• TIFF Next Wave Film Festival to Kick Off on February 15

     [caption id="attachment_3122" align="alignnone" width="550"]Dead Before Dawn 3D[/caption]

    TIFF unveiled today the lineup of film screenings and special events for the 2013 TIFF Next Wave Film Festival scheduled for February 15 to 17.

    This second edition of the TIFF Next Wave Film Festival will again kick off with the Battle of the Scores — a high-profile showcase for young musical and filmmaking talent, featuring high-school indie bands scoring youth-made short films live in front of an audience and a panel of professional judges from the Toronto music and film community, including film composer Adrian Ellis, and director, actor and choreographer Corey Bowles.

    The festival’s Closing Night film is April Mullen’s Dead Before Dawn 3D (2012), described as a hilariously clever coming-of-age adventure story that puts a whole new spin on the zombie genre. Starring director Mullen and writer/producer Tim Doiron, the film was shot in Niagara Falls, Ontario and it follows a group of college students that accidentally unleash an evil curse that causes people to kill themselves and turn into Zemons, aka Zombie Demons. 

    Film lineup includes:

    5-25-77 director: Patrick Read Johnson, USA, 2012
    Work-in-progress screening 

    It’s late 1976.  Seventeen-year-old Pat Johnson, the only sci-fi-obsessed film geek in his small town of Wadsworth, IL, population 750, is a one-man motion picture studio, expressing his manic energy by making Super-8 sequels to the popular blockbusters of the day, as well as sci-fi abstractions of his own alienated existence.  After meeting and falling in love with Linda Augustyniak, a serious and hardworking local girl, Pat seems ready to renounce his dreams, get a “real” job, and settle into a life of work, marriage, and 2.3 children.

    But when his mother cold-calls the editor of American Cinematographer Magazine in a desperately naive attempt to get her beloved eldest child an entrée into Hollywood (and OUT of his probable hometown destiny), Pat is given an opportunity few even imagine.

    Bushido Sixteen director: Tomoyuki Furumaya, Japan, 2010

    Kaori is a kendo elite who has been practicing since the age of three, but she can’t forget the game that she lost to an obscure opponent. To restore her pride, she enters the same school only to find that the opponent is a carefree undisciplined girl called Sanae with no track record and who practices kendo just for fun. Desperate to find out why she lost, Kaori challenges Sanae in an attempt to discover her hidden talent. Sanae, at first hesitant and unconfident, begins to discover the joy of playing for keeps. Tough-as-nails Kaori and soft and benevolent Sanae: will they become each other’s best opponents?

    Dead Before Dawn 3D director: April Mullen, Canada, 2012 (Phase 4 Films)*Director and Writer/Producer Tim 

    Casper Galloway’s  future is one giant question mark. With only two weeks until college graduation he still lives with his mother, is indecisive to a fault and is one credit away from failing. But just when Casper thinks things couldn’t get any worse, he and his friends accidentally unleash a curse that causes people to kill themselves and turn into Zombie Demons, aka Zemons. Armed with a slew of homemade weapons and a Winnebago, the team races through the night searching for a way to reverse the curse and save the world.

    Earthbound director: Alan Brennan, Ireland, 2012

    At 11 years old, Joe Norman is told by his dying father that he is an alien hiding on earth. Joe believes him. He grows up to be a diehard fan-boy working in a comic shop. When he falls for down-to-earth Maria, a fellow sci-fi fan, he is inspired to lead a more normal social existence… until intergalactic bounty hunters track Joe down at his new office and the couple soon learn the dangerous truth about who Joe really is.

    Fame High director: Scott Hamilton Kennedy, USA, 2012

    From the nail-biting freshman auditions to the spectacular graduation performance,  Fame High captures the in-class and at-home drama, competition, heartbreak, and triumph of one year following a group of struggling freshmen and seniors at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. Here, both underprivileged and privileged teenagers reach for their dreams of becoming actors, singers, dancers, and musicians. Fame High is where intensely devoted teachers and highly motivated students go about the business of making the best better. But all-that-talent means all-that-pressure when students are competing for the same roles, the same teachers’ favours, and the same career opportunities. They are also struggling with  grades, family and young love, while defying complications of race, culture, and economic challenges at every turn. 

