Peter Schønau Fog’s drama “You Disappear” has been selected as Denmark’s official entry to the Foreign Language Film category at the 2018 Academy Awards.
The film was chosen from a shortlist of three titles that also comprised Henrik Ruben Genz’ “Word of God” and Fenar Ahmad’s “Darkland.”
Peter Schønau Fog’s drama is based on Danish writer Christian Jungersen’s bestselling novel. Mia is married to the successful headmaster Frederik who is caught embezzling from his own school. But did he do this of his own free will – or has his personality been altered by the tumour lurking in his brain? The film is a story about the challenges we face as neuroscience forces us to rethink what we are as human beings.
“You Disappear” made its international premiere at the Toronto Film Festival, where critics emphasized Trine Dyrholm and Nikolaj Lie Kaas’ “powerful” and “moving” performances as Mia and Frederik. The cast also features Mikkel Boe Følsgaard and the late Michael Nyqvist.
“You Disappear” is Schønau Fog’s second film after his critically acclaimed feature debut “The Art of Crying” (2007), which was also selected for the Toronto Film Festival.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yf4kORjB04w&t=30s-
YOU DISAPPEAR is Denmark’s Entry for 2018 Oscar Race for Best Foreign Film | TRAILER
Peter Schønau Fog’s drama “You Disappear” has been selected as Denmark’s official entry to the Foreign Language Film category at the 2018 Academy Awards.
The film was chosen from a shortlist of three titles that also comprised Henrik Ruben Genz’ “Word of God” and Fenar Ahmad’s “Darkland.”
Peter Schønau Fog’s drama is based on Danish writer Christian Jungersen’s bestselling novel. Mia is married to the successful headmaster Frederik who is caught embezzling from his own school. But did he do this of his own free will – or has his personality been altered by the tumour lurking in his brain? The film is a story about the challenges we face as neuroscience forces us to rethink what we are as human beings.
“You Disappear” made its international premiere at the Toronto Film Festival, where critics emphasized Trine Dyrholm and Nikolaj Lie Kaas’ “powerful” and “moving” performances as Mia and Frederik. The cast also features Mikkel Boe Følsgaard and the late Michael Nyqvist.
“You Disappear” is Schønau Fog’s second film after his critically acclaimed feature debut “The Art of Crying” (2007), which was also selected for the Toronto Film Festival.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yf4kORjB04w&t=30s
-
Six Documentary Films Win 2017 SFFILM Documentary Film Fund Awards
[caption id="attachment_23721" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
The Feeling of Being Watched[/caption]
SFFILM announced the six winners of the 2017 SFFILM Documentary Film Fund awards totaling $125,000, which support feature-length documentaries in postproduction.
Assia Boundaoui’s The Feeling of Being Watched, RaMell Ross’ Hale County, This Morning, This Evening, Leslie Tai’s How to Have an American Baby, Luke Lorentzen’s Midnight Family, Heaven Through the Back Door by Anna Fitch and Banker White, and A Machine to Live In by Yoni Goldstein and Meredith Zielke, were each awarded significant funding that will help push them towards completion.
The SFFILM Documentary Film Fund has an excellent track record for championing important films that have gone on to earn great acclaim. Previous DFF winners include Peter Nicks’s The Force, which won the 2017 Sundance Film Festival Directing Award for documentary and SFFILM Festival’s Bay Area Documentary Award, and will be released this fall by Kino Lorber; Peter Bratt’s Dolores, which won the 2017 SFFILM Festival Audience Award for Documentary Feature following its Sundance premiere; Jamie Meltzer’s True Conviction, which won a Special Jury Mention for Documentary Feature at the Tribeca Film Festival; and Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer, which won Sundance’s Directing Award for documentary and was nominated for the 2014 Academy Award® for Best Documentary Feature; among many others.
Since its launch in 2011, the SFFILM Documentary Film Fund has distributed nearly half a million dollars to advance new work by filmmakers nationwide. The 2017 Documentary Film Fund is made possible thanks to an expanded gift from the Jenerosity Foundation.
The panelists who reviewed the ten finalists’ submissions are Jennifer Battat, founder of the Jenerosity Foundation; Noah Cowan, SFFILM Executive Director; Caroline von Kühn, Director of Artist Development at SFFILM; Jenny Slattery, Associate Director of Foundations and Artist Development at SFFILM and independent producer Corey Tong.
“We are thrilled to support these six filmmaking teams, each of which is telling an important story with boldness and passion,” remarked the jury. “This group of projects represents a wide range of artistic visions, subjects, and approaches to nonfiction filmmaking—from the intimate portrayal of an independent woman’s last days to an arresting journey into the surreal, futuristic city of Brasilia. We very much look forward to supporting these films as they evolve, make their way into the world, and leave their imprint on audiences, fellow filmmakers, and our collective sense of what can be achieved through the documentary form.”
2017 DOCUMENTARY FILM FUND WINNERS
The Feeling of Being Watched – Assia Boundaoui, director/producer; Jessica Devaney, producer – $25,000 When a filmmaker investigates rumors of surveillance in her Arab-American neighborhood in Chicago, she uncovers one of the largest FBI terrorism probes conducted before 9/11 and reveals its enduring impact on the community. Hale County, This Morning, This Evening – RaMell Ross, director; Joslyn Barnes and Su Kim, producers – $15,000 What is the experience of coming-of-age in the Black Belt region of the US? This film presents the lives of two young men in a series of visual movements that replace narrative arc with orchestral form. Heaven Through the Back Door – Anna Fitch and Banker White, co-director/producers; Sara Dosa, producer – $20,000 Heaven Through the Backdoor is a contemplative documentary that tells the story of Yo (Yolanda Shae), a fiercely independent 88-year old woman whose unique brand of individualist feminism impacts how she chooses to live in the final years of her life. (Former SFFILM FilmHouse resident; Bay Area-based project) How to Have an American Baby – Leslie Tai, director/producer; Jillian Schultz, co-producer – $20,000 There is a city in Southern California that abounds with pregnant women from China. Told through multiple perspectives, How to Have an American Baby is a kaleidoscopic voyage behind the closed doors of the Chinese birth tourism industry. (SFFILM FilmHouse resident; SFFILM fiscally sponsored filmmaker; Bay Area-based project) A Machine to Live In – Yoni Goldstein and Meredith Zielke, co-directors; Sebastian Alvarez, producer; Andrew Benz, co-producer – $20,000 Hovering over what remains of Brazil’s modernist future, this film looks at how social control, rational design, and space-age architecture gave rise to a vast landscape of transcendental and mystical utopias. (Bay Area-based project) Midnight Family – Luke Lorentzen, director; Kellen Quinn, producer; Daniela Alatorre,and Elena Fortes, co-producers – $25,000 In Mexico City, 16-year-old Juan Ochoa struggles to legitimize his family’s unlicensed ambulance business, as corrupt police in the neighborhood begin to target this cutthroat industry.
