• 2011 Filmmaker Magazine “25 New Faces of Independent Film”

    Filmmaker Magazine announced earlier this month announced the 2011 “25 New Faces of Independent Film”. The feature is the 14th edition of the magazine’s annual look at the new, up-and-coming talent, a list that includes includes directors, screenwriters, composers, editors and actors scouted by Filmmaker’s editors over the last 12 months.

    Past 25 Faces include: Sean Durkin (Martha Marcy May Marlene), Lena Dunham (Tiny Furniture), Rashaad Ernesto Green (Gun Hill Road), Derek Cianfrance (Blue Valentine), Danfung Dennis (To Hell and Back Again), Matt Porterfield (Putty Hill), Craig Brewer (Hustle & Flow), Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden (Half Nelson), Barry Jenkins (Medicine for Melancholy), Miranda July (Me and You and Everyone We Know), Joshua Safdie (The Pleasure of Being Robbed) and Peter Sollett and Eva Vives (Raising Victor Vargas). Notable actors include several high profile names in the early stages of their careers such as Rooney Mara, Ryan Gosling, Ellen Page, Peter Sarsgaard and Hilary Swank.

    The 2011 “25 New Faces of Independent Film” are:

    Eddie Alcazar. Former video game designer Eddie Alcazar has lit up the blogosphere with striking early artwork from his first feature, OOOO, currently in post-production. It’s an independently produced, live-action science fiction film about a distraught man attempting to create a new era of human consciousness.

    Andrew S Allen and Jason Sondhi. Andrew S Allen directed and Jason Sondhi produced The Thomas Beale Cipher, an ingenious and beautiful short animation dealing with a true 19th century cryptography mystery. The two are also editors of Short of the Week (shortoftheweek.com), an online curatorial hub for the best short movies on the internet.

    Carlen Altman. Actress and comedienne Carlen Altman made her mark in Ry Russo-Young’s You Wont Miss Me. But with her latest, Alex Ross Perry’s The Color Wheel, she adds “screenwriter” to her resume, collaborating with Perry on this off-kilter tale of sibling love and rivalry.

    Rania Attieh and Daniel Garcia. After a series of acclaimed short films, including one mentored by Abbas Kiarostami, the directing team of Rania Attieh and Daniel Garcia lensed their debut feature, Ok, Enough, Goodbye, in Tripoli, Lebanon. The film, which premiered in Abu Dhabi, is a droll no-budget comedy that is also a portrait of a changing city.

    Brent Bonacorso. Commercials director Brent Bonacorso has made one of the most visually striking short films of the year with West of the Moon, a delirious fantasy inspired by a documentary investigation into children’s dreams. With Jesse Atlas, he is currently co-directing the sequel to the British science fiction feature Monsters.

    Alrick Brown. Shot in Rwanda and exploring the Rwandan genocide, Alrick Brown’s gripping debut feature, Kinyarwanda, won the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival. The IFP Narrative Lab film will be released this fall via the African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement.

    Dean Fleischer-Camp and Jenny Slate. Writer/director Dean Fleischer-Camp and writer/actress Jenny Slate created one of the most charmingly original shorts of the year, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On. Appealing to kids as well as their parents, the no-budget YouTube sensation has already garnered the two a book deal, and the character should be crossing over into television soon as well.

    Sheldon Candis. Filmmaker Sheldon Candis calls his first feature, Learning Uncle Vincent, currently in post-production, a “driller,” as in “dramatic thriller.” Taking place during a 24-hour span, the film stars Common and is the tale of a young boy coming of age through the realization of his uncle’s true character.

    Panos Cosmatos. Panos Cosmatos’ debut feature, Beyond the Black Rainbow, is one of the eeriest, trippiest science fiction films you’ll see all year. Set in 1983 — and shot as if it was made in that year too — it’s an original mindbender evoking early David Cronenberg. The film will be released by Magnet Releasing.

    Everynone. This New York-based collective has build up a passionate fan base through a series of short documentary essay films produced for the WNYC radio program, Radiolab. Selected for the Guggenheim’s YouTube Play Biennial, the group is currently putting together their first feature.

    Kirby Ferguson. A documentary teased out in four parts, Kirby Ferguson’s Everything is a Remix is an insightful and entertaining series on not only today’s remix culture but the history of creative invention itself. With its final episode yet to air, the success of the online series has enabled Ferguson to quit his day job and concentrate on the project, and its offshoots, full-time.

