• REVIEW: Steve Coogan Surprises and Delights in “The Trip”

     

    Conceptualized at first as a six-part television series for British television, director Michael Winterbottom’s “The Trip,” starring English comics Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon, is a strange, delightfully bittersweet mid-life crisis film of sorts, which leaves you somehow feeling as if you’ve witnessed an actual epiphany happening as it is unfolding.

    Coogan plays himself, ostensibly, and the premise is that he is invited to do a driving restaurant tour of the gorgeous Northern English countryside to sample complicated haute cuisine for an upcoming article for the Observer. He invites along (rather grudgingly) his old friend Rob Brydon, after his girlfriend gets cold feet, and cancels. The two friends, again, playing “themselves,” and using their real names, argue, do countless, hilarious imitations of celebrities (trying to one up the other on who does the best, most pitch-perfect Michael Caine), and, generally, begin to rub each other gently, ever so slightly- the wrong way. Which is to say, Brydon’s simpler lifestyle and solid, sweet marriage start to make Coogan dwell upon his own, immediate life choices. Coogan’s interior ramblings become more vocal and rise to the surface, and Brydon’s contrasting satisfyingly placid private life begins to figure more prominently as the road trip wares on.

    As the mild-mannered and dry-witted Brydon witnesses Coogan chatting with his American girlfriend on the phone moment (they are taking a “break,” she in the U.S., he in England) then bedding down a sensual concierge the next, he chides him gently, while never for a moment becoming envious of Coogan’s far flashier life career and romantic life. Well, not really. Coogan, on the other hand, pines for some sort of more relevant stability- with his girlfriend and with his children-all who currently live apart from him, and within his own legit acting career.

    It is interesting to see such an accomplished, genuinely charismatic performer actually suffering over a dearth of opportunities to really sink his teeth into artistically. Yes, he makes fun of costume drama, but there is an intriguing, authentic feeling of longing experienced, the raw wish to experience genuine greatness, which is rarely glimpsed in our fame-obsessed, reality-TV based culture. This is really what “The Trip” is all about: Realizing what’s important to you, versus your life’s circumstances at the very moment. Cogan’s choice at the end is poignant and feels quite “real.” As he is shot behind the craggy, rolling hills of the sumptuous Yorkshire countryside, which appear to have been CGI-ed right in from “Wuthering Heights,” Coogan, quoting Keats and Shakespeare as if in a dream state, would make for a truly intense, romantic presence on-screen in a juicy period piece himself. Steve Coogan, get thee-self into a Merchant Ivory film! Vimooz says go see “The Trip.” Especially if you are on a staycation this season-this is a great, sweet, summer weekend matinee movie, one that will have you both laughing and thinking about how good or crappy you really have it- or both.

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  • 18th Annual Chicago Underground Film Festival Awards

    [caption id="attachment_1306" align="alignnone" width="560"]SOME GIRLS NEVER LEARN Jerzy Rose[/caption]

    Jerzy Rose’s Some Girls Never Learn emerged the big winner of the 2011 Chicago Underground Film Festival picking up Audience Award in addition to the Made in Chicago Award. The film synopsis, ” A university has found the leg bone of Amelia Earhart. The diver responsible for the discovery is receiving mysterious messages from the famous dead pilot.  A high school science teacher travels to the underworld to bring back his girlfriend. Animals are arranging themselves into concentric circles and helium has escaped into the luminiferous aether.”

    2011 Chicago Underground Film Festival Awards

    Jury Awards:

    Best Documentary (feature)
    And Again – Adele Horne

    Best Documentary (short)
    History Minor – Ryan Garrett

    Best Experimental:
    Home Movie – John Price

    Best Experimental:
    Slow Action – Ben Rivers

    Best Narrative (feature):
    The Color Wheel – Alex Ross Perry

    Best Narrative (feature):
    Snow on tha Bluff – Damon Russell

    Made in Chicago Award:
    Some Girls Never Learn  – Jerzy Rose

    Audience Award:
    Some Girls Never Learn – Jerzy Rose

    Honorable Mentions:
    Young Bird Season – Nellie Kluz
    Second Law: South Leh St. – Mike Gibisser
    Chainsaw Found Jesus – Spencer Parsons
    Devil’s Gate – Laura Kraning

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  • 2011 Palm Springs International ShortFest, Short Film Festival & Film Market Announce Star-Studded Lineup

    The 2011 Palm Springs International ShortFest, Short Film Festival & Film Market, which will screen June 21-27, at the Camelot Theatres in Palm Springs, announced its roster of 331 films. New this year, Palm Springs International ShortFest announced its inaugural ShortFest Online Film Festival featuring ten films playing on a special section of the festival web site starting a week prior to the festival and will continue to play online for two months after the end of the festival.

