• 2011 New York Film Festival Shorts Programs Lineup; Oliver Stone’s SALVADOR to replace “Untold History of the United States”

    [caption id="attachment_1635" align="alignnone" width="550"]Oliver Stone[/caption]

    The 2011 New York Film Festival announced two short films programs as well as late-breaking updates for the Oliver Stone presentation and the Masterworks screening of BEN HUR.

    Due to scheduling conflicts, Oliver Stone’s “Untold History of the United States” will no longer screen at the 2011 New York Film Festival. However, Oliver Stone will still be appearing at NYFF to present a 25th Anniversary screening of SALVADOR, a film that burst onto the American film scene with a force that immediately established Stone as an artist to be reckoned with.

    The Masterworks screening of BEN-HUR at Alice Tully Halll on Saturday, October 1 at 10:30AM will now be a family affair, with the attendance of Fraser Heston (the son of Charlton Heston), Catherine Wyler (the daughter of director William Wyler) and Toby Wyler, (the director’s great-grandson). The trio will take part in introductions of the film with FSLC’s Richard Pena and will also be available for interviews to discuss the careers of Heston and Wyler as well as the restoration of the cinema classic.

    BEH-HUR has been given a meticulous frame-by-frame restoration from the original 65mm camera negative, completed from an 8K scan of the original 65mm camera negative, making this the highest-resolution restoration ever completed by Warner Bros. studio. The innumerable qualities of the William Wyler’s film will be on display on the giant screen in the original 2.76 aspect ratio, and this theatrical premiere of the restored version provides audiences of all ages the rare opportunity to marvel at Hollywood maximally lavish, stirring and exciting epic entertainment.

    NYFF 2011 also announced the lineup for two shorts programs set to screen at FSLC’s new Film Center. Both programs feature original short films by exciting new talents on the world cinema stage.



    SHORTS PROGRAM #1

    Total running time: 92 minutes

    Tuesday, October 4 at 1:30PM – Howard Gilman Theater

    Saturday, October 15 at 2:30PM – Francesca Beale Theater



    THE BIRD SPIDER (La Migala) (2011) 14min

    Director: Jaime Dezcallar

    Country: Spain

    A lovelorn man enters into a deadly game of chance when he intentionally sets a poisonous arachnid loose in his apartment.



    BLUE (2011) 14min

    Director: Stephen Kang

    Country: New Zealand

    The life and hard times of a human-sized plush toy, formerly a children’s TV star, now a waiter in a Chinese restaurant. Winner, Grand Prix, Cannes Critics Week.



    THE FIVE STAGES OF GRIEF (2011) 11min

    Director: Jessica Brickman

    Country: USA

    Death is both an aid and an impediment to romantic bliss in this wry comedy about the mourning after, co-starring Fran Kranz and Jason Ritter.



    GRAFFITIGER (2010) 10min

    Director: Libor Pixa

    Country: Czech Republic

    A lonely graffiti-drawn tiger wanders the walls and sidewalks of Prague looking for companionship.



    THE RUNNER (2011) 15min

    Director: Ana Lazarevic

    Country: Serbia and Montenegro/USA

    In the lush and weedy Serbian countryside, a first time human trafficker becomes stranded with the Roma boy he is assigned to deliver.



    THE STRANGE THING ABOUT THE JOHNSONS (2011) 28min

    Director: Ari Aster

    Country: USA

    In the picture-perfect Johnson family, a scandalous secret bubbles to the surface with outrageous, darkly comic complications.



    SHORTS PROGRAM #2

    Total running time: 88 minutes

    Wednesday, October 5 at 1:30PM – Howard Gilman Theater

    Saturday, October 15 at 4:30PM – Francesca Beale Theater



    AARON BURR, PART 2 (2011) 8min

    Director: Dana O’Keefe

    Country: USA

    You only thought you knew all there was to know about the much-maligned third Vice President of the United States.



    THE GREAT GATSBY IN FIVE MINUTES (2011) 10min

    Director: Michael Almereyda

    Country: USA

    The Fitzgerald classic as you’ve never seen it, transposed to a Los Angeles of sleek modern architecture and strip-mall foot clinics.



    MEMORY BY DESIGN (2011) 5min

    Director: Nathan Punwar

    Country: USA

    A dazzling love letter to all things analog, as they recede into the horizon of the digital age.



    MY BOW BREATHING (Il respiro dell’arco) (2011) 10min

    Director: E.M. Artale

    Country: Italy

    Revenge has the sting of a perfectly aimed arrow as a young archer gets in touch with her primal instincts.



    GRANDMOTHERS (Abuelas) (2011) 9min

    Director: Afarin Eghbal

    Country: UK

    A lyrical animated documentary about the search by Argentinian grandmothers for the orphaned children of the “disappeared.”



    FIRST MATCH (2011) 15min

    Director: Olivia Newman

    Country: USA

    No amount of practice on the mat can prepare Mo for the challenge she faces at her first high school wrestling match.



    TRAITORS (2011) 31min

    Director: Sean Gullette

    Country: Morocco/USA

    A night in the lives of an all-girl punk band as they illicitly shoot their first music video on the streets of Tangier.

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  • Special anniversary screenings, documentary presentations and events to take place at 2011 NY Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1633" align="alignnone"]PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY[/caption]

    The 49th New York Film Festival will offer an ‘unprecedented’ selection of programs, led by the first-ever premiere screening of a new ending to Joe Berlinger’s and Bruce Sinofsky’s PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY including footage from the events surrounding the recent celebrated release of the West Memphis Three. PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY is an HBO Documentary Films production set to premiere on the network in 2012.

    Oliver Stone will offer a special sneak preview of his new documentary project, The Untold History of the United States. Produced as a 10-part miniseries for Showtime (where it will premiere in 2012), NYFF will present this special sneak preview of Untold History’s first three chapters, which focus on the events leading up to America’s entrance into World War II, the war itself, and the unjustly forgotten figure of former U.S. Vice President Henry Wallace. PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY and Stone’s The Untold History of the United States project headline an impressive slate of documentary offerings at NYFF this year with such diverse and fascinating subjects as independent film legend Roger Corman, musician Andrew Bird, The Rings of Saturn author W.G. Sebald, “The Girl From Ipanema” composer/performer Antonio Carlos “Tom” Jobim, influential British rock group Mott The Hoople, film critic and gay activist Vito Russo, and Frederick Wiseman’s latest, CRAZY HORSE, where the filmmaker turns his camera toward another Paris cultural institution – the Crazy Horse erotic cabaret (following 2009’s LA DANSE which delved into the Paris Opera Ballet).

    Additional highlights include anniversary screenings of THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS, SPIRITED AWAY and THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL; musical accompaniment by members of the NY Philharmonic to the classic Charlie Chaplin film THE GOLD RUSH; as well as live accompaniment by the Alloy Orchestra to the silent film FROM MORNING TILL MIDNIGHT; a screening of the animated feature film THE 99 which follows super-powered heroes based on derivatives of the 99 attributes of Allah; and a recently rediscovered masterwork of the post-punk cinema, YOU ARE NOT I, directed by Sara Driver and shot by Jim Jarmusch. NYFF will also feature a panel on Pauline Kael followed by a screening of James Toback’s FINGERS, and a screening of Rin Tin Tin starrer CLASH OF THE WOLVES with film discussion focusing on the four-legged film legend by The Orchid Thief author Susan Orlean.

    Views from the Avant Garde will make its fifteenth experimental journey to the screen this year and the New York Film Festival will once again partner with HBO in hosting four HBO Directors Dialogues – details for both of these special programs will be announced shortly.

    MASTERWORKS AND SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY SCREENINGS

    Masterworks: THE GOLD RUSH

    Chaplin’s personal favorite among his own films, THE GOLD RUSH (1925), is a beautifully constructed comic fable of fate and perseverance, set in the icy wastes of the Alaskan gold fields. Re-released by Chaplin in 1942 in a recut version missing some scenes, and with added narration and musical score, THE GOLD RUSH will be presented in a new restoration of the original, silent 1925 version. In this frequently terrifying and always unpredictable universe of natural and human savagery packed with avalanches, wild bears, predatory dance hall girls and murderous claim-jumpers, the incomparable Gentleman-Tramp arrives, seeking his fortune and facing every imaginable threat to life and limb. The film contains one of Chaplin’s classic comic set pieces in which he elegantly cooks and eats his boot to fend off starvation. THE GOLD RUSH blends action, slapstick comedy and sentiment seamlessly, making it one of the most beloved of Charles Chaplin’s works. The screening features a new score restoration by Timothy Brock (his ninth, commissioned by the Chaplin Estate) live musical accompaniment conducted by Brock and performed by musicians from the NY Philharmonic.

