• Poster Unveiled for 2013 Berlin International Film Festival

    The 63rd Berlin International Film Festival unveiled the poster for the 2013 festival which will take place from February 7 to 17, 2013.

    “The poster for the Berlinale 2013 will again add a bright note to the city’s winter landscape and set the mood for the Festival. The Berlinale Bear has no time to sleep in winter,” says Festival Director Dieter Kosslick.

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  • Indiana Film Journalists Vote Safety Not Guaranteed Best Film of 2012

    [caption id="attachment_2333" align="alignnone" width="550"]Safety Not Guaranteed[/caption]

    “Safety Not Guaranteed” took top honors, winning Best Film as well as Best Original Screenplay (Derek Connolly) at the Indiana Film Journalists Association 2012 Awards.  “Beasts of the Southern Wild” was the runner-up for Best Film and also won the Original Vision Award, which recognizes a film that is especially innovative or groundbreaking. Eight other films were named Finalists for Best Film.

    Stephen Chbosky won Best Adapted Screenplay for “The Perks of Being a Wallflower.” “Rise of the Guardians” was named Best Animated Film, “Searching for Sugar Man“ Best Documentary and “The Raid: Redemption” Best Foreign Language Film. 

    The Hoosier Award, which recognizes a significant cinematic contribution by a person or persons with Indiana roots, went to Jon Vickers, Founding Director of Indiana University Cinema.  

    The following is the complete list of honored films:

    Best Film
    Winner: Safety Not Guaranteed
    Runner-Up: Beasts of the Southern Wild

    Other Finalists (listed alphabetically):
    Django Unchained
    Les Misérables
    Lincoln
    Moonrise Kingdom
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower
    The Sessions
    Silver Linings Playbook
    Zero Dark Thirty

    Best Animated Feature
    Winner: Rise of the Guardians
    Runner-Up: ParaNorman

    Best Foreign Language Film
    Winner: The Raid: Redemption
    Runner-Up: Amour

    Best Documentary
    Winner: Searching for Sugar Man
    Runner-Up: Room 237

    Best Original Screenplay
    Winner: Derek Connolly, “Safety Not Guaranteed”
    Runner-Up: Quentin Tarantino, “Django Unchained”

    Best Adapted Screenplay
    Winner: Stephen Chbosky, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower”
    Runner-Up: David O. Russell, “Silver Linings Playbook”

    Best Director
    Winner: Quentin Tarantino, “Django Unchained”
    Runner-Up: Kathryn Bigelow, “Zero Dark Thirty”

    Best Actress
    Winner: Jessica Chastain, “Zero Dark Thirty”
    Runner-Up: Jennifer Lawrence, “Silver Linings Playbook”

    Best Supporting Actress
    Winner: Anne Hathaway, “Les Misérables”
    Runner-Up: Helen Hunt, “The Sessions”

    Best Actor
    Winners (Tie):
    Bradley Cooper, “Silver Linings Playbook”
    Daniel Day-Lewis, “Lincoln”

    Best Supporting Actor
    Winner: Tommy Lee Jones, “Lincoln”
    Runner-Up: Christoph Waltz, “Django Unchained”

    Best Musical Score
    Winner: Thomas Newman, “Skyfall”
    Runner-Up: Mychael Danna, “Life of Pi”

    Original Vision Award
    Winner: Beasts of the Southern Wild
    Runner-Up: Django Unchained

    The Hoosier Award
    Winner: Jon Vickers, Founding Director of Indiana University Cinema

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  • Life of Pi, Bully Among Winners Las Vegas Film Critics Society 2012 Awards

    [caption id="attachment_2655" align="alignnone" width="550"]Best Documentary – Bully[/caption]

    The Las Vegas Film Critics Society selected “Life of Pi” as the best motion picture of 2012, along with Ang Lee as best director.  “Life of Pi” took home a total of five awards including, best cinematography, musical score, visual effects and youth in film award for its young star, Suraj Sharma. Best Documentary went to Bully and Best Foreign Film went to Amour.

    2012 Sierra Award winners

    Best Picture
    “Life of Pi”

    Best Actor
    Daniel Day Lewis, “Lincoln”

    Best Actress
    Jennifer Lawrence, “Silver Lining Playbook”

    Best Supporting Actor
    Tommy Lee Jones, “Lincoln”

    Best Supporting Actress
    Anne Hathaway, “Les Miserables”

    Best Director
    Ang Lee, “Life of Pi”

    Best Screenplay (Original or Adapted)
    Rian Johnson, “Looper”

    Best Cinematography
    Claudio Miranda, “Life of Pi”

    Best Film Editing
    “Zero Dark Thirty”

    Best Costume Design
    Jaqueline Durran, “Anna Karenina”

    Best Art Direction
    Alex Cameron, “Prometheus”

    Best Visual Effects
    “Life of Pi”

    Best Documentary
    “Bully”

    Best Foreign Film
    “Amour” (Germany)

    Best Song
    “Skyfall”

    Best Score
    Mychael Danna, “Life of Pi”

    Best Animated Film
    “Paranorman”

    Youth in Film
    Suraj Sharma, “Life of Pi”

