• Palm Springs International Film Festival to honor Actress Jessica Chastain and Composer Howard Shore

    [caption id="attachment_2121" align="alignnone"]Jessica Chastain in Tree of Life [/caption]

    The 23rd annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) will honor Jessica Chastain with the Spotlight Award and composer Howard Shore with the Frederick Loewe Award for Film Composing.

    Jessica Chastain will receive the Spotlight Award.  The Spotlight Award honors an actor or actress for their extraordinary performances in the current cinematic year.  Chastain will receive the award for her roles in The Help, The Tree of Life, Take Shelter, The Debt and Coriolanus.

    Her work in Take Shelter earned a Gotham Award for Best Ensemble Cast and an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Female.  Her other honors this year include a New York Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress for The Tree of Life, The Help and Take Shelter and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association’s award as Best Supporting Actress for all of her movies this year.  Additionally, Chastain’s role in The Help led her to several acclamations including a Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture, a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role and a Critics’ Choice Movie Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

    Howard Shore will receive the Frederick Loewe Award for Film Composing.  He previously received the same honor at the Festival’s Awards Gala in 2005 for composing the score in The Aviator.  His collaboration with director Martin Scorsese also includes composing the scores for “Gangs of New York” and “The Departed.”  This year he will be receiving the award for his ‘exceptional’ work in Martin Scorsese’s Hugo.

    PSIFF recipients of the Frederick Loewe Music Award include T Bone Burnett, Alexandre Desplat, Danny Elfman, James Newton Howard, Randy Newman and Diane Warren.

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  • Salmon Fishing in the Yemen to Open and Almanya, Welcome to Germany to Close 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_2118" align="alignnone" width="550"]Amr Waked as Sheikh and Ewan McGregor as Fred Jones in Salmon Fishing in the Yemen[/caption]

    The 23rd annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) will launch on Thursday, January 5 with CBS Films’ Salmon Fishing in the Yemen and wraps on Sunday, January 15 with Almanya, Welcome to Germany.  The festival,  running from January 5-16 in Palm Springs, California announced its Galas, Premieres, Modern Masters and a Special Presentation.

    OPENING AND CLOSING GALAS
    The Festival will open with the screening of CBS Films’ Salmon Fishing in the Yemen (UK.  Directed by Oscar©-nominee Lasse Hallström, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is an extraordinary, beguiling tale of fly-fishing and political spinning, of unexpected heroism and late-blooming love and of an attempt to prove the impossible, possible. Ewan McGregor and Emily Blunt star in the feature film alongside Oscar©-nominee Kristen Scott  Based on Paul Torday’s acclaimed novel, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is written by Oscar-winner Simon Beaufoy and produced by Paul Webster and executive produced by Jamie Laurenson, Stephen Garrett, Paula Jalfon, Zygi Kamasa and Guy Avshalom.  CBS Films will open the film in US theaters on March 9, 2012.

    [caption id="attachment_2119" align="alignnone" width="550"]Almanya, Welcome to Germany[/caption]

    Closing the Festival is Almanya, Welcome to Germany (Germany), neatly structured into two interwoven time frames, this charming, colorfully styled comedy centers on multiple generations of a German-Turkish clan, and derives its touching, laugh-out-loud humor from cultural misunderstandings and the question of what constitutes national identity.  The film has received many accolades including two 2011 German Film Awards including Best Film (Silver) and Best Screenplay and winner of the Audience Award at the Chicago Film Festival.  The film is directed by Yasemin Samdereli and stars Vedat Erincin, Fahri Yardim, Lilay Huser, Demet Gul, Aylin Tezel, Denis Moschitto.

    PREMIERES
    The Festival will offer a selection of 60 premieres of highly anticipated films, showcasing the diversity of international cinema

    World premieres include: Academy Award winner Marcia Gay Harden and Aidan Quinn in If I Were You (Canada/UK) and Michael O’Keefe in A Thousand Cuts (USA).

    North American premieres include: Asma’a (Egypt), Baikonur (Kazakhstan/Germany, Russia), Beast (Denmark), By the Fire (Chile/Germany, Spain), Cold Steel (China), Happy New Year, Grandma! (Spain), Hotel Lux (Germany), How Big is Your Love (Algeria/Morocco), Love in the Medina (Morocco), Lovely Man (Indonesia), Off White Lies (Israel), The Perfect Stranger (Spain), Real Truths. The Life of Estela (Argentina); The Rif Lover (Morocco/France, Belgium), Run for Life (Serbia/Japan), Sea Shadow (United Arab Emirates), Three Quarter Moon (Germany), Time to Spare (Netherlands), Transit Cities (Jordan), Women with Cows (Sweden), Wreckers (UK)and Wrinkles (Spain).

    U.S. premieres include:Alois Nebel (Czech Republic/Germany), Arranged Happiness (Germany/India), Back to your Arms (Lithuania/Germany, Poland), Blood of My Blood (Portugal), The British Guide to Showing Off (UK),Academy Award winners Olympia Dukakis and Brenda Fricker in Cloudburst (Canada/USA), Come As You Are (Belgium), Die Standing Up (Mexico), Edwin Boyd (Canada), Elena (Russia), Expiration Date (Mexico), Juliette Lewis in Foreverland (Canada), Generation P (Russia/USA), The Girls in the Band (USA), The Graveyard Keeper’s Daughter (Estonia), Guilty (France), Habibi (Palestinian, Territories/USA, Netherlands, United Arab Emirates), Las Acacias (Argentina/Spain), Last Winter (Belgium/France), Lena (Netherlands/Belgium), Let My People Go! (France), Lucky (South Africa/India), Michel Petrucciani (France/Germany, Italy), North Sea Texas (Belgium), Nuit #1 (Canada), Omar Killed Me (Morocco/France), The Orator (New Zealand/Samoa), P-047 (Thailand), Rumble of the Stones (Venezuela), Simon and the Oaks (Sweden/Norway, Denmark, Germany), The Snows of Kilimanjaro (France), Sons of Norway (Norway/France/Denmark/Sweden), Summer Games (Switzerland/Italy), SuperClásico (Denmark), The Tall Man (Australia) and Watch Indian Circus (India).

    SPECIAL PRESENATION

    •Haywire (USA) – Mallory Kane (Gina Carano) is a highly trained operative who works for a government security contractor in the dirtiest, most dangerous corners of the world.  After successfully freeing a Chinese journalist held hostage, she is double crossed and left for dead by someone close to her in her own agency.  Suddenly the target of skilled assassins who know her every move, Mallory must find the truth in order to stay alive.  Director: Steven Soderbergh.  Cast: Gina Carano, Michael Fassbender, Ewan McGregor, Bill Paxton, Channing Tatum, Antonio Banderas, Michael Douglas.


    MODERN MASTERS
    The Modern Masters section features films from some of the true auteurs of contemporary cinema including Christoffer Boe, Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne, Robert Guédiguian, Masato Harada, Chen Kaige, Nanni Moretti, Pawel Pawlikowski, Michael Radford, Lynne Ramsay, and Andrey Zvyaginstev.

    •Beast (Denmark) – An obsessive, destructive love transforms a caring husband into a bloodthirsty beast in this perversely fascinating psychodrama.  Director: Christoffer Boe.  Cast: Nicolas Bro, Marijana Jankovic, Nikolaj Lie Kaas.

    •Chronicle of My Mother (Japan) – Masato’s moving, impeccably acted period drama about the relationship between a self-centered writer and his aging mother draws from an autobiographical novel by Inoue Yasushi.  Director: Masato Harada.  Cast: Koji Yakushiko, Kirin Kiki, Aoi Miyazaki, Rentaro Mikuni.

    •Elena (Russia) – An engrossing yarn about a coveted inheritance, cruel class differences and quietly monstrous misdeeds, Elena paints a chilling portrait of Russia’s post-Communist consumer society as culture entirely lacking in morality.  The film won a Special Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.  Director: Andrey Zvyagintsev.  Cast: Nadezhda Markina, Andrey Smirnov, Elena Lyadova, Alexey Rozin.

    •Habemus Papam (Italy/France) – Habemus papam! is the phrase that announces the election of the new pontiff – but what happens if the chosen man does not want the job?  Nanni Moretti imagines with comedy and pathos a crisis in the Vatican when Cardinal Melville refuses to address the Catholic faithful as their new spiritual leader.  Director: Nanni Moretti.  Cast: Michel Piccoli, Nanni Moretti, Jerzy Stuhr, Renato Scarpa, Franco Graziosi, Margherita Buy, Dario Cantarelli

    •The Kid with a Bike (Belgium/France, Italy) – Fate drops an angry 11-year-old in the path of a kind-hearted hairdresser.  The boy’s intensity drives the Dardennes’ Cannes prize-winning film, but the woman’s tenderness and compassion create rare moments of grace in this heartbreaking tale of abandonment.  Directors: Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne.  Cast: Cecile de France, Thomas Doret, Jeremie Renier, Fabrizio Rongione, Egon di Mateo.