    Family Weekend director: Benjamin Epps, USA, 2012

    When mom Samantha (a no-nonsense, high-powered business executive with no time for the family) and dad Duncan (a happy-golucky artist who can’t be bothered to earn a paycheck) miss their daughter’s big jump-rope competition, Emily hits her breaking point. 

    Steaming from yet another parental slight, Em enlists the help of her siblings to take her parents hostage, in order to teach the family to be “normal”.

    Ghost Graduation director: Javier Ruiz Caldera, Spain, 2012

    Modesto is a teacher. Modesto sometimes sees dead people. Not only has this cost him a fortune at the shrink’s, it’s also gotten him fired from every school he’s ever worked at. His luck changes when he lands a job at Monforte, where five students have turned the prestigious school into a house of horrors. Modesto is charged with getting all five kids to pass their senior year and to get out of there once and for all. But it won’t be that easy… they’ve been dead for over 20 years.

    Molly Maxwell director: Sara St. Onge, Canada, 2012 (Entertainment One)

    In an alternative school filled with prodigies, talents, and unique individuals, Molly Maxwell feels decidedly ordinary. With family and friends eagerly waiting to see how she distinguishes herself, she finds herself unable to commit to any path for fear she’ll let the world down. When her young, handsome, slightly disillusioned English teacher enters the picture and relieves the pressure, Molly is suddenly able to flourish. But when their student-teacher bond becomes more intimate, Molly risks alienating everyone she loves on the road to figuring out just what makes her special.

    Otelo Burning director: Sara Blecher, South Africa, 2011

    When 16-year-old Otelo Buthelezi takes to the water for the first time, it’s clear that he was born to surf. But then tragedy strikes and, on the day that Nelson Mandela is released from prison, Otelo is forced to choose between surfing success and justice. This is a beautifully made, insightful and entertaining film that captures a turbulent time in the history of South Africa.

    Struck by Lightning director: Brian Dannelly, USA, 2012 (Mongrel Media)

    High-school senior Carson Phillips (Chris Colfer, Glee) was destined for bigger things than his close-minded small town could ever offer. He was on a path to greatness, but destiny had a different plan when he was suddenly killed by a bolt of lightning in his school parking lot. Demonstrating that life is what happens while you’re busy planning your future, Carson recounts the last few weeks of his life via witty, insightful flashbacks, including a blackmail scheme targeting the popular kids in school that he concocts with his best friend (Rebel Wilson, Pitch Perfect), a home life that includes a mother (Allison Janney, Juno, The West Wing) who’s more interested in the bottle than her son’s future and, an estranged father (Dermot Mulroney, My Best Friend’s Wedding) who suddenly appears with a pregnant fiancée (Christina Hendricks, Mad Men).

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  • 2013 Beaufort International Film Festival to run February 13 – 17, Announces Finalists

    Death By China – Peter Navarro

    The Beaufort International Film Festival scheduled for February 13 – 17, 2013 in Beaufort, South Carolina, is gearing up to be a huge event. Tickets officially went on sale earlier this week.

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  • 15 Films added to 2013 Santa Barbara International Film Festival line-up

    [caption id="attachment_3118" align="alignnone" width="550"]A Royal Affair[/caption]

    The Santa Barbara International Film Festival, which begins Thursday, January 24, 2013, has added 15 films to the already stellar lineup of films being showcased at this year’s festival, including three Academy Award nominees, two World Premieres and two US Premieres.

    “We’ve added some fantastic new films that broaden the scope of the program and embody the international spirit of the festival,” commented Michael Albright, SBIFF’s Director of Programming.

    World Premieres being added are:

    ANGELS IN EXILE, South Africa – World Premiere
    Directed by Billy Raftery
    Narrated by Charlize Theron
    An 8-year journey that challenges viewers to look past the violent and often graphic image of homeless youth and see them for what they are…children.

