• Invited Program and NEW DOCS Lineup for 17th Full Frame Documentary Film Festival; World Premiere of Doug Block’s “112 WEDDINGS” on Opening Night

     112 WEDDINGS112 WEDDINGS

    The 17th Annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival taking place April 3 to 6, 2014, in Durham, N.C., announced its “Invited Program” and “NEW DOCS” lineup of new feature and short films. Filmmaker Doug Block’s film “112 WEDDINGS” will have its World Premiere as the Full Frame Opening Night Film on Thursday, April 3rd. 

    “112 WEDDINGS,” an HBO Documentary Film, is a heartwarming examination of the struggles and joys that come with lifelong partnership. After two decades filming weddings part-time, acclaimed director Doug Block (“51 Birch Street,” “The Kids Grow Up”) revisits couples years after the big day in order to see how love and life have unfolded after vows.

    Block said, “Among filmmakers, Full Frame is the country’s most revered documentary film festival, so it’s a particular honor to be chosen as this year’s Opening Night Film. ‘112 Weddings’ is a thought-provoking film about love and marriage, and I’m hoping it will get the festival off to a rousing, celebratory start.”

    http://youtu.be/4BMPt4qfMMs

    One of the nation’s premier documentary film festivals, Full Frame celebrates its 17th annual festival this April. Full Frame is a qualifying event for consideration for the nominations for both the Academy Award® for Best Documentary Short Subject and the Producers Guild of America Awards.

    Invited Program

    112 Weddings (Director: Doug Block)
    Documentary filmmaker and part-time wedding videographer Doug Block tracks down couples he’s filmed over the years, contrasting past with present to see how love and life have unfolded after vows. World Premiere

    20,000 Days on Earth (Directors: Iain Forsyth, Jane Pollard)
    Equal parts document and daydream, Jane Pollard and Iain Forsyth’s innovative film features the inimitable Nick Cave in a series of revelatory and imaginative vignettes.

    Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq (Director: Nancy Buirski)
    Tanaquil Le Clercq inspired choreographers unlike any ballerina before her, but in 1956, at the height of her fame, she was stricken with polio. A mesmerizing film of love, loss, and surprising grace.

    Alive Inside: A Story of Music & Memory (Director: Michael Rossato-Bennett)
    When a social worker discovers that music can unlock the memories of patients whose minds are clouded by dementia, he embarks on a mission to transform lives one iPod at a time.

    The Battered Bastards of Baseball (Directors: Chapman Way, Maclain Way)
    A celebratory portrait of the Portland Mavericks, who joined the minor leagues in 1973 as the lone single-A team without a major-league affiliation.

    The Case Against 8 (Directors: Ben Cotner, Ryan White)
    This behind-the-scenes film, shot over five years, follows the unlikely team who fought to overturn California’s ban on same-sex marriage, and won.

    E-Team (Directors: Katy Chevigny, Ross Kauffman)
    Four fearless activists from the Human Rights Watch’s Emergency Team take us to the frontlines of Syria and Libya as they investigate and document war crimes.

    Freedom Summer (Director: Stanley Nelson)
    Remarkable archival footage and unforgettable eyewitness accounts take us back to the summer of 1964, when hundreds of civil rights activists entered Mississippi to help enfranchise the state’s African American citizens.
     
    The Green Prince
     (Director: Nadav Schirman)
    A real-life thriller about the complex relationship between a Palestinian spy and his Israeli Shin Bet handler.

    Ivory Tower (Director: Andrew Rossi)
    Is a college degree worth the price? This sweeping examination of higher education questions the value of college in an era of rising tuition costs and staggering student debt.

    Last Days in Vietnam (Director: Rory Kennedy)
    Historical footage and reflections by U.S. diplomats and soldiers transport us to Saigon in April 1975 and the moral quandaries surrounding the order to evacuate American citizens only.

    The Missing Picture (Director: Rithy Panh)
    This deeply poetic and personal document uses hundreds of clay figurines—as so few photos exist—to recreate events and validate memories of the atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia.

    My Prairie Home (Director: Chelsea McMullan)
    Transgender singer-songwriter Rae Spoon tours Canada in this impressionistic merging of dreamy music videos and intimate interviews.

    No More Road Trips? (Director: Rick Prelinger)
    Compiled from hundreds of home movies to create a dream ride across 20th-century America, this mixtape’s soundtrack and narration is provided by the audience.

    One Cut, One Life (Directors: Lucia Small, Ed Pincus)
    Two filmmakers undertake the making of a very personal documentary when one of them is diagnosed with a terminal illness, approaching matters of life and death with profound honesty. World Premiere

    Our Man in Tehran (Directors: Drew Taylor, Larry Weinstein)
    This riveting film recounts Canadian ambassador Ken Taylor’s role in the high-risk rescue of six Americans from Tehran during the Iran hostage crisis. US Premiere

    Soft Vengeance: Albie Sachs and the New South Africa (Director: Abby Ginzberg)
    Lawyer, writer, art lover and freedom fighter Albie Sachs fights to overthrow South Africa’s apartheid regime. World Premiere

    Supermensch (Director: Mike Myers)
    As entertaining as it is heartfelt, this star-studded film celebrates the adventurous life of talent manager, producer, and dealmaker extraordinaire Shep Gordon.

    Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People(Director: Thomas Allen Harris)

    This invaluable document is a journey through the African American family photo album: its political, social, and artistic history; its stories of loss, self-invention, community, and beauty.

    The Visitors (Director: Godfrey Reggio)
    Stunning black-and-white images set to a score by Philip Glass propel this visceral rumination on humanity’s relationship with an increasingly digital world.

    WHITEY: United States of America V. James J. Bulger (Director: Joe Berlinger)
    This true-crime doc examines the sensationalized trial of a notorious South Boston gangster and brings new allegations of law-enforcement corruption to light.


    NEW DOCS

    Ana Ana (Directors: Corinne van Egeraat, Petr Lom)
    Four young women in Egypt tell their stories in an unforgettable cinematic collaboration that merges the personal and the political. North American Premiere

    Apollonian Story (Directors: Ilan Moskovitch, Dan Bronfeld)
    A modern hermit has spent the last 40 years single-mindedly carving a home out of a Mediterranean cliff. When his estranged son comes to help, the pair must navigate long-standing tensions. North American Premiere

    Book of Days (Director: Ian Phillips)
    Filmed over seven years, this fascinating short follows an enigmatic artist and bookseller as he struggles to get his book, Hannibal Barca, published. World Premiere

    Born to Fly (Director: Catherine Gund)
    “Action architect” Elizabeth Streb choreographs performances that push the human body to extremes in this exhilarating portrait of Streb and her company of dancers as they take to the air.

    Bronx Obama (Director: Ryan Murdock)
    An unemployed Puerto Rican father chases the “look of a lifetime” when he realizes he bears an uncanny resemblance to our 44th president.

    Buffalo Dreams (Director: Maurice O’Brien)
    Fanciful dreams meet cold reality as a Scottish family tries to raise American bison far from their native grasslands. North American Premiere

    Butterfly Girl (Director: Cary Bell)
    An unsentimental, deeply moving portrait of a young woman trying to live a “normal life” despite having a rare, often fatal, skin disease.

    Can’t Stop the Water (Directors: Rebecca Ferris, Jason Ferris)
    Abandoned homes line the one road of the disappearing Isle de Jean Charles in Louisiana, home to a Choctaw community. This is the story of those who’ve stayed.

    CAPTIVATED: The Trials of Pamela Smart (Director: Jeremiah Zagar)
    In telling the story of the first fully televised trial in the U.S., this incisive, multilayered film looks at how mass-media coverage and sensationalism impact the workings of justice.

    The Case of the Three Sided Dream (Director: Adam Kahan)
    Rahsaan Roland Kirk, an extraordinary musician who preferred the term “black classical music” to “jazz,” lived in a world of sound and dreams—and action.

    The Chaperone (Directors: Fraser Munden, Neil Rathbone)
    Charm and surprise characterize this animated story of a fight that breaks out between chaperones of a middle-school dance and a biker gang.

    The Circle (Director: Bram Conjaerts)
    Scientific data, animation, and man-on-the-street interviews collide in this portrait of life above the world’s largest high-energy particle accelerator.

    DamNation (Directors: Ben Knight, Travis Rummel)
    This poetic, reflective film follows the growing and increasingly successful movement to tear down America’s dams and restore long-standing fisheries, through both legal means and guerilla tactics.

    Evolution of a Criminal (Director: Darius Clark Monroe)
    Ten years after robbing a bank as a teenager, filmmaker Darius Monroe returns home and turns the camera on himself—to tell the story of what happened and look at the fallout from his actions

    Fairytale of the Three Bears (Director: Tristan Daws)
    Three hardworking men recall the story of the “Three Bears” as they muse on their lives in post-Soviet Russia. North American Premiere

    Flowers from the Mount of Olives (Director: Heilika Pikkov)
    Mother Ksenya, an 83-year-old nun in a convent in Jerusalem, reflects on her remarkable life as she embarks on one final challenge: silence. North American Premiere

    Foundry Night Shift (Director: Steven Bognar)
    In the wee hours, when electrical demand is down, workers stoke elaborate furnaces to produce the steel frames for Steinway pianos.

    The Great Invisible (Director: Margaret Brown)
    A chilling investigation of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill through the stories of people still experiencing its aftereffects, from oil executives to Gulf Coast residents—long after the media moved on.

    Hacked Circuit (Director: Deborah Stratman)
    A single suspenseful shot takes us inside the art of aural illusion and reveals that all is not as it seems or sounds.

    The Hand That Feeds (Directors: Rachel Lears, Robin Blotnick)
    A group of NYC restaurant workers stand up for their rights, despite the threat of job loss and deportation, in this moving story of a bitter labor dispute. World Premiere

    Happy Valley (Director: Amir Bar-Lev)
    This compelling look at Penn State’s football scandal goes beyond the surface of spectacle to get at the heart of the responses of an impassioned community.

    The Hip-Hop Fellow (Director: Kenneth Price)
    Music producer and turntablist supreme Ninth Wonder travels from North Carolina to Massachusetts to become Harvard’s first Hip-Hop Fellow. World Premiere

    In Country (Directors: Mike Attie, Meghan O’Hara)
    The lines between what’s real and what’s pretend blur as members of a platoon of Vietnam War re-enactors go to battle, each for their own complicated reasons.  World Premiere

    The Lab (Director: Yotam Feldman)
    Israeli filmmaker Yotam Feldman points a chilling lens at his country’s defense industry, the fourth largest arms exporter in the world. North American Premiere

    Light Fly, Fly High (Directors: Susann Ostigaard, Beathe Hofseth)
    Born into the “untouchable” caste, an Indian girl challenges her fate by entering a government-subsidized (and unfortunately, corrupt) boxing program. North American Premiere

    Monk by Blood (Director: Ema Ryan Yamazaki)
    Scion Sasaki, an aspiring chef and sometimes DJ, grapples with the responsibility of taking over his family’s ancestral Buddhist temple, a tradition dating back 23 generations. North American Premiere

    Monk with a Camera (Directors: Guido Santi, Tina Mascara)
    Nicky Vreeland trades in his rarified high-society existence for a Tibetan Buddhist monk’s maroon robes. Luckily, he brings his camera along.

    The Notorious Mr. Bout (Directors: Tony Gerber, Maxim Pozdorovkin)
    With unprecedented access and years of home movies, this multidimensional film points a lens at international arms smuggler and philosophical businessman Viktor Bout.

    Olga – To My Friends (Director: Paul Anders Simma)
    A young woman living alone on a reindeer herding post 1,000 miles north of Moscow contemplates solitude and purpose, and what she will do if the post is shut down. North American Premiere

    The Overnighters (Director: Jesse Moss)
    The unintended consequences of good intentions become evident when a pastor in an oil boomtown opens his doors to desperate and disillusioned jobseekers.

    A Park for the City (Director: Nicole Macdonald)
    Surveillance cameras give us a Night at the Museum look inside Detroit’s abandoned zoo on Belle Isle, a no-man’s land of flora and fauna reverting to wilderness.


    Private Violence (Director: Cynthia Hill)
    “Why didn’t you leave?” This urgent and inspiring film follows two women’s complex stories of survival while exploring the way we talk about and deal with domestic violence as a society.

    Return to Homs (Director: Talal Derki)
    This film takes us to the frontlines of the Syrian Civil War as two friends who are determined to defend their city abandon peaceful resistance and take up arms, heading straight for the heart of the warzone.

    Rich Hill (Directors: Tracy Droz Tragos, Andrew Droz Palermo)
    Three boys from a small Missouri town grapple with isolation and instability in this expressionistic film that portrays, with grace and complexity, family bonds, poverty, and survival.

    Ronald (Director: John Dower)
    One man, one supersized pair of red shoes, over ninety-nine billion served. World Premiere

    Santa Cruz del Islote (Director: Luke Lorentzen)
    On this remote island, the most densely populated on the planet, a community struggles to maintain their way of life as resources and opportunities dwindle. World Premiere

    Seeds of Time (Director: Sandy McLeod)
    As humans face a “perfect storm” of disastrous scenarios, scientist Cary Fowler demonstrates the importance of biodiversity by developing seed banks across the globe.

    Sex(Ed) The Movie (Director: Brenda Goodman)
    Remember the first time you heard about sex? Through clips from film and TV archives, this hilarious, humbling film takes a look at our country’s earnest attempts to share the facts of life.

    The Silly Bastard Next to the Bed (Director: Scott Calonico)
    JFK handles a scandal over some pricey bedroom furniture in the last summer of his presidency. World Premiere

    Summer 82 When Zappa Came to Sicily (Director: Salvo Cuccia)
    Frank Zappa’s 1982 European tour comes to a surprising, and riotous, conclusion in Palermo in this film featuring rare footage and local insights. North American Premiere

    The Supreme Price (Director: Joanna Lipper)
    Hafsat Abiola fights to realize her parents’ dreams of alleviating poverty and ending military dictatorship in this powerful look into the Nigerian pro-democracy movement.World Premiere

    Swallow (Director: Genevieve Bicknell)
    Eating: a pleasant or unpleasant task? Food: tasty and bubbling or oozy and disgusting?North American Premiere

    Tough Love (Director: Stephanie Wang-Breal)
    Two parents navigate the red tape of America’s child welfare system as they fight to regain custody of their children. World Premiere

    Ukraine Is Not a Brothel (Director: Kitty Green)

    The women of FEMEN, the provocative topless feminist movement in the Ukraine, confront the power structure fueling their organization.