-
Ithaca Fantastik Reveals First Wave of Films, TRAGEDY GIRLS, THE ENDLESS and More
[caption id="attachment_24718" align="aligncenter" width="1123"]
TRAGEDY GIRLS[/caption]
The 2017 Ithaca Fantastik (IF) film festival returns to Ithaca, New York, November 3 to 12, 2017; and with less than a month and a half to go, IF is revealing, its first wave of titles, and an inspired retrospective.
Returning audiences will notice an expanded schedule as the festival grows from half a week to a full nine days. The festival’s two weekends will be dedicated to the best in current genre and festival cinema, with the week between featuring classic retrospective selections.
The first weekend begins with the return of the CINEMA PUR miniseries, from Finnish action comedy SAMURAI RAUNI (Mika Ratto, Finland) to the hyper-real dark fairy tale TIGERS ARE NOT AFRAID (Issa Lopez, Mexico). Turkey and Canada are well-represented again this year, with the SXSW award-winner INFLAME (Ceylan Ozgun Ozcelik, Turkey), and the TIFF midnight madness selection THE CRESCENT (Seth A. Smith, Canada).
The lineup wouldn’t be complete without a little witchcraft – HAGAZUSSA: A Heathen’s Curse (Lukas Feigelfeld, Germany) will haunt viewers long after the screening. Rounding out CINEMA PUR, the documentary BIGHT OF THE TWIN (Hazel McCarthy, US), about the personal journey of avant-garde performance artist Genesis Breyer P-Oridge, interlaces belief and grief in a beautiful and unexpected way.
The 40th Anniversary of the Giallo masterpiece SUSPIRIA (Dario Argento, 1977) provides an excellent occasion to revisit Italian exploitation classics with fresh eyes. The festival retrospective, ITALIANO PSICHEDELICO, will focus on the amazing visuals these inspired directors put on-screen. Selections include late 60s to mid 70s Italian films SUSPIRIA (Dario Argento, 1977), AUTOPSY (Armando Crispino, 1975), LE ORME (Luigi Bazzoni, Mario Fanelli, 1975), BABA YAGA (Corrado Farina, 1973), DEADLY SWEET (Tinto Brass, 1967), as well as more titles to be announced in wave two!
Continuing the weekend lineup, the festival will feature slasher comedy TRAGEDY GIRLS (Tyler McIntyre, UK), Tribeca award winner THE ENDLESS (Benson and Moorhead, USA), Graham Skipper’s directorial debut SEQUENCE BREAK (USA), Nordic ghost tale I REMEMBER YOU (Oskar Thor Axelsson, Iceland), and a twisted take on the timeloop trope A DAY (Sun-Ho Cho, South Korea).
Ithaca Fantastik would not be complete without its midnight series, featuring the riveting zombie comedy ZOMBIOLOGY (Alan Lo, Japan) and the surprising BRAVE STORM (Junya Okabe, Japan), which can be best described as an inventive and improbable mix between Terminator and Evangelion.
2017 Ithaca Fantastik First Wave of Films
BIGHT OF THE TWIN (Ithaca Premiere) Hazel Hill McCarthy III, US BRAVE STORM (North American premiere) Junya Okabe, Japan THE CRESCENT (Ithaca Premiere) Seth A. Smith, Canada A DAY (East Coast Premiere) Sun-Ho Cho, South Korea THE ENDLESS (Ithaca Premiere) Benson and Moorhead, USA HAGAZUSSA (Ithaca Premiere) Lukas Feigelfeld, Germany INFLAME (East Coast Premiere) Ceylan Ozgun Ozcelik, Turkey I REMEMBER YOU (Ithaca Premiere) Oskar Thor Axelsson, Iceland SAMURAI RAUNI (North American Premiere) Mika Ratto, Finland SEQUENCE BREAK (Ithaca Premiere) Graham Skipper, USA TIGERS ARE NOT AFRAID (East Coast Premiere) Issa Lopez, Mexico TRAGEDY GIRLS (Ithaca Premiere) Tyler McIntyre, UK ZOMBIOLOGY: ENJOY YOURSELF TONIGHT (Ithaca Premiere) Alan Lo, Hong KongRetrospective ITALIANO PSICHEDELIKO
AUTOPSY Armando Crispino, 1975 BABA YAGA Corrado Farina, 1973 DEADLY SWEET Tinto Brass, 1967 LE ORME Luigi Bazzoni, Mario Fanelli, 1975 SUSPIRIA Dario Argento, 1977
-
MANHUNT, CUSTODY, ‘NICO, 1988’ Added to London Film Festival
[caption id="attachment_24707" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
CUSTODY (Jusqu’à la garde)[/caption]
Four new feature films MANHUNT, CUSTODY, NICO, 1988, NO STONE UNTURNED and a series of Experimenta events have been added to the lineup for the 61st BFI London Film Festival.
MANHUNT
Strand: Thrill
Dir: John Woo
MANHUNT (ZHUIBU), represents John Woo’s thrilling return to his cinematic roots, with intrepid cops, flying glass, mid-air shootouts in balletic slo-mo. Here the Hong Kong maestro moves police thriller operations to Japan, where lawyer Du Qiu (Zhang Hanyu) finds himself a murder suspect on the run from tenacious cop Yamura (Masaharu Fukuyama). A hugely enjoyable full-tilt action romp which is both a dazzling assault on the senses and strong on humor, MANHUNT sees Woo at the top of his game.
NO STONE UNTURNED
Strand: Debate
Dir/Scr: Alex Gibney.
NO STONE UNTURNED joins the Debate Strand, receiving its International Premiere at the LFF. Academy-Award winning documentarian Alex Gibney reopens the case of the unresolved 1994 Loughinisland massacre in Northern Ireland in this gripping non-fiction murder mystery. NO STONE UNTURNED is a suspenseful and profoundly effective true crime investigation that uncovers a shocking case of collusion and cover-up. Gibney’s Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God won the LFF’s Grierson Award for Best Documentary in 2012.
CUSTODY
Strand: Debate
Dir/Scr: Xavier Legrand
CUSTODY (Jusqu’à la garde), winner of the Best Director and Best First Feature prizes at the Venice Film Festival, is a taut, tense drama that confirms the promise of director Xavier Legrand’s Oscarnominated short film. Myriam (Léa Drucker) has recently left husband Antoine (Denis Ménochet) and doesn’t want her youngest, Julien, to see a father she claims is violent. But the judge rules otherwise, and the boy becomes a pawn in a bitter parental conflict. Displaying psychological precision, skilful building of suspense and an eloquent use of ambiguity, CUSTODY is frighteningly credible.
NICO, 1988
Strand: Create
Dir/Scr: Susanna Nicchiarelli.
The Festival’s Create strand grows in strength in its inaugural year with the addition of NICO, 1988, Susanna Nicchiarelli’s fascinating biopic of the iconic performer Nico. Winner of the Best Film in Orizzonti at Venice Film Festival, Susanna Nicchiarelli tells the story of the final two years in the often tragic life of the frustrated artist, exploring the destructive sides of Nico’s personality – her heroin addiction, her combative nature, her swollen ego – all brought vividly to life by Trine Dyrholm (who also recorded her own vocals for the film).
