• Wild and Scenic Film Festival on Tour in Lousiville This Weekend

    [caption id="attachment_2497" align="alignnone" width="550"]A River Runs Through Us[/caption]

    The Wild and Scenic Film Festival on Tour returns to the Clifton Center’s Eifler Theatre in Louisville on Saturday, March 3, 2012, from 8:30-11:00 p.m screening inspirational and motivational films, hosted again by Kentucky Waterways Alliance .

    “The Wild & Scenic film festival is a great opportunity to bring our community together around local environmental issues, inspire advocacy and offer people a direct way to get involved locally,” said Judith Petersen, Kentucky Waterways Alliance executive director. “And this year is particularly special because we’re celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Clean Water Act. We hope you’ll join us to commemorate this landmark piece of legislation.”

    [caption id="attachment_2498" align="alignnone" width="550"]YERT – Your Environmental Road Trip[/caption]

    The program (with a 10 minute intermission) offers a mix of films addressing environmental issues. The festival will be showing an exclusive compilation for the Wild & Scenic  Film Fest of YERT – Your Environmental Road Trip by local director (and emcee for the festival) Ben Evans. The selections from this award winning documentary take a fun substantive look at solutions to the challenging water crises around the country – from the desert Southwest to the Gulf Coast to Appalachia. 

    Other films screening include Beaver Creek Episode 4, by young animator Ian Timothy, who is a junior at St. X High School in Louisville. Ian’s film was an official selection in the national 2012 Wild and Scenic film festival in Nevada City, California. Beaver Creek Episodes are funny stop motion animation shorts featuring Twigs the beaver and Drake the duck. Each episode blends witty cartoon antics of natural beaver activities, which casts a good light on nature’s keystone species. Both filmmakers will be there that night for a short Q & A session with the audience.

    In Marion Stoddart: the Power of 1000 chronicling an important episode in U.S. environmental history, this inspirational story examines the human side of acclaimed environmental pioneer Marion Stoddart who proved that with vision and commitment, an “ordinary” person can accomplish extraordinary things.

    Click here for entire line-up

    Read more


  • Winners of the 84th annual Academy Awards

    [caption id="attachment_2493" align="alignnone" width="550"]Thomas Langmann and Michel Hazanavicius – Best Picture – THE ARTIST[/caption]

    No surprise here, The Artist was the big winner at the 84th annual Academy Awards, taking home the big award of the night, Best Picture along with Best Actor for leading actor Jean Dujardin.

    The list of the winners from the 84th annual Academy Awards:

    Best picture: “The Artist.”

    Actress in a leading role: Meryl Streep, “Iron Lady.”

    [caption id="attachment_2494" align="alignnone" width="394"]Jean Dujardin wins Best Actor for THE ARTIST.[/caption]

    Actor in a leading role: Jean Dujardin, “The Artist.”

    Actress in a supporting role: Octavia Spencer, “The Help.”

    Actor in a supporting role: Christopher Plummer, “Beginners.”

    Directing: Michel Hazanavicius, “The Artist.”

    Cinematography: “Hugo.”

    Art direction: “Hugo.”

    Costume design: “The Artist.”

    Makeup: “The Iron Lady.”

    [caption id="attachment_2495" align="alignnone" width="550"]Asghar Farhadi – Foreign Language Film – Iran, A SEPARATION[/caption]

    Foreign language film: “A Separation,” Iran.

    Film editing: “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.”

    Sound editing: “Hugo.”

    Sound mixing: “Hugo.”

    Documentary feature: “Undefeated.”

    Animated feature film: “Rango.”

    Visual effects: “Hugo.”

    Original score: “The Artist.”

    Original song: “Man or Muppet” from “The Muppets.”

    Adapted screenplay: Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, “The Descendants.”

    Original screenplay: Woody Allen, “Midnight in Paris.”

    Live action short film: “The Shore.”

    Documentary (short subject): “Saving Face.”

    Animated short film: “The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore.”

    Read more


  • The Artist, Pariah, The Descendants Win at 27th Film Independent Spirit Awards

    [caption id="attachment_2176" align="alignnone"]Best First Feature – Margin Call[/caption]

    The Artist, as expected, was the big winner at yesterday’s 27th Film Independent Spirit Awards, winning awards for Best Feature, Best Director, Best Male Lead and Best Cinematography. Other winners included My Week With Marilyn, which won Best Female Lead; The Descendants, which won Best Supporting Female and Best Screenplay; Beginners, which won Best Supporting Male and Pariah, which won the John Cassavetes Award; 50/50, which won Best First Screenplay; Margin Call, which won Best First Feature; A Separation, which won Best International Film; and The Interrupters, which won Best Documentary.

    The 5th annual Robert Altman Award was given to one film’s director, casting director, and ensemble cast. J. C. Chandor’s Margin Call received this award, along with casting directors Tiffany Little Canfield and Bernard Telsey and ensemble cast members Penn Badgley, Simon Baker, Paul Bettany, Jeremy Irons, Mary McDonnell, Demi Moore, Zachary Quinto, Kevin Spacey and Stanley Tucci.