    Watchers of the Sky (Director: Edet Belzberg)
Four extraordinary people embody the vision of Rafael Lemkin, who created international law to stop genocide and hold leaders accountable.

    Where is My Son? (Director: Qu Zhao)
    Abandoning a successful career in the big city, JunKyo Lee returns home to care for his ailing mother in her final years. North American Premiere

    White Earth (Director: J. Christian Jensen)
    Against the backdrop of an ethereal North Dakota winter, three children and their immigrant mother describe scenes of isolation and exertion—the impact of the oil boom on their everyday lives.

    Yangtze Drift (Director: John Rash)
    In gorgeous black and white, this updated city symphony moves along the varied sights, sounds, and rhythms of a great river. World Premiere

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  • TIFF Kids International Film Festival Unveils Film Lineup; Opens With Canadian premiere of RIO 2, Closes With THE HOUSE OF MAGIC

    THE HOUSE OF MAGICTHE HOUSE OF MAGIC

    The TIFF Kids International Film Festival, returns for its 17th year at TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto from April 8 to 21, 2014, with a slate full of premieres of some of the best films from around the world for children aged 3 to 13. The TIFF Kids Festival kicks off on Opening Night with the Canadian premiere of RIO 2, the all-star sequel to the smash-hit 2011 animated adventure, reuniting audiences with Blu and Jewel, voiced by Oscar® nominee Jesse Eisenberg and Oscar® winner Anne Hathaway, and wraps with the Closing Night Film THE HOUSE OF MAGIC, a gorgeously animated 3D feature from Belgium about a young abandoned cat who finds a new home in an enchanted mansion. 

    TIFF Kids Festival 2014 features a total of 112 films, comprising 28 features and 84 shorts, hailing from 31 countries, including Australia, Germany, The Netherlands, Israel, China, Poland, Russia, and many more. 

    FEATURE FILM PRESENTATIONS

    TIFF Kids Festival is pleased to present the following 29 feature films:

    African Safari, dir. Ben Stassen, Belgium
    North American Premiere
    Take your seat in our customized hot air balloon and join us on the 3D safari adventure of a lifetime. Our expedition starts in  the desert dunes of Namibia and travels across the entire African continent, through spectacular landscapes including the  Kalahari Desert, Okavango, Victoria Falls, Ngorongoro and the Serengeti heading up to Mt. Kilimanjaro. Soar over herds of  big game and ride in the jeep where you’ll get uncomfortably close to elephants and cheetahs. This is the real wild Africa with no fences! Be sure to close your tent at night…
    Recommended for ages 10 and up

    AninA, dir. Alfredo Soderguit, Uruguay/Colombia
    Toronto Premiere
    Anina Yatay Salas is a ten-year-old girl who does not like her name. Each part is a palindrome, which means it reads the same both forwards and backwards. Her schoolmates are always teasing her about this, especially Anina’s arch-enemy Yisel. An unusual punishment for fighting with Yisel gives Anina a different perspective on life both on and off the playground, in this beautifully animated adaptation of the 2003 book by author and illustrator Sergio López Suárez.
    Recommended for ages 9 and up.

    Antboy, director: Ask Hasselbalch, Denmark
    Twelve-year-old Pelle accidentally gets bitten by an ant and develops unimaginable superpowers. With help from his friend, comic-book nerd Wilhelm, Pelle creates a secret identity as the superhero Antboy and becomes a local crimefighter. When a supervillain, The Flea, enters the scene, Antboy must step up to the challenge.
    Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    Antboy, director: Ask Hasselbalch, Denmark
    Twelve-year-old Pelle accidentally gets bitten by an ant and develops unimaginable superpowers. With help from his friend, comic-book nerd Wilhelm, Pelle creates a secret identity as the superhero Antboy and becomes a local crimefighter. When a supervillain, The Flea, enters the scene, Antboy must step up to the challenge.
    Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    Casper and Emma’s Winter Vacation (Karsten og Petra på vinterferie), dir. Arne Lindtner Næss, Norway
    International Premiere
    Casper and Emma goes off to a cabin for their winter vacation. They play in the snow and have a great time together — until Peter shows up! Peter is really good at all kinds of things, and Emma thinks he’s just fantastic. Casper does everything he can to prove he’s good at stuff too — but is this the way to win Emma back?
    Recommended for ages 5 and up.

    Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, dirs. Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, USA
    Following the special Story Mobs event!
    Bill Hader, Anna Faris and Andy Samberg lend their voices to this smash-hit animated comedy, about an aspiring inventor whose loony new invention causes food to literally fall from the skies.
    Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    Felix, dir. Roberta Durrant, South Africa
    Toronto Premiere
    Thirteen-year-old Felix dreams of becoming a saxophonist like his late father, Zweli, of the famous Bozza Boys band, despite his mother Lindiwe’s disapproval. Felix’s world is turned upside down when he wins a scholarship to a prestigious school. Wanting to prove himself, he auditions for the school concert, but he can’t read music. Two aging ex-Bozza Boys give Felix a crash course on the saxophone and teach him about his musical roots and father’s past—but can his mother come to celebrate Felix’s musical talent?
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    Finn, dir. Frans Weisz, Netherlands
    Toronto Premiere
    Finn is a nine-year-old boy who lives with his single dad in a small village. One day, Finn hears a stranger playing a violin in an old farmhouse nearby, and he becomes entranced by the beauty of the music. But Finn’s father forbids him from visiting the stranger or playing the instrument.
    Recommended for ages 9 and up.

    Gabriel, dir. Mikolaj Haremski, Poland
    Toronto Premiere
    Tom is passionate about cars and spends all his free time in the garage. Under the watchful care of mechanic Raszynski, he discovers the secrets of building cars. One day, Tom decides to find his unknown father and runs away from his grandparents, with whom he has lived since his mother’s death, and sets out on what becomes a dangerous journey. At the beginning of his escapade he gets into trouble, which he overcomes with the help of new friend, Gabriel. Tom begins to learn that Gabriel has supernatural abilities. As their journey continues, Tom gets closer to finally knowing his father, and discovering the mystery of Gabriel.
    Recommended for ages 9 and up.

    Giraffada, dir. Rani Massalha, France/Germany/Italy/Palestine
    A young Palestinian boy and his veterinarian father make an incredible journey to transport a giraffe from Israel to the West Bank’s Qalqilya Zoo, in this inspirational drama based on a true story.
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    I Swan, dir. Kong Sheng, China
    Toronto Premiere
    Holly, traumatized by her mother’s accidental death, develops a selective mutism. Hoping to help her recover, her father takes her to the natural wetland where he works. Holly befriends a wounded swan and nurtures it back to health. The swan’s company also helps Holly become happy again, and eventually overcome the trauma of her mother’s death.  Unfortunately, a man with evil intentions steals the swan, leading Holly and her father to begin a difficult search for her best friend.
    Holly befriends a wounded swan 9 and up

    Kick It! (Kule kidz gråter ikke), dir. Katarina Launing, Norway
    North American Premiere
    Anja loves soccer more than anything else, but when a serious illness forces her off the field she receives help from a very unexpected source.
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    Knight Rusty (Ritter Rost), dir. Thomas Bodenstein, Germany
    Canadian Premiere
    Knight Rusty is in for the adventure of his life: just as his dream of winning a big tournament comes true, he is falsely accused of theft. Stripped of his knightly honour and his castle, he sets out to redeem himself and to win back the heart of his damsel. Can he also defeat the evil prince and save the kingdom?
    Recommended for ages 7 and up.

    Minuscule: Valley of the Lost Ants (Minuscule – La vallée des fourmis perdues), dirs. Thomas Szabo, Hélène Giraud,
    France
    Canadian Premiere
    In a peaceful forest, the remains of a picnic trigger a ruthless war between rival ant colonies, obsessed with gaining control of the same prize: a box of sugar cubes! Amidst this struggle a young ladybug befriends a black ant and helps him save his people from the horrible red ants…
    Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    On the Way to School (Sur le chemin de l’école), dir. Pascal Plisson, France
    Toronto Premiere
    This touching, globe-trotting documentary travels from Kenya to Patagonia, Morocco and India to show the incredible physical obstacles that some children must face every day simply to get to the classroom on time.
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    Pim & Pom, The Big Adventure (Pim & Pom, Het Grote Avontuur), dir. Gioia Smid, The Netherlands
    Toronto Premiere
    Feline friends Pim & Pom must fend for themselves when they are separated from their beloved owner, in this charming animated adventure based on the long-running Dutch comic strip.
    Recommended for ages 3 and up.

    Regret! (Spijt!), dir. Dave Schram, The Netherlands
    Toronto Premiere
    Based on the book by popular Dutch author Carry Slee, this all-too-realistic story about a teenager relentlessly tormented by his peers speaks powerfully to the devastating consequences that can result if young people don’t stand up and speak out against bullying.
    Recommended for ages 12 and up.

    Rio 2, dir. Carlos Saldanha, USA
    Canadian Premiere
    Introduction and Q+A with director Carlos Saldanha!
    It’s a jungle out there for Blu, Jewel and their three kids in Rio 2, after they’re hurtled from that magical city to the wilds of the Amazon. As Blu tries to fit in, he goes beak-to-beak with the vengeful Nigel, and meets the most fearsome adversary of all — his father-in-law. All our favorite Rio characters are back, and they’re joined by Oscar® nominee Andy Garcia, Grammy® winner Bruno Mars, Tony® winner Kristin Chenoweth and Oscar/Emmy®/Tony winner Rita Moreno. Rio 2 also features new Brazilian artists and original music by Janelle Monáe and Wondaland.
    Recommended for ages 7 and up.

    School of Babel (La Cour de Babel), dir. Julie Bertuccelli, France
    Canadian Premiere
    Shot over one school year at La Grange-aux-Belles secondary school in Paris’ 10th arrondissement, this inspiring documentary follows young newcomers to France as they try to adapt to life in their new country.
    Recommended for ages 11 and up.

    Side by Side, dir. Arthur Landon, United Kingdom
    North American Premiere
    When their grandmother’s illness threatens them with separation, a young brother and sister embark on an unforgettable journey through the Scottish wilderness, in this heartfelt adventure tale that celebrates loyalty, perseverance, and the bond between siblings.
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    The Boxcar Children, dirs. Dan Chuba, Mark Dippe, USA
    World Premiere
    Meet Henry, Jessie, Violet and Benny, four orphaned siblings who mysteriously appear in a small town on a warm summer night. No one knows who these young wanderers are or where they have come from. The children make a home for themselves in an old abandoned boxcar in the woods. In this secret place they can keep their family together and safe from the one person who wants to break them apart. A touching tale of family togetherness based on the classic 1920s children’s book by Gertrude Chandler Warner.
    Recommended for ages 6 and up.

    The Contest (MGP Missionen) dir. Martin Miehe-Renard, Denmark
    North American Premiere
    When Sawsan’s parents forbid her from performing on the country’s most popular TV singing contest, her best friend Karl hatches a plan to get her to the show’s big finale.
    Recommended for ages 11 and up.

    The Famous Five 3 (Fünf Freunde 3) director: Mike Marzuk, Germany.
    International Premiere
    In an old shipwreck, the Famous Five discover a mysterious brass locket. A local girl, Joe, believes that this is the key to a lost pirate treasure. Joe reveals that an investor wants to banish her tribe from their bay to build a tourist resort, and this treasure is her last chance to save her home. Together, the kids must embark on a treasure hunt through the dangerous jungle, and escape from a gangster couple on trail, as well as highly poisonous insects at every turn.
    Recommended for ages 11 and up.

    The House of Magic, dirs. Ben Stassen, Jérémie Degruson, Belgium
    Introduction and Q+A with director Ben Stassen!
    Canadian Premiere
    Seeking shelter from a storm, an abandoned young cat named Thunder sneaks into a mysterious mansion owned by retired magician Lawrence, a.k.a. “The Illustrious Lorenzo.” Lawrence shares his fairy-tale world with many animals and a dazzling array of automatons and gizmos capable of whipping up breakfast while rolling out a spectacular song-and-dance routine.  He soon makes Thunder feel welcome, but Jack the rabbit and Maggie the mouse start plotting to get him kicked out. When Lawrence ends up in the hospital, his nephew tries to trick him into selling the house, but its ragtag inhabitants develop a spooky strategy to defend their home. They turn their house into a haunted mansion, using Thunder as their secret weapon…
    Recommended for ages 8 and up.

    The Rooster of St-Victor (Le Coq de St-Victor), dir. Pierre Greco, Canada
    Toronto Premiere
    Although the annoyingly punctual rooster keeps the town of St-Victor motivated with his ear-splitting morning crow, one group of sleep-deprived citizens has had enough of having their slumber disrupted. But when their plan to rid themselves of the rooster causes the village’s fortunes to spiral, their fellow townspeople must find the fowl before the whole town goes under!
    Recommended for ages 7 and up.
    Presented in French; no English subtitles.

    The Tough Guys (De tøffeste gutta), dir. Christian Lo, Norway
    North American Premiere
    Considering himself to be a superhero, eleven-year-old Modulf deliberately attracts the attention of the school bullies in order to protect his fellow students; but when his new friend Lise gets in serious trouble after trying to bring the bullies to justice, he’s forced to choose between being a superhero or a good friend.
    Recommended for ages 10 and up.

