• VIDEO: Watch First Trailer for Muay Thai Boxing Thriller A PRAYER BEFORE DAWN

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    A Prayer Before Dawn Watch Joe Cole fights his way out in first trailer for Muay Thai boxing thriller A Prayer Before Dawn.  The film, directed by Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire premiered earlier this year at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival, and is set to be released in 2018 by A24. A Prayer Before Dawn Poster A Prayer Before Dawn is the remarkable true story of Billy Moore, a young English boxer incarcerated in two of Thailand’s most notorious prisons. He is quickly thrown into a terrifying world of drugs and gang violence, but when the prison authorities allow him to take part in the Muay Thai boxing tournaments, he realizes this might be his chance to get out. Billy embarks on a relentless, action-packed journey from one savage fight to the next, stopping at nothing to do whatever he must to preserve his life and regain his freedom. Shot in a an actual Thai prison with a cast of primarily real inmates, A Prayer Before Dawn is a visceral, thrilling journey through an unforgettable hell on earth. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mp88Nuci68c

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  • 2017 Twin Cities Film Fest Awards – “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” Wins Best Film

    [caption id="attachment_23572" align="aligncenter" width="1000"]THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri[/caption] The Twin Cities Film Fest announced its 2017 award winners Saturday evening, and named Martin McDonagh’s “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” as the year’s Best Feature Film. “The Bachelors,” a father-son drama starring J.K. Simmons, was named a finalist in several categories and walked away with the Indie Vision Breakthrough Award for Simmons’ teenage co-star Josh Wiggins. The festival’s top non-fiction awards went to documentaries spotlighting the great migrations of refugees now underway around the globe. Ai Weiwei’s “Human Flow,” was named Best Documentary; Amanda Bailly’s “8 Borders, 8 Days” won the 2017 Non-Fiction Indie Vision Award. The 2017 Audience Awards went to “Instructions for Living,” a drama co-starring and co-written by Minnesota native Morgan Owens; “Coyote,” a documentary about the life and disappearance of acclaimed sailor Mike Plant who grew up in the state; and ‘Hearts Want,” a sweeping short romance directed by Twin Cities filmmaker Jason P. Schumacher. Minnesota native Lea Thompson returned home to the state to open the festival with her comedic directorial debut “The Year of Spectacular Men.” The film is written by her daughter Madelyn Deutch, who stars in the comedy opposite her sister Zoe. At Saturday evening’s award ceremony, Madelyn was named this year’s Indie Vision Breakthrough Artist for narrative filmmaking. “The creativity of Madelyn’s script, the strength of her performance, and the uniqueness of Lea’s first film, set the tone for the entire festival,” says Jatin Setia, Twin Cities Film Fest’s executive director. “We billed this year as the ‘Year of Spectacular Women,’ in part because we were captivated by these memorable female-driven films we were seeing on the festival circuit and also in recognition of the fact that over 50 percent of all our titles this year were directed/produced by women. Madelyn’s award is just the tip of the iceberg, in terms of the female talent we celebrated this year.” On the festival’s closing day, TCFF also honored actress, and Minnesota native, Rachael Leigh Cook with the festival’s coveted North Star Award.

    2017 Twin Cities Film Fest Award Winners

    Best Feature Film: “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,” directed by Martin McDonagh. Best Documentary: “Human Flow,” directed by Ai Weiwei Best Short Film: “Cat Killer,” directed by Wes Jones. Audience Award, Narrative: “Instructions For Living,” directed by Sarah Heinss (Runner-Up: “Aquarians,” directed by Michael M. McGuire) Audience Award, Non-Fiction: “Coyote,” directed by Thomas Simmons (Runner-Up: “Victor’s Last Class,” directed by Brendan Brandt) Audience Award, Short Film: “Hearts Want,” directed by Jason P. Schumacher (Runner-Up: “Wet Dreams: One Woman’s Chance at Touching Gold,” directed by Darren Coyle) Indie Vision Breakthrough Award — Narrative: Madelyn Deutch (screenplay, “The Year of Spectacular Men”) Indie Vision Breakthrough Award — Non-Fiction: “8 Borders, 8 Days,” directed by Amanda Bailly Indie Vision Breakthrough Award – Best Performance: Josh Wiggins (“The Bachelors” and “Walking Out”) Fun Is Good Bill Murray Comedic Shorts Award: “Lady Lillian,” directed by Amber Johnson North Star Award for Excellence: Rachael Leigh Cook TCFF 2017 Changemaker Award: Lexi Reed Holtum, executive director and lobbyist of the Steve Rummler Hope Network, for her work advocating on behalf of Steve’s Law and the 2015 state funding that enabled first responders to have the resources they need to implement the law. Holtum was also responsible for the creation of the network’s Overdose Prevention Program, fostering partnerships between hospitals, treatment and sober living facilities, and communities to reduce opioid overdose deaths.