    •Michel Petrucciani (France/Germany, Italy) – Petrucciani was born with a crippling genetic disorder that prevented him from growing more than three feet tall.  Yet he become one the greatest jazz pianists. A wonderful documentary portrait of a larger-than-life personality by director Michael Radford (Il Postino).

    •Sacrifice (China) – Fifth Generation master Chen is back on top with this sumptuous Yuan Dynasty tale of mistaken identity, court intrigue, murder, and revenge. Baby Zhao is saved by his family doctor and raised by him to exact revenge on the General who murdered the Zhao clan.  Director: Chen Kaige.  Cast: Ge You, Wang Xueqi, Huang Xiaoming, Fan Bingbing, Hai Qing, Ahang Fengyi.

    •The Snows of Kilimanjaro (France) – Veteran Robert Guédiguian, Marseilles’s answer to Mike Leigh, delivers a potent, moving slice of life as an aging trade unionist and his wife try to come to terms with a traumatic home invasion – and the knowledge that they know the perpetrator.  Director: Robert Guédiguian.  Cast: Ariane Ascaride, Jean-Pierre Darroussin, Gerard Meylan, Gregoire LePrince-Ringuet, Maryline Canto, Anais Demoustier

    •We Need to Talk About Kevin (UK) – Two years after her teenage son commits a horrific crime, Eva (Tilda Swinton) tries to come to terms with her marriage, career, and parenthood.  A grippingly cinematic, searingly honest film from the director of Ratcatcher and Morvern Callar.  Director: Lynne Ramsay.  Cast: Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller, Siobhan Fallon, Ursula Parker, Ashley Gerasimovich.

    •The Woman in the Fifth (UK/France, Poland) – Ethan Hawke and Kristin Scott Thomas star in this mind-bending psychological thriller about an American writer in Paris trying to reconnect with his daughter, whose grip on reality loosens in part due to the influence of Scott Thomas’s mysterious femme fatale.  Director: Pawel Pawlikowski.  Cast: Ethan Hawke, Kristin Scott Thomas, Samir Guesmi, Joanna Kulig.

    Other Festival films with notable talent and directors include: Glenn Close and Janet McTeer in Albert Nobbs (Ireland); Ewan McGregor, Eva Green, Ewen Bremner and Connie Nielsen in Perfect Sense (UK/Germany, Sweden, Denmark); Linda Cardellini, Michael Shannon, John Slattery in Return (USA); Sal (USA) directed by James Franco; and Greg Kinnear, Alan Arkin, Billy Crudup, David Harbour, Bob Balaban, Lea Thompson in Thin Ice (USA);

     

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  • House of Tolerance Tops French Lumière Awards Nominations

    [caption id="attachment_2116" align="alignnone"]Bertrand Bonello’s House of Tolerance[/caption]

    The nominations for the 17th Lumière Awards, aka the French Golden Globes, were announced, and Bertrand Bonello’s House of Tolerance lead the field with six nominations including Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay and a surprising three for Best Female Newcomer for actresses Alice Barnole, Adèle Haenel and Céline Sallette.

    House of Tolerance is described as Bertrand Bonello’s highly stylized look at the final days of a fin-de-siècle brothel in Paris.

    Michel Hazanavicius’s The Artist was right behind with five nominations including Best Film, Best Director, amd Best Screenplay. Other films with multiple nominations include Pierre Schoeller’s The Minister with four nominations and Aki Kaurismäki’s Le Havre with three nominations.

    List of nominees:

    Best Film
    House of Tolerance – Bertrand Bonello
    The Artist – Michel Hazanavicius
    The Minister – Pierre Schoeller
    Le Havre – Aki Kaurismäki
    Untouchable – Eric Toledano and Olivier Nakache

    Best Director
    Bertrand Bonello – House of Tolerance
    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist
    Maïwenn – Poliss
    Aki Kaurismäki – Le Havre
    Pierre Schoeller – The Minister

    Best Screenplay
    Bertrand Bonello – House of Tolerance
    Robert Guédiguian and Jean-Louis Milesi – The Snows of Kilimanjaro
    Michel Hazanavicius – The Artist
    Maïwenn and Emmanuelle Bercot – Poliss
    Pierre Schoeller – The Minister

    Best Actress
    Bérénice Béjo – The Artist
    Catherine Deneuve and Chiara Mastroianni – The Beloved by Christophe Honoré
    Valérie Donzelli – Declaration of War by Valérie Donzelli
    Marina Fois and Karin Viard – Poliss
    Clotilde Hesme – Angèle and Tony by Alix Delaporte

    Best Actor
    Jean Dujardin – The Artist
    Olivier Gourmet – The Minister
    Joey Starr – Poliss
    Omar Sy – Untouchable
    André Wilms – Le Havre

    Best Female Newcomer
    Alice Barnole – House of Tolerance
    Adèle Haenel – House of Tolerance
    Zoé Héran – Tomboy by Céline Sciamma
    Céline Sallette – House of Tolerance
    Anamaria Valtoromei – Little Princess [trailer] by Eva Ionesco

    Best Male Newcomer
    Grégory Gadebois – Angèle and Tony
    Guillaume Gouix – Jimmy Rivière [trailer] by Teddy Lussi-Modeste
    Raphaël Ferret – Guilty [trailer] by Vincent Garenq
    Denis Ménochet – The Adopted [trailer] by Mélanie Laurent
    Mahmoud Shalaby – Free Men [trailer] by Ismaël Ferroukhi

    Best French-Language Film (from outside France)
    Curling – Denis Côté (Canada)
    Where Do We Go Now? [trailer] – Nadine Labaki (France/Lebanon/Italy)
    Scorched – Denis Villeneuve (Canada)
    The Kid With a Bike [trailer, film focus] – Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (Belgium/France/Italy)
    The Giants [trailer, film focus] – Bouli Lanners (Belgium/Luxembourg/France)

    A very special mention for the dog-actor in The Artist

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  • Gilles Jacob Wins A New Term As President of Cannes Film Festival

    The Cannes Film Festival board of administrators has extended the terms of Gilles Jacob, the 81-year-old president of the Cannes film festival, along with its 50-year-old director Thierry Fremaux.

    Although there were reportedly several big-name positions positioning for the job including French Culture Minister Frederic Mitterrand, Jacob told AFP, that the festival’s board of administrators voted to extend his mandate as President until 2014 along with that of Fremaux.

    The Cannes Film Festival is run as an association whose members are a mix of French state representatives, including of the culture ministry and parliament, and figures from the French film world, from producers to cinemas.

    The next festival is scheduled for May 16 to 27, 2012.

     

     

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  • First Five Films of Perspektive Deutsches Kino Program at 2012 Berlinale

    In 2012, the Perspektive Deutsches Kino programme at the Berlin International Film Festival will open with Katarina Peters’ documentary Man for a Day. A number of open-minded women attend a workshop given by performance artist and drag king activist Diane Torr. They work on transforming themselves into the man of their choice for a day. Giving up old roles and taking on new ones is hard work, but it is great fun trying to decipher them while observing yourself in the process. After Am seidenen Faden (Stroke, 2004), this is Kararina Peters’ second full-length film.

    Gegen Morgen is Joachim Schoenfeld’s first full-length feature. For years, Schoenfeld worked as an actor for television and the screen, and a radio speaker. Now, with this story about the two policemen Wagner und Zippolt, he is presenting his visually unusual directorial debut. With two colleagues, he also produced the film. Gegen Morgen (Before Tomorrow) premiered in Panorama Spectrum at the Shanghai International Film Festival in June 2011.

    Author Tim Staffel makes his directorial debut with Westerland, a feature film produced by Salzgeber & Co Medien GmbH. Staffel first became known for his novel “Terrordrom” (1998). Here he has filmed his book “Jesús und Muhammed”, written on Sylt in 2008. In it two young men fall in love with each other and then hole themselves up on an island. At moments, it’s paradise; at others, hell.

    “What is remarkable this time is that all three feature films selected so far are works of directors who were way past 40 when they made their first full-length films,” comments Linda Söffker, director of the Perspektive section. “A broad spectrum and roundabout routes enrich the festival environment and cinema culture.”

    Two medium-long works from the Academy of Media Arts in Cologne show that the direct path – via a film school and directing courses – can also produce films that are aesthetically outstanding. In Sterben nicht vorgesehen, director Matthias Stoll uses documentary pictures from the past and present, to put together a loving portrait of his dead father. Early memories are brought to life in animations: a melancholy farewell in the form of a humourous essay. Tage in der Stadt (Out off), on the other hand, is not about a parting but a new start. How do you start over when you’ve been behind bars for 13 years, and life is totally unstructured when you get out? Nina (Pascale Schiller) drifts through town as if she is in no way part of it. Something is visibly missing.