    The Spirit Awards was the first event to exclusively honor independent film, with artists receiving industry recognition first at the Spirit Awards include Joel & Ethan Coen, Spike Lee, Oliver Stone, Ashley Judd, Robert Rodriguez, David O. Russell, Edward Burns, Aaron Eckhart, Neil LaBute, Darren Aronofsky, Spike Jonze, Charlie Kaufman, Hilary Swank, Marc Forster, Todd Field, Christopher Nolan, Zach Braff, Amy Adams and many more.

    The following is a complete list of 27th Film Independent Spirit Awards winners:

    Best Feature – The Artist             

    Best Director – Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist

    Best Screenplay – Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash, The Descendants

    Best First Feature – Margin Call, Director: J.C. Chandor

    Best First Screenplay – Will Reiser, 50/50

    John Cassavetes Award (For the best feature made under $500,000) –  Writer/Director: Dee Rees, Pariah                                                        
    Best Supporting Female – Shailene Woodley, The Descendants

    Best Supporting Male – Christopher Plummer, Beginners

    Best Female – Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn

    Best Male – Jean Dujardin, The Artist

    Best Cinematography – Guillaume Schiffman, The Artist

    Best Foreign Film – A Separation, Director: Asghar Farhadi

    Best Documentary – The Interrupters, Director: Steve James


    Two new filmmaker grants were awarded during the ceremony. The 2012 Chaz and Roger Ebert Fellowship, which recognizes a social-issue documentary and includes a cash grant of $10,000, was given to Katie Fairfax Wright and Malika Zouhali-Worrall, co-directors of the documentary Call Me Kuchu. The film was developed in Film Independent’s 2011 Documentary Lab and has its world premiere at the 2012 Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Teddy Award for Best Documentary.

    The 2012 Giorgio Armani Directing Fellowship, which includes a cash grant of $10,000, was awarded to Grace Lee, director of the documentary American Revolutionary: The Evolution of Grace Lee Boggs. The film, currently in post-production, is in Film Independent’s 2012 Documentary Lab.

    On January 14th, the following winners were honored at the Spirit Awards Filmmaker Grant and Nominee Brunch at BOA Steakhouse in West Hollywood:

    The 18th Annual Audi Someone to Watch Award was given to Mark Jackson, director of Without. The $25,000 unrestricted grant, funded for the first time by Audi, recognizes a talented filmmaker of singular vision who has not received appropriate recognition.

    The 17th Annual Nokia Truer Than Fiction Award was given to Heather Courtney, director of Where Soldiers Come From. The $25,000 unrestricted grant, funded by Nokia, is presented to an emerging director of non-fiction features who has not yet received significant recognition.

    The 15th Annual Piaget Producers Award was given to Sophia Lin, producer of Take Shelter. The $25,000 unrestricted grant, funded by Piaget, is presented to an emerging producer who, despite highly limited resources demonstrates the creativity, tenacity, and vision required to produce quality, independent films.

    The 2nd Annual Jameson FIND Your Audience Award, which helps one low-budget independent film find a broader audience, was given to Benjamin Murray and Alysa Nahmias, co-directors of Unfinished Spaces. The $40,000 marketing and distribution grant, funded by Jameson® Irish Whiskey, was designed to meet independent filmmakers’ biggest challenge today: How to get their films out into the marketplace.

    Read more


  • Mike Ratel’s Documentary About Lawn Mower Racing to World Premiere at 2012 DC Independent Film Festival

    ,

    On Your Mark, Get Set, MOW! has been officially selected to screen at the 2012 DC Independent Film Festival, Saturday, March 3, 2012, 5:00pm. The documentary film which will make its world premiere, will explore the world of lawn mower racing through the eyes of a Michigan family who has lost six members to Huntington’s disease and uses the sport to raise awareness of the disease and funds for its research.

    Filmmaker Mike Ratel has been following the sport of lawn mower racing for five years and will tell the story of how weekend “Turf Warriors” use their hobby to help raise awareness and funds to battle Huntington’s disease, a hereditary degenerative neurological disorder.

    To offer an explanation of Huntington’s disease to a general audience Producer/Director Ratel has conducted on-camera interviews with medical professionals, US congressmen, Huntington’s disease advocates, and Arlo Guthrie who lost his father Woody Guthrie, an American folk music icon, to the disease in 1967. Ratel has also spent hundreds of hours filming, traveling and living with lawn mower racers from across the country to gain a solid understanding of the people behind the sport.

    “This group of people is one of the most benevolent and kindhearted communities you’ll ever see,” said Ratel from his Washington, D.C.-based production studio. “The family we focus on in the film has lost seven members to the disease, but still finds time to travel the country racing lawn mowers, enjoying life and helping create awareness. Their annual lawn mower race fundraiser is an award-winning event that has gained acclaim far and wide. I’m proud and honored to be telling their story.”

    The DC Independent Film Festival will run February 29th thru March 4th in Washington, DC.

    {youtube}dyhYXcJz2mM{/youtube}

    Read more


  • 29 Films on Lineup for 2012 New Directors/New Films

    [caption id="attachment_2331" align="alignnone"]5 BROKEN CAMERAS[/caption]

    The 41st New Directors/New Films (March 21 – April 1) organized by The Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art will screen 29 feature films (24 narrative, 5 documentary) and 12 short films representing 28 countries.