    Masterworks: INVASIÓN

    A little-known classic of Latin American cinema, INVASIÓN (1969) was the first work conceived specifically for the cinema by the great Jorge Luis Borges, in collaboration with his friend Adolfo Bioy Casares. A kind of updating of The Illiad that breathlessly morphs from police thriller to dream-like fantasy, the film is set in Aquiléa, a city that looks a lot like Buenos Aires currently under siege by sinister forces.  A group of middle-aged men, led by a somewhat older man, resolve to mount resistance to the invaders. Meetings are held, maps are studied, strategies are proposed—but can the invasion really be overcome?  A former assistant to Bresson here making his feature film debut, Hugo Santiago with INVASIÓN created a work that is lyrical, unsettling and infinitely suggestive.

    Masterworks: YOU ARE NOT I

    A haunting adaptation of a 1948 short story by Paul Bowles about a woman who escapes from an asylum, YOU ARE NOT I (1981) played widely in the international film festival circuit in the early Eighties. Then, a leak in a New Jersey warehouse destroyed the negative, leaving director Sara Driver with only a battered, copy that could not be projected. Miraculously, a print was found among the holdings of Paul Bowles just three years ago, and now the film has been restored and is available once again. Undoubtedly one of the most impressive works to emerge from the post-punk downtown scene, the film was beautifully shot by Jim Jarmusch (who also co-wrote the screenplay) and features Suzanne Fletcher, Nan Goldin and Luc Sante. The screening will mark the world premiere of the rediscovered and restored version of the film.

    50 Years of the New York Film Festival: THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL

    In anticipation of the New York Film Festival’s historic 50th edition in the fall of 2012, the Film Society is proud to inaugurate a year-long retrospective of highlights from the festival’s past 49 editions, curated by current and former members of the NYFF selection committee. We begin with the opening night film of the very first NYFF, Luis Buñuel’s THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL, described by festival director Richard Roud thusly: “For ninety hypnotic minutes Buñuel shatters all conventional notions of social logic and ethics. Never before has he been able to give such free reign to his vitality, wit and iconoclasm, his power to surprise and shock. Buñuel has been a great name in world cinema for over thirty years now, and we are proud to open the first New York Film Festival with his most remarkable film.”

    New Wave presents THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS 10th Anniversary Screening

    The Film Society’s young patrons group, New Wave, presents a special screening of Wes Anderson’s beloved contemporary classic—a world premiere at the 2001 NYFF—on the occasion of its 10th anniversary. A true American original, Anderson mingles romance, tragedy, social observation and unforgettable characters in his buoyant third feature, about a family of eccentric geniuses living in a parallel New York (where Helvetica is the only typeface and all cabs are Gypsies). Gene Hackman is perfection as Royal Tenenbaum, the erratic, unscrupulous paterfamilias, long banished by his orderly wife (Anjelica Huston). Now, faking an illness, he returns home to settle accounts with his estranged children: a financial whiz (Ben Stiller), a failed playwright (Gwyneth Paltrow), and a retired tennis champion (Luke Wilson). The screening will be followed by an on-stage reunion of Anderson and other members of the cast and crew.

    Anniversary Screenings Celebrating Animation Legend Hayao Miyazaki

    25th Anniversary Screening of CASTLE IN THE SKY

    The third feature film directed by Japanese animation legend Hayao Miyazaki—and the first produced under the aegis of his Studio Ghibli—takes place in a world where vast flying cities and castles once filled the skies, but now only one, named Laputa, remains. Sinister army officers and mercenary sky pirates variously seek the floating isle for their own purposes, but as usual in Miyazaki, a plucky young girl, Sheeta, reliably stays one step ahead of them all. Loosely inspired by Gulliver’s Travels, with an arresting visual design based in part on a visit Miyazaki once paid to a Welsh mining town, this exuberant, one-of-a-kind adventure fantasy, presented here in a new 35mm print, is certain to delight kids and kids-at-heart of all ages.

    10th Anniversary Screening of SPIRITED AWAY

    Miiyazaki’s Oscar-winning triumph follows the whimsical and occasionally terrifying adventures of 10-year-old Chihiro, who becomes trapped in a strange spirit world after an evil witch transforms her parents into pigs. Taking a job as an attendant in the witch’s sprawling bathhouse, Chihiro, now known as Sen, must find a way to rescue her parents—and herself—before she forgets her real name and stays trapped forever. A beautifully drawn coming-of-age story, with sharp observations on Japanese societal change, SPIRITED AWAY surpassed TITANIC as the biggest domestic box-office hit in Japanese history before becoming Miyazaki’s breakthrough film in the United States.

    20 Years of Art Cinema: A Tribute to Sony Pictures Classics and screening of James Ivory’s HOWARDS END

    Twenty years ago this December, former Orion Classics co-presidents Michael Barker, Tom Bernard and Marcie Bloom launched Sony Pictures Classics, instantly setting a new gold standard for the distribution of independent and foreign-language cinema in America. Their inaugural release, HOWARDS END, grossed more than $25 million at the U.S. box office and earned nine Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. In the two decades since, the hits have kept on coming, including three additional Best Picture nominees (CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON; CAPOTE; and AN EDUCATION), 10 winners of the Foreign Language Film Oscar, and eight New York Film Festival opening nights, including this year’s CARNAGE. On the occasion of their 20th anniversary, we salute the Sony Classics team with a look back at their remarkable career, including film clips and an in-depth conversation with Barker and Bernard moderated by NYFF selection committee chairman Richard Peña. The discussion will be followed by a screening of James Ivory’s HOWARDS END (1992).



    SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS: DOCUMENTARIES



    ANDREW BIRD: FEVER YEAR

    With his stirring, soulful vocals, eccentric violin plucking and whistling, and music that ranges from blues to calypso to rock, electronic and just about everything in between, Andrew Bird has built on the basis of live performances and 20 albums an impressive international fan base. Yet now, moving into his late thirties, he wonders how much longer he can keep up the pace of 150+ concert dates a year, as well as what slowing down might mean to his career. Chock full of concert and private Bird performances, Xan Aranda’s ANDREW BIRD: FEVER YEAR offers a look into the life of a remarkable contemporary musician and composer for whom each day, despite all his success, is still a struggle.

    THE BALLAD OF MOTT THE HOOPLE

    Storming out of Hereford, England in the late Sixties, Mott the Hoople became one of British rock’s most popular live acts. Yet, their records failed to reach audiences, and the band was on the verge of breaking up when one of their fans, a certain David Bowie, wrote “All the Young Dudes” for them; reborn, they zoomed to the top of the charts—and that’s really when the trouble started. A record of the rise, fall, rise and eventual disintegration of one of the era’s iconic bands, THE BALLAD OF MOTT THE HOOPLE also recounts the story of Guy Stevens, the band’s explosively brilliant manager. Accurate, insightful and full of never-before seen interviews and concert footage, Mike Kerry and Chris Hall’s terrific film is simply rock history at its best. Rock legend Ian Hunter will attend the festival and participate in a Q&A following the film’s screenings.

    CORMAN’S WORLD: EXPLOITS OF A HOLLYWOOD REBEL

    Mention the name Roger Corman and you conjure up a whole world of movie-making: screaming young women in tight sweaters, lumbering monsters creeping out of shadows, shock movie posters. Yet beyond that somewhat sentimentalized image of the “King of the Bs” was a producer who prospered at a time when so much of Hollywood was collapsing, all the while nurturing talents ranging from Martin Scorsese, Peter Bogdanovich and Jonathan Demme to Jack Nicholson, Pam Grier and Robert De Niro; eventually, even Ingmar Bergman and Akira Kurosawa would be associated with him. Alex Stapleton’s engaging and well-informed study offers a rich context for assessing Corman’s importance for cinema, with insightful and often hilarious testimony from friends and disciples. USA, 2011, 95 min. We will also present a rare screening of Roger Corman’s THE INTRUDER (1962, 84 min.), starring William Shatner as a mysterious man who arrives in a small Southern town on the eve of integration.

    CRAZY HORSE

    A sequel of sorts to LA DANSE, his 2009 portrait of the Paris Opera Ballet, the 39th feature by documentary master Frederick Wiseman takes us behind and in front of the scenes at another storied Paris cultural institution: the Crazy Horse erotic cabaret, now in its 60th year of continuous operation. In his signature observational style, Wiseman makes us a fly on the wall as the Crazy Horse team prepares a new revue, taking us from auditions and costume fittings to rehearsals and finally the highly seductive numbers themselves, filmed in shimmering close-up. Along the way, Wiseman steals remarkable glances at performers getting into character and directors and technicians battling management as they strive to perfect the aesthetics of desire. The result is an exuberant, one-of-a-kind musical valentine to the City of Light and the art of making art.