    On February 19, Berlinale Kinotag, (the Berlinale’s cinema day for the public), will continue the concept from last year: the winners of the Max Ophüls Award in the feature film competition 2012 and the winner of the First Steps Award 2012 in the category documentary film (The Other Chelsea – Eine Geschichte aus Donezk/A Story from Donetsk, directed by Jakob Preuss) will be presented within the framework of the Berlinale.

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  • 62nd Berlin International Film Festival Unveils Official Poster

     

    The 62nd Berlin International Film Festival, taking place from February 9 to 19, 2012, unveiled its official poster. As of mid January the poster for the Berlinale 2012 will add a bright note to the winter cityscape – first around the Potsdamer Platz and then all over Berlin. The motif on the poster will also appear on many of the Festival’s publications.

    “The Berlinale Bear is both a trademark and a popular symbol. The colourful variations of the Berlinale Bear in the poster’s motif for 2012 allude perfectly to the Festival’s diversity and multifaceted nature, and will put the city in the mood for this major event,” says BOROS, the agency doing the artwork for the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival.

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  • Palm Springs International Film Festival to Honor Director Stephen Daldry

    The 23rd annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) will present three time Academy Award nominee Stephen Daldry with the Director of the Year Award for Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close.

    Daldry is an award-winning director of both stage and screen.  His first feature film, Billy Elliot, won more than 40 awards worldwide and received three Oscar® nominations, including Best Director.  His second feature The Hours received nine Oscar® nominations including Best Picture and Director, 11 BAFTA nominations and won Best Picture (Drama) at the Golden Globes.  His other recent feature, The Reader, earned five Oscar® nominations, including Best Director and Best Picture.

    Past Director of the Year honorees include Ang Lee, Anthony Minghella, Alexander Payne, Sean Penn, Jason Reitman and David O. Russell.

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  • Palm Springs International Film Festival Unveils New Program highlighting Arab Cinema for 2012

    [caption id="attachment_2105" align="alignnone"]Asma’a[/caption]

    The 2012 Palm Springs International Film Festival announced a new program highlighting Arab Cinema as well as films selected to compete for the FIPRESCI Award, New Voices/New Visions Award and John Schlesinger Awards.  The Festival will screen 40 of the 63 official submissions to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for Best Foreign Language Film. 

    ARABIAN NIGHTS: A Showcase of CINEMA FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
    This program will premiere 11 new films made in the Middle East.  The showcase reflects the dramatic upsurge of film production and the concurrent emergence of exciting new filmmaking talents across the region.  The films selected in the Arabian Nights program include:

    Asma’a (Egypt) – Devout, careworn widow Asma’a has a secret.  She is HIV-positive in a world where the disease is still stigmatized.  Ultimately, the host of a daring TV show inspires Asma’a to speak out and fight back – both against her illness and social ignorance.  Director: Amr Salama.  Cast: Hend Sabry, Maged El Kedwani, Hani Adel, Ahmad Kamal, Sayed Ragab, Botros Ghali.

    Cairo 678 (Egypt) – Tackling the issue of sexual harassment, which continues to plague Egyptian society, this social issues drama focuses on three women from different backgrounds.  Director: Mohamed Diab Bushra.  Cast: Nelli Kareem, Nahed El Seba’i, Maged El Kedwany, Bassem Samra.

    Habibi (Palestinian Territories/USA, Netherlands, United Arab Emirates) – The first fiction feature set in Gaza in over 15 years offers a story of forbidden love.  Can Qays, a poet from the refugee camp, build a future with Layla, the daughter of a traditional, religious family?  Director: Susan Youssef.  Cast: Kais Nashif, Maisa Abd Elhadi, Yussef Abu-Warda, Amer Khalil.

    How Big is Your Love (Algeria/Morocco) – A heartwarming examination of childhood and love in modern Algiers.  With his parents breaking up, 8-year-old Adel is sent to live with his grandparents.  Soon it’s like he’s lived there forever, he’s so intimately wrapped up in their lives.  Director: Fatma Zohra Zamoum.  Cast: Racim Zennadi, Adbelkader Tadjer, Louiza Habani, Loubna Boucheloukh, Zahir Bouzrar, Nadjia Debbahi-Laaraf.

    Love in the Medina (Morocco) – In this colorful melodrama, a young man from a conservative Moroccan family infuriates his father when he decides to become a butcher.  Soon he discovers that there is only one thing that he loves more than choice cuts…Women.  Director: Abdelhaï Laraki.  Cast: Omar Lotfi, Ouidad Elma, Driss Rokh, Amal Ayouch.

    [caption id="attachment_2106" align="alignnone"]Man Without a Cell Phone[/caption]

    Man Without a Cell Phone (Palestinian Territories/France, Belgium, Qatar) – An Arab-Israeli village’s new cell-phone tower quickly goes from minor annoyance to symbol of oppression.  In turn, charming slacker Jawdat abandons youthful aimlessness for activism.  Tempering its pointed politics with gentle humour, Sameh Zoabi’s dramedy is an old-fashioned crowd-pleaser.  Director: Sameh Zoabi.  Cast: Razi Shawahdeh, Basem Loulou, Louay Noufi, Ayman Nahas.

    On The Edge (Morocco/France, Germany) – In the demimonde of nocturnal Tangier, four street-smart young women struggle to escape their poverty turning tricks and pawning stolen valuables.  The film won Best Film, Best Director and Best Actress at the Taormina Film Festival.  Director: Leila Kilani.  Cast: Soufia Issami, Mouna Bahmad, Nouzha Akel, Sara Betioui.

    The Rif Lover (Morocco/France, Belgium) – A bold, visually ravishing tale of women struggling against the bonds of tradition as a beautiful but naïve 20-year-old falls into the clutches of a drug baron.  Director: Narjiss Nejjar.  Cast: Nadia Kounda, Mourade Zeguendi, Nadia Niazi, Omar Lofti, Siham Assif.

    Sea Shadow (United Arab Emirates) – Set in a small seaside town in the Emirates, this gentle coming-of-age story follows two teenagers on the road to adulthood.  Bound by tradition and deeply rooted values, Mansoor and his pretty cousin Kaltham must find the courage to forge their own paths.  Director: Nawaf Al-Janahi.  Cast: Omar Al Mulla, Neven Madi, Abrar Al Hamad, Khadeeja Al Taie, Aisha Abdulrahman, Ahmad Iraj.

    The Three Disappearances of Soad Hosni (Lebanon) – Beautifully conceived and expertly edited, this playful documentary uses a wealth of clips from Egyptian star Hosni’s films to explore the iconic actress’s screen image and shed light on the Arab world’s most popular cinema.  Director: Rania Stephan.

    Transit Cities (Jordan) – A 36-year-old divorcee returns to Amman after 14 years in the U.S., but finds her hometown, family and friends much changed. This affecting drama strikes enough universal notes pertaining to cultural estrangement to resonate with expats of any stripe.  Director: Mohammad Hushki.  Cast: Saba Mubarak, Mohammad Al-Qabbani, Shafika Al Til, Ashraf Farah, Manal Seihmeimat.

     


    AWARDS BUZZ
    The Awards Buzz section features 40 of the 63 official submissions to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for Best Foreign Language Film, selected by Festival programmers as the strongest entries in this year’s race.  A special jury of international film critics will review these films to award the FIPRESCI Award for Best Foreign Language Film of the Year, Best Actor and Best Actress.  The 2012 FIPRESCI jury members are Mario Abbade from Almanaque Virtual, Correio Braziliense and Globo (Brazil) and President and Curator of the Rio de Janeiro Association of Film Critics; Nathan Lee, former film critic for the New York Times, Village Voice, and NPR, currently contributing editor of Film Comment magazine (US); and Boyd van Hoeij, critic for Variety, Winq (Netherlands), Mate (US/UK), Filmkrant (Netherlands) and Indiewire (US).  The following films selected, in alphabetical order by country, are:

    Breathing (Austria), Director: Karl Markovics

    Bullhead (Belgium/Netherlands), Director: Michaël R. Roskam

    Elite Squad: The Enemy Within (Brazil), Director: Jose  Padilha

    Tilt (Bulgaria/Germany), Director: Viktor Chouchkov

    Monsieur Lazhar (Canada), Director: Philippe Falardeau

    The Flowers of War (China), Director: Yimou Zhang

    Alois Nebel (Czech Republic/Germany), Director: Tomáš Lunák

    Superclásico (Denmark), Director: Ole Christian Madsen

    Le Havre (Finland/France, Germany), Director: Aki Kaurismäki

    Declaration of War (France), Director: Valérie Donzelli

    Pina (Germany), Director: Wim Wenders

    Attenberg (Greece), Director: Athina Rachel Tsangari

    A Simple Life (Hong Kong/China), Director: Ann Hui

    The Turin Horse (Hungary/France, Germany, Switzerland), Director: Bela Tarr

    Volcano (Iceland/Denmark), Director: Rúnar Rúnarsson

    Abu, Son of Adam (India), Director: Salim Ahamed

    A Separation (Iran), Director: Asghar Farhadi

    Footnote (Israel), Director: Joseph Cedar

    Terraferma (Italy), Director: Emanuele Crialese

    Postcard (Japan), Director: Kaneto Shindo

    The Front Line (Korea), Director: Jang Hun

    Back to Your Arms (Lithuania/Germany, Poland), Director: Kristijonas Vildziunas

    Miss Bala (Mexico), Director: Gerardo Naranjo

    Omar Killed Me (Morocco/France), Director: Roschdy Zem

    Sonny Boy (Netherlands), Director: Maria Peters

    The Orator (New Zealand/Samoa), Director: Tusi Tamasese

    Happy, Happy (Norway), Director: Anne Sewitsky

    In Darkness (Poland/Canada/Germany), Director: Agnieszka Holland

    Jose and Pilar (Portugal/Spain, Brazil), Director: Miguel  Goncalves Mendes

    Morgen (Romania/France, Hungary), Director: Marian Crisan

    Montevideo – Taste of a Dream (Serbia), Director: Dragan Bjelogrlic

    Tatsumi (Singapore/Indonesia), Director: Eric Khoo

    Gypsy (Slovakia), Director: Martin Sulík

    Black Bread (Spain), Director: Agustí  Villaronga

    Beyond (Sweden/Finland), Director: Pernilla August

    Summer Games (Switzerland/Italy), Director: Rolando Colla

    Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale (Taiwan), Director: Te-Sheng Wei

    Once Upon a time in Anatolia (Turkey/Bosnis-Herzegovina), Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan

    Patagonia (United Kingdom/Argentina, Wales), Director: Marc Evans

    Rumble of the Stones (Venezuela), Director: Alejandro Bellame Palacios


    NEW VOICES/NEW VISIONS
    The New Voices/New Visions Award will honor one of ten films from top emerging international directors marking their feature film debut at the Festival, with the additional criteria that the films selected are currently without U.S. distribution.  The jury for this program includes: Jeff Lipsky, Co-Managing Executive Adopt Films; Paul Hudson, Co-Founder Outsider Films; Tom Quinn, Co-President The Weinstein Company/New Label.  The winner will receive a $60,000 Panavision camera rental package.  Films selected for this year include:


    Almanya, Welcome to Germany (Germany) – Neatly structured into two interwoven time frames, this charming, colorfully styled comedy centers on multiple generations of a German-Turkish clan, and derives its touching, laugh-out-loud humor from cultural misunderstandings and the question of what constitutes national identity.  The film won Best Film at the German Film Awards.  Director: Yasemin Samdereli.  Cast: Vedat Erincin, Fahri Yardim, Lilay Huser, Demet Gul, Aylin Tezel, Denis Moschitto.

    Generation P (Russia/USA) – A poet manqué rises to the top of the corporate heap in 1990s Russia in this delirious satire of post-Soviet culture, a drug-fueled rollercoaster ride through the era of Wild West capitalism, gangsters, oligarchs, and political puppets.  Director: Victor Ginzburg.  Cast: Vladimir Yepifantsev, Mikhail Yefremov, Vladimir Menshov, Andrei Fomin, Sergei Shnurov, Oleg Taktarov.

    Habibi (Palestinian Territories/USA, Netherlands, United Arab Emirates) – The first fiction feature set in Gaza in over 15 years offers a story of forbidden love. Can Qays, a poet from the refugee camp, build a future with Layla, the daughter of a traditional, religious family?  Director: Susan Youssef.  Cast: Kais Nashif, Maisa Abd Elhadi, Yussef Abu-Warda, Amer Khalil.

    The House (Slovak Republic/Czech Republic) – Contemporary Eastern Europe’s divisions – between generations, genders, economic strata, city and country – are given incisive treatment in this affecting family drama about an ambitious teen, her disowned elder sister and their dour, controlling father.  Director: Zuzana Liová.  Cast: Judit Bárdos, Miroslav Krobot, Tatjana Medvecká, Marian Mitas.

    The Invader (Belgium) – The story of an illegal African immigrant whose journey begins in Brussels as he searches, like many other immigrants, for a better place in the world. hrough his confrontation with a harsh society, he slowly but irreversibly starts to incarnate our worst fears and becomes the monster we have created.  Director: Nicolas Provost.  Cast: Issaka Sawadogo, Stefania Rocca, Serge Riaboukine, Dieudonne Kabongo.

    Las Acacias (Argentina/Spain) – A gruff truck driver is none too pleased when the woman riding with him from Paraguay to Argentina shows up with a baby.  In the course of their journey his tough demeanor thaws, and they form a touching, hesitant connection.  Director: Pablo Giorgelli.  Cast: Germán de Silva, Hebe Duarte, Nayra Calle Mamani.

    Last Winter (Belgium/France) – Johann, the head of a farming co-op in central France, runs the cattle farm he has inherited from his father with great care. But economic realities increasingly pressure him to sell.  John Shank’s feature debut is effused with a quiet longing for simpler times.  Director: John Shank.  Cast: Vincent Rottiers, Anaïs Demoustier, Florence Loiret Caille, Aurore Clément, Michel Subor.

    Off White Lies (Israel) – A poignant comedy about a teenager who returns to Israel to get to know her eccentric father, who is currently “between apartments.”  As war in Lebanon begins, the father proposes a creative plan to put a roof over their heads.  Director: Maya Kenig.  Cast: Gur Bentwich, Elya Inbar, Tzah Grad, Arad Yeni, Salt Achi-Miriam.

    Old Goats (USA) – Shot in and around Seattle, writer/director Taylor Guterson’s film is an often hilarious and always heartfelt story of three older men (actors Bob Burkholder, David VanderWal, and Britt Crosley, playing themselves) who refuse to go quietly into the night of retirement and old age.  Director: Taylor Guterson.  Cast: Britton Crosley, Bob Burkholder, David VanderWal, Benita Staadecker, Gail Shackel, Steve Stolee.

    Wreckers (United Kingdom) – Urbanites David and Dawn (rising stars Benedict Cumberbatch and Claire Foy) move to the pastoral village of David’s youth, only to have the arrival of David’s soldier/brother Nick—and his revelations about family secrets—threaten their idyll.  Director: D.R. Hood.  Cast: Claire Foy, Benedict Cumberbatch, Shaun Evans, Peter McDonald, Sinead Matthews.


    JOHN SCHLESINGER AWARD
    The John Schlesinger Award for outstanding first documentary feature acknowledges the work of a first-time filmmaker whose documentary is presented in any section of the Festival.  The films will be judged by Mark Jonathan Harris, three-time Oscar-winning documentary director of Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport, The Long Way Home, and The Redwoods; Oliver Ike, director of theatrical and non-theatrical sales at Seventh Art Releasing; and  Michael Lumpkin, Executive Director of the International Documentary Association (IDA).  Ten films are eligible for this award, and this year they include:


    Arranged Happiness (Germany/India) – A loving, first-hand portrayal of a Muslim Kashmiri family’s search for a groom for 27-year-old Waheeda, this humane, mesmerizing documentary provides an intimate and compelling counterweight to widely held perceptions of Islam’s practices in the West.  Director:  Daniela Dar-Creutz.

    Bert Stern, Original Madman (USA) – Bert Stern, the original “madman” photographer, sheds light on a fascinating, topsy-turvy life and career that took him from the mailroom to the heights of success as one of the most celebrated photographers of the 1950s and beyond.  Director: Shannah Laumeister.  With: Bert Stern, Marilyn Monroe, Stanley Kubrick, Elizabeth Taylor.

    Diana Vreeland: The Eye has to Travel (USA) – Both the inventor and embodiment of the term “pizzazz,” Diana Vreeland ruled over the editorial content of Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue for decades.  This tribute to one of our greatest style icons blends archival material and interviews with fashion luminaries with a chic, assured hand.  Director: Lisa Immordino Vreeland.  Co-Directors: Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt, Frederic Theng.  With: Ali McGraw, Anjelica Huston, Manolo Blahnik, David Bailey, Penelope Tree, Veruschka, Lauren Hutton, Diana von Furstenberg.

    Die Standing Up (Mexico) – The inspiring story of Irina, a tireless fighter in the war for personal freedoms, a transsexual who works for progressive causes from her wheelchair despite a severe disability, and her powerful love story with her partner Nelida, whom she married as a man.  Director: Jacaranda Correa.