    Windstorm (Ostwind), dir. Katja von Garnier, Germany
    Toronto Premiere
    Having failed her exams, fourteen-year-old city girl Mika is sent off to her grandmother’s country home. At the stables she forms a mystical bond with the untamed stallion Windstorm, and discovers that within her lies the gift of a true horse whisperer.
    Recommended for ages 9 and up

    Zip & Zap and the Marble Gang (Zipi y Zape y el club de la canica), dir. Óskar Santos, Spain
    Naughty twins Zip & Zap are punished and sent to summer school at Hope, a strict re-education center run by Falconetti, who rules with a heavy hand and an eye-patch and forbids all forms of recreation and entertainment. They form the Marble Gang, the children’s resistance, in order to defy the evil headmaster. Guided by intelligence, bravery and unbreakable faith in friendship, they uncover a mysterious secret hidden deep within the school and end up having the most exciting adventure of their lives.
    Recommended for ages 9 and up. 

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  • 37th Portland International Film Festival Audience Awards; TWO LIVES Wins Best Narrative Feature, FINDING VIVIAN MAIER Wins Best Documentary

    FINDING VIVIAN MAIERFINDING VIVIAN MAIER

    The 37th Portland International Film Festival announced this year’s Alaska Airlines Audience Award winners voted on by the 38,000+ attendees on each of the 104 features and 24 shorts screened at the festival.  Earning top audience accolades for Best Narrative Feature is TWO LIVES (Germany) directed by George Maas and Judith Kaufmann.  FINDING VIVIAN MAIER (United States) directed by John Maloof and Charlie Siskel was selected as the Best Documentary Feature.  Maloof and Siskel also took home the audience award for Best New Director Award. The PIFF 37 audience chose ERNEST AND CELESTINE (France) as this year’s Best Animated Feature.  This year’s Short Film Awards go to directors Asa Blanck and Johan Palmgren for their film GRANDPA AND ME AND A HELICOPTER TO HEAVEN (Sweden) and Irene Taylor Brodsky’s ONE LAST HUG AND A FEW SMOOCHES: THREE DAYS AT GRIEF CAMP was the recipient of the Oregon Short Film Award. 

    PIFF 37 ALASKA AIRLINES AUDIENCE AWARD RESULTS 

    NARRATIVE FEATURES

    1. TWO LIVES / Germany / George Maas, Judith Kaufmann *best narrative feature
    2. IDA / Poland / Pawel Pawlikowski
    3. THE LUNCHBOX / India / Ritesh Batra
    4. CIRCLES / Serbia / Srdan Golubovic
    5. COHERENCE /US /James Ward Byrkit
    6. THE ZIG ZAG KID / The Netherlands / Vincent Bal
    7. ERNEST AND CELESTINE / France / S. Aubier, V. Patar, B. Renner
    8. OMAR / Palestine / Hany Abu-Assad
    9. THE BUTTERFLY’S DREAM / Turkey / Yilmaz Erdogan
    10. THE WIND RISES / Japan / Hayao Miyazaki

    DOCUMENTARY FEATURES

    1. FINDING VIVIAN MAIER / US / John Maloof, Charlie Siskel *best documentary feature
    2. TIM’S VERMEER / US / Teller
    3. PARTICLE FEVER / US / Mark Levinson
    4. LEVITATED MASS / US / Doug Pray
    5. CODE BLACK / US / Ryan McGarry
    6. MAIDENTRIP / The Netherlands / Jillian Schlesinger
    7. REMOTE AREA MEDICAL / US / Jeff Reichert, Farihah Zaman
    8. THE NEW RIJKSMUSEUM / The Netherlands / Oeke Hoogendijk
    9. CAIRO DRIVE / Egypt / Sherief Elkatsha
    10. GOOGLE AND THE WORLD BRAIN / Great Britain / Ben Lewis

    BEST NEW DIRECTORS

    1. FINDING VIVIAN MAIER / US / John Maloof, Charlie Siskel *best new director(s)
    2. CODE BLACK / US / Ryan McGarry
    3. THE LUNCHBOX / India / Ritesh Batra
    4. MAIDENTRIP / The Netherlands / Jillian Schlesinger
    5. THE DAY OF THE CROWS / France / Jean-Christophe Dessaint

     ANIMATED FEATURES

    1. ERNEST AND CELESTINE / France / S. Aubier, V. Patar, B. Renner *best animated feature
    2. CHEATIN’ / US / Bill Plympton
    3. THE DAY OF THE CROWS / France / Jean-Christophe Dessaint

    SHORTS

    1. GRANDPA AND ME AND A HELICOPTER TO HEAVEN / Sweden / Asa Blanck, Johan Palmgren *best short film
    2. SATURDAY GIRLS / France / Emilie Cherpitel
    3. GREAT / Germany / Andreas Henn
    4. ONE LAST HUG AND A FEW SMOOCHES: THREE DAYS AT GRIEF CAMP / Portland / Irene Taylor Brodsky
    5. THE APOTHOCARY / US / Helen Hood Scheer

    OREGON SHORTS

    1. ONE LAST HUG AND A FEW SMOOCHES: THREE DAYS AT GRIEF CAMP / Portland / Irene Taylor Brodsky *best Oregon short film
    2. 9 / Portland / Kimberly Warner
    3. PORTLAND MEADOWS / Portland / Vanessa Renwick

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  • Film Society of Lincoln Center Unveils Lineup for 2014 ART OF THE REAL Series; Opens With LA ÚLTIMA PELÍCULA

    ,

    LA ÚLTIMA PELÍCULALA ÚLTIMA PELÍCULA

    The Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City announced the full schedule and details for Art of the Real, the new documentary-as-art series that will take place April 11-26, 2014. Corneliu Porumboiu’s THE SECOND GAME will have its North American premiere on Opening Night, with the director in attendance, following the screening of Raya Martin and Mark Peranson’s LA ÚLTIMA PELÍCULA.

    The first Opening Night film, Raya Martin and Mark Peranson’s LA ÚLTIMA PELÍCULA, is a documentary within a narrative—and vice versa—about a grandiose filmmaker (Alex Ross Perry, The Color Wheel) scouting locations in Mexico on the eve of the Mayan Apocalypse. Also screening on Opening Night, THE SECOND GAME combines an analogue video of a snowy soccer game from 1988 with narration by the filmmaker Corneliu Porumboiu (Police, Adjective) and his father, who refereed the match. Investigating the slippery middle ground where personal memory meets historical memory, Porumboiu creates an entertaining and disquieting essay on the legacy of the Ceauşescu dictatorship for both Romanian society and his own family.

    The Closing Night film, ACTRESS, by Robert Greene, is a documentary that feels like an intimate melodrama starring Brandy Burre, who had a recurring role on HBO’s The Wire when she gave up a career to start a family. Greene follows Burre’s bumpy return to work, though it’s never clear at what level his riveting film may simply be her next role.
       

    Films, Descriptions & Schedule

     Opening Night
    La última película
    Raya Martin & Mark Peranson, Mexico/Canada/Denmark/Philippines, 2013, 35mm, 88m
    English and Spanish with English subtitles
    In this documentary within a narrative—and vice versa—a grandiose filmmaker (Alex Ross Perry) arrives in the Yucatán to scout locations for his new movie, a production that will involve exposing the last extant celluloid film stock on the eve of the Mayan Apocalypse. Instead, he finds himself waylaid by the formal schizophrenia of the film in which he himself is a character. Simultaneously a tribute to and a critique ofThe Last Movie (Dennis Hopper’s seminal obliteration of the boundary separating life and cinema), La última película engages with the impending death of celluloid through a veritable cyclone of film and video formats, genres, modes, and methods. Martin and Peranson have created an unclassifiable work that mirrors the contortions and leaps of the medium’s history and present.
    Apr 11 at 6:30pm (Q&A with Mark Peranson and Alex Ross Perry)

    North American Premiere
    The Second Game
    Corneliu Porumboiu, Romania, 2014, DCP, 97m
    Romanian with English subtitles
    In 1988, one year before the revolution that toppled Ceaușescu, Corneliu Porumboiu’s father refereed a soccer game between the country’s leading teams as heavy snow fell over the playing field and all of Bucharest. In 2013, father and son watched the original television broadcast of the game, providing their own commentary in real time. The static-heavy analogue video images mix with the grain-like flurries of snow to make this rather ordinary game into something altogether more complex and mysterious, as father and son’s discussion leads to the pondering of alternate events and different outcomes: what if the ball hadn’t hit the crossbar? What if the camera had captured the brief on-field fight? What if the match had taken place a year later? Investigating the slippery middle-ground where personal memory meets historical memory, Corneliu Porumboiu has created an entertaining and disquieting essay on the legacy of the Ceaușescu dictatorship for both Romanian society and his own family.
    Apr 11 at 9:15pm (Q&A with Corneliu Porumboiu)
    Apr 14 at 7:00pm

    Closing Night
    Actress
    Robert Greene, USA, 2014, DCP, 86m
    This thoroughly compelling and at times thoroughly unnerving new film by Robert Greene (Fake It So Real) is a documentary that feels like intimate melodrama. Brandy Burre had a recurring role on HBO’s The Wirewhen she gave up her career to start a family. After a few years of life in the country, she decides to return to acting, and sets the denouement of her relationship in motion. As she comes apart on camera in varying shades of drama, it’s never clear at what level this film may simply be the next role.
    Screening with
    Rehearsal
    Tom Rosenberg, USA, 2013, 11m
    Like a flipped but equally dystopian reality version of Peter Watkins’s The War GameRehearsal depicts a simulated terrorist attack in Middle America, with hundreds of participants playing the roles of panicking victim, rescue worker, and stunned passerby.
    Apr 26 at 8:00pm (Q&A with Robert Greene and Brandy Burre)

    Amie Siegel: Recent Works
    USA, 2010-2013, digital projection, 60m total
    Moving between the gallery space and the cinema, Amie Siegel’s work often places genre fiction within documentary methods. Two films will be screened in full: Black Moon (2010)a partial remake of Louis Malle’s film of the same title, shot in empty, foreclosed housing developments in the U.S., and featuring a troop of female soldiers, pushing through an eerie post-everything wasteland; Winter (2013), an interior/exterior landscape film, juxtaposing the hyper-controlled environment of a New Zealand architect’s home with the surrounding endangered ecology. Clip selections from other new works and a discussion will follow.
    Apr 20 at 6:30pm (Q&A with Amie Siegel)

    The Anabasis of May and Fusako Shigenobu, Masao Adachi and 27 Years Without Images (L’Anabase de May et Fusako Shigenobu, Masao Adachi et 27 anneées sans images)
    Eric Baudelaire, France, 2011, DCP, 66m
    English, French, and Japanese with English subtitles
    Conceptualized while researching the Japanese Red Army during a residency in Japan, the French artist Eric Baudelaire’s first feature-length film is a probing and often mesmerizing weave of Super-8 footage, television clips, film excerpts, and archival miscellany. In voiceover, May Shigenobu (daughter of former Red Army Faction member and Japanese Red Army founder Fusako) and militant filmmaker Masao Adachi delve into their respective histories, including the “27 years without images” during which Adachi spent fighting alongside the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in Lebanon. Their narrations unfold over imagery that both applies and extends what Adachi called his “theory of landscape”—the illustration of oppressive social structures through the meticulous filming of landscapes in which they are obliquely inscribed.
    Screening with
    The Makes
    Eric Baudelaire, France, 2009, DCP, 26m
    An adaptation of Michelangelo Antonioni’s notes on unmade films, published in his book That Bowling Alley on the Tiber.
    Apr 19 at 4:15pm (Q&A with Eric Baudelaire)

    Anna
    Alberto Grifi & Massimo Sarchielli, Italy, 1972-1975, DCP, 225m
    Italian with English subtitles
    Recently restored by the Cineteca di Bologna, this astonishing nearly four-hour documentary centers on the titular pregnant, homeless 16-year-old whom the filmmakers discovered in Rome’s Piazza Navona. Mainly shot on then-newfangled video (which gives the black-and-white images a ghostly translucence), it documents the interactions between the beautiful, clearly damaged, often dazed Anna and the directors, who take her in partly out of compassion and partly because she’s a fascinating subject for a film. Far from straightforward vérité, this self-implicating chronicle includes reenactments of the first meeting, explicit attempts to direct its subject, and frequent intrusions from behind the camera (not least the emergence of the film’s electrician as a love interest). Anna cuts between domestic scenes and café discussions back in the square, where the unruly cross talk among hippies, bums, bourgeoisie, and angry young men touches on the movie’s key themes of obligation and intervention: between filmmakers and their subjects, the state and its citizens, fellow members of society.
    Apr 22 at 6:30pm (Introduction by author Rachel Kushner, author of The Flamethrowers)

    Bloody Beans (Loubia Hamra)
    Narimane Mari, Algeria/France, 2013, DCP, 77m
    French and Arabic with English subtitles
    A group of Algerian children frolic on the beach, but their sunning and roughhousing soon turns into a kind of reenactment of the Algerian War of Independence that plays out as equal parts Lord of the Flies andLes Carabiniers. Roaming the nocturnal streets like a cross between a pack of feral cats and a brigade of revolutionary guerrillas, the kids “capture” a French soldier and force him to put himself in their shoes by eating a plate of their much-despised dietary staple, the titular legumes. Revisiting several signature themes of post-colonial cinema—the costs and benefits of fighting for national independence, the strain that political struggle exerts across all strata of a colonized nation, changes in popular attitudes toward foreigners after successful or failed uprisings—Narimane Mari’s exhilarating first feature counts the work of Jean Vigo and Jean Rouch among its key forebears. Winner of the main competition at the 2013 CPH:DOX Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival.
    Apr 12 at 9:30pm (Q&A with Narimane Mari)
    Apr 13 at 4:30pm (Q&A with Narimane Mari)

    Blue
    Derek Jarman, UK, 1993, 35mm, 79m
    The final film by Derek Jarman, who died 20 years ago, comprises just one shot: a single frame of blue, close in pigment to Yves Klein’s patented International Klein Blue. The static image mirrors the deterioration of Jarman’s sight as a side effect of his HIV medication. Alongside the unchanging image unfolds a dense aural tapestry: Jarman and a group of actors read texts that reflect on the various meanings bound up in blue (as a color, an emotional state, a symbol of infinity) and the experience of living and dying with a terminal illness.
    Apr 25 at 9:15pm (Introduction by filmmaker and artist Carolee Schneemann)