    DON’T EXPECT TOO MUCH

    In this feature-length companion piece to (the previously announced) Nicholas Ray’s WE CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN, Ray’s widow, Susan, examines her late husband’s stormy romance with Hollywood, his self-imposed exile in Europe, and his eventual return to America, where he began work on the wildly experimental magnum opus that would become his final cinematic testament. Incorporating never-before-seen archival picture and sound from the Nicholas Ray Archive, and new interviews with directors Victor Erice and Jim Jarmusch and many of the original cast and crew of WE CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN, DON’T EXPECT TOO MUCH offers a revealing portrait of a great director’s life, work and lasting influence. North American premiere.

    MUSIC ACCORDING TO TOM JOBIM

    Composer/performer Antonio Carlos “Tom” Jobim introduced Brazil and bossa nova to the world with “The Girl from Ipanema.” He went on to write literally dozens of classics songs recorded by the international royalty of pop music. Legendary Brazilian director Nelson Pereira dos Santos has now created this loving, tuneful tribute to Jobim, featuring extraordinary renditions of Jobim standards by artists ranging from Judy Garland, Dizzy Gillespie, Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald to Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, Chico Buarque and Lisa Ono. A veritable carnival of musical styles and approaches, all celebrating the unique artistry of Tom Jobim.

    PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY

    Don’t worry if you missed the first two parts of Emmy-winning documentarians Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky’s epic chronicle of the “West Memphis Three,” Arkansas teens convicted of the 1993 murders of three eight-year-old boys. The third film in a trilogy, PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY features never-before seen footage and quickly catches you up on this lightning-rod case, initially tried without a shred of physical evidence and amidst hysterical claims of satanic cultism. We then flash forward to the present, where the accused await their final appeal and staggering new revelations further point to a gross miscarriage of justice. A remarkable journey filmed over 18 years, the film follows an American tragedy, and capped by an extraordinary reversal of fortune. PARADISE LOST 3: PURGATORY (which will air on HBO in 2012) is also a profound meditation on the passage of time, lives interrupted, and salvation too long in coming.

    PATIENCE (AFTER SEBALD)

    A multi-layered, highly original essay on landscape, history, art, life and loss, PATIENCE (AFTER SEBALD) offers a unique exploration of the work of W.G. Sebald. Structured as a journey through the coastal Suffolk landscapes described in Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn—one of the most highly praised and hotly discussed literary works of recent years—the film avoids typical art documentary strategies, weaving commentaries by artists and critics such as  Robert McFarlane, Rick Moody, Adam Phillips, Tacita Dean and Chris Petit into a rich aural tapestry that offers a revealing counterpoint to images of places and things described in the book.  The result is not an adaptation or explanation of Sebald, but a kind of aesthetic response to his work.

    TAHRIR

    Soon after the first reports came about the occupation of Tahrir Square, filmmaker Stefano Savona headed for Cairo, where he stayed, amidst the ever-growing masses in the Square, for weeks. His film introduces us to young Egyptians such as Elsayed, Noha and Ahmed, spending all day and night talking, shouting, singing, and finally expressing everything they were forbidden to say out loud until now. As the protests grow in intensity, the regime’s repression becomes more violent, with the terrifying potential for massacre never far away.  TAHRIR is a film written in the faces, hands, and voices of those who experienced this period in the Square. It is a day-to-day account of the revolution, capturing the anger, fear, resolve and finally elation of those who made it happen.

    VITO

    For over two decades, Vito Russo was a ubiquitous presence in New York, a ravenous, tireless cinephile and critic who became one of the earliest, most important voices in the struggle for gay rights. His two passions came together in an extraordinary book, The Celluloid Closet, a groundbreaking study of gay and lesbian imagery and themes in movies that remains a landmark in the field. Now Jeffrey Schwarz, using some incredible period footage as well as the testimonies of those who knew him best, has created this heartfelt, insightful portrait of Vito that serves simultaneously as a revealing chronicle of the birth of contemporary gay culture and of later AIDS activism. VITO is an HBO Documentary Film that will premiere on the network in 2012.



    SPECIAL EVENTS



    THE 99 – UNBOUND

    Kuwaiti clinical psychologist—and comic book fan—Naif A. Al-Mutawa wondered what a set of comic heroes based on Islamic archetypes might look like. The result? THE 99, a posse of super-powered heroes based on derivatives of the 99 attributes of Allah; there’s Bari the Healer, Darr the Afflicter, Hadya the Guide, and Jabbar the Powerful—an international selection of young people each given their powers by the mysterious Noor Stones. Currently published in nine languages and having recently joined forces with Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman in a special series published by DC Comics, THE 99 can now be seen here in its first animated feature film, directed by Dave Osborne. Bring the kids! Afterwards, Dr. Al-Mutawa will be on hand to discuss the ideas behind the project and some of his plans for introducing THE 99 to America.

    A Conversation with Susan Orlean: “Rin Tin Tin: The Life and the Legend” with Noel Smith’s CLASH OF THE WOLVES

    Writer Susan Orlean (The Orchid Thief) has turned a childhood fascination with the greatest of canine movie heroes into a wonderful new book that chronicles the triumphs and tragedies of the Rin Tin Tin dynasty.  Orlean will offer a talk on Rin Tin Tin in the movies, as well as introduce and discuss Noel Smith’s CLASH OF THE WOLVES (1925), the movie that made Rinny a box office sensation.  Copies of Ms. Orleans’ Rin Tin Tin: The Life and the Legend will be available for purchase.

    Dreileben: Three Films

    NYFF audiences who feasted on such epic, multi-part television projects as the Red Riding Trilogy, Carlos and Mysteries of Lisbon are sure to enjoy this remarkable meeting of three of the brightest talents at work in contemporary German cinema. For Dreileben, directors Christian Petzold (Yella, Jerichow), Dominik Graf (A Map of the Heart) and Christoph Hochhäusler (The City Below) have each made a feature-length film on the same general subject—the escape of a convicted criminal in a small central German town—but told from completely different points of view and in radically contrasting filmmaking styles: one as an offbeat youth romance, one as a Big Chill-style relationship drama, and one as a tense police procedural. Taken together, these compulsively watchable films make for generous entertainment and a fascinating exercise in the polymorphous possibilities of storytelling.

    Dreileben Part 1: Beats Being Dead

    A convicted killer, released under police custody to pay his last respects to his late mother, escapes from a country hospital at the start of director Christian Petzold’s genre-bending, wonderfully unpredictable Beats Being Dead. But the film soon comes to center on the story of two star-crossed lovers: Johannes (Jacob Matschenz), a shy young hospital orderly, and Bosnian refugee Ana (Luna Mijovic), whom Johannes nobly rescues from the clutches of her abusive biker boyfriend. In the background, a police manhunt proceeds apace, while in the foreground Petzold reminds us there is sometimes nothing as dangerous as first love.

    Dreileben Part 2: Don’t Follow Me Around

    In the trilogy’s second chapter, Jo (Jeanette Hain), a big-city police psychologist, arrives in Dreileben to aid in the ongoing investigation, whereupon she finds herself greeted cooly by the local authorities but welcomed with open arms by Vera (Susanne Wolff), a college friend who lives nearby with her husband, a pretentious author. As the girlfriends reminisce about bygone days and discover they were both once in love with the same man, director Dominik Graf deftly juxtaposes their personal drama against the search for a killer, a police corruption scandal, and a possible case of interspecies transmutation—all underlining the trilogy’s recurring themes of false appearances and deeply hidden truths.

    Dreileben Part 3: One Minute of Darkness

    The Dreileben trilogy comes to a nail-biting close with director Christoph Hochhäusler’s expert thriller, which also brings escaped felon Molosch—a peripheral character in the first two parts—into sharp focus. Hot on the killer’s trail, grizzled police inspector Marcus (Eberhard Kirchberg) tries to put himself inside the mind of the criminal, even as he begins to wonder if the condemned man really is guilty as charged. Meanwhile, as Molosch (brilliantly played by Stefan Kurt) flees deeper into Dreileben’s possibly enchanted forest, he has an unexpectedly tender encounter with a young runaway girl—scenes that echo the Frankenstein story and transform One Minute of Darkness into a dark, memorably strange fairy tale.

    FROM MORNING TILL MIDNIGHT (with The Alloy Orchestra) and A TRIP TO THE MOON

    FROM MORNING TILL MIDNIGHT

    This stunning adaptation of Georg Kaiser’s play pushed the Expressionist stylization of sets, costumes and gestures introduced by THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (made a few months earlier) to such a radical point that German movie theaters refused to show it; long thought lost, a print was found and preserved by the National Film Center of Japan in the 1980s. Bored with his provincial, humdrum middle-class life as a bank teller, “the Cashier,” (a great performance by Ernst Deutsch) embezzles a considerable sum of money and heads to the city, where in no time he’s on a downward spiral. Of special note is the bicycle race, surely one of the most amazing sequences in silent cinema. The Alloy Orchestra has created a new score for this legendary work, which it will perform live at both shows. Thanks to the National Film Center of Japan for making this screening possible.