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  • STRAWBERRY DAYS and PLASTIC CHINA Win Golden Tine Awards at Devour! The Food Film Fest

    [caption id="attachment_25361" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Strawberry Days, directed by Wiktor Ericsson Strawberry Days[/caption] Eight Filmmakers from around the globe have become the winners of the coveted Golden Tine Awards as the seventh edition of Devour! The Food Film Fest comes to a close in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. Strawberry Days, directed by Wiktor Ericsson, won Best Feature Drama for shining an intimate light on a part of the food industry we don’t often see up close; and Jiu-liang Wang’s Plastic China won Best Feature Documentary for tackling a massive global issue and bringing it right down to a human, in fact child size, level. Shingo Usami received the Golden Tine Award in the Best Short Drama category for Riceballs, a film built on small moments around food for a father and son. Best Short Documentary went to Patrick Bresnan for The Rabbit Hunt which follows a family on a rabbit hunt as sugar cane fields are being burned. Best Animation went to Fabio Friedli’s In a Nutshell, a clever and creative film that makes unexpected but legitimate links. Honourable mentions go to Aube Giroux for her film Modified and Kevin Kossowan for his short, Kill DayThe jurors were impressed by the way Giroux’s film wove together a political and personal story, ambitiously assembling an assortment of footage and techniques from home movies to interviews. The Devour! jury was incredibly moved by Kevin Kossowan’s Kill Day. Never has a butcher so eloquently summed up the somewhat conflicted, ongoing struggle to put ethically sourced meat on the table. Kossowan takes a topic so many people would rather look away from and brings it to life in a very poetic and poignant way. The Nourish Nova Scotia Youth Food & Film Challenge winner was also awarded at today’s brunch. Presented by CBC’s Tom Murphy, Christelinda Laureijs took home the $500.00 Nourish Nova Scotia Youth Food & Film Challenge prize to support a healthy eating initiative in their school/community for her film, Food for the Planet. Laureijs was also gifted a brand-new CBC prize, a $500 GoPro Kit. The eighth edition of Devour! will take place October 24 to 28, 2018.

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  • 2017 Directors Guild of Canada Awards – “Luk’Luk’I” Wins Discovery Award

    [caption id="attachment_25356" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Luk'Luk'I Luk’Luk’I[/caption] The 2017 Directors Guild of Canada Awards were presented last night in Toronto, and emerging filmmaker Wayne Mapeemukwa won the 2017 DGC Discovery Award for his film Luk’Luk’I. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jV1734KZvIA Bruce McDonald  won the award for Best Feature Film director for his film the Weirdos; and Fred Peabody won the award for Best Documentary Film director and Best Picture Editing for All Governments Lie: Truth, Deception and the Spirit of I.F. Stone. The Awards were presented at the annual event on Saturday, October 28, 2017, and all the presenters for the evening were all female directors working in the industry today. “Part of the DGC’s mandate is to celebrate excellence,” stated Tim Southam, National President, DGC. “And these women and men have worked together to inspire and create exceptional works. It is especially important now to showcase Canada’s successes and I am proud to work side by side with these talented filmmakers.”

