• Points North Institute Announces 2017 Forum Program at Camden International Film Festival

    Points North Institute - Points North Forum The Points North Institute has unveiled the lineup for its ninth annual Points North Forum. The three-day conference program runs concurrently with the Camden International Film Festival (CIFF) from September 15 – 17, 2017 at the historic Camden Opera House, High Mountain Hall, and St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church in Camden, Maine. The Points North Forum has long been a top festival destination for filmmakers to find creative inspiration and professional development. Accessible workshops and panel discussions feature some of the documentary film industry’s most accomplished storytellers and influential decision makers. This year’s program takes a deep dive into the evolution of the documentary arts in the digital age and tackles the changing conditions for nonfiction storytellers in a politically charged media environment. Moderated discussions with attending filmmakers, artists, funders, and industry leaders will address vital contemporary topics including race in America, press freedom, the politics of the ubiquitous documentary camera, and what’s coming up for the next generation of nonfiction virtual reality experiences. Highlighted documentary craft panels include one on character-driven documentary with acclaimed director Steve James (Hoop Dreams, Abacus: Small Enough to Jail), which will be co-presented by Maine Media Workshops, and a session exploring the creative side of archival storytelling with director Sierra Pettengill (The Reagan Show), editor Nels Bangerter (Cameraperson, Let the Fire Burn) and writer/curator Eric Hynes (Museum of the Moving Image). An essential discussion of press freedom for the nonfiction community will feature Carrie Lozano (IDA Enterprise Fund), Katie Townsend (Reporters Committee on Freedom of the Press), Harlo Holmes (Freedom of the Press Foundation) and Sam Gregory (Witness). One of the Forum’s most popular and beloved events is the Points North Pitch, which is celebrating its 8th year with a new Presenting Sponsorship from Showtime Documentary Films. The pitch is part of the year-long Points North Fellowship, providing six teams of filmmakers from around the world an opportunity to work with mentors and present their feature documentary works-in-progress to a panel of influential funders, producers and broadcasters — all before a live audience at the Camden Opera House. The panel will determine one winner of the Points North Pitch and Modulus Finishing Fund, which includes an in-kind post-production package from Boston-based Modulus Studios. “Our programming is driven by the belief that documentary storytelling is more important now than ever before,” says the Institute’s Program Director Sean Flynn. “It’s a privilege to bring together such a diverse, talented and accomplished group of filmmakers and industry leaders in Camden for urgent and inspiring discussions about the role of the documentary artist today.” This year’s Forum expands to two new venues and features the addition of an invitation-only 1:1 Meetings program, connecting 25 additional filmmakers with works-in-progress to funders and industry representatives. Points North is also expanding its partnership with the LEF Foundation, organizing an invitation-only “Sustainability Roundtable” convening where funders, thought leaders and filmmakers from across New England will discuss the challenges of building a career and opportunities to collectively build a stronger documentary field. Filmmakers, students and other Points North attendees will have numerous opportunities to connect with industry delegates throughout the festival weekend — formally during masterclasses and panels, and informally during CIFF parties and receptions. The strong lineup marks the continued growth of the Points North Forum since the July 2016 launch of the Points North Institute, a parent organization for CIFF that is dedicated to serving as the launching pad for the next generation of nonfiction storytellers.