EXPERIMENTA EVENTS
A series of Artists’ Moving Image professional development and public events are announced as part of Experimenta, in partnership with LUX and supported by Arts Council England. The Experimenta events programme will open with a Symposium organised in partnership with British Council and Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media, University of Westminster, which will consider contemporary and historical artists’ film in Asia. Experimenta Salons offer audiences a chance to explore themes and concerns across different films in a relaxed and engaged atmosphere, and participating artists include Filipa César (SPELL REEL) and Narimane Mari (LE FORT DES FOUS), Anne-Marie Copestake (A BLEMISHED CODE) and Shambhavi Kaul (HIJACKED), Chen Zhou (LIFE IMITATION) and Andrea Luka Zimmerman (ERASE AND FORGET). For the Experimenta Pitch the Festival, in partnership with Film London Artists’ Moving Image Network (FLAMIN), offers 10 artist-filmmakers a chance to win the Experimenta Pitch Award of £1000 towards development costs for a new project. Each participant will present a short pitch to an international panel of leading artists’ film producers.
-
Video: Watch Trailer for Showtime Documentary GEORGE MICHAEL: FREEDOM
Here is the trailer the Showtime documentary “George Michael: Freedom.” Filmed before Michael’s untimely passing, the documentary is narrated by the singer, who was heavily involved in the making of the film that serves as his final work.
“George Michael: Freedom”, will premiere on Saturday, October 21 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Showtime.
“George Michael: Freedom” covers the span of his entire career, but concentrates on the formative period in the late Grammy(R) Award winner’s life and career, leading up to and following the making of his acclaimed, best-selling album “Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1” and his subsequent, infamous High Court battle with his record label that followed, while also becoming poignantly personal about the death of his late partner and first love, Anselmo Feleppa. Filmed before Michael’s untimely passing, the documentary is narrated by the singer, who was heavily involved in the making of the film that serves as his final work. GEORGE MICHAEL: FREEDOM features Michael’s incredible, unseen archival and private home footage, giving viewers a first-person account of this dramatic period in his life – revealing how he became one of the most influential recording artists of all time who alone fought a corner for all artists by challenging the standard recording contract helping to rewrite the rules of the music industry. He talks about why he stepped out of the limelight and turned his back on celebrity.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdzK6Iw94Kg
-
DTLA Film Festival Announces 2017 Short Film Lineup
[caption id="attachment_24691" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Dekalb Elementary[/caption]
The 2017 DTLA Film Festival will screen more than 60 short films from filmmakers around the world in 10 distinctly different programs. Local area filmmakers will be showcased in “Only In DTLA,” exclusive to films shot in downtown Los Angeles, as well as a UCLA v. USC student film face-off. Student films from around the world will have their own dedicated program.
Other shorts programs include “Wonder Women,” which highlights female filmmakers directing leading actresses, “This Modern World,” contemporary narrative international dramas and “What the Doc Ordered,” its documentary short counterpart, “LOL WTF,” an absurdist amalgamation of some of the festival circuit’s most riotous short comedies, and finally “Unusual Objects,” boundary-pushing short cinema that is experimental in form and unique in its execution.
Among the short films of particular note are Reed Van Dyk’s harrowing SXSW-prizewinner Dekalb Elementary, inspired by a real-life 911 call placed during a school shooting, French-filmmaker Jonathan Vinel’s Berlinale-feted Martin Cries, which boldly takes gameplay graphics directly from Grand Theft Auto and mutates them into a masculine, melancholy tone-poem, and finally Janizca Bravo’s surreal black-and-white comedic mind-bender Man Rots from the Head, starring Michael Cera.
“I’m always looking for something singular, something immediate, something that from within the film you can feel the violent heartbeat of an artist needing so fervently to express something. Shorts are often a surprising, invigorating form; their so-called ‘rulebooks’ are more amorphous and mysterious than their feature-length sibling. Some projects can only work as a short form, and when all the pieces synthesize, the result can be a brutal, swift gut-punch.” said Robert John Torres, senior curator for short films.
2017 DTLA FILM FESTIVAL | SHORT FORM LINEUP
MAIN COMPETITION SHORT FILMS
DEKALB ELEMENTARY USA | Narrative | 2016 | 20’ Director: Reed Van Dyk Inspired by an actual 911 call placed during a school shooting incident in Atlanta, Georgia. STUDENT UNION Hungary | Narrative | 2016 | 9’ Director: György Mór Kárpáti The return journey on a train from a freshman summer camp, where 18-year-old Dóra has just been sexually abused. Now the president of the students’ union wants to talk with her. JOHNNY USA | Narrative | 2015 | 19 min. Director: Micah Stuart A night with a troubled stranger forces a young male sex worker to confront a haunting moment from his past that he thought he’d left behind. LUNCH TIME USA | Narrative | 2017 | 15 min. Director: Alireza Ghasemi A 16-year-old girl deals with the responsibility and harsh bureaucracy of having to identify the body of her mother. CONNIE USA | Narrative | 2017 | 9 min. Director: Joel Garber Ambivalent about her pregnancy, Connie attempts to withstand the desert, her husband, and herself. An under-explored dive into the complex psychology of expectant motherhood. THE MOTH USA | Narrative | 2016 | 15 min. Director: Sam Icklow An insomniac writer gives in to the dark pull of a Berlin winter. ACROSS MY LAND USA | Narrative | 2016 | 15 min. Director: Fiona Godivier Arizona 2016, the portray of an american family at the Mexican border. An evening, as the mother is costly watching TV with her daughter, the father and his son get their rifle prepared for a patrol tour along the border wall. In their path, they will encounter others ‘minutemen’ but also illegal immigrants. NIGHT SHIFT USA | Narrative | 2017 | 16 min. Director: Marshall Taylor Tunde Adebimpe plays Olly Jeffries, an on-again off-again actor whose career has stagnated over the years and ends up gigging as a bathroom attendant in a LA nightclub, called “The Fix”. Quick easy, tax-free money to hold him over between jobs is what he told himself when he first tried it out one weekend at the suggestion of a friend, but quickly convinced himself it wasn’t so bad and found a strange solitude that agreed with him. It’s the joy he finds in being invisible, something he calls the art of disappearing. MARTIN CRIES France | Narrative | 2017 | 16 min. Director: Jonathan Vinel Imagine you wake up one day, all your friends have disappeared. The friends that should be there are gone. So you look. You look everywhere. Every hiding place, each inch of the city, all the marshes, all the rivers. You look, but cannot find them. IT’S SUPPOSED TO BE EASY USA | Narrative | 2016 | 12 