• Winona Ryder, Jonathan Nolan Among Jury Members For 2015 Sundance Film Festival

    sundance film festival

    Sundance Film Festival revealed the names of the members of the six juries awarding prizes at the 2015 Festival, taking place January 22 to February 1 in Park City, Salt Lake City, Ogden and Sundance, Utah.  

    Comedian Tig Notaro will host the Festival’s feature film awards ceremony on January 31 in Park City.  Notaro executive produced the documentary, Tig, about her life, which will have its world premiere in the Festival’s Documentary Premieres section.

    Short Film Awards will be announced at a separate ceremony on January 27 at Park City’s Jupiter Bowl.

    U.S. DOCUMENTARY JURY

    Eugene Hernandez
    Eugene Hernandez is the deputy director of the Film Society of Lincoln Center, where he leads strategy and operations for the institution, and is also the co-publisher of the award-winning Film Comment magazine, the official publication of the organization. He previously served as the director of digital strategy, where he oversaw all digital platforms and content. Prior to the Film Society, Hernandez co-founded Indiewire in 1996 and as editor-in-chief built the company over 14 years to become the leading online community and editorial publication for independent and international films and filmmakers. Additionally, he has worked extensively as a consultant for several non-profits, written for major print and online publications, and annually participates in the international film festival circuit as a juror and panelist.

    Kirsten Johnson
    Kirsten Johnson is a cinematographer and director. Her most recent camera work appears in Citizen FourBorn to Fly: Elizabeth Streb vs Gravity, and The Wound and the Gift. Her credits include Academy Award-nominated The Invisible War, and Tribeca Film Festival documentary winner, Pray the Devil Back to Hell. She and Laura Poitras shared the 2010 Sundance Film Festival Cinematography Award for The Oath. Her shooting is featured in Fahrenheit 9/11, Academy Award-nominated Asylum, Emmy-winning Ladies First, and Sundance Film Festival premieres: A Place at the TableThis Film is Not Yet Rated, and DerridaDeadline, co-directed with Katy Chevigny, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Thurgood Marshall Award. She is currently editing A Blind Eye, a documentary that investigates her relationship as a cinematographer to those she films.

    Michele Norris
    Michele Norris is a host and special correspondent at NPR. She produces in-depth profiles, interviews, and series, and guest hosts NPR News programs. Norris was a host on NPR’s “All Things Considered” for a decade. She leads The Race Card Project, an initiative to foster a wider conversation about race in America that she created after publishing her family memoir,The Grace of Silence. Norris received a Peabody Award for her work on The Race Card Project. Prior to joining NPR, Norris was a correspondent for ABC News, The Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune, and the Los Angeles Times. She has received several national honors for her work and has interviewed world leaders, Nobel laureates, Academy Award winners, American presidents, military leaders, and even astronauts traveling in outer space.

    Gordon Quinn
    Gordon Quinn has been producing documentaries and mentoring filmmakers for five decades as co-founder and artistic director of Kartemquin Films. His credits include directing GolubPrisoner of Her Past, and A Good Man, and executive producing Hoop DreamsStevieThe InterruptersThe Trials of Muhammad AliThe Homestretch, and Life Itself. Currently, he is executive producer on the Al Jazeera America series Hard Earned, and directing ’63 Boycott. A passionate advocate for independent public media, Gordon is an expert on fair use, ethics, and storytelling in documentary. He has received awards from the Emmys, Peabodys, PGA, DGA, and the Sundance Film Festival. In 2014, he received a Career Achievement award from Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival and a Master of Cinema award from the RiverRun International Film Festival.

    Roger Ross Williams
    Roger Ross Williams directed God Loves Uganda, which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and screened at more than 75 film festivals worldwide, winning over a dozen awards. Williams also directed and produced Music by Prudence, which won the 2010 Academy Award for documentary short subject. He is the first African-American to win an Oscar for directing and producing a film, short or feature. Williams has several projects in development, including a transmedia project calledTraveling While Black; a feature documentary, LifeAnimated, about the son of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ron Suskind; and a narrative feature film. Williams serves on the alumni advisory board of the Sundance Institute. He splits his time between upstate New York and Amsterdam.

    U.S. DRAMATIC JURY

    Lance Acord
    Lance Acord made his feature director of photography debut with Buffalo ’66 at Sundance Film Festival in 1998. A highly sought-after cinematographer, his credits include God’s PocketWhere the Wild Things AreMarie AntoinetteLost in TranslationAdaptation, and Being John Malkovich. Acord seamlessly transitioned into commercial directing—collecting three nominations from the Directors Guild of America, numerous Cannes Gold Lions, and an Emmy—for such memorable work asThe Force for Volkswagen, Jogger for Nike and Apple’s Misunderstood. A frequent contributor to the Sundance Film Festival as a producer as well as a cinematographer, Acord, via his production company Park Pictures, was a producer on Robot & FrankGod’s Pocket, and Infinitely Polar Bear.

    Sarah Flack
    Sarah Flack is an award-winning film editor based in New York. She won a BAFTA award for editing Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation, and their collaboration has continued with Marie AntoinetteSomewhere, and The Bling Ring. Flack won an Emmy and an American Cinema Editors award with Robert Pulcini for their editing of the HBO film Cinema Verite, directed by Shari Springer Berman and Pulcini. After working on the Prague set of Steven Soderbergh’s second feature, Kafka, Flack went on to edit three of his subsequent films: SchizopolisThe Limey, and Full Frontal. She has also edited films for Sam Mendes, Michel Gondry, Peter Hedges, Michael Showalter, and Edward Burns. Flack graduated from Brown University with degrees in political science and semiotics.

    Cary Fukunaga
    Cary Joji Fukunaga graduated from the University of California, Santa Cruz. His film work as a writer, director, and cinematographer has taken him from the Arctic Circle to Haiti and West Africa. He has received several grants, including a 2008 Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, a John H. Johnson film award, and a 2005 Princess Grace Foundation Fellowship. Fukunaga wrote and directed the short film Victoria para Chino, which screened at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival and won more than two dozen international awards, including an honorable mention at the Sundance Film Festival and a Student Academy Award. His first feature film, Sin Nombre, premiered in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, earning him the Directing Award and the Excellence in Cinematography Award. He also directed Jane Eyre in 2011 and, most recently, the acclaimed first season of True Detective for HBO, for which he earned an Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series.

    Winona Ryder
    With two Academy Award nominations and a Golden Globe to her credit, Winona Ryder is one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents and classic beauties. She will next be seen in Experimenter opposite Peter Sarsgaard, Taryn Manning, and John Leguizamo, set to premiere at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. She is currently in production on the TV miniseries Show Me a Hero, opposite Oscar Isaac, James Belushi, and Catherine Keener. Ryder was recently seen in The Iceman, which premiered to rave reviews at the Venice and Toronto film festivals in 2012. On television, she recently appeared in Turks and Caicos alongside Bill Nighy and Christopher Walken. She appeared in Darren Aronofsky’s 2010 supernatural thriller Black Swan, and appeared in 2011 in The Dilemma from director Ron Howard. Ryder starred in and served as executive producer on the critically acclaimed Girl, Interrupted, and as Jo in Gillian Armstrong’s highly praised version of Little Women, she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. The previous year she was also nominated, and won the Golden Globe and National Board of Review Awards for Best Supporting Actress for Martin Scorsese’s The Age of Innocence. Ryder has worked with some of today’s most important directors, including Woody Allen, Francis Ford Coppola, and Jim Jarmusch. She was a juror for the 51st Annual Cannes International Film Festival and has received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Serving on the Board of Trustees to the American Indian College Fund, Ryder has also been very involved with the KlaasKids Foundation since the organization’s inception in 1994.

    Edgar Wright
    As a teenager in England, Edgar Wright started making short comedy films after winning a video camera in a competition. At 20, he directed the no-budget western A Fistful of Fingers. This led to a foray into television, directing comedy shows for the BBC and Paramount Comedy Channel. He also directed two seasons of Channel 4′s cult classic Spaced. In 2004, Wright directed Shaun of the Dead, the first film in his Cornetto Trilogy. Shaun was followed by Hot Fuzz in 2007 and The World’s End in 2013. The three films combined have amassed a box office of over $150 million. Wright also directed Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, which he co-wrote with Michael Bacall; co-wrote Steven Spielberg’s The Adventures of Tintin; and directed the faux trailer Don’t for Quentin Tarantino’s and Robert Rodriguez’s Grindhouse. Upcoming projects include Baby Driver for Working Title, Collider for Bad Robot, and Grasshopper Jungle for Sony.

    WORLD CINEMA DOCUMENTARY JURY

    Elena Fortes Acosta
    Elena Fortes Acosta was born in Mexico City in 1981. She is the director and partner of Ambulante, a non-profit organization that was founded in 2005 by Gael García Bernal, Diego Luna, and Pablo Cruz, in order to support and promote a documentary film culture. Every year, Ambulante sponsors a traveling festival that brings a selection of over 100 films to more than 100 venues located in 12 regions across Mexico. Since 2007, the festival has been showcased in 20 countries. In 2010, Fortes launched Ambulante Beyond, a long-term training program in documentary filmmaking for youth in Mexico and Central America. In addition to her work in visual media, Fortes has been active in Mexico’s political sphere, working for non-profits focused on advocating increased participation of young people in policymaking and on exposing human rights violations in the country.

    Mark Cousins
    Mark Cousins is a filmmaker and writer. His films include The Story of Film: An OdysseyLife May BeWhat is this Film Called Love?The First MovieHere be DragonsA Story of Children and FilmI am Belfast, and 6 Desires: DH Lawrence and Sardinia. Their themes are Iraq, childhood, cinema, Iran, Mexico City, Albania, walking, bodies and politics. He has won the Stanley Kubrick Award, a Peabody Award, and the Prix Italia. His films have shown in Cannes, Berlin, Toronto, London and at the world’s major festivals, and at Museum of Modern Art in New York. His books include Watching Real People Elsewhereand Imagining Reality. He sometimes co-directs unusual film events with Tilda Swinton, and is honorary professor of film at the University of Glasgow.

    Ingrid Kopp
    An innovator in interactive storytelling, Ingrid Kopp is director of interactive at the Tribeca Film Institute, where she oversees the New Media Fund. Recent supported projects include Immigrant NationHollow, and Question Bridge. Kopp leads the institute’s other digital and interactive programs, including the TFI Interactive conference and the Tribeca Hacks hackathon series, bringing storytellers, technologists and designers together to explore new projects and collaborations. She also curates the Tribeca Storyscapes program for interactive, transmedia work at the Tribeca Film Festival. Kopp started her career in the documentaries department at Channel 4 Television in the UK before moving to New York to run the U.S. office of Shooting People, an international network for filmmakers. Kopp is constantly working at the intersection between storytelling, technology, design, and social change, and is a frequent speaker on the subject. You can always find her on Twitter: @fromthehip.

    WORLD CINEMA DRAMATIC JURY

    Mia Hanson-Løve
    After two short movies, in 2007, Mia Hansen-Løve directed her first feature film All is Forgiven, which depicts a family torn apart by the father’s drug addiction. The film was presented at the Director’s Fortnight at Cannes and received the Louis-Delluc First Film Award. Her second film, Father Of My Children (inspired by the last days of Hansen-Løve’s producer, Humbert Balsan, who committed suicide in 2005), premiered in Un Certain Regard at Cannes in 2009, leading to a lot of attention on the director. In 2010, Variety ranked Mia Hansen-Løve in the Top Ten international directors to know. The following year, she directed the critically acclaimed film Goodbye First Love, a dramatic comedy about a fragile young woman who stumbles upon her teenage lover years later. In 2013, Hansen-Løve returned to the Director’s Fortnight, as the short films jury president. Eden is her fourth film.

    Col Needham
    Col Needham is the founder and CEO of IMDb, the No. 1 movie website in the world with a combined web and mobile audience of more than 200 million unique monthly visitors. Born and living in the UK, Needham has had a lifelong interest in both technology and movies. IMDb grew out of a personal database of movie information that he created as a teenager. IMDb became a wholly owned subsidiary of Amazon.com in April 1998. Today, IMDb’s platform includes award-winning mobile apps for iOS and Android, IMDb’s X-Ray for Movies & TV on Kindle Fire HD and Wii U devices, IMDb Pro, Withoutabox and Box Office Mojo. IMDb will celebrate its 25th anniversary in October 2015. Needham continues in his original role to this day, working from an office in Bristol with IMDb staff members in countries around the world.

