• CANCELLED: 2011 Cairo International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1334" align="alignnone"]Unrest in Egypt earlier this year.[/caption]

    The Ministry of Culture has announced that it will cancel the Cairo International Film Festival this year due to upcoming elections, Gulf News reported.

    “The Ministry of Culture has decided to cancel the festival this year, which was due in late November, because of the current preparations for the parliamentary and presidential elections as well as due to the economic situation.”

    Emad Abu Ghazi, the Minister of Culture, denied that instability in Egypt was behind the decision, “The decision has nothing to do with the current security scene in Egypt.”

    Egyptians will elect a new parliament this September and a new president two months later, the first elections since long-standing President Hosni Mubarak was ousted last February.

     

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  • LA Film Festival Announces Guillermo del Toro as Guest Director, as well as film selections for closing night, special screening

    [caption id="attachment_1332" align="alignnone" width="560"] Katie Holmes in Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark[/caption]

    The Los Angeles Film Festival, continue to get ready for the 2011 edition, announcing Guillermo del Toro as Guest Director, as well as film selections for closing night, a special screening, galas, conversations and more.

    In his role as Guest Director, del Toro will select a film to present at the Festival that has been an influence to him, followed by a conversation.

    Presented by Guillermo del Toro, FilmDistrict’s world premiere of Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark will close the Festival on June 26.  The horror film is directed by Troy Nixey, written by Guillermo del Toro and Matthew Robbins and stars Katie Holmes, Guy Pearce and Bailee Madison.  Based on the 1973 telefilm that del Toro believes is the scariest TV production ever made, the story follows Sally (Madison), a young girl who moves to Rhode Island to live with her father (Pearce) and his new girlfriend (Holmes) in the 19th-century mansion they are restoring.  While exploring the house, Sally starts to hear voices coming from creatures in the basement whose hidden agenda is to claim her as one of their own.  FilmDistrict will release the film on August 26, 2011.

    The Festival will hold a Special Screening on June 16 at 10:30 p.m. of Warner Bros. Green Lantern.  Bringing the enduringly popular superhero to the big screen for the first time, Green Lantern is directed by Martin Campbell, written by Greg Berlanti & Michael Green & Marc Guggenheim and Michael Goldenberg, and stars Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Peter Sarsgaard, Mark Strong, Angela Bassett and Tim Robbins.  In a universe as vast as it is mysterious, an elite, powerful force has existed for centuries–protectors of peace and justice, they are called the Green Lantern Corps.  When a new enemy called Parallax threatens to destroy the balance of power in the universe, their fate and the fate of the Earth lie in the hands of their newest recruit, the first human ever selected: Hal Jordan.  Warner Bros. will release the film wide on June 17, 2011.

    Once again, the Festival will feature a number of high-profile Gala Screenings, with additional films to be announced later this month.  Summit Entertainment’s world premiere of A Better Life is directed by Chris Weitz, written by Eric Eason, adapted from a story by Roger L. Simon, and starring Demián Bichir, José Julián, Dolores Heredia, Joaquín Cosío and Carlos Linares.  A Better Life is the poignant, suspenseful tale of an illegal immigrant in LA struggling to build a better life for his beloved son.  Summit Entertainment will have a limited release of the film on June 24, 2011.

    FilmDistrict’s North American premiere of Drive will also be presented as a Gala.  The film is directed by Nicolas Winding Refn, written by Hossein Amini, adapted from a book by James Sallis, and stars Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan, Bryan Cranston, Albert Brooks, Oscar Isaac, Ron Perlman and Christina Hendricks.  In the precision-crafted crime caper Drive, Ryan Gosling stars as a Los Angeles wheelman for hire, stunt driving for movie productions by day and steering getaway vehicles for criminal operations by night.    FilmDistrict will release the film wide on September 16, 2011.

    James Franco will be sitting down for a freewheeling discussion of film, poetry and pushing the creative envelope.  As part of this special evening, Franco will present the world premiere of The Broken Tower, which he wrote, directed and stars in, about the brief, burning life of the gay, visionary American poet Hart Crane.