    Best DVD (Packaging, Design, and Content)
    “Hitchcock: Masterpiece Collection” (Blu-Ray) 

    WILLIAM HOLDEN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD FOR 2012: Alan Arkin

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  • Searching for Sugar Man, Argo Among St. Louis Film Critics Best Films of 2012

    St. Louis Film Critics’ Awards

    Best Film:“Argo “
    runners-up: “Life of Pi” and “Lincoln”)

    Best Director:Ben Affleck (“Argo”)
    runner-up): Quentin Tarantino (“Django Unchained”) and
    Benh Zeitlin (“Beasts of the Southern Wild”)

    Best Actor:Daniel Day-Lewis (“Lincoln”) 
    (runner-up): John Hawkes (“The Sessions”)

    Best Actress:Jessica Chastain (“Zero Dark Thirty”)
    (runner-up): Jennifer Lawrence (“Silver Linings Playbook”)

    Best Supporting Actor:Christoph Waltz (“Django Unchained”)
    (runner-up): Tommy Lee Jones (“Lincoln”)

    Best Supporting Actress:(Tie): Ann Dowd (“Compliance”) and Helen Hunt (“The Sessions”)

    Best Original Screenplay:”Zero Dark Thirty” (Mark Boal) 
    (runner-up): “Django Unchained” (Quentin Tarantino)

    Best Adapted Screenplay:(Tie): “Lincoln” (Tony Kushner) and “Silver Linings Playbook” (David O. Russell)

    Best Cinematography:”Skyfall” (Roger Deakins
    (runner-up): “Life of Pi” (Claudio Miranda)

    Best Visual Effects:”Life of Pi”
    (runner-up): “The Avengers”

    Best Music:(Tie): “Django Unchained” and “Moonrise Kingdom

    Best Foreign-Language Film:“The Intouchables”
    (runners-up): “The Fairy” and “Headhunters”

    Best Documentary:“Searching for Sugar Man”
    (runner-up): “Ai Wei Wei: Never Sorry,” “Bully” and “How To Survive A Plague”

    Best Comedy:(Tie): “Moonrise Kingdom” and
    “Ted”

    Best Animated Film:“Wreck-It Ralph”
    (runner-up): “ParaNorman”

    Best Art-House or Festival Film(Tie): “Compliance” and “Safety Not Guaranteed”

    Special Merit (for best scene, cinematic technique or other memorable aspect or moment)
    (Four-way Tie):
    “Django Unchained” – The “bag head” bag/mask problems scene
    “Hitchcock” – Anthony Hopkins in lobby conducting to music/audience’s reaction during “Psycho” screening 
    “The Impossible” – Opening tsunami scene 
    “The Master” – The first “processing” questioning scene between Philip Seymour Hoffman and Joaquin Phoenix

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  • Beasts of the Southern Wild, Argo Make Southeastern Film Critics Best Films of 2013

    [caption id="attachment_2324" align="alignnone" width="550"]Beasts of the Southern Wild[/caption]

    The Southeastern Film Critics’ Association voted Ben Affleck’s Argo the best motion picture of 2012, and the actor-director Affleck was named “Best Director.” 

    Ben Zeitlin’s Beasts of the Southern Wild was the overwhelming choice for the group’s Gene Wyatt award, given for the film that “best evokes the spirit of the South,” with Richard Linklater’s Bernie — yet another dramatization of a true story — finishing second. Beasts of the Southern Wild also made the Top 10 best films of 2012 list.

    2012 SEFCA AWARD RESULTS

     TOP TEN

    1. Argo
    2. Zero Dark Thirty
    3. Lincoln
    4. Moonrise Kingdom
    5. Silver Linings Playbook
    6. Beasts of the Southern Wild
    7. The Master
    8. Les Misérables
    9. Life of Pi
    10. The Dark Knight Rises

    BEST ACTOR
    Winner: Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
    Runner-up: Joaquin Phoenix, The Master

    BEST ACTRESS
    Winner: Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
    Runner-up: Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
    Winner: Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master
    Runner-up: Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
    Winner: Anne Hathaway, Les Misérables
    Runner-up: Sally Field, Lincoln

    BEST ENSEMBLE
    Winner: Lincoln
    Runner-up: Moonrise Kingdom

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Winner: Ben Affleck, Argo
    Runner-up: Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty

    BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
    Winner: Moonrise Kingdom: Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
    Runner-up: Zero Dark Thirty, Mark Boal

    BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
    Winner: Argo: Chris Terrio
    Runner-up: Lincoln: Tony Kushner

    BEST DOCUMENTARY
    Winner: The Queen of Versailles
    Runner-up: Bully

    BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM
    Winner: The Intouchables (50)
    Runner-up: Amour (32)

    BEST ANIMATED FILM
    Winner: ParaNorman
    Runner-up: Frankenweenie
    3. Brave

    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
    Winner: Life of Pi: Claudio Miranda
    Runner-up: Skyfall: Roger Deakins

    GENE WYATT AWARD for FILM THAT BEST EVOKES THE SPIRIT OF THE SOUTH
    Winner: Beasts of the Southern Wild
    Runner-up: Bernie

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  • Zero Dark Thirty and Middle of Nowhere Among African-American Film Critics Association 2012 Awards

    [caption id="attachment_2330" align="alignnone" width="551"]Omari Hardwick and Emayatzy Corinealdi in Middle of Nowhere[/caption]

    Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty was named best film of 2012 by the African-American Film Critics Association, but Middle of Nowhere written and directed by 2012 Sundance Film Festival winner of Best Director, Ava DuVernay, was also a big winner, grabbing awards for Best Actress, Best Screenplay, Best Independent Film, and Best Music.