    Taika Waititi
    Taika Waititi is a writer, director, actor, and visual artist from New Zealand. Waititi wrote, directed, and acted in Eagle vs Shark, and Boy, which premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, and went on to become the highest-grossing New Zealand film of all time. Taika’s most recent film, What We Do in the Shadows, co-written/directed/acted with Jemaine Clement, was recently named “The best comedy of the year” by The Guardian, and “Funniest film of the year” by Empire Magazine. Waititi’s other writer/director credits include the 2005 short Two CarsOne Night, which was nominated for an Academy Award and the short film Tama Tu, which picked up festival prizes worldwide. He has written and directed multiple episodes of the TV series Flight of the Conchords, and his other acting credits include a believable portrayal of a waiter in a 1996 New Zealand Butter commercial for NZ’s National Butter Commission. Waititi hails from the Te-Whanau-a-Apanui tribe.

    SHORT FILM JURY

    K.K. Barrett
    K.K. Barrett is a production designer, who started his creative journey as a noise musician, painter, then moved to film in music videos and commercials. He is known for working with a select group of filmmakers who have a personal vision. This has led to a diverse body of work which touches on foreign alienation in Lost in Translation, historical playfulness in Marie Antoinette, both for Sophia Coppola, madcap surreality in I Heart Huckabees, with David O. Russell, skewed magical realism in Human Nature for Michel Gondry, a traumatic childhood in Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. For Spike Jonze he explored the funhouse of fame in Being John Malkovich, creative conundrums in Adaptation, and childhood fantasy in Where the Wild Things Are. His latest was Jonze’s film HER for which he was nominated for an Academy Award in production design. He is currently directing a live film: Nufonia Must Fall which has played in Europe and will debut in the States in the fall of 2015.

    Alia Shawkat
    Alia Shawkat just wrapped the Amber Tamblyn-directed film Paint It Black, in which she stars opposite Janet McTeer. Shawkat’s other feature credits include Lawrence Michael Levine’s Wild CanariesNight Moves (appearing alongside Jesse Eisenberg and Dakota Fanning), and The To Do List, written and directed by Maggie Carey. Shawkat’s upcoming credits include The Final GirlsMe Him HerThe Driftless Area, and Green Room with Imogen Poots and Sir Patrick Stewart. Shawkat is known for her role as Maeby Fünke in the cult series Arrested Development. She also can be seen in Comedy Central’sBroad City and HBO’s Getting On. In addition to being an actress, Shawkat is also a talented jazz singer and pianist, as well as an accomplished painter and illustrator. Her artwork can be viewed on her website Mutantalia.com.

    Autumn de Wilde
    Autumn de Wilde is a photographer and director with a knack for capturing the strange and the special. Her work often depicts an intimate connection and surreal conversation between herself and her subjects. As a result of this creative connection, she’s been instrumental in defining the visual identity of an ever-expanding pool of well-known actors, musicians, and artists. They include: Beck, Elliott Smith, The White Stripes, Childish Gambino, The Decemberists, Keaton Henson, Noah And The Whale, Jenny Lewis, Lena Dunham, Miranda July, Zooey Deschanel, and Elijah Wood. De Wilde’s process also applies to her work with commercial clients such as Cadillac, as well her key art for film and TV campaigns like Jill Soloway’s Transparent for Amazon Prime, Girls for HBO, and Universal Pictures’ 50 Shades of Grey. She has been documenting the life and work of fashion designers Kate and Laura Mulleavy of Rodarte since its inception. She lives in Los Angeles with her daughter, Arrow.

    ALFRED P. SLOAN FEATURE FILM PRIZE JURY (SCIENCE IN FILM)

    Paula Apsell
    As director of the WGBH Science Unit and senior executive producer of the PBS science series NOVA, Paula Apsell has overseen the production of hundreds of acclaimed science documentaries, including such distinguished miniseries as The Fabric of the Cosmos with Brian Greene, Origins with Neil deGrasse Tyson, Making Stuff with David Pogue and the magazine spin-off NOVA scienceNOW. NOVA is the nation’s most-watched science series, a top site on pbs.org, and recipient of every major broadcasting honor, including the Emmy, the Peabody, and the duPont-Columbia Gold Baton. Apsell has won numerous individual awards and has served on many boards including the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History. In 2012 she was journalist in residence at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at University of California, Santa Barbara and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

    Janna Levin
    Janna Levin is an astrophysicist and writer. She has contributed to an understanding of black holes, the cosmology of extra dimensions, and gravitational waves in the shape of spacetime. She is the author of the popular-science book How the Universe Got Its Spots and a novel, A Madman Dreams of Turing Machines, which won the PEN/Bingham prize. Levin is a professor at Barnard/Columbia and was recently named a Guggenheim Fellow.

    Brit Marling
    Brit Marling will be seen in Daniel Barber’s The Keeping Room, a film about three Southern women defending their home during the Civil War which premiered at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival. Marling recently portrayed a molecular biologist in Mike Cahill’s I Origins. and has also been seen in Robert Redford’s The Company You Keep and Nicholas Jarecki’s financial thriller, Arbitrage. At the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, Marling became the first female multi-hyphenate to have two films premiere side-by-side: Sound of My Voice, and Another Earth, both of which she co-wrote, co-produced and starred in. Fox Searchlight acquired both films, releasing them in 2012 and 2011, respectively. Marling’s foray into filmmaking started during her college years at Georgetown University. This introduction led Marling to Havana, Cuba, to co-direct the documentary Boxers and Ballerinas which followed young artists and athletes living in the communist country. Marling graduated valedictorian from Georgetown, having studied economics and studio art.

    Jonathan Nolan
    Jonathan Nolan is an Academy Award-nominated writer of film, fiction, and television. His credits include The Dark KnightThe Dark Knight RisesThe Prestige, and Interstellar. Nolan’s short story Memento Mori, first published in Esquire, was adapted by his brother Christopher into the critically acclaimed film Memento, for which they share an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. The brothers were also nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for The Dark Knight screenplay. For television, Nolan created the hit drama Person of Interest, starring Jim Caviezel and Michael Emerson. The show is in its fourth season on CBS. Most recently, he directed the pilot Westworld for HBO. Based on the film by Michael Critchon and co-written with his wife, Lisa Joy, the project stars Anthony Hopkins and Ed Harris. Nolan and Joy serve as executive producers alongside J.J. Abrams. Nolan was born in London and grew up in the Chicago area. He currently lives in Los Angeles with his family.

    Adam Steltzner
    Adam D. Steltzner is a Fellow at Jet Propulsion Laboratory and is leading the development of the Sampling System for the 2020 Mars Surface Mission project. Most recently he was the phase lead and development manager of the Entry, Descent and Landing phase of the Mars Science Laboratory project. Steltzner received his BS in mechanical engineering from University of California, Davis in 1990, his MS in applied mechanics from Caltech in 1991, and his PhD in engineering physics from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1999. Steltzner joined the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1991 and has worked on various projects including Galileo, Cassini, Mars Pathfinder, Champollion, Comet Nucleus Sample Return, Mars Exploration Rovers, and the Mars Science Laboratory. His research interests include structural dynamics, input force determination, mechanical design, systems engineering, and leadership of high-performance teams. He is increasingly aware of the importance of team culture and interpersonal dynamics in delivering a team’s final product.

    Read more


  • Sun Valley Film Festival Reveals Dates and Highlights of Upcoming 2015 Festival

    sun valley film festival

    The Sun Valley Film Festival (SVFF), celebrating its fourth year, will take place March 4th-8th, 2015, in Sun Valley, Idaho.

    For 2015, the Festival has added a 5th day of programming and will screen more than 60-curated films followed by filmmakers Q &A sessions. Other special programs on tap are the free, standing-room only Coffee Talks with industry insiders like legendary actor Bruce Dern, the Screenwriters Lab led by Academy Award® winners Jim Rash and Nat Faxon, screenwriters of The Descendants, and the new Film Lab. Great parties, dinners, special events, and sunny spring skiing will surely top off this spirited and inspired festival weekend in Sun Valley.

    2015 Festival Highlights

    Film Screenings: A curated selection of over 60 films including world premieres, shorts, narratives, and documentaries from around the globe.

    Coffee Talks: Two-time Academy Award® nominee Bruce Dern, will be a featured guest at one of the Coffee Talks, during the 2015 Sun Valley Film Festival (SVFF) taking place March 4-8, 2015. The Coffee Talks are free, hugely popular, informal forums for film buffs, featuring inside-the-velvet- rope discussions with top talent from both in front of and behind the camera. Past speakers have included Jodie Foster, Kevin Smith and Mariel Hemingway. Mr. Dern is the first confirmed guest for the Coffee Talks at the 2015 Sun Valley Film Festival.

    Mr. Dern, who has appeared in over 80 films, was nominated as Best Supporting Actor for the 1978 film Coming Home and Best Actor for the 2013 film Nebraska. He has had a long and illustrious career spanning over 55 years, during which time he has been the recipient of numerous awards and accolades including the Best Actor award at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival for his role in Alexander Payne’s Nebraska. Often playing unsympathetic characters in supporting roles, he has amassed an impressive body of work over his legendary cinematic calling.

    Screenwriters Lab: Jim Rash and Nat Faxon, the Academy Award®-winning writers of The Descendants and 2014’s comedy, The Way Way Back, will host the 2015 Screenwriters Lab. The Screenwriters Lab, one of the many highlights of the Festival, is now accepting submissions for The High Scribe screenplay competition, which gives finalists, among other things, an opportunity for one-on-one meetings with some of the industry’s finest to discuss their work. The 2015 High Scribe judge and mentor will be film, television, and stage actor, Will McCormack. The High Scribe winner will be announced during the lab on March 5th, 2015, and a scene from their script will be brought to life.

    Saturday Night Awards Bash: Hailing from Jackson, Mississippi, indie-rock band The Weeks will bring their brand of southern-fried rock to Whiskey Jacques on Saturday night during the Awards Bash.  Formed while teenagers in 2006, they have quickly amassed a loyal following with their soulful country rock sound and have recently wrapped a European tour with The Kings of Leon.

    NEW! The Film Lab: This new program brings together a film’s creative forces – the writer, producer and director – in a combustible fashion.  From the writer’s pages to the screen, the audience will enjoy interactions and discussions with filmmakers in an innovative way. 

    NEW! One Potato Short Screenplay Competition:  The latest addition to our menu is the new One Potato short screenplay competition, which awards the screenwriter a $2500 stipend to go towards shooting their film in Idaho. The competition is part of a larger initiative to encourage filming in the state. As the producing partner on the film, SVFF will connect the winner with seasoned filmmakers, consultants, and production resources.

    Wild To Inspire: Nat Geo WILD, in partnership with SVFF and the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF), is launching its second annual filmmaking competition WILD TO INSPIRE. The competition will give one lucky winner a shot at international travel for a Nat Geo WILD dream job – the opportunity to travel to Africa and document wildlife for Nat Geo WILD viewers.  The winner will share their wildlife adventure through a variety of media including video diaries, photos, social media and more as part of an online companion to Nat Geo WILD’s Destination Wild series. The WILD TO INSPIRE film competition will accept submissions from November 3, 2014, through January 16, 2015. More information and complete rules visit natgeowild.com/wildtoinspire.

    Content:  Dedicated to the exploding genre of digital content only found online. Content will showcase digital premieres, cutting edge panels, and lively discussion.

    Future Filmmakers Forum: A unique program that allows middle and high school students to experience the process of filmmaking, film submission and festival attendance.  SVFF will select and screen the best student short films and will award cash prizes for the best overall film and best film by an Idaho student. 

    SVFF Awards:  A total of seven special awards are presented including two unique to SVFF – One in a Million is awarded to a standout film produced for under $1 million and the Vision Award recognizes an outstanding producer.

     via

    Read more


  • Palm Springs International Film Festival Announces 2015 Lineup

    palm springs intl film fest 2015

    The 26th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) reveals its complete line-up including Premieres, New Voices/New Visions and Modern Masters.

    192 films from 65 countries, including 65 premieres will unspool at the Festival, running from January 2-12, 2015 in Palm Springs, California.  World premieres include Don Quixote: The Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha (USA) starring James Franco, Horatio Sanz, Luis Guzman and Lin Shaye, Packed In A Trunk: The Lost Art of Edith Lake Wilkinson (USA), Some Kind of Love (Canada), Spirit / Will / Loss (USA), Twenty-Five Palms (Luxembourg) a documentary on the 25th anniversary of the Palm Springs International Film Festival directed by Fabrizio Maltese, and Walter (USA) starring Justin Kirk, Virginia Madsen, William H. Macy, Neve Campbell and Peter Facinelli.