    Film and stage director Julie Taymor has a unique talent for adapting established works in fresh, exciting ways.  From her 1999 debut feature film Titus, Academy Award-winning Frida, Across the Universe and last year’s The Tempest, Taymor demonstrates a level of creativity and skill for adapting stories that is rare.  Join us as this award-winning director shares behind-the-scenes clips in a conversation about taking material from different sources and translating them to the stage and the screen.

    Returning to downtown Los Angeles, with its central hub at L.A. LIVE, the Festival will run from Thursday, June 16 to Sunday, June 26.

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  • Rooftop Films to NY Premiere 3 films from 2011 South by Southwest

    [caption id="attachment_1330" align="alignnone" width="560"]The Dish and The Spoon[/caption]

    Rooftop Films is doing it different this year, announcing a special weekend of select films from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival, making their New York Premieres June 3-5 2011, as part of Rooftop Films 15th Annual Summer Series.

    The films making their New York Premieres as part of our South by Southwest Weekend are The Dish and the Spoon directed by Alison Bagnall and starring Greta Gerwig, No Matter What directed by Cherie Saulter, and Rooftop Filmmakers’ Fund and Edgeworx Studios Grantee The City Dark directed by Ian Cheney.

    Friday, June 3, 2011
    Rooftop Films and SXSW Present:
    The Dish and the Spoon
    (Alison Bagnall | Philadelphia, PA | NY Premiere)

    In this delicate affecting romance, indie starlet Greta Gerwig boldly plays against type as Rose, a woman furious with her unfaithful husband. During a drinking binge, she encounters an alienated teen played by newcomer Olly Alexander, and the two go on whimsical adventures together, their relationship becoming more enchantingly intimate as they gambol about a small beachside town.

    Saturday, June 4, 2011
    Rooftop Films and SXSW Present:
    No Matter What
    (Cherie Saulter | Chipley, FL | NY Premiere)

    Teenagers Joey and Nick are navigating the complex landscape of rural Florida on their own — they don’t really have parents, they prefer skateboarding to school. When the pair set out to find Joey’s mother — camping out in drug dealers’ backyards, hopping freight trains — we wonder if, perhaps, they should just keep going.

    Sunday, June 5, 2011
    Rooftop Films, SXSW and Edgeworx Studios present:
    The City Dark
    (Ian Cheney | Brooklyn, NY | NY Premiere)

    For thousands of years, the night sky was a crucial part of human experience, but due to light pollution, the stars are disappearing from our vision and consciousness. Would bringing back the sky make us better humans, or save us from some of the harmful effects of modern city life? Supported in part by the Rooftop Filmmakers’ Fund and the Edgeworx Studios Post-Production Grant.

    Screening with a selection of 2011 SXSW Shorts:
    Heliotropes (Michael Langan | San Francisco, CA) Heliotropes documents the parallel goals of man and nature, through the most primitive and sophisticated means, to simply stay in the light. Based on the poem by Brian Christian.

    Howling at the Moon (Jason Tippet, Elizabeth Mims | Los Angeles, CA): Matt and Harry receive an invitation to see a fellow employees band. To escape the awkward coffee shop performance, Matt comes up with a somewhat decent excuse.

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  • REVIEW: The Bully Projects from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1328" align="alignnone" width="560"]Norwegian film “Turn me on, goddammit”[/caption]

    The themes of bullying, being bullied, and the horrific effects it can have on a child were displayed in full force at this year’s 2011 Tribeca Film Festival in New York.

    Director Lee Hirsch, who was himself bullied as a child, helms this poignant, thorough and very topical “Bully Project,” which takes you not only into the lives of children being ridiculed and teased at school, but, literally, onto the school bus right along with both the weak and the tormented. He also highlights two families who both suffered a devastating loss when their child killed themselves. (One middle-school age child, and one teen-ager).


    Far from being sheer heartache in motion, Hirsch’s agenda seems to be one of getting the school’s faculty and leadership more involved (in what has become a national issue of serious force),  while school administrators argue that it is the parents who need to teach their children to respect others. The doc just got picked up by the Weinstein Company, so you will soon be able to judge for yourself.  I loved it.

    The new Tony Kaye film “Detachment,” starring Adrien Brody, Marcia Gay Harden, Christina Hendricks, James Caan and Lucy Liu, not only dives head-on into the life of one very tortured, teenage girl’s life, but into the life of her teachers and head principal’s.