    A TRIP TO THE MOON (La voyage dans la lune)

    More than a century after its first release—and on the 150th anniversary of its creator’s birth—a fully restored color version of cinematic pioneer George Méliès’ 1902 science-fiction classic A Trip to the Moon is once again visible on screen. Long considered lost, a heavily damaged copy of the hand-painted film was anonymously donated in the 1990s to the Barcelona Cinematheque, and in 2010 an ambitious restoration project was launched by Lobster Films, Groupama Gan Foundation for Cinema and the Technicolor Foundation for Cinema Heritage. Thanks to state-of-the-art digital technology, the fragments of the 13, 375 frames have been reassembled and restored one by one. The stunning result screens here with a new original soundtrack by the French band Air.

    Oliver Stone’s The Untold History of the United States

    For much of his remarkable career, three-time Oscar-winning filmmaker Oliver Stone has set about exposing errors and omissions in the official record of such key moments in American history as the JFK assassination, the Vietnam War, and the Nixon administration. In his hugely ambitious new project, The Untold History of the United States, Stone puts nothing less than the entire 20th century under a microscope, with results that are sobering, surprising and sure to be controversial. Produced as a 10-part miniseries for Showtime (where it will premiere in 2012), we are thrilled to present this special sneak preview of Untold History’s first three chapters, which focus on the events leading up to America’s entrance into World War II, the war itself, and the unjustly forgotten figure of former U.S. Vice President Henry Wallace. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion featuring Stone, co-writer Peter Kuznick, historian Douglas Brinkley (Rice University) and journalist Jonathan Schell (The Nation).

    “Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark” with James Toback’s FINGERS

    Confirmed panelists: David Edelstein (Film Critic, New York magazine), Brian Kellow, Geoffrey O’Brien (Editor in Chief, Library of America), film director James Toback, Camille Paglia (University Professor of Humanities and Media Studies, University of the Arts)

    A decade after her death, Pauline Kael remains a pivotal figure in American film criticism, thanks to her inimitable style, the sharpness of her observations, and the influence she exerted over subsequent generations of writers. On the occasion of two new books—Brian Kellow’s biography Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark and the Library of America anthology The Age of Movies: Selected Writings of Pauline Kael—a panel of noted critics and filmmakers will discuss Kael’s life, work and legacy. The discussion will be followed by a screening of James Toback’s FINGERS, of which Kael wrote: “In FINGERS, the first film he has directed, James Toback is trying to be Orson Welles and Carol Reed, Dostoevsky, Conrad, and Kafka…Insanity, violent bouts of sex, Jacobean revenge killings—nothing is too much for Toback in his exhilarated state…Yet the film never seems ridiculous, because he’s got true moviemaking fever.”

    Sodankylä Forever Parts 1-4

    Surely the most singular of events in the annual calendar of film culture, the Midnight Sun Film Festival is held every June in the Finnish village of Sodankylä beyond the arctic circle—where the sun never sets. Founded by Aki and Mika Kaurismäki along with Anssi Mänttäri and Peter Von Bagh in 1985, the festival has played host to an international who’s who of directors and each day begins with a two-hour discussion. To mark the festival’s silver anniversary, festival director Peter Von Bagh edited together highlights from these dialogues to create an epic four-part choral history of cinema drawn from the anecdotes, insights, and wisdom of his all-star cast: Coppola, Fuller, Forman, Chabrol, Corman, Demy, Kieslowski, Kiarostami, Varda, Oliveira, Erice, Rouch, Gilliam, Jancso—and 64 more! Ranging across innumerable topics (war, censorship, movie stars, formative influences, America, neorealism) these voices, many now passed away, engage in a personal dialogue across the years that’s by turns charming, profound, hilarious and moving. Call it Finland’s idiosyncratic and playful answer to Godard’s Histoire(s) du cinema.

    Peter Von Bagh will present the program over the course of two evenings:

    Part 1: History of a Century & Part 2: The Yearning for the First Cinema Experience (149m)

    Part 3: Eternal Time & Part 4: Drama of Light (112m)



    FILMS AND SPECIAL EVENTS (WITH DIRECTORS AND ADDITIONAL REFERENCE INFORMATION

    Masterworks Screenings:

    THE GOLD RUSH, directed by Charlie Chaplin (restored)

    INVASIÓN, directed by Hugo Santiago (restored)

    YOU ARE NOT I, directed by Sara Driver (restored)



    Special Anniversary Screenings:

    CASTLE IN THE SKY, directed by Hayao Miyazaki. 25th Anniversary Screening (Celebrating Animation Legend Hayao Miyazaki).

    THE EXTERMINATING ANGEL, directed by Luis Buñuel (Mexico): 50 Years of the New York Film Festival

    HOWARDS END, directed by James Ivory. (20 Years of Art Cinema: A Tribute to Sony Pictures Classics)

    THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS, directed by Wes Anderson (USA). 10th Anniversary Screening. Presented by New Wave

    SPIRITED AWAY (Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi), directed by Hayao Miyazaki (Japan). 10th Anniversary Screening (Celebrating Animation Legend Hayao Miyazaki).



    Special Presentations: Documentaries:

    ANDREW BIRD: FEVER YEAR, directed by Xan Aranda (USA)

    THE BALLAD OF MOTT THE HOOPLE, directed by Mike Kerry and Chris Hall (UK)

    CORMAN’S WORLD: EXPLOITS OF A HOLLYWOOD REBEL, directed by Alex Stapleton and screening of THE INTRUDER, directed by Roger Corman

    CRAZY HORSE, directed by Frederick Wiseman (USA, France)

    DON’T EXPECT TOO MUCH, directed by Susan Ray (USA)

    MUSIC ACCORDING TO TOM JOBIM, directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos (Brazil)

    PARADISE 3: PURGATORY, directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky (USA)

    PATIENCE (AFTER SEBALD), directed by Grant Gee (UK)

    TAHRIR, directed by Stefano Savona (France/Italy)

    VITO, directed by Jeffrey Schwarz (USA)



    Special Events:

    THE 99 – UNBOUND, directed by Dave Osborne

    A Conversation with Susan Orlean: “Rin Tin Tin, the Life and the Legend” with Noel Smith’s CLASH OF THE WOLVES screening.

    Dreileben part 1 – 3: Beats Being Dead, directed by Christian Petzold; Don’t Follow Me Around, directed by Dominik Graf; One Minute of Darkness, directed by Christoph Hochhäusler (Germany)

    FROM MORNING TILL MIDNIGHT (Von morgens bis Mitternacht), directed by Karl Heinz Martin (Germany) with Alloy Orchestra and A TRIP TO THE MOON, directed by George Melies.

    Oliver Stone’s The Untold History of the United States. Screening of the first 3 chapters of TV series with panel discussion featuring Oliver Stone, co-writer Peter Kuznick, historian Douglas Brinkley (Rice University) and journalist Jonathan Schell (The Nation).

    “Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark” with James Toback’s FINGERS, directed by James Toback. Panel discussion with David Edelstein (Film Critic, New York magazine), Brian Kellow, Geoffrey O’Brien (Editor in Chief, Library of America), James Toback, Camille Paglia (University Professor of Humanities and Media Studies, University of the Arts), plus screening of Fingers, directed by James Toback

    Sodankylä Forever Parts 1-4, directed by Peter Von Bagh (Finland)

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  • Alexander Payne’s THE DESCENDANTS is Closing Night Gala Selection for 2011 NY Film Festival and Main-Slate of 27 Features

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    [caption id="attachment_1631" align="alignnone" width="550"]Alexander Payne’s THE DESCENDANTS[/caption]

    Alexander Payne’s THE DESCENDANTS will be the Closing Night Gala selection for the 49th New York Film Festival (September 30-October 16). NYFF also released the main slate of 27 feature films as well as a return to the festival stage of audience favorite, On Cinema (previously titled The Cinema Inside Me), featuring an in-depth, illustrated conversation with Alexander Payne.

    In his first film since the Oscar-winning SIDEWAYS, writer-director Alexander Payne once again proves himself a master of the kind of smart, sharp, deeply felt comedy that was once the hallmark of Billy Wilder and Jean Renoir. Based on the bestselling novel by Kaui Hart Hemmings, THE DESCENDANTS stars George Clooney as ‘Matt King’, the heir of a prominent Hawaiian land-owning family whose life is turned upside-down when his wife is critically injured in a boating accident. Accustomed to being “the back-up parent,” King suddenly finds himself center stage in the lives of his two young daughters (excellent newcomers Shailene Woodley and Amara Miller), while at the same time being forced to decide the fate of a vast plot of unspoiled land his family has owned since the 1860s. Rooted in Clooney’s beautifully understated performance, Payne’s film is an uncommonly perceptive portrait of marriage, family and community, suffused with humor and tragedy and wrapped in a warm human glow.