    Zero Dark Thirty chronicles the search for Osama bin-Laden and Middle of Nowhere is a drama about a woman and her relationship with her incarcerated lover.

    The complete list of winners:

    Best Picture: “Zero Dark Thirty”
    Best Director: Ben Affleck, “Argo”
    Best Actress: Emayatzy Corinealdi, “Middle of Nowhere”
    Best Actor: Denzel Washington, “Flight”
    Best Supporting Actress: Sally Field, “Lincoln”
    Best Supporting Actor: Nate Parker, “Arbitrage”
    Best Screenplay: Ava DuVernay, “Middle of Nowhere”
    Best Foreign Language Film: “The Intouchables”
    Best Documentary: (tie) “The House I Live In” and “Versailles ’73: American Runway Revolution”
    Best Animated Feature: “Rise of the Guardians”
    Best Independent Film: “Middle of Nowhere”
    Best Breakthrough Performer: Quvenzhané Wallis, “Beasts of the Southern Wild”
    Best Music: Kathryn Bostic and Morgan Rhodes, “Middle of Nowhere”
    Special Achievement Awards: Cicely Tyson and Billy Dee Williams

    Top 10:
    1. “Zero Dark Thirty”
    2. “Argo”
    3. “Lincoln”
    4. “Middle of Nowhere”
    5. “Life of Pi”
    6. “Les Misérables”
    7. “Django Unchained”
    8. “Beasts of the Southern Wild”
    9. “Moonrise Kingdom”
    10. “Think Like a Man”

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  • Toronto Film Critics Picks The Master as Best Film of 2012

    [caption id="attachment_3015" align="alignnone" width="550"]Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Amy Adams in The Master[/caption]

    The Master, Paul Thomas Anderson’s drama about a battle of wills between a ravaged war veteran and the cult leader who offers him a place at his right hand, was the big winner of the Toronto Film Critics Association 2012 Awards.

    Anderson’s film took Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay, with co-star Philip Seymour Hoffman named the year’s Best Supporting Actor. Anderson has now won Best Picture twice (previous was Magnolia 1999) and Best Director three times (previous was Magnolia and Punch-Drunk Love 2002). He also shared the Best Screenplay prize with Being John Malkovich author Charlie Kaufman (1999).

    Canadian filmmakers were also honored in the TFCA’s other awards, with Stories We Tell winning the Allan King Documentary Award and Panos Cosmatos sharing the Best First Feature prize for Beyond the Black Rainbow with Benh Zeitlin’s Beasts of the Southern Wild.

    The full list of Toronto Film Critics Association Awards winners and runners-up:

    BEST PICTURE
    “The Master” (eOne)
    Runners-up:
    “Amour” (Mongrel Media)
    “Zero Dark Thirty” (Alliance Films)

    BEST ACTOR
    Denis Lavant, “Holy Motors”
    Runners-up:
    Daniel Day-Lewis, “Lincoln”
    Joaquin Phoenix, “The Master”

    BEST ACTRESS
    Rachel Weisz, “The Deep Blue Sea”
    Runners-up:
    Jessica Chastain, “Zero Dark Thirty”
    Emmanuelle Riva, “Amour”

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
    Philip Seymour Hoffman, “The Master”
    Runners-up:
    Javier Bardem, “Skyfall”
    Tommy Lee Jones, “Lincoln”

    BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
    Gina Gershon, “Killer Joe”
    Runners-up:
    Amy Adams, “The Master”
    Ann Dowd, “Compliance”
    Anne Hathaway, “Les Miserable”

    BEST DIRECTOR
    Paul Thomas Anderson, “The Master”
    Runners-up:
    Kathryn Bigelow, “Zero Dark Thirty”
    Leos Carax, “Holy Motors”

    BEST SCREENPLAY, ADAPTED OR ORIGINAL
    “The Master”, written by Paul Thomas Anderson
    Runners-up:
    “Lincoln”, written by Tony Kushner, based on the book
    “Team of Rivals” by Doris Kearns Goodwin
    “Zero Dark Thirty”, written by Mark Boal

    BEST FIRST FEATURE – TIE
    “Beasts of the Southern Wild”, directed by Benh Zeitlin
    “Beyond the Black Rainbow”, directed by Panos Cosmatos
    Runner-up:
    “The Cabin in the Woods”, directed by Drew Goddard

    BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
    “ParaNorman” (Alliance Films)
    Runners-up:
    “Brave” (Disney*Pixar)
    “Frankenweenie” (Disney)

    BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FILM
    “Amour”(Mongrel Media)
    Runners-up:
    “Holy Motors” (Mongrel Media)
    “Tabu” (filmswelike)

    ALLAN KING DOCUMENTARY AWARD
    “Stories We Tell” (Mongrel Media)
    Runners-up:
    “The Queen of Versailles” (Mongrel Media)
    “Searching for Sugar Man” (Mongrel Media)

    ROGERS BEST CANADIAN FILM AWARD FINALISTS
    “Bestiaire”, directed by Denis Côté
    “Goon”, directed by Michael Dowse
    “Stories We Tell”, directed by Sarah Polley

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  • Dear Mandela Among 25 Documentaries to Receive Grants from Sundance Institute

    [caption id="attachment_3013" align="alignnone" width="550"]Dear Mandela [/caption]

    Sundance Institute announced the 25 feature-length documentary films that will receive $550,000 in grants from its Documentary Film Program and Fund (DFP). 

    Granted filmmakers reflect a range of experience, including five first-time feature filmmakers as well as noted documentarians Fred Wiseman, Sam Pollard and Jehane Noujaim. In-country filmmakers include those in Africa (Ghana), India and China, and additional countries of production include Afghanistan, Nepal, Senegal and Egypt.

    DEVELOPMENT

    Boomtown (U.S.) 
    Director: Beth Murphy 
    A modern day Grapes of Wrath story is playing out across America as families pack their bags and head to North Dakota in search of the American Dream.

    Bukom Fighter (Ghana) 
    Director: Makafui Zimrani 
    A nine year old boy from a shanty town in Ghana tries to create hope for himself using the only resource at his disposal; the power of his fists.

    Chameleon (Canada / Ghana)
    Director: Ryan Mullins 
    Africa’s most famed investigative reporter, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, takes us deep undercover for his own brand of brazen journalism.

    Perry vs. Schwarzenegger (U.S.)
    Directors: Ryan White and Ben Cotner
    In 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case that challenges California’s ban on same-sex marriage. Perry v. Schwarzenegger, filed by two couples with an unlikely legal team, has now reached the nation’s highest court and is poised to be the first ruling on the right of gay and lesbian Americans to marry.

    Rise and Fall of ACORN (U.S.)
    Directors: Reuben Atlas and Sam Pollard
    In 2009 a national community-organizing group was destroyed. The complex story of ACORN involves a journalist posing as a pimp, embezzlement, and voter fraud.

    PRODUCTION / POST-PRODUCTION

    99% – The Occupy Wall Street Collaborative Film (U.S.)
    Directors: Audrey Ewell, Aaron Aites, Lucian Read, Nina Krstic
    The Occupy movement erupted in September 2011, propelling economic inequality into the spotlight. In an unprecedented collaboration, filmmakers across America tell its story, digging into big picture issues as organizers, analysts, participants and critics reveal how it happened and why.

    After Tiller (U.S.)
    Directors: Martha Shane and Lana Wilson
    Since the assassination of Dr. George Tiller in 2009, only four doctors in the country provide late-term abortions. With unprecedented access, After Tiller goes inside the lives of these physicians working at the center of the storm.

    At Berkeley (U.S.)
    Director: Frederick Wiseman
    A world renowned, public university strives to maintain its academic excellence, public role, and the economic, racial and social diversity of the student body in the face of severe budget cuts by the California Legislature.

    A Blind Eye (U.S. / Afghanistan)
    Director: Kirsten Johnson
    A one-eyed boy struggles to hide what really haunts him. A bold teenage girl defies convention, out running her nightmares of the Taliban, but still too afraid to show her face in a film. A U.S. Military surveillance blimp in the sky over Kabul tracks their every move.

    Dirty Wars (U.S.)
    Director: Richard Rowley 
    Investigative journalist Jeremy Scahill chases down the truth behind America’s covert wars.

    The Faun Experiment (U.S.)
    Directors: Tamar Rogoff and Daisy Wright
    He expected to be in a wheelchair by age 40 with cerebral palsy. Instead, Gregg Mozgala embarks on a dance project with choreographer Tamar Rogoff. As art overturns science his life is forever changed.

    The Girl Who Knew Too Much (U.S. / Nepal)
    Directors: Amy Benson and Scott Squire, Co-Director: Ramyata Limbu
    Shanta is an Untouchable Nepali girl with a rare opportunity to break her family’s cycle of poverty, through education. But, a year from graduation, Shanta falls victim to globalization’s new epidemic: suicide.

    The Kill Team (U.S.)
    Director: Dan Krauss 
    An American soldier attempts to expose U.S. war crimes even more heinous than Abu Ghraib and then is himself charged with premeditated murder.

    Mr. President (U.S. / Senegal)
    Director: Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
    President Abdoulaye Wade challenged Senegal’s constitutional term limits and ran for re-election. The election and pro-democracy movement is seen from both sides, ultimately documenting a chapter of African Spring.

    The New Black (U.S.) 
    Director: Yoruba Richen 
    The New Black uncovers the complicated and often combative histories of the African-American and LGBT civil-rights movements.