    Brody brings his natural, irresistible talent to the forefront of this film, which is, to put it mildly, completely heart-wrenching. You get to see both sides of the equation fully here- the teenager with far too much emotional weight on her shoulders, the classroom of disrespectful kids who border on terrorizing, and the lonely, exhausting lives of these high school teachers. It is quite something to see a subject portrayed so starkly, and Kaye is clearly mad as hell about the subject- as he is far too talented to be this heavy-handed without being aware of it. This film is supposed to hit you like a ton of bricks, and it most certainly does.  This should be rudimentary viewing for anyone with a kid about to enter public school, or anyone who wants to know why people always consistently say that teachers should be making a million dollars a year.

    The Norwegian film “Turn me on, goddammit,” was a minor hit at Tribeca this year. It features some very natural, great performances by non-actors, and is the first feature from director Jannicke Systad Jacobsen. It centers on a very horny teenager, Alma, who gets bumped down into the nether regions of the high school hierarchy after a boy that she has a crush on “pokes” her leg with his penis at a party. She soon becomes known as “Dick Alma, ” and is completely shunned at school. I wasn’t as crazy as everyone was else about this film, but it is a lot of fun, and is even stranger set against the bleak, rural Norwegian landscape. Alma perseveres far better than the subjects and characters of the film above, which also made it a pleasure to watch.

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  • 2011 Edinburgh International Film Festival to Showcase New British Films as First Programme Details Unveiled

    [caption id="attachment_1326" align="alignnone" width="500"]Director Karl Golden , Emma Booth and Harry Treadaway on the red carpet for the World premiere of Pelican Blood at Cineworld, Edinburgh as part of the Edinburgh International Film 2010. Photograph: Edinburgh International Film Festival 2010. [/caption]

    The Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) revealed the first details of its 2011 program showcasing some of the best new British films . The program will include the world premiere of political thriller ‘Page Eight’ from twice Oscar-nominated David Hare (best known for the internationally acclaimed ‘The Hours’ and ‘The Reader’) – which stars Bill Nighy, Rachel Weisz, Michael Gambon, Ralph Fiennes and Judy Davis.

    Scottish director David Mackenzie (Young Adam, Hallam Foe) will also be bringing the UK premiere of his new sci-fi thriller ‘Perfect Sense’, which stars Ewan McGregor and Ewen Bremner, to the festival.

    The full list of British films included in this year’s program will be announced at launch, however additional titles revealed at this stage include:

    ‘Albatross’: a coming of age drama directed by Niall MacCormick and starring Jessica Brown-Findlay (‘Downton Abbey’), Sebastian Koch (‘The Lives of Others’, ‘Black Book’), Julia Ormond and Felicity Jones (‘Northanger Abbey’, ‘The Tempest’, ‘Page Eight’).

    ‘Angel’s Crest’: a British-Canadian small town drama directed by British-born Gaby Dellal (‘On a Clear Day’), based on a book by American writer Leslie Schwartz, and starring Jeremy Piven (‘Entourage’),  Elizabeth McGovern (‘Kick-Ass’, ‘Downton Abbey’), Mira Sorvino and Kate Walsh.

    ‘The Caller’: a thriller from Matthew Parkhill (‘Dot the I’), starring Stephen Moyer (‘True Blood’) and Rachelle Lefevre (‘Twilight’).

    ‘Stormhouse’: the second feature from Dan Turner, a high concept thriller depicting the military capture of a supernatural entity in a secret underground base. International premiere.

    ‘Weekender’: directed by Karl Golden (‘Pelican Blood’), a comedy drama depicts the 1990s Ibiza scene and stars Jack O’Connell (‘This is England’, ‘Skins’), Emily Barclay and Dean Andrews.

    The 2011 EIFF will also support rising Scottish filmmakers, with the inclusion of two films from first-time directors. ‘Fast Romance’, the debut feature from Scottish director Carter Ferguson, is a Glasgow-set romantic comedy depicting seven very different singletons searching for love. And ‘Charlie Casanova’ is a darkly funny crime thriller from first-time writer and director Terry McMahon.

    The 65th Edinburgh International Film Festival will take place at venues across the city from 15th-26th June, offering a ‘film for all’ remit and over 100 screenings for audiences to enjoy.