    Screening at Alice Tully Hall on Sunday, October 16, Alexander Payne’s THE DESCENDANTS marks the filmmakers 3rd visit to the New York Film Festival; previous titles presented were ABOUT SCHMIDT and SIDEWAYS. Fox Searchlight is releasing the film on November 23, 2011.

    The 49th New York Film Festival main-slate:

    Opening Night Gala Selection

    CARNAGE
    Director: Roman Polanski
    Country: France/Germany/Poland

    Centerpiece Gala Selection

    MY WEEK WITH MARILYN
    Director: Simon Curtis
    Country: UK

    Special Gala Presentations

    A DANGEROUS METHOD
    Director: David Cronenberg
    Country: UK/Canada/Germany

    THE SKIN I LIVE IN
    Director: Pedro Almodóvar
    Country: Spain

    Closing Night Gala Selection

    THE DESCENDANTS
    Director: Alexander Payne
    Country: USA

    4:44: LAST DAY ON EARTH
    Director: Abel Ferrara
    Country: USA

    THE ARTIST
    Director: Michel Hazanavicius
    Country: France

    CORPO CELESTE
    Director: Alice Rohrwacher
    Country: Italy/Switzerland/France

    FOOTNOTE
    Director: Joseph Cedar
    Country: Israel

    GEORGE HARRISON: LIVING IN THE MATERIAL WORLD
    Director: Martin Scorsese
    Country: USA

    GOODBYE FIRST LOVE
    Director: Mia Hansen-Løve
    Country: France/Germany

    THE KID WITH A BIKE
    Director: Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne
    Country: Belgium/France

    LE HAVRE
    Director: Aki Kaurismäki
    Country: Finland/France/Germany

    THE LONELIEST PLANET
    Director: Julia Loktev
    Country: USA/Germany

    MARTHA MARCY MAY MARLENE
    Director: Sean Durkin
    Country: USA

    MELANCHOLIA
    Director: Lars von Trier
    Country: Denmark/Sweden/France/Germany/Italy

    MISS BALA
    Director: Gerardo Naranjo
    Country: Mexico

    ONCE UPON A TIME IN ANATOLIA
    Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan
    Country: Turkey

    PINA
    Director: Wim Wenders
    Country: Germany/France/UK

    PLAY
    Director: Ruben Östlund
    Country: Sweden/France/Denmark

    POLICEMAN
    Director: Nadav Lapid
    Country: Israel/France

    A SEPARATION
    Director: Asghar Farhadi
    Country: Iran

    SHAME
    Director: Steve McQueen
    Country: UK

    SLEEPING SICKNESS
    Director: Ulrich Köhler
    Country: Germany/France/Netherlands

    THE STUDENT
    Director: Santiago Mitre
    Country: Argentina

    THIS IS NOT A FILM
    Director: Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb
    Country: Iran

    THE TURIN HORSE
    Director: Béla Tarr and Agnes Hranitzky
    Country: Hungary/France/Germany/Switzerland/USA

     

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  • David Cronenberg’s A DANGEROUS METHOD and Pedro Almodovar’s THE SKIN I LIVE Added As Special Gala Presentations at 2011 New York Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1629" align="alignnone" width="550"]David Cronenberg’s A Dangerous Method[/caption]

    Two Galas will join the Opening, Centerpiece and Closing Night Galas for the upcoming 49th New York Film Festival (September 30 – October 16) with David Cronenberg’s A DANGEROUS METHOD set to screen on Wednesday, October 5 and Pedro Almodovar’s THE SKIN I LIVE IN on Wednesday, October 12.

    Scheduled at Alice Tully Hall on Wednesday, October 5 will be David Cronenberg’s A DANGEROUS METHOD.  Adapted by Christopher Hampton from his play The Talking Cure, the film chronicles the ever-shifting relationship between Carl Jung (Michael Fassbender) and Sigmund Freud (Viggo Mortensen). Basking at first in Freud’s approval and encouragement, Jung increasingly questions his theories and methods. At the heart of their dispute is their rival approaches to the beautiful yet deeply unbalanced Sabina Spielrein (Keira Knightly), who eventually draws each man under her spell. Produced by Jeremy Thomas, the Sony Pictures Classics release also stars Vincent Cassel and Sarah Gordon. The film is set for a November 23 release. Presented the following Wednesday, on October 12, will be Pedro Almodóvar’s THE SKIN I LIVE IN. Reuniting the director with Antonio Banderas, the star of several of his early films, this dramatic thriller was written by Almodovar in collaboration with brother and producer, Agustin, based on Thierry Jonquet’s novel Mygale. Dr. Robert Ledgard (Banderas) is a world famous plastic surgeon who argues for the development of new, tougher human skin; unbeknownst to others, Dr. Ledgard has been trying to put his theory into practice, keeping a young woman, Vera (Elena Anaya), imprisoned in his mansion while subjecting her to an increasingly bizarre regime of treatments. Fascinated by the thin layer of appearance that stands between our perception of someone and that person’s inner essence, Almodóvar here addresses that continuing theme in his work in a bold, unsettling exploration of identity. Almodóvar regular Marisa Paredes offers another winning performance as Marilia, Ledgard’s faithful assistant. A Sony Pictures Classics release is scheduled to open October 14.

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  • Simon Curtis’ MY WEEK WITH MARILYN is Centerpiece Gala selection for 2011 New York Film Festival

    Simon Curtis’ MY WEEK WITH MARILYN will make its World Premiere as the Centerpiece Gala selection, screening at Alice Tully Hall on Sunday, October 9 for the upcoming 49th New York Film Festival (September 30 – October 16).

    Based on Colin Clark’s diaries, MY WEEK WITH MARILYN, is set in the early summer of 1956, when a 23 year-old Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne), just down from Oxford and determined to make his way in the film business, worked as a lowly assistant on the set of THE PRINCE AND THE SHOWGIRL. It was the film that famously united Sir Laurence Olivier (Kenneth Branagh) and Marilyn Monroe (Michelle Williams), who was also on honeymoon with her new husband, the playwright Arthur Miller (Dougray Scott).

    Nearly 40 years on, Clark’s diary account The Prince, the Showgirl and Me was published, but one week was missing – which was published some years later as My Week with Marilyn. This is the story of that week. When Arthur Miller leaves England, the coast is clear for Clark to introduce Monroe to some of the pleasures of British life; an idyllic week in which he escorted a Monroe who was desperate to get away from her retinue of Hollywood hangers-on and the pressures of work.   

    Produced by David Parfitt, the Weinstein Company release also stars Dominic Cooper, Judi Dench, Julia Ormond, Zoe Wanamaker, Emma Watson, Toby Jones, Philip Jackson, Geraldine Somerville, Derek Jacobi and Simon Russell Beale. The film is set for a November 4 release.

    NYFF will also feature an exciting lineup of Masterworks presentations including a special screening of an 8K Digital restored version of William Wyler’s sword and sandals epic BEN-HUR (1959), Nicholas Ray’s WE CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN (1973) and an ambitious celebration of the upcoming 100th Anniversary of Japan’s Nikkatsu Films featuring screenings of 36 films including classics such as Kon Ichikawa’s THE BURMESE HARP (1956), Masahiro Makino’s SINGING LOVE BIRDS (1936), Ko Nakahira’s CRAZED FRUIT (1956), Shohei Imamura’s PIGS AND BATTLESHIPS (1961) and Seijun Suzuki’s TOKYO DRIFTER (1966).

    The screening of the recently restored version of Wyler’s classic BEN-HUR will show off the epic starring Charlton Heston and arguably the greatest chariot race put on film via an 8K Digital print which returns the film back to its original aspect ratio. Ray’s seldom seen experimental film WE CAN’T GO HOME AGAIN was originally made in collaboration with the late director’s film students and was the subject of subsequent editing by Ray before his death in 1979. Ray’s widow supervised the restoration of the “multi-narrative” film, bordering between film and visual arts, which was conceived as a teaching tool – instructing filmmaking through practice versus theory.

    Founded upon the consolidation of several production companies and theater chains, Nikkatsu Corporation has enjoyed a rich history of film production and distribution since 1912. Since that time, notable directors such as Kenji Mizoguchi, Kon Ichikawa, Shozo Makino and his son Masahiro Makino, Ko Nakahira, Shohei Imamura and Seijun Suzuki have made films under the Nikkatsu banner.  During World War 2, Nikkatsu was forcibly combined with several other Japanese studios to form a large, government-influenced studio, but in 1954 the company resumed production under its own control.