    This year’s star-studded shorts feature Academy Award winners and nominees, film and television stars and studio executives.  Sarah Paulson and Wes Bentley star in After-School Special (USA); Selma Blair and Jeremy Davies in Animal Love (USA); Michael Cera stars in Bad Dads (USA); Billy Burke in David and Goliath (USA); Anthony LaPaglia in In Loco Parentis (Australia); Campbell Scott in Love, Lots of It (USA); Jason Alexander, James Avery, Sid Ganis, Amy Heckerling, Sally Kirkland, Kathy Najimy, Amy Pascal, and Joe Roth in Not Your Time (USA); Seymour Cassel and Fionnula Flanagan in the North American premiere of Pass the Salt, Please (USA); Melissa Leo in the World Premiere of The Sea Is All I Know (USA); Kirsten Dunst and Brian Geraghty in the U.S. premiere of The Second Bakery Attack (Mexico/USA); Tom Hardy in Sergeant Slaughter, My Big Brother (UK); Julia Stiles stars in Sexting (USA) directed by Neil LaBute; Keira Knightley and Colin Firth star in Steve (UK) directed by Rupert Friend; Adam Arkin, Clifton Collins, Jr., Carla Gugino and Jesse Spencer star in Tell-Tale (UK); and Jessica Chastain stars in and serves as a producer for The Westerner (USA).

    In addition to familiar faces in front of the camera, some recognizable names directing shorts this year include: Peter Cattaneo directs Bunce (UK) starring Stephen Fry; David Hayter directs the World Premiere of Chasm (USA); Heather Hemmens directs the World Premiere of Designated (USA); Jay Duplass directs Kevin (Spain/USA); Terry George directs the North American Premiere of The Shore (UK); Olivia Wilde and Maria Bello serve as executive producers for the documentary Sun City Picture House (Haiti) directed by David Darg.

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  • Shakeups at Little Rock Film Festival and Malaga Spanish Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1449" align="alignnone" width="560"]Little Rock Film Festival Organizers Craig and Brent Renaud with Phil Donahue[/caption]

    Just days after the close of the 5th Little Rock Film Festival, the Arkansas Times is reporting that executive director Jack Lofton is out after announcing his resignation. With Lofton out, co-founders Owen Brainard and Craig Renaud will serve as co-executive directors of the festival.

    Lofton has reportedly described the split as “amicable and mutually beneficial.”

    Additionally, co-founder Brent Renaud has been appointed executive director of the newly created Arkansas Film Institute, a “state-wide initiative to promote and support filmmaking and film culture in Arkansas.”

    And in Spain, Malaga Spanish Film Festival director Carmelo Romero fired the executive director Franjo Parejo and the general coordinator Antonio Luque this week, citing a “complete lack of trust” in the two men, reports The Hollywood Reporter.

    The decision is said to not be based on direct allegations of financial impropriety, but on an audit into the general accounts for the 2010 festival which showed irregularities but was still approved by the festival’s board without any votes against.

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  • 2011 Amsterdam Film Festival Announces Van Gogh Awards; The Secret Friend, Der Sandmann, Wish, and Happy Earn Grand Jury Awards

    [caption id="attachment_1447" align="alignnone" width="560"]Adam Bowers writes, directs and stars in the low-budget comedy ‘New Low[/caption]

    The 2011 Amsterdam Film Festival Van Gogh Awards announced the winners of the prestigious Van Gogh Awards. The Grand Jury Prize was presented to four films – The Secret Friend directed by Flavio Alves (Brazil), Der Sandmann directed by Peter Luisi (Switzerland), Wish directed by Kyle Milardo (USA) and Happy directed by Roko Belic (USA).