    The New Voices/New Visions Award will honor one of 10 films from top emerging international directors marking their feature film debut at the Festival, with the additional criteria that the films selected are currently without US distribution.  The winner is selected by a jury of US distributors and will receive a glass sculpture designed for the Festival by renowned artist Dale Chihuly.  Films selected for this year include:

    Afterlife (Hungary), Director Virág Zomborácz

    Chubby (Belgium), Director Bruno Deville

    Fidelio, Alice’s Journey (France), Director Lucie Borleteau

    Grand Street (USA), Director Lex Sidon

    Henri Henri (Canada), Director Martin Talbot

    Manpower (Israel), Director Noam Kaplan

    A Moonless Night (Uruguay), Director Germán Tejeira

    No One’s Child (Serbia), Director Vuk Ršumovic

    Theeb (Jordan), Director Naji Abu Nowar

    What’s Between Us (Switzerland), Director Claudia Lorenz

    The Modern Masters section features 12 films from international directors who set the standards for contemporary cinema. Films selected for this year include:

    Chagall – Malevich (Russia), Director Alexander Mitta

    Clouds of Sils Maria (France), Director Olivier Assayas, Cast: Juliette Binoche, Kristen Stewart, Chloë Grace Moretz

    Dancing Arabs (Israel), Director Eran Riklis

    An Eye for Beauty (Canada), Director Denys Arcand

    Gemma Bovery (France), Director Anne Fontaine

    The Humbling (USA), Director Barry  Levinson, Cast: Al Pacino, Greta Gerwig, Charles Grodin, Mary Louise Parker, Dan Hedaya and Dianne Wiest

    In Order Of Disappearance (Norway/Sweden), Director Hans Petter Moland

    Iris (USA), Director Albert Maysles

    Li’l Quinquin (France), Director Bruno Dumont

    The Perfect Dictatorship (Mexico), Director Louis Estrada

    Queen and Country (United Kingdom), Director John Boorman

    Red Amnesia (China), Director Wang Xiaoshuai

    Other Festival films with notable talent and directors include: 5 To 7 (USA), directed by Victor Levin and starring Anton Yelchin, Olivia Thirlby, Lambert Wilson, Glenn Close and Frank Langella, ’71 (UK) starring Jack O’Connell, Back on Board: Greg Louganis (USA), the Edward Snowden documentary Citizenfour (Germany) directed by Laura Poitras, Effie Gray (UK), starring Dakota Fanning, Emma Thompson, Robbie Coltrane, Julie Walters, Helicopter Mom (USA) starring Nia Vardalos, Kate Flannery and Lisa Loeb, the documentary Holbrook/Twain: An American Odyssey (USA) featuring Hal Holbrook, Sean Penn, Martin Sheen, Emile Hirsch, Cherry Jones, Robert Patrick and Annie Potts, In Order of Disappearance (Norway) starring Stellan Skarsgård, Keep On Keepin’ On (USA) directed by Alan Hicks and featuring Clark Terry, Justin Kauflin, Gwen Terry and Quincy Jones, Learning to Drive (USA) starring Patricia Clarkson and Ben Kingsley, Match (USA) starring Matthew Lillard, Carla Gugino and Patrick Stewart, The Outrageous Sophie Tucker (USA) featuring Barbara Walters, Tony Bennett, Carol Channing, Michael Feinstein, Shecky Greene, Bruce Vilanch and David Hyde Pierce, Song One (USA) starring Anne Hathaway and Mary Steenburgen, Trespassing Bergman (Sweden) directed by Jane  Magnusson and Hynek Pallas featuring Woody Allen, Wes Anderson, Francis Ford Coppola, Clare Denis, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Michael Haneke, Ang Lee, Alexander Payne, Ridley Scott and Lars von Trier, Two Days, One Night(Belgium) starring Marion Cotillard.

    For a complete list of films including those selected in the World Cinema Now and True Stories program visit www.psfilmfest.org.

    Read more


  • Award-Winning Documentary “ON THE WAY TO SCHOOL” Sets February 2015 Release Date

     award-winning documentary "ON THE WAY TO SCHOOL" directed by Pascal Plisson

    The award-winning documentary “ON THE WAY TO SCHOOL” (Sur le chemin de l’école) directed by Pascal Plisson, will open in Lincoln Plaza Cinemas in New York on February 6, 2015.  ON THE WAY TO SCHOOL immerses us in the extraordinary routines of four different children who live in the four corners of the earth but all share the same thirst for learning. They understand that only education will allow them a better future and that is why, every day, they must set out on the long and perilous journey that will lead them to knowledge. Their sheer will to accomplish their dream leads them onto a path we have all walked – but never like this.

    ON THE WAY TO SCHOOL, winner of the 2014 Cesar Award for Best Documentary, is the story of: Jackson, 11, who lives in Kenya and twice a day he and his younger sister walk 10 miles through a savannah populated by wild animals; Carlito, 11, rides more than 11 miles twice a day with his younger sister, across the plains of Argentina, regardless of the weather; Zahira, 12, lives in the Moroccan Atlas Mountains and takes an exhausting walk on foot along punishing mountain paths awaits her before she and her two girlfriends can reach their boarding school; Samuel, 13, lives in India and the 2.5 miles he has to travel each day are an ordeal, as he doesn’t have the use of his legs so his two younger brothers have to push him all the way to school in a makeshift wheelchair.

     http://youtu.be/eIsQ0B43Q9Y

    Read more


  • Oxford Film Festival 2015 Lineup; Opens with James Franco’s THE SOUND AND THE FURY

     The Sound and The FuryThe Sound and The Fury

    Oxford Film Festival announced the selections for its 12th annual festival, to be held February 26-March 1, 2015 at the Oxford Commons Malco.

    The opening night event includes the Mississippi premiere of James Franco’s adaptation of “The Sound and The Fury.” Directed by James Franco, who also stars alongside Seth Rogen, Danny McBride and Tim Blake Nelson, The Sound and the Fury presents a portrait of the Compson family, former Southern aristocrats struggling to deal with the dissolution of their family and its reputation.            

     Films that are not in competition for a Spirit of the Hoka award are noted in the category lists below.

    Narrative Feature Competition

    A is for Alex        
    Directed by Alex Orr       
    A struggling inventor works to save the world and become a worthy father and husband.
    1 hour 14 minutes

    Bluebird 
    Directed by Lance Edmands
    In the northern reaches of Maine, a local school bus driver becomes distracted during her end-of-day inspection, and fails to notice a sleeping boy in the back of the bus. Starring Amy Morton (Chicago P.D.), John Slattery (Mad Men), and Margo Martindale (Justified, The Americans). 
    1 hour 31 minutes

    Burnout
    Directed by Lydia Hyslop
    When a vote to legalize marijuana passes, Ada finds her unusual—and illegal – livelihood suddenly threatened. What happens if the demand for the girl with the drugs becomes obsolete?
    1 hour 17 minutes

    The Last Time You Had Fun
    Directed by Mo Perkins
    When Clark and Will meet Alison and Ida in a wine bar, the foursome set out for an all-night adventure to have the most fun that four decidedly dysfunctional adults are capable of having. Starring Demitri Martin (Taking Woodstock, In a World), Mary Elizabeth Ellis (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia), Eliza Coupe (Happy Endings), Kyle Bornheimer (Bachelorette).
    1 hour 19 minutes, non-competition      

    OzLand 
    Directed by Michael Williams      
    In a dry and dusty post-apocalyptic world, two wayfarers wander aimlessly until Leif finds a copy of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a book that challenges the beliefs, friendship, and even the very survival of these two divergent travelers.            
    1 hour 58 minutes  

    Shanks                  
    Directed by William Castle (1974)
    A mute puppeteer (Marcel Marceau) uses a deceased scientist’s invention to control dead bodies like puppets. 
    1 hour 33 minutes , non-competition     

    Stomping Ground 
    Directed by Dan Riesser
    A young couple on a weekend trip to the American south embark on an impromptu “Bigfoot hunt” that threatens their relationship and their lives.         
    1 hour 20 minutes            

    Documentary Feature Competition

    Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound       
    Directed by William Saunders 
    A uniquely talented collective of musicians from Bakersfield, California in the 1950s and 60s challenged the established tastes of the Nashville scene, and permanently altered the landscape of Country music. While artists like Merle Haggard and Buck Owens rode the Bakersfield Sound to national fame, singer-songwriter Billy Mize found touring to be incompatible with the only thing he loved more than music: his family.                  
    1 hour 40 minutes

    Dwarves Kingdom  
    Directed by Matthew Salton       
    After a chance meeting a little person on a train, a Lord of the Rings-obsessed Chinese real estate investor created an amusement park where people with dwarfism could live and earn money performing. In English and Chinese with English subtitles.
    1 hour 11 minutes     

    Just About Famous
    Directed by Jason Kovacsev and Matt Mamula
    JUST ABOUT FAMOUS shines a spotlight on the often overlooked side of celebrity: the lookalikes. Take a trip into the intriguing, enlightening, and often surreal life of Elvis, Obama, Bush, Madonna and Lady Gaga impersonators, each with a different path, as they converge on an annual convention. 
    1 hour 29 minutes      

    Oil & Water         
    Directed by Alan Robert Davis    
    This feature documentary explores the complex relationship between coastal Cajuns in Louisiana and the oil and gas industry, following a family and their seafood business as they struggle in the years after the BP oil spill.               
    1 hour 15 minutes           

    Yazoo Revisited: Integration and Segregation in a Deep Southern Town
    Directed by David Rae Morris     
    History of race relations and the 1970 integration of the public schools in Yazoo City, Mississippi, the hometown of the filmmaker’s father, the late writer, Willie Morris.              
    1 hour 24 minutes           

    Narrative Short Competition

    Based On Rosenthal       
    Directed by Sam Cespedes          
    BASED ON ROSENTHAL follows a boy, Jerry, touched by the supernatural, and his attempt to help his terminally ill grandmother find some peace and comfort during her last days.
    15 minutes          

    Bingo Night!                       
    Directed by Jordan Liebowitz      
    A financially-strapped senior citizen finds a creative (and legally dubious) means of getting some quick cash in this sly and high-spirited comic caper. Starring Lynne Marie Stewart (It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia) and Mindy Sterling (Austin Powers, Legit).
    14 minutes                                                          

    Day One               
    Directed by Michael Steiner        
    On her first day of deployment in Afghanistan as an interpreter, an Afghan-American woman’s unit searches out the remote house of a bomb-maker. When the bomb-maker’s pregnant wife goes into labor, the interpreter must go beyond the call of duty to deliver her breech child. Inspired by a true story.
    25 minutes                                                                                                           

    The Department of Signs and Magical Intervention          
    Directed by Melissa Sweazy        
    Recently-deceased Aidan Crane is put to work at the Department of Signs and Magical Intervention, sorting through the requests from the living for signs from above. When he accidentally sends a sign to the one person who shouldn’t have received it, he is sent back to fix his mistake.
    19 minutes                         

    Destroyer            
    Directed by Andrew Kightlinger 
    A husband (Alan Ruck, Spin City, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off) drives his wife out to the country with a mind for retribution. Also starring Judith Hoag (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, NBC’s Nashville).
    8 minutes           

    Ed is a Portal       
    Directed by Darrell C. Hazelrig    
    A sci-fi comedy by the New Puppet Order about all of life’s little headaches: obnoxious co-workers, slovenly roommates, and having an inter-dimensional gateway growing in the back of your head. 
    10 minutes         

    The Gunfighter     
    Directed by Eric Kissack 
    In the tradition of classic westerns, a narrator (Nick Offerman, Parks and Recreation) sets up the story of a lone gunslinger that walks into a saloon. However, the people in this saloon can hear the narrator who may just be a little bit of a jerk.  
    9 minutes

    I Love Art             
    Directed by Mac Alsfeld                
    During a fun trip to the art museum with his girlfriend, Carl falls in love with a painting…literally.                
    9 minutes                                                                                                               

    Moffino               
    Directed by Giosuè Petrone        
    Moffino is obsessed with getting out of work at 6:00 p.m. sharp with the hope of finding a parking place, until one day…. In Italian with English subtitles.       
    6 minutes       