    North American Premiere
    Castanha
    Davi Pretto, Brazil, 2014, DCP, 95m
    Portuguese with English subtitles
    Davi Pretto’s first feature-length film chronicles the daily life of João Carlos Castanha, a middle-aged, single, ailing actor who supports both himself and his live-in mother by working as a cross-dressing nightclub MC. When in drag, Castanha plays the part of a larger-than-life scoundrel, verbally assailing the clientele while also enjoying periodic visits from friends backstage. On the side, Castanha finds work as an extra in film productions and taking bit parts in small plays. His greatest roles, and greatest loves, are in the past, making way for his repressed memories to take over, and finally allowing the line between his experience of reality and fantasy to blur, as the film takes haunting and confounding turns.
    Apr 19 at 9:00pm
    Apr 23 at 5:00pm

    Change of Life (Mudar de Vida)
    Paulo Rocha, Portugal, 1966, DCP, 90m
    Portuguese with English subtitles
    Paulo Rocha’s second feature, conceived as a direct response to his mentor Manoel de Oliveira’s Rite of Spring (which Rocha worked on as well), is a masterpiece of “sculpted reality,” using fictional conceits and non-actors cast as themselves to create an ethnographic portrait of Furadouro, a remote Portuguese fishing village. The dramatic premise, about a soldier returning home to a place that has changed in both subtle and obvious ways during his absence, serves as a pretext for Rocha to respectfully examine the specificities of Furadouro’s people, their daily routines and rituals, and their evolving relationships with the village’s history.
    Apr 24 at 9:00pm
    Apr 25 at 5:00pm

    North American Premiere
    Dust Breeding
    Sarah Vanagt, Belgium, 2013, digital projection, 47m
    Using the trial of Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadžić at the International Criminal Tribunal,Dust Breeding looks at the shifting nature of memory, media, testimony, and translation, and how they work to obscure accountability. Vanagt intersperses the court’s record of the trial, told through fragments of sound and footage from the legal proceedings, with scenes of her own recordings of pencil rubbings of objects and surfaces in the court. In the nearly featureless witness stand, or the window the translator sits behind, she gathers a parallel set of evidence to be reconstructed. What emerges is a complex composite sketch of historical memory and trauma.
    Screening with
    The Garden on Both River Banks
    Amel El Kamel, France, 2013, DCP, 20m
    French and Arabic with English subtitles
    The dying industrial landscape of the Union District in the North of France is narrated by the few souls who remain.
    Apr 20 at 4:30pm

    Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer
    Thom Andersen, USA, 1975, 35mm, 56m
    Thom Andersen’s concise essay film on the famous proto-cinema experiments of Eadweard Muybridge combines a biographical overview of its subject with philosophical considerations of what Muybridge’s work might represent ontologically and anthropologically. Assisted by filmmaker Morgan Fisher, Andersen re-photographed and then animated more than 3,000 of Muybridge’s sequential images, giving new life to the experiments in recording motion while analyzing their aesthetic value and their impact on science and the creation of cinema. Narrated by Dean Stockwell, with a wide-ranging intellectual curiosity that brings together art history, sociology, and psychoanalysis, Andersen’s documentary is that rare feat of filmmaking as film criticism, a thoroughgoing investigation into cinema’s primordial years that connects the medium’s invention to the broader history of Western representation.
    Screening with
    Olivia’s Place
    Thom Andersen, USA, 1966/74, 16mm, 6m
    A heartfelt portrait of the patrons, workers, and objects in a beloved Santa Monica diner, which closed a few years after Andersen shot this contemplative footage.
    and 
    Hey, Asshole! 
    Thom Andersen, USA, 2014, digital projection, 6m
    Andersen continues his exploration of ignored urban spaces with a look at the Los Angeles strip club—made entirely of footage from The Takeover, a straight-to-video gangster movie complete with gun violence and glowing neon.
    Apr 13 at 7:00pm (Q&A with Thom Andersen)
    Apr 15 at 5:30pm

    La Libertad
    Lisandro Alonso, Argentina, 2001, 35mm, 73m
    Alonso’s landmark feature debut, based on months of closely observing its subject’s routines, follows a day in the life of Misael, a young woodcutter in the Argentinean pampas. Using long takes that are at once uninflected and hyper-attentive, La Libertad chronicles the stark facts and repetitive actions of Misael’s largely solitary existence: he searches for trees and chops wood, pauses to defecate or eat, prepares and transports the logs for sale, returns to his camp to build a fire and cook his dinner. The title crystallizes a question about this man’s life: is the cyclical daily grind a burden or a kind of freedom? Or does the title refer to Alonso’s conception of an anti-dramatic, materialist cinema, absolutely in-the-moment and liberated from the traditional confines of fiction and documentary? “An account of everyday work that transforms the banal into poetry, maybe even myth,” James Quandt wrote of La Libertad, named one of the top 10 films of the past decade in Cinema Scope magazine. Print courtesy of the Harvard Film Archive.
    Screening with
    Ah, Liberty!
    Ben Rivers, UK, 2008, 16mm, 20m
    Rivers’s hand-processed black-and-white images depict the exuberant and anarchic everyday playfulness of the children of a family living an alternative existence in the Scottish Highlands.
    Apr 21 at 7pm

    Libera Me
    Alain Cavalier, France, 1993, 35mm, 80m
    Best known for his French New Wave–era political thrillers (Fire and Ice, The Unvanquished), Alain Cavalier has also produce a body of egregiously undersung documentaries and experimental works. One of the very best is this fable of political occupation and resistance that feels somehow both alien and familiarIn this series of situational tableaux set in a totalitarian dictatorship, no words are spoken, but the soundtrack is rich with the faint sounds of bodies breathing, shifting, embracing, and struggling. The low-key lighting, palette of dim blues and browns, emotional restraint, and precise framing call to mind Bresson or Malle, but the cumulative effect of this unique film is very much all its own.
    Apr 21 at 9:00pm

    U.S. Premiere
    Lukas the Strange (Lukas nino)
    John Torres, Philippines, 2013, DCP, 85m
    Tagalog with English subtitles
    “Lukas, in the middle of the film, the actress will pay a visit. You’ll fall in love with her. And you’ll understand your father. I’ll become your memory. I haven’t shown you the middle yet.” Thus begins John Torres’s latest dream of a documentary, a highly experimental, gloriously free-form coming-of-age story. Shortly after the arrival of a film crew that throws his tiny, usually quiet village into a frenzy of commotion, Lukas’s father, Mang Basilio, announces that he is a tikbalang, the half-horse, half-man of Filipino folklore. When Mang Basilio disappears, the awkward, baffled Lukas sets out on a journey of self-discovery that will include a “river of forgetting,” invisible voices, and a hallucinatory blurring of reality and fantasy. Torres has already carved out an idiosyncratic niche for himself in the thriving world of documentary-fiction hybrids, and this is his most personal and expansive work to date.
    Apr 18 at 5:00pm
    Apr 20 at 8:30pm

    A New Product
    Harun Farocki, Germany, 2012, digital projection, 37m
    German with English subtitles
    At a design consultancy in Hamburg, a new corporate office concept is under development. In long, awkward office meetings, illustrated with perplexing diagrams, senior staff pontificate on the future thriving workplace, one inevitably powered by neoliberal buzzwords like flexibility, openness, and communication. With a light touch, Farocki arranges these scenes into a revelatory black satire of contemporary managerial process.
    Screening with
    Just Like Us
    Jesse McLean, USA, 2013, digital projection, 15m
    The memories of an anonymous narrator who was once a body double for a famous actress punctuate a vast suburban waste space of empty parks and big box parking lots, and mingle with paparazzi footage and clippings. Here the tabloid insistence that we become intimate with the lives of celebrities takes a deep literal turn.
    and
    Former Models
    Benjamin Pearson, USA, 2013, digital projection, 20m
    A sci-fi toned meditation on celebrity and the loss of the self in the public image, Former Models retraces the tragic rise and fall of Milli Vanilli, narrated by Robert Pilatus himself, in the form of a robot voice.
    Apr 24 at 7:00pm

    Plot Point Trilogy 
    Nicolas Provost, Belgium/USA, 2007-2012, digital projection, 60m total
    Nicolas Provost’s work studies the similarities between the narrative conventions of movies and the recording of the everyday, and looks for the cinematic everywhere but the cinema. In his Plot Point Trilogy,three short videos created over six years, Provost filmed iconic public spaces with a hidden camera, weaving the footage into dramatic arcs using narrative editing devices. Plot Point (2007) dramatizes the NYPD’s movements in Times Square. Stardust (2010), transforms the ugly foyers of Las Vegas into a crime story featuring real Hollywood stars. And Tokyo Giants (2012) follows an actor playing a serial killer through the Japanese metropolis.
    Screening with
    Pittsburgh 1968/69
    Ted Kennedy, USA, 2013-2014, digital projection, 6m
    A series of short “docudramas” made from original 16mm camera rolls from a Pittsburgh TV news station.
    Apr 23 at 9:15pm (Q&A with Nicolas Provost)

    Red Hollywood
    Thom Andersen & Noël Burch, USA, 1996, digital projection, 120m
    Working from extensive original research, this revelatory documentary—an elaboration of Andersen’s 1985 essay of the same name—offers a unique perspective on Hollywood filmmaking from the 1930s to the 1950s, when “Red” screenwriters and directors worked within the studio system to make films that challenged issues of class, war, race, and gender. Andersen and Burch use clips from 53 different films spanning numerous genres in order to demonstrate how this network of filmmakers’ ideology affected the meaning and reception of their work, as well as interviews with many of the artists (such as Paul Jarrico, Ring Lardner, Jr., Alfred Levitt, and Abraham Polonsky) who were blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee.
    Apr 12 at 6:30pm (Q&A with Thom Andersen)
    Apr 13 at 2:00pm

    San Clemente
    Raymond Depardon, France, 1982, 35mm, 113m
    French with English subtitles
    Reminiscent of Wiseman’s Titicut Follies (1967) and Forugh Farrokhzad’s The House Is Black (1967), celebrated Magnum photographer and documentarian Raymond Depardon’s gripping account of the last days of a psychiatric hospital on the brink of shutting down allows viewers access to a world otherwise hidden from the public. Portraying the everyday routines of the hospital’s patients, their body language and facial expressions that speak to otherwise inexpressible emotional turmoil, Depardon follows his subjects’ individual fates with strict observational distance and enormous compassion fitting Nan Goldin’s edict that photography be “not about a style or a look or a setup. It’s about emotional obsession and empathy.” Print courtesy of Institut Français, Paris.
    Apr 25 at 7:00pm

    North American Premiere
    The Silent Majority Speaks
    Bani Khoshnoudi, Iran, 2010, digital projection, 94m
    In what critic Nicole Brenez calls “a deep political analysis of one century of revolt and repression in Iran, and the various roles of images in this collective history,” The Silent Majority Speaks collects images from several different cameras secretly recording the protests in the wake of the fraudulent June 2009 Iranian presidential elections. Clandestinely made and signed by the “Silent Collective,” the film mixes of-the-moment footage of the rise of Iran’s Green Movement with glimpses of revolutions long since suppressed and snippets of narration that recall a century of turbulence. Filmmaker and artist Bani Khoshnoudi has recently revealed herself to be the film’s director, and this will be its first screening in North America and the first since her disclosure.
    Apr 17 at 9:15pm (Q&A with Bani Khoshnoudi)

    Suitcase of Love and Shame
    Jane Gillooly, USA, 2013, DCP, 70m
    Constructed from 60 hours of reel-to-reel audiotape from the 1960s discovered in a suitcase purchased on eBay, Suitcase of Love and Shame reveals the intimate details of an affair between a Midwestern woman and her lover, who used recording devices to remember and document their romance. Foregrounding the audio material and restraining the visual, director Jane Gillooly reconstructs the doomed relationship in a way that brings the material exceptionally close to the viewer.
    Screening with
    O Arquipélago
    Gustavo Beck, Brazil, 2013, DCP, 28m
    An enigmatic and captivating chronicle of a working Brazilian family and the life around them, through their direct and indirect engagement with the camera.
    Apr 15 at 7:00pm (Q&A with Jane Gillooly and Gustavo Beck)
    Apr 16 at 4:00pm

    A Thousand Suns (Mille soleils)
    Mati Diop, France, 2013, HDCam, 45m
    French and Wolof with English subtitles
    Screening with
    Atlantiques
    Mati Diop, France/Senegal, 2009, HDCam, 15m
    Wolof, Swahili and French with English subtitles
    A Thousand Suns is a portrait of Magaye Niang, the non-professional actor who played the lead in the African film classic, Touki Bouki, which was directed by Diop’s uncle, Djibril Diop Mambéty. Fusing documentary and fantasy in homage to her uncle’s masterpiece, Diop follows Niang from a screening of that 1973 film to his farm in Senegal as the old man comes to terms with the vanished past he longs for and the future he still hopes is possible. Atlantiques, winner of the Best Short Film Award at the 2009 Rotterdam International Film Festival, tells the story of a young boy’s tragic migratory voyage over the Moroccan border.
    Apr 18 at 7:00pm (Q&A with Mati Diop)
    Apr 20 at 2:30pm

    U.S. Premiere
    Time Goes by Like a Roaring Lion (Die Zeit Vergeht Wie Ein Brüllender Löwe)
    Philipp Hartmann, Germany, 2013, DCP, 79m
    German with English subtitles
    A free-associative essay on temporality, mortality, and cinema’s capacity to represent both, Philipp Hartmann’s autobiographical film is at once affecting and dense with ideas. The filmmaker-narrator has just turned 37, half the average life expectancy of a German man, and his own chronophobia (the fear of time’s passage) prompts an increasingly personal and phenomenological investigation into the past. Time Goes by Like a Roaring Lion is captivatingly digressive, taking detours to consider Alzheimer’s, an atomic clock in Brauchsweig, and the world’s largest salt desert in Bolivia. Despite the loftiness of its subject matter, the film maintains an air of lightness and a spirit of artistic and philosophical experimentalism.
    Apr 18 at 9:00pm (Q&A with Philipp Hartmann)
    Apr 19 at 2:00pm (Q&A with Philipp Hartmann)