    The De grote Prijs van de Jury was presented to New Low directed by Adam Bowers (USA); a film about a neurotic twentysomething struggling to figure out which girl he really belongs with: the best or the worst one he’s ever known.

    The Cinematic Vision Award was presented to The Greater Good directed by Chris Pilaro & Kendall Nelson (USA). The Greater Good looks behind the fear, hype and politics that have polarized the vaccine debate in America today. The film re-frames the emotionally charged issue and offers, for the first time, the opportunity for a rational and scientific discussion on how to create a safer and more effective vaccine program.

    The Van Gogh Award was presented to Bert’s Plan directed by Yair Shvartz (USA). Bert is a struggling middle-aged writer attempting to get his book published. Downtrodden and plagued with rejection, Bert comes up with a plan. In a twist of hilariously dark, ironic and serendipitous events, Bert’s original plan takes an unexpected turn.

    The Prodigy Auteur Prize was presented to Victim, directed by Leon Rowe (USA). Victim is a psychological thriller about a man who is plagued by guilt, anger and vengeance struggling with a decision that will change his life forever.

    2011 VAN GOGH AWARDS:

    De grote Prijs van de Jury: New Low directed by Adam Bowers
    Cinematic Vision Award: The Greater Good directed by Chris Pilaro & Kendall Nelson
    Van Gogh Award: Bert’s Plan directed by Yair Shvartz
    Prodigy Auteur Prize: Victim directed by Leon Rowe

    Grand Jury Prize: The Secret Friend directed by Flavio Alves
    Grand Jury Prize: Der Sandmann directed by Peter Luisi
    Grand Jury Prize: Wish directed by Kyle Milardo
    Grand Jury Prize: Happy directed by Roko Belic

    Best Director: The Story directed by Steve Bellamy
    Documentary Directing Award: Lift Up directed by Philip Knowlton & Huguens Jean
    Dramatic Directing Award: A Lost and Found Box of Human Sensation directed by Stefan Leuchtenberg & Martin Wallner

    World Cinema Directing Award: Ronan’s Escape directed by A.J. Carter
    World Cinema Directing Award: Unravelling directed by Kuldip Powar

    Excellence in Cinematography Award: Out of the Darkness directed by Stefano Levi
    Excellence in Cinematography Award: Hipolito directed by Teodoro Ciampagna
    Excellence in Cinematography Award: Vous Etes Servis directed by Jorge Leon
    Excellence in Cinematography Award: The Big Uneasy directed by Harry Shearer

    World Cinema Cinematography Award: Protect The Nation directed by C. R. Reisser
    World Cinema Cinematography Award: Small Change directed by Cathy Brady
    World Cinema Cinematography Award: Beatboxing – The Fifth Element Of Hip Hop directed by Klaus Schneyder
    World Cinema Cinematography Award: The Girls in the Band  directed by Judy Chaikin

    Best Documentary Film Editing: I am Nancy directed by Arlene Marechal
    Best Dramatic Film Editing: Vicissitude directed by Will Jobe
    Best Feature Film Screenplay: Face to Face directed by Michael Rymer
    Best Short Film Screenplay: IFAKAT directed by Orhan  Tekeoglu

    World Cinema Documentary Film Editing Award: May I Be Frank directed by Gregg Marks, Conor Gaffney, Ryland Engelhart & Cary Mosier
    World Cinema Dramatic Film Editing Award: Vento directed by Marcio Salem
    World Cinema Screenwriting Award, Feature Film: Behind the Eight Ball directed by Mike Graveline
    World Cinema Screenwriting Award, Short Film: DILF directed by Geoff Edwards

    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Documentary: Sharkwise directed by Lieven Debrauwer
    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Dramatic: Sofia directed by Shervin Kermani
    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Short: Return directed by Cyd Chartier Cohn
    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Student: Landlocked directed by Jerry Melichar
    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Music Video: Corrupted Scene Behind the Stage directed by Ivan Mena Tinoco
    Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Animation: Los Estrandados directed by Derek Evanick
    Special Jury Prize, Dutch Documentary: Mila’s Journey directed by Annie Perkins & Rinku Kalsy
    Special Jury Prize, Dutch Dramatic: In Transit directed by Kees-Jan Husselman
    Special Jury Prize for Originality: How It Ended directed by Gabriel Nussbaum
    Special Jury Prize for Spirit of Independence: Streets of Flamenco directed by Marisa Lloreda Saez
    Special Jury Prize for Acting, World Cinema: Spinster directed by Pip Satchell
    Special Jury Prize for Acting: Sissy directed by Bonnie Root