    Repeater   
    Directed by Wade Vanover
    A father and son struggle to relate after years apart. Starring David Strathairn (Lincoln, Good Night and Good Luck). Adapted from Chris Offut’s short story, “Target Practice”. 
    21 minutes         

    Star Warp’d        
    Directed by Pete Schuermann   
    A claymation parody of classic science-fiction films including Star Wars, Star Trek, The Terminator, and many others. 
    32 minutes, non-competition    

    Waking Marshall Walker               
    Directed by Bjorn Thorstad and Gabriel Baron    
    An encounter with a mysterious stranger brings unsettling premonitions, sending Marshall Walker on a desperate race through memory and time to reunite with his estranged daughter Charlotte and undo a fateful mistake, or risk being trapped between worlds forever.            
    15 minutes                                         

    Documentary Short Competition

    Big Bad Art          
    Directed by Ben Cannon               
    This no-holds-barred look at the making of a zeitgeisty “house party” might be the funniest documentary to ever come busting out of the art world.       
    43 minutes         

    Crooked Candy                 
    Directed by Andrew Rodgers      
    A ban on Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs in the U.S. isn’t enough to keep one man from following his childhood dream. 
    7 minutes                                           

    The Forgotten (Los Olvidados)                   
    Directed by David Feldman          
    A young Latino artist advocates for domestic laborers through an art installation in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona, in tribute to his immigrant roots. 
    13 minutes                                                                                                                                          

    The Grand Dis-illusion (La gran desilusión)            
    Directed by Pedro González Kuhn            
    On September 1, 2012, the Spanish government increased the culture tax from 8% to 21%, causing many theatres to close and many skilled workers to lose their jobs. In Spanish with English subtitles.
    11 minutes                                                                                                               

    Ironman Jackson Wingfield 
    Directed by Deer Run Media       
    To become an Ironman, one must complete a 2.4 mile swim, a 112 mile bike ride and a 26.2 mile run. Jackson Wingfield won a ticket through his job at Kenco Logistics 14 weeks before race day. Couch to Ironman in just 3 months is an unprecedented endeavor. Jackson rose to the challenge.
    4 minutes                                                                                                                                 

    Jim Dickinson: The Man Behind the Console                        
    Directed by Nan Hackman
    Legendary record producer Jim Dickinson (1941-2009) discusses how working with producer Sam Phillips and, later, watching the Rolling Stones record “Sticky Fingers” influenced his role as a future producer, how he taught his sons Luther and Cody of the North Mississippi Allstars, about the world of music, and how he values his work as a producer with Alex Chilton on Big Star’s “Third” album.          
    16 minutes         

    Mr. X   
    Directed by Alex Nicholson          
    The study of a London tattooist.               
    7 minutes  

    Shirley’s Kids 
    Directed by Michael Paulucci      
    Shirley Chambers gained nationwide publicity because of the tragic loss of her four children to gun violence in America’s most dangerous city, Chicago. 
    10 minutes         

    Wagonmasters                 
    Directed by Sam Smartt and Chris Zaluski              
    WAGONMASTERS tells the story of the station wagon as it represents a changing America over the last hundred years, and offers glimpses into the lives of lingering wagon enthusiasts.      
    19 minutes                                         

    Animated Short Competition                                                                                

    Between Times                
    Directed by Ru Kuwahata and Max Porter            
    From the wall of a small town bakery, a cuckoo clock recounts a day where bread was sliced one second thick, lovers fell in sync and time rarely flowed at an even rate.       
    15 minutes  

    Humanexus
    Directed by Ying-Fang Shen
    Tools and technologies have made it easier to reach out and share ideas, but each one presents a new, unforeseen challenge to forming meaningful interpersonal connections.                      
    11 minutes

    Jinxy Jenkins, Lucky Lou                
    Directed by Michael Bidinger and Michelle Kwon              
    When the chaotically misfortunate Jenkins and the monotonously lucky Lou run into each other one morning, they find a thrilling and fulfilling change of pace as they hurtle down the hills of San Francisco in an ice cream cart. 
    4 minutes           

    Love in the time of March Madness         
    Directed by Melissa Johnson      
    The true-life story of a 6’4” woman who is a star on the basketball court but struggles to find true love.  
    10 minutes         

    Proximity             
    Directed by Holly Petersen          
    Two ceramic figures, a Victorian gentleman and a sixties cowgirl, explore the depths of love and betrayal.  
    4 minutes           

    Zuzumi 
    Directed by Mengyi Xu  
    A story about the friendship between pets and humans, a pet pig turns into a super pig woman save the day and her master.
    3 minutes                                                                                                                

    Experimental Short Competition

    Displacements
    Directed by Manuel Alvarez Diestro
    In Hong Kong, one of the densest cities in the world, new towns are adjacent to cemeteries. The world of the living coexists with that of the dead. Meanwhile, Hong Kong inhabitants move from place to place, awaiting their final displacement.
    10 minutes

    Flipping               
    Directed by Jin Kyu Ahn
    Using a hand-drawn animation technique called “flipping,” physical objects collide with the sounds made by playing two improvised scores.
    8 minutes

    Interstates                          
    Jeffery Chong
    INTERSTATES captures the essence of a winter drive through rural New Hampshire and Maine by focusing on the journey’s ever-fleeting scenery. 
    3 minutes         

    Left       
    Directed by Daniel Winter
    A 3075 individually left-hand drawn rotoscoped frame by frame silent short film about a child, their bear, and moving away from home.
    3 minutes                                                                                                       

    Memory V: Sodankylä                   
    Directed by Gloria Chung              
    Recollections of a week spent north of the Arctic Circle, under the midnight sun: hazy, dreamlike, disorienting, lovely and surreal.
    6 minutes                                                                                                                                

    Memory VI: An Ostrich’s Eye Is Bigger Than Its Brain        
    Directed by Gloria Chung              
    How does our memory function? Why do we remember certain trivial or mundane things but cannot recall other seemingly larger ideas, information, events or experiences?
    5 minutes                                                                            

    On the Train to Kutná Hora…and Back                    
    Directed by Ann Deborah Levy  
    Footage shot with a point-and-shoot camera on a day trip in the Czech countryside, is rearranged and heavily edited. 
    8 minutes  

    A Perfect Day
    Directed by Oguzhan Kaya
    In a city far away from nature, a man wakes up, has his breakfast, and starts a perfect day.
    5 minutes

    The Stars and Stripes Forever in the Eternal City                                
    Directed by Rebekah Flake          
    This film explores tendencies of exuberance and patriotism “and throwing away money” in Rome, the ancient seat of Western imperialism. 
    5 minutes                                                                              

    Mississippi Films (music videos, narrative shorts and documentary shorts)

    85% Broken        
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by Alison Fast and Chandler Griffin        
    What happens when a classical composer from Japan adopts a small Mississippi town?  85% BROKEN is a magical film about one artist’s interpretation of place through sound and a found accordion. Filmed in Water Valley, Miss. 
    15 minutes                                                                                                             

    Barry     
    Mississippi Narrative      
    Directed by Matthew Graves     
    Deep beneath a cold, dark forest lies Barry. His world is a dusty coffin and a cherished locket from his dear wife, Mary. He has come to terms with his present situation but strange new noises are coming from outside his solitary home.
    10 minutes, non-competition    

    A Different Kind of Festival          
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by Ellen Phillips               
    The first ever Art-er Limits Fringe Festival opens its doors for artists, performers, and musicians from all over Mississippi to come and showcase their work in a different and unique way.   
    7 minutes, non-competition        

    From Tribulation to Triumph       
    Mississippi Music Video                
    Directed by Jake Wood / Music by Jake Wood
    5 minutes                                                                                                              

    Garage Sale
    Mississippi Narrative      
    Directed by Meaghin Burke         
    Lydia and her father struggle to heal a fractured relationship while preparing to sell his house.  Packing and selling cherished childhood objects conjures a host of memories for Lydia, who is still reeling from the death of her sister.  As she tries to accept her complicated relationship with her father, she also celebrates the opportunity to make amends across the generations.
    13 minutes                                                                                                   

    A Horror Movie 
    Mississippi Narrative      
    Directed by Casey Dillard              
    Six “teens” are expecting a night of fun, but their cabin party quickly turns into a night of terror, danger and clichés.        
    11 minutes                                                                                                    

    In Ten  
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by Melanie Addington 
    For 15 years, Oxford’s theater community has held a national 10-minute play contest, with a festival of the winners produced with local talent. 
    15 minutes, non-competition                                            

    Inside Your Head              
    Mississippi Music Video                
    Directed by Newt Rayburn / Music by The Heard                              
    3 minutes

    Leadway
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by Robbie Fisher and Dudley Percy Olsson
    Cindi Quong Lofton, a Chinese-American woman in a small town in the rural Mississippi Delta, deals with the violent murder of her father, an iconic figure in the community known simply by the name ‘Leadway’, the name of his store.     
    10 minutes

    A Long Journey 
    Mississippi Music Video                
    Directed by Shannon Cohn / Music by Leo ‘Bud’ Welch
    4 minutes 

    Lord Knows I’m a Soldier     
    Mississippi Music Video                
    Directed by Danny Klimetz/Oxford Sessions / music by Sean Apple 
    4 minutes

    A Mississippi Love Story                
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by Robbie Fisher            
    Against the backdrop of legal battles about same-sex marriage, Eddie and Justin share their personal take on what love really means in their Deep South hometown.     
    14 minutes

    Mississippi Milk 
    Mississippi Documentary              
    Directed by David Rogers and Brittany Retherford             
    A family farmer’s struggle to produce a local product and bring it to the communities of North Mississippi.
    13 minutes

    PEAs      
    Mississippi Narrative      
    Directed by Kelly Buckholdt         
    A woman goes to a meeting of Picky Eaters Anonymous looking for relationship advice.  
    10 minutes

    Statesboro Blues
    Mississippi Music Video                
    Directed by Danny Klimetz/Oxford Sessions / music by Will Echols
    3 minutes                                                                                                                

    Unquantifiable
    Mississippi Documentary
    Directed by Ed Foose     
    Art Place Mississippi is an organization that promotes art education in adolescent offender programs, alternative schools, and senior citizen centers.
    21 minutes

    Read more


  • Berlin Film Fest Reveals Films in 2015 Panorama Program

    berlin film fest 2015 poster

    Eleven fictional and eight documentary films have been selected to screen in the 36th Panorama program of the 65th Berlin International Film Festival taking place from February 5 to 15, 2015.  

    East Asia will again make a strong showing in 2015. Already confirmed are significant works by renowned directors from Taiwan and South Korea. With Paradise in Service, director Doze Niu Chen-Zer from Taiwan presents a difficult chapter of East Asian history that has hardly ever been dealt with before: the establishment of brothels to keep up the morale of armed forces in the battle “against Mao”. And with JK Youn’s epic Ode to My Father, South Korea, half of a still divided country, investigates the repercussions of the Korean War and their impact on today.

    The USA’s presence will also be felt: After Henry Fool and Fay Grim (Panorama 2007), cult filmmaker Hal Hartley, an iconic figure from the golden days of 1980s US-independent film, has concluded his trilogy with a masterpiece: Ned Rifle. And Justin Kelly provides an unusual directorial debut with I Am Michael, which was co-produced by Gus Van Sant. In it James Franco portrays a gay activist during the so emancipating 1980s, who then tries to turn straight in the 1990s. From the same decade, but set in the 1980s is an example of a filmmaker’s extraordinary perseverance, even though his work was edited beyond recognition by its investors: seventeen years after the premiere of the film 54 about the legendary New York nightclub, Studio 54, director Mark Christopher is presenting his original cut 54 – The Director’s Cut to the public.

    Raoul Peck will present his latest work in the Panorama: the Haitian-French-Norwegian co-production Murder in Pacot (screenplay: Pascal Bonitzer). A character piece set outdoors against the catastrophe of the earthquake in Port-au-Prince looks with bitter rage at class distinctions in Haitian society.

    One film from Latin America has already been confirmed, a co-production from Uruguay and Chile: Aldo Garay’s The New Man. Here, too, recent history is explored: in the heat of the battle that Tupamaros and Sandinistas are fighting against the military dictatorships in their respective countries, Roberto, a young boy from Nicaragua, suddenly finds himself with foster parents in Uruguay. When he then decides to change his gender, he is also confronted with the limits of tolerance in leftist society.