    Powerless (India) 
    Directors: Fahad Mustafa and Deepti Kakkar 
    In a city with 15-hour power outages, a nimble young electrician provides robin-hood style services to the poor. Meanwhile, the first female chief of the electricity supply company is on a mission to dismantle the illegal connections, for good.

    Provenance (U.S.)
    Director: Amie Siegel
    Artist and filmmaker Amie Siegel traces the journey of Le Corbusier and P. Jeanneret designs in reverse — the economic circuit and life of objects, revealed across three continents. Without interviews, actors or voice-over, these coveted items are the protagonists of this story.

    Regarding Susan Sontag (U.S.)
    Director: Nancy Kates 
    The late writer, activist and public intellectual Susan Sontag was a study in contrasts; a courageous public figure who remained a closeted lesbian. The film examines her contributions to culture and her views, as a thinker and activist, on war, terrorism, torture and other contemporary issues.

    Rich Hill (U.S.)
    Directors: Tracy Droz Tragos and Andrew Droz Palermo
    Rich Hill is the coming of age story of kids in a dying American town who find strength in unlikely places

    Running in the City (China)
    Director: FAN Jian
    More than 240 million migrant workers who labor inside China aren’t acknowledged as urban residents due to China’s household registration policy. This is a story of one family’s rebellion.

    The Shadow World (U.S. / Belgium) 
    Director: Johan Grimonprez 
    This feature documentary explores the international arms industry: a business in which wins and losses are counted in human lives.

    The Square (Egypt / U.S.) 
    Director: Jehane Noujaim
    What does it mean to risk your life for your ideals? How far will five revolutionaries go in defending their beliefs in the fight for their nation?

    Solarize This (U.S.)
    Director: Shalini Kantayya 
    In a city where oil spills, ecological red-alerts, and poverty are commonplace,Solarize This asks the hard questions of how a clean energy economy may actually be built, through the stories of three unemployed American workers seeking to retool at a solar power jobs training program in Richmond, California.

    Uranium Drive-In (U.S.)
    Director: Suzan Beraza
    A proposed uranium mill gives an economically devastated mining community in Colorado hope of jobs for the first time in decades. When environmentalists step in to stop the uranium, pro-mill advocates are enraged. Is uranium worth it?

    AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT

    Dear Mandela (South Africa / U.S.)
    Directors: Dara Kell and Christopher Nizza
    When their shantytowns are threatened with mass eviction, three ‘young lions’ of South Africa’s new generation rise from the shacks and build a strong social movement to challenge their government in the highest court in the land, putting the promises of democracy to the test.

    The Audience Engagement Award for Dear Mandela will support strategic exchanges between international human rights defenders, diplomats and law students poised to take action on the issues of evictions and housing rights, and a screening tour featuring a youth leadership initiative for shantytown dwellers in affected countries including Haiti, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, India and Brazil.

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  • Martin Scorsese and HBO to Make Bill Clinton Documentary

    HBO and Martin Scorsese will partner for a documentary about William Jefferson Clinton, 42nd President of the United States. According to the press release, the film will be made with Clinton’s full cooperation, and will explore his perspectives on history, politics, culture and the world, with Scorsese producing and directing, and Steve Bing producing.

    “President Clinton is one of the most compelling figures of our time, whose world view and perspective, combined with his uncommon intelligence, make him a singular voice on the world stage,” said Plepler and Lombardo. “This documentary, under Marty’s gifted direction, creates a unique opportunity for the President to reflect on myriad issues that have consumed his attention and passion throughout both his Presidency and post-Presidency.”

    “A towering figure who remains a major voice in world issues, President Clinton continues to shape the political dialogue both here and around the world,” observed Scorsese. “Through intimate conversations, I hope to provide greater insight into this transcendent figure.”

    “I am pleased that legendary director Martin Scorsese and HBO have agreed to do this film,” said President Clinton. “I look forward to sharing my perspective on my years as President, and my work in the years since, with HBO’s audience.”

    William Jefferson Clinton, the first Democratic president in six decades to be elected twice, served as 42nd President of the United States from 1993 to 2001, leading the U.S. to one of the longest economic expansions in American history. After leaving the White House, he established the William J. Clinton Foundation with the mission to improve global health, strengthen economies, promote healthier childhoods and protect the environment by fostering partnerships among governments, businesses, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and private citizens to turn good intentions into measurable results. To date, more than 2,100 Clinton Global Initiative commitments have improved the lives of 400 million people in 180 nations.

    President Clinton was born Aug. 19, 1946, in Hope, Ark. He and his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, have a daughter, Chelsea, and live in Chappaqua, NY.

    The Clinton documentary marks Martin Scorsese’s fourth collaboration with HBO, following the documentaries “Public Speaking” (2010) and the Emmy®-winning “George Harrison: Living in the Material World” (2011), and the hit series “Boardwalk Empire,” for which he serves as an executive producer, as well as winning an Emmy® for directing last year.

    Image: President Clinton visits the Clinton Health Access Initiative distribution center in Uganda. While at the center, President Clinton speaks with government representatives to announce CHAI’s new program to scale-up treatment for diarrhea through oral rehydration salts and zinc.

