s Le Commencement (Time To Go) (France)
Ever since he was a child, the Musician has had only one goal: becoming a great guitar player. Now thirty, he’s living with a young welder, Elsa, who wants to build a life with him. But the Musician knows that for as long as he hasn’t achieved his goal he will never be able to commit to anything or anyone else. One night, however, Elsa convinces him to take a job in a music shop in a nearby city. But on the way there, the Musician meets a strange man who promises to make his dreams come true in exchange for his soul…
Honorable mention to: Anna Muso’s Ran Fast (USA)
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2015 Chicago International Film Festival Unveils Spotlight: Architecture+Space+Design Program
The 2015 Chicago International Film Festival (Oct 15-29, 2015), in conjunction with the Chicago Architecture Biennial, revealed the Festival’s Spotlight: Architecture+Space+Design program.
The international selection showcases 11 new feature films, including notable portraits of architects, designers and buildings (Concrete Love – The Bohm Family, Why A Film About Michele De Lucchi?, The Infinite Happiness) and beautifully photographed depictions of contemporary and futuristic cities (Obra, Invention, Under Electric Clouds).
In addition to the program of shorts, Chicago Film Archives program and feature-length films (all listed below), the Spotlight features a discussion with architect Helmut Jahn on Sat, Oct 17 at 6:00pm at the AMC River East 21.
Rounding out the Spotlight: Architecture+Space+Design program, on Wednesdays throughout the Chicago Architecture Biennial (Oct-Dec 2015), local and visiting architects and designers will present Architects on Film.
2015 Chicago International Film Festival SPOTLIGHT: ARCHITECTURE+SPACE+DESIGN
Concrete Love – The Bohm Family (pictured above)
CHICAGO PREMIERE
Country: Germany, Switzerland
Director: Maurizius Staerkle Drux
Synopsis: Prominent German architect Gottfried Böhm is celebrated for his buildings of concrete, steel, and glass. His three sons are also highly acclaimed. When the family matriarch, an architect herself and source of inspiration for all Böhm men, dies, their emotional foundation is shattered. Sensitive to form and emotion, Concrete Love lays bare the blueprint of a family.
Double Happiness
CHICAGO PREMIERE
Country: Austria, China
Director: Ella Raidel
Synopsis: This surreal, exquisitely framed documentary looks at the construction of a near-exact replica of a scenic Austrian town-cobblestone by cobblestone-in an undeveloped Chinese tract of land. In a style both entrancing and playful, the film questions the difference between real and imagined, model and reality, raising thought-provoking questions about the nature of authenticity and happiness. Features insightful interviews with urban planners, designers, and trailblazing Beijing architect Ma Yansong.
Greater Things
USA PREMIERE
Country: UK, Japan
Director: Vahid Hakimzadeh
Synopsis: In this stunningly composed meditation on space and human relationships, an adrift Iranian architect, a disengaged Japanese couple, and a Lithuanian mixed martial arts fighter search for connection in modern Japan. From the stylishly designed shops of Tokyo to a minimalist glass suburban home to a mysterious tree house in the woods, Greater Things reveals the strange places we inhabit, and how they can both unite and divide us.
Helmut Jahn: An Architect’s Life
Country: N/A
Director: N/A
Synopsis: World-renowned for his progressive architecture and constant innovation, Helmut Jahn has designed 16 buildings in Illinois, including Chicago’s own United Airlines Terminal. He has also designed skyscrapers in major cities around the world, from Brussels and Rotterdam to Bangkok, Shanghai, and Berlin, which boasts his celebrated Sony Center. Jahn will discuss his remarkable 49-year career in architecture and his unique vision, using clips from modern and classic films that showcase his designs and reflect his philosophy.
Illegal Portraits (Ritratti Abusivi)
NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
Country: Italy
Director: Romano Montesarchio
Synopsis: Welcome to Parco Saraceno, a derelict neighborhood in southeast Italy. Built in the 1960s, its run-down houses once held the promise of suburban coastal bliss. Now home to a community of squatters, the development is a portrait of both poverty and resilience. Without power or resources, the residents persevere, finding new ways to live among the ruins and maintain their way of life-and their dignity.
The Infinite Happiness
CHICAGO PREMIERE
Country: France, Denmark
Director: Ila Beka, Louise Lemoine
Synopsis: Copenhagen’s “8 House,” an ultramodern loop of apartments created by architect Bjarke Ingels, reinvents the concept of “home.” Its 500 residents can traverse all nine floors by bike while their kids attend kindergarten on the ground floor. This exuberant documentary profiles the (mostly) happy residents, including a group of children who experience the best scavenger hunt ever, offering a hopeful, inspired picture of communal living by design.
Invention
USA PREMIERE
Country: Canada, France
Director: Mark Lewis
Synopsis: A meditative sensory experience from Canadian avant-garde artist Mark Lewis, Invention intimately explores our relationship to the physical space around us. Long, luxurious tracking shots take the viewer through museum works and modern cityscapes in Toronto, São Paolo, and Paris, panning and tilting at improbable angles to give a fresh perspective on the everyday. Echoes of Koyaanisqatsi and Man With a Movie Camera infuse this poem of modern life.
Milano 2015
NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
Country: Italy
Director: various
Synopsis: From subways to skyscrapers, from antique monasteries to ornate mansions, from shuttered old theaters to the inimitable La Scala, this stunning omnibus feature captures the soul and majesty of the northern Italian city. Six Italian directors explore different facets of contemporary Milan. The result is a rich and eclectic portrait of urban life and spaces-both rooted in history and bursting with a diversity of architecture and humanity.