    Child abuse is the subject in several works, including the aforementioned The New Man, and films from Austria (The Last Summer of the Rich by Peter Kern), Switzerland (Dora or the Sexual Neuroses of Our Parents by Stina Werenfels), Canada (Chorus by Francois Delisle) and the Czech Republic (Daniel’s World by Veronika Liskova). Evidently the time is ripe to broach this difficult topic again and in so doing take even greater risks.

    The Norwegian fictional film Out of Nature by Ole Giæver and Marte Vold is a zeitgeisty parable about a man, and his search for identity and joy in life. The young father needs a break from parental bliss: he retreats to the mountains to rethink what he wants from life.

    In the Swedish contribution Dyke Hard by Bitte Anderson, all the stops have been pulled on what makes indie cinema so entertaining. A zany, quasi musical of post-punk-lesbo-rock-‘n’-roll calibre: this is underground fun at its purest.

    Five other films (besides The New ManThe Yes Men and Daniel’s World) have already been confirmed for Panorama Dokumente:

    B-Movie – Lust & Sound in West-Berlin by Jörg A. Hoppe, Klaus Maeck and Heiko Lange also embraces this rediscovered pleasure in the 1980s: a cornucopia of unbridled creativity spurts from this period in Berlin, which is revealed here to have been a highpoint. Alongside almost forgotten gems are tracks by Gudrun Gut, Blixa Bargeld and Nick Cave, among others.

    Scandal at the Zoo Palast: R.W. Fassbinder’s conquest of the Berlinale began with Love Is Colder than Death in the 1969 Competition. In Fassbinder – To Love without Demands, Danish filmmaker Christian Braad Thomsen opens his archive and generously gives us a contemplative afternoon in a hotel room in Cannes with this unendingly inspiring filmmaker.

    Kenya is among those African countries where, under the influence of evangelical organisations from the United States, hatred has been ignited against homosexuals. In Stories of Our Lives, Jim Chuchu lets a whole range of brave people talk. Banned in its country of origin, the film also presents pre-Christian rites that respect self-determination much more than society today.

    In his 162-minute 3D documentary Iraqi Odyssey, Iraqi-Swiss filmmaker Samir masterly depicts the latest, highly complex history of Iraq as revealed by events in a family.

    Last not least, news of a celebration! On February 13, 2014, the Teddy Awards will be presented for the second time at the Komische Oper Berlin. The Special Teddy 2015 will go to Udo Kier. Almost no other actor has crossed, fused, redrawn and extended the many boundaries of cinematic art with such ease.

    54: The Director’s Cut 
    USA
    By Mark Christopher
    With Ryan Phillippe, Salma Hayek, Mike Myers, Sela Ward, Mark Ruffalo
    World premiere

    Chorus 
    Canada
    By François Delisle
    With Sébastien Ricard, Fanny Mallette, Pierre Curzi, Geneviève Bujold
    European premiere

    Der letzte Sommer der Reichen (The Last Summer of the Rich
    Austria
    By Peter Kern
    With Amira Casar, Nicole Gerdon, Winfried Glatzeder
    World premiere

    Dora oder Die sexuellen Neurosen unserer Eltern (Dora or The Sexual Neuroses of Our Parents
    Switzerland / Germany
    By Stina Werenfels
    With Victoria Schulz, Jenny Schily, Lars Eidinger, Urs Jucker
    International premiere

    Dyke Hard 
    Sweden
    By Bitte Andersson
    With Alle Eriksson, Peggy Sands, M. Wågensjö, Iki Gonzales Magnusson, Lina Kurttila
    International premiere

    Gukje Shijang (Ode to My Father)
    Republic of Korea
    By JK Youn
    with Hwang Jung-min, Kim Yunjin
    International premiere

    I Am Michael
    USA
    By Justin Kelly
    With James Franco, Zachary Quinto, Emma Roberts
    International premiere

    Jun Zhong Le Yuan (Paradise in Service
    Taiwan 
    By Doze Niu Chen-Zer
    With Ethan Juan, Wan Qian, Chen Jianbin, Chen Yi-Han
    European premiere

    Meurtre à Pacot (Murder in Pacot)
    France / Haiti / Norway
    By Raoul Peck
    With Alex Descas, Ayo, Thibault Vinçon, Lovely Kermonde Fifi, Joy Olasunmibo Ogunmakin
    European premiere

    Mot Naturen (Out of Nature
    Norway
    By Ole Giæver, Marte Vold
    With Ole Giæver, Marte Magnusdotter Solem, Rebekka Nystadbakk, Ellen Birgitte Winther, Sievert Giaever Solem
    European premiere

    Ned Rifle (Ned Rifle
    USA
    By Hal Hartley
    With Liam Aiken, Martin Donovan, Aubrey Plaza, Parker Posey, Thomas Jay Ryan
    European premiere


    Panorama Dokumente

    B-Movie: Lust & Sound in West-Berlin 
    Germany
    By Jörg A. Hoppe, Klaus Maeck, Heiko Lange
    With Mark Reeder, Marius Weber
    World premiere

    Danieluv svet (Daniel’s World
    Czeck Republic
    By Veronika Liskova
    International premiere

    El hombre nuevo (The New Man
    Uruguay / Chile
    By Aldo Garay
    World premiere

    Fassbinder – lieben ohne zu fordern (Fassbinder – To Love without Demands
    Denmark
    By Christian Braad Thomsen
    With Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Irm Hermann, Harry Baer, Lilo Pempeit
    World premiere

    Iraqi Odyssey 
    Switzerland
    By Samir
    European premiere

    Stories of Our Lives 
    Kenya
    By Jim Chuchu
    With Kelly Gichohi, Paul Ogola, Tim Mutungi, Mugambi Nthinga, Rose Njenga
    European premiere

    The Yes Men Are Revolting 
    USA
    By Laura Nix, Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno
    European premiere

    Read more


  • “The Big Lebowski,” the 1971 Indie Film “Please Don’t Bury Me Alive!” Among 25 Films Added to National Film Registry

    The Big LebowskiThe Big Lebowski

    Librarian of Congress James H. Billington announced the annual selection of 25 motion pictures to be named to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress

    The 2014 registry list includes Joel and Ethan Coen’s cult classic, “The Big Lebowski,” and Efraín Gutiérrez’s 1976 independent movie, “Please Don’t Bury Me Alive!,” considered by historians to be the first Chicano feature film. The documentaries and shorts named to the registry include “Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport,” a film examining the rescue operation that placed thousands of Jewish children with foster families in Great Britain prior to World War II; “Felicia,” a 13-minute short that showcases a Watts neighborhood through a teenager’s first-person narrative; and the 1980 “Moon Breath Beat,” created by animator Lisze Bechtold when she was a student at CalArts.

    Under the terms of the National Film Preservation Act, each year the Librarian of Congress names 25 films to the National Film Registry that are “culturally, historically or aesthetically” significant. The films must be at least 10 years old. The Librarian makes the annual registry selections after reviewing hundreds of titles nominated by the public and conferring with Library film curators and the distinguished members of the National Film Preservation Board (NFPB). 

    2014 National Film Registry

    13 Lakes (2004)
    James Benning’s feature-length film can be seen as a series of moving landscape paintings with artistry and scope that might be compared to Claude Monet’s series of water-lily paintings. Embracing the concept of “landscape as a function of time,” Benning shot his film at 13 different American lakes in identical 10-minute takes. Each is a static composition: a balance of sky and water in each frame with only the very briefest suggestion of human existence. At each lake, Benning prepared a single shot, selected a single camera position and a specific moment. The climate, the weather and the season deliver a level of variation to the film, a unique play of light, despite its singularity of composition. Curators of the Rotterdam Film Festival noted, “The power of the film is that the filmmaker teaches the viewer to look better and learn to distinguish the great varieties in the landscape alongside him. [The list of lakes] alone is enough to encompass a treatise on America and its history. A treatise the film certainly encourages, but emphatically does not take part in.” Benning, who studied mathematics and then film at the University of Wisconsin, currently is on the faculty at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts).

    Bert Williams Lime Kiln Club Field Day (1913)
    In 1913, a stellar cast of African-American performers gathered in the Bronx, New York, to make a feature-length motion picture. The troupe starred vaudevillian Bert Williams, the first African-American to headline on Broadway and the most popular recording artist prior to 1920. After considerable footage was shot, the film was abandoned. One hundred years later, the seven reels of untitled and unassembled footage were discovered in the film vaults of the Museum of Modern Art, and are now believed to constitute the earliest surviving feature film starring black actors. Modeled after a popular collection of stories known as “Brother Gardener’s Lime Kiln Club,” the plot features three suitors vying to win the hand of the local beauty, portrayed by Odessa Warren Grey. The production also included members of the Harlem stage show known as J. Leubrie Hill’s “Darktown Follies.” Providing insight into early silent-film production (Williams can be seen applying his blackface makeup), these outtakes or rushes show white and black cast and crew working together, enjoying themselves in unguarded moments. Even in fragments of footage, Williams proves himself among the most gifted of screen comedians.

    The Big Lebowski (1998)
    From the unconventional visionaries Joel & Ethan Coen (the filmmakers behind “Fargo” and “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”) came this 1998 tale of kidnapping, mistaken identity and bowling. As they would again in the 2008 “Burn After Reading,” the Coens explore themes of alienation, inequality and class structure via a group of hard-luck, off-beat characters suddenly drawn into each other’s orbits. Jeff Bridges, in a career-defining role, stars as “The Dude,” an LA-based slacker who shares a last name with a rich man whose arm-candy wife is indebted to shady figures. Joining Bridges are John Goodman, Tara Reid, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Steve Buscemi and, in a now-legendary cameo, John Turturro. Stuffed with vignettes—each staged through the Coens’ trademark absurdist, innovative visual style—that are alternately funny and disturbing, “Lebowski” was only middling successful at the box office during its initial release. However, television, the Internet, home video and considerable word-of-mouth have made the film a highly quoted cult classic.

    Down Argentine Way (1940)
    Betty Grable’s first starring role in a Technicolor musical happened only because Alice Faye had an attack of appendicitis, but Grable took advantage of the situation and quickly made herself as important to 20th Century-Fox as Faye. Released just over a year before America entered World War II, this film and others starring Grable established her as the pinup queen. The title explains much, with Grable traveling to South America and falling in love with Don Ameche. Carmen Miranda makes her American film debut, and the Nicholas Brothers’ unparalleled dance routines dazzle.

    The Dragon Painter (1919)
    After becoming Hollywood’s first Asian star, Japanese-born Sessue Hayakawa, like many leading film actors of the time, formed his own production company—Haworth Pictures (combining his name with that of director William Worthington)—to gain more control over his films. “The Dragon Painter,” one of more than 20 feature films his company produced between 1918 and 1922, teamed Hayakawa and his wife Tsuru Aoki in the story of an obsessed, untutored painter who loses his artistic powers after he finds and marries the supposed “dragon princess.” His passion and earlier pursuit of her had consumed him with the urge to create. Reviewers of the time praised the film for its seemingly authentic Japanese atmosphere, including the city of Hakone and its Shinto gates, built in Yosemite Valley, California.

    Felicia (1965)
    This 13-minute short subject, marketed as an educational film, records a slice of life in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles prior to the rebellions of 1965. Filmmakers Trevor Greenwood, Robert Dickson and Alan Gorg were UCLA film students when they crafted a documentary from the perspective of the unassuming-yet-articulate teenager Felicia Bragg, a high-school student of African-American and Hispanic descent. Felicia’s first-person narrative reflects her hopes and frustrations as she annotates footage of her family, school and neighborhood, creating a time capsule that’s both historically and culturally significant. Its provenance as an educational film continues today as university courses use “Felicia” to teach documentary filmmaking techniques and cite it as an example of how non-traditional sources, as well as mainstream television news, reflect and influence public opinion.

    Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)
    The late John Hughes, the king of both 1980s family comedy (“Home Alone”) and teen angst (“Sixteen Candles”), achieved a career highpoint with this funny, heartfelt tale of a teenage wiseacre (Matthew Broderick) whose day playing hooky leads not only to a host of comic misadventures but also, ultimately, to self-realization for both him and his friends. Hughes’ manner of depicting late-20th-century youth—their outward and inward lives—finds a successful vehicle in the “everyman” appeal of lead Broderick, whose conning of his parents is really an honest and earnest attempt to help his best friend. With the city of Chicago serving as backdrop and a now-iconic street performance of “Twist and Shout” serving as the film’s centerpiece, Ferris Bueller emerged as one of film’s greatest and most fully realized teen heroes. Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, Jennifer Grey and Jeffrey Jones co-starred in the film. This is Hughes’ first film on the registry.