    Points North Forum

    September 15 – 17, 2017 Camden Opera House | Camden, ME  High Mountain Hall | Camden, ME Friday, September 15  10:00am – 11:30am (High Mountain Hall) From Deep in The Archives This conversation will take on the creative side of archival filmmaking — finding, understanding, and recontextualizing footage — then looking at how it succeeds, where it can falter, and how far is too far. Sierra Pettengill, archival researcher and director of THE REAGAN SHOW and Nels Bangerter, editor of CAMERAPERSON and LET THE FIRE BURN will join writer and curator Eric Hynes, none of whom are lawyers, to go beyond the question of “is this fair use?” to address archival’s emerging creative and ethical issues.
    • Sierra Pettengill (THE REAGAN SHOW)
    • Nels Bangerter (editor, CAMERAPERSON)
    • Moderated by Eric Hynes (Film Comment Magazine, Museum of the Moving Image)
    10:00am – 11:30am (Camden Opera House Tucker Room) What Do Cameras Do? Jason Fox, Editor of the new journal World Records, invites a group of CIFF filmmakers to address a seemingly straight-forward question: what do cameras do? We often assume that cameras simply represent reality. Yet, from the cameras in our pockets to the cutting edge of virtual reality technology, the choices documentarians make about the cameras they use, how to use them, and the implications of those choices have never been so varied and complex. How do the decisions these creators make inform their relationships with their subjects?  When are cameras revealing, and when are they invasive? In the age of the camera phone, is everyone a documentarian?
    • Moderated by Jason Fox (World Records, NYU)
    12:00pm – 1:30pm (High Mountain Hall) The Subject of Interrogation The motives of subjects for being interviewed do not necessarily align with those of the filmmaker’s. The central question of this panel bridges that divide: at what moment did these filmmakers realise the story they were telling was different from the one they were being told? How did they convey their vision to their subjects, and what information did they deliberately withhold? In which ways do they justify their creative and investigative methods? This session breaks open the assumption of objective and virtuous documentary truths and deliberately lays bare, as do these filmmakers, the messiness of pursuing a story beyond the headlines… and the below the facades people often wish to present. 12:00pm – 1:30pm (Camden Opera House Tucker Room) Aural Histories: Three Encounters with Documentary Sound Sound designer and artist Ernst Karel’s work is behind some of the most critically acclaimed documentaries of recent years, including MANAKAMANA and LEVIATHAN. In this masterclass, he reveals his creative process in a journey across three encounters with documentary sound — recording, listening, and editing — and the transformative potentials of each.
    • Ernst Karel (MANAKAMANA, LEVIATHAN)
    2:00pm – 3:30pm (High Mountain Hall) Whose Stories?  From Black Lives Matter to Charlottesville, the stark realities of racial violence and the enduring legacy of white supremacy have become central to America’s political discourse in recent years. This moderated conversation between Sabaah Folayan (WHOSE STREETS?) and Lee Anne Schmitt (PURGE THIS LAND) explores the role of the documentary artist in helping audiences navigate and understand this historical moment. How can both white and black filmmakers confront the traumas of racism while remaining accountable to their histories, their communities and their racial identity? And how might documentary open up new frames for discourse and spaces for healing?
    • Sabaah Folayan (WHOSE STREETS?)
    • Lee Anne Schmitt (PURGE THIS LAND)
    • Moderated by Jennifer MacArthur (Borderline Media)
    2:00pm – 3:30pm (Camden Opera House Tucker Room) Real Stories, Virtual Worlds Like other new media in their heydays, virtual reality has been greeted by both the inflated expectations of its promise as an “empathy machine” and skepticism about its viability as the “future of storytelling.” Nevertheless, the technologies that enable filmmakers, journalists and artists to tell reality-based stories in virtual worlds continue to mature each year. The groundbreaking VR creators featured in this year’s Storyforms: Remixing Reality exhibition discuss the nonfiction potentials of volumetric capture, 3D game engines, multi-sensory experience design and next generation VR platforms.
    • Carla Borras (Frontline PBS)
    • Winslow Porter (Tree VR)
    • Joseph Ellsworth (CFC Media Lab)
    5:00pm – 6:30pm (High Mountain Hall) Points North Reception presented by LEF Foundation After a busy day of panels, masterclasses and screenings, join the LEF Foundation for drinks, light fare and conversation with new friends at this annual gathering of the documentary film community.   Saturday, September 16  10:30am – 12:30pm (Camden Opera House Auditorium) Points North Pitch (presented by SHOWTIME Documentary Films) Whether you’re a film professional or not, the Points North Pitch is an invaluable chance to learn about the process of developing a documentary film and see first-hand how leading decision-makers evaluate projects. Six teams of filmmakers selected for CIFF’s Points North Fellowship will pitch their works-in-progress to a distinguished panel of funders, broadcasters, distributors and producers. Each pitch lasts exactly 7 minutes, followed by 12 minutes of critical feedback. Filmmakers will have an opportunity to win the Points North Pitch Prize and Modulus Finishing Fund, which includes an in-kind post-production package from Modulus Studios. The winner will be announced on Saturday at 5:30pm at the Dowling Walsh Reception in Rockland. This is a free, public event.
    • Daniel Chalfen (Naked Edge Films)
    • Lisa Kleiner Chanoff (Catapult Film Fund)
    • Charlotte Cook (Field of Vision)
    • Maxyne Franklin (Doc Society)
    • Tabitha Jackson (Sundance Institute)
    • Carrie Lozano (IDA Enterprise Fund)
    • Marie Nelson (PBS)
    • Molly O’Brien (Fork Films)
    • Jose Rodriguez (Tribeca Film Institute)
    • John Van Wyck (Cinereach)
    • Caroline von Kuhn (San Francisco Film Society)
    • Moderated by Brian Newman (Sub-Genre)
    1:30pm – 2:30pm (High Mountain Hall) The Verité Director: A Conversation with Steve James and Jeff Unay Presented by Maine Media Workshops Acclaimed documentary director and producer Steve James (HOOP DREAMS, THE INTERRUPTERS) has built a career on making intimate, verité films that reveal deep emotional truths about the unforgettable characters he follows. Director Jeff Unay builds on this tradition with his cinematic debut feature, THE CAGE FIGHTER. In this wide ranging discussion, the two directors explore the creative challenges of being a verité director, building deep relationships with subjects, and distilling the messiness of everyday life into a powerful character-driven story.
    • Steve James (ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL, HOOP DREAMS)
    • Jeff Unay (THE CAGE FIGHTER)
    3:00pm – 4:30pm (High Mountain Hall) Truth and Power: Free Expression for Nonfiction Storytellers Telling stories that challenge powerful institutions and figures has never been easy, but in 2017, press freedom seems to be increasingly under attack in the United States and around the world. Filmmakers, journalists and media activists face hostile political leaders, well-funded legal challenges, threats of arrest and assault, difficulty accessing public records, and digital technologies that makes it harder to protect sources and source material. Leading thinkers and advocates for investigative and activist media makers will discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by this new climate, while sharing tools, techniques and strategies that independent filmmakers can use when speaking “truth to power.”
    • Harlo Holmes (Freedom of the Press Foundation)
    • Katie Townsend (Reporters Committee on Freedom of the Press)
    • Sam Gregory (WITNESS)
    • Moderated by Carrie Lozano (IDA Enterprise Fund)
    7:30pm – 9:30pm (Steel House, Rockland) Cryptoparty! (or: The Internet Ain’t What It Used to Be) Co-presented by Steel House From all-powerful platforms to hackers and government surveillance, it’s a scary, confusing digital world out there — but we’re here to make fighting back with encryption a little more fun. Join security expert Harlo Holmes and other special guests for pizza, beer and an informal, hands-on exploration of principles and tools you can use to protect your privacy and your work in the age of digital communications.
    • Harlo Holmes, Director of Newsroom Digital Security at Freedom of the Press Foundation
    • Chelsea Barabas, Head of Social Innovation, Digital Currency Initiative at MIT Media Lab
    • Sam Gregory, Program Director, WITNESS