    Jury Prize – Dutch Short Filmmaking: Riding Bikes with the Dutch directed by Michael Bauch
    Jury Prize – International Short Filmmaking: Falling Apart directed by Christopher Valori

    World Cinema – Experimental Film: Extincion II: La Cuadratura De Los Círculos directed by Fernando Usón Forniés
    World Cinema – Animated Film: Searching directed by Hyun Joo Cho
    World Cinema – Music Video: Stretch directed by Arturo Cubacub
    World Cinema – Student: Mezzanotte Obscura directed by    Lori Petchers
    World Cinema – First Time Director: I’m Just Saying directed by Brian Douglas

    Best Action Film: Slashimi directed by Anthony Powell
    Best Avant-Garde Film: Hallucination directed by Christian Jean
    Best Biography: Klondike’s Calling directed by Paola Rosà & Antonio Senter
    Best Children’s Film: Little Gobie directed by Tony Tang
    Best Comedy: The Winking Boy directed by Marcus Dineen
    Best Coming of Age Film: Een Kleine Duw directed by Philippe Verkinderen
    Best Crime Film: Una Calle Sin Salida directed by Robert Fernandez-Ferreira
    Best Drama: The Price of Sex directed by Mimi Chakarova
    Best Educational Film: Harvest of Loneliness directed by Adrian Salinas, Gilbert Gonzalez & Vivian Price
    Best Environmental Film: Liquid Amber directed by Maggi Payne
    Best Fantasy Film: A Complex Villainelle directed by Nathan Billington, Rebecca Forth, Bart Ovaitt & Ryan Porter
    Best Horror Film: Message directed by Lee Yat Fung
    Best Human Rights Film: Children in Exile directed by Chris Swider
    Best Mockumentary: Frontman directed by Ben Hyland
    Best Musical: Mr. Foley directed by D.A.D.D.Y.
    Best Personal Narrative: Beautiful Enough directed by Claire Oakley
    Best Romance: I Love My Woman directed by Otis Kriegel
    Best Romantic Comedy: Sombras Nada Mas directed by Max Valverde
    Best Sci-Fi Film: Cockpit:  The Rule of Engagement directed by Jesse Griffith
    Best Spiritual Film: The Time Machine directed by Mark Kendall
    Best Sports Film: One Revolution directed by Amanda Stoddard
    Best Student Film: Amanda directed by Michael Tanner Cusumano
    Best Urban Film: Storie Urgenti directed by Joseph Edward Rozzo

    SCREENPLAY COMPETITION WINNERS:

    Feature Screenplay Competition

    First Place: You’re Sick written by Donn Warr Lewis
    Second Place: Halfway Home written by David Schroeder
    Third Place: The Quarry written by Adam Ford-smith

    Short Screenplay Competition

    First Place: Push Bike written by Tracey Walker
    Second Place: Sunset Fire written by A. Wayne Carter
    Third Place: Born as Ghosts written by Mark Skinner

    Official Finalists

    American Trash written by David Kornfield
    Beyond the Horizon written by George Ferris
    Borderline written by Joshua Paolino
    Courting Death written by Heather Silvio
    Cradle of the Stars written by Joey Kent
    En Route written by Philip Howe
    Neon Cactus written by Philip Sedgwick
    Poetease written by Jeffrey Morin
    The Kiarsidia written by Bruce Golde
    The Only Living Man with a Hole in His Head written by Todd Colby Pliss
    There is a Season written by Stuart Creque
    Too Fat to Fly written by Anthony Amenta

    Honorable Mentions

    180 Proof written by Adam Sumner
    A Mind of Glass written by Louise Dautheribes McKerl
    China Girls written by Gary Riester
    Drosselbart written by Effie Bathen
    Eaglet written by Eugene Gavrilenko
    Ghost Light written by Philip Marcoccio
    God’s Architect written by Michael Mares
    Happiness in Pieces written by Krzysztof Rostek
    Hunting Paradise written by Craig Harwood
    Meet Jane Doe written by Jacqueline Gault
    Murder in the Lakelands written by Patrick Nash
    Pot Shop written by Judah Ray Neiditch
    The Parting Glass written by Philip Marcoccio
    T.W.I.N written by Malaika Langa
    Wrigly & King written by Cornelius Murphy