    The Gang’s All Here (1943)
    Although not remembered as well today as those put out by MGM, 20th Century-Fox’s big Technicolor musicals stand up well in comparison. Showgirl Alice Faye, Fox’s No. 1 musical star, is romanced by a soldier who uses an assumed name and then turns out to be a rich playboy. Carmen Miranda is also featured and her outrageous costume is highlighted in the legendary musical number “The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat.” Busby Berkeley, who had just finished a long stint directing musicals at MGM and an earlier one at Warner Bros., directs and choreographs the film.

    House of Wax (1953)
    A remake of 1933’s “Mystery of the Wax Museum,” the 1953 “House of Wax” expanded upon the earlier horror tale of a mad sculptor who encases his victims’ corpses in wax. It added the dark talents of Vincent Price and helped introduce 3-D visual effects to a wide audience. “House of Wax,” produced by Warner Bros. and released in April 1953, is considered the first full-length 3-D color film ever produced and released by a major American film studio. Along with its technical innovations, “House of Wax” also solidified Vincent Price’s new role as America’s master of the macabre, and his voice resonated even more with the emerging stereophonic sound process. Though he had flirted with the fear genre earlier in his career in the 1946 “Shock,” “Wax” forever recast him as one of the first gentlemen of Hollywood horror. Along with Price, Phyllis Kirk, Frank Lovejoy and Carolyn Jones (as one of Price’s early victims) complete the cast. André de Toth directed the film.

    Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport (2000)
    Just prior to World War II, a rescue operation aided the youngest victims of Nazi terror when 10,000 Jewish and other children were sent from their homes and families to live with foster families and in group homes in Great Britain. This Oscar-winning film was directed by Mark Jonathan Harris, writer and director of another Oscar winner, “The Long Way Home,” and was produced by Deborah Oppenheimer, whose mother was among the children evacuated. The film examines the bond between parent and child, uncovering the anguish of the parents who reluctantly acknowledged they could no longer protect their children, but through their love saw a chance to protect them, by proxy if not proximity. Interviews with the surviving children reveal feelings of abandonment and estrangement that often took years to overcome. The film is a tribute not only to the children who survived, but to the people of England who agreed to rescue the refugees when U.S. leadership would not.

    Little Big Man (1970)
    In this Arthur Penn-directed Western, Dustin Hoffman (with exceptional assistance from make-up artist Dick Smith) plays a 121-year-old man looking back at his life as a pioneer in America’s Old West. The film is ambitious, both in its historical scope and narrative approach, which interweaves fact and myth, historical figures and events and fanciful tall tales. “Little Big Man” has been called an epic reinvented as a yarn, and the Western reimagined for a post-1960s audience, one already well-versed in the white hat-black hat tradition of the typical Hollywood Western saga. Against a backdrop that includes the cavalry, old-time medicine shows, life on the frontier and a climax at Custer’s Last Stand, Penn, Hoffman and scriptwriter Calder Willingham (from the novel by Thomas Berger) upend Western motifs while also still skillfully telling a series of remarkable human stories filled with tragedy and humor.

    Luxo Jr. (1986)
    The iconic living, moving desk lamp that now begins every Pixar motion picture (from “Finding Nemo” to “Monsters, Inc.” to “Up”) has its genesis in this charming, computer-animated short subject, directed by John Lasseter and produced by Lasseter and fellow Pixar visionary Bill Reeves. In the two-minute, 30-second film, two gray balance-arm lamps—one parentally large and one childishly small (the “Junior” of the title)—interact with a brightly colored ball. In strikingly vivid animation, Lasseter and Reeves manage to bring to joyous life these two inanimate objects and to infuse them both with personality and charm—qualities that would become the norm in such soon-to-be Pixar productions as “Toy Story,” “Cars” and “WALL-E.” Nominated for an Oscar in 1986 for best-animated short, “Luxo Jr.” was the first three-dimensional computer-animated film ever to be nominated for an Academy Award.

    Moon Breath Beat (1980)
    Lisze Bechtold created “Moon Breath Beat,” a five-minute color short subject, in 1980 while a student at California Institute of the Arts under the tutelage of artist and filmmaker Jules Engel, who founded the Experimental Animation program at CalArts. Engel asked, hypothetically, “What happens when an animator follows a line, a patch of color, or a shape into the unconscious? What wild images would emerge?” “Moon Breath Beat” reveals Bechtold responding with fluidity and whimsy. Her two-dimensional film was animated to a pre-composed rhythm, the soundtrack cut together afterward, sometimes four frames at a time, to match picture with track, she says. The dream-like story evolved as it was animated, depicting a woman and her two cats and how such forces as birds and the moon impact their lives. Following graduation, Bechtold was the effects animator for the Disney short “The Prince and the Pauper” (1990) and principal effects animator for “FernGully: The Last Rainforest” (1992). Now primarily an author and illustrator, she claims many of her characters were inspired by pets with big personalities, including “Buster the Very Shy Dog,” the subject of her series of children’s books.

    Please Don’t Bury Me Alive!Please Don’t Bury Me Alive!

    Please Don’t Bury Me Alive! (1976)
    The San Antonio barrio in the early 1970s is the setting for writer, director and star Efraín Gutiérrez’s independent piece, considered by historians to be the first Chicano feature film. A self-taught filmmaker, Gutiérrez not only created the film from top to bottom on a shoestring, he also acted as its initial distributor and chief promoter, negotiating bookings throughout the Southwest where it filled theaters in Chicano neighborhoods. He tells his story in the turbulent days near the end of the Vietnam War, as a young Chicano man questioning his and his people’s place in society as thousands of his Latino brethren return from the war in coffins. Chon Noriega, director of the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center, wrote, “The film is important as an instance of regional filmmaking, as a bicultural and bilingual narrative, and as a precedent that expanded the way that films got made. …” Cultural historians often compare Gutiérrez to Oscar Micheaux, the pioneering African-American filmmaker who came to prominence in the 1920s.

    The Power and the Glory (1933)
    Preston Sturges’ first original screenplay, “The Power and the Glory,” is a haunting tragedy in sharp contrast to the comedies of the 1940s that established him as one of America’s foremost writer-directors. Contrary to common practice of the time, Sturges wrote the film as a complete shooting script, which producer Jesse L. Lasky, believing it “the most perfect script I’d ever seen,” ordered director William K. Howard to film as written. Compared favorably to novels by Henry James and Joseph Conrad for its extensive mix of narration with dramatic action (Fox Studios coined the word “narratage” to publicize Sturges’ innovative technique), “The Power and the Glory” introduced a non-chronological structure to mainstream movies that was said to influence “Citizen Kane.” Like that film, “The Power and the Glory” presents a fragmented rags-to-riches tale of an American industrial magnate that begins with his death, in this case a suicide, and sensitively proceeds to produce a deeply affecting, morally ambivalent portrayal. The Nation magazine called Spencer Tracy’s performance in the lead role “one of the fullest characterizations ever achieved on screen.”

    Rio Bravo (1959)
    As legend goes, this Western, directed by Howard Hawks, was produced in part as a riposte to Fred Zinnemann’s “High Noon.” The film trades in the wide-open spaces for the confines of a small jail where a sheriff and his deputies are waiting for the transfer of a prisoner and the anticipated attempt by his equally unlawful brother to break the prisoner out. John Wayne stars as sheriff John T. Chance and is aided in his efforts to keep the law by Walter Brennan, Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson. Angie Dickinson is the love interest and Western regulars Claude Akins, Ward Bond and Pedro Gonzalez are also featured. A smart Western where gunplay is matched by wordplay, “Rio Bravo” is a terrific ensemble piece and director Hawks’ last great film.

    Rosemary’s Baby (1968)
    With “Rosemary’s Baby,” writer-director Roman Polanski brought his expressive European style of psychological filmmaking to an intricately plotted, best-selling American novel by Ira Levin, and created a masterpiece of the horror-film genre. Set in the sprawling Dakota apartment building on New York’s Central Park West, the film conveys an increasing sense of unease, claustrophobia and paranoia as the central character, convincingly played by Mia Farrow in her first starring role, comes to believe that a cult of witches in the building is implementing a plot against her and her unborn child. The supporting cast that Polanski assembled—John Cassavetes as Rosemary’s husband, Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer as their neighbors, and Ralph Bellamy as her doctor—portray believably banal New Yorkers who gain nearly total control over Rosemary’s daily life during her pregnancy. Insistent that “a thread of deliberate ambiguity runs throughout the film,” Polanski maintains that the film’s denouement can be understood in more than one way.

    Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)
    Charles Laughton, known for such serious roles as Nero, King Henry VIII and later as the 1935 Captain Bligh, takes on comedy in this tale of an English manservant won in a poker game by American Charlie Ruggles, a member of Red Gap, Washington’s extremely small social elite. Laughton, in understated valet fashion, worriedly responds: “North America, my lord. Quite an untamed country I understand.” However, once in America, he finds not uncouth backwoodsmen, but rather a more egalitarian society that soon has Laughton reciting the Gettysburg Address, catching the American spirit and becoming a successful businessman. Aided by comedy stalwarts ZaSu Pitts and Roland Young, Laughton really shows his acting range and pulls off comedy perfectly. It didn’t hurt that Leo McCarey, who had just worked with W.C. Fields and would next guide Harold Lloyd, was in the director’s chair. McCarey, who could pull heartstrings or touch funny bones with equal skill, started his long directorial career working with such comedy icons as Laurel & Hardy and created several beloved American films.

    Saving Private Ryan (1998)
    Through the years, Hollywood’s take on war, honor and heroism has taken many conflicting forms. “Saving Private Ryan” drops ordinary soldiers into a near-impossible rescue mission set amid the carnage of World War II’s Omaha Beach landing. The film’s beginning scenes vividly show us “war is hell,” as William T. Sherman said. Spielberg conveyed ultra-realism with harrowing intensity. “Omaha Beach was actually an ‘X’ setting,” says Spielberg, “even worse than ‘NC-17,’ and I just kind of feel that (I had) to tell the truth about this war at the end of the century, 54 years later. I wasn’t going to add my film to a long list of pictures that make World War II ‘the glamorous war,’ ‘the romantic war.’”

    Shoes (1916)
    Renowned silent era writer-director Lois Weber drew on her experiences as a missionary to create “Shoes,” a masterfully crafted melodrama heightened by Weber’s intent to create, as she noted in an interview, “a slice out of real life.” Weber’s camera empathetically documents the suffering her central character, an underpaid shopgirl struggling to support her family, endures daily—standing all day behind a shop counter, walking in winter weather in shoes that provided no protection, stepping on a nail that pierces her flesh. Combining a Progressive era reformer’s zeal to document social problems with a vivid flair for visual storytelling, Weber details Eva’s growing desire for the pair of luxurious shoes she passes each day in a shop window, her self-examination in a cracked mirror after she agrees to go out with a cabaret tout to acquire the shoes, her repugnance as the man puts his hands on her body, and her shame as she breaks down in tears while displaying her newly acquired goods to her mother. The film, which opens with pages from social worker Jane Addams’s sociological study of prostitution, was acclaimed by “Variety” as “a vision of life as it actually is … devoid of theatricalism.”

    State Fair (1933)
    For director Henry King to create a film that celebrated an institution as beloved and indomitable as the State Fair, it required the presence of a cherished and steadfast star—in this case, icon, philosopher and America’s favorite cowboy, Will Rogers. Rogers found a superlative vehicle for his homespun persona in this small town slice-of-life setting. He is assisted by Janet Gaynor (already the Academy’s very first best-actress winner), Lew Ayres and Sally Eilers. Enhancing the fair’s festivities, which include the making of mom’s entry for the cook-off and the fattening-up of the family pig, are diverse storylines rich with Americana and romance—some long-lasting and some ephemeral, rife with fun but fleeting as the fair itself. The film’s authenticity owes much to its director, widely known as the “King of Americana” through films such as “Tol’able David,” “Carousel” and “Wait till the Sun Shines, Nellie.”