    Yance Ford. Series Producer at POV, Yance Ford is also a documentary filmmaker, currently in production on her debut feature, Strong Island, produced by Esther Robinson. The formally compelling film is an investigation into the murder of her brother when she was in college, and it examines the emotional legacy his absence has produced for Ford and her family.

    Alma Har’el. Alma Har’el’s debut documentary Bombay Beach won the Best Documentary Prize at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. It is a loving, spirited look at an off-the-map community in the Salton Sea, using the director’s own vivid cinematography and dreamy choreographed moments to create an indelible, magical story about life, play and self-invention.

    Rob Hauer. L.A.-based cinematographer Rob Hauer has shot some of the best shorts of recent memory, including Sara Colangelo’s Little Accidents and Topaz Adizes’ 2011 Cannes selection, Boy. His feature work includes Amy Wendel’s 2011 Sundance feature All She Can and, upcoming, a period Western by first-time director Jared Moshe.

    Brent Hoff. Known to filmmakers for editing the quarterly DVD magazine Wholphin, Brent Hoff has burst on the screenwriting scene with several works, including Dirty White Boy, an account of the last days of rapper Old Dirty Bastard and his unlikely manager, Jarred Weisfeld, and the Tribeca Sloan Prize-winning El Diablo Rojo, about a swarm of killer squid.

    Laura Israel. For years, Laura Israel has been well known in the documentary and music video worlds as an editor, working with artists ranging from Patti Smith to Robert Frank. When a wind energy controversy erupted in the small Catskills community that is her weekend retreat, she decided to make a movie about it. Windfall, her debut doc, won the top prize at Doc NYC and is a complex, eerie investigation into the business realities of alternative energy.

    Mark Jackson. Without, winner of a Special Jury Mention at the 2011 Slamdance Film Festival, is Brooklyn-based filmmaker Mark Jackson’s astonishing debut, a disquieting, beautifully controlled thriller about a young woman taking care of an elderly man while housesitting for a vacationing family. The film is receiving its international premiere at the Locarno Film Festival, and Jackson is already at work on other projects, including a collaboration with writer Mary Gaitskill.

    Alison Klayman. Journalist-turned-documentary filmmaker Alison Klayman is in post on her debut feature, Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, a portrait of the outspoken Chinese artist. Following Ai during the installation of his large conceptual works while depicting his increasing activism and use of social media, Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry offers an insider’s look at not only a great artist’s creative process but also a changing China.

    David Lowery. Dallas-based writer, director and editor David Lowery followed up his subtle, evocative debut feature St. Nick with Pioneer, which is one of the year’s best shorts. Starring Will Oldham, it’s an emotionally piercing two hander, taking us into a fable-like world where adult wisdom coexists with childhood wonder. Lowery is currently at work on a new feature, which was selected for the Sundance Creative Producing Lab.

    Rola Nashef. Detroit-based Rola Nashef is in post-production on her first feature, the character-based drama Detroit Unleaded. Based on the director’s own short film, this IFP Narrative Lab selection is set within the city’s Arab-American community and features breakout performances from its young cast.

    Joe Nicolosi. Austin-based Joe Nicolosi has had the toughest of filmmaking challenges, tasked with creating short films that are captivating on not just the first viewing but also the second, third and fourth. His imaginative short “bumpers” for the SXSW Film Festival have brought him attention at the festival, among producers and agents, and, upcoming, viewers of YouTube, where he is debuting three new series this August.

    Damon Russell. In a year in which many critics have discussed the porous line between fiction and documentary, Damon Russell’s Atlanta-set feature Snow on Tha Bluff, about a single parent crack dealer, may be the most provocative yet. Along with partner Shawn Christensen, Russell is also a partner in the production company Fuzzy Logic.

    Kitao Sakurai. Cinematographer Kitao Sakurai made his strange and memorable feature debut with Aardvark, a Cleveland-shot drama starring blind actor Larry Lewis, Jr. that premiered in Locarno and is completing an impressive run of foreign festivals.

    Gingger Shankar. Musician and performer Gingger Shankar first ventured into the world of film with her contributions to The Passion of Christ, but she made her solo motion picture scoring debut at this year’s Sundance Film Festival with Maryam Kesharvarz’s Circumstance. Mixing hip hop-tinged electronica with traditional Iranian melodies, Shankar’s work imaginatively encapsulates the movie’s own themes. Her other recent work includes Sean Hackett’s independent feature Homecoming.