    The opening night feature is Nadine Labaki’s WHERE DO WE GO NOW?. Screening on Wednesday, March 21 at MoMA, Labaki’s follow up to the critically acclaimed CARAMEL follows the events that transpire after women of different religions in a remote Lebanese village band together and invent schemes to prevent their men from killing each other in the intractable religious conflict that surrounds their community. This entertaining and unlikely near-musical tears down stereotypes of women in the Middle East and uses humor to explore serious subjects, with one eye toward Aristophanes’ Lysistrata and the other toward Bollywood. Winning audience awards at the Toronto and San Sebastian Film Festivals after a successful premiere in Cannes, WHERE DO WE GO NOW? is refreshing and unflinching. The film is a Sony Pictures Classics Release.

    The 41st edition of New Directors/New Films will be marked by a series of first time events for the festival: The screening and celebration of Stanley Kubrick’s first feature, FEAR AND DESIRE (1953) breaks precedent by presenting a film nearly 20 years older than the festival itself. THE RABBI’S CAT, directed by Antoine Delesvaux and Joann Sfar will be the first 3-D feature screened at ND/NF, as well as the first feature shown as a family film. Two programs of short films have also been added to this year’s schedule and Gareth Huw Evans’ Indonesian martial-arts thriller THE RAID will be the first late-night screening of a ND/NF selection.

    This year a special surprise screening will be featured as the Closing Night selection. The film will not be revealed to the audience until it screens at the Film Society on Sunday, April 1.

    Among the feature debuts are films by actors-turned-directors Karl Markovics and Roschdy Zem. Markovics’ BREATHING follows an inmate at a juvenile detention center whose last hope of parole rests on his ability to hold down a job as a morgue assistant, while Zem’s thriller OMAR KILLED ME is about a Moroccan gardener wrongly accused of murder. Visual artist and musician Terence Nance’s AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY is a personal meditation on love in the new millennium. The film was an audience favorite at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

    Additional first-time feature outings include Adam Leon’s GIMME THE LOOT, a New York-fueled adventure about two ambitious graffiti artists with a plan to make their revenge-inspired mark on the city. Song Chuan’s HUAN HUAN weaves an emotionally charged story about a woman whose indiscretions have a domino effect within her rural village. Similarly, Kleber Mendonça Filho’s NEIGHBORING SOUNDS looks at the unexpected consequences that occur when a private security firm is hired to police a prosperous middle class neighborhood sitting next to a low-income area. Finally, Lee Kwang-Kuk puts the lessons learned from being assistant director to Korean auteur Hong Sang-soo on display with his film ROMANCE JOE which thrusts the viewer into a series of intertwined stories triggered by a bar maid telling of the time she met a suicidal guy called ‘Romance Joe.’

    Returning to New Directors/New Films are Mads Brügger (THE RED CHAPEL, 2010) with his film THE AMBASSADOR, in which he takes center stage as the title character in an effort to expose African political misdeeds; and Joachim Trier (REPRISE, 2007) with his (previously announced) OSLO, AUGUST 31ST which follows a young man on what will be the most significant day of his life.

    Daring and experimental approaches to documentary filmmaking are highlighted by Anca Damian’s (previously announced) CRULIC: THE PATH TO BEYOND which utilizes hand-drawn, cutout and collage animation techniques and Victor Ginzburg’s GENERATION P, a metaphysical Mad Men from the go-go 1990s. Other documentaries include Emad Burnat’s and Guy Davidi’s Sundance award-winner for Best Documentary Direction, 5 BROKEN CAMERAS, which chronicles the jarring events that have taken place in Palestine over the past five years and David France’s HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE, which provides an immersive moving-image document chronicling the rise of AIDS activism.

    The 41st New Directors/New Films features selections include:

    THE AMBASSADOR (Ambassadøren) (2011) 94min
    Directed by Mads Brügger
    Country: Denmark
    The consummate agent-provocateur–his method fittingly described as “Graham Greene meets Borat”–Brügger (THE RED CHAPEL, NDNF 2010) shocks and mightily entertains by performing an artistic intervention in reality using role-playing and hidden cameras to expose an awful truth about life in central Africa.

    BREATHING (Atmen) (2011) 90min
    Director: Karl Markovics
    Country: Austria
    The remarkably assured directorial debut from veteran Austrian actor Karl Markovics (THE COUNTERFEITERS) creates a slipstream between the perilousness of youth and the inevitability of death as it tells the story of an inmate at a juvenile detention center whose last hope of parole rests on his ability to hold down a job…as a morgue assistant. A Kino Lorber release.

    CRULIC: THE PATH TO BEYOND (2011) 73min
    Director: Anca Damian
    Country: Romania
    Anca Damian’s documentary utilizes hand drawn, cutout and collage animation techniques, combined with some very dark humor to create a striking documentary about a young Romanian’s hunger strike in a Polish jail.

    DONOMA (2011) 133min
    Directed by Djinn Carrénard
    Country: France
    Rumored to have been shot for about $200, DONOMA announces the arrival of an intriguing new talent on the French scene, Haitian-born, Paris based Djinn Carrénard. Devised, shot (often guerrilla-style) and edited over a period of years, the film is a choral piece that chronicles the romantic destinies of three women, offering a fresh, funny portrait of an emerging French generation.