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  • 2011 Cinemalaya Independent Film Festival to feature 31 films

    [caption id="attachment_1445" align="alignnone" width="560"]Eugene Domingo in ‘Ang Babae Sa Septic Tank’[/caption]

    Thirty-one  films will compete in the 2011 Cinemalaya Independent Film Festival in Manila next month. Nine films will compete in the New Breed Full-length Feature category, 10 films in the Short Feature category, and 4 in the Directors’ Showcase.

    New Breed category

    “Amok” by Lawrence Fajardo
    “Ang Babae sa Septic Tank” by Chris Martinez
    “Ang Sayaw ng Dalawang Kaliwang Paa” by Alemberg Ang and Alvin Yapan
    “Baby Factory” by Eduardo W. Roy, Jr. and Jerome Zamora
    “Cuchera” by Joseph Israel M. Laban and Janice O’Hara
    “I-libings: Your Loss, Our Luck” by Rommel Andreo Sales
    “Ligo na U, Lapit Na Me” by Noel Ferrer, Jerry Gracio and Erick Salud
    “Niño” by Loy Arcenas
    “Teoriya (Father’s Way)” by Alistaire Christian E. Chan

    Short Feature category

    “Oliver’s Apartment” by Misha Balangue
    “Hanapbuhay” by Henry Frejas
    “Un Diutay Mundo (One Small World)” by Ana Carlyn V. Lim
    “Immanuel” by Gabriel “Gio” Puyat
    “Hazard” by Mikhail Red
    “Walang Katapusang Kwarto” by Emerson Reyes
    “Debut” by Pamela Llanes Reyes
    “Samarito” by Rafael L. Santos
    “Every Other Time” by Gino M. Santos
    “Nino Bonito” by Rommel “Milo” Tolentino

    Directors Showcase

    “Bisperas” by Jeffrey Jeturian
    “Busong” by Auraeus Solito
    “Isda” by Adolfo Alix, Jr.
    “Patikul” by Joel C. Lamangan

    This year’s Cinemalaya Festival will for the first time include a section called Focus Asia that will feature 8 independent works by Asian directors.

    The Cinemalaya Awards Night will be held on July 2, 2011.

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  • The 2011 Honolulu Film Awards; Annie Perkins’ “Mila’s Journey” awarded Grand Jury Prize

    [caption id="attachment_1443" align="alignnone" width="560"]Mila’s Journey[/caption]

    The 2011 Honolulu Film Awards Ceremony Dinner was held last month at the Sarento’s Top of the “I” restaurant located on the top floor of the beautiful Ilikai Hotel & Suites with breathtaking views of Diamond Head and Waikiki Beach in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Honolulu Film Awards honor the best from around the world in several competition categories including Feature Films, Documentaries, Short Films, Foreign Films, Hawaiian Films, Action Sports Films, Music Videos, Experimental Films, Television Pilots, Environmental Films, Screenplays and more.

    Annie Perkins’ “Mila’s Journey” was awarded the Grand Jury Prize and was in attendance to pick up the prize. Mila’s Journey follows Mila & her decision to return to India after more than 30 years. The film juxtaposes modern images with the old 8mm footage & pays homage to romance, adventure, spirituality, freedom and female independence. The film shows one Dutch woman’s attempt to answer the question ‘what would happen if I went back?’

    Other winning filmmakers in attendance included Dana Neves, Director, “The Green Tie Affair” – Best of Hawaii; Bret Malley, Director, “Greenwashers” – Best Documentary Short; Mary Piller, Director, “Greenwashers” – Best Environmental Film; and Yurij Luhovy, Director, “Genocide Revealed” – Best Historical Film.