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  • Touch Football Comedy ‘Turkey Bowl’ from 2011 South By Southwest to be released in the Summer

    Turkey Bowl, which world-premiered at 2011 South By Southwest is getting a planned Summer 2011 release in the US after being acquired by Tribeca Film. Written and directed by Kyle Smith in a breakout debut, Turkey Bowl is a real-time comedy set in Los Angeles.

    Every summer, Jon (Jon Schmidt) gathers 10 friends together in his adopted city to play the Turkey Bowl – bringing a piece of small-town tradition to the urban sprawl – all for the beloved prize for the winning team… a turkey. Friendships flare and fade, jealousy is met with both laughter and pain, and old and unrequited love threatens to remain old and unrequited, and all of these undercurrents are revealed in the unique, improvised rhythm of backyard football. Turkey Bowl is produced by Kyle Smith and Stephen Paratore and stars Kerry Bishé, Zoe Perry, Zeke Hawkins and Tom DiMenna.

    Turkey Bowl will be released beginning in late June by Tribeca Film, a comprehensive distribution label launched in 2010 by Tribeca Enterprises, the company that also runs the very successful Tribeca Film Festival.

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  • 12th Jeonju International Film Festival Award Winners; “Jean Gentil” wins for best international film

    [caption id="attachment_1322" align="alignnone" width="560"]Jean Gentil[/caption]

    The South Korean film “Anyang, Paradise City”won the grand prize in the Korean feature films competition category at the 12th Jeonju International Film Festival.  Directed by Park Chan-kyong, the film portrays the past and present of the South Korean city of Anyang by integrating elements of documentary and feature film.

    Park is a younger brother of director Park Chan-wook, an award-winning director who captured the grand prix honors at Cannes in 2004 with “Oldboy.” The brothers shared the Golden Bear Award for Best Short Film at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival, as co-directors of “Night Fishing.”

    “Jean Gentil” by Israel Cardenas and Laura Amelia Guzman took the top international prize and “Double Clutch” by Ahn Guk-jin won the South Korean short film competition. ‘Jean Gentil’ follows an unemployed Haitian professor looking for work in Santo Domingo who falls upon hard times as he loses his apartment and struggles with his faith.

    The 12th Jeonju International Film Festival ran April 28 – May 6, 2011 in the South Korean city of Jeonju, under the theme of “Freedom, Independence and Communication” and featured 190 films from 38 countries.

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  • 2011 New York Indian Film Festival Announces Award Winners; Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony) wins Best Film

    [caption id="attachment_1320" align="alignnone" width="560"]Best Feature Film – Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony)[/caption]

    The 11th Annual New York Indian Film Festival came to a close on May 8 with the Closing Night red carpet premiere of Rituparno Ghosh’s powerful film Noukadubi which was attended by Rishi Kapoor, Neetu Singh Kapoor, Salman Rushdie, Mira Nair, Aparna Sen, Madhur Jaffrey, Ambassador Prakash Shah, Consul General Prabhu Dayal, and many other notable celebrities. Noukadubi is a 1920s love story based on the novel by Rabindranath Tagore.

    Following the premiere at Asia Society in Manhattan was the festival’s annual awards ceremony.

    The 2011 award winning films are:

    Best Feature Film – Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony), directed by Arjun Gourisaria & Moinak Biswas

    Best Director – Aparna Sen, Iti Mrinalini

    Best Actor – Rishi Kapoor, Do Dooni Chaar

    Best Actress – Konkona Sen Sharma, Iti Mrinalini

    Best Screenplay – Mohan Raghavan, T.D. Dasan Std. VI B

    Best Documentary – Bhopali (Max Carlson)

    Best Short Film – Just That Sort Of A Day (Abhay Kumar)

     

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  • Newport Beach Film Festival Announces 2011 Award Winners; ‘A Beginner’s Guide to Endings’ Wins Top Jury Prize

    Jonathan Sobol’s feature-length writing-directing debut ‘A Beginner’s Guide to Endings’ was the big winner at the 2011 Newport Beach Film Festival winning multiple awards including the top prize Jury Award for Best Feature Film. The film follows the three eldest sons (Scott Caan, Paul Costanzo and Jason Jones) of a career gambler (Harvey Keitel) and how they each respond to his death.