    North American Premiere
    To Singapore, with Love
    Tan Pin Pin, Singapore, 2013, DCP, 70m
    English, Malay, and Mandarin with English subtitles
    Scattered about the globe, in London, Thailand, and neighboring Malaysia, the subjects of this expertly crafted, enormously moving documentary are Singaporean political exiles who fled their country decades ago to escape detention or worse for their beliefs and activism. Most will never be permitted to return in their lifetime, but all have created an extraordinary second life for themselves in an adopted homeland. The latest from leading Singaporean documentarian Tan Pin Pin (Singapore GaGaInvisible City) doubles as a tender group portrait of these brave individuals, and of Singapore itself, as seen from afar by its harshest critics and most utopian defenders.
    Apr 23 at 7:15pm (Q&A with Tan Pin Pin)
    Apr 24 at 5:00pm

    North American Premiere
    The Ugly One
    Eric Baudelaire, France/Lebanon, 2013, DCP, 101m
    English, French, Japanese, and Arabic with English subtitles
    A sequel of sorts to The Anabasis…, Baudelaire’s second feature takes as its starting point a script and a set of directions given to him by the Japanese filmmaker Masao Adachi, whose voiceover narration intrudes occasionally to meditate on memory and militancy. Baudelaire deviates considerably from Adachi’s text in presenting the story of Lili (Juliette Navis) and Michel (Rabih Mroué), who meet on a beach in Beirut. Their interactions reveal a traumatic shared past marked by an act of terrorism and the loss of a loved one. The contrapuntal interplay of this elegiac narrative and Adachi’s memories of insurrection and revolutionary regret produces a work that is as moving as it is intellectually and politically challenging.
    Apr 19 at 6:30pm (Q&A with Eric Baudelaire)

    World Premiere
    US 41
    James Benning, USA, 2014, digital projection, 56m
    and
    HF
    James Benning, USA, 2014, digital projection, 11m
    and
    signs
    James Benning, USA, 2014, digital projection, 18m
    Since switching from his beloved 16mm to various digital formats, with all the financial freedom and creative possibilities that change affords, James Benning has been on an especially prolific streak. These three new short works are characteristically provocative in their political intonations, conceptual rigor and reflexive beauty. HF is Benning’s tribute in miniature to legendary filmmaker Hollis Frampton, known for his materialist dissection of the cinema apparatus and adventurous considerations of memory and time. Signsis a sobering continuation of Benning’s career-long interest with the written word as image, text as vision: a silent parade of stills showing dozens of cardboard signs asking for money, food, and kindness. A stretch of highway blanketed by snow becomes the stage for one accident after another in US 41, perhaps Benning’s first disaster movie, or a comedy of (automotive and meteorological) errors. Returning Benning to his favorite subject of the American character as reflected in our landscape, US 41 is an almost transcendental contemplation of mortality by way of traffic camera footage and Bob Dylan.
    Apr 26 at 5:30pm (Q&A with James Benning)

     FOCUS ON THE SENSORY ETHNOGRAPHY LAB
    In a mere eight years, the Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University has gone from an unusually ambitious academic program to one of the most vital incubators of nonfiction and experimental cinema in the United States. Lucien Castaing-Taylor established the SEL in 2006 on the premise that documentary and art are not mutually exclusive and that the intensive fieldwork of anthropology could nourish both. In practice this means rejecting the laziest devices in the contemporary documentarian’s tool kit: reductive story arcs, infantilizing voiceovers and talking heads, manipulative music cues. It also reconnects documentary to the work of such pioneers as Robert Flaherty and Jean Rouch, and indeed to the medium’s eternal promise as an instrument for both capturing reality and heightening the senses. The films in this selection, including work produced at the SEL and work that inspired SEL makers, attest to the aspirations of sensory ethnography: to experience the world, and to transmit some of the magnitude and multiplicity of that experience. Presented in collaboration with the 2014 Whitney Biennial.

    As Long as There’s Breath
    Stephanie Spray, USA, 2009, digital projection, 57m
    Nepali with English subtitles
    Stephanie Spray’s third video work documenting the lives of a Nepali family named the Gayeks, As Long as There’s Breath focuses on their daily rituals and conversations in the wake of their son’s departure. Using the long take as a means of rendering the emotional substance beneath the surface of everyday routines, Spray connects the psychological effects of a loved one’s absence to the most mundane yet essential acts of work, and the resulting portrait lays bare the family’s inner lives, while maintaining their role as collaborators in the film.
    Screening with 
    Untitled
    Stephanie Spray, USA, 2010, digital projection, 14m
    A playful piece depicting, in a continuous shot, the bickering and bantering of a newlywed couple in Nepal.
    Apr 16 at 7:00pm (Q&A with Stephanie Spray)

    Foreign Parts
    Véréna Paravel & J.P. Sniadecki, USA, 2010, DCP, 80m
    Tucked between the Citifield baseball stadium and the Van Wyck overpass lie a ramshackle collection of auto-body repair shops and other small businesses, staffed by an extraordinarily multicultural cast of characters. But New York City has other plans: the area has been targeted for development, complete with apartments, malls, and parks, and this commercial shantytown may soon be a memory. Filmmakers Véréna Paravel and J.P. Sniadecki have created a revealing and tender portrait of Willets Point, Queens, that captures the many roads the American dream has taken. A Kino Lorber release.
    Apr 14 at 5:00pm

    Forest of Bliss
    Robert Gardner, USA/India, 1986, 35mm, 90m
    Pioneering ethnographic filmmaker and anthropologist Robert Gardner describes this mesmerizing evocation of the role of death in Benares, India, as “a ninety-minute expansion on a split second of the panic dread I felt on turning an unfamiliar corner onto Manikarnika Ghat (The Great Cremation Ground)” during a visit there a decade earlier. Appearing to occupy the time between two sunrises, the film revolves around three inhabitants of this world of death: a healer, a priest, and the hereditary “king” of the cremation ground who sells sacred fire to mourners. Interwoven with their activities are glimpses of life of the Ghat: wild dogs, marigold sellers, boys flying kites, wood-carriers, boatmen on the Ganges. Gardner eschews voice-over narration, explanatory title cards or even subtitles, instead relying on an eerie yet serene flow of images and sound.
    Apr 12 at 4:30pm

    Jaguar
    Jean Rouch, France, 1954/1967, 16mm, 89m
    French with English subtitles
    Throughout his filmmaking career, Jean Rouch blended narrative practices and documentary techniques in what he called “ethno-fiction,” and Jaguar, which follows three young Songhay men from Niger as they set out on a journey to the Gold Coast (modern day Ghana) in search of adventure and work, is perhaps the prime example of his idiosyncratic and now widely influential approach. The four men filmed their trip in the mid-1950s, before synchronized sound was possible in documentary filmmaking, then reunited a few years later to record the sound, trying to remember what they said and making up commentary about their surroundings and themselves, by turns jocular and impertinent. Rouch and his collaborators succeeded in creating a complex portrait of African life where the three leads perform an ethnography of their own culture, turning it inside out. As Rouch put it, Jaguar is “a postcard in the service of the imaginary.” Print courtesy of Institut Français, Paris.
    Apr 13 at 9:30pm

    Jakub
    Jana Ševčíková, Czech Republic, 1992, 35mm, 63m
    Czech with English subtitles
    Jana Ševčíková’s portrait of Jakub Popovich is a stirring look at the lives of the Ruthenians, a community based in Northern Romania and Western Bohemia that held together amidst 50 years of political upheaval and revolution. Ševčíková began filming two years before the ouster of Ceaușescu in 1989 and completed the project in 1994, emphasizing the fast-changing milieu around this marginalized community.
    Screening with
    Old Believers (Staroverci)
    Jana Ševčíková, Czech Republic, 2001, 35mm, 46m
    Czech with English subtitles
    Time seems to have stopped in the forsaken Romanian village of the Danube Delta where the Russian emigrants of a minority faith settled during the 17th century and Ševčíková spent five years documenting their intimate community for Old Believers. The residents have preserved the archaic language and strictly adhere to the traditions of their oldest ancestors, while the almost meditative rhythm of the place gives a transcendental significance to even the most ordinary everyday tasks.
    Apr 14 at 9:30pm

    Manakamana
    Stephanie Spray & Pacho Velez, USA, 2013, DCP, 118m
    Nepali and English with English subtitles
    Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez’s (literally) transporting film—shot inside a cable car that carries pilgrims and tourists to and from a mountaintop temple in Nepal—is radically simple in conception. Each of its 11 shots lasts as long as a one-way ride, which corresponds to the duration of a roll of 16mm film. A kind of head movie that viewers are invited to complete as they watch, Manakamana is thrillingly mysterious in its effects: a staged documentary, a cross between science fiction and ethnography, an airborne version of an Andy Warhol screen test. Working within a 5-by-5-foot glass and metal box, Spray and Velez have made an endlessly suggestive film that both describes and transcends the bounds of time and space. Winner of the Filmmakers of the Present prize at the 2013 Locarno Film Festival. A Cinema Guild release.
    Apr 12 at 1:30pm (Q&A with Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez)

    Mother Dao, the Turtlelike
    Vincent Monnikendam, Netherlands/Indonesia, 1995, 35mm, 90m
    Dutch and Indonesian with English subtitles
    A compilation of clips from documentaries and propaganda films shot by Dutch cameramen between 1912 and 1932 in their former colony of Indonesia, Vincent Monnikendam’s masterpiece of found-footage documentary contrasts the lives of wealthy colonial rulers, who issue orders while clad in immaculately white outfits, with the hopeless situation of the native people, victims of brutal economic exploitation. West of Sumatra, the islanders of Nias tell of Earth’s creator Mother Dao, the ever rejuvenating, the turtlelike, whose immaculate conception first begat man and woman. Taking this as inspiration for his use of dialectical techniques, Monnikendam uses a soundtrack of indigenous music and recited poetry as a sharp counterpoint to the abundant images of hardship, squalor and oppression. Susan Sontag praised Mother Dao as “a film that is both a searing reflection on the ravages of colonialism and a noble work of art.”
    Apr 15 at 9:30pm

    Sweetgrass
    Ilisa Barbash & Lucien Castaing-Taylor, USA, 2009, 35mm, 105m
    This breathtaking chronicle follows an ever-surprising group of modern-day cowboys as they lead an enormous herd of sheep up and then down the slopes of the Beartooth Mountains in Montana on their way to market. Call it an abstract Western or the last round-up. Ilisa Barbash and Lucien Castaing-Taylor spent three summers in Montana documenting the process by which sheep are raised, ranched, sheared, and driven hundreds of miles to graze in high pastures of Sweet Grass County. Sweetgrass is routinely awe-inspiring and often hilarious. The Big Sky Country has never looked more spectacular—or, thanks to the ranchers as well as their animals, sounded more cacophonous—and, after Sweetgrass, it will never look the same. A Cinema Guild release.
    Apr 17 at 6:30pm (Q&A with Ilisa Barbash)

    Swiss Mountain Transport Systems, Radio Version (5.1 mix)
    Ernst Karel, USA, 2011, DCP (audio only), 55m
    Swiss Mountain Transport Systems consists of location recordings made during the summer and fall of the various transport systems that are specific to mountainous terrain—gondolas (aerial cable cars), funiculars, and chairlifts—of different types, of different vintages, and accessing different elevations, in different parts of Switzerland. Recorded from within mostly enclosed mobile environments, this emergent music includes mechanical drones, intermittent percussiveness, and transient acoustic glimpses of a vast surrounding landscape inhabited by humans and other animals.
    Screening with other sound work
    Apr 16 at 9:15pm (Q&A with Ernst Karel)
     

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  • Documentary TANZANIA: A JOURNEY WITHIN Sets Release Day; VIDEO: Watch Trailer

    TANZANIA: A JOURNEY WITHIN, directed by Sylvia Caminer

    The documentary, TANZANIA: A JOURNEY WITHIN, directed by Sylvia Caminer, which follows the journey of two unlikely friends, Kristen Kenney, a privileged young American woman, and Venance Ndibalema, a Tanzanian scientist/philosopher, as they travel across Tanzania, opens in NYC April 25 in conjunction with World Malaria Day, and in LA on May 2, before expanding nationwide.

     After nine long years in the USA furthering his education Venance is traveling home to Tanzania with Kristen, a close American friend from a vastly differing background. As Venance leads Kristen through his native countryside, they experience the ancient culture, the present-day poverty, and the eternal spirituality of his motherland. As Venance struggles to blend his newly learned western philosophy with that of tribal life Kristen experiences a life-changing transformation by observing first-hand the daily struggle to survive for many living on the continent. It is a dramatic, emotional, visually stunning odyssey that challenges and changes our protagonists forever. 

    Kristen’s trip, and bout with Malaria there, inspired her to create Malaika For Life– a business which sells bracelets made by Tanzanian women.  Proceeds for each bracelet sold are used to provide life-saving treatment for one African suffering from Malaria – hence their slogan “Buy a Bracelet, Save a Life”.  To date, Malaika For Life has saved over 22,000 lives and has the support of celebrities including Mandy Moore and NBA star Metta World Peace.

    Hoping to re-create the success of that campaign, the filmmakers are launching “Buy A Movie Ticket, Save a Life” in conjunction with the theatrical release of TANZANIA: A JOURNEY WITHIN in April.  Proceeds from every ticket sold to the public will be used to provide life-saving treatment for Malaria patients in Africa.  

     http://youtu.be/7wTL5SC8Bj0

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  • Unlucky 13! 13th SCINEMA Festival of Science Film CANCELED for 2014.

    SCINEMA Festival of Science Film

    SCINEMA Festival of Science Film is canceled for 2014. The Australian festival announced that because they were not successful in their funding bid, the festival will take a hiatus and return in 2015. SCINEMA Festival of Science Film is a traveling science film and multimedia festival based in Canberra, Australia.

    Filmmakers, venues and friends,

    They say 13 is an unlucky number, but SCINEMA Festival of Science Film ran a terrific festival in 2013 – our 13th festival.