    Additional Best of Category Winners include:
    Special Jury Award: Minnie Loves Junior – Directed By Andy Mullins
    Special Jury Award: Lychee Thieves – Directed By Kathleen Kwai Ching Man
    Special Jury Award: Little Gobie – Directed By Tony Tang
    Jury Prize: OnAir – Directed By Carsten Vauth & Marco J. Riedl
    Jury Prize: Down This Road – Directed By Vinz Feller
    Jury Prize: The Buck Johnson Story – Directed By Blake McCray
    Best Feature Film: 5th & Alameda – Directed By Richard Friedman
    Best Actor: Dryerthèque – Lead Actor Trevor Wissink-Adams
    Best Actress: An Affair with Dolls – Lead Actress Alexandra Chalupa
    Best Animation: For a Fistful of Snow – Directed By: Julien Ezri
    Best Cinematography: The Two Escobars – Directed By Jeff Zimbalist & Michael Zimbalist
    Best Coming of Age: Fast Times and Fast Food – Directed By Kyle Niemier
    Best Director: Das Tub – Directed By James Cunningham
    Best Documentary Feature: Hollywood, 90038 – Directed By Jennifer Kes Remington
    Best Documentary Short: Greenwashers – Directed By Bret Malley     
    Best Drama: Mental – Directed By Joy Gohring
    Best Educational Film: Out of the Darkness – Directed By Stefano Levi
    Best Family Film: My Father, Joe – Directed By Nikila Cole
    Best Foreign Film: Suburbs of Downtown – Directed By Sergio García Locatelli
    Best Human Rights Film: Via Gori – Directed By George Barbakadze
    Best Independent Short: Apocalypse Story – Directed By Jeffrey P. Nesker
    Best Music Video: To The Death – Directed By Danielle French
    Best Screenplay: Not Worth A Bullet – Directed By Markus F. Adrian
    Best Short Film: Bathing and the Single Girl – Directed By Christine Elise McCarthy
    Best Student Film: Falling Apart – Directed By Christopher Valori

    Screenplay Competition Winners
    1st Place: Finding Thomas written by Jaimee Campbell
    2nd Place: Molokai written by Tuesday Rose
    3rd Place: Hogwild written by Dayan Paul

    Short Screenplay Competition Winners
    1st Place: The Wedding Bet written by Vicki Bartholomew
    2nd Place: Sunset Fire written by A. Wayne Carter
    3rd Place: Assassins written by JimmyLee Smith

    Screenplay Official Finalists
    180 Proof written by Adam Sumner
    Are You Lonesome Tonight? written by Robert Factor
    Blink of an Eye written by Anthony Williams
    Courting Death written by Heather Silvio
    DAM 999 Script written by Sohan Roy
    Kill Haole Day written by Shelley Krawchuk
    Nisei Warrior written by Sandie Vea
    Olohana written by Daniel Fan
    On Any Other Day written by Lee Vehe
    Pot Shop written by Judah Ray Neiditch
    Sedah High written by Mpaki Molapo
    The Hickory Horse written by Vicki Bartholomew
    The Last Mermaid written by Shanon Culiner
    Walking In The Sand written by Curt Lambert
    Wrigley & King written by Cornelius Murphy

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  • Shut Up Little Man! An Audio Misadventure to be relased on VOD from Tribeca Film

    [caption id="attachment_1441" align="alignnone" width="560"]Shut Up Little Man! An Audio Misadventure[/caption]

    Tribeca Film will release Shut Up Little Man! An Audio Misadventure, written and directed by Matthew Bate and produced by Bate and Sophie Hyde. Shut Up Little Man! will be released nationwide on VOD August 25, 2011, and theatrically the same day (expanding on September 9), by Tribeca Film, a comprehensive distribution label operated by Tribeca Enterprises. The documentary premiered in competition at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and has played in New Directors/New Films and the True/False Film Festival.

    In 1987, Eddie and Mitch, two young punks from the Midwest, moved into a low-rent tenement apartment in the Lower Haight district of San Francisco. Through paper-thin walls, they were informally introduced to their middle-aged alcoholic neighbors, the most unlikely of roommates—Raymond Huffman, a raging homophobe, and Peter Haskett, a flamboyant gay man. Night after night, the boys were treated to a seemingly endless stream of vodka-fueled altercations between the two and for 18 months, they hung a microphone from their kitchen window to chronicle the bizarre and violent relationship between their insane neighbors. Oftentimes nonsensical and always vitriolic, the diatribes of Peter and Ray were an audio goldmine just begging to be recorded and passed around on the underground tape market. Their tapes went on to inspire a cult following, spawning sell-out CD’s, comic artworks by Dan Clowes (Ghostworld), stage-plays, music from the likes of Devo and a Hollywood feeding Frenzy.