    Photo credit: Barbara Kinney / Clinton Foundation

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  • Sundance Institute Picks 12 Projects for Feature Film Program 2013 January Screenwriters Lab

    Sundance Institute has selected 12 projects for its 2013 January Screenwriters Lab, an immersive, five-day (January 11-16) writers’ workshop at the Sundance Resort in Utah. Participating independent screenwriters – drawn from around the world, including the United States, Iran, Europe, Mexico, and Somalia – will have the opportunity to work intensely on their feature film scripts with the support of established writers. The 2013 Lab is dedicated to the memory of Frank Pierson (1925-2012), a founding creative advisor of the Feature Film Program whose body of work and generosity as a mentor served as an inspiration to countless writers.

    Keri Putnam, Executive Director of Sundance Institute, said, “Across all Sundance Institute Labs, which include offerings for various forms of artistic expression, the constant is creating an environment that encourages innovation and creative risk-taking. We look forward to building a unique community of artists at our Lab, in support of these emerging screenwriters and their stories.”

    Michelle Satter, Founding Director of the Sundance Institute Feature Film Program, said, “We are thrilled to welcome the new group of writers to the Lab whose stories are timely, ambitious and singular in their vision and independent voice. Exploring themes that resonate across cultures, the writers have found diverse and dynamic approaches to storytelling that will inspire and move audiences in the years to come. The January Screenwriters Labs marks the beginning of a rigorous year-round process of creative and tactical support which is tailored to the needs of each individual project and extends from script development to connecting with audiences.”

    The Fellows will work with a distinguished group of creative advisors at the Lab, including Marcos Bernstein, D.V. DeVincentis, Michael Goldenberg, Susannah Grant, Walter Mosley, Marti Noxon, Anjum Rajabali, Howard Rodman, David Seidler, Susan Shilliday, Zach Sklar, Dana Stevens, Robin Swicord, Mike White, Tyger Williams and Erin Cressida Wilson.

    The projects and Fellows selected for the 2013 January Screenwriters Lab are:

    700th and International (U.S.A.)

    Chinaka Hodge (writer)
    A trash-talking hood track phenomenon named Tuka dies by an unexpected bullet; she awakes to find herself in a corrupt version of heaven where everyone has a job—namely, to decide the exact moment of death for someone still living on earth. 

    Chinaka Hodge is a poet, educator and playwright from Oakland, California. She received her BA from NYU’s Gallatin School and her MFA from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. After nearly a decade of performing her own words around the globe and on two seasons of Def Poetry, she made the transition to the screen and received her first credit for Brave New Voices on HBO. 

    The Adderall Diaries (U.S.A.)
    Pamela Romanowsky (writer/director)
    While covering a real-life murder mystery, writer Stephen Elliott realizes he’d rather investigate his own dysfunctional relationships with women, his father and himself. Based on the memoir by Stephen Elliott.

    Born and raised in Minnesota, Pamela Romanowsky moved to New York to attend NYU’s Graduate Film Program. Her short film Gravity premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival and won the National Board of Review and the Wasserman/King Foundation’s student filmmaking awards. Her most recent directorial effort is TAR(James Franco, Mila Kunis, Jessica Chastain, Zach Braff), a multi-director omnibus based on the life and poetry of CK Williams.

    Avalanche (Iran)
    Morteza Farshbaf (co-writer/director) and Anahita Ghazvinizadeh (co-writer)
    When a nurse takes the graveyard shift, a period of sleeplessness and solitude leaves her with a new perspective on her life.

    Morteza Farshbaf is an Iranian writer and filmmaker. He studied cinema at the Tehran University of Art, during which time he was a student of and assistant for Abbas Kiarostami. After making several short films, Farshbaf’s first feature Mourningwon the New Currents Award and FIPRESCI Prize at the 2011 Busan International Film Festival. 

    Anahita Ghazvinizadeh is an Iranian writer and filmmaker. She studied cinema in Tehran and is continuing her education in film in the United States. She was also a student of Kiarostami, and has made short films in Iran and the US. She has collaborated with Farshbaf on several projects, including as a co-writer of Mourning.

    Franny (U.S.A.)
    Andrew Renzi (writer/director)
    When the daughter and new husband of late family friends move back to Philadelphia, a larger-than-life but damaged man cannot control his desire to recreate the past.

    Andrew F. Renzi wrote and directed the short film The Fort, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. His newest short film, Karaoke!, will premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Previously, Renzi worked with the New York production company Borderline Films on Antonio Campos’ Afterschool (Cannes 2008) and Alistair Banks Griffin’s Two Gates of Sleep (Cannes 2010).

    The Incident (U.S.A)
    Jan Kwiecinski (writer/director)
    When a young man decides to cover up an accidental murder, his whole life comes into focus in ways he never expected.

    Jan Kwiecinski graduated from the filmmaking departments of the London Film School and the Wajda’s Master School of Directing. His award-winning short film,The Incident, screened internationally at many festivals including the Shanghai International Film Festival and the T-Mobile New Horizons Film Festival. Recently, Kwiecinski directed the segment entitled Fawns of the omnibus feature The Fourth Dimension, co-directed by Alexey Fedorchenko and Harmony Korine. The film premiered in the Narrative Competition at the 2012 San Francisco Film Festival.

    Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name (U.K. / Germany / U.S.A.)
    Eva Weber (co-writer/director) and Vendela Vida (co-writer)
    Twenty-eight-year-old Clarissa discovers on the day of her father’s funeral that everything she believed about her life was a lie. She flees New York and travels to the Arctic Circle to uncover the secrets of her mother who mysteriously vanished when Clarissa was fourteen. Based on Vendela Vida’s novel.

    Originally from Germany, Eva Weber is a London-based filmmaker working in both documentary and fiction. Her award-winning films have screened at numerous international film festivals, including Sundance, Edinburgh, SXSW, BFI London, and Telluride; and have also been broadcast on UK and international television. Her documentary short film The Solitary Life of Cranes was selected as one of the top five films of the year by critic Nick Bradshaw in Sight & Sound’s annual film review in 2008.

    Vendela Vida is the author of four books, including the novels Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name and The Lovers. She is a founding co-editor of the Believermagazine and co-writer of the film Away We Go, which was directed by Sam Mendes.

    Love After Love (U.S.A.)
    Russell Harbaugh (writer/director)
    Taking place over the course of several years, Love After Love is a messy, autobiographical love story about grief, sex and the separation of a family.

    Russell Harbaugh’s short film Rolling on the Floor Laughing played the 2012 Sundance Film Festival and many other festivals around the world including the FSLC/MoMA co-curated New Directors/New Films, Maryland Film Festival, Sarasota International Film Festival, Milano, Warsaw, and others. Previously, Harbaugh was the assistant to Eric Mendelsohn on the film 3 Backyards, which earned the Best Director award at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. Harbaugh received his MFA from Columbia University in 2011 and is originally from Evansville, Indiana. He lives in New York. 

    Maanokoobiyo (Somalia/U.S.A.)
    K’naan (writer/director)
    In war-torn Somalia, an artistic orphan named Maano joins the mercenary killing squad of a notorious warlord, only to discover his adoptive father and gang leader is responsible for wiping out his family.

    K’naan is a Somali poet, rapper and singer, songwriter. He spent his childhood in Mogadishu, Somalia and was on one of the last commercial flights out of the country before its collapse. He rose to prominence with the success of his song “Wavin’ Flag” after it was chosen as the anthem of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. He lives in New York. 

    Mercy Road (U.S.A.)
    Ian Hendrie (co-writer/co-director) and Jyson McLean (co-writer/co-director)
    Based on true events, Mercy Road traces the political and spiritual odyssey of a small town housewife as she turns from peaceful pro-life activist to underground militant willing to commit violence and murder in the name of God.

    Ian Hendrie is a San Francisco-based director, screenwriter, producer. He is also the co-founder of Fantoma Films, a production company and independent DVD label which has been releasing premium edition DVDs of films by such famed auteurs as Francis Ford Coppola, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Samuel Fuller, Fritz Lang, Kenneth Anger and Alex Cox, among others, since 1999. Along with Jyson McLean, Hendrie was the recipient of the Fall 2011 San Francisco Film Society/Kenneth Rainin Foundation Grant for Screenwriting for Mercy Road.

    Jyson McLean began making short films in high school. He attended Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and shortly thereafter began directing commercials and music videos, which have aired nationally and overseas. His commercial credits include spots for Bud Light, Career Builder and Quaker Oats. He has won the Gold ITVA PEER award three years in a row, and has worked with numerous award-winning advertising agencies including DDB Los Angeles, BBDO London and Fred & Farid, Paris.

    State Like Sleep (U.S.A.)
    Meredith Danluck (writer/director)
    Under the surreal cloud cover of northern Europe, a young American widow reluctantly revisits her past when her mother is hospitalized in Brussels. While coping with the bleak reality of parental loss, Katherine explores her deceased husband’s secret life of underground sex clubs and finds comfort in a relationship with a stranger as equally broken as she is.

    Meredith Danluck is an artist and filmmaker. Her work has screened at major art institutions internationally including MoMA, PS1, Venice Biennale, Liverpool Biennial, and Reina Sofia, as well as various film festivals including SXSW, TIFF, Doc NYC, Margaret Mead and Hamburg International. This year, as part of the New Frontier exhibition at the Sundance Film Festival, she will be showing her four-screen film installation North of South, West of East.

    Zeus (Mexico)
    Miguel Calderón (writer/director)
    Sporadically employed and still living with his mother, Joel finds his only joy in falconry in the flatlands outside Mexico City, until an encounter with a down-to-earth secretary forces him to face reality.

    Miguel Calderón is a visual artist working in various mediums, notably photography, video and writing. His exhibitions have been included at the Sao Paolo Biennial, Museo Tamayo, Yokohama Triennial, Centro de Arte Reina Sofia and Jumex Collection. He lives in Mexico City.

    via press relase – Sundance Institute

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  • Richard Gere to be Honored at 2013 Palm Springs International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_3008" align="alignnone" width="550"]Richard Gere in Arbitrage[/caption]

    The 24th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) which runs January 3-14, 2013, will honor Richard Gere with the Chairman’s Award.  