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  • Zurich Film Festival to Honor Andrew Garfield with Award, BREATHE to Screen as Gala Premiere

    [caption id="attachment_22908" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]BREATHE Breathe[/caption] Andrew Garfield will receive the prestigious Golden Eye Award at this year’s Zurich Film Festival, and his latest film Breathe will have its Gala Premiere at the festival on Friday, October 6th. Garfield will be in Zurich alongside actor Andy Serkis, who is making his directorial debut, and producer Jonathan Cavendish, whose parents’ story the film is based on. “Following on from his masterful performances in Hacksaw Ridge and Silence, Andrew Garfield’s powerful and enthralling turn in Breathe reinforces him as one of the true stars of his generation” stated ZFF Co-Directors Nadja Schildknecht and Karl Spoerri. “We are delighted to welcome him to Zurich and present him with our Golden Eye award at this year’s Festival.”

    Andrew Garfield

    In 2016, Garfield appeared on the big screen in Mel Gibson’s Academy Award®-nominated World War II epic, Hacksaw Ridge. Garfield’s critically acclaimed performance earned him lead actor nominations at the Academy Awards, Golden Globe Awards, Screen Actors Guild Awards and BAFTA Awards. That year Garfield also starred in Martin Scorsese’s adaptation of the literary classic Silence alongside Liam Neeson and Adam Driver. Garfield’s additional film credits include: Marc Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man and The Amazing Spider-Man 2, which combined grossed over 1.5 billion at the box-office; Ramin Bahrani’s 99 Homes opposite Michael Shannon and Laura Dern; David Fincher’s The Social Network, for which he was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor; Mark Romanek’s Never Let Me Go opposite Keira Knightley and Carey Mulligan; Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus; Spike Jonze’s robot love story I’m Here; Robert Redford’s Lions for Lambs; Julian Jarrold’s Red Riding Trilogy – 1974; and John Crowley’s Boy A, for which he earned BAFTA’s Best Actor Award in 2008. Garfield will soon be seen in A24’s modern noir crime thriller Under the Silver Lake, written and directed by David Robert Mitchell. Garfield could last be seen on stage in the UK in the National Theatre’s acclaimed production of Tony Kushner’s ‘Angels in America’ directed by Tony Award®-winning Marianne Elliott. Garfield made his Broadway debut in 2012 in the revival of Arthur Miller’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play ‘Death of a Salesman’, opposite Phillip Seymour-Hoffman and directed by Mike Nichols. His portrayal of Biff Loman earned him a Tony® nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Play.