    2017 Directors Guild of Canada Awards

    DGC LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Don Shebib DON HALDANE DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD Anne Sirois OUTSTANDING DIRECTORIAL ACHIEVEMENT IN FEATURE FILM Bruce McDonald – Weirdos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iXeBAw53X0 OUTSTANDING DIRECTORIAL ACHIEVEMENT IN MOVIES FOR TELEVISION AND MINI-SERIES Holly Dale – Mary Kills People OUTSTANDING DIRECTORIAL ACHIEVEMENT IN DRAMATIC SERIES Helen Shaver – Vikings OUTSTANDING DIRECTORIAL ACHIEVEMENT IN COMEDY SERIES Aleysa Young – Baroness Von Sketch Show OUTSTANDING DIRECTORIAL ACHIEVEMENT IN FAMILY SERIES Dean Bennett – Heartland ALLAN KING AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN DOCUMENTARY All Governments Lie: Truth, Deception and the Spirit of I.F. Stone – Fred Peabody https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_cKC0_sGu0 BEST PICTURE EDITING – DOCUMENTARY Jim Munro – All Governments Lie: Truth, Deception and The Spirit of I.F. Stone BEST SHORT FILM (tie) Gatekeeper Tuesday 10:08 A.M. BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – FEATURE FILM Awakening the Zodiac – Lisa Soper BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – MOVIES FOR TELEVISION AND MINI-SERIES Rob Gray – Cardinal BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – TELEVISION SERIES John Dondertman – Orphan Black, Human Raw Material BEST PICTURE EDITING – FEATURE FILM Ron Sanders/Sandy Pereira – Mean Dreams BEST PICTURE EDITING – MOVIES FOR TELEVISION AND MINI-SERIES Teresa De Luca – Cardinal BEST PICTURE EDITING – TELEVISION SERIES Donald Cassidy – Vikings – In the Uncertain Hour Before the Morning BEST SOUND EDITING – FEATURE FILM Ratchet & Clank – Nelson Ferreira, J.R. Fountain, Dashen Naidoo, John D. Smith BEST SOUND EDITING – MOVIES FOR TELEVISION AND MINI-SERIES Cardinal – Claire Dobson, Nelson Ferreira, Paul Germann, David McCallum, Jane Tattersall BEST SOUND EDITING – TELEVISION SERIES Vikings, The Last Ship – Claire Dobson, Andrew Jablonski, David McCallum, Steve Medeiros, Brennan Mercer, Dale Sheldrake, Jane Tattersall

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  • “Insecure” Star Jay Ellis Named Celebrity Ambassador of 2018 American Black Film Festival

    Jay Ellis, Insecure The 22nd American Black Film Festival (ABFF) returns to Miami, June 13 to 17, 2018 with actor Jay Ellis, star of the popular HBO series “Insecure” serving as the 2018 Celebrity Ambassador. Jay Ellis currently stars as ‘Lawrence’ on HBO’s critically-acclaimed comedy series, ”Insecure,” which follows a young African-American woman as she navigates familiar insecure situations in Los Angeles, while Lawrence, her ex-boyfriend, faces his own expectations for himself and his professional and personal success and happiness. Ellis also starred as ‘Bryce “Blue” Westbrook’ on the hit BET series, “The Game.” His additional television credits include roles on “Masters of Sex,”, “Grace and Frankie,” “How I Met Your Mother,” “Grey’s Anatomy,” and “NCIS.” On the big screen, Ellis is currently on location in Cape Town, South Africa filming “The Maze” for Sony Pictures, with producer Neal Mortiz. Ellis recently wrapped production on the indie, “A Boy. A Girl. A Dream: Love on Election Night,” with castmates Omari Hardwick and Meagan Good, directed by Qaism Basir. “It’s an honor to serve as ambassador for the 2018 American Black Film Festival. Jeff’s vision for ABFF and his continued passion to create a platform for storytellers and content creators of color has been inspiring to me and many others. I’m grateful for the opportunity to be a part of building on the mission of ABFF,” says Jay Ellis. “We are delighted to welcome Jay Ellis to the ABFF family. His commitment to new and diverse stories embodies the mission of this festival. Jay’s career trajectory exemplifies the importance of supporting and uplifting our own. We feel very fortunate to have him as our 2018 ambassador and are excited about what his participation will bring to our event,” said Jeff Friday, CEO of ABFF Ventures.

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  • 2017 Austin Film Festival Awards – IN BLUE and TRANSFORMER Win Film Jury Awards

    [caption id="attachment_25348" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Transformer  directed by Michael Del Monte Transformer[/caption] The Austin Film Festival (AFF) announced the 2017 Script Competition Winners and the Film Competition Jury Award Winners. In Blue directed by Jaap van Heusden won the award for Best Narrative Feature, and Transformer  directed by Michael Del Monte won the award for Best Documentary Feature. In “In Blue”,  a flight attendant who has successfully existed as a single independent woman for years finds herself delivering a child mid flight. This moment flips her world on its head. Transformer tells the story of former US Marine and world record weightlifter Matt Kroczaleski who was publicly outed as transgender in the summer of 2015.  The reaction was universal: her sponsors abandoned her, she was disowned by her parents, and banned from competing. Now Janae, she must find her place in society, unable to lose the muscle she once so desperately gained and living one day as an alpha male and the next day as a delicate girl.