    Sophia Takal. Sophia Takal’s Green, which premiered at SXSW, is a sharply observed, incisively directed, and sexually provocative drama about female jealousy. Boasting strong performances by Kate Lyn Sheil, Lawrence Lavine, and Takal herself, the movie is a bold, visually assured feature debut.

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  • Facebook Announces FlickLaunch- the first social networking platform for Indie Films

    Reuters announced recently that horror/thriller “The Perfect House” will be the very first film to première on FlickLaunch, the first independent-movie distribution platform built on Facebook.

    The film, a hauntedhouse anthology that tells three separate stories using different horror-film techniques, will debut on FlickLaunch on Octover 1st as a seven-day, $5 rental accessible through its Facebook page.This news was announced on Friday by FlickLaunch and by the makers of “The Perfect House,” which stars Monique Parent, Felissa Rose and Will Robertson and is directed by Kris Hulbert and Randy Kent.

    FlickLaunch was designed to be a simple platform that independent filmmakers can use to upload and stream their films quickly and easily, receiving up to 70 per cent of the revenue. The films can be viewed full-screen directly on Facebook, and stopped, paused and resumed within the rental period.

    Warner Bros. recently expanded its Facebookbased streaming for major films like “The Dark Knight,” “Harry Potter” and the “Sorceror’s Stone” and “Inception,” but the FlickLaunch platform was aimed at indie filmmakers looking for alternative distribution avenues.

    “Currently, many independent films are not lucky enough to secure distribution from a major distributor and rarely have a meaningful marketing budget to reach a mass audience,” said FlickLaunch co-founder and CEO Craig Tanner in a release announcing the debut. “FlickLaunch provides an immediate solution to filmmakers for both of these issues.” Prior to the FlickLaunch debut, the cast and crew of The Perfect House will take the film on a 30-day tour around the country, which will be documented on its Facebook page and official website.

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  • REVIEW: “Another Earth” Is Otherworldly, Low-Key Perfection

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    Actress-producer-co-writer of “Another Earth” Brit Marling lights up the screen in this truly wonderful, low-key “sci-fi romance,” which she co-wrote with director Mike Cahill. The film was one of the toasts of Sundance, and is an extremely low-budget mediation on destiny and the concept of “what if there were another YOU out there?”

    Marling plays Rhoda Williams, a bright, pretty seventeen-year old about to graduate high school, happily celebrating her acceptance into MIT’s astrophysics program. Driving home tipsy from the party, she learns via radio broadcast that “another earth” has just been discovered, an exact replica of our planet called “Earth 2.” As Rhoda looks up to dreamily gaze at the wondrous new planet, her world literally collides with a famous composer (William Mapother) and his family.

    Directed by Mike Cahill, this film, shot on such a small budget they actually had to steal one of the locations outside of a jail, is pretty remarkable in its originality and absolute clarity of vision. Marling is also tough and luminous, and William Mapother has that crinkly-eyed charm reminiscent of Dermot Mulroney (whom he resembles.) What Cahill manages to do with very limited (and inexpensive) visual effects, pitch perfect control on the film’s tone, and the actor’s performances is pretty extraordinary. He is certainly a director to watch. Vimooz recommends that you check out this film, which opened June 22nd. We loved it, and so will you…!

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  • The Highest Pass directed by Slamdance co-founder Jon Fitzgerald to open 2011 Topanga Film Festival

    The world premiere of The Highest Pass directed by Slamdance co-founder Jon Fitzgerald will open the 2011 Topanga Film Festival in Topanga, California.

    Starting in Rishikesh, the birthplace of Yoga, this documentary takes us on a motorcycle journey through the Himalayas of India and over the highest motorable road in the world, following a dare devil yogi that leads seven Americans to make decisions about life and death while traversing steep, icy cliffs and the chaos of India’s “road killer” traffic. Carrying a prophecy of death in his late twenties, their Yogi leader Anand inspires us to question what it means to truly live and pushes them to the limits of his teachings:  “Only the one who dies, truly lives”.  Adam is forced to question: Is truly living worth dying for?

    The 2011 Topanga Film Festival runs July 28 thru July 31.