min. Director: Keith Ewell A couple fights to save their relationship that has been surreptitiously driven by the paternalistic, cultural, and media driven expectations on love ingrained in us all. INVISIBLE USA | Narrative | 2017 | 4 min. Director: William Rowe A homeless mother’s world is turned upside down when she begins to vanish from reality. She sets out on a desperate race against time to find someone to help her before she is gone forever. THE BASTARD USA | Narrative | 2016 | 24 min. Director: Jeoff Hanser A man has sex with a sex doll; a year later a plastic baby shows up on his doorstep. MAN ROTS FROM THE HEAD USA | Narrative | 2016 | 16 min. Director: Janicza Bravo A door-to-door salesman (Michael Cera) runs into an odd lot on a bum route. BLUA Colombia | Documentary | 2015 | 21 min. Director: Carolina Charry Quintero Humanity and animality are enigmatically confronted and entwined. Combining rich high-contrast 16mm images with crisp digital color scenes, BLUA composes an uncanny entry into the relationship between human and animal existence. Unfolding like a tapestry, its montage complicates the relationship between observation and fiction. Reaching for equal beauty and strangeness, BLUA is an assertion of the uncanny, a cine-poetic philosophical speculation. I MADE YOU, I KILL YOU France, Romania | Documentary | 2016 | 14 min. Director: Alexandru Petru Badelita “I have always been ashamed to talk about my childhood and I think that this caused me a lot of sadness.” THE POINT SYSTEM USA | Narrative | 2016 | 9 min. Director: Conner Bell In a candid interview on raising her two young sons, a mother reveals the system by which every aspect of her children’s lives is monetized, including affection. XYLOPHONE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 9 min. Director: Jennifer Levonian When a woman impulsively steals a goat from a petting zoo, her morning routine turns into a madcap romp through her neighborhood. NYO VWETA NAFTA Portugal, Mozambique | Documentary | 2017 | 21 min. Director: Ico Costa Inhambane. Mozambique. King-Best. Samsung Galaxy. Versace. Babes. White rooster. There are no toothpicks in Norway. Coconut trees. Baobab fruits. Superfruits. Vitamine C. Passiflorine. Alpha-linolenic acid. SMS in Chinese. Megabytes. Hotel Cardoso. Coffee is a white man’s addiction. Ngadzango. My woman. Nafta. A MEDITATION USA | Narrative | 2016 | 15 min. Director: Joe Petricca A man who is a little lost finds himself connecting with a surprising woman who shows up to buy the DVR he is selling on Craigslist. LAPS USA | Narrative | 2016 | 6 min. Director: Charlotte Wells On a routine morning, a woman on a crowded New York City subway is sexually assaulted in plain sight. HOLD ON (HOUVAST) Netherlands | Narrative | 2016 | 22 min. Director: Charlotte Scott-Wilson During an important concert one of the strings of Kyra’s cello comes loose. She gets a panic attack and gets stage fright for the first time. Kyra tries everything to lose the panic attacks and be able to play again in front of an audience. FERTILE MYRTLE USA | Narrative | 2017 | 4 min. Director: Julie Orser One woman’s absurdist struggle through the uncertain and frustrating path of infertility told in cutout animation. (OUT)CASTE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 21 min. Director: Shilpi Shikha Agrawal When a manual scavenger cannot continue her work, her 11-year-old daughter picks up where the mother left off. LUCIA, BEFORE AND AFTER USA | Narrative | 2016 | 12 min. Director: Anu Valia After traveling hundreds of miles, a woman must wait another twenty-four hours before she can get an abortion. dont f with me Australia | Narrative | 2016 | 11 min. Director: Fiona Percival This film was made with over 1000 teenage girls via Facebook who shared stories about sexual assault. LETTING GO Sweden | Narrative | 2016 | 4 min. Director: Nathalie Alvarez Sanna is forced to take care of her little brother when their mother is emotionally unavailable. BEAUTIFUL FIGURE (SZEP ALAK) Hungary | Narrative | 2016 | 16 min. Director: Hajni Kis A high-school cleaning lady falls in love with one of the female students in the school. Her love is impossible from the beginning, but she still decides to show her feelings. AMERICAN PARADISE USA | Narrative | 2017 | 19 min. Director: Joe Talbot A forgotten man in Trump’s America attempts to shift his fate with the perfect crime. Inspired by true events. SHIT KIDS USA | Narrative | 2016 | 18 min. Director: Kyle Dunnigan What happens when the most self-obsessed generation in history meets boundary-less parenting? Children who feel entitled to murder their parents. It’s a Romeo and Juliet tale, if Romeo and Juliet were total assholes. VICTOR & ISOLINA USA | Documentary | 2016 | 6 min. Director: William D. Caballero In the Unique style of Hybrid animation…Living apart, Victor and Isolina (now in their 80’s) answer questions about their life-long, complex and arduous relationship, posed from behind the lens of their documentary filmmaking Grandson. An adorable, touching, poignant love story in a funny he said/she said account. I KNOW JAKE GYLLENHAAL IS GOING TO F*#@K MY GIRLFRIEND USA | Narrative | 2016 | 15 min. Director: Nino Mancuso After Sean and his girlfriend see a Jake Gyllenhaal movie and suspecting his girlfriend has a crush on the film star, Sean’s paranoia actually seems to manifest the fateful encounter with the actor. LOST DOGS (잃어버린 개) USA | Narrative | 2017 | 15 min. Director: Cullan Bruce A woman ridiculed by her family longs to escape. Striking a deal with her brother to clear his illegal debt, she delves deeper into darkness HOT WINTER: A FILM BY DICK PIERRE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 18 min. Director: Jack Henry Robbins Dr. Manly, the world’s leading Climate Scientist and Bodybuilding Champion, gets to the bottom of global warming. VHS, 1982. THE ROBBERY USA | Narrative | 2016 | 10 min. Director: Jim Cummings Crystal robs a liquor store. It goes pretty ok. GREETINGS FROM ALEPPO Netherlands | Documentary | 2017 | 17 min. Directors: Issa Touma, Floor van der Meulen and Thomas Vroege ‘Greetings From Aleppo’ reveals how little the news about Syria corresponds with the experiences of everyday life. Photographer Issa Touma keeps away from bold declarations; he films life, the inconsistencies and perseverance as they reveal themselves in front of his camera. War is tragic and absurd. Surviving is often highly surreal and touching in this war-torn city. SLEEPING WITH THE DEVIL USA | Documentary | 2016 | 23 min. Director: Alisa Yang A documentary short of based on a recorded Skype exorcism. PERFECTLY NORMAL USA | Documentary | 2016 | 12 min. Director: Joris Debeij A man who often seems lost in an imaginary world, but works hard to keep his feet on the ground, proving that one can make deliberate choices to maintain stability. GOODS Brazil | Documentary | 2017 | 15 min. Director: Carla Villa-Lobos Upon the arrival of a newcomer, six women share their experiences, desires and fears as sex workers. PEHELWANI USA, India | Documentary | 2017 | 10 min. Director: Joao Canziani The fascinating story of a group of young men that practice the ancient art of ‘pehelwan,’ or mud wrestling, at the Bhuteshwar Akhara in the town of Mathura, India. We get to witness the strict yet ultimately joyous way these men live, the tight bond they have with each other, and the reverence for the soil they wrestle upon. “THE TALK” TRUE STORIES ABOUT THE BIRDS AND THE BEES Canada | Documentary | 2016 | 9 min. Director: Alain Delannoy There are things in life you never forget. One of them, like it or not, is “The Talk”. IN THE WAKE OF GHOST SHIP USA | Documentary | 2017 | 21 min. Director: Jason Blalock Last December, Oakland’s Ghost Ship warehouse fire claimed 36 lives, the nation’s deadliest fire in over a decade. It also set off a wave of scrutiny of live/work spaces across the country. Seven miles from Ghost Ship, a legendary punk collective called Burnt Ramen is fighting back against sudden eviction.STUDENT FILMS SERIES