    FEAR AND DESIRE (1953) 72min
    Director: Stanley Kubrick
    Country: USA
    Directed, photographed, and edited by the talented and ambitious 24-year-old Kubrick, FEAR AND DESIRE was written by his high school classmate, Howard Sackler, who would go on to win the Pulitzer Prize in playwriting. Some Kubrick scholars see this wartime drama of five soldiers behind enemy lines and their encounter with a native woman as a dry run for PATHS OF GLORY; others see it as the original to the second half of FULL METAL JACKET. A Kino Lorber release.

    5 BROKEN CAMERAS (2011) 90min
    Directors: Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi
    Countries: Palestine/Israel/France
    Emad Burnat’s and Guy Davidi’s documentary began five years ago in the Palestinian town of Bil’in when Burnat bought a camera to record the birth of his son Gibreel. Gibreel’s arrival, however, coincided with a period of great unrest in the area, which is witnessed by five video cameras, each subsequently damaged by bullets or rocks. A Kino Lorber release.

    FOUND MEMORIES (Historias Que Só Existem Quando Lembradas) (2011) 98min
    Director: Julia Murat
    Country: Brazil
    The original title, which translates as “stories that only exist when remembered,” beautifully expresses the theme and core sentiment of Julia Murat’s poetic rendering of the fictive town of Jotuomba. A magical confluence of generations and cultures is occasioned by the visit of Rita, a young photographer, to this place where time has seemingly stood still and life is rooted in the fixed roles of tradition soon to be rendered obsolete. A Film Movement release.

    GENERATION P (2011) 116min
    Director: Victor Ginzburg
    Country: Russia
    Ginzburg’s GENERATION P could be described as a metaphysical Mad Men from the go-go 1990s – a wonderland of images and ideas that emerged from the rebirth of a nation as a marketer’s paradise. The film offers a “view” of post-Communist Russia as the arrival of democracy and Pepsi-Cola brought the advance of capitalism with all of its mechanisms and fuzzy messages.

    GIMME THE LOOT (2012) 81min
    Director: Adam Leon
    Country: USA
    In his feature film debut, Adam Leon has created a raucous, car-less road trip that is an homage to street-smart kids and New York City. Malcolm and Sofia, two determined teens from the Bronx, are the ultimate graffiti writers. When their latest masterpiece is wiped out by a rival gang, they must hustle, steal and scheme to get spectacular revenge and become the biggest graffiti writers in the city.

    GOODBYE (Bé omid é didar) (2011) 104min
    Director: Mohammad Rasoulof.
    Country: Iran
    In his latest film, celebrated Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof creates a dramatic and tense tale set in Tehran, where a young woman is desperately attempting to acquire a visa to leave the country. The beautifully shot film uses the confinement of space to cinematically express claustrophobia, its precise framing catching every subtle expression on the face of the astonishing Leyla Zareh, who plays the disbarred human rights lawyer, Noora, looking for a way out.

    HEMEL (2012) 80min
    Director: Sacha Polak
    Country: The Netherlands/Spain
    Sacha Polak’s HEMEL features Hannah Hoekstra as a strong-willed, complicated, and vulnerable heroine who longs (perhaps too much) to connect with her elusive father and ultimately find herself. The film is a powerful investigation of a sexually-empowered woman and her search for physical and intellectual intimacy.

    HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE (2012) 109min
    Director: David France
    Country: USA
    David France’s immersive moving-image document chronicling the rise of AIDS activism shows a movement though the lenses of those who captured it firsthand. Desperate people leveraged the skills they had—some wrote, some lobbied, many marched, and all mobilized—to flight a plague that vast swaths of society saw as just punishment for immoral actions. A Sundance Selects release.

    HUAN HUAN (2011) 90min
    Director: Song Chuan
    Country: China
    Song Chuan’s first feature captures the dreams and desires, disappointments and regrets, of a life not fully lived via the title character. In a rural Chinese village, a young woman who is the local doctor’s mistress struggles against her family, government bureaucracy and social mores to move away and create a life for herself.

    IT LOOKS PRETTY FROM A DISTANCE (Z daleka widok jest piekny) (2011) 77min
    Directors: Anka and Wilhelm Sasnal
    Country: Poland
    Anka and Wilhelm Sasnal’s film is set in a Polish village effectively cut off from civilization, where rough and impassive Pawel makes a living scavenging for scrap metal. There’s bad blood between him and the “community” (a more spiteful collection of individuals would be hard to imagine), and when he goes AWOL his neighbors loot and vandalize his home. What if he returns? A brooding, almost wordless drama vision of a world in an advanced state of entropy.

    LAS ACACIAS (2011) 85min
    Director: Pablo Giorgelli
    Country: Argentina
    One of the discoveries of the 2011 Cannes Critics Week, Pablo Giogelli’s road movie with a difference takes a 900-mile trip from Asunción in Paraguay to Buenos Aires in the company of Rubén, a gruff, taciturn truck driver and the two illegal immigrants—a young woman, and her new-born daughter—he is reluctantly transporting.