    First Position: A Ballet Documentary (USA) – Filled with drama, tension and suspense, this enormously satisfying documentary follows six gifted ballet students from disparate social, regional, economic and ethnic backgrounds as they prepare for the Youth America Grand Prix, a prestigious competition where the world’s top dance companies and schools prospect for new talent.  Director: Bess Kargman.

    The Three Disappearances of Soad Hosni (Lebanon) – Beautifully conceived and expertly edited, this playful documentary uses a wealth of clips from Egyptian star Hosni’s films to explore the iconic actress’s screen image and shed light on the Arab world’s most popular cinema.  Director: Rania Stephan.

    The Tiniest Place (Mexico/El Salvador) – The heartbreaking yet hopeful story of Cinquera, a small town in rural El Salvador that was completely depopulated during the Civil War, as told by the survivors who have returned with astonishing resilience to rebuild their lives on their native soil.  Director: Tatiana Huezo Sanchez.

    Unfinished Spaces (USA/Cuba) – Masterfully interweaving art, politics and history, this spellbinding doc recounts the secret history of a little-known architectural marvel, commissioned as a showpiece art school by Fidel Castro, but then deemed “decadent” when he was forced to throw in his lot with the Soviet Union.  Directors: Alysa Nahmias, Benjamin Murray. 

    Wish Me Away (USA) – Coming out is never easy, but when you’re a country music star it could also be career suicide.  This inspiring, award-winning doc introduces us to courageous singer-songwriter Chely Wright, a devout Christian who also happens to be a lesbian.  Directors: Bobbie Birleffi and Beverly Kopf.

    You’ve Been Trumped (United Kingdom) – Anthony Baxter’s biting and entertaining documentary trails “The Donald” as he seeks to build a massive golf resort on unspoiled Scottish coastline and comes up against a spirited group of local landowners who will not go down without a fight.  Director: Anthony Baxter.  With: Donald Trump.


    Additional awards include the Mercedes-Benz Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature and Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature.  The Bridging the Borders Award, presented by Cinema Without Borders and Hewlett Packard, honors the film that is most successful in exemplifying art that promotes bringing the people of our world closer together.  The prize includes an HP 8560w Elitebook Mobile Workstation with a built-in HP DreamColor display, valued at $4000.

     

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  • TIFF to Screen Feature and Short Films on the 2011 Top Ten list

    [caption id="attachment_2103" align="alignnone" width="550"]Take This Waltz stars Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Luke Kirby and Sarah Silverman[/caption]

    TIFF kicks off the eleventh annual Canada’s Top Ten on January 5, 2012 at TIFF Bell Lightbox. The event offers public screenings of feature and short films on the Top Ten list, introductions and Q&A sessions with filmmakers – including Guy Maddin, Philippe Falardeau, Jean-Marc Vallée and Nathan Morlando – and a panel featuring Canada’s Top Ten filmmakers discussing the gangster/crime genre in Canadian film. Canada’s Top Ten will run to January 15. Select films will tour theatres across the country in early 2012, including Vancouver’s Pacific Cinematheque, Edmonton’s Metro Cinema and Ottawa’s ByTowne Cinema. Established in 2001, Canada’s Top Ten celebrates excellence in Canadian cinema and raises public awareness of Canadian achievements in film.

    Canada’s Top Ten screening schedule (guests in attendance noted below)

    Thursday, January 5

    8 PM
    Monsieur Lazhar (dir. Philippe Falardeau)

    Friday, January 6

    4 PM
    Monsieur Lazhar (dir. Philippe Falardeau)

    7 PM
    Keyhole  (dir. Guy Maddin and producer Jody Shapiro)

    9:30 PM
    Edwin Boyd (dir. Nathan Morlando and producer Allison Black)

    Saturday, January 7

    4 PM
    Keyhole (dir. Guy Maddin)

    7 PM
    Panel Discussion – A Canadian Gangster (Guy Maddin, Keyhole; Nathan Morlando, Edwin Boyd; and Jason Eisener, Hobo With a Shotgun)

    9 PM
    Hobo With a Shotgun  (dir. Jason Eisener)

    Sunday, January 8
    7 PM
    Canada’s Top Ten Shorts  Programme A:
    Ora (dir. Philippe Baylaucq)
    Hope (actor Lucas Silveira)

    We Ate the Children Last  (dir. Andrew Cividino)
    Choke (dir. Michelle Latimer)
    Doubles With Slight Pepper 

    8:30 PM
    Canada’s Top Ten Shorts  Programme B:
    No Words Came Down (dir. Ryan Flowers and actor Andrew Gillingham)
    Rhonda’s Party (dir. Ashley McKenzie)
    The Fuse: Or How I Burned Simon Bolivar  (dir. Igor Drljaca)
    La Ronde (dir. Sophie Goyette and producer Elaine Hébert)
    Trotteur (dir. Arnaud Brisebois)

    Tuesday, January 10

    4 PM
    Hobo With a Shotgun  (dir. Jason Eisener)

    7 PM
    Starbuck

    Wednesday, January 11

    3 PM
    Starbuck

    7 PM
    Marécages

    Thursday, January 12

    3 PM
    Marécages

    7:00 PM
    A Dangerous Method  (actor Sarah Gadon)

    Friday, January 13

    3 PM
    Starbuck

    9 PM
    Café de flore (dir. Jean-Marc Vallée)

    Saturday, January 14

    6 PM
    Le Vendeur  (dir. Sébastien Pilote)

    9 PM
    Take This Waltz (actor Luke Kirby)

    Sunday, January 15

    12 PM
    Le Vendeur  (dir. Sébastien Pilote

    3 PM
    Take This Waltz

    5:30 PM
    Café de flore

    Canada’s Top Ten films are chosen from features, shorts, documentaries, animation and experimental films. Each film must have premiered at a major film festival or obtained a commercial theatrical release in Canada in 2011. The filmmaker must be a Canadian citizen or resident, and have a history of working in Canada or on Canadian-financed films.

    Canada’s Top Ten features (in alphabetical order)

    Café de Flore — Jean-Marc Vallée (Alliance Films)
    A Dangerous Method — David Cronenberg (Entertainment One)
    Edwin Boyd — Nathan Morlando (Entertainment One)
    Hobo With a Shotgun — Jason Eisener (Alliance Films)
    Keyhole — Guy Maddin (Entertainment One)
    Marécages — Guy Édoin (Mongrel Media)
    Monsieur Lazhar — Philippe Falardeau (Entertainment One)
    Starbuck — Ken Scott (Entertainment One)
    Take This Waltz — Sarah Polley (Mongrel Media)
    Le Vendeur — Sébastien Pilote (Entertainment One)

    Canada’s Top Ten short films (in alphabetical order):

    Choke — Michelle Latimer
    Doubles With Slight Pepper — Ian Harnarine
    The Fuse: Or How I Burned Simon Bolivar — Igor Drljaca
    Hope — Pedro Pires (Phi Group)
    No Words Came Down — Ryan Flowers &Lisa Pham
    Ora — Philippe Baylaucq (National Film Board of Canada)
    Rhonda’s Party — Ashley McKenzie
    La Ronde — Sophie Goyette (Locomotion Films)
    Trotteur — Arnaud Brisebois &Francis Leclerc (Phi Group and Cirrus Communications)
    We Ate the Children Last — Andrew Cividino

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  • 97 Original Scores Eligible to Compete in 2011 Oscar® Race

    Ninety-seven scores from eligible feature-length motion pictures are in contention for nominations in the Original Score category for the 84th Academy Awards®.

    The eligible scores along with the composer are listed below in alphabetical order by film title:

    • “The Adjustment Bureau,” Thomas Newman, composer
    • “The Adventures of Tintin,” John Williams, composer
    • “African Cats,” Nicholas Hooper, composer
    • “Albert Nobbs,” Brian Byrne, composer
    • “Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked,” Mark Mothersbaugh, composer
    • “Anonymous,” Thomas Wander and Harald Kloser, composers
    • “Another Earth,” Phil Mossman and Will Bates, composers
    • “Answers to Nothing,” Craig Richey, composer
    • “Arthur Christmas,” Harry Gregson-Williams, composer
    • “The Artist,” Ludovic Bource, composer
    • “@urFRENZ,” Lisbeth Scott, composer
    • “Atlas Shrugged Part 1,” Elia Cmiral, composer
    • “Battle: Los Angeles,” Brian Tyler, composer
    • “Beastly,” Marcelo Zarvos, composer
    • “The Big Year,” Theodore Shapiro, composer
    • “Captain America: The First Avenger,” Alan Silvestri, composer
    • “Cars 2,” Michael Giacchino, composer
    • “Cedar Rapids,” Christophe Beck, composer
    • “Conan the Barbarian,” Tyler Bates, composer
    • “The Conspirator,” Mark Isham, composer
    • “Contagion,” Cliff Martinez, composer
    • “Coriolanus,” Ilan Eshkeri, composer
    • “DAM999,” Ousepachan, composer
    • “The Darkest Hour,” Tyler Bates, composer
    • “The Debt,” Thomas Newman, composer
    • “Dolphin Tale,” Mark Isham, composer
    • “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,” Marco Beltrami and Buck Sanders, composers
    • “Dream House,” John Debney, composer
    • “The Eagle,” Atli Orvarsson, composer
    • “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close,” Alexandre Desplat, composer
    • “Fast Five,” Brian Tyler, composer
    • “The First Grader,” Alex Heffes, composer
    • “The Flowers of War,” Qigang Chen, composer
    • “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, composers
    • “The Greatest Miracle,” Mark McKenzie, composer
    • “Green Lantern,” James Newton Howard, composer
    • “Hanna,” Tom Rowlands, composer
    • “Happy Feet Two,” John Powell, composer
    • “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2,” Alexandre Desplat, composer
    • “The Help,” Thomas Newman, composer
    • “Hop,” Christopher Lennertz, composer
    • “Hugo,” Howard Shore, composer
    • “I Don’t Know How She Does It,” Aaron Zigman, composer
    • “The Ides of March,” Alexandre Desplat, composer
    • “Immortals,” Trevor Morris, composer
    • “In Search of God,” Rupam Sarmah, composer
    • “In the Land of Blood and Honey,” Gabriel Yared, composer
    • “In Time,” Craig Armstrong, composer
    • “Insidious,” Joseph Bishara, composer
    • “The Iron Lady,” Thomas Newman, composer
    • “J. Edgar,” Clint Eastwood, composer
    • “Jane Eyre,” Dario Marianelli, composer
    • “The Lady,” Eric Serra, composer
    • “Like Crazy,” Dustin O’Halloran, composer
    • “Margaret,” Nico Muhly, composer
    • “Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,” Michael Giacchino, composer
    • “Mr. Popper’s Penguins,” Rolfe Kent, composer
    • “Moneyball,” Mychael Danna, composer
    • “Monte Carlo,” Michael Giacchino, composer
    • “New Year’s Eve,” John Debney, composer
    • “Norman,” Andrew Bird, composer
    • “One Day,” Rachel Portman, composer
    • “Puss in Boots,” Henry Jackman, composer
    • “Rampart,” Dickon Hinchliffe, composer
    • “Real Steel,” Danny Elfman, composer
    • “Rebirth,” Philip Glass, composer
    • “Red Riding Hood,” Alex Heffes and Brian Reitzell, composers
    • “Restless,” Danny Elfman, composer
    • “Rio,” John Powell, composer
    • “Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” Patrick Doyle, composer
    • “The Rite,” Alex Heffes, composer
    • “The Rum Diary,” Christopher Young, composer
    • “Sanctum,” David Hirschfelder, composer
    • “Sarah’s Key,” Max Richter, composer
    • “Senna,” Antonio Pinto, composer
    • “Shame,” Harry Escott, composer
    • “The Skin I Live In,” Alberto Iglesias, composer
    • “The Smurfs,” Heitor Pereira, composer
    • “Snow Flower and the Secret Fan,” Rachel Portman, composer
    • “Super 8,” Michael Giacchino, composer
    • “Take Shelter,” David Wingo, composer
    • “The Thing,” Marco Beltrami, composer
    • “Thor,” Patrick Doyle, composer
    • “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,” Alberto Iglesias, composer
    • “Tower Heist,” Christophe Beck, composer
    • “W.E.,” Abel Korzeniowski, composer
    • “War Horse,” John Williams, composer
    • “Warrior,” Mark Isham, composer
    • “Water for Elephants,” James Newton Howard, composer
    • “The Way,” Tyler Bates, composer
    • “We Bought a Zoo,” Jon Thor Birgisson, composer
    • “We Need to Talk about Kevin,” Jonny Greenwood, composer
    • “Win Win,” Lyle Workman, composer
    • “Winnie the Pooh,” Henry Jackman, composer
    • “X-Men: First Class,” Henry Jackman, composer
    • “Young Adult,” Rolfe Kent, composer
    • “Your Highness,” Steve Jablonsky, composer

    A Reminder List of works submitted in the Original Score category shall be sent with a nominations ballot to all members of the Music Branch who shall vote in the order of their preference for not more than five achievements. The five achievements receiving the highest number of votes will become the nominations for final voting for the award.

    To be eligible, the original score must be a substantial body of music that serves as original dramatic underscoring, and must be written specifically for the motion picture by the submitting composer. Scores diluted by the use of tracked themes or other preexisting music, diminished in impact by the predominant use of songs, or assembled from the music of more than one composer shall not be eligible.

    The 84th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Tuesday, January 24, 2012, and the Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2011 will be presented on Sunday, February 26, 2012.

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  • Black Film Critics Circle Picks 2011 Films, Dee Rees Best Director for PARIAH

    [caption id="attachment_2100" align="alignnone"]Best Actor – Olivier Litondo for THE FIRST GRADER[/caption]

    The Black Film Critics Circle (BFCC) voted “THE HELP” Best Film of 2011, Dee Rees Best Director for “PARIAH”, Viola Davis Best Actress for “THE HELP” and Olivier Litondo Best Actor for “THE FIRST GRADER”.

    The complete list of award winners include:

    Best Picture – THE HELP
    Best Director – Dee Rees for PARIAH
    Best Actor – Olivier Litondo for THE FIRST GRADER
    Best Actress – Viola Davis for THE HELP
    Best Supporting Actor – Albert Brooks for DRIVE
    Best Supporting Actress – Octavia Spencer for THE HELP
    Best Independent Film – PARIAH
    Best Original Screenplay – Dee Rees for PARIAH
    Best Adapted Screenplay – Tate Taylor for THE HELP
    Best Documentary – BEING ELMO: A Puppeteer’s Journey
    Best Foreign Film – LIFE, ABOVE ALL
    Best Animated Film – RANGO
    Best Ensemble – THE HELP

    BFCC Signature Awards include:

    PIONEER – HARRY BELAFONTE
    A renaissance artist who brought his unique talent to all areas of entertainment in a career that has spanned nearly 60 years, Belafonte is a multi-Grammy© winning artist, an Emmy© Award winner with the distinct designation as the first African American television producer, a Tony© Award winner, motion picture film actor and producer, Civil Rights Activist and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. From his music, films, and humanitarian work, Harry Belafonte has continued to embody the very essence of the word Pioneer.

    RISING STAR – ADEPERO ODUYE
    Adepero’s performance in PARIAH is a moving, powerful unforgettable portrayal of a young woman of color coming to terms with herself, her sexuality, and her family. We believe she is truly a Talent to Watch.

    SPECIAL MENTION – ATTACK THE BLOCK:
    Attack is a genre film that defies a number of conventions, not only by having a primarily black cast but portraying each character with a dignity seldom seen on screen and even more rarely in a Science-Fiction film.

    BFCC’S TOP TEN FILMS OF 2011

    1. The Help
    2. The Artist
    3. Pariah
    4. Drive
    5. The Descendants
    6. Attack the Block
    7. Tree of Life
    8. Hugo
    9. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
    10. Warrior

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  • 2012 Slamdance Film Festival Announces lineup for the Special Screenings and Short Programs

    The 2012 Slamdance Film Festival taking place January 20 – 26, 2011 in Park City, Utah, announced the lineup for the Special Screenings and Short Programs for the 18th edition.

    The Special Screenings Programs present a variety of acclaimed and visionary films by a diverse group of global filmmakers – from Hollywood iconoclasts to highly anticipated emerging directors.

    The 2012 Shorts Program features 75 shorts, and include Special Screenings, Live Action Competition, Documentary Competition, Animation, $99 Special, Anarchy Shorts, and the world premiere of a special program of new Iranian shorts never seen outside the country, Made In Iran: 7 Short Premieres.

    This year’s Slamdance short film competition slate features 32 live action shorts and 13 documentary shorts programmed both in blocks and in front of features, and 10 animated films programmed in a signature animation block.

    A jury will present awards to short films in competition in the following categories: Narrative, Animation, and Documentary. Competition shorts are also eligible for the Spirit of Slamdance Award.

    Out of competition shorts and programs include: $99 Special Short Harold’s Bad Day, a winner of the 2011 Slamdance Short Screenplay Competition, directed by Slamdance alum Jordan Brady. The $99 Special Program presentation is the culmination of an annual tradition in which filmmakers are challenged to make a short film in 99 days with a budget of $99 dollars.

    Made In Iran: 7 Short Premieres, an out of competition shorts program, is a world premiere collection of recent Iranian shorts never seen outside the country, curated by Iranian-American filmmaker Ehsan Ghoreishi, featuring the work of emerging talents from across Iran.

    Anarchy Shorts is a curated, non-competitive spotlight on unique and provocative filmmakers who have made visionary, experimental, cult, and underground films.