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  • SXSW Award Winning Film “Natural Selection” to open in theaters this fall

    [caption id="attachment_1543" align="alignnone" width="570"]Rachael Harris and Matt O’Leary in Natural Selection[/caption]

    The award winning film, “Natural Selection” from director Robbie Pickering, which premiered in competition at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival and went on to win seven awards, including the Grand Jury and Audience Awards for Best Narrative Feature, Breakthrough Performance for both Rachael Harris and Matt O’Leary, Best Screenplay, Best Editing and Best Score/Music, will open in theaters this fall.

    Natural Selection” was written and directed by Robbie Pickering, and in addition to Harris and O’Leary, the film stars Jon Gries (“Napoleon Dynamite” and “Real Genius”) and John Diehl (“Miami Vice” and “Stargate”).

    When a dutiful Texas housewife (Rachael Harris) discovers that her devout husband has suffered a stroke at a sperm bank where he’s been secretly donating for the past 25 years, she leaves her sheltered world and starts off on a comedic journey to find his eldest biological son (Matt O’Leary from “Brick” and “Frailty”), a mullet-headed, foul-mouthed ex-con. Along the way, Linda’s wonderfully bizarre relationship with Raymond will teach her more about herself than she ever imagined possible.

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  • Nancy Fishman Film Releasing to distribute Eve Annenberg’s “Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish”

    San Francisco Bay Area based distributor Nancy Fishman Film Releasing announced that it will release Eve Annenberg’s “Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish,” described as a gritty, funny New York drama about encounters between Satmar Hasid bad boys and the work of Shakespeare.  Directed and produced by Eve Annenberg, “Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish” will be released nationally to theaters through Nancy Fishman Film Releasing, and internationally to festivals and broadcasters.

    The play Romeo and Juliet has been translated around the world. Now Eve Annenberg’s quirky new feature film sets William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet in contemporary New York City with Brooklyn-inflected English and Yiddish spoken by a talented cast. A jaded middle-aged E.R. nurse with a chip on her shoulder about the Ultra Orthodox is assigned a translation of “Romeo and Juliet”—from old Yiddish to new Yiddish—in her pursuit of a Master’s degree. In over her head, she accepts help from some charismatic and ethically challenged (a.k.a. scamming) young Ultra Orthodox dropouts. When another ex-Orthodox leaver enchants her apartment with Kabbalah magic that he is leaking due to over studying, the boys begin to live Shakespeare’s play in their heads, in a gauzy and beautiful alternate reality where everyone is Orthodox.

    In what might be the first Yiddish “mumblecore” film, Annenberg creates a magical universe (set in Williamsburg, Brooklyn), where Romeo and Juliet hail from divergent streams of ultra-Orthodox Judaism and speak their lines in street-smart Yiddish. The Bard may have never dreamed of the Montagues as Satmar Jews, but Annenberg’s fanciful direction makes the story of feuding Orthodox families both poignant and timeless. As they start to “modernize” and act in the archaic play, the young men fall under its rapturous incantation. Annenberg’s utterly enchanting meditation on life and love in New York yields a rapprochement between Secular and ultra Orthodox Worlds. “Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish” magically explores how everyone—from a jaded E.R. nurse to edgy black-hatted slackers—falls under the spell of love and Shakespeare.

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  • Talihina Sky: The Story of Kings of Leon Documentary to Premiere on Showtime

    TALIHINA SKY, detailing the Grammy® Winners’ rise to fame from Bible Belt beginnings will premieres Sunday, August 21 at 10 PM ET/PT on SHOWTIME.  The film premiered this spring at the Tribeca Film Festival.

    When three teenaged brothers and their cousin rebelled against their strict, religious Southern upbringing to form a rock band named Kings of Leon , their humble back story garnered almost as much attention as their music. Many questioned if they were really related and if rumors of their father being a Pentecostal preacher were true. Since then, the band has achieved worldwide, Grammy® Award-winning success and now, the mystery and myths behind these budding rock legends will be laid to rest in the documentary TALIHINA SKY: THE STORY OF KINGS OF LEON, premiering on SHOWTIME on Sunday, August 21 at 10 PM ET/PT.

    The documentary kicks off at the annual Followill family reunion in the back woods of Talihina, Oklahoma, where the boys return to their roots and unwind with their family. First-time director and Followill friend Stephen C. Mitchell weaves personal home videos, unedited interviews and behind-the-scenes footage of the band’s journey from their small-town beginnings — spent in poverty and touring the Bible Belt with their father, a Pentecostal evangelist minister, and their devout mother — to living the rock star dream.