    2017 Austin Film Festival Film Competition Jury Award Winners

    Narrative Feature: In Blue written by Jan-Willem den Bok and Jaap van Heusden Narrative Feature Honorable Mention: Boost written by Darren Curtis Documentary Feature in partnership with POV:  Transformer directed by Michael Del Monte Comedy Vanguard Feature: Don’t Talk to Irene written by Pat Mills Dark Matters Feature: Freddy/Eddy written by Tini Tüllman Narrative Short presented by ShortsTV: Demon written by Caleb Slain Narrative Student Short: Towards the Sun written by Elie Choufany and Monica Santis Documentary Short: Los Comandos directed by Joshua Bennett and Juliana Schatz Preston Animated Short: Second to None written by Vincent Gallagher Scripted Digital Series presented by Stage 13:  Cleaner Daze created by Tess Sweet and Daniel Gambelin

    2017 Austin Film Festival Script Competition Winners

    Drama Screenplay Award presented by the Writers Guild of America, East:  Brokenhearted by Caroline Hopkins Comedy Screenplay Award presented by Sony Pictures Animation: The Olympian by Troy Miller Sci-Fi Screenplay Award presented by Skybound Entertainment:  Every Horizon Beyond by Henry Tranton Enderby Entertainment Award: Apacheria by Andrew Reuland & Joey Grossfield Horror Screenplay Award: Family Photos by Chad Harris AMC One-Hour Pilot Award: Breakfield by Caitlin Schneiderhan Sitcom Pilot Award: The Big D by Jill Taylor Short Screenplay Award: Ringneck by Michael Allcock Scripted Digital Series Award presented by Stage 13: The Range by Adam Groff One-Hour Spec Award: Black Mirror: Punchbag by Steven Snell Sitcom Spec Award: You’re the Worst: Antiversary by Cara Brown Playwriting Award underwritten by Sweetwood Creative: Signature Photo by Michael Bucklin Fiction Podcast Award presented by Public Radio International: How to Build a Fire by Kat Sandler

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  • First 15 Films Revealed for 47th International Film Festival Rotterdam

    [caption id="attachment_24746" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Florida Project The Florida Project[/caption] International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) revealed the first 15 films selected for its 47th edition, among which are Sean Baker’s The Florida Project and Guillermo del Toro’sThe Shape of Water. Other selections include work by Wang Bing, Constantin Popescu and Alexey Fedorchenko. The festival will take place from January 24 to February 4, 2018. IFFR celebrates film art from all over the world and continues to present its programme in four sections, each with its own distinct character: Bright Future (including the Hivos Tiger Competition and the Tiger Competition for Short Films); Voices; Deep Focus and Perspectives. Short films are strongly represented throughout the festival. Also among the first titles are the international premieres of La fleurière by Ruben Desière (Belgium/Slovakia) and The Bottomless Bag by Rustam Khamdamov (Russia). Other festival highlights include Wang Bings Golden Leopard winning Mrs. Fang; Les garçons sauvages by French filmmaker Bertrand Mandico; Zhang Miaoyan’s Silent Mist (China/France); and the world premiere of the short film project with history in a room filled with people with funny names 4 by Korakrit Arunanondchai (USA/Thailand/South Africa/UK). The first 15 films confirmed for the 47th IFFR:

    BRIGHT FUTURE

    The Flower Shop (La fleurière), Ruben Desière, Belgium/Slovakia, international premiere The Wild Boys (Les garçons sauvages), Bertrand Mandico, France All You Can Eat Buddha, Ian Lagarde, Canada, European premiere

    VOICES

    Anna’s War, Alexey Fedorchenko, Russia, European premiere Pororoca, Constantin Popescu, Romania/France Silent Mist, Zhang Miaoyan, China/France, European premiere

    VOICES/Limelight

    The Florida Project, Sean Baker, USA The Shape of Water, Guillermo del Toro, USA

    DEEP FOCUS

    The Bottomless Bag, Rustam Khamdamov, Russia, international premiere Mrs. Fang, Wang Bing, Hong Kong/France/Germany Marquis of Wavrin, from the manor to the jungle (Marquis de Wavrin, du manoir à la jungle), Grace Winter, Luc Plantier, Belgium