Modern Metropolis: Mid-Century Chicago On Film
Note: This is a FREE event at the Chicago Cultural Center
Country: N/A
Director: various directors
Synopsis: Chicago’s rich architectural tradition has long been a hallmark of the Windy City. In this evocative collection of shorts culled from the Chicago Film Archives dating from 1962 to 1976, go back in time to witness its urban glories. The films include dynamic “city-symphonies,” an ode to stainless steel, and an admiring portrait of Louis Sullivan’s Stock Exchange building and its woeful demolition.
Obra
CHICAGO PREMIERE
Country: Brazil
Director: Gregorio Graziosi
Synopsis: When a complacent young architect in São Paulo discovers a burial ground at the site of his first construction project, he must reckon with hidden secrets that make him question the very foundation of his heritage. An entrancing meditation on urban alienation and repressed national memory filmed in stark, exquisitely composed black-and-white, Obra is a haunting portrait of contemporary Brazil in flux.
Shorts 8: The Tower Above The Earth – Architecture
Countries: France, Iran, Israel, Poland, Switzerland, US
Directors: Teresa Czepiec, Sandy Pitetti, Miki Polonski, Chuck Przybyl, Matthieu Landour, Arash Nassiri
Description: The shorts takes a bright new view of space and design in cinema from claustrophobic urban spaces to hypnotic skylines and historic architecture coalesce, courtesy of Program Partner Jeanne Randall Malkin Family Foundation.
Under Electric Clouds (Pod elektricheskimi oblakami)
USA PREMIERE
Country: Russia, Ukraine
Director: Aleksey German Jr.
Synopsis: In 2017 Russia, exactly 100 years after the Bolshevik Revolution, the world is on the verge of a new great war. An unfinished skyscraper looms on the horizon, casting an emblematic shadow over a society about to collapse. With breathtaking sci-fi imagery, this wildly strange magical realistic film interweaves the stories of seven individuals, from an architect to a Kyrgyz laborer, as it explores a dystopian dreamscape.
Underground Fragrance (Di Xia Xiang)
USA PREMIERE
Country: China, France
Director: Di Xia Xiang
Synopsis: On the rapidly urbanizing outskirts of Beijing, Yong Le spends his days scouring homes scheduled for demolition for furniture to pawn and his nights in the sub-basement of a high-rise apartment building. After an accident blinds him, a nightclub dancer, hoping to secure a day job with a real estate developer, nurses him back to health. Produced by Tsai Ming-Liang, the film adapts his signature meditative social realism, revealing a world in which everyone, literally and figuratively, is looking to move up.
Why a Film About Michele De Lucchi? (Perché un film su Michele De Lucchi)
CHICAGO PREMIERE
Country: Italy
Director: Alessio Bozzer
Synopsis: A portrait of the famous radical Italian designer and progenitor of the Maker Movement, this informative, playful documentary traces Michele De Lucchi’s personal experiments and provocations. With De Lucchi serving as his own narrator, the film examines his pioneering achievements with the design movement Memphis, including the stripped-down “First Chair,” the Oceanic Lamp, and a spectacular LED-lit bridge in Tbilisi, Georgia.
ARCHITECTS ON FILM
The Hawks and the Sparrows
Country: Italy (1966)
Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini
Featured Architect: Xavier Wrona, founder of the architecture office Est-ce ainsi, a structure working to refocus the architectural practice on its political consequences and its possible participation in the reform of “vivre ensemble.”
Synopsis: In this whimsical fable from the legendary Italian director, an old man (played by the famous Keaton-esque clown Toto) walks along the dusty road of life with his empty-headed son. Joined by a philosophical crow, who asks probing questions about existence, father and son witness the complex contradictions of Italian life, from Christianity vs. Marxism, Church vs. State.
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse
Country: USA (1991)
Directors: Fax Bahr, George Hickenlooper
Featured Architect: Eric Ellingsen is currently teaching at the School of the Art Institute (SAIC) and has a practice called species of space.
Synopsis: This eye-opening documentary examines the outrageous behind-the-scenes making of Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 classic Apocalypse Now. With rarely seen archival footage shot by Coppola’s wife, the film recounts how events on the Philippines-set production soon resembled the madness recounted in the story. Over-budget, with cast and crew bordering on the edge of insanity, the film is a revealing look at the extraordinary lengths that some will go to make their art.
Waste Land
Country: USA (2010)
Director: Lucy Walker
Featured Architect: Emmanuel Pratt, Co-Founder and Executive Director of the Sweet Water Foundation and founding member of axilL3C. He is also Director of Aquaponics for Chicago State University and teaches courses within the College of Arts and Sciences.
Synopsis: This Oscar-nominated documentary follows renowned artist Vik Muniz as he journeys from his home base in Brooklyn to the world’s largest garbage dump in his native Brazil. There, he photographs an eclectic band of “catadores”-people who scrounge for recyclable materials. As he collaborates with these inspiring characters to recreate photographs of themselves, Waste Land offers stirring evidence of the transformative power of art and the alchemy of the human spirit.
Screening 1: Wed, Nov 18; 6:00pm
Note: This is a FREE event held at the Chicago Cultural Center
My Winnipeg
Country: USA (2007)
Director: Guy Madden
Featured Architect: Design With Company’s co-founders Stewart Hicks and Allison Newmeyer, who are also assistant professors at the University of Illinois at Chicago
Synopsis: A self-described “docu-fantasia,” this rollicking cinematic poem charts the not-exactly-true goings-on in the birthplace of Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin (The Saddest Music in the World). Brazenly blurring the borders of nonfiction and dream, Maddin recounts his return to his childhood home, revisiting key moments from his adolescence and his city’s history (from a semi-nude civic pride event to a jazz-age séance ballet!) My Winnipeg is a wild ride of remembrance, place, and imagination.