    See the full lineup 

    SPECIAL SCREENINGS – NARRATIVE:

    Holiday Road – Directors/Screenwriters: Todd Berger, Bill Palmer, Bobby Miller, Daron Nefcy, Benny Grinnell, Ian Eastin, Marcy McIlwain, Aaron Arendt, Michael Suter, Dee Robertson, Doug Manley, Helena Wei, Andrew Putschoegl. (USA) World Premiere
    A feature length comedic anthology celebrating the hilarious, poignant, and absurd aspects of America’s twelve most recognized holidays.
    Cast: Wendi McLendon-Covey, Jerry Trainor, Thomas Lenk, Blaise Miller, James Carpinello, Jeff Grace, Kent Osborne, Christing Ulloa

    Old Dog – Director/Screenwriter: Pema Tseden. (China) US Premiere
    On the high Tibetan plains, an old shepherd will do anything to prevent his Tibetan Mastiff from being sold to an urban Chinese dealer.
    Cast: Yanbum Gyal, Drolma Kyab, Lochey, Tamdrin Tso

    Unconditional – Director: Bryn Higgins, Screenwriter: Jo Fisher. (UK) World Premiere
    The psycho-love story of two teenage twins who fall under the spell of a charismatic man offering love on one condition: the boy becomes his own sister.
    Cast: Christian Cooke, Melanie Hill, Harry McEntire, Madleine Clark

    SPECIAL SCREENINGS – DOCUMENTARY:

    Neil Young Journeys – Director: Jonathan Demme. (USA) US Premiere
    A personal, retrospective look into the heart and soul of iconoclast Neil Young – as told through intimate performances from Young’s 2011 summer solo shows in Toronto’s iconic Massey Hall, and insightful, wistful stories from his life while driving from his idyllic Canadian hometown.

    No Room for Rockstars – Director: Parris Patton. (USA) World Premiere
    Through the experiences of four musicians on The Vans Warped Tour, No Room For Rockstars takes you on an emotional journey of hope and determination, and documents the extreme highs and lows that occur in the pursuit of success in today’s era of rock and roll.

    Terra Blight – Director: Isaac Brown. (USA) World Premiere
    A global examination of the unseen life cycle of computer consumption, from manufacturing to disposal, that has created one of the largest, most common toxic wastes on our planet.

    Wild in the Streets – Director: Peter Baxter, Screenwriters: Peter Baxter, Jay Nelson.
    (UK/USA) World Premiere
    Every year, thousands of locals from rival sides of a rugged English town brutally compete in an ancient sports game that is the lifeblood of the community – and the origin of soccer, rugby, and football.
    Narrator: Sean Bean

    With Great Power: The Stan Lee Story – Directors: Will Hess, Nikki Frakes, Terry Dougas,
    Screenwriters: Will Hess, Nikki Frakes. (USA)
    The story of maverick pop culture icon Stan Lee – one man’s journey of perseverance, and how by sticking to what he loved, he became an internationally influential and successful artist.
    Cast: Stan Lee, Nicolas Cage, Michael Chiklis, Roger Corman, Kirsten Dunst, Danny Elfman,
    James Franco, Samuel Jackson, Tobey Maguire, Eva Mendes, Frank Miller, Seth Rogen, Bryan
    Singer, Kevin Smith, Ringo Starr

    SPECIAL SCREENINGS – SHORTS:

    Ed Wood’s Lost Film Final Curtain – Director/Screenwriter: Edward D. Wood, Jr. (USA) World Premiere
    In a never before seen Ed Wood television pilot, a weary actor prowling a darkened theater at night searches anxiously for meaning which leads him to a surprising end.
    Cast: James “Duke” Moore, Dudley Manlove, Jenny Stevens

    Franchi is Back – Director/Screenwriter: Alexandre Franchi. (Canada) World Premiere
    A Filmmaker talks about his bout with cancer in a self-promo film in order to avoid repeating his damn story 1000 times to people because it’s a pain in the ass.
    Cast: Alexandre Franchi

    SPECIAL SCREENING – $99 SPECIAL:
    Filmmakers are challenged to make a short film in 99 days with $99

    Harold’s Bad Day – Director: Jordan Brady, Screenwriter: R.J. Buckley. (USA) World Premiere
    A wry, dark comedy about a well-intentioned teacher with a gambling debt.
    Cast: Doug Benson, Nicholas Sadler, Zack Pearlman, Curtiss Frisle

    SPECIAL SCREENING – MADE IN IRAN: 7 SHORT PREMIERES:

    Dances With The Armchair – Director/Writer: Dariush Nehdaran. (Iran) US Premiere
    As an armchair burns down to the ground, all the faces and memories embedded inside it dance away from its body through the flames.

    Far From Him, Towards Him – Director/Screenwriter: Javad Rezaei Monfared. (Iran) World Premiere
    An atheist with a terminal disease goes on a journey to find and reconnect with his father whom he believes is a servant in a holy shrine.

    Room No. 8 – Director/Screenwriter: Zohreh Keshavarz Motlagh Shirazi. (Iran) World Premiere
    A story about a group of people trapped in various social and psychological confines who yearn to break free.

    Pondering – Director/Screenwriter: Mohammad Hossein Keshavarz Motlagh Shirazi (Iran) World Premiere
    On a crisp night, under the blue moonlight, a man explores his inner child as he strangely interacts with the streetlights hovering above him.

    A Pore As Big As a Knuckle – Director/Screenwriter: Ali Ahmadi. (Iran) World Premiere
    A story about a family that has to face the consequences of a painfully unusual rape incident committed by one of their own.

    The Tree – Director/Screenwriter: Hamed Siami. (Iran) World Premiere
    A studio photographer loses the ability to associate people with their pictures.

    When The Kid Was a Kid – Director/Screenwriter: Anahita Ghazvinizadeh. (Iran) World Premiere
    A ten-year-old girl strives to understand her divorced mother’s world, while preparing for a play in which children imitate their parents.

    SPECIAL SCREENING – ANARCHY SHORTS PROGRAM:

    At The Formal – Director/Screenwriter: Andrew Kavanagh. (Australia). US Premiere
    Modern and ancient rituals collide in this macabre depiction of a high school formal.

    The Dude – Director: Jeff Feuerzeig. (USA) Documentary
    As the inspiration for the beloved central character in the Coen Brothers’ cult-favorite film The Big Lebowski, Jeff Dowd has become a popular figure at Lebowski Fests around the country.

    The Fritzl Effect – Director/Screenwriter: Stefanos Sitaras. (Greece)
    A musician keeps a young woman in his basement for inspiration. As she tries to escape, she only falls deeper into his trap.

    I Saw Your Sister Yesterday – Director: Mina Park. (USA)
    Experimental animation about a woman’s inner pain due to societal restrictions.

    The Magic Man – Director/Screenwriter: DC Kasundra. (USA)
    Hoping to secure fame and fortune, a struggling vaudeville magician turns to the dark arts, but the power unleashed could cost him the one thing he truly loves.

    Mahahula The Giant Rodent of Happiness – Director/Screenwriter: Nomint Motion Design.
    (Greece)
    An animated short film about happiness.

    The Severe Psychosis of a Musicless Man – Director: Ian McClerin, Screenwriter: Matt Gomez. (USA) World Premiere.
    A cartoonish journey into the mundane life of Preston: a middle-aged family man who begins hearing music in his head, fusing with his eccentric family, that plummets him into insanity.

    Stihl – Directors/Screenwriters: James Benning, James Raymond (USA) World Premiere
    Experimental filmmaker James Benning and video artist James Raymond collaborate to create a world founded on modern day fears: darker images of chainsaws, teddy bears, porno and masked men that question whether we are the monsters we envision and perhaps want to be.

    Stokje – Director/Screenwriter: Léonie de Boer. (Netherlands)
    A tale of two boys at the playground, and their descent from child’s play to immorality.

    We’ll Become Oil – Director/Screenwriter: Mihai Grecu. (Romania/Hungary) World Premiere
    The story of oil taking over history.

    LIVE ACTION COMPETITION SHORTS:

    33 Teeth – Director/Screenwriter: Evan Roberts. (USA)
    A 14 year-old boy has a heightened fascination with the comb of his attractive neighbor, Chad.

    The Agony and Sweat of the Human Spirit – Directors/Screenwriters: D. Jesse Damazo, Joe Bookman (USA)
    Two cowboys on a hunt. What are they hunting? Triumph.

    Angelito – Director: Paula Lima, Screenwriter: Vitor Coral. (USA/Brazil)
    Luisa the nanny tries to find peace taking care of a defiant young boy.

    Another Bullet Dodged – Director: Landon Zakheim, Screenwriters: Landon Zakheim, Todd Luoto. (USA)
    A wolf in sheep’s clothing who thinks he is a sheep.