    RETREAT, Canada – World Premiere
    Directed by David Cherniack
    A documentary that follows the trials and tribulations of thirty-five Westerners as they go through an intense eight-week meditation retreat in Thailand led by Alan Wallace.

    U.S. Premieres being added are:

    MADDENED BY HIS ABSENCE (J’enrage de son Absence), France – US Premiere
    Directed by Sandrine Bonnaire
    Deeply affected by the death of his son in a car accident nine years ago, Jacques (William Hurt) struggles to come to terms with his past.

    SHYAMAL UNCLE TURNS OFF THE LIGHTS, India – US Premiere
    Directed by Suman Ghosh
    An 80-year-old Kolkata retiree is determined to turn off the streetlights after sunrise, but finding someone to take him seriously proves a battle against indifference and complacency

    Oscar nominated films added are:

    A ROYAL AFFAIR (En kongelig affære), Denmark/Sweden/Czech Republic/Germany (Academy Award® nominee)
    Directed by Nikolaj Arcel
    This sumptuous historical drama from writer-director Nikolaj Arcel (screenwriter of the original The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) chronicles the scandalous love triangle between a queen, her German doctor, and the mad King of Denmark.

    HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE, USA
    Academy Award® nominee for Best Documentary
    Directed by David France
    A vital documentary that traces the history of the AIDS activist coalitions ACT UP and TAG, whose radical initiatives broke crucial new ground in the fight against HIV in the 1980s and 1990s.

    WAR WITCH (Rebelle), Canada
    (Academy Award® nominee)
    Directed by Kim Nguyen
    In Sub-Saharan Africa, a 14-year-old girl tells her unborn child the story of her life at war. It all started when she was abducted by the rebel army at the age of 12.

    In addition, the following are also added to the program:

    BEIJING FLICKERS, China– West Coast Premiere
    Directed by Yuan Zhang
    Dumped, fired, evicted and abandoned by everyone, a down-on-his-luck man finds solace with a circle of equally ill-fated friends, in this touching and lighthearted drama from independent Chinese auteur Zhang Yuan.

    BEYOND THE HILLS, Romania/France
    Directed by Cristian Mungiu
    A young Romanian woman sets out to retrieve her childhood friend from her “captivity” in a remote Romanian monastery, and soon comes into violent conflict with the archaic strictures of this traditional community.

    MUMBAI’S KING, India
    Directed by Manjeet Singh
    A young boy comes of age in a Mumbai slum while dealing with his long-suffering mother and violent father, in this gently observational portrait crafted in the tradition of the great neorealist classics.

    STEEL, Italy
    Directed by Stefano Mordini
    In a working class town off the coast of Italy just miles from paradise, Anna and Francesca, two teenage girls spend their last summer of innocence before high school.

    SOUND CITY, USA – West Coast Premiere
    Directed by Dave Grohl
    Multitalented musician Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters and Nirvana fronts a mission to resurrect the rapidly vanishing human touch behind the creation of music.

    STILL MINE, Canada
    Directed by Michael McGowan
    An elderly couple fights against local authorities in rural New Brunswick to build their final home.

    STUDENT, Kazakhstan – West Coast Premiere
    Directed by Darezhan Omirbayev
    A solitary philosophy student commits a calculated violent crime against the backdrop of Kazakhstan’s growing inequality, institutional corruption, and a ruthless underworld in this contemporary adaptation of Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment.

    THE PUNK SYNDROME, Finland/Norway/Sweden
    Directed by Jukka Kärkkäinen, J-P Passi
    Punk music is about being a voluntary outcast. What if the outcasts want acceptance? Turning punk on its head, the mentally challenged members of Pertti Kurikka’s Name Day find acceptance in the music they create.

     

    via Santa Barbara International Film Festival

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  • The international premiere of Stoker Starring Nicole Kidman to Close 2013 International Film Festival Rotterdam

    The international premiere of Stoker, the English debut of South Korean filmmaker Park Chan-Wook (Oldboy, Thirst, Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance), will close the 2013 International Film Festival Rotterdam on Saturday February 2. 