Screening 1: Wed, Nov 4; 6:00pm
Note: This is a FREE event held at the Chicago Cultural Center
The Wiz
Country: USA (1978)
Director: Sidney Lumet
Featured Architect: Amanda Williams whose work centers on color, race, and space. She uses vivid, culturally derived colors to paint abandoned houses on Chicago’s South Side, marking the pervasiveness of undervalued Black space. Accolades include a 3Arts Award, a Joyce Foundation scholarship, and a Robert James Eidlitz Fellowship in Ethiopia.
Synopsis: The film version of the popular Broadway musical retells the events of “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” through the eyes of Dorothy, a young African-American kindergarten teacher (Diana Ross) who’s “never been below 125th Street.” On her journey down the yellow brick road of ’70s Manhattan, she encounters a garbage-stuffed scarecrow (Michael Jackson), a broken-down tin man (Nipsey Russell), and a cowardly lion (Ted Ross) posing as a stone statue outside a museum. Together, they seek out the Wiz (Richard Pryor), a powerful wizard living in Emerald City who may be able to help Dorothy get home.
Screening 1: Wed, Dec 9; 6:00pm
Note: This is a FREE event held at the Chicago Cultural Center; featuring a conversation with Jacqueline Stewart, Professor in the University of Chicago’s Department of Cinema and Media Studies. Stewart’s research and teaching explore African American film cultures from the origins of the medium to the present, as well as the archiving and preservation of moving images, and “orphan” media histories, including nontheatrical, amateur, and activist film and video. She directs the South Side Home Movie Project and is co-curator of the L.A. Rebellion Preservation Project at the UCLA Film and Television Archive. She also serves as an appointee to the National Film Preservation Board. She is currently researching the racial politics of moving image preservation and is also completing a study of the life and work of African American actor/writer/director Spencer Williams.
Voices of Cabrini
Country: USA (1999)
Director: Ronit Bezalel
Featured Architect: Andres Hernandez, an artist-designer-educator who works with youth and adults to interpret, critique, and re-imagine the physical, social and cultural environments we inhabit.
Synopsis: Shot over a four-year period, this gripping documentary chronicles the demolition of Cabrini Green, Chicago’s most infamous housing development. Told sympathetically from the perspectives of the people being uprooted, the film shows the startling evictions of longtime residents from the city’s mid-city ghetto. A sobering look at “city planning” at work, Voices of Cabrini is a valuable historical look at a city in transition-and those left behind.
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JAMES WHITE to Chicago Premiere at Chicago International Film Festival, James Mond, Christopher Abbott to Receive Emerging Artist Award
The 51st Chicago International Film Festival Junior Board will present the U.S. independent feature film James White as their Junior Board Night at the Festival on Saturday, October 17, 2015; and will present the Festival’s Emerging Artist Award to both director Josh Mond and actor Christopher Abbott.
In this Sundance-winning drama directed by Josh Mond (producer of Martha Marcy May Marlene and Simon Killer), James White is an emotionally unstable young New Yorker processing the recent death of his long-absent father. His mother, a cancer survivor who raised him from a young age, falls terminally ill. With an immersive filmmaking style putting us inside James’s head, the raw, affecting film features a revelatory lead performance from Christopher Abbott (Girls), with Cynthia Nixon (Sex and the City) as his ailing mother.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1aVC6LJ3uc
“We are very excited that the Junior Board has selected these amazing young talents for their Emerging Artist Award,” said Anthony Kaufman, Programmer for the Chicago International Film Festival. “In his first feature as a director, Josh Mond has crafted a remarkably assured dramatic film, which is made all the more visceral and moving by Christopher Abbott’s riveting performance.”
The Chicago International Film Festival’s Junior Board is a diverse group of young, working professionals dedicated to fundraising and volunteering to support the Festival’s year-round Education Program. Along with year-round screenings and special events, Junior Board Night reflects the Board’s passion and enthusiasm for the Festival and its mission. Previous Junior Board Night films have included The Sessions (Ben Lewin) and Low Down (Jeff Preiss).
“The Junior Board works throughout the year as ambassadors of the Festival, and Junior Board Night is one of our most highly anticipated events. We look forward to welcoming Josh and Christopher to Chicago, sharing their film with our audiences and celebrating them for their work,” says Hanna Soltys, Junior Board President.
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OLIVER’S DEAL, INCORRUPTIBLE Win Top Awards at 2015 Woodstock Film Festival
OLIVER’S DEAL, directed by Barney Elliott (pictured above) won the Maverick Award for Best Feature Narrative, and INCORRUPTIBLE, directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi won the Maverick Award for Best Feature Documentary at the 2015 Woodstock Film Festival which ran Wednesday, September 30, through Sunday, October 4, 2015.
The Awards Ceremony was held Saturday night, with Academy Award® winning actress Melissa Leo on hand to help celebrate the talent at this year’s festival, including honorary award recipients Atom Egoyan and Guy Maddin, two of Canada’s most celebrated filmmakers. Guy Maddin presented Atom Egoyan with the Honorary Maverick Award, and Atom Egoyan then presented Guy Maddin with the second annual Fiercely Independent Award.
This year’s ceremony also featured the introduction of two inaugural awards, the Carpe Diem Andretta Award, presented to Waffle Street, and the World Cinema Competition, presented to Meet Me In Venice.