    SHORT FILM

    Glimpse, Artur Zmijewski, Poland/Germany I Have Nothing to Say, Ying Liang, Taiwan/Hong Kong with history in a room filled with people with funny names 4, Korakrit Arunanondchai, USA/Thailand/South Africa/UK, world premiere

    MID-LENGTH

    The Worldly Cave, Zhou Tao, China, European premiere

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  • VIDEO: Watch Daniel McCabe’s Eye Opening Documentary THIS IS CONGO Trailer

    This is Congo Here is the powerful trailer for Daniel McCabe’s eye opening documentary This is Congo which will have its New York premiere at the upcoming DOC NYC 2017. The film had its world premiere at the 2017 Venice Film Festival and will also screen at the upcoming IDFA 2017. After living in the Congo for 7+ years, McCabe gained unprecedented access to top military officials and well-connected locals, allowing him to give a truly unfiltered look into one of the longest conflicts in the world, and the people surviving within it. This is Congo examines multiple sides of the fractious war in the Democratic Republic of Congo, following a former rebel whistle blower, a beloved frontline Commander and Mama Romance, a charismatic mineral dealer working on the black market. This is Congo is a highly-immersive, unfiltered look into one of the longest conflicts in the world. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has seen more than five million conflict-related deaths, multiple regime changes and the wholesale impoverishment of its people in the past two decades. This is Congo immerses the viewer onto the frontlines of battle with key players including a whistleblower and military commanders to provide a truly unfiltered and unique look into the conflict plaguing Congo. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4WfWODjDYAk

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  • I AM NOT A WITCH and TASTE OF CEMENT Win at 2017 Adelaide Film Festival 

    [caption id="attachment_25151" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]I AM NOT A WITCH I AM NOT A WITCH[/caption] I Am Not A Witch and documentary Taste of Cement are the top prize winning films of the 2017 Adelaide Film Festival.  The festival named Nothing Happens, the winner of the inaugural AFTRS International VR Award. The 2017 ADL Film Fest International Feature Award winner, I Am Not A Witch, is the feature debut of Zambia-born Welsh director Rungano Nyoni, and tells the tale of Shaula, a young, Zambian orphan banished from her village to a ‘witch camp.’ The Jury hailed the film as “unique and bold … surprisingly funny … a bold debut from a bright new talent.” The 2017 Flinders University International Best Documentary Award goes to Ziad Kalthoum’s Taste of Cement. The film details the tale of Syrian Construction workers who are virtually imprisoned on the site of the Beirut skyscrapers they build. It celebrated its Australian Premiere at ADL Film Fest, and was applauded by the Jury; “a poetic unfolding … we admire the filmmaker’s audacity, ambition and heart … Ziad is a director of talent.” For the 2017 GU Film House Audience Awards, as voted by the audiences, Best Feature went to Warwick Thornton’s frontier western – Sweet Country, Jill Bilcock: Dancing the Invisible scooped up Best Documentary; and Oddlands took Best Short. Inspired by real events, Sweet Country is a period western set in 1929 in the outback Northern Territory. When Aboriginal stockman Sam (Hamilton Morris) kills white station owner Harry March (Ewen Leslie) in self-defence, Sam and his wife Lizzie (Natassia Gorey-Furber) go on the run. They are pursued across the outback, through glorious but harsh desert country. With credits including Strictly Ballroom, Muriel’s Wedding, The Dish, Moulin Rouge!, Romeo + Juliet and Road to Perdition Jill Bilcock is regarded as one the world’s great film editors. Axel Grigor’s hugely entertaining documentary Jill Bilcock: Dancing the Invisible, traces Bilcock’s journey from Melbourne film student in the 1960s to working as an extra in Bollywood movies and learning her craft when Australia had virtually no feature film industry.

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  • MADE IN ILIMA, SUPERDESIGN Among Films for 9th Architecture & Design Film Festival in NYC

    [caption id="attachment_25336" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Made in Ilima Made in Ilima[/caption] The 9th Architecture & Design Film Festival returns to Cinépolis Chelsea in New York City from November 1 to November 5,  and will screen a total of 34 feature-length and short films, including films that explore the life and work of revered architects such as Glenn Murcutt, Kevin Roche and Rem Koolhaas and timely topics such as the power of design to instill positive change. Among the world premieres, attendees will get the first look at Made in Ilima, a film about a primary school and community center built in the Congo by 2017 Cooper Hewitt National Design Award winner, MASS Design. Viewers can also expect to see the U.S. premiere of Aires Mateus: Matter in Reverse, a film about the uniquely developed architectural language embodied in the work of the Portuguese architecture firm. In addition to the curated selection of films, ADFF will present a series of intimate discussions with prominent architects, designers, industry leaders and filmmakers as well as entertainment in the theater’s newly revamped lounge.