    Searching for its own niche in the booming postwar Japanese film industry, Nikkatsu moved into the youth market with its stirring screen adaptation of Shintaro Ishihara’s SEASON OF THE SUN. An enormous success, Nikkatsu quickly followed up with a wave of similar works oriented for the youth market. As the vogue for these youth films began to wane in the early 60s, Nikkatsu launched a series of hard-boiled action films that remain perhaps the company’s best known period internationally. Led by such action stars as Shishedo Joe, Yujiro Ishihara and Hideaki Nitani, Nikkatsu action introduced a new kind of protagonist, often cynical and at odds with a society revealed to be totally corrupt. Influenced by American B movies, Nikkatsu action would itself be a key influence on the Hong Kong gunplay films years later.

    With aging action stars and a public looking for something new, Nikkatsu in the 70s created “Roman Porno,” romantic pornography, a series of soft-core erotic films that featured real (if often bizarre) plots and actors. The constant shift in production enabled Nikkatsu to stay profitable while other Japanese studios were either closing or switching to television. Yet by the 90s, Nikkkatsu was itself forced to declare bankruptcy and re-organize. Despite changes in ownership since then, Nikkatsu has remained continuously in production, branching out into new genre such as horror, martial arts and even family drama. As it approaches its centenary, Nikkatsu’s motto “We Make Fun Films” remains as true today as it was in its golden era. A new generation of filmgoers are discovering its classic films and filmmakers, inspiring not only the re-release of films from their catalogue but the production of remakes as well. Organized by the Film Society of Lincoln Center with Nikkatsu Corporation, the Japan Foundation and the National Film Center of Japan, this Centenary Celebration of Nikkatsu will be screened later this year at the Festival of 3 Continents in Nantes, France, as well as at the Cinematheque Française.

    Nikkatsu 100th Anniversary Retrospective Lineup

    AKANISHI KAKITA (1936) 77min
    Director: Mansaku Itami

    THE BURMESE HARP (Biruma no Tategoto) (1956) 115min
    Director: Kon Ichikawa

    CHARISMA (Karisuma) (1999) 103min
    Director: Kiyoshi Kurosawa

    COLD FISH (Tsumetai Nettaigyo) (2010) 144min
    Director: Sion Sono

    A COLT IS MY PASSPORT (Colt ha Oreno Passport) (1967) 85min
    Director: Takashi Nomura

    CRAZED FRUIT (Kurutta Kajitsu) (1956) 86min
    Director: Ko Nakahira

    DANCER IN IZU (Izo no Odoriko) (1963) 87min
    Director: Katsumi Nisikawa

    A DIARY OF CHUJI’S TRAVELS (Chiji Tabi Nikki: Part 1 and Part 2) (1927) 107min
    Director: Daisuke Ito

    EARTH (1939) 92min
    Director: Tomu Uchida

    GATE OF FLESH (Nikutai no Mon) (1964) 90min
    Director: Seijun Suzuki

    THE HELL-FATED COURTESAN (Maruhi: Joro Seme Jigoku) (1973) 77min
    Director: Noboru Tanaka

    HOMETOWN (1930) 86min
    Director: Kenji Mizoguchi

    I LOOK UP WHEN I WALK (aka KEEP YOUR CHIN UP) (Uewo Muite Arukou) (1962) 91min
    Director: Toshio Masuda

    INTENTIONS OF MURDER (Akai Satsui) (1964) 150min
    Director: Shohei Imamura

    INTIMIDATION (Aru Kyohaku) (1960) 65min
    Director: Koreyosji Kurahara

    LOVE HOTEL (1985) 88min
    Director: Shinji Somae

    MADE TO ORDER CLOTH (aka JIROKICHI THE RAT) (Oatsurae Jirokichi Koshi) (1931) 70min
    Director: Daisuke Ito
    **Screening with:
    JIRAIYA THE NINJA (Goketsu Jiraiya) (1921) 30min
    Director: Shozo Makino

    MUD AND SOLDIERS (Tsuchi to Heitai) (1936) 120min
    Director: Tomotaka Tasaka

    THE OLDEST PROFESSION (Maruhi: Shikiyo Mesu Ichiba) (1974) 83min
    Director: Noboru Tanaka

    PIGS AND BATTLESHIPS (Buta to Gunkan) (1961) 108min
    Director: Shohei Imamura

    A POT WORTH A MILLION RYO (Tange Sazen Hyakuman Ryou no Tsubo) (1935) 92min
    Director: Sadao Yamanaka

    RETALIATION (Shima ha Moratta) (1967) 94min
    Director: Yasuharu Hasebe

    RUSTY KNIFE (Sabita Knife) (1958) 90min
    Director: Toshio Masuda

    SEASON OF THE SUN (Taiyo no Kisetsu) (1956) 89min
    Director: Takumi Furukawa

    SINGING LOVE BIRDS (Oshidori Uta Gassen) (1936) 69min
    Director: Masahiro Makino

    STRAY CAT ROCK: SEX HUNTER (Noraneko Rock: Sex Hunter) (1970) 86min
    Director: Yasuharu Hasebe

    SUN IN THE LAST DAYS OF THE SHOGUNATE (aka Shinagawa Path) (Bakumatsu Taiyoden) (1957) 110min
    Director: Yuzo Kawashima

    SUZUKI PARADISE: RED LIGHT (Suzuki Paradise: Aka Shingo) (1956) 81min
    Director: Yuzo Kawashima

    TAKE AIM AT THE POLICE VAN (Jusango Taihisen Yori: Sono Gososha wo Nerae) (1960) 79min
    Director: Seijun Suzuki

    THE TATTOOED FLOWER VASE (Kashinno Irezumi: Ureta Tsubo) (1979) 74min
    Director: Masaru Konuma

    TEN NIGHTS OF DREAMS (Yume Juya) (2007) 110min
    Director: Various

    TILL WE MEET AGAIN (Ashita Kuru Hito) (1955) 115min
    Director: Yuzo Kawashima

    TOKYO DRIFTER (Tokyo Nagaremono) (1966) 83min
    Director: Seijun Suzuki

    THE WARPED ONES (1960) 108min
    Director: Koreyoshi Kurahara

    THE WOMAN WITH RED HAIR (Akai Kami no Onna) (1979) 73min
    Director: Tatsumi Kumashiro

    A WORLD OF GEISHA (Yojyohan Fusuma no Urabari) (1973) 77min
    Director: Tatsumi Kumashiro

     

     

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  • New York Film Festival Review: The Lonliest Planet

    A critical fave at the Toronto Intl. Film Festival, Julia Loktev’s follow-up to her 2006 “Day Night Day Night,” “Lonliest Planet” starts hunky Mexican star Gael Garcia Bernal as Alex and the fresh faced, confident Nica (Hani Furstenberg)- a couple playfully back-packing through the Caucasus mountains together in Georgia (formerly part of Russia) , led by their wary guide Dato (local, hired guide Bidzina Gujabidze.)

    Young, sexy and in love, these two appear to be cozying into a very happy, hipster future together. Until the middle of their trek, when the trio is casually ambushed by two peasants. No t to give the story away, this seemingly quiet yet very impactful event stretches the limits of their relationship, as it comes apart as gently as a tissue thrown away after a good cry before our very eyes.

     

    Hani Furstenberg is a truly great find-she’s a dynamic actress. Her hair as red as flame, she exudes an almost beguiling confidence, realizing without fully realizing, in the end,  who her lover really is. Bernal is also terrific at portraying her boyfriend who seems to know before Nica does that he is out of his depth altogether, in terms of her strength and courage.

    Supposedly, the title is poking fun at those “Lonely Planet” guides for the young and carefree traveler. Loktev doesn’t seem as much to be commenting about a generation, the state of the world itself, or the blithely Western ignorance of what it means to have your country fall apart after a war. It seems she just wants to show us how our perceptions, if we are fortunate enough, can change on a dime. She seems to be encouraging us not to wait for a life-threatening moment to occur before analyzing who and what it is we really love.

    The film is overall pretty slow moving, but the terrific score keeps us moving right along with vast long shots of the trio pilgrimming through the sharp terrain. The dialogue is sparse but overall the film is sharp, enjoyable, and really stays with you-the Lonliest Planet is a vivid character portrait of a relationship unraveling. Check it out next week at the New York Film Festival.

     

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  • New York Fim Festival Review: Melancholia

    Lars von Trier was banned from Cannes this year, after a ridiculously off-handed remark about “understanding Hitler” blew up to epic proportions.

    “Melancholia,” the latest film in the bratty bad boy’s ever-expanding oeuvre, is truly epic in its own right.

    The film opens with a bolt of sound that is Wagner and a truly mesmerizing and lush montage of gorgeous set pieces, which play themselves out later in the film. From there, we dive jumpily right into the wedding day of Kristin Dunst’s Justine, who is marrying an aw-shucks guy who still can’t believe his great luck (Alexander Skarsgard) and is contending with simmering guests and relatives -sharky but cordial boss Stellan Skarsgard, hilariously pissed off wedding planner Udo Kier, truly viperous mom Charlotte Rampling, exasperatingly careless and adorable dad John Hurt, had-it-up-to-here brother-in-law John played by Kiefer Sutherland, (neatly carrying the film on his back at one point,) and ready to explode, and weary, martyrish sis Claire, played by Charlotte Gainsbourg. Justine is also battling, we see as the day wares thin to evening, severe manic depression.