2015 Woodstock Film Festival Maverick Awards
The Maverick Award for BEST FEATURE NARRATIVE was presented by jurors Themla Adams, Stephen Lang, and Joana Vincente to:
OLIVER’S DEAL, directed by Barney Elliott
Honorable Mention was presented to: IT HAD TO BE YOU, directed by Sasha Gordon
The Maverick Award for BEST FEATURE DOCUMENTARY was presented by jurors Simon Kilmurry, Alan Berliner, and Sara Bernstein to:
INCORRUPTIBLE, directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
“This remarkable film traces a journey from idealism to corruption in one of Africa’s oldest democracies, asking the question – is power an inherently corrupting influence? What the leaders of the country do not count on is that — in the end — it is the people of Senegal who turn out to be incorruptible. Through unprecedented access to all the players, filmmaker Chai Vasarhelyi weaves a complex and thrilling picture of a country at the precipice.” – 2015 Woodstock Film Festival Jury
Honorable Mention was presented to THE BABUSHKAS OF CHERNOBYL, directed by Holly Morris, Co-directed by Anne Bogart
“A lyrical, poetic portrait of an unknown group of women in a forgotten land. The Babushkas of Chernobyl live mostly alone, in the shadow of the world’s largest nuclear meltdown, surrounded by huge amounts of invisible radiation contamination. Strong and independent, their indelible ties to their homes trumps any health risk to which they might be exposed. A beautifully crafted documentary, this film does what documentaries do best – transport us to an unknown world and introduce us to extraordinary people we might never meet.” – 2015 Woodstock Film Festival Jury
The Maverick Award for BEST ANIMATION was presented by jurors Signe Baumane and Linda Beck to:
THE FIVE MINUTE MUSUEM, directed by Paul Bush
Honorable Mention was presented to RELIGATIO, directed by Jaime Giraldo
The Markertek Award for BEST SHORT NARRATIVE was presented by Benjamin Scott, Mary Stuart Masterson, and Nancy Collet to:
STANHOPE, directed by Solvan “Slick” Naim
Honorable Mention was presented to WELCOME (BIENVENIDOS), directed by Javier Fesser
The Markertek Award for BEST STUDENT SHORT FILM was presented by jurors David F. Schwartz, Isil Bagdadi, and Marjoe Aquilling to:
AGAINST NIGHT, directed by Stefan Kubicki
The Markertek Award for BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY was presented by jurors Hugo Perez, Cynthia Kane, and Jedd Wider to:
ALL ABOUT AMY, directed by Samuel Centore
Honorable Mention was presented to NANEEK, directed by Neal Steeno
The Haskell Wexler Award for BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY was presented with a special introduction by Haskell Wexler to:
BOB AND THE TREES, directed by Diego Ongaro, with cinematography by Chris Teague and Danny Vecchione
James Lyons Award for BEST EDITING of a FEATURE NARRATIVE was presented by jurors Meg Reticker and Sabine Hoffman to:
OLIVER’S DEAL, directed by Barney Elliott and edited by J.L. Romeu & Roberto Benavides
Honorable Mention was presented to TOUCHED WITH FIRE, directed by Paul Dalio and edited by Paul Dalio & Lee Percy
James Lyons Award for BEST EDITING of a FEATURE DOCUMENTARY was presented by jurors Sabine Hoffman, Katherine Barnier, and Michael Berenbaum to:
THE BABUSHKAS OF CHERNOBYL, directed by Holly Morris and edited by Michael Taylor, Richard Howard, and Mary Manhardt
Honorable Mention was presented to I WILL NOT BE SILENCED, directed by Judy Rymer and edited by Paul Hamilton
ULTRA INDIE AWARD was presented by jurors Lori Singer and Leah Meyerhoff to:
LAMB, directed by Ross Partridge
Honorable Mention was presented to BOB AND THE TREES, directed by Diego Ongaro
TANGERINE ENTERTAINMENT JUICE AWARD FOR BEST FEMALE FEATURE DIRECTOR was presented by jurors Amy Hobby and Anne Hubbell to:
Linda-Maria Birbeck, director of THERE SHOULD BE RULES
CARPE DIEM AWARD ANDRETTA AWARD FOR BEST FILM was presented by Lauri and Jim Andretta to: WAFFLE STREET, directed by Eshom Nelms and Ian Nelms
WORLD CINEMA AWARD was presented by jurors Claude Dal Farra and Lucy Barzun Donnelly to: MEET ME IN VENICE, directed by Eddy Terstall
BEST ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE was presented to Roberta Petzoldt (Meet Me in Venice)
FIERCELY INDEPENDENT AWARD was presented by Atom Egoyan to: GUY MADDIN
HONORARY MAVERICK AWARD was presented by Guy Maddin to: ATOM EGOYAN
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Michael Moore’s WHERE TO INVADE NEXT to Midwest Premiere at Chicago International Film Festival
Michael Moore’s latest film, Where To Invade Next, which World Premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, will have its Midwest Premiere at the 51st Chicago International Film Festival on Friday, October 23, 2015 as Centerpiece Film. Director Michael Moore is scheduled to attend.
What has lured Michael Moore, the documentary genre’s most entertaining rabble-rouser, back to feature films after a six-year hiatus? Only the future of his country, naturally. Where To Invade Next is an expansive, rib-tickling, and subversive comedy in which Moore, playing the role of “invader,” visits a host of nations to learn how the U.S. could improve its own prospects.
The creator of Fahrenheit 9/11 and Bowling for Columbine is back with this hilarious and eye-opening call to arms. Where To Invade Next shows the solutions to America’s most entrenched problems already exist in the world, he says-they’re just waiting to be co-opted.