    Park has won many awards, including the Alfred Bauer Award of the Berlin film festival (for I’m a Cyborg) and the jury prize of the Cannes film festival (for Oldboy and Thirst).

    The closing film is a psychological drama/thriller starring Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland, Jane Eyre), Matthew Goode (A Single Man, Watchmen) and Nicole Kidman (The Hours, The Others). Stoker is the script writing debut of actor Wentworth Miller (Prison Break).

    Stoker is about the girl India (Wasikowska), whose father dies in an auto accident. Her Uncle Charlie (Goode), who she never knew existed, comes to live with her and her emotionally unstable mother Evelyn (Kidman). Soon after his arrival, she comes to suspect this mysterious, charming man has ulterior motives, but instead of feeling outrage or horror, this friendless girl becomes increasingly infatuated with him.

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  • SXSW Film 2013 to Open With The Incredible Burt Wonderstone Plus Announces 6 Films

    [caption id="attachment_3114" align="alignnone" width="550"]The Incredible Burt Wonderstone[/caption]

    SXSW 2013 will open with the world premiere of The Incredible Burt Wonderstone.  Starring Steve Carell, and Steve Buscemi, with costars Carrey, Olivia Wilde, Alan Arkin and James Gandolfini, the film is described by the festival as a “hilarious, uproarious comedy.” As superstar Vegas magicians and former best friends Burt and Anton grow to secretly loathe each other, their long-time act implodes, allowing an ambitious rival street performer the big break he’s been waiting for. 

    Joining The Incredible Burt Wonderstone are 6 films including Alex Winter’s Napster documentary Downloaded, the long awaited Evil Dead remake and new films from Harmony Korine and Joe Swanberg. The documentary Good Ol’ Freda and the debut of Everyone’s Going to Die complete the first 6 films announced for the 20th SXSW Film Conference and Festival.

    Downloaded (World Premiere)
    Director: Alex Winter

    Downloaded is a documentary that explores the rise and fall of Napster and the birth of the digital revolution. It’s about the teens that helped start this revolution, and the artists and industries who continue to be impacted by it.

    Drinking Buddies (World Premiere)
    Director/Screenwriter: Joe Swanberg

    You know what makes the line between “Friends” and “More Than Friends” really blurry? Beer. 
    Cast: Olivia Wilde, Jake Johnson, Anna Kendrick, Ron Livingston, Joe Swanberg

    Everyone’s Going to Die (World Premiere)
    Director/Screenwriter: Jones

    A guy whose life is falling apart, meets a girl whose life can’t get started. Two people, one chance, a million reasons why not. A story of weirdness and redemption with talking cats, roller-skating beavers and nobody dying. 
    Cast: Nora Tschirner, Rob Knighton, Kellie Shirley, Madeline Duggan, Stirling Gallacher

    Evil Dead (World Premiere)
    Director: Fede Alvarez, Screenwriters: Fede Alvarez & Rodo Sayagues

    Five friends, holed up in a remote cabin, discover a Book of the Dead that unwittingly summons up dormant demons which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left to fight for survival. 
    Cast: Jane Levy, Shiloh Fernandez, Lou Taylor Pucci, Jessica Lucas, Elizabeth Blackmore

    Good Ol’ Freda (World Premiere)
    Director: Ryan White

    Good Ol’ Freda tells the story of Freda Kelly, a shy Liverpudlian teenager asked to work for a young local band hoping to make it big: the Beatles. Their loyal secretary from beginning to end, Freda tells her tales for the first time in 50 years.