    Oren Kaplan’s “Hamill’ a true story based on the life of deaf UFC fighter Matt Hamill, continues to be ahuge audience favorite, snagging yet another Audience Award for Best Film.

    2011 JURY AWARDS:

    BEST FEATURE FILM: A Beginner’s Guide to Endings
    BEST ACTOR: Vince Colosima (Face to Face)
    BEST ACTRESS: Ra Chapman (Face to Face)
    BEST DIRECTOR: Michael Rymer (Face to Face)
    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHER: Samy Inayeh (A Beginner’s Guide to Endings)
    BEST SCREENPLAY: Jonathan Sobol (A Beginner’s Guide to Endings)
    BEST FEATURE DOCUMENTARY FILM: My So-Called Enemy (Director Lisa Gossels)
    HONORABLE MENTION: We Were Here (Directors David Weissman and Bill Weber)
    BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY FILM: Warriors of Qiugang (Director Ruby Yang)
    HONORABLE MENTION: Moth in Spring (Director Yu Gu)
    BEST SHORT ANIMATED FILM: Fly (Director Alan Short)
    HONORABLE MENTION: Bottle (Director Kirsten Lepore)
    BEST NARRATIVE SHORT FILM: Love Song of Iskra Prufrock (Director Lucy Gaffy)
    HONORABLE MENTION: The Escape (Director James Connelly)


    2011 AUDIENCE AWARDS:

    Audience Award Winner Feature (US) – Hamill (Oren Kaplan)
    Audience Award Winner Feature (Foreign) – My Afternoons With Margueritte (Jean Becker)
    Audience Award Winner Documentary – Defining Beauty: Ms. Wheelchair America (Alexis Ostrander)
    Audience Award Winner Action Sports Feature – Splinters (Adam Pesce)
    Audience Award Winner Family Film – [no winner named]
    Audience Award Winner Short Film – Moonfishing (David Michael Friend)
    Audience Award Winner Art, Architecture + Design – [no winner named]
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking  Acting- Jericho Rosales (Subject: I Love You)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking Directing – Matt Walsh (High Road)
    Outstanding Achievement in Feature Filmmaking – Takeshi Koike (Redline)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – André Øvredal (Trollhunter)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Drew Pierce, Brett Pierce (Deadheads)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Liz Garbus (Bobby Fisher Against The World)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Alana Morshead (Peach Plum Pear)
    Outstanding Achievement in Documentary – James Marsh (Project Nim)
    Outstanding Achievement in Documentary – David Dworsky, Victor Köhler (Press Pause Play)
    Outstanding Achievement in Action Sports Filmmaking – Adam Pesce (Splinters)
    Outstanding Achievement in Action Sports Filmmaking – Eric Iberg, Shane Nelson (Like A Lion)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Animation – Robert Kohn (The Lift)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Horror – Jerome Sable (The Legend of Beaver Dam)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Directing – Skot Bright (Ollie Klublershturf vs The Nazis)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – Antonio Piazza, Fabio Grassadonia (Rita)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – Vicky Mather (Stanley Pickle)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – David Yarovesky (Ghild)


    2011 CHUCK JONES CENTER FOR CREATIVITY AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN ANIMATION:

    The Chuck Jones Award for Direction, Story and Character Development – Le Cirque (Nicolas Brault)
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Comic Timing – Fly
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Art Direction – Thought For You
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Character Development – Blind Date


    2011 MACGILLVRAY FREEMAN FILMS AWARDS:

    MacGillivray Freeman Films Award for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking (feature) – My So-Called Enemy
    MacGillivray Freeman Films Award for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking (short) -The Dancer
    MacGillivray Freeman Films Special Achievement Award in Environmental Filmmaking – This is Your Ocean: Sharks

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  • Hot Docs 2011 Award Winners; Dragonslayer Wins Best International Feature

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    [caption id="attachment_1317" align="alignnone" width="560"]Dragonslayer[/caption]

    ‘Dragonslayer’ won Best International Feature and ‘Family Portrait in Black and White’ won Best Canadian Feature at the 2011 Hot Docs Film Festival. Nine awards and over $72,000 in cash prizes were presented to Canadian and international filmmakers, including awards for Festival films in competition and those recognizing emerging and established filmmakers.