    Unmasked (1917)
    At the time “Unmasked” was released, Grace Cunard rivaled daredevils Pearl White (“The Perils of Pauline”) and Helen Holmes (“The Hazards of Helen”) as America’s Serial Queen. In the film, Cunard is a jewel thief pursuing the same wealthy marks as another thief played by Francis Ford, brother of director John Ford and himself a director and character actor. Cunard, in the mode of many women filmmakers of that era, not only starred in the film, but also wrote its script and parlayed her contributions into a directorial role as well. Produced at Universal Studios, the epicenter of female directors during the silent era, “Unmasked” reflected a style associated with European filmmakers of the time: artful and sophisticated cinematography comprised of complex camera movements and contrasting depths of field. With a plot rich in female initiative and problem-solving, Cunard fashioned a strong character who does not fit the image of traditional womanhood: she relishes her heists, performs unladylike physical exploits, manipulates court evidence, carries on with a man who is not her husband and yet survives the film without punishment. In essence, the character Cunard created echoed the woman behind the camera. Today, “Unmasked” serves as a succinct but illustrative example of the role of women in film history, as depicted in fact and fiction.

    V-E +1 (1945)
    The silent 16 mm footage that makes up “V-E +1” documents the burial of beaten and emaciated Holocaust victims found by Allied forces in the Nazi concentration camp at Falkenau, Czechoslovakia, as World War II ended in Europe. According to Samuel Fuller, who shot the footage while in the infantry unit that liberated the camp, the American commander in charge ordered leading civilians of the town who denied knowledge of the death camp to “prepare the bodies for a decent funeral,” parade them on wagons through the town, and bury them with dignity in the town’s cemetery. Fuller later became an acclaimed maverick writer-director known for crafting films that entertained, but nevertheless forced audiences to confront challenging societal issues. After making “The Big Red One,” a fictionalized version of his war experiences that included scenes set in Falkenau, Fuller unearthed his “V-E + 1” footage and returned to Falkenau to comment on the experience for the French documentary “Falkenau: The Impossible Years.”

    The Way of Peace (1947)
    Frank Tashlin, best known for making comedies with pop icons like Jerry Lewis or Jayne Mansfield, directed this 18-minute puppet film sponsored by the American Lutheran Church. Punctuated with stories from the Bible, the film’s purpose was to reinforce Christian values in the atomic age by condemning the consequences of human conflict with scenes of the crucifixion, lynching and Nazi fascism. Wah Ming Chang, a visual- effects artist who specialized in designing fantastic models, characters and props, created the puppets for the stop-motion animation and also produced the film, which reportedly took 20 months to complete. The film is narrated by actor Lew Ayres, who starred in the anti-war film “All Quiet on the Western Front” (1930). He was so influenced by that experience, that he became a vocal advocate for peace and famously declared himself a conscientious objector during World War II. The Reverend H. K. Rasbach, a frequent adviser on big-budget films such as “The Ten Commandments” and “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” provided technical supervision and story concept. The film premiered at Constitution Hall in Washington D.C., with more than 2,700 in attendance, including members of Congress, representatives of the Supreme Court and 750 leaders from various branches of government.

    Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)
    Author Roald Dahl adapted his own novel, Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley wrote a memorable musical score, and producer David Wolper wisely cast Gene Wilder as Wonka in this film musical about a contest put on by an often-sadistic candymaker. Harkening back to the classic Hollywood musicals, “Willy Wonka” is surreal, yet playful at the same time, and suffused with Harper Goff’s jaw-dropping color sets, which richly live up to the fanciful world found in one of the film’s signature songs, “Pure Imagination.” Wilder’s brilliant portrayal of the enigmatic Wonka caused theatergoers to like and fear Wonka at the same time, while the hallucinogenic tunnel sequence has traumatized children (and adults) for decades, their nightmares indelibly emblazoned in memory like the scariest scenes from “The Wizard of Oz.”

    Films Selected for the 2014 National Film Registry

    13 Lakes (2004)

    Bert Williams Lime Kiln Club Field Day (1913)

    The Big Lebowski (1998)

    Down Argentine Way (1940)

    The Dragon Painter (1919)

    Felicia (1965

    Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)

    The Gang’s All Here (1943)

    House of Wax (1953)

    Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport (2000)

    Little Big Man (1970)

    Luxo Jr. (1986)

    Moon Breath Beat (1980)

    Please Don’t Bury Me Alive! (1976)

    The Power and the Glory (1933)

    Rio Bravo (1959)

    Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

    Ruggles of Red Gap (1935)

    Saving Private Ryan (1998)

    Shoes (1916)

    State Fair (1933)

    Unmasked (1917)

    V-E + 1 (1945)

    The Way of Peace (1947)

    Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)

    Read more


  • “The Keeping Room” from Toronto Film Festival to Get a 2015 Release

    the keeping room

    Julia Hart’s Black List Western feature, The Keeping Room, which had its world premiere at Toronto International Film Festival is set to be released in the U.S. in 2015 via Drafthouse Films. Directed by Daniel Barber (Harry Brown), The Keeping Room focuses on the violent resilience and dramatic camaraderie of three Southern women as their home is besieged during the purges at the close of the American Civil War. Forced to defend their land and fight for their lives, the women take up arms against their male oppressors, shattering gender and genre conventions in the process.

    A forceful turn from Brit Marling (Arbitrage, I Origins) heads a formidable trio of female leads that includes Hailee Steinfeld (True Grit, Ender’s Game) and newcomer Muna Otaru in a powerful break out role. Playing against his usual character, Sam Worthington (Avatar, Man On A Ledge), excels as a villainous renegade soldier intent on killing the women and razing their home.

    Based on Julia Hart’s revered 2012 Black List screenplay, The Keeping Room deliberately eschews Hollywood Western tropes and challenges gender politics as the female protagonist is defined in brave and provocative fashion. Described as “a feminist western with bite” (Indiewire) and “a beautifully breathless revisionist western” midway between Cold Mountain and Straw Dogs (Little White Lies), The Keeping Room is unflinching filmmaking anchored in the “bold and fearless” performances (Film School Rejects) delivered by its lead women.

    “The Keeping Room is a film that instantly resonated with us on so many levels,” said James Emanuel Shapiro, Drafthouse Films COO. “Not only is it filmmaking of the highest level but it challenges formulas with such convictions that we were all affected by its potency.”

    “We could not ask for a better partner than Drafthouse for The Keeping Room,” said producer Jordan Horowitz. “As with everything they do, we look forward to a theatrical release that is classy, energetic, passionate, and a whole lot of fun.” to be released theatrically nationwide in Fall 2015.

    The Keeping Room will open in an expansive theatrical release across North America in September 2015 and will be released on a variety of VOD platforms and digital, DVD, and Blu-ray formats after its theatrical run.

    http://youtu.be/-gtXf710ED8

    Read more


  • 2015 Beaufort International Film Festival to Honor Andie MacDowell & Announces Film Finalists

    The Ninth Annual Beaufort International Film Festival starting February 11 and continuing to February 15, 2015, in the historic coastal town of Beaufort, SC announces the film finalists.  BIFF 2015 will unveil the inaugural award for the Spirit & Pride of South Carolina Award, presented to that person whose career achievements in the areas of film, television or music have reflected positively on themselves and the state of South Carolina. The first award will be presented to Model and Actress Andie MacDowell, originally from Gaffney, SC. Academy Award Nominated Screenwriter and Best Selling Author Pat Conroy will present this inaugural award. Steve Rhea from Charleston, SC, will be presented the “Behind the Scenes” Award for his more than 30 years of work as a Film Location Specialist. The 2015 Beaufort International Film Festival Finalists are as follows: ANIMATION Blue Directed by: Katelyn Bianchini, Asia Lancaster, Rena Cheng Orange, CA Green Acres Directed by: James Beck (Dodge College, Chapman Univ.) Orange, CA Grounded Directed by:  Monica Stefanelli  (Dodge College, Chapman Univ.) Orange, CA Light Me Up Directed by:  Derek Dolechek, Ryan Walton (Dodge College, Chapman Univ.) Orange, CA My Light Has Gone Directed by: Jason Kummerfeldt (Dodge College, Chapman Univ.) Orange, CA DOCUMENTARY You Belong to Me Directed by:  John Cork Carmel, CA Cotton Road Directed by: Laura Kissel Columbia, SC In An Ideal World Directed by: Noel Schwerin San Francisco, CA Not Anymore: A Story of Revolution Directed by:  Matthew VanDyke Baltimore, MD Something You Can Call Home Directed by:  Rebecca Keynon London, United Kingdom The Civilian-Military Divide: Bridging the Gap Directed by:  Robert Roy Toronto, ON, CANADA FEATURE Cinema Purgatorio Directed by:  Chris White Greenville, SC Dig Two Graves Directed by:  Hunter Adams Los Angeles, CA  90027 The Lengths Directed by:  Tim Driscoll Jacksonville, FL Suck It Up Buttercup Directed:  Malindi Fickle Honolulu, HI The Frontier Directed by: Matt Rabinowitz West Hollywood, CA SHORTS: A Great Personality is Just Skin Deep Directed by:  John Schwab London, UK Counter Directed by: Nicholas Bouler Los Angeles, CA Last Night at the Ellington Directed by:  Geoffrey Gunn Greenville, SC Love Sick Lonnie Directed by:  Chad Matthews Austin, TX Nostalgic Directed by:  Ronald Eltanal Wilmette, IL The Quota Directed by: Jim Cushinery Los Angeles, CA Times Like Dying Directed by:  Evan Vetter Wilmington, NC Uncomfortable Silence Directed by:  Gabriele Altobelli Rome, Italy Wrong Side Up Directed by: Henry McComas Englewood, CO STUDENT FILMS Combustabilly Directed by:  Jake Bellew; University of North Carolina School of the Arts Into the Silent Sea Directed by:  Andrej Landin; Dodge College Roses for Margaret Directed by:  Christine Hurley; University of North Carolina School of the Arts Sea Odyssey Directed by:  Adam Nelson; Savannah College of Art & Design The Bright Side Directed by: Sarah Thacker; Dodge College The Collection Directed by:  Ian Gullett; University of North Carolina School of the Arts BEST COMEDY A Great Personality is Only Skin Deep CombustaBILLY Love Sick Lonnie Cinema Purgatorio The Quota Last Night at the Ellington The Lengths SCREENPLAY A Clash of Iron Richard Reed Riverside, CA Club Bong Song Tom Bixby St. Helena, SC Hell and Hallelujah! Margaret Ford Rogers Charleston, SC Lost Cause David Schroeder Miami, FL Mint Condition Gary Weeks Roswell, GA Sandbox Coordinates Sheila Watson and Tony Watson Johns Island, SC The Life Shift Marcia Chandler Rhea, Writer Charleston, SC BEST ACTOR: Daniel R. Jones  (Last Night at the Ellington- Short Film) Max Gail (The Frontier – Feature Film) Ted Levine  (Dig Two Graves – Feature Film) Mike Nussbaum (Nostalgic – Short Film) Chris White ( Cinema Purgatorio – Feature Film) BEST ACTRESS Traysie Amick (Cinema Purgatoria – Feature Film) Katharyn Grant (Wrong Side Up – Short Film) Lacey Marie Myer (Suck It Up Buttercup – Feature Film) Susan Ruttan ( The Quota – Short Film) Corsica Wilson (The Lengths – Feature Film) BEST DIRECTOR Hunter Adams ( Dig Two Graves– Feature Film) Malindi Fickle ( Suck It Up Buttercup – Feature Film) Geoffrey Gunn ( Last Night at the Ellington – Short Film) Henry Danoe McComas ( Wrong Side Up- Short Film) Evan Vetter  (Times Like Dying – Short Film) via digitaljournal

    Read more


  • Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Name “Birdman” as Top Film of 2014

    birdman movie 1BIRDMAN

    BIRDMAN was voted as the best film of 2014 by the Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association. The DFW Critics also voted the film’s director Alejandro González Iñárritu, Best Director,  Michael Keaton for Best Actor, and Best Cinematography for Emmanuel Lubezki.  Rounding out the list of the top 10 films of the year were BOYHOOD (2), THE IMITATION GAME (3), THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (4), THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (5), WHIPLASH (6), GONE GIRL (7), SELMA (8), WILD (9) and NIGHTCRAWLER (10).

    The complete list of winners and runners-up of 2014 Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association awards.

    The Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association voted the backstage drama BIRDMAN as the best film of 2014, according to the results of its 21st annual critics’ poll released today.

    Rounding out the composite list of the top 10 films of the year were BOYHOOD (2), THE IMITATION GAME (3), THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (4), THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (5), WHIPLASH (6), GONE GIRL (7), SELMA (8), WILD (9) and NIGHTCRAWLER (10).

    For Best Actor, the association named Michael Keaton for BIRDMAN. Runners-up included Eddie Redmayne for THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (2), Benedict Cumberbatch for THE IMITATION GAME (3), Jake Gyllenhaal for NIGHTCRAWLER (4) and Timothy Spall for MR. TURNER (5).