    THE MINISTER (L’exercice de l’État) (2011) 115min
    Director: Pierre Schöller
    Country: France
    Pierre Schöller’s political thriller focuses on a cabinet minister (Olivier Gourmet) in charge of national transportation who believes himself to be a man of the people. He wants both to be and do good, but in order to get anything done he must, given the exigencies of compromise, cajole, bend and even betray.

    NEIGHBORING SOUNDS (O som ao redor) (2012) 124min
    Director: Kleber Mendonça Filho
    Country: Brazil
    A thrilling debut from a breakout talent, Kleber Mendonça Filho’s NEIGHBORING SOUNDS delves into the lives of a group of prosperous middle-class families residing on a quiet street, close to a low-income neighborhood. A private security firm hired to police the street becomes the catalyst for an exploration of the neighbors’ discontents and anxieties, which are exacerbated by a palpable sense of unease over their society’s troubled past and present inequities.

    NOW, FORAGER (2012) 93min
    Directors: Jason Cortlund and Julia Halperin
    Countries: USA/Poland
    A quiet tale about the search for integrity and the perfect mushroom, Jason Cortlund’s and Julia Halperin’s NOW, FORAGER follows Lucien and Regina, an urban couple living off the land foraging for fungi in upstate New York with a dream of following the seasonal emergence of exotic varieties across the country. That is, until Regina’s decision to take a job in the kitchen of a hip restaurant offers a more solid opportunity, even as it betrays Lucien’s off-the-grid ethos.

    OMAR KILLED ME (Omar m’a tuer) (2011) 85min
    Director: Roschdy Zem
    Country: France
    Actor-turned-director Roschdy Zem’s OMAR KILLED ME tells a story of racism, politics, and injustice with the clarity of a documentary and the pacing of a thriller. When a rich widow was murdered in the south of France 20 years ago, her Moroccan gardener was convicted and jailed with no evidence; it took a committed journalist to try to unravel the rush to judgment that laid bare the racism that was hidden in the French justice system.

    OSLO, AUGUST 31ST (2011) 96min
    Director: Joachim Trier
    Country: Norway
    Daylight lingers at the end of August in Oslo, but sunlight is not a friend to Anders, a semi-recovered addict, facing a new life, which may not be appealing without former habits. Adapted from the same novel as Louis Malle’s THE FIRE WITHIN (1963), Joachim Trier’s OSLO, AUGUST 31ST follows Anders as he tries to adjust – making love, wandering through Oslo, having a job interview, seeing old friends, and trying to get comfortable with his situation. A Strand Releasing Film.

    AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY (2011) 95min
    Directed by Terence Nance
    Country: USA
    Frank, funny, and bracingly contemporary, visual artist Terence Nance gleefully bends the cinematic rules for his personal meditation on love in the new millennium with his film, AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF BEAUTY. Passages of live action sequences and direct-to-camera interviews are accented with a wide variety of animation styles as Nance analyzes his amorous history as well as his current circumstances.

    PORFIRIO (2011) 101min
    Director: Alejandro Landes
    Country: Colombia
    Paralyzed from the waist down by a stray police bullet, the title character in Alejandro Landes’ remarkable film spends his days selling minutes on his cell phone when not flirting with his comely neighbor, and secretly plotting his revenge. Landes worked on the film for five years, creating a tale that joined the most intimate details of Porfirio’s day-to-day life with an astonishing re-creation of his attempt to hijack an airplane.

    THE RABBI’S CAT (Le chat du rabbin) (2011) 89min
    Director: Antoine Delesvaux
    Countries: France/Austria
    Adapted from the graphic novels by Joanne Sfar, THE RABBI’S CAT is a vivid, lively, and imaginative animated film co-directed by Sfar and Antoine Delesvaux . Set in 1920’s Algiers, a widower rabbi lives with his voluptuous and dutiful daughter and their pesky cat who swallows a parakeet and begins to speak, driving everyone crazy and moving the plot ahead by insisting on having a bar-mitzvah.

    THE RAID (2011) 100min
    Director: Gareth Huw Evans
    Countries: Indonesia/USA
    In Gareth Huw Evans’ sensational thriller, THE RAID, a police SWAT team storms a housing project ruled by gangsters and inhabited by machete-wielding lowlifes—but the mission has been leaked, the tables are turned, and a dwindling band of elite fighters find themselves massively outnumbered in a lethal game of cat and mouse. What ensues is a relentless and savage succession of close-quarters shoot-outs and punishing martial-arts combat sequences, each jaw-dropping smackdown unbelievably topping the previous one. This film is wild! A Sony Pictures Classics release.

    ROMANCE JOE (Ro-maen-seu Jo ) (2011) 115min
    Director: Lee Kwang-Kuk
    Country: South Korea
    In his playful first feature, Lee Kwang-Kuk expertly weaves several narrative strands into an elegant web and a meditation on storytelling. A teasing and pleasing portrait of a filmmaker in search of a story to tell, ROMANCE JOE begins as a young, self-possessed barmaid in a remote inn recalls the time she met the title character.

    TEDDY BEAR (2012) 92min
    Director: Mads Matthiesen
    Country: Denmark
    Mads Matthiesen’s character-based and understated comedy, TEDDY BEAR tells the story of a gentle giant of a body builder who self sculpts his muscles by day and lives quietly at home with his mom at night. But at 38, he really wants a proper girlfriend, and despite his mother’s resistance (she is a master of emotional manipulation) and his own profound awkwardness, he draws up the courage to find one–even if he has to leave Denmark to do so.