REST IN PEACE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 18 min. Director: Salma Amer A girl gets possessed by her father’s spirit. NOBLE CREATURES USA | Narrative | 2017 | 20 min. Director: Daniel Lafrentz Two adversarial escaped convicts – with different ideas about how to hold onto their freedom – are hunted through the Louisiana swamp by a tortured, but resolute, female corrections officer. MOTHER OF THE YEAR USA | Narrative | 2017 | 15 min. Director: Makena Costlow Sam, loving mother of two, is a hot mess. She can’t seem to handle the chaos of her daughter’s teenage rebellion and her son’s over-involved schedule. When she disappoints those who matter most to her, her mother comes to the rescue. Sliding a clear bag across the table, she introduces Sam to a drug that might solve everything. It’s powers convince Sam to volunteer herself to host the neighborhood block party. Thanks to her newly found addiction, Sam has no problem balancing her kids and her party planning. LIGHT SIGHT Iran | Narrative | 2016 | 8 min. Director: Seyed M. Tabatabaei M.E., the imprisoned character in a room is attracted to a hanging light and tries to catch it. But the room itself becomes an obstacle on his way. OPHELIA USA | Narrative | 2017 | 4 min. Director: Julia Balayan Inspired by true events, ‘Ophelia’, tells a story of a girl, whose young love meets a tragic end. Embodied by a trio of cellist, pianist and a ballerina, the video is an ode to her undying love and a tribute to her eternal memory. DEVIL WEARS A SUIT Australia | Narrative | 2017 | 20 min. Director: Eli Mak A high-concept drama/sci-fi about a Jewish boy who must decide whether to ‘cure’ his homosexuality with an injection or be ostracised from his community forever. CAMERA OBSCURA USA | Narrative | 2017 | 10 min. Director: Ashley Kroon Tessa and Vera are best friends with the shared dream of creating a final film for their high school art class that’s so sensational, it goes down in history. There’s only one problem: they don’t have a subject. Then, they meet Strange Boy.UCLA VS. USC STUDENT FILMS
BECOMING LUCY UCLAx | 10 min. Director: Luisa Novo Lucy, 15, blames her mother for her father leaving them for a 24 year-old blonde. When she finds out her crush at school likes blondes, she dyes her hair to get the attention of both men. CHANGES UCLAx | 10 min. Director: Roberto Escamilla Garduno Changes is a coming of age dramedy following the story of Mitchell, a 16 year old boy, who is taken by his friends to a shady motel to have his first sexual encounter. There she will meet Destiny, who will show him new horizons in an unexpected way. DEAD FLOWERS UCLAx | 15 min. Directors: Pablo Riquelme & Stephen R. Scott Alex is the only living son of two. He takes care of his memory damaged mother until one day their past becomes their present. SEARCHING SKIES UCLAx | 9 min. Director: Vivian Hua When a Syrian refugee family is invited to a Christian family’s house for Christmas, they are caught between opposing viewpoints — until an unexpected event occurs. STRINGS OF HOPE UCLAx | 11 min. Director: Eva Merz In 1945, a German ex-soldier has to overcome his reservations about the American troops, playing a puppet show in exchange for food for his family. FUCK USC | 6 min. Director: Nicole Danser Fuck is a bittersweet comedy that looks at the rise and fall of a couple through charting the word “Fuck” in their relationship. GEETA USC | 16 min. Director: Sohil Vaidya 16 year old Geeta has been brought to the United states as domestic worker by an Indian couple with the promises of giving her the American Dream. It is not long until Geeta slowly realizes that her financial, personal and social freedoms are slowly being stricken away from her. GOOD GIRL USC | 6 min. Director: Sade Joseph Good Girl follows Marci-Lee McKinley, an American high school student who must navigate life between her dysfunctional Jamaican Immigrant family and her predominantly-white private school. MORGAN IN MAYWOOD USC | 7 min. Director: Kevin Alexander Gallo In 1982 New Jersey, a teen boy, Morgan, has an love affair with his older manager at his part-time roller rink job. However when he discovers his manager has been keeping a secret from him, Morgan is faced with a tough decision. TECATO USC | 6 min. Director: Ronald Trejo After a run in with his AA counselor, Dom must make a decision to tell someone or not.7 ENEMY NATIONS SHORTS
SING FOR ME Iraq | Documentary | 2015 | 38 min. Director: Sama Waham ‘Sing For Me’ is a poetic documentary that contemplates the notion of belonging and inherited nostalgia, while investigating the viewpoint of fractured diasporic identities and ethnic solidarity, and meditating on Mandaeanism; a fading ancient practice that goes back to Babylonian history. A LIFE STORY Libya | Narrative | 2016 | 14 min. Director: Muhannad Lamin The story of Amen, a young man who left home and across the Sahara in order to provide for his family in militia controlled Libya. THE AUDITION Somalia | Narrative | 2015 | 4 min. Director: Zak Salad The Audition portrays the narrative of two Black Actors who go on an audition for a tv series, they are subjected to numerous negative stereotypes and various versions of racial profiling. ONE WEEK AND TWO DAYS Sudan | Narrative | 2017 | 20 min. Director: Marwa Zein The relationship of a loving couple is challenged when they were trying to conceive a baby. Big decision should be made by both in such critical times. NOT COVERED Yemen | Narrative | 2017 | 7 min. Director: Ezat Wagdi When the camera becomes a passion, a curse, and at the same time a tool for disclosing the antinomies between Yemen and the rest of the world.WEBSERIES