     

    Claire and John are throwing this wedding for Justine on their estate which could be in England, (Denmark) could be somewhere in the US, we have no idea- one thing we learn right away- that there is a mysterious, new planet called Melancholia is due to pass right by Earth, and the entire wedding party seems entirely disconnected from what could be the end of the world.

    Seeing as John and Claire have no discernable occupation and are simply “filthy rich,” and seeing that weeks after the wedding, which melted down to ashes by the end of the night, Justine can barely make it into a cab to go and visit her sister, she is so entrenched in her own sadness, it is easy to see this film as some sort of statement on the vapidness and futility of our time spent on earth, or depth of the human condition as we know it now. It is said that von Trier has and was battling his own depression when making this film. It really doesn’t matter hat his bad boy antics or state of mind is- he has made an honest to goodness masterpiece, both visually and emotionally, and one which relies heavily on American narrative filmmaking-without the morality injected into practically all of it today.

    Because as the inhabitants of this tiny family come together, in their own way, we are to ponder not “what we do, and how would we do it?” How would we survive knowing, as Claire’s young son says at one point, “there is nowhere to hide?” But rather, we are allowed to bear witness to the strange voluptuousness of giving entirely into one’s own emotions, rather than being tousled by the gridlock of despair itself.

    Justine, even near paralyzed with what looks like grief, has the upper hand when the end of days grows near. Why? Well, it is curious that her nephew calls her “Auntie Steel-Breaker,” but it is really the fact that she is able to languish, and languish so beautifully (there is even a scene, shot long, with a nude Dunst prostrate on the bank of a small river, as she looks at the approaching, gloriously CGI-ed Melancholia approaching Earth, that looks like a far-out, breath-taking version of an Old Master portrait) that draws even her fed-up, patient sister into muttering “You have it so easy, don’t you?” Because Claire is only and always in a general state of anxiety and mild despair. The type most of us are in point or another. The kind that takes energy, that takes willpower to overcome, that takes an earnest desire to change. All traits which are vividly anti-death. All traits which are, as well, rather exhausting, after awhile. Even at the the end of the film, as Justine not only is able to face death with a calm serenity, but soothes her nephew over her hysterical sister’s ultimately useless cries of anguish, she is the strong one. She “knows,” ultimately, that we are alone, and we must deal with our imminent demise alone.

    It is the very voluptuousness of both Justine’s “sickness” and Dunst’s performance, which one simply cannot say enough about, which gives the film a strange vitality I can never recall experiencing before when watching a film. Actually, the closest thing would be the last half of “2001, A Space Odyssey”- when image, narrative (and in this case truly beguilingly perfect and spot-on performances by Dunst, Gainsbourgh and Sutherland) combine to allow the viewer to feel something is being fed into the head and soul by entirely different channels. As Justine says at the end of the film, “I know things.” Well, I’m not quite what von Trier really knows, but there is nothing of the fable, parable or moral to this film. It’s a meticulously orchestrated slate to appear clean, although it’s quite loaded at the same time. As Justine is able to do, von Trier seems to be encouraging us to give in to whatever feelings we may too frightened of releasing. But not for any particular reason, of course. Just because, as Dunst’s Justine inflicts her own sorry state on everyone who knows her, he can.Go and see this film, which plays at this week’s upcoming New York Film Festival. It’s a marvel of image, idea and performance.

    -Francesca McCaffery

     

     

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  • The second NY/SF International Children’s Film Festival Lineup of Films; October 21 – 23 in San Francisco

    [caption id="attachment_1621" align="alignnone" width="550"]A scene from the documentary CHANDANI: THE DAUGHTER OF THE ELEPHANT WHISPERER, playing at the NY/SF International Children’s Film Festival, October 21 – 23 at San Francisco Film Society | New People Cinema and Letterman Digital Arts Center. [/caption]

    The second NY/SF International Children’s Film Festival, a three-day celebration of diverse, enlightening, inspiring and entertaining films for kids and teens ages 3-18 and their families, will run October 21 – 23 at San Francisco Film Society | New People Cinema and the Premier Theater, Letterman Digital Arts Center.

    “The inaugural Children’s Film Festival in 2010 was such a great success and a testament to the demand for — and appreciation of — high quality international films, from Bay Area kids and families,” said Joanne Parsont, SFFS director of education. “We have been working hard to cultivate those audiences over the last year and are really looking forward to bringing them another fun and festive program in 2011. We are especially pleased to be able to showcase this great slate of films in two of San Francisco’s preeminent theaters, with two 3-D offerings at Lucasfilm’s Premier Theater on Opening Night and a full weekend of films at the new San Francisco Film Society | New People Cinema.”

    See lineup below.

    All programs at San Francisco Film Society | New People Cinema, except as noted.

    Friday, October 21 Opening Night

    Premier Theater, Letterman Digital Arts Center

    5:00 pm Sammy’s Adventures: The Secret Passage

    Ben Stassen (Belgium 2010)

    This delightful eco-adventure is an immersive 3-D experience, taking you on an animated undersea journey with Sammy, a sea turtle embarking on a 50-year odyssey around the world-and a lifetime of adventure. Vibrant visuals are accompanied by a lively soundtrack featuring pop songs by Bruno Mars and Michael Jackson. 85 min. In English. Preceded by short The Deep. Recommended for all ages.

    6:00 pm Opening Night Party

    Palm Room, San Francisco Film Centre, 39 Mesa Street, The Presidio

    A fun-filled party with face painting, butterfly tattoos, shadow puppets, music, kid-friendly food, drinks and complimentary grown-up grape juice that film-and-party ticket holders can attend either after Sammy’s Adventures or before Tales of the Night. Attendees are encouraged to come in costume, like the costume-changing characters in Tales of the Night.

    7:30 pm Tales of the Night

    Michel Ocelot (Les contes de la nuit, France 2011)

    Renowned French animation auteur Michel Ocelot marks his first foray into 3-D animation using his unique shadow puppet style to tell six different fables each unfolding in an exotic locale. History blends with fairy tale in enchanted lands full of dragons, werewolves, sorcerers, captive princesses and brave warriors. 84 min. In French with subtitles. Preceded by short Don’t Go. Recommend for ages seven and up.



    Saturday, October 22

    10:00 am Tigers and Tattoos – and More

    Karla von Bengston (Denmark 2010)

    Maj and her tattoo artist uncle Sonny make a hasty escape after she foolishly engraves her own artwork on a burly customer. They embark on an unexpected adventure, discovering a fairy-filled forest and a circus family with a man-eating tiger. In Danish with English voiceover. Preceded by shorts The Happy Duckling, Chicken Cowboy and The Wooden Pirate with the Flesh Leg. Total running time 63 min. Recommended for ages five and up.

    12:00 pm Party Mix

    This entertaining, thought-provoking and visually stunning collection of animated and live-action short films from around the world includes the NYICFF Grand Prize-winning Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, 2010 Oscar winner The Lost Thing and the Guinness World Record holders for both the smallest and largest stop-motion animation films, Dot and Gulp, produced by multiple-Oscar-winning studio Aardman Animations. Total running time 68 min. Recommended for ages 7-14.

    2:15 pm The Storytelling Show

    Jean-Chrisophe Roger (France/Luxembourg 2010)

    In this hilarious animated comedy, a brother and sister enter their father in a reality TV show contest, where dads compete to tell the best bedtime stories. Inspired by the filmmaker’s childhood memories, it’s a raucous tribute to the joys of imagination and the limitless possibilities of storytelling. 77 min. In French with subtitles. Preceded by short Johnny. Recommended for ages seven and up.

    4:15 pm Girls’ POV

    This eye-opening and engaging selection of short films celebrates the trials and triumphs of girls from different cultures, countries and backgrounds. Featuring NYICFF jury-award winner Chalk and BAFTA winner I-Do-Air, the program steers through a wide range of issues and emotions from friendship and rivalry to jealousy and love, from arranged marriages to eating disorders. Total running time 82 min. Recommended for ages 9-16.

    7:00 pm Echoes of the Rainbow

    Alex Law (Hong Kong 2010)

    Set in 1960s Hong Kong, this graceful and poignant story about the family of an illiterate shoemaker focuses on his eight-year-old son, nicknamed Big Ears, who idolizes his older brother and dreams of being an astronaut. But when a family tragedy strikes, Big Ears must learn how to deal with love and loss, good times and bad. Written by Alex Law. Photographed by Charlie Lam. With Buzz Chung, Aarif Lee, Simon Yam, Sandra Ng, Ann Hui. 117 min. In Cantonese, Mandarin and French with subtitles. Distributed by Mei Ah Entertainment. Recommended for ages ten and up.