Director Michael Moore has a long and rich history with the Chicago International Film Festival, having premiered his groundbreaking debut Roger and Me at the Chicago International Film Festival in 1989. Moore came back to present his 2002 film Bowling for Columbine, which won him an Oscar for Best Documentary. “Michael Moore is quite a character and his films are important. He’s changed the way we look at the documentary in so many ways. You either love him or you hate him, but he’s definitely a director to watch.” says Founder & Artistic Director of the Chicago International Film Festival Michael Kutza. “‘Where To Invade Next’ doesn’t disappoint.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2RYV04G0tHc

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Molly Moon and the Incredible Book of Hypnotism. (pictured above) Plucky Molly enjoys her family of friends in a small-town English orphanage. That is, until she finds a book that gives her the power of hypnosis. When her talented best friend, Rocky, is adopted, Molly sets her sights on a new, big-city adventure: having fun and becoming a huge TV star! But is the false fame worth it, at the expense of true friendship? Based on the phenomenally popular best-selling book series, starring Raffy Cassidy (Snow White and the Huntsman, Disney’s Tomorrowland), and featuring Oscar-nominated Emily Watson and Celia Imrie (Nanny McPhee). England, screened in English. For ages 8 and up.
Oddball. The sleepy maritime Australian town of Warrnambool is losing its beloved Little (“Fairy”) Penguin population faster each day. It’s up to hard-nosed local chicken farmer “Swampy” Marsh, his notoriously havoc-wreaking dog, Oddball, and ten-year-old granddaughter, Livvy to save them! Mother Emily is the top conservationist on the island. While she wants to stay to preserve the island’s wildlife treasure, time is running out, and the family must move if the efforts are fruitless. Both free-thinking Swampy and goofy sheepdog Oddball together have a bit of a reputation, but Livvy and family will keep them on track as they search for clues illuminating the reasons for the penguins’ perilous position. Based on real-life events, the Maremma dogs have truly made a difference on the penguin colony. This is a fairy tale about fairy penguins come true! Australia, screened in English. For ages 9 and up.
Code M. D’Artagan’s legendary sword has been missing for generations. Resourceful twelve-year-old Isabel decides to take over her grandfather’s search to solve the Musketeer’s mystery, once and for all, by piecing together clues and codes. Joined by two unlikely friends, they band together – all for one and one for all! But who can Isabel really trust? Brought to you by the same director as the 2014 Festival hit, Secrets of War. Netherlands, screened in Dutch with English subtitles. For ages 9 and up.
Secret Society of Souptown. Mari, Olav, Sadu, and Anton are part of the “Secret Society of Souptown,”whose sole purpose is to go on adventures and solve mysteries. When a magic potion starts making adults act like children, ten-year-old Mari takes charge, and her friends must work together to find the antidote to save the town. Perhaps a clue is in the old book that Mari’s grandfather mentions, hidden by their scientist ancestor during the German occupation in World War II. The gang must first get to the remaining clues to save the day. But they only have 48 hours! Estonia/Finland, screened in Estonian with English subtitles. For ages 10 and up.
When Marnie Was There. The wildly popular Studio Ghibli’s latest is a Hitchcockian coming-of-age film. Twelve-year-old Anna believes she’s forever outside of the invisible magic circle where most people live. In order to help her relax for the summer and recover from a recent asthma attach, Anna is forced to live with her aunt and uncle in the countryside of Japan. However, her entire summer unexpectedly takes a turn when she meets a bewitching and mysterious neighbor girl with flowing blonde hair named Marnie. But is Marnie real or imagined? Featuring an all-star American voice cast: Haillee Steinfeld (True Grit, Pitch Perfect 2, Ender’s Game), Kiernan Shipka (TV’s Mad Men), John C. Reilly, Catherine O’Hara, and Kathy Bates. Japan, screened in English. For ages 11 and up.
Rhubarb. Siem is twelve years old and pretty tired of moving from house to house with his father each time a new romance fails. Winnie is twelve years old and hopes that her fiery but gorgeous mother Tosca can just settle down. When the two parents meet at the children’s school, a relationship blossoms. To ensure that this one sticks, the kids take matters into their own hands. Budding videographer Siem enlists friend Winnie to come up with tips and tricks for how to make a fruitful relationship grow, by creating a how-to video guide for the hapless couple. But will the pair’s multi-media efforts get real-life results? Netherlands, screened in Dutch with English subtitles. For ages 11 and up.
Satellite Girl and Milk Cow. (pictured above) The satellite KITSAT-1 is abandoned in outer space because of a malfunction. She used to be doing research on human activity, collecting sounds and images. She has captured the most intriguing voice of all while researching Planet Earth: that of young Kyung-Chun. The teen is a would-be singer-songwriter, deep in the throes of miserable rejection from his unrequited love. Transformed into a creature, he is forced to wander, forever pursued by the evil Incinerator. It’s up to Merlin the Wizard to help bring the two isolated beings together, each facing failure. By embracing their humanity and humanness, while at the same time sorting out what lies ahead in their futures, can this unlikely pair become more than just friends? South Korea, screened in Korean with English subtitles. For ages 11 and up.
Labyrinthus. Fourteen-year-old Frikke finds a mysterious camera in the park and he soon gets sucked into a virtual video maze. Is his new friend Nola real or imagined? Frikke thinks he has what it takes to crack the code, but perhaps he does not have control over the rules after all. He’ll have to play the game to the end, using all available resources, or risk losing everything. Belgium, screened in Dutch with English subtitles. For ages 11 and up.