    Highlights include:

    Thursday, November 2 (6:00 PM) Van Alen Sessions: Infrastructure on Film Following the screening of the Van Alen Institute’s world premiere of Season Three of the short documentary series Van Alen Sessions, Steven Thomson, managing producer of Van Alen Sessions and programs and communications manager at the Van Alen Institute, will moderate a panel discussion on the changing narrative of cities’ infrastructures. Thursday, November 2 (6:00 PM) What to do with 520 Miles of Coastline? Following the screening of Arup’s short film Pier to Pier: Reclaiming New York’s Waterfront, Arup’s Francesca Birks will moderate a panel discussion with leading members of the city’s waterfront and public space communities including Jonathan Boulware, Executive Director of the South Street Seaport Museum, Nancy Choi, Senior Environmental Engineer at Arup, Archie Lee Coates, Executive Director, Co-Founder & Designer of + POOL and Robert Holdbrook, Planning Department Director at NYC Economic Development Corporation. Friday, November 3 (6:45 PM) REM Following the screening of REM, Cathleen McGuigan, Editor in Chief of Architectural Record, will sit in conversation with Nicolai Ouroussoff, architecture writer and critic, to discuss the intimate portrayal of world-renowned architect Rem Koolhaas. Friday, November 3 (9:00 PM) Made in Ilima The co-founders of MASS Design, Michael Murphy and Alan Ricks, will sit down with film director Thatcher Bean for a Q&A to discuss their project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo – a conservation-focused primary school and community center in the Ilima community, which remains one of the most isolated in the world. Saturday, November 4 (4:15 PM) Kevin Roche: The Quiet Architect Pritzker Prize-winning Irish-American architect Kevin Roche and director Mark Noonan will discuss the film and Roche’s lifetime of acclaimed work in a Q&A after the film screening. Sunday, November 5 (4:30 PM) SUPERDESIGN Following the screening of SUPERDESIGN, Felix Burrichter, creative director, curator, writer and founder of PIN-UP Magazine will moderate a conversation about Italian Radical Design with Evan Snyderman, owner and co-founder of R & Company and producer of SUPERDESIGN; Francesca Molteni, director of SUPERDESIGN; Franco Audrito, founder of Studio65; and Maria Cristina Didero, co-curator of SUPERDESIGN and curator of the SuperDesign exhibition at R & Company.

    The VR films include:

    This is What the Future Looked Like: A new eight-minute VR documentary created by filmmakers Sam Green and Gary Hustwit that is a rumination on the work of architect and futurist Buckminster Fuller. Inside the Biennale: A VR Series: In a collaboration with Artsy and UBS, Scenic created a series about the Venice Art Biennale.

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  • 19th Bratislava International Film Festival to Open with “REQUIEM FOR MRS. J.”