    TWILIGHT PORTRAIT (2011) 105min
    Director: Angelina Nikonova
    Country: Russia
    TWILIGHT PORTRAIT is a powerhouse collaboration co-written and co-produced by Angelina Nikonova, who directed, and Olga Dihovichnaya, who stars in this very dark, provocative and constantly surprising debut feature film. In a modern Russian city where corruption, apathy and class warfare are the norm, a woman is raped, rather casually, by the police. What follows explodes the conventions of sexual politics—and will certainly have filmgoers talking.

    WHERE DO WE GO NOW? (2010) 100min
    Director: Nadine Labaki
    Countries: France/Lebanon/Italy/Egypt
    Labaki’s film focuses on a group of women of different religions in a remote Lebanese village that band together and invent schemes to prevent their men from killing each other in the intractable religious conflict that surrounds their community. This entertaining and unlikely near-musical tears down stereotypes of women in the Middle East and uses humor to explore serious subjects, with one eye toward Aristophanes’ Lysistrata and the other toward Bollywood. A Sony Pictures Classics Release.


    The 41st New Directors/New Films shorts selections include:

    PROGRAM 1 (In alphabetical order) 84min

    CHICA XX MUJER (2011) 12min
    Director: Isabell Šuba
    Countries: Germany/France
    In a country with the highest percentage of cosmetic surgery and beauty queens per capita, a Venezualian girl prepares to be celebrated like a princess on her quinceañera.
    THE CHILDREN OF THE NIGHT (Les enfants de la nuit) (2011) 26min
    Director: Caroline Deruas
    Country: France
    Girl meets boy, the oldest story in the book: but it’s France in 1944, and he’s German.
    GIONGO (2011) 8min
    Director: Colin Elliott
    Country: France
    What did Shakespeare know of love? How many words are there in Japanese for rain? Can anyone really dance the Mashed Potato?
    MEANING OF ROBOTS (2011) 4min
    Director: Matt Lenski
    Country: USA
    “I’ve been working on this robot movie… and over the years it developed into a sex movie.” Seriously.

    THE ROOM (Soba) (2011) 5min
    Director: Ivana Jurić
    Country: Croatia
    Stop motion animation explores sensuality and sex through the eyes of a doll.

    STREET VENDOR CINEMA (Cine camelô) (2011) 16min
    Director: Clarissa Knoll
    Country: Brazil
    When a filmmaker and his team set up a shop that makes and sells short films on demand, wild fantasies come to life in the middle of a bustling marketplace.

    SUMMIT (2011) 13min
    Director: Medeni Griffiths
    Countries: UK/USA
    A chance encounter on a mountain road can lead to friendship and understanding or mistrust and betrayal.
    PROGRAM 2  (In alphabetical order) 96min

    THE END (2011) 16min
    Director: Didier Barcelo
    Country: France
    A respected actress’ work gets refurbished.

    OH SORROW (Ay pena) (2011) 20min
    Director: Elisa Cepedal
    Country: Spain
    When you lose your last connection to the place you once called home, what’s to keep you there?

    THE PLAIN (A chjána) (2011) 21min
    Director: Jonas Carpignano
    Countries: Italy/USA
    Based on real events in Italy, an African immigrant discovers an unexpected cost to his activism.

    REVOLUTION REYKJAVIK (2011) 20min
    Director: Isold Uggadottir
    Country: Iceland
    As Iceland sinks into economic meltdown, 58-year-old Gudfinna tries, against all odds, not to do the same.

    ROLLING ON THE FLOOR LAUGHING (2011) 19min
    Director: Russell Harbaugh
    Country: USA
    Two sons become over-protective with their mother at a dinner to celebrate her birthday.

     


    Read more


  • Brian Bolsters film THE LOOKOUT and Jeff Orlowsskis CHASING ICE Win Top Awards at 2012 Big Sky Documentary Film Festival

    ,

    [caption id="attachment_2337" align="alignnone"]Jeff Orlowsskis CHASING ICE[/caption]

    The 9th annual Big Sky Documentary Film Festival announced this year’s award winning films in the four competitive categories: Best Feature, Big Sky Award, Best Short Film and Best Mini Doc (under 15 minutes) on Thursday evening at a ceremony at The Loft in downtown Missoula. Each category winner will receive $500, courtesy of The Documentary Channel.

    FEATURE FILM COMPETITION  The Best Feature prize was awarded to Jeff Orlowsskis CHASING ICE,  about National Geographic environmental photographer James Blalog.  Jurors Amy Shattsky and Ben Fowlie called the film, an extremely timely and important documentary about one man’s journey to demonstrate global warming in action by photographing the recession of the glaciers. Touching, terrifying and informative, we feel the highs, lows, frustrations and joys of the ultimate success of his experiment. Through a patient and thoughtful filmmaking approach, the director vividly captures the power and awe of the glaciers falling apart. As they recede into the ocean, the glaciers cry out, warning us of the peril that our planet is in.