    The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (World Premiere)
    Director: Don Scardino, Story by Chad Kultgen & Tyler Mitchell and Jonathan Goldstein & John Francis Daley. Screenplay by Jonathan Goldstein & John Francis Daley

    As superstar Vegas magicians and former best friends Burt and Anton grow to secretly loathe each other, their long-time act implodes, allowing an ambitious rival street performer the big break he’s been waiting for.
    Cast: Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi, Olivia Wilde, with Alan Arkin, James Gandolfini and Jim Carrey

    Spring Breakers (US Premiere)
    Director/Screenwriter: Harmony Korine

    Four sexy college girls plan to fund their spring break getaway by burglarizing a fast food shack. But that’s only the beginning… 
    Cast: James Franco, Selena Gomez, Vanessa Hudgens, Ashley Benson, Rachel Korine, Gucci Mane

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  • Full Frame Documentary Film Festival 2013 Thematic Program and Tribute to Honor Jessica Yu

    The Full Frame Documentary Film Festival has announced its 2013 Thematic Program and Tribute celebrating the work of Academy Award winning filmmaker Jessica Yu. 

    The program will be curated by Amir Bar-Lev director of the documentary films “Fighter” (2001), “My Kid Could Paint That” (2007), and “The Tillman Story” (2010). He co-produced the documentary “Trouble The Water” (2008), which won the 2008 Full Frame Grand Jury Award and was a 2009 Academy Award Nominee. Bar-Lev is currently directing “Happy Valley”, about the Penn State scandal.

    The festival will honor Jessica Yu with the Full Frame Tribute and will feature a retrospective of her work. Yu is a director of both documentaries and scripted films. She won an Oscar® for Best Documentary Short for “Breathing Lessons” (1996), a film about Mark O’Brien, a poet confined to an iron lung. Her latest film for Participant Media, “Last Call at the Oasis” (2011), is a chronicle of the water crisis.  Her documentaries include the award-winning features “Protagonist” (2007), “In the Realms of the Unreal” (2004), and HBO’s “The Living Museum” (1998), and the shorts “Meet Mr. Toilet” (2012) and “The Kinda Sutra” (2009).

    Both Yu and Bar-Lev will attend the festival. Specific titles for the Thematic Program and Full Frame Tribute, along with additional attending guests, will be announced in March.

    The 16th Annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival will be held April 4-7, 2013, in Durham, N.C.

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  • Tribeca Film to Present Alex Karpovsky Double Feature Theatrical Release In New York City February 22 2013

     

    [caption id="attachment_3110" align="alignnone" width="550"]Alex (Alex Karpovsky) in Red Flag.[/caption]

    Tribeca Film will release two upcoming features from writer/director/actor Alex Karpovsky (“Girls”) – Red Flag and Rubberneck – in a unique double feature theatrical run at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center in New York, starting on February 22, 2013.

    Rubberneck described as “a slow-burn character study-turned-psychosexual thriller” had its world premiere at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival. Co-written by Karpovsky and Garth Donovan, the film “is a chillingly believable story of workplace romance gone wrong.” Months after a weekend fling, Boston research scientist Paul (Karpovsky) continues to lust after his beautiful coworker Danielle (Jamie Ray Newman), nurturing his fantasies with the occasional polite exchange at work. But once she starts dating another scientist at their lab, his infatuation quickly turns into obsession – and he finds himself unable to control his desires.

    Red Flag world-premiered at the 2012 Los Angeles Film Festival, went on to win multiple awards at other festivals, and was recently nominated for Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You at the 2012 Gotham Independent Film Awards.

    Red Flag is described as “a laugh-out-loud road trip comedy, starring writer/director Alex Karpovsky (“Girls,” Tiny Furniture) as Alex Karpovsky, a newly-single indie filmmaker who hits the road with an old friend (Onur Tukel) to promote one of his films. As the pair travels from one half-empty theater to the next, pursued by an adoring fan (Jennifer Prediger) who drives them into an exceptionally uncomfortable love triangle, Alex-as-Alex is forced to suffer an endless series of humiliations, each one more absurd than the last.”

    Karpovsky is one of the stars of the smash HBO series Girls and has appeared in films such as Tiny Furniture, Sleepwalk With Me, and Beeswax; in early 2013, he will be seen in the Coen Brothers’ new feature Inside Llewyn Davis, as well as Supporting Characters (a January 2013 Tribeca Film release). As a writer-director, his prior films include Woodpecker and The Hole Story.