    Reese Witherspoon was voted Best Actress for WILD. Next in the voting were Julianne Moore for STILL ALICE (2), Rosamund Pike for GONE GIRL (3), Felicity Jones for THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (4) and Marion Cotillard for TWO DAYS, ONE NIGHT (5).

    In the Best Supporting Actor category, the winner was J.K. Simmons for WHIPLASH. He was followed by Edward Norton for BIRDMAN (2), Ethan Hawke for BOYHOOD (3), Mark Ruffalo for FOXCATCHER (4) and Alfred Molina for LOVE IS STRANGE (5).

    For Best Supporting Actress, the association named Patricia Arquette for BOYHOOD. Runners-up were Emma Stone for BIRDMAN (2), Keira Knightley for THE IMITATION GAME (3), Jessica Chastain for A MOST VIOLENT YEAR (4) and Laura Dern for WILD (5).

    Alejandro González Iñárritu was voted Best Director for BIRDMAN. Next in the voting were Richard Linklater for BOYHOOD (2), Wes Anderson for THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (3), David Fincher for GONE GIRL (4) and Ava DuVernay for SELMA (5).

    The association voted FORCE MAJEURE as the best foreign-language film of the year. Runners-up included IDA (2), WINTER SLEEP (3), LEVIATHAN (4) and WILD TALES (5).

    CITIZENFOUR won for Best Documentary over LIFE ITSELF (2), JODOROWSKY’S DUNE (3), THE OVERNIGHTERS (4) and THE GREAT INVISIBLE (5).

    THE LEGO MOVIE was named the best animated film of 2014, with BIG HERO 6 as runner-up. Alejandro González Iñárritu, Nicolas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris and Armando Bo shared the Best Screenplay award for BIRDMAN over Richard Linklater for BOYHOOD.

    The award for Best Cinematography went to Emmanuel Lubezki for BIRDMAN, followed by Hoyte Van Hoytema for INTERSTELLAR. The association gave its award for Best Musical Score to Hans Zimmer for INTERSTELLAR.

    The association voted BOYHOOD as the winner of the Russell Smith Award, named for the late Dallas Morning News film critic. The honor is given annually to the best low-budget or cutting-edge independent film.

    Read more


  • “Selma” to Open, “Boychoir” to Close 2015 Palm Springs International Film Festival

    SelmaSelma

    The 26th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) will open on Friday, January 2 with the Golden Globe nominated Selma directed by Ava Duvernay. The Festival will wrap on Sunday, January 11 with the US premiere of Boychoir directed by François Girard. New this year, the festival will focus on 20 films from Eastern Europe in a program titled Eastern Promises. The festival runs January 2-12, 2015.

    Directed by Ava DuVernay, Selma chronicles the tumultuous three-month period in 1965, when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led a dangerous campaign to secure equal voting rights in the face of violent opposition.  The epic march from Selma to Montgomery culminated in President Johnson signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965, one of the most significant victories for the civil rights movement.  The film stars David Oyelowo, Tom Wilkinson, Cuba Gooding Jr., Alessandro Nivola, Giovanni Ribisi, Common, Carmen Ejogo, Lorraine Toussaint, with Tim Roth and Oprah Winfrey, who also serves as a producer. Oyelowo (who will receive the Festival’s Breakthrough Performance Award, Actor) and director DuVernay are expected to attend the film screening. The film has also received four Golden Globe nominations including Best Picture, Drama, Best Actor, Drama and Best Director. The film will open nationwide on January 16 over Martin Luther King, Jr. Day weekend and timed to the upcoming 50-year anniversary of the historical voting rights marches from Selma to Montgomery.

    http://youtu.be/x6t7vVTxaic

    BoychoirBoychoir

    The Festival will close with Boychoir, directed by François Girard.  The film is about a troubled 12-year-old from a disadvantaged background who gets accepted at an elite music school, The National Boychoir Academy.  He engages in a battle of wills with a tough taskmaster, the school’s Choirmaster, Carvelle.  The film stars Dustin Hoffman, Garrett Wareing, Kathy Bates, Eddie Izzard, Kevin McHale, Josh Lucas and Debra Winger.

     The festival will spotlight Central and Eastern European filmmaking in a special focus titled Eastern Promises. This year, the region boasts some of the strongest-ever candidates for the upcoming Best Foreign Language Film Oscar®, a mature generation of auteurs who are assuming the mantle of masters, and a new generation who created some of the most stirring, controversial and acclaimed films of 2014. The 20 films selected in the program include:

    Afterlife (Hungary) – Tender, funny and surprising, Afterlife is a sweetly absurdist coming-of-age tale that explores the relationship between an anxious twenty-something and his controlling father, a village Pastor — not only while the older man is alive, but also after his death. Director: Virág Zomborácz                          

    Corn Island (Georgia) – A fable-like drama capturing the cycle of life along the border between Georgia and Abkhazia. An old farmer sows corn on one of the tiny islands that form in the Inguri River each spring, but cultivating no-man’s land is dangerous business. Director: George Ovashvili                   

    Cowboys (Croatia) – A nifty blend of social drama and absurdist comedy, about a bunch of small town no-hopers who stage an American Western as a musical. Director: Tomislav Mršic

    Fair Play (Czech Republic/Slovakia/Germany) – In Czechoslovakia circa 1983, a talented young sprinter risks her career by resisting the “special care” program designed to boost her competition times in this involving drama. Director: Andrea Sedlácková

    Ida Ida

    Ida (Poland) – A moving and intimate drama set in 1960s Poland, about a young novitiate on the verge of taking her vows who discovers a dark family secret dating from the Nazi occupation. The film received Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress at the Polish Film Awards. Director: Pawel  Pawlikowski

    In the Crosswind (Estonia) – An art film in every sense of the word, this black-and-white slice of history mixes live-action with tableaux vivants to provide a requiem for inhabitants of the Baltics deported to Siberia or killed on Stalin’s orders. Director: Martti Helde

    The Guide (Ukraine) – A boy on the run is rescued by a blind folk minstrel in this tale of love, loyalty, betrayal and infamy, set during the suppression of rural “kulaks” — wealthy farmers — and the Soviet-engineered Ukraine famine that left as many as 10 million peasants dead from starvation. Director: Oles Sanin

    The Japanese Dog (Romania) – This moving tale centers on a bereaved 80-year-old reconnecting with his estranged son, who returns to Romania with a Japanese wife and child. Director: Tudor Christian Jurgiu      

    Kebab & Horoscope (Poland) – A former kebab-shop employee and an out-of-work horoscope writer declare themselves marketing experts and are hired to help a struggling carpet emporium in this droll shaggy-dog story. Director: Grzegorz Jaroszuk

    The Lesson (Bulgaria/Greece) – An honest, hard-working schoolteacher in a small Bulgarian town is driven to desperate measures to avoid financial ruin and must grapple with the moral consequences of her actions. Directors: Kristina Grozeva, Petar Valchanov

    Mirage (Hungary/Slovakia) – An African footballer on the lam (Isaach de Bankolé) in the desolate and lawless plains of Hungary becomes an avenging angel in Szabolcs Hajdu’s Eastern European western. A beautiful, mysterious work, it’s graced with fantastic camerawork and a superb soundtrack. Director: Szabolcs Hajdu                                                                                                                    

    No One’s Child (Serbia/Croatia) – In the spring of 1988, hunters capture a wild boy among the wolves deep in the Bosnian mountains and send him to a Belgrade orphanage. But his “education” is interrupted by war. Director: Vuk Ršumovic

    The Reaper (Croatia/Slovenia) – With a superb, seasoned cast and stellar camerawork, three intertwined stories unfold over a single night in an isolated Croatian village. This tense, nuanced drama makes for grim but compelling viewing. Director: Zvonimir Juric

    Rocks in My PocketsRocks in My Pockets

    Rocks in My Pockets (Latvia) – A modern milestone in animated storytelling, stuffed with irony, humor and tales within tales, this imaginative memoir merges director Signe Baumane’s own story with a mini-history of 20th century Latvia. Director: Signe  Baumane                                                             

    See you in Montevideo (Serbia) – This exciting sequel to Montevideo, Taste of a Dream (PSIFF, 2013) continues the tale of how the Yugoslav football team took part in the first official World Cup in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1930 and made sports history. Director: Dragan Bjelogrlic       

    Tangerines (Estonia) – 1992. An Estonian village in Abkhazia. The approaching war scares off all but two villagers who remain to harvest the tangerines. This deeply pacifist chamber drama is as tense as a thriller. Director: Zaza Urushadze

    These Are the Rules (Croatia/France/Serbia) – Based on a true story, this is a painstaking and painful account of the official indifference and injustice that confronts the law-abiding parents of a teenage boy badly beaten up by a high school bully. Director: Ognjen  Svilicic

    Three Windows and a Hanging (Kosovo) – When a woman from a traditional Kosovar village anonymously reveals to an international journalist that she and others were raped during the war with Serbia, the fallout from this once-repressed secret threatens to tear apart the fabric of village life. Director: Isa Qosja

    The Tribe (Ukraine) – One of the most original, audacious and talked about films of 2014, The Tribetakes place in a boarding school for the deaf where the students participate in an underground criminal network. Performed entirely in sign language without subtitles. DirectorL Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy

    White God (Hungary) – A new city law taxing mixed breed mutts leads many owners to dump their dogs on the streets – including 13-year-old Lili’s beloved pet Hagen. While she tries to find him, Hagen fights for survival. But every dog has his day. Director: Kornél Mundruczó    

    Read more


  • Toronto Film Critics Association names Richard Linklater’s “Boyhood” the Best Film of the Year

    BoyhoodBoyhood

    Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, has won three top prizes at the 2014 awards of the Toronto Film Critics Association.  In addition to the film’s Best Picture award, Linklater has won Best Director, and Patricia Arquette has been named Best Supporting Actress.  The Toronto Film Critics Association also named its three finalists for the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award: Enemy, directed by Denis Villeneuve; The F Word, directed by Michael Dowse; and Mommy, directed by Xavier Dolan.

    The 2014 Joe Fresh Allan King Documentary Award is given to The Overnighters; director Jesse Moss, and Albert Shin, director of the South Korean domestic drama In Her Place, was named the winner of the Scotiabank Jay Scott Prize for an emerging artist. 

    The full details of the 18th annual TFCA awards are as follows:

    Best Film: Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, a cinematic masterpiece that evokes beauty in life and the inevitable passage of time
    Runners-up: The Grand Budapest HotelInherent Vice

    Best Director: Richard Linklater, for the singular achievement that is Boyhood
    Runners-up: Paul Thomas Anderson, Inherent Vice; Wes Anderson, The Grand Budapest Hotel

    Best Actor: Tom Hardy, for playing a Welsh builder in crisis in Locke
    Runners-up: Jake Gyllenhaal, Nightcrawler; Ralph Fiennes, The Grand Budapest Hotel

    Best Actress: Marion Cotillard, for her performance as a Polish woman navigating 1920s America in The Immigrant
    Runners-up: Julianne Moore, Still Alice; Reese Witherspoon, Wild

    Best Supporting Actor: J.K. Simmons, for his role as a tyrannical conductor in Whiplash
    Runners-up: Josh Brolin, Inherent Vice; Edward Norton, Birdman

    Best Supporting Actress: Patricia Arquette, for her role as the mother of Mason Jr. in Boyhood
    Runners-up: Katherine Waterston, Inherent Vice; Tilda Swinton, Snowpiercer

    Best Screenplay: The Grand Budapest Hotel, for its nuanced humour and intricate narrative dollhouse
    Runners-up: Boyhood (dir. Richard Linklater); Inherent Vice (dir. Paul Thomas Anderson)

    Best Animated Feature: Isao Takahata’s delicate fable The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
    Runners-up: The Lego MovieBig Hero 6How to Train Your Dragon 2

    Best First Feature: Ritesh Batra’s The Lunchbox
    Runners-up: Nightcrawler (dir. Dan Gilroy); John Wick (dir. David Leitch and Chad Stahelski)

    Best Foreign-Language Film: Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure
    Runners-up: Ida (dir. Pawel Pawlikowski); Leviathan (dir. Andrei Zvyagintsev)

    Best Documentary Film: Jesse Moss’s The Overnighters
    Runners-up: Citizenfour (dir. Laura Poitras); Manakamana (dir. Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez)

    Read more