555 USA | Narrative | 2017 | 40 min. Director: Andrew DeYoung An anthology of eerie, luscious fables set in the cinematic underbelly of Hollywood. Watch as Kate Berlant and John Early morph into different characters that trace the border of comedy and hell. THE GAY AND WONDROUS LIFE OF CALEB GALLO USA | Narrative | 2016 | 40 min. Director: Brian Jordan Alvarez A fast-paced, fringe-meets-mainstream miniseries examining a group of young friends desperate for love. VERY ANIMATED PEOPLE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 4 min. Director: Joseph Bennet An animated series featuring comedians telling stories from their lives set to animation. OUR HAPPY APOCALYPSE USA | Narrative | 2017 | 15 min. Director: Tyler Manzo In a post-apocalyptic bay area, a group of drifters are all looking for an object of great power known only as ‘The Chest’. THE DRUNK LONELY WIVES BOOK CLUB USA | Narrative | 2016 | 19 min. Director: Mary Lou Belli When four neighbors found a ladies-only book club in 1963, friendships are formed and broken, secrets are revealed, social conventions are challenged, and juicy discussions are had — few of which have anything to do with the monthly book! THREE TREMBLING CITIES Iran | Narrative | 2016 | 8 min. Director: Arthur Vincie An intimate portrait of the inner lives and daily struggles of the immigrants that make NYC’s heart tremble with hope. FRANKIE + EMMA UK | Narrative | 2017 | 3 min. Director: Emily Seale-Jones Scatty, passionate, permanently broke, impulsive and accident-prone, the two girls lead each other in and out of a series of tight holes in which sometimes friendship and mutual support cause more problems than they solve. LIFE COACHED USA | Narrative | 2016 | 16 min. Director: Chloe Lenihan A renowned NYC Life Coach struggles to follow the advice she gives her clients on a daily basis. GOD’S 17 Australia | Narrative | 2017 | 10 min. Director: Nir Shelter God’s 17 is a web series about a community of well-meaning religious people and revolves around the group’s founders; Brother Aaron and Sister Tammy. IN ABSENTIA USA | Narrative | 2017 | 12 min. Directors: Jessica Silvetti, Ethan Kogan The series focuses on characters confronted with the absence of both the material and intangible.The series focuses on characters confronted with the absence of both the material and intangible. CTRL ALT DEL USA | Narrative | 2017 | 3 min. Directors: Margaret Katch & Roni Geva Character anthology web series set in an abortion clinic. It’s a comedy! Based on real interviews, created by women, shot by women, with an all-woman crew. CRYSTAL USA | Narrative | 2016 | 4 min. Director: Crystal Correa Crystal, newly-single workaholic, decides to avoid dealing with her breakup which ends with a sticky result. FAKERS USA | Narrative | 2017 | 7 min. Director: Ryan Mitchel Fakers is an indie web series that highlights and celebrates the absurdity of New York City. BECCA ON CALL USA | Narrative | 2016 | 15 min. Director: Jenness Rouse, Matt Draper Aspiring authoress, Becca C. Johnson, dreams of becoming the next Jane Austen of the 21st century. OHNI CASE FILES USA | Documentary | 2017 | 18 min. Director: Aimee Galicia Torres Ohni Case Files is a medical docuseries about the surgical team at Osborne Head and Neck Institute. Each episode tells a unique story about the doctors and the patients they treat. MY FRIEND D-RONE USA | Narrative | 2016 | 9 min. Director: Jack Martin A socially awkward techie’s perfectly mundane life gets flipped upside down when a sentient, sassy drone arrives in the mail. NEW MOMMIES USA | Narrative | 2017 | 9 min. Director: Matthew Mullen, Boris Undorf New Mommies explores the lives of a freshly cuckolded odd couple as they begin their quest to find “new mommies” for their beloved pets. THE FEMINIST COOKING SHOW USA | Narrative | 2017 | 1 min. Director: Lauren Keating A Food Network frame on Broad City living. POT LUCK Australia | Narrative | 2016 | 8 min. Director: Ness Simmons Three friends make a pact which turns their weekly Pot Luck dinners into a search for love. Or not. OCEAN PARKWAY USA | Narrative | 2016 | 5 min. Director: Nicole Haran Fresh from a major tragedy, a downwardly mobile family of four—five if you count New Guy, the cat—is starting over in a borrowed, temporary home. UNDERGRADS USA | Narrative | 2016 | 8 min. Director: Zoe Robyn After a summer under the thumb of their parents two best friends are ready to catch up on all the TV that they missed; however, after moving in with their least favorite people in the world they find out their goal is further away than they thought. They decide to go on a journey to get the free television they feel they deserve. DROPPING THE SOAP USA | Narrative | 2017 | 12 min. Director: Ellie Kanner Shit’s about to get real for the cast and crew of the long-running (awful) soap-opera “Collided Lives” when new Executive Producer Olivia Vanderstein (Jane Lynch) shows up to shake things up.
-
10 Asian Films Nominated for Busan International Film Festival 1st Kim Jiseok Award
[caption id="attachment_24686" align="aligncenter" width="905"]
Ash l LI Xiaofeng[/caption]
The 22nd Busan International Film Festival has selected 10 official candidates for Kim Ji-seok Award. The Busan International Film Festival newly established the ‘Kim Ji-seok Award’ to honor the late Kim Ji-seok who passed away earlier this year after devoting his life’s career to discovering young Asian directors and supporting the growth of Asian cinema.
Unlike the New Currents section introducing the first or second film of up-and-coming Asian directors, Kim Jiseok Award nominees are selected from films produced by active and skilled Asian directors. Among 10 world premiere films in A Window on Asian Cinema, the section for new films of Asian directors and most-talked films, 2 finalists will be chosen through the jury’s examination and awarded 10,000 USD each.
Kim Jiseok Award is to remember Kim Ji-seok, one of the founding members of the Busan International Film Festival and one of its first Program Directors who dedicated himself to fostering new Asian films and encouraging up-and-coming Asian directors for over 20 years, as well as a leading individual who worked hard to establish the festival identity as the hub of Asian cinema. To preserve the meaning of the Award, Kim Jiseok Award Jury consists of Asian film professionals who maintained close relationship with the late program director and contributed to the globalization of Asian cinema. Film critics Tony Rayns, Darcy Paquet and a representative Indonesian filmmaker Garin Nugroho will serve as first jurors for the Kim Jiseok Award at the 22nd Busan International Film Festival.
The 22nd Busan International Film Festival will be held from October 12, 2017 to October 21, 2017.
2017 Kim Jiseok Award Nominees (Title in Alphabetical order)
Ash l LI Xiaofeng
A medical student, a steelworker, and two murders. Two men reemerge a decade after a young police investigator fails to solve the case, one a success and one saddled with miseries. Unable to leave the past behind, the group of men head towards redemption—or damnation.
The Bold, The Corrupt And The Beautiful l YANG Ya-Che
An ambitious businesswoman who is trying to play the government and industry off each other for personal gain finds herself in trouble after an ingenious plan backfires, leading to murder, and becomes a deadly catalyst that could destroy the life and family she set out to protect.
The Carousel Never Stops Turning l Ismail BASBETH
About a man who never forgets his late wife, newlyweds at a zoo, three girls who travel across the countryside, a prostitute who contemplates her escape, a woman who seeks her mother’s murderer, two farmers who protest against the eviction done by the government, and about a car that witnesses everything.
Goodbye Kathmandu l Nabin SUBBA
Nepal’s brutal civil war wages on during the winter of 2004, three separate characters look for success, identity and love in Kathmandu during a historic upheaval. Amar returns from the US to start a business. Mangal is torn between tradition and rock music, while Robin is pressured to join the Gurkhas.
In the Shadows l Dipesh JAIN
Is Khuddoos trapped within old Delhi’s city walls, in his own mind, or both? That’s the central question in this psychological thriller, in which a lonely man obsesses over the people he watches on hidden cameras, and a boy he fears is in danger.