    Richard Gere stars in Arbitrage from Lionsgate and Roadside Attractions.  Gere plays New York hedge-fund magnate Robert Miller, who on the eve of his 60th birthday is desperate to complete the sale of his trading empire and makes an error that forces him to turn to an unlikely person for help.  The film is written and directed by Nicholas Jarecki and stars Richard Gere, Susan Sarandon, Tim Roth, Brit Marling, Laetitia Casta and Nate Parker.  For Arbitrage, Gere received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama.

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  • 15 FIlms Invited to Compete in Generation Kplus and Generation 14plus at 2013 Berlin International Film Festival

     [caption id="attachment_3006" align="alignnone" width="550"]Baby Blues – Poland By Kasia Rosłaniec[/caption]

    Fifteen films have already been invited to compete in Generation Kplus and Generation 14plus at the 2013 Berlin International Film Festival. The early list includes 3 films from the US including Hide Your Smiling Faces directed by Daniel Patrick Carbone, The Cold Lands directed by Tom Gilroy and Tough Bond by Austin Peck, Anneliese Vandenberg. The complete Generation program will be announced in mid January. The 63rd Berlin International Film Festival will run February 7 – 17, 2013.

    Films include:

    Generation 14plus:

     

    Baby Blues – Poland 
    By Kasia Rosłaniec 
    An extroverted teenage mother’s tour de force through a world of daily chores, nappies fashion and drugs. 
    European premiere

     

    Capturing Dad – Japan 
    By Ryota Nakano
    Two young girls at their father’s funeral service. A laconic, humorous story about saying final goodbyes to a trusted stranger. 
    International premiere

     

    Hide Your Smiling Faces – USA 
    By Daniel Patrick Carbone 
    In a remote rural settlement, two young brothers learn to deal with the loss of a friend and the inevitable forces involved in becoming an adult. Atmospheric US independent cinema. 
    World premiere

     

    Pluto – Republic of Korea
    By SHIN Suwon 
    June just has to belong to the clique of best students at his school, who take brutal measures against their rivals. Dramatic thriller about the destructive powers of a highly ambitious society. 
    International premiere

     

    Shopping – New Zealand
    By Louis Sutherland, Mark Albiston 
    The half-Samoan brothers Willie and Solomon are caught between fronts. Willie has fallen under the influence of a gang leader, while Solomon has to assert himself against their father. 
    European premiere

     

    The Cold Lands – USA 
    By Tom Gilroy 
    With Lili Taylor, John Ventimiglia 
    After his mother’s sudden death, Atticus flees from the authorities into the rugged mountains and dense forests of upstate New York.
    World premiere

     

    Touch of the Light – Taiwan / Hong Kong, China 
    By CHANG Jung-Chi 
    Yu-Siang, a young blind man, moves on his own from the provinces to Taipei to study the piano. A film that embraces all the senses – from WONG Kar Wai’s Jet Tone production company. 
    European premiere

     

    Tough Bond – USA 
    By Austin Peck, Anneliese Vandenberg 
    When cultural and family ties no longer exist, homeless children find comfort in sniffing glue. Intimate documentary images and a radically honest look at Kenyan society.
    World premiere

     

    Generation Kplus:

     

    Kopfüber (UPSIDEdown) – Germany
    By Bernd Sahling 
    Sascha is ten, steals things and can hardly read. When the doctor prescribes medicine for ADHD, everyone hopes he’ll calm down and get back on track. 
    World premiere

     

    Mammu, es Tevi mīlu (Mother, I Love You) – Latvia 
    By Jānis Nords 
    His mother has three jobs so Raymond is all on his own. He gets himself into a terrible predicament.
    World premiere

     

    Nono, Het Zigzag Kind (The Zigzag Kid) – Netherlands / Belgium 
    By Vincent Bal 
    With Isabella Rossellini, Burghart Klaussner
    Before his Bar Mitzvah, Nono is supposed to learn how to behave from Uncle Sjmoel. Yet a mysterious man takes him on a trip into his family’s secret past.
    European premiere

     

    ÖDLAND – Damit keiner das so mitbemerkt (WASTELAND – So that No One Becomes Aware of It)– Germany 
    In strikingly beautiful images and told with the words of children, this documentary recounts how it feels to be a refugee caught between worlds. 
    World premiere / Documentary film

     

    Satellite Boy – Australia
    By Catriona McKenzie
    With David Gulpilil
    Pete, an Aboriginal boy, lives with his grandfather in the Australian outback. When their home is threatened with demolition, Pete ventures on a bold journey to save his country 
    European premiere

     

    The Rocket – Australia 
    By Kim Mordaunt 
    Little Ahlo and his family are forced to find a new place to live. Their trek through war-torn Laos leads them to the highly explosive rocket festival. 
    World premiere

     

    Twa Timoun (Three Kids) – Belgium
    By Jonas d’Adesky 
    Three Haitian street children organise what they need to survive in Port au Prince, the capital city that was nearly demolished by the earthquake. A tale of unwavering friendship in documentary style. 
    European premiere

     

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