    But the luck ran out this year for our 14th festival – we weren’t successful in our funding bid for National Science Week funding. And so SCINEMA will be taking the year off in 2014. Perhaps with festival 14 we are experiencing our second seven-year-itch. But the SCINEMA team pledge to return in 2015.

    We will be announcing our call for entries for 2015 in the middle of this year so keep an eye on our website.

    Many thanks to you all for your support over the past 13 years, and looking forward to catching up with you all in 2015.

    Cris Kennedy & Damian Harris
    For SCINEMA Festival of Science Film

     via SCINEMA Festival of Science Film

    http://youtu.be/pctSerHgvfI

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  • Robert Greene’s THE ACTRESS to Open SF DocFest

     Robert Greene’s THE ACTRESSRobert Greene’s THE ACTRESS

    The 13th San Francisco Documentary Film Festival (SF DocFest) taking place June 5 to 19, 2014, will open on June 5th with Robert Greene’s new film THE ACTRESS, which follows Brandy Burre, an actress who gave up her role in HBO’s “The Wire” to start a family in upstate New York. After playing the role of wife and mother, Burre decided to re-enter the acting business. The film will play as part of a retrospective of Robert Greene’s earlier work. 

    The festival will also honor filmmaker and writer, Robert Greene, with the 2014′s SF DocFest Non-Fiction Vanguard Award. This is the second time SF DocFest has given this award following the 2008 recipient Melody Gilbert. In addition to premiering his new film, ACTRESS, the festival will present a retrospective of some of Robert Greene’s earlier films including KATI WITH AN I (2010) and FAKE IT SO REAL (2012).  

    The festival announced a new DocFest Director of Programming Jennifer Morris and a new Associate Programmer Chris Metzler. Jennifer Morris, currently a programmer and consultant for Film23, Jennifer Morris was previously the Festival Director and Director of Programming for Frameline, She also served as the director of the Frameline Completion Fund which provided funding-ranging from $20-$50k annually- for the completion of films that deal with issues of importance to LGBT communities with an emphasis on underrepresented communities. She has also been a DJ and promoter in the Bay Area (under the name DJ Junkyard) for over 20 years.  Morris is originally from Southern California where she received her BA in Motion Pictures and Television from UCLA.

    Chris Metzler graduated from USC with a degree in business and cinema; Chris Metzler’s film career has taken him from the depths of agency work, to coordinating post-production for movies. His filmmaking work has resulted in him criss-crossing the country with the aid of caffeinated beverages, all the while making his way in the Nashville country and Christian music video industries, before finally forsaking his soul to commercial LA rock n’ roll. These misadventures culminated in him winning a Billboard Magazine Music Video Award. He eventually fled to San Francisco to join the independent documentary film scene and start work on his feature length directorial debut – the offbeat environmental documentary, “Plagues & Pleasures on the Salton Sea”, which was narrated by John Waters. With the success of that feature documentary Metzler went on to make, “Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone”, about the legendary rock-ska-funk band Fishbone. The film was narrated by actor Laurence Fishburne, premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival, screened at SXSW, and aired nationally on PBS. Metzler is now pursuing other sub-cultural documentary subjects, including: rogue economists, lucha libre wrestlers, swamp rat hunters, ganjapreneurs, and evangelical Christian surfers.

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  • A WILL FOR THE WOODS Top Winners of 2014 SF IndieFest

      A WILL FOR THE WOODS directed by Amy Browne, Jeremy Kaplan, Tony Hale and Brian Wilson A WILL FOR THE WOODS directed by Amy Browne, Jeremy Kaplan, Tony Hale and Brian Wilson

    After 2 weeks of films, the 16th SF IndieFest came to a close; and the festival announced the 2014 Award winning films and filmmakers. The audience voted LETS RUIN IT WITH BABIES directed by Kestrin Pantera as the Best Narrative Feature, and A WILL FOR THE WOODS directed by Amy Browne, Jeremy Kaplan, Tony Hale and Brian Wilson as Best Documentary Feature.  The Jury also selected A WILL FOR THE WOODS as Best Documentary Feature, but went with DOOMSDAYS for Best Narrative Feature.

    Audience Award Winners & Woodcock Jury Prize Winners

    Narrative Feature: LETS RUIN IT WITH BABIES

    http://youtu.be/chv48rRn9d0

    Documentary Feature: A WILL FOR THE WOODS

    http://youtu.be/uHbjE3Nz0fs

    Narrative Short: ANOTHER TIME, MAYBE

    Documentary Short: MR GRILLO, THE THEREMINIST

    Animation: VIRTUOUS VIRTUELL

    SF IndieFest also presented the following films the Woodcock Jury Prizes chosen by a jury of pass holders.

    Narrative Feature ($1000 prize): DOOMSDAYS

    http://youtu.be/ZFPLDCw9U6s

    Documentary Feature ($1000 prize): A WILL FOR THE WOODS

    Short Film ($500 prize): DULUTH IS HORRIBLE (San Francisco based filmmaker Vincent Gargiulo)

     

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  • VIDEO: Watch Trailer for THE FINAL MEMBER, About Iceland Museum Devoted to the Male Member (LOL)

    THE FINAL MEMBER documentary

    Check out the trailer for the new documentary called THE FINAL MEMBER that will be released in April 2014.  Paris has the Louvre. London has the Tate Modern, and New York the Metropolitan Museum. But Husavik, Iceland—a diminutive village on the fringe of the Arctic Circle—boasts the world’s only museum devoted exclusively to painstakingly preserved male genitalia. 

    Founded and curated by Sigurður “Siggi” Hjartarson, the Icelandic Phallological Museum houses four decades worth of mammalian members, from a petite field mouse to the colossal sperm whale, and every “thing” in between. But, lamentably, Siggi’s collection lacks the holy grail of phallic phantasmagoria: a human specimen.

    THE FINAL MEMBER centers on Siggi, whose world changes dramatically when he receives generous offers from an elderly Icelandic Casanova and an eccentric American. However, as the competition for eternal penile preservation heats up between the two men, Siggi soon discovers that this process is more complicated than it initially appeared. In their debut feature film, Jonah Bekhor and Zach Math follow Siggi on his dogged, often emotional quest to complete his exhibition in a peculiar, yet startlingly relatable, story of self-fulfillment and the value of personal legacies (both big and small).

    THE FINAL MEMBER captures the uniquely bizarre Icelandic Phallogical Museum, whose quest for the human specimen leaves an indelible stamp on the lives of a few… to the intrigue of many. We would love to send you a screener for consideration so you can plunge into this strange world yourself. 

    http://youtu.be/sZMaheZ_Iy0

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  • American Documentary Film Festival to Screen “God Loves Uganda,” by Academy Award Winning Director, Roger Ross Williams

    GOD LOVES UGANDA

    Although Uganda’s President Museveni claimed he was signing the country’s controversial anti-gay bill into law to fight liberal cultural imperialism by the West, the reality is that he may have actually signed the bill into law as a direct result of just the opposite: conservative cultural imperialism by America’s Christian Right. Possible? Academy Award-Winning Director Roger Ross Williams explores exactly that theory in his documentary GOD LOVES UGANDA at the American Documentary Film Festival which opens on Thursday, March 27th and continues through Monday, March 31st, 2014.

    godlovesuganda1

    godlovesuganda3

     The Academy Award®-short-listed film in the Best Documentary Feature category is one of the year’s most talked-about and critically-acclaimed films.  Oscar® winner Roger Ross Williams provides a powerful exploration into the evangelical campaign to change African culture with values imported from America’s Christian Right. The film follows American and Ugandan religious leaders fighting what they consider “sexual immorality,” and missionaries trying to convince Ugandans to follow Biblical law. Director Roger Ross Williams plans to attend the American Documentary Film Festival screening of GOD LOVES UGANDA.

    http://youtu.be/UnH5AWqBcLg

    via American Documentary Film Festival 

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  • Ashland Independent Film Festival Announces 2014 Film Schedule Lineup

     THE CASE AGAINST 8THE CASE AGAINST 8

    The Ashland Independent Film Festival (AIFF) unveiled its complete program for the thirteenth annual Festival, to be held in the heart of historic downtown Ashland, Oregon, April 3 to 7, 2014. The Festival will open with THE CASE AGAINST 8, is a behind-the-scenes look inside the historic case to overturn California’s ban on same-sex marriage.

    The AIFF will honor two-time Academy Award® winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple with its 2014 Lifetime Achievement Award. Kopple received an Oscar® in 1976 for Harlan County USA, and again in 1991 for American Dream. Kopple’s many award-winning films include SHUT UP AND SING; WOODSTOCK: NOW and THEN; AND WILD MAN BLUES, about Woody Allen and his relationship with Soon-Yi Previn.   RUNNING FROM CRAZY, Kopple’s latest documentary, will screen at this year’s Festival.  The film examines the personal journey of writer, model and actress Mariel Hemingway, the granddaughter of Ernest Hemingway, as she strives for a greater understanding of her complex family history.

    This year, the AIFF will present a 2014 Rogue Award to a homegrown talent, Ty Burrell. Ty has appeared in blockbuster hits such as Black Hawk Down (2001), Dawn of the Dead (2004), and The Incredible Hulk (2008) and is the voice of Mr. Peabody in the upcoming Mr. Peabody & Sherman. Most know him as the funniest father on television, Phil Dunphy. But few know the man behind Phil, the Emmy Award® winning performer who grew up in Ashland.  In A Conversation with Ty Burrell on Saturday, April 5 at the Historic Ashland Armory, Ty and his childhood friend, Miles Inada, Professor of Art and Emerging Media at Southern Oregon University, will engage in what is sure to be an insightful and thoroughly entertaining discussion of acting (“the least rational career possible”), playing soccer in first grade together, plus a Q&A with the audience and other surprises.

    Putting the spotlight on a filmmaker making a unique contribution to independent film, the AIFF is also proud to present Mark Monroe with a 2014 Rogue Award.  Monroe is the writing talent behind the Academy Award® winning film THE COVE, the eye-opening CHASING ICE (AIFF12), and critically acclaimed THE TILLMAN STORY. Recently, Monroe penned MISSION BLUE, about legendary oceanographer, marine biologist, environmentalist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Sylvia Earle and her campaign to create a global network of protected marine sanctuaries, which will screen at the Festival. Monroe will be featured on a free filmmaker TalkBack panel, NOT THE SAME OLD STORY, examining the critical role of writing for documentary films.

    Documentaries featured at the festival include the Opening Night Film, THE CASE AGAINST 8, a behind-the-scenes look inside the historic case to overturn California’s ban on same-sex marriage.  Other documentaries featured at the 13th annual AIFF include BURT’S BUZZ, an intimate portrait of the reclusive Burt’s Bees founder Burt Shavitz and RUNNING WILD, the story of legendary cowboy Dayton O. Hyde, author and protector of wild horses. From Emmy® Award–winning documentary filmmaker and AIFF Alum Director Rory Kennedy (Ethel, AIFF12) comes LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM, revealing the chaotic final days of the Vietnam War. IVORY TOWER examines the purpose of higher education in an era when the price of college has increased more than any other service in the U.S. economy since 1978.

    Four films nominated for Best Documentary Short Subject will be featured.  FACING FEAR follows a former neo-Nazi skinhead and the gay victim of his hate crime who meet by chance 25 years after the incident that dramatically shaped both of their lives. KARAMA HAS NO WALLS chronicles the 2011 Yemen uprising. A peaceful gathering by students turns deadly when pro-government snipers open fire on the protest.  CAVEDIGGER portrays Ra Paulette, an artist who creates cathedral-like caves in northern New Mexico with nothing but hand tools, grit and passion.  PRISON TERMINAL: THE LAST DAYS OF PRIVATE JACK HALL breaks through the walls of one of Americas oldest maximum-security prisons to tell the story of the final months in the life of a terminally ill prisoner.

    AIFF will also screen four Best Live Action Short nominated films.  DO I HAVE TO TAKE CARE OF EVERYTHING, a comedy about a chaotic morning in a family with kids, and a mother who is determined that it’s best to take care of everything herself.  IN JUST BEFORE LOSING EVERYTHING (AVANT QUE DE TOUT PERDRE), a getaway becomes essential for the survival of a mother and her children.  THAT WASN’T ME (AGUEL NO ERA YO) tells the story of Paula, a social worker, who accompanies her boyfriend to Sierra Leone to aid and rescue child soldiers.   THE VOORMAN PROBLEM follows Doctor Williams as he examines the enigmatic Mr. Voorman, a prisoner with a peculiar affliction: he believes he is a god that created the universe nine days ago.  

    The Festival’s “Animation Shorts” program will include the Academy Award® winning film MR. HUBLOT and Academy Award® nominee FERAL. MR. HUBLOT depicts the strange world of an obsessive-compulsive recluse with characters and objects fashioned from intricately detailed, salvaged materials. In FERAL, a young boy is found in the wild and brought back to civilization.

    Last year, the Festival expanded the “Family Shorts” program, a collection of delightful and engaging short films suitable for ages 5 and up, to a full weekend of showings at the Ashland Street Cinemas. This season, the AIFF continues to grow its family friendly programming with the Oscar®-nominated animated feature, ERNEST & CELESTINE. A curious and surprisingly open-minded mouse, Celestine, befriends Ernest, a down on his luck bear. The two take an immediate liking to each other in this charming, playful and beautifully animated film. Featuring Forest Whitaker, Lauren Bacall, Paul Giamatti, and William H. Macy, the film will enchant audiences of all ages.

    Sandra Boynton, one of America’s best-loved artists and children’s book authors, will be in Ashland during the Festival with her newest short film, ALLIGATOR STROLL, playing in the “Family Shorts” program.  A gallery exhibit of whimsical and original images from her new book, FROG TROUBLE, will be held at Houston’s Custom Framing and Fine Art during the Festival.

    The AIFF again presents some of the best new feature film work available on the festival circuit. BLUEBIRD, featuring Amy Morton and John Slattery, explores the interconnectedness of a small town in the northern reaches of Maine when the local school bus driver becomes distracted during her end-of-day inspection. In the romantic adventure JUST A SIGH, Alix (Emmanuelle Devos) embarks on a mysterious, off-kilter day with stranger (Gabriel Byrne), leading to what could be a new life for Alix.  Obvious Child is an unapologetically honest and authentic look at what happens when 27-year-old Brooklyn comedian Donna Stern gets dumped, loses her job, and discovers she’s pregnant — just in time for Valentine’s Day.