    SHORT FILM COMPETITION  Reva Goldberg and Caveh Zahedi awarded the Short Film prize to Matt Leighs BLUE RINSE, a sweet observational film set in a Dublin hair salon.  They also awarded an Artistic Vision Award to KUDZU VINE by Josh Gibson.

    MINI-DOC COMPETITION  Yance Ford awarded the Mini Doc awarded to MR SMITHS PEACH SEEDS, Stewart Copelands beautifully realized portrait of Tennessee folk artist Roger Smith.

    BIG SKY AWARD  Brian Bolsters film THE LOOKOUT received the Big Sky Award, presented by filmmakers Marshall Curry and Beth Harrington. In addition, Audrey Halls film about portrait artist Hugh Wilson was give an Artistic Excellence Award.

    All awarded films will re-screen the final weekend of the festival.

    Read more


  • Bailout and It’s in the Blood Among Winners of 2012 Derby City Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_2486" align="alignnone" width="549"]It’s in the Blood[/caption]

    Louisville natives Scooter Downey & Sean Elliot, and Frankfort filmmakers Todd Sheene, Allen Martin, & Scott Stafford are among the winners of the top prizes at the 2012 Derby City Film Festival which took place February 17th through the 19th.

    “It’s in the Blood” written by Downey & Elliot, took home the awards for Best US Feature Film, Audience Choice, and Best Actor (Elliot). The film was directed by Downey and also stars Lance Henriksen who received a Lifetime Achievement Award prior to the film screening. Sheene, Martin, & Stafford took home the award for Best US Short Film for their film “Bizarnival: Tuxedos in the Attic”

    The full list of 2012 Award winners:

    Videoblocks & The Footage Firm Award for Technical Achievement: “Grounded”
    Audience Choice: “It’s in the Blood”
    Lifetime Achievement: Lance Henriksen
    Best Actor: Sean Elliot – “It’s in the Blood”
    Best Actress: Kristen Booth – “Below Zero”
    Best Student Short Film: “Thin Air”
    Best International Short Film: “Donkey”
    Best US Short Film: “Bizarnival: Tuxedos in the Attic
    Best Documentary: “Bailout”
    Best Feature Film: “It’s in the Blood”

    Dates for the 2013 Derby City Film Festival and call for entries will be announced later this Spring.

    Read more


  • 2012 Phoenix Film Festival Announces Ten Films in this year’s Feature Film Competition

    [caption id="attachment_2484" align="alignnone" width="550"]How Do You Write a Joe Schermann Song[/caption]

    The 2012 Phoenix Film Festival has announced the ten films scheduled to compete in this year’s Feature Film Competition.  In addition to featuring some of the brightest new talent that the industry has to offer, the competition films are also rife with established Hollywood names and former festival favorites, including ‘Friday Night Lights’ alum, starlet Minka Kelly (Searching for Sonny), and 2008 Arizona Filmmaker of the Year Bivas Biswas (Paranoia).  See the full list of titles from the genre bending slate below.

    Connected – This acclaimed Sundance feature documentary offers an exhilarating stream-of-consciousness ride through the interconnectedness of humankind, nature, progress and morality at the dawn of the 21st century.

    Hollywood to Dollywood – On the fumes of a dream, twin brothers Gary and Larry Lane have written a script with a plum roll for one of their idols, Dolly Parton.  Having had no luck getting the screenplay into her hands, they embark on a cross-country journey to personally deliver it to her.

    How Do You Write a Joe Schermann Song – After landing an opportunity to write for an Off-Broadway musical, Joe is forced to cast either the love of his life or his newly discovered muse. The realities of show business prove to Joe that writing is easy, living is hard.

    Into the Wake – A psychological thriller that follows a man lured from the city to the remote river banks of his youth by a cryptic phone call. Caught in a violent clan war that he ran from years ago, his life unravels rapidly behind him as he descends further into his past.

    Must Come Down – This film chronicles Holly and Ashley, two listless 20-Somethings, and their brief commiseration as grown-up children stumbling through life’s final bout of growing pains.

    Paranoia – A classic “Whodunit” and psychological thriller from award winning director Bivas Biswas.  An ambitious detective investigates the murder of his wife’s best friend’s husband.  His wife’s best friend holds the key to the mystery but she struggles with reality and imagination.

    Searching for Sunny – Sonny Bosco is missing under mysterious circumstances, and the investigation turns meta when it’s realized that everything happening seems eerily similar to a play performed in high school – a play Sonny wrote.

    Shuffle – Part Twilight Zone-style mystery, part Frank Capra fantasy, SHUFFLE is the terrifying tale of a man who begins experiencing his life out of order; every day he wakes up at a different age, on a different day of his life, never knowing where or when he’s going to be once he falls asleep.

    Small, Beautifully Moving Parts – A comic and poignant look at one woman’s coming-of-parenthood in the age of technology.

    We Run Sh*t – This film examines the struggle of five veteran event producers who travel to Miami during it’s annual Winter Music Conference.  It’s a never-before-seen expose into the darker side of nightlife entertainment.

    The 12th Annual Phoenix Film Festival runs this year from Thursday, March 29th to Thursday, April 5th. The week long Festival will be held once again at Harkins Scottsdale 101 Theaters located at 7000 E. Mayo Blvd. Phoenix, AZ 85054.