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  • Jennifer Garner and John Musker to Present at 2011 Student Academy Awards

    [caption id="attachment_1439" align="alignnone" width="560"]Jennifer Garner (pictured) and Oscar®-nominated animator John Musker have been tapped to present at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ 38th Annual Student Academy Awards ceremony on Saturday, June 11, at 6 p.m., at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.[/caption]

    Jennifer Garner and Oscar-nominated animator John Musker have been tapped to present at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ 38th Annual Student Academy Awards ceremony on Saturday, June 11, at 6 p.m., at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.  The awards ceremony is the culmination of a week of industry-related activities and social events that the Academy is hosting for the 15 students from the U.S. and abroad who have been selected as winners this year.

    Garner was most recently seen in “Arthur,” released earlier this year.  Her other acting credits include “Valentine’s Day,” “Juno” and “13 Going on 30.”  She will next be seen in “The Odd Life of Timothy Green,” due out later this year.

    Musker received an Oscar nomination in 2009 for the animated feature “The Princess and the Frog.”  His other credits include “Treasure Planet,” “Aladdin” and “The Little Mermaid,” all of which he co-wrote and co-directed.

    [AMPAS]

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  • REVIEWS: One Lucky Elephant and Queen of the Sun:What are the Bees Telling Us– Two essential new docs

    This week two documentaries open in New York that examine relationships between humans and animals. Though two very different kinds of animals are presented in these two films, and their stories told in very different styles, the overall ideas explored in both films, about humans and animals coexisting, are quite similar.

    A realistic examination of wild animals living in captivity through the unique story of an elephant and a circus director, One Lucky Elephant is an intimate documentary about a cross-species relationship. Director Lisa Leeman has said that she wanted her film to be character-driven, and she succeeded—the film revolves around the characters David Balding and his elephant that he raised and founded his circus around, Flora. David gives personal accounts of his close relationship to Flora—she is like a daughter to him—and the camera follows him through his struggle to find her a new home, as she has grown out of circus performing. The film crew followed the story for ten years, beginning in 2000, when the idea came up to send her back to Africa to give safari rides; when that fell through the crew stuck with David and Flora as they considered different possible residences for her, from zoos to an elephant refuge in Tennessee. The dramatic pull comes from the question of whether, once Flora is placed somewhere new, it may be time for her to remain independent from David forever.

    Leeman focuses much of the time on David but is careful to get every viewpoint of Flora’s situation. One can see from the intimate footage of Flora what a wonderful and smart elephant she is, but to give the audience more of an understanding of the complex inner minds of elephants, and the specific experiences of elephants taken from the wild and put into circuses or zoos, other elephant experts (the co-founder of the Tennessee refuge, and a Miami Zoo elephant keeper) are also interviewed and give their own account of the situation. There is no direct statement against having these animals in captivity—most of the main people interviewed worked in the circus and got their experience with elephants there—but the film presents all the information at hand about how captivity affects elephants’ physical, emotional and psychological well-being. The audience is at once moved by the relationship between David and Flora, but, as the film progresses, unsure if they would wish the fate of being brought up in a circus on any other elephant, no matter how loving the trainer. The technique of initially “breaking” elephants is revealed late in the film as still being less than humane, and other factors of being in captivity are weighed in, but through most of the film, Leeman focuses on this specific elephant’s experiences, and the importance of her bond with a human. In the end, the bond might be greater for David, but the effect his love has had on Flora is also undeniable. Their unique relationship is captured in a bittersweet film that honestly depicts both the positive and negative aspects of a wild animal being raised by a human.

    Opens June 8th in NYC

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    Queen of the Sun: What are the Bees Telling Us? is a refreshing new documentary by Taggart Siegel, exploring the very serious subject of the disappearance of honeybees across North America and Europe. The film is straightforward in some ways; Siegel interviews a host of people around the world about bees, and covers many aspects of the scientific phenomenon, presenting an abundance of relevant information. But this is done with a unique style—the shots meditate on nature, on beehives, or beekeepers as they muse about their love for these essential insects. The opening of the film, for example, gives us the odd image of a woman covered from chin to waist in bees, moving in a slow dance. This is never explained, it is simply a strong image, both beautiful and unsettling, and Siegel presents it to the audience to let them make of it what they will.