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  • Helen Mirren + winners of the 33rd Moscow International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1538" align="alignnone"]Helen Mirren received the special prize for the outstanding achievement in the career of acting[/caption]

    The winners of the 33rd Moscow International Film Festival were announced earlier this month after the festival wrapped its June 23rd to July 7th, 2011 run.

    ”Viewers’ sympathy” award was given to “MONTEVIDEO, TASTE OF A DREAM” (MONTEVIDEO, BOG TE VIDEO) by a Serbian director Dragan Bjelogrlic.

    FIPRESCI jury awarded a film by Alberto Morais “THE WAVES” (LAS OLAS).

    “Kommersant” magazine gave its prize to “HEART’S BOOMERANG” (SERDTSA BUMERANG) by Nikolay Khomeriki.

    For the second time during the MIFF history NETPAC (The Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema) jury worked during the festival. The Association gave its award to “REVENGE: A LOVE STORY” (FUK SAU CHE CHI SEI) by Wong Ching Po. The film participated in Main Competition  program.

    Russian film critics gave first diploma to a Pole Feliks Falk for his film “JOANNA”. Their second diploma was given to “REVENGE: A LOVE STORY” (FUK SAU CHE CHI SEI).

    Cinema clubs prize and diploma were given to a Bulgarian film “SNEAKERS” (KECOVE) by Ivan Vladimirov and Valeri Yordanov and CHAPITEAU-SHOW by Sergei Loban

    Cinema clubs Special diploma was given to “JOANNA”

    Cinema clubs awarded “UNDERCURRENT” (BRIM) by Árni Ólafur Ásgeirsson from Perspectives and “ELENA” by Andrei Zvyagintsev presented in Russian program.

    Special diploma of Cinema clubs was given to “SNOWCHILD” by Uta Arning.

    Helen Mirren received the special prize for the outstanding achievement in the career of acting.

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  • Indie film ‘Identical’ to premiere in NYC on Saturday

    Tomorrow, Saturday, July 23, 2011 is the East Coast premiere of the independent film Identical, starring Kelly Baugher, Jonathan Togo, Emily Foxler, Ed Asner, Aaron Refvem and Craigs Mums Grant.The premiere takes place at the Symphony Space in New York City.

    Adapted from “Memoirs of a Murder” by Daniel Bollag,who also co-directs the film with Seo Mutarevic, the film follows identical twin brothers who need each other to exist. After a passionate love triangle forms, when they fall in love with the same woman, secrets are revealed among murderous accounts.

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  • COMING SOON: Indie Comedy “My Best Day”

    The indie film, “My Best Day,” an ensemble comedy feature from director Erin Greenwell (“Big Dreams in Little Hope”) is currently filming in the Slate Belt in Pennsylvania. As reported by lehighvalleylive.com, the final product will feature Heard’s Meat Market in Bangor, the Portland baseball park, Jewell’s Service Station in East Bangor and other spots around the region as part of the same small town.

    The story line sounds hilarious, Karen’s life as a small town receptionist is turned upside down when the father she never knew calls for a refrigerator repair. Karen sets out to investigate, dragging along her friend Meagan posing as a mechanic.

    By the end of the day, Karen will also encounter her father’s closet lover, a compulsive sister addicted to off track betting, a brother struggling with grade school heart ache and bullies, a broken refrigerator and a load of fireworks.

    The cast includes some up and coming actors including Jo Armeniox, Ashlie Atkinson, Raúl Castillo, Harris Doran, Molly Lloyd, Kate McKinnon, Haley Murphy, Robert Salerno and Rachel Style.

    The filmmakers anticipate a 2012 festival run.

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  • Fantastic Fest Adds 20 films to its 2011 Film Lineup

    [caption id="attachment_1177" align="alignnone" width="560"]Underwater Love[/caption]

    Fantastic Fest announced the first wave of programming for the seventh edition happening September 22-29, 2011 in Austin, Texas.  This batch of 20 films spans the globe from Japan, Belgium, Mexico, Russia, Hong Kong, Korea and of course the USA.

    “Fantastic Fest is the high-point of my year. Every year old friends return and strangers become friends. Fantastic Fest is my extended dysfunctional family; each of us completely obsessed by the wildest and weirdest films on earth,” says festival creative director and co-founder Tim League.