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  • PBS Continues Commitment to Independent Films in 2013 – Short Film Festival and Independent Film Showcase Announced

     [caption id="attachment_3108" align="alignnone" width="550"]The Waiting Room – A film by Peter Nicks[/caption]

    PBS continues it support of independent film with the return of the second annual Online Film Festival and the Independent Film Showcase in the Fall.

    PBS’ Online Film Festival, beginning March 4  will showcase 25 short films and viewers will have the opportunity to vote for their favorite short film from March 4 through March 22; the film with the most votes will receive the People’s Choice Award.The winning film will be announced in early April.

    Additionally, this fall, PBS will present a four-week Independent Film Showcase with programs airing Monday nights at 10 p.m.(broadcast dates TBD). The Showcase will feature films from the landmark series POV and INDEPENDENT LENS.

    The featured films include the following (air dates are TBD):

    “56 Up”- POV A film by Michael Apted

    “56 Up” is the eighth film in a series of landmark documentaries that began 49 years ago when UK-based Granada’s World in Action team, inspired by the Jesuit maxim “Give me the child until he is seven and I will give you the man,” interviewed a diverse group of seven-year-old children from all over England, asking them about their lives and their dreams for the future. Michael Apted, a researcher for the original film, has returned to interview the “children” every seven years since, at ages 14, 21, 28, 35, 42, 49, and now at age 56. In this latest chapter, more life-changing decisions are revealed, more shocking announcements are made and more of the original group takes part than ever before, speaking out on a variety of subjects including love, marriage, career and class.

    “Brooklyn Castle”- POV A film by Katie Dellamaggiore

    Imagine a school where the cool kids are the chess team. Welcome to I.S. 318.”Brooklyn Castle”tells the stories of five members of the chess team at a below-the-poverty-line inner city junior high school that has won more national championships than any other in the country. The film follows the challenges these kids face in their personal lives -and on the chessboard – and is as much about the sting of their losses as it is about anticipation of their victories.

    “Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey” – INDEPENDENT LENS A film by Ramona Diaz

    For Arnel Pineda, the past five years have been the stuff that dreams are made of. In 2007, hisfriend began uploading videos of the aspiring Filipino singer covering classic rock songs onto YouTube. One of the videoswas seen by Neal Schon, guitarist for the iconic rock band Journey. Blown away by Pineda’s talent and uncanny vocal similarity to former Journey front man Steve Perry, Schon flew Pineda from Manila to San Francisco to audition for the band.The rest is history. But Pineda’s personal journey had just begun. His mother died when he was 12 and he ended up on the streets. And with no classical music training, he was anything but prepared for the grueling physical and emotional strains that come from fronting a rock band on a whirlwind world tour. Can a man who has already overcome so many obstacles deal with the demands of his newfound fame?

    “The Waiting Room” – INDEPENDENT LENS A film by Peter Nicks

    “The Waiting Room” is an immersive documentary film that interweaves several stories that unfold in surprising ways in the ER waiting room at Oakland, California’s Highland Hospital-a facility stretched to the breaking point. The film is an intimate rendering of the story of our health care system at a moment of great change, told through the eyes of people stuck-sometimes for up to 14 hours-in the waiting room. The program tells the story of a remarkably diverse populationbattling their way through seismic shifts in the nation’s health care system while weathering the storm of a national recession. It’s a film about one hospital, its multifaceted community, and how our common vulnerability to illness binds us together. “This is the rare film that can change the way you think and see the world,” says The San Francisco Chronicle.

     

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  • Variance Films to Release An Oversimplification Of Her Beauty

    Variance Films will release Terence Nance’s award-winning debut, AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY in US and Canadian theaters beginning April 12th, 2013. Cinema Guild will then release the film on DVD and digital platforms in late summer 2013.

    AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY, which debuted at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival and winner of 2012 Gotham Award for “Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You” documents the relationship between Terence and a lovely young woman (Namik Minter) as it teeters on the divide between platonic and romantic. Utilizing a tapestry of live action and multiple styles of animation, Terence explores the fantasies, emotions, and memories that race through his mind as he examines and re-examines a singular moment in time. Executive producers of the film include Jay-Z, Wyatt Cenac, Dream Hampton, and Joy Bryant.

    “It’s been a long road for this film. We first rolled camera in 2006, and on that day I never would have imagined that this day would come,” said Terence Nance. “I’m extremely excited to be partnering with Dylan and Variance to bring AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY to theaters. They are fearless defenders of the theatrical experience, and I’m convinced the best place to see this film is at a theater near you.”

    AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY will be the third Variance Films release from the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, after Spike Lee’s RED HOOK SUMMER and Mark Webber’s THE END OF LOVE (in theaters March 1st). Variance’s next release will be Dave Grohl’s SOUND CITY, a 2013 Sundance Film Festival selection, in theaters February 1st.

    AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY is a Media MVMT production, and was produced by Terence Nance, Andrew D Corkin and James Bartlett. The deal was negotiated by Dylan Marchetti on behalf of Variance Films and by Traction Media on behalf of the producers.

     

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  • DGA Announces Nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for 2012

    [caption id="attachment_3105" align="alignnone" width="550"]How To Survive A Plague[/caption]

    The Directors Guild of America today announced the nominees for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentaries for the year 2012.

    The winners will be announced at the 65th Annual DGA Awards Dinner on Saturday, February 2, 2013, hosted by director/actor/producer Kelsey Grammer.

    The nominees for the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary for 2012 are (in alphabetical order):

    MALIK BENDJELLOUL
    Searching For Sugar Man
    This is Mr. Bendjelloul’s first DGA Award nomination.

    KIRBY DICK
    The Invisible War 
    This is Mr. Dick’s first DGA Award nomination.

    DAVID FRANCE
    How To Survive A Plague
    This is Mr. France’s first DGA Award nomination.

    LAUREN GREENFIELD
    The Queen of Versailles
    This is Ms. Greenfield’s first DGA Award nomination.

    ALISON KLAYMAN
    Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry
    This is Ms. Klayman’s first DGA Award nomination.

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  • Amour Among 2013 Golden Globes Winners

    [caption id="attachment_2949" align="alignnone" width="550"]Amour[/caption]

    The Hollywood Foreign Press Association handed out the annual Golden Globes last night in Hollywood, and Ben Affleck’s Argo was the night’s biggest winner, taking home awards for best picture and director in a motion picture. Another winner, Michael Haneke picked up the best foreign film award for Amour, which now seems to be a lock on the same award in the upcoming Academy Awards.

    The winners of the 70th Annual Golden Globe Awards for Motion Pictures 

     

    BEST MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
    ARGO
    Warner Bros. Pictures, GK Films, Smokehouse Pictures; Warner Bros. Pictures

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
    JESSICA CHASTAIN Zero Dark Thirty

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE – DRAMA
    DANIEL DAY-LEWIS Lincoln

    BEST MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
    LES MISERABLES
    Universal Pictures, A Working Title Films/Cameron Mackintosh Productions; Universal Pictures

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
    JENNIFER LAWRENCE Silver Linings Playbook

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MOTION PICTURE – COMEDY OR MUSICAL
    HUGH JACKMAN Les Miserables

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
    BRAVE
    Walt Disney Pictures, Pixar Animation Studios; Walt Disney Pictures

    BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
    AMOUR (Austria)
    Les Films Du Losange, X Filme Creative Pool, Wega Film; Sony Pictures Classics

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
    ANNE HATHAWAY Les Miserables

    BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A MOTION PICTURE
    CHRISTOPH WALTZ

    BEST DIRECTOR – MOTION PICTURE BEN AFFLECK

    BEST SCREENPLAY – MOTION PICTURE QUENTIN TARANTINO

    BEST ORIGINAL SCORE – MOTION PICTURE MYCHAEL DANNA

    BEST ORIGINAL SONG – MOTION PICTURE
    “Skyfall”
    Music & Lyrics by: Adele and Paul Epworth

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  • 2013 Palm Springs International Film Festival Announces Festival Winners, The Sapphires Win Top Prize

    [caption id="attachment_3102" align="alignnone" width="550"]The Sapphires[/caption]

    The Sapphires (Australia) directed by Wayne Blair, and based on the real-life story of an all-female Aboriginal singing group in 1960’s Australia that went from folk to soul with unexpected success, received the Mercedes-Benz Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature at the 24th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival.

    Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey (USA) directed by Ramona Diaz received the Audience Award Best for Documentary Feature.  This documentary is about the dilemma the rock band Journey faces to replace their lead singer Steve Perry after he quits the band. They eventually find the perfect solution via YouTube: a street kid who fronted a Filipino cover band.

    The FIPRESCI Prize for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year jury selected Fill the Void (Israel), directed by Rama Burshtein, “for portraying a culture usually depicted in stereotypical terms, with subtlety, sympathy and sensuality and employing a style that is intimate, but not intrusive.”  In the film, an 18-year-old in Tel Aviv’s Hassidic community must choose between her heart’s desire and familial duty in a drama that make the conventions of the marriage plot feel brand new.

    The New Voices/New Visions selected The Cleaner (Peru) directed by Adrian Saba.   The film tells the story of a mysterious and deadly epidemic in Lima, Perù, where a depressed and isolated man cleans up after the dying. When he takes in a frightened young boy who has lost his mother, he’s quietly transformed by the experience of caring for another human being.

    The Cine Latino Award was presented to Blancanieves(Spain), directed by Pablo Berger, which was the Opening Night film of the Festival.   This silent movie is an adaptation of Snow White, where the daughter of a famous bullfighter is mistreated by her wicked stepmother.  When she runs away and joins a band of dwarfs, her natural bullfighting talent is discovered, but her stepmother plots to bring her down.

    Stolen Seas (Somalia/Kenya/UK/Italy), directed by Thymaya Payne, received The John Schlesinger Award, which is presented to a first-time documentary filmmaker.  Stolen Seas presents the inside story of Somali piracy.  The filmmakers spent three years in some of the world’s most dangerous places, talking to pirates, hostages, hostages’ relatives, and the shipping company executives caught up in this deadly culture clash. 

    Jump (Ireland/UK), directed by Kieron J. Walsh, received the HP Bridging the Borders Award presented by Cinema Without Borders and Hewlett Packard, which honors the film that is most successful in exemplifying art that promotes bringing the people of our world closer together.  In the film, a fateful New Year’s Eve throws half a dozen characters into cross-purposes in this complex, wildly inventive and occasionally giddy mix of crime caper, romance and moral tale from Northern Ireland. 

    The Palm Springs International Film Festival, held from January 3-14, 2013, screened 182 films from 68 countries.

    The complete list of award winners are:

    Mercedes-Benz Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature
    The Sapphires (Australia)

    Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature 
    Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey (USA)

    FIPRESCI Prize for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year
    Fill the Void (Israel)

    FIPRESCI Prize for the Best Actor of the Year in a Foreign Language Film 
    Cosimo Rega, Salvatore Striano and Giovanni Arcuri from Caesar Must Die (Italy)

    FIPRESCI Prize for Best Actress of the Year in a Foreign Language Film 
    Emilie Dequenne from Our Children (Belgium)

    New Voices/New Visions Award
    The Cleaner (Peru) – Winner
    7 Boxes (Paraguay) – Honorable Mention

    Cine Latino Award
    Blancanieves(Spain) – Winner
    Sadourni’s Butterflies (Argentina) – Honorable Mention

    The John Schlesinger Award
    Stolen Seas (Somalia/Kenya/UK/Italy) – Winner
    Far Out Isn’t Fair Enough: The Tomi Ungerer Story (USA) – Honorable Mention

    HP Bridging the Borders Award
    Jump (Ireland/UK) – Winner
    When Day Breaks (Serbia/Croatia/France) – Honorable Mention

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