Malila: The Farewell Flower l Anucha BOONYAWATANA
Former lovers Shane and Pich navigate a break-up, a wife, child, death, and a terminal illness to reunite, separate and reunite in one final transcendent time. Malila is a film about healing, acceptance, guilt, forgiveness, and the ability to understand life’s uncertainties.
The Scythian Lamb l YOSHIDA Daihachi
A government-sponsored program brings six strangers to Uobuka, a small town by the sea. Tsukisue is the pleasant and efficient city official who is in charge of the program. A body is discovered after Tsukisue learns the shocking truth.
Silent Mist l ZHANG Miaoyan
Danger lurks in the fog that hovers over the winding paths of a canal town in modern-day Southern China. Mysterious incidents occur after an old man arrives. At night a rapist seeks his prey while in daylight a wealthy businessman threatens humble shopkeepers.
Smaller and Smaller Circles l Raya MARTIN
When a dead boy from a poor community is found on a trash heap, nobody cares to notice. Forensic specialist Father Gus Saenz investigates as more pre-teen bodies turn up in a Manilla dump site. Based on an award-winning Filipino novel.
Wilderness l KISHI Yoshiyuki
Shinjuku in 2021 is the wilderness, where Shinji, an abandoned child, and Clipper, from an abusive home, hone their boxing skills as a way to find their identities. Opposites except for their shared loneliness, the two ultimately make a connection in the ring.
-
First Films Revealed for 2017 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival, SAMI BLOOD, PINSKY and More

Sami Blood directed by Amanda Kernell (courtesy IFFR) The 2017 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival revealed the first announced films selected to to screen at the festival this October and will be followed with a full line-up of short films, educational events and parties at the hottest venues in downtown Santa Fe. John Sayles and Maggie Renzi will receive the Lifetime Achievement Award.
-
TASTE OF CEMENT, QUEST Among 2017 Camden International Film Festival Award Winners
[caption id="attachment_19922" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Quest[/caption]
On Sunday, September 17, the Camden International Film Festival (CIFF) hosted their annual Awards Ceremony, with the Audience Award going to Jonathan Olshefski’s QUEST.Overall the festival presented four awards for documentary features and one for a documentary short, in addition to its Points North Pitch Award.
The 2017 class of Points North Fellows includes James Sorrels and Joshua Louis Simon’s AREA 2, Eva Weber’s GHOST WIVES, Claire Sanford and Adam Pajot-Gendron’s HWANGSA, Jessica Earnshaw and Holly Meehl’s JACINTA, Hassan Fazili and Emelie Mahdavian’s MIDNIGHT TRAVELER, and Todd Chandler’s UNTITLED SAFER SCHOOLS PROJECT.
Each of these projects in development received a $1,000 cash grant from the Points North Institute. This year’s Points North Pitch Award, which included in-kind post-production services from Boston-based Modulus Studios, went to MIDNIGHT TRAVELER. During the pitch, the project was offered an additional $10,000 by the Ford Foundation’s JustFilms.
Last year, CIFF became an Academy-qualifying festival for short films, making the winner of the Camden Cartel Award for Best Short eligible to enter the Documentary Short Subject competition for the Academy. The award went to Ben Knight’s THE LAST HONEY HUNTER, with Special Jury mention going to Adam and Zack Khalil’s THE VIOLENCE OF A CIVILIZATION WITHOUT SECRETS.
For the third year, CIFF collaborated with long-time partner, Documentary Educational Resources, to present the John Marshall Award for Contemporary Ethnographic Media, awarded this year to Tala Hadid’s HOUSE IN THE FIELDS.
Jurors Iyabo Boyd (Producer), Brett Story (Filmmaker), and James N. Kienitz Wilkins (Filmmaker) awarded the 2017 Cinematic Vision Award to Martin Dicicco’s ALL THAT PASSES BY THROUGH A WINDOW THAT DOESN’T OPEN, with Special Jury Mention going to Drew Xanthopolous’s THE SENSITIVES.
The Jury stated that DiCicco’s film “stood out as an inherently political yet free-flowing and contemplative film with moments of humor and melancholia that used a classic metaphor for cinema to explore how the past is embedded, if not stuck, in the present moment. This film is unique for its autonomy in both content and technical execution — a portrait of laborers who must trust that their life work will mean something someday, and a filmmaker who spent years on an intense and often lonely journey as combined director, producer and cinematographer.”
This year’s jury of Molly O’Brien (Fork Films), Robb Moss (Filmmaker), and Jose Rodriguez (Tribeca Film Institute) awarded the 2017 Harrell Award for Best Documentary Feature to Ziad Kalthoum’s TASTE OF CEMENT, with Special Jury Mention going to Gustavo Salmerón’s LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE. The Jury stated the winning film was chosen “For its masterful use of visual metaphor, breathtaking sound design and poetic restraint in telling the chaotic story of war and its exiles.”
The 14th edition of the Camden International Film Festival will take place September 13 to 16, 2018. Submissions will open in January 2018.

Professor Marston and the Wonder Women[/caption]
I, TONYA[/caption]
Craig Gillespie’s
A Thousand Junkies[/caption]
The 9th annual DTLA Film Festival will kick off on Thursday, September 21st with the Los Angeles premiere of A Thousand Junkies, the feature film directorial debut from multi-hyphenate Tommy Swerdlow (Cool Runnings, Little Giants, and Snow Dogs), who directed and co-wrote the film and co-stars with Blake Heron and TJ Bowen, who shares a writing credit. In A Thousand Junkies features three junkies named for the actors playing them, crisscross Los Angeles in search of relief, considering increasingly reckless options in the pursuit of a score, and coming across all sorts of odd characters along the way. The film will be released theatrically by The Orchard later this year.
The Festival, taking place September 21 to 30 at L.A. LIVE, announced its feature films including all documentary and narrative feature-length films in competition. In keeping with this year’s theme – “Movies. Not walls” – the festival will host the first Enemy Nations Film Series. This series will present films from the countries labeled by immigration initiatives and Presidential tweets as homes to enemies of the state.
From The Orchard is The Work by directors Jairus Mcleary and Gethin Aldous, a powerful documentary set inside a single room in Folsom State Prison (California), which follows three level-four convicts as they participate in a four-day, innovative group therapy retreat. Rounding out the trio from The Orchard is Super Dark Times, Kevin Phillips’ harrowing, meticulously observed look at teenage age lives.
Continuing with the dark side, Most Beautiful Island explores the unforgettable and decidedly sinister day in the life of a young woman immigrant struggling to leave behind a mysterious past as she copies with life New York City. Ana Asensio directs and stars in this psychological thriller, which nabbed this year’s SXSW Film Festival’s Grand Jury Prize and will be released later this year by Samuel Goldwyn Films.
In Kasra Farahani’s Tilt, Joe is a filmmaker making a definitive documentary about the dark side of America’s post WW2 “golden age.” However, he soon finds himself falling down the rabbit hole of self-doubt and paranoia. In a similar vein Erik Nelson with A Gray State has created a chilling portrait of real-life alt right personality David Crowley as he struggles to complete his opus film project.