    The film is not always surreal, however. The focused subject is the major problem of Colony Collapse Disorder, in which a beehive is suddenly deserted—the honey is there, but the bees have vanished. There are many discussions presented in the film on this subject, but the main argument is an environmental one: the use of pesticides are affecting the bees’ nervous system, making them forget where their hive is, and monocultures of crops are removing the plants that bees depend on to survive. The disappearance of bees (which is rapidly happening; five million colonies have already been lost in North America alone) is extremely significant. Not only do bees make honey, they also pollinate forty percent of our food; there are no plants without their pollinators.

    The film presents all of these facts and many more to give a broad understanding of the situation that honeybees are in, but it also does more than that. It gives a historical context of the importance of bees throughout human culture, and most of all, presents a variety of colorful characters who passionately express their love for bees, not just because of their practical uses, but because they are extraordinary creatures. Gunther Hauk, a biodynamic beekeeper and farmer who owns a bee sanctuary, is a main focus of the film for his knowledge of the bees’ situation, as is Michael Pollan, the bestselling author of multiple books exploring our modern relationship to food, but many other individuals are presented to give their own insight into the importance of bees. Some of the beekeepers interviewed include an eccentric French yogi in Grenoble; a boy in London who started beekeeping with his dad when he was only nine, and has named each of their queen bees after a queen of England; and a woman fighting to legalize beekeeping in Manhattan so that she can continue keeping them on her Harlem rooftop.These characters’ meditations on bees may at times alienate viewers who are not fond of hippie-ish sensibilities, but hopefully they will serve to intrigue rather than repel.

    Siegel includes philosophical meditations about bees and hives, animation sequences, and lovely cinematography of bees in the process of pollinating or building a hive, as well as the aforementioned moments of surrealism, to tell the story of the honeybees’ plight, and simply to illustrate the impact bees have on the world, and on people. The relationship between humans and bees is now more significant than ever, since we have the responsibility of making sure they survive.

    Opens June 10th in NYC

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  • Winners of the 1st Gold Coast International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1435" align="alignnone" width="560"]Bob And The Monster[/caption]

    The first annual Gold Coast International Film Festival in North Hempstead, Long Island, New york wrapped and held its first awards ceremony Sunday night at the Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point reports Port Washington Patch.

    Keirda Bahruth’s “Bob And The Monster” won the New York Post 2011 Gold Coast International Film Festival Trailer Contest and the audience award for best documentary film.  The film is a documentary chronicling the life of charismatic singer/songwriter Bob Forrest, from his days as front man for indie rock band Thelonious Monster, through his life-threatening struggle with addiction, to his triumph and transformation into one of the most influential addiction counselors in the US today.

    “My Afternoons with Margueritte,” directed by Jean Becker won the audience appreciation award for best narrative film.  My Afternoons With Margueritte is the story of a illiterate and lonely man who bonds with an older and well-read woman.

    Meghan Shea’s “In The Spirit of Laxmi,” won best short documentary and Domhnall Gleeson’s “Noreen” won best narrative short.

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  • Elton John Documentary ‘The Union’ to debut on HBO in Jan. 2012

    The Elton John documentary film, THE UNION, had its world premiere as the opening night selection at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival, will debut on HBO in Jan. 2012.

    Directed by Cameron Crowe (“Almost Famous,” “Jerry Maguire”), THE UNION takes an unprecedented look at the creative life of Elton John and his remarkable collaborative album with his early-career idol, Leon Russell, produced by award-winning music producer T Bone Burnett.  Never before filmed in his composing process, John is captured by Crowe in this candid portrait of one of the world’s most treasured artists and performers.  Begun in Nov. 2009, THE UNION chronicles the entire writing and recording process of the heralded album John recorded with Russell.

    “I’m a great fan of HBO and their extraordinary programming, so I’m particularly thrilled that they will be airing THE UNION,” commented Elton John.

     

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