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  • 2014 Tribeca Film Festival announces World Narrative and Documentary Competition selections, plus Viewpoints titles

     SUMMER OF BLOODSUMMER OF BLOOD

    The 2014 Tribeca Film Festival (TFF), today announced the World Narrative and Documentary Competition film selections, along with selections for the out-of-competition Viewpoints section which highlights unique, personal stories and diverse filmmakers in international and American independent cinema. Forty seven of the 87 feature-length films were announced as part of the 13th edition of the Festival, which will take place from April 16 to April 27 at locations around New York City and open with the documentary film TIME IS ILLMATIC.

    The Festival announced that DIOR AND I will screen as opening night for the World Documentary competition, GABRIEL will open the World Narrative competition, and SUMMER OF BLOOD will open the Viewpoints section. All three titles will have their world premiere on April 17.   

    The complete list of films selected for the World Narrative Feature and World Documentary Competition   is as follows, followed by the out-of-competition Viewpoints titles:

    World Narrative Feature Competition

    Brides(Patardzlebi), directed and written by Tinatin Kajrishvili. (France, Georgia) – North American Premiere. In the suburbs of Tbilisi, Georgia, seamstress Nutsa shares an apartment with her two young children and awaits the return of her husband, Goga, who has six years left on his prison sentence. With only rare visits and phone calls to connect with her husband, Nutsa faces difficult decisions about keeping the family together and maintaining her own freedom. In her first narrative feature, director Tinatin Kajrishvili captures an intimate look at love and absence, and a subtle indictment of the harsh Georgian penal system. In Georgian with subtitles.

    Five Star, directed and written by Keith Miller. (USA) – World Premiere. A member of the notorious Bloods since he was 12 years old, Primo takes John, the son of a fallen gang member, under his wing, versing him in the code of the streets. Set amongst the streets of East New York, Five Star blends documentary and fiction as director Keith Miller (Welcome to Pine Hill) carefully eschews worn clichés of gang culture to offer a compelling portrait of two men as they are both forced to confront the question of what it really means to be a man.

    Gabriel, directed and written by Lou Howe. (USA) – World Premiere. Rory Culkin delivers an electrifying performance as Gabriel, a vulnerable and confused teenager longing for stability and happiness. Convinced that reuniting with his old girlfriend will bring his dreams to fruition, Gabriel risks it all in a desperate and increasingly obsessive pursuit. First-time writer-director Lou Howe authentically portrays the heartbreaking reality of a young man battling his inner demons, establishing himself as an extraordinary new filmmaking talent.

    Glass Chin, directed and written by Noah Buschel. (USA) – World Premiere. After going down in the fifth round, boxer Bud Gordon bowed out of the limelight. Now residing in a fixer-upper apartment in New Jersey with his girlfriend, Bud longs for his former Manhattan glory. In an effort to get back in the game, he makes a deal with a crooked restaurateur. But quick schemes rarely bring easy pay-offs and as the consequences of his business negotiations unfold, Bud has to make a choice between his integrity and his aspirations.

    Goodbye to All That, directed and written by Angus MacLachlan. (USA) – World Premiere. Otto Wall is just a little unlucky in life, and unbeknownst to him, in love. When his wife suddenly asks for a divorce, he bounces between a search for answers, desperate attempts to stay connected to his daughter, and his fateful reentry into the dating pool. Junebug screenwriter Angus MacLachlan returns to the woods of North Carolina for this sharp and sensitive comedy starring Paul Schneider, Melanie Lynskey, Heather Graham, Anna Camp, Amy Sedaris, and Celia Weston.

    Güeros, directed and written by Alonso Ruiz Palacios, co-written by Gibrán Portela. (Mexico) – North American Premiere. A water balloon suddenly dropping from the sky exploding on a mother’s head in the frantic first moments of this striking debut feature, announces its director, Alonso Ruiz Palacios, as a bold new voice of Mexican cinema. Set amidst the 1999 student strikes in Mexico City, this coming-of-age tale finds two brothers venturing through the city in a sentimental search for an aging legendary musician. Shot in beautiful black-and-white, Güeros brims with youthful exuberance. In Spanish with subtitles.

    Human Capital (Il capitale umano), directed and written by Paolo Virzì, co-written by Francesco Bruni and Francesco Piccolo. (Italy, France) – International Premiere. In Paolo Virzì’s refined three-chapter tale, we begin at the end. Approaching a snowy night from three vastly different perspectives, the lives of two generations overlap as they tumble toward an ill-fated event that inextricably links them. Starring two of Italy’s leading actresses, Valeria Golino and Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, Human Capital twists love, class, and ambition into a singular, true-life story that exposes the consequences of valuing certain human lives over others. In Italian with subtitles.

    The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq (L’Enlèvement de Michel Houellebecq), directed and written by Guillaume Nicloux. (France) – North American Premiere. If novelist Michel Houellebecq had indeed been kidnapped during his 2011 promotional book tour, this may have been the definitive documentary on the case. As a wild alternative, Guillaume Nicloux presents this work of complete fiction starring none other than Houellebecq himself.  Playfully speculating on the explanation for Houellebecq’s mysterious disappearance, this highly entertaining, farcical piece of cinema parallels the wry characteristics of its unique and ever-unconventional subject. In French with subtitles.

    Loitering with Intent, directed by Adam Rapp, written by Michael Godere and Ivan Martin. (USA) – World Premiere.  After running into a film producer eager to invest in a new project, aspiring writers Dominic and Raphael need to come up with a script fast, so the pair head to the seclusion of rural Fire Island, NY, to churn out their masterpiece. But when Dominic’s siren of a sister (Marisa Tomei) turns up desperate for reprieve from her boyfriend (Sam Rockwell), they soon realize they’re in for more than they bargained for. Isabelle McNally and a hilarious Brian Geraghty round out this latest effort from director Adam Rapp.

    Something Must Break (Nånting Måste Gå Sönder), directed and written by Ester Martin Bergsmark, co-written by Eli Levén. (Sweden) – North American Premiere. When Sebastian meets Andreas for the first time, he knows they belong together. While Sebastian defies gender norms—flouting convention in his androgynous fluidity—straight-identifying Andreas becomes unable to accept his attraction to another man, as their relationship progresses. Struggling with his identity, Sebastian becomes increasingly determined to become “Ellie,” even if it means walking away from Andreas. Something Must Break brims with raw electricity as it explores questions of gender and sexuality with refreshing candor. In Swedish with subtitles.

    X/Y, directed and written by Ryan Piers Williams. (USA) – World Premiere. Ryan Piers Williams directs and stars alongside America Ferrera, Amber Tamblyn  and Melonie Diaz in a character-driven drama centered around four restless New Yorkers, and their shifting sexual and romantic relationships as they search for a sense of intimacy and self-identity. As Mark, Jen, Sylvia, and Jake navigate through their emotionally-arrested states, X/Y reveals the honest and wanton desire we all have to connect with someone and what is at stake when that connection fades.

    Zero Motivation directed and written by Talya Lavie. (Israel) – World Premiere. Filmmaker Talya Lavie steps into the spotlight with a dark comedy about everyday life for a unit of young female Israeli soldiers. The human resources office at a remote desert base serves as the setting for this cast of characters, who bide their time pushing paper, battling for the top score in Minesweeper, and counting down the minutes until they can return to civilian life. Amidst their boredom and clashing personalities, issues of commitment—from friendship to love and country—are handled with humor and sharp-edged wit. In Hebrew with subtitles.

    World Documentary Feature Competition

    1971, directed and written by Johanna Hamilton, co-written by Gabriel Rhodes. (USA) – World Premiere. Forty years before WikiLeaks and the NSA scandal, there was Media, Pennsylvania. In 1971, eight activists plotted an intricate break-in to the local FBI offices to leak stolen documents and expose the illegal surveillance of ordinary Americans in an era of anti-war activism. In this riveting heist story, the perpetrators reveal themselves for the first time, reflecting on their actions and raising broader questions surrounding security leaks in activism today.

    Ballet 422, directed by Jody Lee Lipes. (USA) – World Premiere. Cinematographer and documentarian Jody Lee Lipes crafts an intimate, fly-on-the-wall documentary offering a rare peek into the hidden world of professional ballet. The film shadows Justin Peck, wunderkind choreographer of the New York City Ballet, as he undertakes the Herculean task of creating the company’s 422nd original piece. Following the creative process from its embryonic stages to its highly anticipated premiere, Ballet 422 is a powerful celebration of the skill and endurance of New York’s most talented dancers—as well as those who remain hidden in the wings.

    Dior and I (Dior et moi), directed and written by Frédéric Tcheng. (France) – World Premiere. In Frédéric Tcheng’s masterful documentary, one enters the storied world that is the House of Christian Dior with a privileged, behind-the-scenes look at the creation of Raf Simons’ first Dior Haute Couture collection as Artistic Director, a true labor of love by a dedicated, charming, and often humorous group of collaborators.  Beautifully melding the everyday, pressure-filled components of fashion with a mysterious and elegant reverence for the history of this iconic brand, Tcheng’s colorful homage to the seamstresses of the atelier is nothing short of magical. In English and French with subtitles.

    Fishtail, directed and written by Andrew Renzi. (USA) – World Premiere. The iconic voice and noble philosophies proffered by Harry Dean Stanton punctuate this authentic look at life on the edge of wilderness. Producer of festival favorite, Two Gates of Sleep, Andrew Renzi makes his directorial debut with this glimpse into the rugged lifestyle few Americans still pursue. Follow the cowboys of Montana’s Fishtail Basin Ranch as they survive another calving season in this captivating atmospheric documentary. Set to a seraphic score, Stanton would agree, this is a film for “those of earth-born passion.”

    Garnet’s Gold, directed by Ed Perkins. (UK) – World Premiere. Twenty years ago, Garnet Frost nearly lost his life hiking near Scotland’s Loch Arkaig. The near-death experience still haunts him to this day, and, in particular, a peculiar wooden stick he discovered serendipitously right before he was rescued. Believing the staff (as he calls it) is actually a marker for a fortune hidden nearly 300 years ago, Garnet embarks on a treasure hunt to search for the lost riches. But beneath the search for gold, lies a poignant pursuit for life’s meaning and inspiration.

    Mala Mala, directed by Dan Sickles and Antonio Santini. (Puerto Rico) – World Premiere. Antonio Santini and Dan Sickles’ vibrant and visually striking immersion in the transgender community of Puerto Rico celebrates the breadth of experiences among trans-identifying women:  from campaigning for government-recognized human rights, to working in the sex industry, or performing as part of drag troupe, “The Doll House.” Unapologetic and unconventional, Mala Mala explores the ways internal and external identity pave the path of self discovery through the unique yet universal stories of its fascinating cast of characters. In English and Spanish with subtitles.

    Misconception, directed by Jessica Yu. (USA) – World Premiere. For almost 50 years, the world’s population has grown at an alarming rate, raising fears about strains on the Earth’s resources. But how true are these claims? Taking cues from statistics guru Hans Rosling, Misconception offers a provocative glimpse at how the world—and women in particular— are tackling a subject at once personal and global. Following three individuals, director Jessica Yu focuses on the human implications of this highly charged political issue, inspiring a fresh look at the consequences of population growth. In English, Hindi, Mandarin, and Russian with subtitles.

    Ne Me Quitte Pas, directed and written by Sabine Lubbe Bakker and Niels van Koevorden. (Netherlands, Belgium) – International Premiere. Left by his wife for another man, Marcel falls into alcoholism and a deep depression, with only his friend Bob, also an alcoholic, to look after him. The friendship between the two men captures the frailty of the male ego and the natural comedy borne from their candid conversations. Ne Me Quitte Pas follows this downward spiral of mid-life crisis in a tender, often humorous, sometimes disturbing, examination of the ‘crisis of masculinity,’ alongside a mesmerizing exploration of mundane rural existence. In Flemish and French with subtitles.

    Point and Shoot, directed and written by Marshall Curry. (USA) – World Premiere. In 2011, unassuming Matthew VanDyke left his home in Baltimore to find adventure and see the world on his motorcycle, only to end up joining the Libyan rebel army to take arms against Gaddafi. Gun in one hand, video camera in the other, Matthew finally finds purpose and meaning in his wanderlust, until he is captured and held in solitary confinement for six months and must decide where his allegiances really lie. Director and TFF award winner, Marshall Curry (Racing Dreams), captures one man’s arresting transformation from a sheltered kid to a soldier on the front lines.

    Regarding Susan Sontag, directed and written by Nancy Kates, co-written by John Haptas. (USA) – World Premiere. Hungry for life and gracefully outspoken throughout her career, Susan Sontag became one of the most important literary, political, and feminist icons of her generation. Kates’ in depth documentary intimately tracks Sontag’s seminal, life-changing moments through her own words, as read by Patricia Clarkson—from her early infatuation with books to her first experience in a gay bar; from her first marriage to her last lover. Regarding Susan Sontag is a nuanced investigation into the life of a towering cultural critic and writer whose works on photography, war, and terrorism still resonate today. An HBO Documentary film.

    Tomorrow We Disappear, directed by Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber. (USA) – World Premiere. The puppeteers, performers, and magicians of the Kathputli colony in Delhi are the last slum-dweller–artists of their kind. When their land is sold to high-rise developers, they must fight for the only home they know. Fending off relocation, they struggle to keep their mystical Indian folk arts alive and to conserve what beauty remains as they are forced into someone else’s vision of the future. Tomorrow We Disappear is not just documentation, but ultimately becomes an extraordinary act of preservation. In Hindi with subtitles.