Adults struggling with children in their lives is at the heart of several of this year’s narrative features. In Adam Cushman’s Restraint a young married woman’s mental health begins to deteriorate as she attempts to adapt to life in suburbia with her controlling husband and his 9-year-old daughter. In Zach Brown’s Hard Surfaces (formerly Moleskin Diary) life in the fast lane for an artist-photographer suddenly grinds to a halt when he unexpectedly is left in sole custory of his 9-year-old niece.
In Jorge Xolalpa, Jr.’s Blue Line Station a high school couple have a child of their own on its way as they struggle with the best solution for an unwanted pregnancy. In Christopher J. Hansen’s Blur Circle, to be released later this year by Indie Rights, a mother desperately wants to find her missing child, even it means accepting help from a man with a shrouded past.
On the lighter side of relationships, in Jade Jenise Dixon’s Dog Park, also an Indie Rights upcoming release, it’s a canine to the rescue as a group of twenty-somethings struggle with the dating game. In Michael Ferrell’s Laura Gets A Cat, an unemployed writer considers what to do with her unexciting boyfriend while jumping into an affair with a performance artist, all fuel for your vivid imaginary life.
Striking a similar tone but in the context of a documentary, The Dating Project by Jonathan Cipiti confronts the eye-opening statistics that today in America fully half of all adults are single – a far higher percentage than with past generations. Five college-age single Millennials confront their own lack of success in finding a mate in this eye-opening look at dating in the age of social media.
The havoc wreaked by social media is reflected in two of the festival’s rom coms. In director David Tyson Lam’s Viral Beauty our protagonist simply wanted a date. She got a million subscribers, instead. Sloan Copeland’s Life Hack is a humorous but cautionary about privacy and cyber threats in the digital age. The take away? Cover your webcam.
On the other hand Gigi Gorgeous is one girl who ain’t complainin’ about the power of the world wide web. In This Is Everything: Gigi Gorgeous the life and history of the eponymous Internet superstar is explored in a poignant and inspiring documentary by Oscar-winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple (Harlan County, USA).
Could video games be a contributing factor to Millennials’ singleness? Who cares! In Jeremy Snead’s multi-episodic documentary Unlocked: The World Of Games Revealed everybody involved in all levels of video gaming from creators to players certainly seems to be having a helluva good time. Ditto, all those involved in that other counter culture revolving around music audio cassette tapes. In Zachary Taylor, Georg Petzold and Seth Smoot’s Cassette: A Documentary Mix Tape rabid mix tapes fans, including the likes of Henry Rollins, share what makes this once forgotten and now beloved blast-from-the-past so very au courant.
Yes, nostalgia for the music of the Eighties is part of the appeal of mix tapes. This same nostalgia is captured in Ellen Goldfarb’s Dare To Be Different, a look back at WLIR, the pioneering Long Island, N.Y. radio station that helped to pave the way for new wave and punk, and launch the careers of everyone from Blondie to Joan Jett. (Oh, did we mention Prince, U2 and Madonna were also heard first in the U.S. on the WLIR airwaves?)
The past meets the future in the “lost” 1938 screwball comedy set in the future of 2018 in Jamie Greenberg’s Future ’38. Confused? All will be revealed in this highly original satire that wowed the crowds at Slamdance earlier this year. Gabriel Cruz Rivas and Rodrigo Guardiola’s gaze is firmly fixed in the present in his documentary Zoe: Panoramas, an introspective look inside one of Latin America’s biggest rock bands.
The festival’s signature curated film series this year is entitled Enemy Nations, which refers to how whole nations of people suddenly became identified by the highest levels of the U.S. government as anti-American. The series presents a selection from each of these seven countries in an opportunity for you, the audience, to decide for yourself if the enemy is from beyond the borders, or within.
The series includes Shiva Sanjari’s Here The Seats Are Vacant, a stunning portrayal of Iran’s first female director, who herself became an enemy of her nation with the rise of the Islamic Revolution. Also part of the series is Avo Kaprealian’s Houses Without Doors, a documentary shot surreptitiously by director with a small camera from the balcony of his home on the Syrian front line. The camera records the dramatic changes in his neighborhood and his own family. Five short films, which will be announced later, are part of the series as well.
Forbidden Cuba is the first American feature film shot after the thawing of diplomatic relations between the island nation and the U.S. Art Jones’ picture is a cautionary tale about an American businessman who travels to Cuba to retrieve an executive gone rogue, only to have his own eyes opened to the beauty and vibrant culture of the country.
In Sea Gypsies: The Far Side Of The World filmmaker Nico Edwards sets off for his own adventure as part of a motley crew of amateurs and seasoned sailors attempting the nearly impossible and certainly risky goal of traversing the ocean between New Zealand and Patagonia by way of Antarctica in a sailboat – in the dead of winter. Yes, in the Digital Age real-life adventure is yours for the taking IF you’re willing to pursue it.
Water is also the subject of two more documentary films screening at the festival. In John Hopkins’ Bluefin, fresh from its U.S. premiere at Santa Barbara Film Festival earlier this year, the plight of a magnificent oceanic creature, which unfortunately is best known as a mainstay of sushi, is explored from different perspectives. It’s fresh water and the plight of humans in developing countries who lack it that is explored in Brian Wood’s A World Without Water. This special screening and event will be co-hosted by Los Angeles-based PH8, a NGO with international outreach.
Rounding out the festival’s feature film line-up are two documentaries about the impact of encroaching civilization on precious forest land and its wildlife. Mónica Alvarez Franco’s Cloud Forest – which boasts stunning cinematography – documents the people of a small community in Mexico who are the guardians of one of the ecosystems most at risk in country. Tony Lee’s The Cat That Changed America is about a bona fide Hollywood star. P22 is the most famous lion in America, a cougar who lives in Griffith Park, and this is his amazing story.
A final note about a late entry to the festival. VAXXED: From Cover-up to Controversy was a feature-length documentary invited to make its world premiere at last year’s Tribeca Film Festival when the screening was abruptly cancelled — the only film ever pulled from the festival’s line-up. Soon after, Robert DeNiro in his guise as Tribeca’s co-founder went on national television to proclaim he regretted his festival’s decision and urged the viewing public to go see the film, which by then had entered theatrical release. The man at the center of that film, medical researcher and author Andrew Wakefield, is also the focus of The Pathological Optimist, a biopic about the former medical doctor whose discovery of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism profoundly changed his life and challenged medical orthodoxy that all vaccines were safe for all children. In her film, which is making its Los Angeles theatrical premiere during DTLA Film Festival, director Miranda Bailey weaves a delicate portrait of a man who is both revered and vilified by millions, a full-access look at the man at the center of one of the biggest medical and media controversies of our times.
“One of the missions of our nonprofit film festival is to reflect the rich ethnic-cultural diversity and creative free spirit of DTLA and its surrounding environs. We believe our audiences will agree that this year’s line-up wholeheartedly embraces that mandate,” said Greg Ptacek, festival director.
The complete list of announced feature film presentations at the 9th DTLA Film Festival follows