    Comin’ At Ya! 3D “30(th) Anniversary” (2011)- Real D Presents

    World Premiere

    Star Tony Anthony and Producer Tom Stern live in person

    Director: Ferdinando Baldi, USA, 118 minutes

    The film that kicked off the ’80s 3D Boom returns in a state of the art digital re-imaged restoration. Equal parts western and rollercoaster, COMIN’ AT YA pulls out every stop to entertain you. If the modern wave of 3D were as fun as COMIN’ AT YA! 3D, the motion picture industry would have nothing to worry about. The only Spaghetti Western shot in 3D is now completely restored with the latest in 3D technology and stars Tony Anthony as H.H. Hart, an avenging hero out to retrieve his kidnapped bride, played by Victoria Abril. Gene Quintana plays the slave trader who is holding her hostage in this extremely memorable cult favorite.

    Beyond the Black Rainbow (2011)

    Regional Premiere

    Director: Panos Cosmatos, USA, 110 minutes

    A trance inducing, psychedelic head trip from visionary director Panos Cosmatos, BEYOND THE BLACK RAINBOW is a sci-fi dystopia sent with love from the Reagan years. Imagine STALKER meets LOGAN’S RUN.

    Body Temperature (2011)

    North American Premiere

    Director: Takaomi Ogata, Japan, 72 minutes

    Takaomi Ogata’s BODY TEMPERATURE chronicle’s a young man’s love affair with a life-sized sex doll. Think LARS AND THE REAL GIRL but with all the creepiness that story was strangely missing.

    Borderline (2011)

    North American Premiere

    Director: Alexnadre Coffre, France, 89 minutes

    When David finds a bag in the park, he sees its nefarious contents as the perfect escape from his dead-end life; hopefully without losing it entirely at the hands of the bag’s former owner.

    Boys on the Run (2010)

    Texas Premiere

    Director: Daisuke Miura, Japan, 114 minutes

    Based on a manga (surprise), BOYS ON THE RUN’s central courtship starts with a bestiality DVD and ends with a Taxi Driver-style showdown. Guaranteed to warm the heart of the serial masturbator inside all of us.

    Bullhead (2011)

    US Premiere

    Director Michael R. Roskam live in person

    Director: Michael R Roskam, Belgium, 129 minutes

    Testicular trauma, the underground beef hormone black market, steroid addiction and a vast swath of suppressed emotions swirl together to form one of the most powerful narratives we have seen in recent memory.

    El Infierno (2010)- Cine Las Americas presents

    Texas Premiere

    Director: Luis Estrada, Mexico, 145 minutes

    Luis Estrada’s El Infierno (Hell) finds pitch-black dark humor in a peasant’s rise to power amid the drug-war-torn streets of the Mexican border.

    House by the Cemetery (1981)- Blue Underground Presents

    Theatrical Premiere of the 2K digitally restored version

    Director: Lucio Fulci, Italy, 87 minutes

    Lucio Fulci’s classic Italian gore rollercoaster, now presented in a digital restoration from Blue Underground.

    Invasion of Alien Bikini (2011)

    Texas Premiere

    Director: Oh Young-Doo, Korea, 75 minutes

    The no-budget bikini-clad alien invasion martial arts romp INVASION OF ALIEN BIKINI was so fun, it took the $25,000 jury prize at this year’s Yubari Fantastic Fest, a sum more than five times the budget of the film.

    Kill Me Please (2010)

    US Premiere

    Director Olias Barco live in person

    Director: Olias Barco, Belgium, 96 minutes

    From the producers of MAN BITES DOG, KILL ME PLEASE details the day-to-day exploits of one of the world’s foremost assisted suicide clinics. Dark comedy and pathos are as well mixed as Dr. Krueger’s lethal cocktails.

    A Lonely Place to Die (2011)

    Regional Premiere

    Director: Julian Gilbey, UK, 98 minutes

    This back-to-basics, no-BS modern take on the survival genre features a violent Russian girl in a cage, gun-toting maniacs, and a cat-and-mouse chase across lawless, rural Scotland.

    Milocrorze, A Love Story (2011)

    Regional Premiere

    Director: Yoshimasa Ishibasha, Japan, 90 minutes

    This bizarro musical/variety/samurai/love story from Japan is cinematic LSD from Yoshimasa Ishibashi, the mad genius behind the Fuccon Family, and Takayuki Yamada, who plays all three male leads.

    New Kids Turbo (2011)

    US Premiere

    Directors: Steffen Haars and Flip van der Kuil, The Netherlands, 87 minutes

    Gutter comedy escalates to ludicrous extremes in the Dutch smash hit that will leave you gasping for air. The mullets are magnificent, as are the moustaches.