The Shamer’s Daughter. The Shamer’s daughter, Dina, has unwillingly inherited her mother’s supernatural ability. She can look straight into the soul of other people, making them feel ashamed of themselves. When the sole heir to the throne is wrongfully accused of the horrible murders of his family, Dina’s mother is lured to Dunark under false pretenses to make him confess. Refusing to use her ability for the wrong purposes, she is taken prisoner. It is now up to Dina to uncover the truth of the murders, but soon she finds herself in a dangerous power struggle, with her own life at risk. Based on the popular book. Denmark, screened in Danish with English subtitles. For ages 12 and up.
Adama. As twelve-year-old Adama is about to experience his boyhood rite of passage, he and his brother’s lives are changed forever. Adama lives in a remote African village, but his older teenaged brother Samba gets lured outside of their community to join the ranks of the Tirailleurs, French West African soldiers recruited by the French during World War I. Despite all odds, Adama goes on a journey and finds his brother at the ferocious Battle of Verdun on the Western Front. This stunningly animated coming-of-age story is an inspiring depiction of perseverance and personal striving where fraternal bonds triumph. France, screened in French with English subtitles. For ages 12 and up.
2015 Chicago International Children’s Film Festival Shorts Programs
Ready, Steady, Go! On your marks, get set, go! Come along with these animated characters as they undertake remarkable adventures. In one film, persistence pays off for pals Rita and Crocodile, as they set out for a day of fishing. In another film, an abandoned mitten makes an unexpected hang-out for a rag-tag pack of animal friends. Then, visiting a new place can be difficult even for the intergalactically well-traveled. There’s more than one way to feel like an alien! Finally, quirky Pecival Pilts reaches for new perspectives – on stilts! Perfect Houseguest (USA), Bear and Bird (USA), The Sun of Bagnolet Street (France), Lune (France), My Little Croco (France), Rita and Crocodile: “Fishing” (Denmark), The Tie (Belgium), The Mitten (France/Belgium), Alien (Czech Republic), The Story of Percival Pilts (Australia/ New Zealand). For ages 2 to 8.
New Faces, New Friends. New friends may well turn out to be best friends, and it’s okay if they are a little different, too. In this collection of animated shorts, characters of all species forge new friendships, learn about each other, and explore the world around them. A tabby cat and a goose may be an unusual friendship, but Fred and Anabel are inseparable as they set out on a series of adventures. In the last short, a boy’s imagination takes wing – literally! – with the help of his animal friends. Mr. K’s New House (Taiwan), Achoo! (Japan), Rita and Crocodile: “Forest”(Denmark), Bear and Bird (USA), My Little Croco (France), Lune (France), Rita and Crocodile: “Zoo”(Denmark), Fred and Anabel (Germany), The Mitten (France/Belgium), Konigri-kun: “A Small Rice Ball” (Japan) The Little Blond Boy with a White Sheep (France). For ages 2 and up.
Out and About. Doers and Dreamers Wanted! Join these spirited individuals on their journeys as they discover new places and new faces. Little Cousteau longs for a big adventure in the deep blue sea, just like his idol, Jacques Cousteau. But does he even have to leave his bedroom to experience the deep blue sea? In the last film, the town character becomes the new town hero, striving to achieve his goals of new heights and new perspectives. The Sun of Bagnolet Street (France), Da Vinci and the Button (Ireland), La Fontaine Turns Film-makers – The Crow and the Fox (France/Belgium), Rita and Crocodile: “Forest”(Denmark), Trude’s Flatmate: “The Gift” (Germany), My Little Croco (France), Lune (France), The Little Cousteau (Czech Republic), Ba (Brazil), The Story of Percival Pilts (Australia/New Zealand). For ages 5 and up.
Halloween: Tricks and Treats.Tricks and treats, new identities, aliens, monsters, all at a snap of your fingers! It’s Freaky Friday for the feline and canine cantankerous duo in one film, as they realize that being kind might be the only way to reverse the damage. Can these enemies put their differences aside in time to get their voices back? Then, when is too much of a sweet treat just too much? In one set of shorts, can Trude’s roommate mend some of his monstrous ways? In the last short, while a classmate picks on new girl Anabelle for her wearing a funny mask, it only takes one move of solidarity on Bethany’s part to rally the students around her. Ham Ham (Germany), Tony and Mr. Illness (Czech Republic), Rita and Crocodile: “Camping” (Demark), The Sweet Porridge (Germany), Alien (Czech Republic), Trude’s Flatmate: “The Gift” (Germany), Frenemy (France), Pawo (Germany) Snap (Croatia), Trude’s Flatmate: “Digger” (Germany), Bunny New Girl (Austria). For ages 5 and up.
Day Trippers. Adventure and flights of fancy are on the minds of the characters in these short films, even if only for a little while. A boy finds he can fly with the help of his wooly and feathered friends. In another short, Alfred has regal aspirations on his “day off” from school. Then, in the final film, Belinda and Alexander break free and escape to a swanky music hall to fulfill a lifelong dream. Imagination and day tripping await! Alien (Czech Republic), One, Two, Tree (France/Switzerland), The Captain, the Pilot and the Singer (Norway), Cookin’ with Fire (Australia), My 2014 Neighbor (Philippines), The Little Blond Boy with a White Sheep (France), Astronaut K (Switzerland), The Fly (Italy), Prince Alfred (Germany), Dreaming of Peggy Lee (England). For ages 8 and up.