    The Centrifuge Brain Project – Director/Screenwriter: Till Nowak. (Germany)
    Portrait of a group of American scientists who in the 1970s conducted bizarre experiments involving amusement park rides.

    Codes of Honor – Director/Screenwriter: Jon Rafman. (Canada)
    A pro arcade gamer relives his triumphs, defeats and fading legacy.

    Cold Blood – Director/Screenwriters: Martin Thibaudeau. (Canada)
    An exhausted mother brings her terrified son to the hospital.

    Crown – Director/Screenwriter: AG Rojas. (USA) World Premiere
    A middle-aged junkie experiences a surreal high.

    DeafBlind – Director/Screenwriter: Ewan Bailey. (UK) World Premiere
    A deaf and blind woman and a young man share a spiritual and disturbing connection.

    Eat – Director/Screenwriter: Janicza Bravo. (USA)
    After locking herself out of her apartment, a young woman finds herself in the company of a reluctant neighbor.

    Eileen Pratt – Director/Screenwriter: Michael Kratochvil. (Austrailia) World Premiere
    A socially awkward bus driver seeks to return to the only place she feels she belongs.

    February – Director/Screenwriter: Nick Singer. (USA) World Premiere
    A young plumber has a series of abbreviated encounters.

    The Good Person – Director: Yukihiro Katô. (Japan) US Premiere
    A housewife with a missing husband has a bizarre encounter with mysterious visitors.

    Hope. You Like Crap. – Director/Screenwriter: Shaun Parker. (USA) World Premiere
    Me, looking back and painfully deconstructing my stupid, insipid student film 20 years later.

    I Am John Wayne – Director/Screenwriter: Christina Choe. (USA) World Premiere
    A young black cowboy struggles with the death of his best friend.

    I’m Coming Over – Director/Screenwriter: Sam Handel. (USA)
    In an eccentric mountain town, a borderline neo-luddite struggles to maintain and share a fragile state of enlightenment.
    Cast: Lauren Ambrose

    The Kook – Directors/Screenwriters: Nat Livingston Johnson, Gregory Mitnick. (USA)
    A gentle and unassuming member of an eccentric religious sect in the Catskill Mountains experiences a crisis in faith.

    Lin – Director/Screenwriter: Piers Thompson. (UK/Bulgaria/Turkey)
    A woman appears to be running away from her past.

    Little Horses – Director/Screenwriter: Levi Abrino. (USA)
    A divorced small town postal worker tries to use a pony to win his family back.

    Memory by Design – Director/Screenwriter: Nathan Punwar. (USA)
    The objects that three young women use to mark their past take on memories of their own.

    New Skin – Director/Screenwriter: Vladimir de Fontenay. (USA)
    Helen spends New Year’s Eve working at a gas station, where she meets an intriguing young man just before midnight.

    Park – Director/Screenwriter: Liz Cambron. (USA)
    An unnamed girl living in a trailer park, drifting through life, beginning sexual explorations, and stealing her dad’s Vicodin.

    People Parade – Director: John Wilson, Screenwriters: John Wilson, Chris Maggio. (USA) World Premiere
    After the star of a long-running variety show passes away, his son is obligated to reunite a weathered cast of television performers and host the final episode.

    Reinaldo Arenas – Director/Screenwriter: Lucas Leyva. (USA)
    Told from the point of view of a dying shark, the film captures the last moments in the life of an unintentional immigrant in downtown Miami.

    Rose and Sophia – Director/Screenwriter: Natalie Neal. (USA) World Premiere
    A childhood interest in spying is rekindled among two teenage girls stuck between adolescence and adulthood.

    A Scene at the Sea – Director/Screenwriter: Jaehee Lee. (South Korea)
    A father and son, roles now reversed as one becomes the caretaker of the other, execute a delicate dance at the edge of the sea.

    A Short Film About Ice Fishing – Director/Screenwriter: Jason Shahinfar. (USA)
    In rural South Dakota, two friends go out for an explosive day of ice fishing.

    Silent River – Director/Screenwriter: Anca Miruna Lazarescu. (Germany) US Premiere
    Gregor and Vali want to get away from Romania and the Ceausescu regime in 1986.

    Solipsist – Director/Screenwriter: Andrew Huang. (USA) World Premiere
    A three part psychedelic fantasy film about otherworldly beings whose minds and bodies converge into one entity.

    Soy Tan Feliz – Director/Screenwriter: Vladimir Duran. (Argentina/Colombia) US Premiere
    Fragments of a Saturday winter day with the Vittenzein brothers, who find themselves in a strange intimacy on a stop during a drive to their mother’s house.

    TMI – Director: Jeff Tomsic, Screenwriters: Jordan Klepper, Laura Grey. (USA) World Premiere
    Obnoxiousness begins at conception.

    When Rabbits Fly – Director: Helgi Jóhannsson, Screenwriters: Helgi Jóhannsson, Halldor Ragnar Halldorsson. (Iceland) North American Premiere
    A family of three living with a rabbit in a cardboard box seeks six strangers to get their old life back.

    ANIMATED COMPETITION SHORTS:

    Birdboy – Directors/Screenwriters: Alberto Vázquez, Pedro Rivero. (Spain)
    A terrible industrial accident changes little Dinky’s life forever.

    Follow the Sun! – Director/Screenwriter: MK12. (USA)
    An homage and/or affront to a Great American Tradition: the drive-in intermission snack reel.

    Hietsuki Bushi – Director/Screenwriter: Ryo Hirano. (Japan)
    A seamless mixture of traditional Japanese song, blip music, universe, and agriculture.

    Hollow – Director/Screenwriter: Oliver Anderson. (USA)
    Two young brothers stumble across a disturbing secret in the fleeting light of a Midwestern summer.

    The House – Director/Screenwriter: David Buob. (Germany)
    A family story in a revolving house.

    The Observer – Director/Screenwriter: Abbey Luck. (USA) World Premiere
    A disenchanted citizen learns how to free his village from a tyrant king by observing patterns in nature.

    Peekaboo – Director/Screenwriter: Cecilia Fletcher. (USA)
    A woman must decide between reporting a crime and going on vacation.

    Soil – Director/Screenwriter: Meejin Hong. (USA)
    As imagery transforms between figures and abstraction, the life cycle of an organism and dualities within human nature are explored.

    Thumb Snatchers from the Moon Cocoon – Director/Screenwriter: Bradley Schaffer. (USA)
    A short tempered Texas sheriff uses his cowboy logic to recklessly defeat a race of condescending, cocoon dwelling critters.

    Venus – Director: Tor Fruergaard, Screenwriter: Sissel D. Thomsen. (Denmark)
    An erotic comedy in claymation.

    DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION SHORTS:

    Ben Franklin Blowing Bubbles at a Sword: The Journeys of a Mental Athlete – Director: Jonathan Napolitano. (USA) World Premiere
    Three mental athletes stretch the limits of their minds as they train for and compete in the 2011 USA Memory Championship.

    The Devotion Project: More Than Ever – Director: Antony Osso. (USA)
    The inspiring true story of two men who forged a 54-year love story despite the odds.

    I’m Never Afraid! – Director: Willem Baptist. (The Netherlands)
    Eight-year-old Mack ‘the motor midget’ should be dead but nothing is stopping him.

    Kiss the Paper – Director: Fiona Otway. (USA)
    A poetic documentary contemplating the revival of the nearly obsolete, centuries-old craft of letterpress printing.

    Kudzu Vine – Director: Josh Gibson. (USA)
    This ode to the climbing, trailing, and coiling species Pueraria lobata evokes the agricultural history and mythic textures of the American South.

    The Lookout – Director: Brian Bolster. (USA) World Premiere
    Watching over some of the most fire-prone landscape in North America, a Fire Lookout reflects upon his work.

    Murder Mouth – Director: Madeleine Parry. (Australia)
    Could you kill what you had for dinner? Maddie, a 21 year-old meat eater, decides to take the question into her own hands.

    No Relation – Director: Kieran Dick. (Canada)
    What is real and how do you capture it?

    No Wine Left Behind – Director: Kevin Gordon. (USA)
    An Iraq War hero leads a ragtag group of veterans as they try to conquer the wine industry.

    On Tender Hooks – Director: Kate Shenton. (UK)
    Freak show magician Damien Lloyd-Davies pierces his flesh with meat hooks and performs a “suicide suspension.”

    The Professional- Director: Skylar Nielsen. (USA)
    Metal-fabricator Neil Youngberg never planned on taking over his grandfather’s business and is now faced with passing on his legacy.

    We Win or We Die – Director: Matthew Millan. (Libya, USA) World Premiere
    The inspiring story of one man’s heroic sacrifice that liberated a city from the yoke of oppression.

    You Can’t Win – Director: Jorge Torres-Torres (Puerto Rico/USA) World Premiere
    A typical night at the cockfights in the island of Puerto Rico.

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