    2011 Hot Docs Film Festival Award Winners:

    Best Canadian Feature
    FAMILY PORTRAIT IN BLACK AND WHITE (D: Julia Ivanova; P: Boris Ivanov, Mike Jackson)
    Sponsored by the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation and Documentary Organization of Canada, the award includes a $15,000 prize courtesy of the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation.

    It can be dangerous to be black in post-Soviet era Ukraine, a country peopled by 99.9% blue-eyed blonds. Olga Nenya faces down age-old xenophobia as she fosters 23 abandoned children along with her own, including 16 bi-racial orphans, in a ramshackle house in a small Ukrainian town. At first their lives seem like an idyllic United Colors of Benetton ad: love and affection from Olga, swimming trips to the lake, playing with chickens, goats and cats, going to school and doing chores in the garden and house. But as the film progresses over three years, a more layered and psychologically disturbing portrait emerges. Olga plays favourites and picks on kids who contradict her, and strict Soviet-era ideas about child rearing stymie their opportunities and abilities. Fresh from its Sundance premiere, Julia Ivanova brings festival audiences a rich observational portrait of a woman who wants to save the children from an unjust world—her way.

    Special Jury Prize – Canadian Feature (tie)
    AT NIGHT, THEY DANCE (D: Isabelle Lavigne, Stéphane Thibault; P: Lucie Lambert)
    and
    THE GUANTANAMO TRAP (D: Thomas Selim Wallner; P: Thomas Kufus, Amit Breuer, Marcel Hoehn, Christoph Jorg)
    Sponsored by the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation and Documentary Organization of Canada, the award includes a $10,000 prize courtesy of the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation.

    The Canadian Features Jury also acknowledged the film WIEBO’S WAR (D: David York, P: David York, Nick Hector, Bryn Hughes, Bonnie Thompson; EP: David York, David Christensen) with an honourable mention.

    Best International Feature
    DRAGONSLAYER (D: Tristan Patterson; P: John Baker, EP: Christine Vachon)
    Sponsored by A&E, the award includes a $10,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    California’s suburbs, decimated by economic collapse, are a sprawl of abandoned foreclosures and deserted swimming pools. Skreech, a 23-year-old skate punk, takes full advantage of the decline, stretching out his adolescence by riding empty pools, getting wasted, camping in friends’ backyards and chilling with his girl. If Holden Caulfield had grown up broke in 21st-century Fullerton, no doubt his life would have mirrored Skreech’s. A countdown orders the chaos of our hero’s Peter Pan lifestyle, ticking down the time he has left to get high—5—drink—4—puke—3—and road trip before real-world responsibilities encroach on his idyll. Despite getting his kicks at no one else’s expense—2—society demands he be productive—1—and employed. Dragonslayer is an amazing and unconventional nostalgia trip that questions what “going nowhere” looks like, how capitalism determines our way of life and why inertia is such a powerful threat.

    Special Jury Prize – International Feature
    THE CASTLE (D: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti; P: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti; EP: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti)
    Sponsored by the Ontario Media Development Corporation, the award includes a $5,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The International Features Jury also acknowledged the films GRANDE HOTEL (D: Lotte Stoops; P: Ellen De Waele, Co-Producer Denis Vaslin, Volya Films; EP: Ellen De Waele) and HELL AND BACK AGAIN (D: Danfung Dennis; P: Mike Lerner, Martin Herring; EP: Dan Cogan, Karol Martesko Fenster, Gernot Schaffler, Thomas Brunner, Maxyne Franklin) with honourable mentions.

    Best Mid-Length Documentary
    OUR NEWSPAPER (D: Eline Flipse; P: Eline Flipse; EP: Eline Flipse)
    Sponsored by Canada Council for the Arts, the award includes a $3,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The Short and Mid-Length Films Jury also acknowledged the film PEOPLE I COULD HAVE BEEN AND MAYBE AM (D: Boris Gerrets; P: Pieter van Huystee) with an honourable mention.

    Best Short Documentary
    FLYING ANNE (D: Catherine van Campen; P: Joost Seelen)
    The award includes a $3,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The Short and Mid-Length Films Jury also acknowledged the film SOMETHING TO TELL YOU (D: Pete Gleeson; P: Pete Gleeson; EP: Yvette Coyne) with an honourable mention.