    Read more


  • BLUE LIKE JAZZ to Open in Theatres on April 13 after Premiere at 2012 SXSW

    BLUE LIKE JAZZ, directed and co-written by Steve Taylor (THE SECOND CHANCE)  will have its World Premiere in the Narrative Spotlight section at the 2012 South-by-Southwest Film Festival before opening in theatres on April 13th.

    Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller spent 43 weeks on the New York Times Best Seller list and has sold over 1.5 million copies to date.  The semi-autobiographical story was adapted for the screen by Miller, Steve Taylor and Ben Pearson.

    In the early days of pre-production, the project was forced to be put on hold due to lack of funding, prompting a website to be created by fans, for fans, called “Save Blue Like Jazz”.  The site urged loyalists to help raise money to fund the movie through Kickstarter, an online matchmaker for filmmakers and financial backers. The campaign went on to raise a record-setting $345,000, more than doubling the original goal of $125,000, allowing the film to start production.

    In Blue Like Jazz, Don (Allman), a pious nineteen-year-old sophomore at a Texas junior college, impulsively decides to escape his religious upbringing for life in the Pacific Northwest at one of the most progressive campuses in America, Reed College in Portland.  Upon arrival, Reed’s surroundings and eccentric student body proves to be far different than he could possibly imagine from the environment from which he came, forcing him to embark on a journey of self-discovery to understand who he is and what he truly believes.

    The film boasts a cast of rising stars including Marshall Allman (TRUE BLOOD), Claire Holt (THE VAMPIRE DIARIES, PRETTY LITTLE LIARS), and Tania Raymonde (LOST). Blue Like Jazz was produced by Taylor, J. Clarke Gallivan and Coke Sams for Ruckus Film.

    Read more


  • AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY from 2012 Sundance Film Festival to be released in the Summer

    Sundance Selects will release director Alison Klayman’s AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY which just screened as an Official Selection in the Berlinale Special at the Berlin Film Festival following its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival where it won a Special Jury Prize for Spirit of Defiance.  Sundance Selects is planning a major summer theatrical release which will coincide with Ai Weiwei’s first trip outside of China since his detention.

    Ai Weiwei is China’s most famous international artist and its most outspoken domestic critic. Against a backdrop of strict censorship and an unresponsive legal system, Ai expresses himself and organizes people through art and social media. In response, Chinese authorities have shut down his blog, beat him up, bulldozed his newly built studio, and held him in secret detention.  AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY is the inside story of a dissident for the digital age who inspires global audiences and blurs the boundaries of art and politics. First-time director Alison Klayman gained unprecedented access to Ai while working as a journalist in China. Her detailed portrait provides a nuanced exploration of contemporary China and one of its most compelling public figures.

    Read more


  • KING ME Documentary to Screen at 2012 Cleveland International Film Festival

    Think Media Studios said today that their 2011 documentary, KING ME, will screen at this year’s Cleveland International Film Festival. The documentary follows the story of one man’s struggle to elevate himself from his humble roots through a very unlikely game, world championship checkers.

    Played by millions across the globe, most see checkers as simply a casual game.  However, there is a competitive world of world-class checkers that features colorful characters, intense competition, and celebrated checkers champions.  KING ME is the true story of a rare talent rising from obscurity and a gritty examination of South African post-apartheid race relations not seen before. The movie’s protagonist, Lubabalo Kondlo, is a South African township resident who faces many obstacles in his quest to become a World Champion. KING ME’s sometimes heart wrenching story is framed within the confines of the competitive checker scene and its slightly off center denizens deliver unforgettable and often hilarious moments.

    King Me will have multiple showings during the festival that runs from March 22nd to April 1st.  The 36th annual Cleveland International Film Festival features more than 100 feature films as well as more than 100 short subject films, from more than 50 countries. Last year’s festival took in nearly 80,000 movie enthusiasts

    “We’re excited to be a part of the Cleveland International Film Festival,” said Think Producer and KING ME’s Director, Geoff Yaw.  “King Me’s story takes place all over the globe from Africa to the Caribbean, and then ends up right here in Northeast Ohio. It was important to us to show the movie right here at home in Cleveland.”



    Read more


  • Documentary The Imposter from 2012 Sundance Film Festival to be Release Later This Year

    The Indomina Group will release The Imposter, Bart Layton’s directorial debut which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and will be shown at the upcoming SXSW festival.  Indomina is planning a theatrical release later this year, 2012.

    Layton’s documentary, The Imposter, is a chilling factual thriller that chronicles the story of a 13-year-old boy who disappears without a trace from San Antonio, Texas in 1994. Three and a half years later he is found alive, thousands of miles away in a village in southern Spain with a story of kidnapping and torture. His family is overjoyed to bring him home. But all is not quite as it seems. The boy bears many of the same distinguishing marks he always had, but why does he now have a strange accent? Why does he look so different? Any why doesn’t the family seem to notice these glaring inconsistencies? It’s only when an investigator starts asking questions that this strange tale takes an even stranger turn.

    The stranger than fiction mystery, which features many twists and turns, is told in a cinematic language that combines documentary and stylized visualizations.   Perception is challenged at every turn, and just as the truth begins to dawn on you, another truth merges leaving you even more on edge.

    Read more