Not Invisible. Whether deaf, hearing, or somewhere-in-between, these short films prove there is no limit with a little patient persistence, creative communication, and a good team. In one film, Jean-Michel discovers through countless comedic efforts that in the game of love, the greatest superpower is the ability to communicate. In another film, Alexander and Belinda defy expectations and achieve a lifelong dream: singing on stage. At only 15, twins Sisi and Wanwan inspire us with their dedication to music, to each other, and to supporting youth in their native China. Finally, extraterrestrial robot Spanneroo and earthling Joe build a friendship that crosses galaxies, solves problems, and brings them on unimaginable adventures! Mr. Violet (Iran), Jean-Michel the Woodland Caribou (France/Belgium), Dreaming of Peggy Lee (England), Sisi and Wanwan (Netherlands), Spanneroo and Joe (France). For ages 8 and up.
Halloween: Transformers. Teenage transformations can be wacky and weird, especially for some of the characters in this collection of shorts. In a film based on a Sioux tale, Coyote denies his gift but is granted a magical second chance to redeem himself. In another short, what happens when a young minotaur’s single mom begins to date – only, Mr. Right is a little prone to turn into stone? Then, what to do when Granny turns into… an orange tree? Make marmalade, of course. In the final film, a family’s camping trip goes awry when Simon’s older sister’s wish comes true. Enjoy these tales of transformation, magic, and persistence. A Single Life (Netherlands), Cookin’ with Fire (Australia), Alchemist’s Letter (USA), Alien (Czech Republic), My Stuffed Granny (Greece), Coyote and the Rock (Hungary), Mythopolis (Czech Republic), The Wish Fish (Czech Republic). For ages 10 and up.
Halloween: AlieNation. The characters in this collection, alien or otherwise, are going through some changes and hardly feel like themselves anymore. In a beautifully animated French film, single Mom has brought home a new beau, who is a … raven? The new stepfather is entirely a bird of a different feather, and it takes quite a bit of adjustment in the household. In the final short, Amelia and Duarte become different people when going through their relationship’s break-up. Transforming and compartmentalizing each magic moment into an orderly system might help contain their sorrows. Alien (Czech Republic), A Single Life (Netherlands), Alchemist’s Letter (USA), Alienation (Germany), My Stuffed Granny (Greece), Coyote and the Rock (Hungary), My Home (France), Amelia & Duarte (Portugal). For ages 13 and up.
Circuit Breakers. The characters in this collection of short films are disconnected. They need to trip their emotional switch to be fully in touch with themselves and with those around them. In one film, recent immigrant Yussef comes to the realization that to move forward in his new environment, he needs to reveal a bit about himself to his new classmates and unload the burden of his past. In another short, two young brothers are thrown together in an uncomfortable situation, but learn they can rely on each other as never before. In the final film, a young teen visits his father in prison, where they have a limited time to truly connect. Soot (Portugal), Yussef is Complicated (Ireland), Like a Butterfuly (Germany), The Swing (England), Picnic (Croatia). Contains extremely coarse profanity and is for ages 14 and up.
2015 Chicago International Children’s Film Festival Shorts Program Special Event
“Nature Cat” Special Sneak Peek. The national PBS launch of Nature Cat is right here, in Chicago! Come for the sneak peek and stay for behind-the-scenes insight on animation from members of the creative team. Fred is a housecat who dreams of exploring the great outdoors, but there’s one hitch: he’s still a housecat with no instincts for nature! Time for action-packed adventures full of nature investigation, “aha” discovery moments, and humor. Voiced by an all-star line-up of comedic actors, including Saturday Night Live star Taran Killam as Nature Cat. The brain-child of brothers David Rudman (Sesame Street, The Muppets) and Adam Rudman (Tom & Jerry, Sesame Street, Cyberchase), Nature Cat is a co-production of Spiffy Pictures and WTTW Chicago. For ages 4 and up.
Edgy Animation and Anime
Satellite Girl and Milk Cow. The satellite KITSAT-1 is abandoned in outer space because of a malfunction. She used to be doing research on human activity, collecting sounds and images. She has captured the most intriguing voice of all while researching Planet Earth: that of young Kyung-Chun. The teen is a would-be singer-songwriter, deep in the throes of miserable rejection from his unrequited love. Transformed into a creature, he is forced to wander, forever pursued by the evil Incinerator. It’s up to Merlin the Wizard to help bring the two isolated beings together, each facing failure. By embracing their humanity and humanness, while at the same time sorting out what lies ahead in their futures, can this unlikely pair become more than just friends? South Korea, screened in Korean with English subtitles. For ages 11 and up.
When Marnie Was There. The wildly popular Studio Ghibli’s latest is a Hitchcockian coming-of-age film. Twelve-year-old Anna believes she’s forever outside of the invisible magic circle where most people live. In order to help her relax for the summer and recover from a recent asthma attack, Anna is forced to live with her aunt and uncle in the countryside of Japan. However, her entire summer unexpectedly takes a turn when she meets a bewitching and mysterious neighbor girl with flowing blonde hair named Marnie. But is Marnie real or imagined? Featuring an all-star American voice cast: Haillee Steinfeld (True Grit, Pitch Perfect 2, Ender’s Game), Kiernan Shipka (TV’s Mad Men), John C. Reilly, Catherine O’Hara, and Kathy Bates. Japan, screened in English. For ages 11 and up.
Boy and the World. (pictured above) This colorfully animated film follows a young Brazilian boy who explores his world with wonder and a sense of curiosity. One day, while searching for his father in the bustling city, he stumbles onto a network of money-grubbing adults who pit governmental forces against a band of colorful merrymakers. A stunning depiction of growing up and the choices that must be made, this film is a creative feat in emotional, lyrical animation. Brazil. For ages 12 and up.