    Virunga, directed and written by Orlando von Einsiedel. (UK) – World Premiere. Virunga is Africa’s oldest national park, a UNESCO world heritage site, and the last natural habitat for the endangered mountain gorilla. None of that will stop the business interests and rebel insurgencies lurking at the park’s doorstep. Orlando von Einsiedel pairs gorgeous natural scenes from Virunga with riveting footage of the Congolese crisis, raising an ardent call for conservation as a vital human enterprise. Along the way, he spotlights the incredibly dangerous work that is often required to safeguard the environment. In English, French, and Swahili with subtitles.

    Viewpoints

    Art and Craft, directed by Sam Cullman and Jennifer Grausman. (USA) – World Premiere, Documentary. Mark Landis is one of the most prolific and notorious ‘artists’ of the century. An expert forger of masterpiece art, Landis has duped curators across the nation, further befuddling them by donating his imitations instead of selling them. Many have dedicated years tracking his escapades with one burning question: “Why?” Framed around a cat-and-mouse chase between Landis and those he has hoodwinked, Art and Craft paints a richly complicated portrait of mental illness, skewed philanthropy, and the desire to feel connected.

    The Bachelor Weekend, directed and written by John Butler. (Ireland) – U.S. Premiere, Narrative. Pressured by his best man to spend a bachelor’s weekend camping, foppish groom-to-be, Fionan, reluctantly agrees. But when his fiancée’s alpha-male brother, nicknamed ‘The Machine,’ unexpectedly turns up, the camping trip takes a turn for the worst. Fionan and his genteel friends are no match for the uncouth bully, and the trip begins to look like it will become Fionan’s worst nightmare. A slapstick, good-natured comedy, Bachelor Weekend hilariously delves into the stereotypical realm of masculinity that is camping and the great outdoors.  A Tribeca Film release.

    Bad Hair (Pelo Malo), directed and written by Mariana Rondon. (Venezuela, Peru, Argentina, Germany) – U.S. Premiere, Narrative. Junior, a nine-year-old living in Caracas, wants nothing more than to straighten his unruly hair to look like a singer for his school photo—a fixation that stirs homophobic panic in his overtaxed mother. Each effort Junior makes to alter his appearance and gain his mother’s love is brushed off with abrasive avoidance until he’s ultimately faced with a heartbreaking decision. With a painfully tender performance by Samuel Lange, writer-director Mariana Rondón directs this coming-of-age drama about the search for identity clashing with intolerance. In Spanish with subtitles.

    Below Dreams, directed and written by Garrett Bradley. (USA) – World Premiere, Narrative. A reverie of images and sound, Below Dreams loosely follows the narratives of three very different people returning to New Orleans for the promise of a better life. But as each character experiences the city’s realities, it becomes clear that their individual hopes and dreams may no longer be possible, and that with change must also come sacrifice. Shot documentary style, but with dreamlike qualities melding fiction and reality, this is a hypnotic tribute to both the socially marginalized and to the city of New Orleans itself.

    Beneath the Harvest Sky, directed and written by Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly. (USA) – U.S. Premiere, Narrative. Bored and restless, best friends Dominic and Casper are making plans to escape their small town in Northern Maine to start new lives in Boston. In order to earn the money, Dominic spends the summer harvesting potatoes, while Casper becomes involved in the family business—smuggling drugs over the Canadian border. The divergent paths of the two boys, both trapped in their circumstances in different ways, will change their friendship forever. Brought to life by two stellar lead performances, Beneath the Harvest Sky is an authentic portrayal of adolescent frustration, culminating in a heartbreaking coming-of-age drama.  A Tribeca Film release.

    Black Coal, Thin Ice (Bai Ri Yan Huo), directed and written by Diao Yinan. (China, Hong Kong) – North American Premiere, Narrative. After a botched arrest in a grisly serial-murder case, small-town detective Zhang Zili is suspended from the force, taking a job as a security guard at a coal factory. When another series of mysteriously similar murders takes place five years later, Zhang sets out to investigate on his own. Winner of the top prize at this year’s Berlin Film Festival, Diao Yinan’s moody, quietly powerful thriller is a classic film noir staged against the quotidian lives of a wintry Northern Chinese industrial town. In Mandarin with subtitles.

    Broken Hill Blues (Ömheten), directed and written by Sofia Norlin. (Sweden) – North American Premiere, Narrative. A group of adolescents wrestle with their uncertain futures in a remote mining town that is literally cracking underneath their feet. Kiruna, the northernmost town in Sweden, sits above an iron ore mine that has been slowly eroding the land around it for decades. Soon, Kiruna and everyone in it will have to move, but to where they do not know. As the displaced teenagers linger on the cusp of adulthood, they echo the town’s own fragility in this beautiful and understated film. In Swedish with subtitles.

    Electric Slide, directed and written by Tristan Patterson. (USA) – World Premiere, Narrative. A heightened homage to the City of Angels, Electric Slide riffs on the real-life story of Eddie Dodson, the notorious “Gentleman Bank Robber.”  With a debonair sophistication and a serious talent for flirt, Dodson managed to lure money from mesmerized female tellers at over 60 banks during an epic spree in the 1980s.  Director Tristan Patterson gathers Jim Sturgess, Chloë Sevigny, and Patricia Arquette to paint a dark, hyper-stylized tale of crime, love, and style.  

    Famous Nathan, directed and written by Lloyd Handwerker. (USA) – World Premiere, Documentary. Nathan’s Famous Frankfurters, a New York City icon, has left a lasting imprint on the collective memory and palate of Coney Island. Director and grandson of ‘Famous’ Nathan himself, Lloyd Handwerker, takes a look back at the immigrant experience and almost 100 years of family and New York history in this personal documentary gem. Featuring a strong score, colorful and endearing characters, rare archival material, and a nuanced editing style, Famous Nathanwill not disappoint New York history enthusiasts.

    An Honest Liar, directed and written by Justin Weinstein, Tyler Measom, co-written by Greg O’Toole. (USA) – World Premiere, Documentary. Renowned magician James “The Amazing” Randi, has been wowing audiences with his jaw-dropping illusions, escapes, and sleight of hand for over 50 years. When Randi began seeing his cherished art form co-opted by all manner of con artists, from faith healers and fortune-tellers to psychics and gurus, Randi made it his mission to expose the simple tricks charlatans have borrowed from magicians to swindle the masses. Weinstein and Measom chronicle Randi’s best debunkings, with the help of interviewees including Penn Jillette, Bill Nye, and “Mythbuster” Adam Savage, ultimately showing us how we are all vulnerable to deception, even “The Amazing” Randi himself.

    Honeymoon, directed and written by Leigh Janiak, co-written by Phil Graziadei. (USA) – New York Premiere, Narrative. What begins as a happy honeymoon for newlyweds Bea (Rose Leslie) and Paul (Harry Treadaway) takes a sinister turn when Bea disappears from bed one night and Paul discovers her the next day naked in the woods with no memory of how she got there. Soon Bea begins an escalating, unexplainable shift from a happy, carefree young woman to a cold, distant, and calculating one. Supernatural forces may be at work, but they uncannily echo some of the anxieties that come with a new marriage—issues such as secrecy, mistrust, and loss of identity—in Janiak’s brooding domestic drama.

    I Won’t Come Back (Ya Ne Vernus), directed by Ilmar Raag, written by Oleg Gaze and Jaroslava Pulinovich. (Belarus, Estonia, Finland, Kazakhstan, Russia) – World Premiere, Narrative. Aloof graduate student Anya is on the run from the police when she encounters precocious and willful Kristina, an orphan determined to find her grandmother in Kazakhstan. Kristina offers a momentary solution to Anya’s desperate situation, and the unlikely pair begins a harrowing and unpredictable odyssey, hitchhiking across the epic landscapes of Russia and its neighboring countries. I Won’t Come Back is a visceral look at survival and a heartfelt exploration into the depths of friendship and the meaning of family. In Russian with subtitles.

    Ice Poison (Bing Du), directed and written by Midi Z. (Myanmar, Taiwan R.O.C.) – North American Premiere, Narrative. Faced with diminishing returns on his harvest, a poor young farmer in Myanmar pawns his cow for a moped and seeks alternative income as a taxi driver. Among his first fares is a woman making a new start after escaping an arranged marriage in China. Together, they are lured into the lucrative business of selling “ice poison” (crystal meth) around town. With an unobtrusive documentary style, Burmese-Taiwanese director Midi Z captures the struggles faced by many in an unseen part of the world. In Burmese and Chinese Yunnan with subtitles.

    Karpotrotter (Karpopotnik), directed and written by Matjaž Ivanišin, co-written by Nebeojša Pop-Tasić. (Slovenia) – North American Premiere, Narrative. Karpotrotter is a road movie about place, time, and memory, as well as an homage to filmmaker Karpo Godina, whose work flourished during the Black Wave of Yugoslavian filmmaking in the 1960s. Director Matjaž Ivanišin retraces the footsteps of his compatriot’s journey, interlacing Godina’s original Super 8mm footage with folklore music, landscape imagery, and contemporary portraits of the local villagers. In Slovene with subtitles.

    Love & Engineering, directed and written by Tonislav Hristov. (Finland, Germany, Bulgaria) – International Premiere, Documentary. Is there an algorithm for love? Atanas, a Bulgarian engineer living in Finland, is determined to find out. With the help of some of his geeky bachelor friends, he sets up a series of experiments to crack the code and develop a new, scientific approach to dating. This charming and lighthearted documentary follows Atanas and company as they research pheromones, chart brain waves, and try out “hacks” on blind dates, in their quest to find romance in the modern world. In Bulgarian, English and Finnish with subtitles.

    Maravilla, directed and written by Juan Pablo Cadaveira. (Argentina) – International Premiere, Documentary. A true underdog story, Maravilla follows Argentinian boxer Sergio ‘Maravilla’ Martinez, as he sets out to reclaim the title of Middleweight champion that was unfairly snatched from him in 2011 by Julio Chavez, Jr. Focusing on the rise of Martinez from penniless amateur to world champion and sporting celebrity, director Juan Pablo Cadaveira offers a fascinating glimpse into today’s boxing landscape, revealing the politics of the sporting profession that often places entertainment value over the sport itself. In English and Spanish with subtitles.

    The Overnighters, directed by Jesse Moss. (USA) – New York Premiere, Documentary. After hydraulic fracturing uncovers a rich oil field in North Dakota, a small conservative town is tested as hordes of unemployed men chasing the “American Dream” pour into its borders. Desperate men, often running from their past, find compassion and refuge in the form of a local pastor. However, the more responsibility he shoulders, the more everything threatens to come crumbling down. A film of dualities, this provocative modern-day parable by documentarian Jesse Moss challenges the very fabric of our society.

    Starred Up, directed by David Mackenzie, written by Jonathan Asser. (UK) – U.S. Premiere, Narrative. Writer Jonathan Asser intelligently brings the brutality of British prison life to raw, unflinching life in this tense and unpredictable drama. Jack O’Connell (This Is England) plays Eric, a young offender so violent and volatile that he is ‘starred up’—prematurely moved to an adult prison. As he tries to keep his head down and navigate this new microcosm of societal codes and loyalties, Eric’s explosive nature is tested under the ceaseless gaze of guards and fellow inmates, one who turns out to be his estranged father, Neville (Ben Mendelsohn).  A Tribeca Film release.

    Summer of Blood, directed and written by Onur Tukel. (USA) – World Premiere, Narrative. Misanthropic and immature Eric faces a premature mid-life crisis after his girlfriend leaves him. With no career and even less charisma in bed, it seems like this loveable loser is beyond hope, until one fateful summer night when a vampire bites him in a Brooklyn alleyway. The next day, Eric finds his confidence invigorated and his stomach in excruciating pain that can only be cured by one thing…blood. Onur Tukel directs and stars in this delightfully dark comedy about love, lust, and humanity.

    Traitors, directed and written by Sean Gullette. (Morocco) – North American Premiere, Narrative. In Sean Gullette’s feature debut, Malika is the lead singer of an all-female punk band and sees music as a means to escape a dull and conservative life in Tangier. When a producer expresses interest in her, she jumps at the chance, but first she’ll need to find the money for recording, and a drug run across the Moroccan border may be her only option. Fiery and energetic, Traitors is a spirited and rebellious journey of a young woman breaking from the traditional life set before her. In Arabic, English and French with subtitles.
    Traitors is screening as part of a special cultural partnership with Venice Days where a European film showcased at Venice Days is selected by organizers there to have its international premiere at Tribeca. In 2013 Venice Days premiered Lenny Cooke.

    Vara: A Blessing, directed and written by Khyentse Norbu. (Bhutan) – North American Premiere, Narrative. Raised in a sheltered village, young Lila yearns for a life devoted to Hindu worship, like that of her devadasi mother, but she begins to encounter worldly obstacles to her spiritual fulfillment. Guileless, Lila agrees to model for a lowly village boy who hopes to become a sculptor, unknowingly endangering both of their lives under the ever-present gaze of the villagers, especially the village landlord’s son.

    Young Bodies Heal Quickly, directed and written by Andrew T. Betzer. (USA) – World Premiere, Narrative. Two brothers drift aimlessly through their summer days, trashing abandoned cars and playing with paintball guns, until the accidental death of a young woman forces them to make drastic decisions. With few options, the duo flee across state lines to dodge arrest and search for refuge. Poetic, funny, and poignant, this quietly mesmerizing film follows the brothers’ transitions from boys to men through an absorption of the world—good and bad—around them.

    In addition to those announced today, the Festival presents feature-length films in the Spotlight, Midnight, and Special sections, which will be announced on March 6, 2014.

    2014 Competition Feature Film Awards:

    Awards in the World Narrative and World Documentary Competitions will be presented in the following juried categories: Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature, sponsored by AT&T; Best New Narrative Director (for first-time feature directors in any section); Best Actor in a Narrative Feature; Best Actress in a Narrative Feature; Best Screenplay in a Narrative Feature; Best Cinematography in a Narrative Feature; Best Documentary Feature; Best Editing in a Documentary Feature; and Best New Documentary Director (for first-time feature directors in any section).

    Two feature films—one narrative and one documentary—will be selected to receive the Heineken Audience Award, the audience choice for best feature film. Films playing in the World Narrative Competition, World Documentary Competition, Viewpoints, Spotlight and Midnight sections are eligible.

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