    [caption id="attachment_24376" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Requiem for Mrs. J Requiem for Mrs. J[/caption] The 19th Bratislava International Film Festival will take place from November 9 to 16, under the main theme – the art of film acting. The festival will open with Requiem for Mrs. J. (J. Rekvijem za gospođu, 2017) by the Serbian director and one of the members of the Fiction Competition jury Bojan Vuletić. This tragicomedy tells the story of an unemployed widow, meticulously preparing for her suicide. The film rests on the masterly acting performance of Mirjana Karanović. The section Cinema Now, a selection of festival hits and highly anticipated new releases, will also feature the Indian film Sexy Durga (2017), which won the Hivos Tiger Award at this year’s festival in Rotterdam. This road movie about two lovers wandering the southern Indian province of Kerala is a great improvisation as well as a fascinating reflection on the contemporary India. The Chronicles of Melanie (Melānijas hronika, 2016) tells a story unravelling during the 1940’s Soviet occupation of Latvia, inspired by true life events of the journalist Melānija Vanaga. The film directed by Viesturs Kairišs is the Latvian candidate for an Oscar. Another film featured in the section is the Slovak premiere of a new release from the all-star French director François Ozon called Double lover (L’amant double, 2017). The titillating erotic thriller toys with a secret and a blurred line between expectations and reality. A Ciambra (2017) directed by Jonas Carpignano is the Italian candidate for an Oscar as well as one of the top ten nominees for this year’s LUX Prize. The story revolves around a teenage Romani boy Pio, who must quickly become a man in order to support his family. One of the traditional festival sections Made in Slovakia presents the local and international audience with several attractive new local releases, many of them in their Slovak premiere. An anticipated documentary film, which will enter the current local film scene by its premiere at the Bratislava IFF, is a portrait of a recently late Slovak big beat icon Varga. The young director Sonya Maletzová met and started filming Marián Varga towards the end of his life. Through a sophisticated montage of archival records, the film condenses Varga’s life and career decades into musical numbers, where one track echoes in interpretations from different periods. His mortal frame visibly changes along with his musical style and temperament. However, somewhere beneath, Varga remains preciously unchanging and artistically as well as humanly consistent. Another premiere to look forward to is the final part of Jan Hřebejk’s and Petr Jarchovský’s trilogy Garden store: Suitor (Zahradnictví: Nápadník, 2017) This time, it is a story of love, exposing the quiet war between parents and their children, affected by the war and the communist coup d’état. Suitor is a bird’s-eye-view portrayal of the sharp dividing line between the pre- and post-war generations. They each have their own vision of happiness and therefore tread their own paths to reach it. The section will also present a controversial portrait of a “velvet neo-Nazi”, The White World According to Daliborek (Svět podle Daliborka, 2017), by the Czech director Vít Klusák. The film was realized partially thanks to a co-production with Slovakia, especially through a significant creative input of the composer Vladimír Godár, whose music tinted the grotesque images of Dalibor’s everyday life a with a color of human tragedy. The Made in Slovakia section will traditionally comprise a selection of films made by the students of the Film and Television Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava and the Academy of Arts in Banská Bystrica. This year the audience should not miss the internationally successful student films noticed by some of the biggest world festivals. Atlantis, 2003 (Atlantída, 2003, 2017) directed by Michal Blaško appeared in the student competition of the Cinéfondation film festival in Cannes and Magic Moments (2017) by Martina Buchelová made it to the Short Cuts competition section at the Toronto International Film Festival. The list of legendary Slovak actors currently featuring Ladislav Chudík, Mária Kráľovičová, Jozef Adamovič, Štefan Kvietik, Eva Krížiková, Ivan Palúch, Emília Vášaryová and Martin Huba, whose memorial tiles are already embedded in the Bratislava Film Walk of Fame, will include the name of yet another outstanding actress – Božidara Turzonovová. This year’s laureate of the award for lifetime artistic creation and holder of a Film Walk of Fame memorial tile will personally introduce the film Penelope (Penelopa, 1977) directed by Štefan Uher, in which she played the lead role. This year’s Lexicon section will shed some light on the specifics, history and future of acting for film, starting with the perfect acting opposites of silent slapstick comedy – Chaplin and Keaton – and ending with virtual actors in the era of 3D cinema. The section will feature two films from the silent era, The Floorwalker (1916) and One Week (1920), followed by the breakthrough A Streetcar Named Desire (1951), whose legendary lead star Marlon Brando uses the so-called method acting. The history of the Slovak cinema will be represented by the remarkable film Our Daily Life (Deň náš každodenný, 1969), interesting by the way it works with non-actors. The section’s highlight is a study of a consuming physical and psychological transformation of an actress who gradually merges with her character Kate Plays Christine (2016). The film directed by the American filmmaker Robert Greene is the winner of last year’s Special Jury Prize for the best screenplay in the category of documentary films at the Sundance Film Festival. The 19th edition of the Bratislava International Film Festival will welcome one of the most outstanding actors on the current European acting scene, Jean-Marc Barr, who has received world recognition thanks to his cooperation with the controversial Danish director Lars von Trier, especially as the star of Luc Besson’s cult film The Big Blue (Le grand bleu, 1988). In Bratislava, Jean-Marc Barr will receive the festival’s own Award for Artistic Excellence in World Cinema as well as personally introduce his latest film Grain (Bugday, 2017), directed by the renowned Turkish filmmaker Semih Kaplanoğlu and often likened to Tarkovsky’s Stalker. Another big name to attend the festival is the star of the North American independent film, the Canadian Denis Côté. The works of the 43-year-old Canadian director and former film critic with images from Eisenstein’s Ten Days that Shook the World tattooed on his back, are characteristic by their blending of fiction and documentary methods, as well as things left unsaid and secrets. The highlight of the profile section will be represented by the Slovak premiere of Côté’s latest film A Skin so Soft (Ta peau si lisse, 2017) about professional strongmen and bodybuilders. The events accompanying the main festival program will include a number of great musical evenings, thought-provoking discussions and masterclasses of this year’s main festival faces Jean-Marc Barr and Denis Côté. The theme of acting will also sound throughout the lecture of Ladislav Dedík, the founder of Studio 727 post-production company, who will talk about the issue of the digital actor, motion-capture technology and full-body scan, linked to the future of film acting in the era of computer generated and special effects films and video games.