    Sunday, October 23

    10:00 am Kid Flix Mix

    Perfect for youngest audiences, this colorful and musical mix of the best animated films from around the world features chatty birds, beatboxing cats and one very hungry pig. From Slovakia to Spain, filmmakers demonstrate a range of styles, using everything from hand-drawn to computer-generated animation and mixed media collage with characters made from patterned fabrics, burlap and buttons. Total running time 62 min. Recommended for ages 3-6.

    12:15 pm Sandman and the Lost Sand of Dreams     

    Director in person

    Sinem Sakaoglu, Jesper Møller (Germany 2010)

    Ever wonder where you go when you sleep? In this fantastical stop-motion adventure, six-year-old Milo is transformed into an animated character and swept into the secret nocturnal Dreamland on a mission to thwart the nefarious schemes of Habumar, creator of nightmares. 80 min. In English. Preceded by short Ormie. Recommended for all ages.

    2:45 pm Chandani: The Daughter of the Elephant Whisperer

    Arne Birkenstock (Germany/Sri Lanka 2009)

    Chandani dreams of following in the footsteps of her father and becoming the first female mahout-a guardian of wild elephants. Set in the Sri Lankan tropics, this documentary is a stunning tale of ambition, tradition, gender bias, familial bonds and playful pachyderms. Photographed by Marcus Winterbauer. 86 min. In English and Sinhalese with subtitles. Preceded by short Dot. Recommended for ages eight and up.

    5:30 pm Aurélie Laflamme’s Diary 

    Director in person

    Christian Laurence (Le journal d’Aurélie Laflamme, Canada 2010)

    Aurélie Laflamme suspects she’s an alien. But she’s really just a teenager navigating the strange conventions of adolescence on planet Earth. Facing teachers, tampons, fake tans and first crushes, she’s an endearingly awkward French Canadian version of a Judy Blume character. Written by India Desjardins. Photographed by Martin Leon. With Rose Adam, Valérie Blais, Genevieve Chartrand, Édith Cochrane. 108 min. In French with subtitles) Preceded by short Marcel the Shell with Shoes On. Recommended for ages eight and up.

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  • 2011 Rooftop Filmmakers’ Fund Grantees

    Rooftop Films announced the recipients of the 2011 Rooftop Filmmakers’ Fund Grants. Grants were made to two feature films and five short films.

    The 2011 grantees are:

    ROOFTOP FILMS & EDGEWORX POST-PRODUCTION GRANT:
    AIN’T THEM BODIES SAINTS (David Lowery)

    ROOFTOP FILMS & EASTERN EFFECTS EQUIPMENT GRANT:
    OBVIOUS CHILD (Gillian Robespierre)

    ROOFTOP FILMS & ADRIENNE SHELLY FOUNDATION SHORT FILM GRANT FOR WOMEN:
    A LIGHT IN THE NIGHT (Sarah Daggar-Nickson)

    ROOFTOP FILMMAKERS’ FUND SHORT FILM GRANTS:
    MAN ON MARS (Anna Farrell)
    TSUNAMI / SAKURA [TIDAL WAVE / CHERRY BLOSSOM] (Lucy Walker)
    I’M NOT NOTHING (Zachary Volker)
    THE SEEDS (Todd Chandler & Jeff Stark)

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  • The three winners of the inaugural SFFS Documentary Film Fund grants

    The San Francisco Film Society announced the three winners of the inaugural SFFS Documentary Film Fund grants. The Fund was created to support the postproduction of singular feature-length nonfiction film work that is distinguished by compelling stories, intriguing characters and an innovative visual approach.

    2011 Winners

    Joe Brewster and Michèle Stephenson, An American Promise, $25,000

    In 1999, filmmakers Joe Brewster and Michèle Stephenson began documenting the experiences of two African American boys — their son and his best friend — as they started kindergarten at the prestigious, private, predominantly white Dalton School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, just as the school began to actively cultivate a diverse student body. This unprecedented longitudinal documentary reveals the life-changing experiences of the boys and their families as they navigate the challenges of academic achievement further complicated by issues of race and class.

    Priya Desai and Ann Kim, Match +, $25,000

    How do you find love and marriage when you are HIV-positive? And how do you do that in India, where marriage is a must but HIV/AIDS is unspeakable? Shame led some people to marry without disclosing their diagnosis and others to remain single. Twenty-five years ago the doctor who discovered the first cases of HIV in India could do little more than console her patients. Now she also acts as their matchmaker, helping HIV-positive people fulfill their familial duty as well as their own wish to marry.

    Zachary Heinzerling, Cutie & the Boxer, $50,000

    Cutie & the Boxer chronicles a unique love story between two Japanese artists and reveals the roots of their relationship. Ushio Shinohara achieved notoriety in postwar Japan with his avant-garde boxing paintings, and in 1969 moved to New York City in search of international recognition. Three years later, at age 19, Noriko left Japan to study art in New York and was instantly captivated by the middle-aged Shinohara. She abandoned her education and became the wife of an unruly, alcoholic husband. Forty years into their marriage the Shinoharas’ art and personalities are the basis for a deep and challenging symbiosis. Cutie & the Boxer reveals painful, universal truths about the lives of artists and examines how the creative process intersects with reality, identity and marriage.

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  • It’s Good To Be Short at The 15th Annual Urbanworld Film Festival

    Last weekend in New York Vimooz visited the Fifteenth Annual Urbanworld Film Festival in NYC, presented by BET Networks and sponsored by HBO and MoviePass.

    Urbanworld was founded in 1997 by Stacy Spikes, and is dedicated to redefining the multicultural roles in contemporary cinema.

    One of the spotlight films, Mario Van Peebles domestic drama “All Things Fall Apart,” which stars Fifty Cent as a rising college football star struck down by cancer (!), was a big, deserved audience hit. But, the real and true stand-outs of Urbanworld Film Festival were the narrative shorts.

    Urbanworld did a tremendous job of pulling in some awesome short films. These shorts were exceptionally well executed, cut, acted, designed- you name it. Watch for the upcoming names coming soon in the next few years, and try to catch the films themselves at the next round of local festivals (many made there world premier here.) All of the narrative shorts were truly great, and here were some highlights:

    “Burned,” directed by Phyllis Toben Bancroft, about an African American female Iraqi vet coping with alcoholism; “Camilo,” directed by Rafael Salazar, about an autistic boy who spent eleven days alone on the NYC subway system, centering on the Hispanic newscaster who doesn’t recognize him on the train, right after doing a news story on the boy; “Counterfeit,” directed by Geoff Baily, which was gorgeously shot in New York, and showed us the hustle of the Chinatown counterfeit game through the eyes of African immigrants; “Crazy Beats Strong Every Time,” dir. By Moon Molson, about inner-city twenty-somethings and the drunken ex-stepfather one of them can no longer ignore nor tolerate; “Digital Antiquities,” dir. By J.P. Chan- which was, hands-on, one of the best short films I’ve ever seen- in terms of early George Lucas lo-fi CGI, production design and promise; the hysterically animated “Jerk Chicken”- the whole shebang created and directed by the uber-talented Samuel Stewart; “The Tombs,” one of the most narratively cinematic of all the shorts- about the treacherous day in the life of the NYC prison system when waiting to see the judge, directed by Jerry Lamothe (another director to really watch); two truly astounding films for different reasons-slavery musical piece “Underground,” directed by Akil Dupont, which was lavish in its scope and sheer, old-fashioned cinematic ambition, and “Wake,” dir by Bree Newsome, a strangely elegant, gothic, scare film, which I already want to see full-length; “The Boxer,” by directors. Teddy Chen Culver and David Au; the very nervy and successful “Wolf Call,” dir by Rob Underhill, which is the re-telling of the Emmett Hill murder by the two murderers themselves and a reporter, all played by the same remarkable actor-writer- Mike Wiley; “LA Coffin School,” dir. By Erin Li, about a very odd way to come to appreciate and value life; and the incestuous, shattering “Hard Silence,” dir by Ozzy Villazon, features a truly breakout performance by a fantastic Valenzia Algarin and a genuinely knock-out one by Martha Solorzano.

    Vimooz just cannot wait to see what fresh talent Urbanworld will discover next year…

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  • The Black Power Mixtape-1967-1975- A Must-See Documentary

    Late ‘60s America was so multi-dimensional, so rife with various and extensive cultural and political facets, it’s difficult to get a true hold on what was really accomplished in that era, since the Civil Rights Movement of the early to mid 1960s. But a LOT surely was accomplished, just as much as so much was left bitterly undone. The “Black Power Movement” of that era, spearheaded by a young, brilliant freedom-rider named Stokley Carmichael, has its roots in the soil sown of decades upon decades of poverty, slavery, abuse of all kinds, and political injustice towards African-Americans in the United States.

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