    HBO Documentary Films Emerging Artist Award
    Michal Marczak for the film AT THE EDGE OF RUSSIA (P: Marianna Rowinska)
    Sponsored by HBO Documentary Films.

    documentary’s Don Haig Award
    Rama Rau
    Awarded by the Don Haig Foundation, the prize includes a $20,000 cash prize generously sponsored by documentary.

    Lindalee Tracey Award
    Honouring an emerging Canadian filmmaker with a passionate point of view, a strong sense of social justice and a sense of humour, the award was presented to Alexandre Hamel.
    The award winner will receive a $6,000 cash prize and $3,000 in film stock donated by Kodak Canada.

    The Hot Docs Board of Directors acknowledged the Terence Macartney-Filgate as the recipient of the 2011 Hot Docs Outstanding Achievement Award, which was presented to the influential Canadian filmmaker at an event earlier in the day.

    The Sundance Channel People’s Choice Award and audience top ten favourite films of the 2011 Festival, determined by audience ballot, will be announced on Monday, May 9. Also announced on this day is the Filmmaker Award, determined by ballots cast by Hot Docs 2011 filmmakers.

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  • Donald Trump Gets ‘Trumped’ in New Documentary at Hot Docs Festival

    Donald Trump is making more news, this time with a new Scottish documentary coming out that paints a pretty negative picture of the tycoon.

    The film, You’ve Been Trumped, directed by the Scottish filmmaker Anthony Baxter, premiered at the Toronto Hot Docs Festival, which is still running. It follows the process of Trump trying to build a golf course in the lovely seaside village of Balmedie, Scotland, where the sport was reportedly born. He runs up against a local farmer who refuses to sell his land, and subsequently wages war against him. Baxter delves into the conflict, apparently at the risk of angering authorities, as he was arrested at one point for trespassing.

    The Edinburgh Film Festival actually rejected the film, deeming it too “racy,” but Baxter raised money online and is now pitching the film to U.S. distributors. The doc also boasts a score by Jonsi, the lead singer of Sigur Ros.

    This new documentary gives a glimpse of what Donald Trump looks and acts like in the face of adversity; a symbolic story of strong rural residents standing against the ruthless American capitalism that tries to exploit their land. But more than just being symbolic, Baxter hopes to illustrate a very real side of Trump that Americans may not know exists, and realizes the timeliness of the film coinciding with Trump’s new political aspirations.

     

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  • Festival Winner “Lebanon, Pa” Now In Theaters

    It took three long years, but Philadelphia native Ben Hickernell debut his first full-length feature film partially shot in and named after Lebanon, Pennsylvania, named “Lebanon, Pa” at Great Escape theater at the Lebanon Valley Mall in Lebanon, Pennsylvania

    Hickernell wrote, directed and co-produced the film, and as reported by ldnews.com, stresses that the film is not about the town itself and is merely the setting for the story. Although some of the scenes were shot in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, most of the film was actually shot in Philadelphia.

    The story is described as Will (Josh Hopkins), a charming 35-year-old Philadelphia ad man, heads to Lebanon, Pa. to bury his recently deceased father. He forms an unexpected friendship with CJ (Rachel Kitson), his bright, newly pregnant 17-year-old cousin. As Will becomes interested in CJ’s married teacher (Samantha Mathis) and CJ confronts her conflicted father, both struggle with formidable decisions about the path their lives will take.

    Can we vault our differences and meet in the middle? This bittersweet comic drama tenderly explores the cultural divide in America through the lives of one extended family.

    “Lebanon, Pa” premiered at the 2010 South by Southwest Film Conference and Festival in Austin, Texas, and also screened in filmmaker Michael Moore’s Traverse City Film Festival in Michigan in July, where it won the Founder’s Prize for Best Fiction Film.

    The film also won the Filmadelphia Award for the best film made in Pennsylvania at the Philadelphia Film Festival and the Standout Film Award at the Hells Half Mile Film and Music Festival in Michigan.

    The movie is now in limited release in New York City, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Michigan and Florida, with new cities continuously being added.

    Visit the official film site for more details.

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