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  • BOMB CITY, BIG SONIA and GAME Win Audience Awards at Tallgrass Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_25330" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Bomb City Bomb City[/caption] Bomb City, Big Sonia and Game wowed the audience at the 2017 Tallgrass Film Festival and were voted winners of the Audience Awards. Bomb City directed by Jameson Brooks won the Audience Award for Award Winning Feature Narrative, and Big Sonia directed by Leah Warshawski and Todd Soliday won the Audience Award for Award Winning Feature Documentary. Game directed by Jeannie Donohoe won the prize for Audience Award Winning Short . Bomb City is a crime-drama about the cultural aversion of teenage punks in a conservative Texas town and their ongoing battle with a rival, more-affluent group of jocks. The film is based on the true story of Brian Deneke. In Big Sonia, Holocaust survivor and diva, Sonia Warshawski, has just been served an eviction notice for her popular tailor shop in suburban Kansas City. Sonia’s trauma comes to the surface as she struggles with the concept of retirement. Gook, directed Justin Chon was awarded the prize for Outstanding Narrative Feature, along with Outstanding Rising Star for Simone Baker. In the film, set in 1992, two Korean-American brothers strike up an unlikely friendship with an 11-year-old African-American girl, while racial tensions build to a breaking point as the L.A. riots break out. For Ahkeem directed by Jeremy S. Levin and Landon Van Soest took the award for Outstanding Documentary Feature. After a school fight lands 17-year old Daje Shelton in a court-supervised alternative high school, she’s determined to turn things around and make a better future for herself, despite challenges both personally and in society.

    2017 Tallgrass Film Festival Award Winners

    Best Kansas & Emerging Filmmaker Awards

    Best Emerging Student Award Documentary: Yellow, Director Rowyn Mottershead Best Emerging Student Award – Narrative: Reverse, Director Andrew Kivett Best Kansas Short Film Award – Documentary: Dragtivists, Director, Savannah Rodgers Best Kansas Short Film Award -Narrative: Rabbits, Director Patrick Clement

    Golden Strands Programming Awards

    Outstanding Cinematography: Seat 25, CInematographer Joe Kaufman Outstanding Screenplay: Lucky, Screenwriters Logan Sparks & Drago Sumonja Best Editing: 20 Weeks, Editor David Hopper Outstanding Film Animation: Two Trains Runnin’ Outstanding Rising Star: Simone Baker, Gook Outstanding Male Actor: Christopher Marquette, I Hate the Man in the Basement Outstanding Female Actor: Simone Nortman, For the Birds Outstanding Ensemble Cast: Badsville, Ian McLaren, Benjamin Barrett, Tamara Duarte, Emilio Rivera, Robert Knepper Outstanding Courage in Filmmaking: City of Joy, Director, Madeleine Gavin Excellence in the Art of Filmmaking: Black Cop, Director, Cory Bowles Venus Award for the Teddie Barlow Outstanding Female Filmmaker: Skye Borgman, Forever ‘B’ Outstanding First Feature: Whose Streets?, Directors, Sabaah Folayan and Damon Davis Outstanding Documentary Short Film: Edith + Eddie, Director, Laura Checkoway Outstanding Narrative Short Film: Real Artist, Director, Cameo Wood Outstanding Documentary Feature: For Ahkeem, Directors, Jeremy S. Levin, Landon Van Soest Outstanding Narrative Feature: Gook, Director Justin Chon

    Audience Awards

    Audience Award Winning Short ($1,000 Cash Prize): GAME, Director, Jeannie Donohoe Audience Award for Award Winning Feature Documentary ($2,500 Cash Prize): BIG SONIA, Directors, Leah Warshawski, Todd Soliday Audience Award for Award Winning Feature Narrative ($2,500 Cash Prize): BOMB CITY, Director Jameson Brooks

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