Edgy Animation. Come for a sampler of this season’s best animated short films from around the globe! In one film, each awkward aspect of puberty is portrayed by characters in different animation styles. In another, a new arrival is an alien in more than one sense of the word. In order to stave off feelings of discrimination, a video diary proves a good coping mechanism for one woeful young city dweller. Go along for the ride as films based on French surrealist poetry deliver boundless, fantastical perspectives. Lastly, daughter and father band together to get government aid, but there is just one hitch. A Single Life (Netherlands), A Portrait (Greece), Blotting Paper (France), The Sun of Bagnolet Street (France), Sovereign Paperwork (Uruguay), Alienation (Germany), The Zebra (France), The Bengal Salsify (France), Aubade (Switzerland), Alien (Czech Republic), The Marathon Diary (Norway), My Stuffed Granny (Greece), Why Banana Snarls (Russia), Granny (Georgia), Soot (Portugal). For ages 13 and up.
Fantasy Fantastic. The characters in this collection of animated shorts are dreamers and doers. But, do their reveries stand in the way of moving on in their lives and moving forward in their relationships? A recent graduate of a French film school animates a set of films based on the Surrealist poetry of Robert Desnos. Then, a young skier, despite her best efforts, is never first place at the Lapland Marathon Arctic Challenge. But then again, winning isn’t everything. Then, in a cheeky digitally animated short, Amelia and Duarte “unpack” their feelings during a break-up in a very unusual fashion. In the last film, Hugo’s new stepfather is a bird of a different feather, entirely. Mr. Violet (Iran), In a Small Boat (France), I Have Dreamed of You So Much (France), Paris (France), Reclining (France), Aubade (Switzerland), One, Two, Tree (France/Switzerland), Air-Mail (Switzerland), Counting Sheep (France), Sleepy Steve (USA), The Marathon Diary (Norway), Amelia & Duarte (Portugal), Mythopolis (Czech Republic), My Home (France). For ages 13 and up.
Little from the Fish Shop. Not your mother’s Little Mermaid! A very adult re-telling of the Hans Christian Anderson story, director Jan Balej uses stop-motion animated puppets in the tradition of his legendary countryman, Jiří Trnka. Forced to relocate above ground, the Sea King and his family are fishmongers in a sleazy harbor town. Hidden from humans until her 16th birthday, his youngest daughter is unschooled in the ways of the human world. Fascinated by the seedy surroundings, “Little” falls instantly in the thrall of the oily neighbor, owner of a brother and bar next door. When pure love meets real-life risks, tragedy ensues. Czech Republic. For ages 16 and up.
2015 Chicago International Children’s Film Festival Weekday Evening Screenings- Shorts Programs
Style and Substance. The young people in this collection of short films sort out what they really need versus what they already have – or what they can make themselves! In one film, a middle sister is mortified that she can’t be like her neighbor with her amazing, brand new bike. In another film, Myna longs for an Xbox upgrade. In the final short, four teens travel to a fashion school in Mannheim to learn from style experts how they can revamp their current wardrobes without spending a dime. Mo’s Bows (USA), Catwalk (Sweden), Me and My Moulton (Canada/Norway), Myna and Asterix (India), You Are Style! (Germany). For ages 10 and up.
Circuit Breakers. The characters in this collection of short films are disconnected. They need to trip their emotional switch to be fully in touch with themselves and with those around them. In one film, recent immigrant Yussef comes to the realization that to move forward in his new environment, he needs to reveal a bit about himself to his new classmates and unload the burden of his past. In another short, two young brothers are thrown together in an uncomfortable situation, but learn they can rely on each other as never before. In the final film, a young teen visits his father in prison, where they have a limited time to truly connect. Soot (Portugal), Yussef is Complicated (Ireland), Like a Butterfuly (Germany), The Swing (England), Picnic (Croatia). Contains extremely coarse profanity and is for ages 14 and up.
2015 Chicago International Children’s Film Festival Weekday Evening Screenings- Feature Films
Tour of Honor. This thoughtful feature-length documentary film details a program created by Honor Flight, an organization that flies World War II and Korean War veterans out to Washington DC to see the memorials erected in their honor. It is a powerful, emotional journey that tells the personal stories of the veterans, members of the Greatest Generation. For ages 12 and up.
How I Came to Hate Math. (pictured above) Why is it that most of us struggled to stay awake in our high school math classes? A group of passionate mathematicians, who have dedicated their lives to the study of mathematics, hope to explain how most students have come to hate math and why we are missing out on the vast creativity, beauty, and potential that mathematics has to offer. In conversations with math visionaries, the film highlights the many outlooks on math applications (scientific, business, economics), opens up discourse about the importance and magnificence of math, and conversely, why people may generally find math historically inaccessible. Take back that negative perception! France, screened in French and English with English subtitles. For ages 15 and up.
Boy 7. In a future world, the Netherlands is a totalitarian government that has turned select teens into robotic killers to launch terrorist attacks in the nation. Talented hacker, Sam, is unwillingly recruited to join the Institute and starts a training regimen with a deadly diploma in mind. Through non-sequential narrative and flashbacks to a parallel life, Sam convinces fellow “trainees” Lara and Louis to help him infiltrate and subjugate the oppressors. But flashbacks and flash drives may not be enough to expose the conspiracy. Does Sam have what it takes? Netherlands/Belgium/Croatia, screened in Dutch with English subtitles. Contains extremely coarse profanity and is for ages 15 and up.