    Revenge: A Love Story (2011)

    US Premiere

    Director: Ching Po Wong, Hong Kong, 91 minutes

    Ching-Po Wong’s REVENGE A LOVE STORY follows a severely wronged man in his quest to avenge a terrible crime. This is a new ultra-violent Hong Kong action, one deeply influenced by the best of Korean revenge films.

    Snowtown (2010)

    US Premiere

    Director: Justin Kurzel, Australia, 120 minutes

    Justin Kurzel, part of the Australian Film Collective BLUE TONGUE FILMS whose members include Spencer Susser (HESHER) and NASH Edgerton (THE SQUARE), knocks out a stellar debut feature with SNOWTOWN, a dark hypnotic tale of a lower-class youngster who has the misfortune of finding a father figure in John Bunting, Australia’s most notorious serial killer.

    The Stoker (2010)

    North American Premiere

    Director: Alexei Balabanov, Russia, 87 minutes

    Genius storyteller and two-time Fantastic Fest veteran, Alexsei Balabanov (CARGO 200, MORPHIA) delivers his unique blend of bloody crime drama by way of the darkest recesses of the Russian human condition.

    Underwater Love (2011)

    Texas Premiere

    Director: Shinji Imaoka, Japan, 87 minutes

    The simple life of a fish factory worker gets turned upside-down when she falls in love with a legendary Japanese creature in this kinky, musical romp of a pink film lensed by the legendary Christopher Doyle and directed by Fantastic Fest veteran Shinji Imaoka (UNCLE’S PARADISE).

    Versus (2001)

    US Premiere

    Star Tak Sakaguchi and writer Yudai Yamaguchi live in person

    Director: Ryuhei Kitamura, Japan, 119 minutes

    The 10th anniversary screening of the yakuza vs. zombies action classic that cracked open Japan’s indie film business like a can of cheap beer.

    Yakuza Weapon (2011)

    Regional Premiere

    Star/co-director Tak Sakaguchi and co-director Yudai Yamaguchi live in person

    Directors: Tak Sakaguchi and Yudai Yamaguchi, Japan, 106 minutes

    Ten years after starring in VERSUS, former street fighter-turned actor/director Tak Sakaguchi is back with this mondo trasho flick about a yakuza with a machine gun arm and a rocket launcher leg.

    Zombie (1979)- Blue Underground Presents

    Theatrical Premiere of the 2K digitally restored version

    Director: Lucio Fulci, Italy, 92 minutes

    Lucio Fulci’s extreme masterpiece of post-Romero corpse mania is back in a gorgeous 2K digital restoration.

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  • Keenen Ivory Wayans and the Complete List of Winners of the 15th Annual American Black Film Festival (ABFF)

    [caption id="attachment_1531" align="alignnone" width="550"]Best Film: THE TESTED, directed by Russell Constanzo.[/caption]

    The 15th Annual American Black Film Festival (ABFF), which took place in South Beach Miami July 6-9, honored  Emmy Award-winning producer/director Keenen Ivory Wayans at the closing night ceremony, aka ABFF Honors, with the Entertainment Icon Award in recognition of his success in the film and television industry for nearly 25 years.

    The festival also announced the complete list of ABFF Honors Awards:

    HBO® Short Film Competition – FIG, written by Alex George Pickering and directed by Ryan Coogler.
    Best Documentary, presented by CNN – BROWN BABIES, directed by Regina Griffin.
    Grey Goose “Rising Icon” Award – Actress Naturi Naughton.
    The Star Project Winners, presented by NBCUniversal – Sheaun McKinney of Los Angeles and Tiffany D. Hobbs of Dallas.
    The gmc Television Network Screenplay Competition — David Martyn Conley for RAISING IZZIE.

    Grand Jury Winners:

    Best Screenplay presented by Team Sizzle Worldwide – BLACK GOLD, directed by Jeta Amata.
    Best Actor, presented by Gold Peak Tea (tie) – Lonyo Engele for his role as David Brown in DAVID IS DYING and Persia White for her role as Trenyce in DYSFUNCTIONAL FRIENDS.
    Best Director, presented by Cadillac – Stephen Lloyd Jackson for DAVID IS DYING.
    Best Film, presented by Wells Fargo THE TESTED, directed by Russell Constanzo.


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