    Breathe

    Based on the true story of Robin Cavendish, Breathe is a heart-warming and highly emotional celebration of bravery and human possibility, a love story about living every breath as though it’s your last. The film stars Andrew Garfield as Cavendish and Claire Foy as his wife Diana. From a script by twice Academy Award-nominated screenwriter William Nicholson , Andy Serkis (globally known for his performances including, War for the Planet of the Apes, Star Wars: The Force Awakens) delivers a hugely impressive directorial debut with this inspirational true story of love without limits. Adventurous and charismatic, Robin Cavendish has his whole life ahead of him when he is paralysed by polio whilst in Africa and given just months to live. Against all advice, Robin’s wife Diana brings him home from hospital where her devotion and witty determination inspire him to lead a long and fulfilled life. Together they refuse to be limited by expectations, dazzling others with their humour, courage and lust for life. The film’s supporting cast members include Hugh Bonneville (Paddington) and Tom Hollander (The Night Manager) as Robin’s devoted, long-time friends. Stephen Mangan (Rush) and acting legend Dame Diana Rigg (Game of Thrones, the original The Avengers) complete the cast, with a soundtrack by the acclaimed composer Nitin Sawhney.

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  • 2017 New York Film Festival Announces Special Events, Docs on Steven Spielberg, Bob Dylan + Shorts

    [caption id="attachment_24179" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]A Gentle Creature Dir. Sergei Loznitsa, A Gentle Creature (Sergei Loznitsa)[/caption] The 55th New York Film Festival taking place September 28 – October 15, today added a new Retrospective title and announced the Special Events section and Main Slate shorts. Special Events will feature the world premieres of three major documentaries: Susan Lacy’s Spielberg, which chronicles the cinema titan’s remarkable career and screens with the director and subject in person; Jennifer Lebeau’s Trouble No More, a concert film that punctuates rare, recently rediscovered footage from Bob Dylan’s ’79-’80 tour with a beautiful performance by Michael Shannon; and Susan Froemke’s The Opera House, a history of the Metropolitan Opera and a love letter to the art form that will have a special screening in the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center. Claude Lanzmann returns to NYFF with the World Premiere of his four-film series Four Sisters, created from interviews conducted in the 1970s with four Eastern European women who impossibly survived the Holocaust. Additional highlights include a new restoration of G.W. Pabst’s silent magnum opus Pandora’s Box, screening with the world premiere of a new orchestral score by Jonathan Ragonese performed live; Rory Kennedy’s Without a Net, an examination of the many technologically underserved schools across the country; and two talks with luminaries from this year’s festival—a far-ranging conversation with Kate Winslet about her career and her unforgettable performance in this year’s Closing Night selection, Woody Allen’s Wonder Wheel, and a Master Class with Vittorio Storaro and Ed Lachman, the brilliant cinematographers behind the Closing and Centerpiece films. The fifth annual Film Comment Presents selection is the U.S. premiere of 2017 Cannes competition selection A Gentle Creature, an incisive, tragicomic vision of today’s Russia directed by Sergei Loznitsa and inspired by a Dostoevsky short story. In previous years, Film Comment has championed films such as Terence Davies’s A Quiet Passion, Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave, and László Nemes’s Son of Saul. The magazine will also host three live events: a roundtable discussion with festival filmmakers about their experiences as movie lovers and creators, a dialogue on the representation of race and immigration in cinema history, and a critical wrap report of the festival’s highs and lows. All three will also be recorded for the weekly Film Comment Podcast. The festival also showcases 24 short films across four programs as part of the NYFF Main Slate. Highlights include Qiu Yang’s A Gentle Night, winner of the Short Film Palme d’Or at Cannes this year; new work by returning filmmakers Jason Giampietro, John Wilson, Riccardo Giacconi, and Pacho Velez; and world premieres of Ashley Connor & Joe Stankus’s The Layover, Adinah Dancyger’s Cheer Up Baby, Gabriel de Urioste’s Program, Damien Power’s Hitchhiker, and Wilson’s The Road to Magnasanti. Finally, the New York Film Festival announced a late addition to the Retrospective honoring Robert Mitchum’s centenary: Bruce Weber’s Nice Girls Don’t Stay for Breakfast, a work-in-progress portrait of Mitchum the man, a flawed soul and true artist, which Weber began shooting more than twenty years ago.

    FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS

    A Conversation with Kate Winslet For more than twenty years, Kate Winslet has proven herself one of the most expressive actors in movies, from her astonishing breakouts in Heavenly Creatures (1994), Sense and Sensibility (1995), and Titanic (1997), to the increasingly internalized characterizations of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), Revolutionary Road (2008), The Reader (2008), for which she won an Oscar, and Steve Jobs(2015), a NYFF centerpiece. This year, Winslet stars in the NYFF festival closer, Wonder Wheel, directed by Woody Allen, and her blistering, unpredictable, vanity-free performance is destined to be remembered as one of her greatest. Join Kate Winslet in a special live onstage event in which she talks about this latest role, and her career in general. Claude Lanzmann’s Four Sisters The Hippocratic Oath (France, 2017, 89m) Baluty (France, 2017, 64m) The Merry Flea (France, 2017, 52m) Noah’s Ark (France, 2017, 68m) World Premiere Since 1999, Claude Lanzmann has made several films that could be considered satellites of Shoah, comprised of interviews conducted in the 1970s that didn’t make it into the final, monumental work. He has just completed a series of four new films, built around four women from four different areas of Eastern Europe with four different destinies, each finding herself unexpectedly and improbably alive after war’s end: Ruth Elias from Ostravia, Czechoslovakia; Paula Biren from Lodz, Poland; Ada Lichtman from further south in Krakow; and Hannah Marton from Cluj, or Kolozsvár, in Transylvania. “What they have in common,” wrote Lanzmann, “apart from the specific horrors each one of them was subjected to, is their intelligence, an incisive, sharp and carnal intelligence that rejects all pretence and false reasons—in a word—idealism.” What is so remarkable about Lanzmann’s films is the way that they stay within the immediate present tense, where the absolute horror of the shoah is always happening. The Opera House Dir. Susan Froemke, USA, 2017, 108m World Premiere Renowned documentarian Susan Froemke takes viewers through the history of the Metropolitan Opera via priceless archival stills, footage, and interviews (with, among many others, the great soprano Leontyne Price). The film follows the development of the glorious institution from its beginnings at the old opera house on 39th Street to the storied reign of Rudolph Bing to the long-gestating move to Lincoln Center, the construction of which traces a fascinating byway through the era of urban renewal and Robert Moses’s transformation of New York. Most of all, though, this is a film about the love for and devotion to the preservation of an art form, and the upkeep of a home where it can live and thrive. This screening will take place at the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center. Pandora’s Box Dir. G.W. Pabst, Germany, 1929, 143m Pabst’s immortal film version of the Frank Wedekind play gave us one of the most enduring presences in cinema. “Is the movie’s resident Pandora, Louise Brooks, inside the character of Lulu or is Lulu inside her?” wrote J. Hoberman in The Village Voice. As Brooks herself put it to Kenneth Tynan, “It was clever of Pabst to know even before he met me that I possessed the tramp essence of Lulu.” Lulu, in Hoberman’s words, was a “new kind of femme fatale—generous, manipulative, heedless, blank, democratic in her affections, ambiguous in her sexuality.” She has inspired countless helmet-haired imitators, but she still reigns supreme. Featuring the world premiere of a new orchestral score composed and conducted by Jonathan Ragonese. A Janus Films release. DCP courtesy of the Deutsche Kinemathek from the restoration based on elements contributed by the Cinémathèque Française, Gosfilmofond and the Národní Filmový Archiv in Prague undertaken at Cineteca di Bologna. The work was helmed by the George Eastman House and Big Sound with funding provided by Hugh M. Hefner. This evening is generously supported by Ira Resnick. Spielberg Dir. Susan Lacy, USA, 2017, 147m World Premiere Susan Lacy’s new film traces the private, public, and artistic development of one of cinema’s true giants, from his early love of moviemaking as a kid growing up in all-American suburbia, through his sudden rise to superstardom with Jaws, to his establishment of a film-and-TV empire with DreamWorks and beyond. All along the way, Spielberg has approached every new film as if it were his first. Featuring interviews with friends and contemporaries in the “New Hollywood” (Francis Coppola, Brian De Palma, George Lucas, Martin Scorsese); key artistic collaborators (including Tom Hanks, John Williams, longtime DP Janusz Kamiński); and, the film’s most touching presences, Spielberg’s beloved sisters and parents, Arnold and Leah. An HBO Documentary Film. Trouble No More Dir. Jennifer Lebeau, USA, 2017, 59m World Premiere Like every other episode in the life of Bob Dylan, the “born again” period that supposedly began with the release of Slow Train Coming (1979) and supposedly ended with Shot of Love (1981) has been endlessly scrutinized in the press. Less attention has been paid to the magnificent music he made. This very special film consists of truly electrifying video footagemuch of it thought to have been lost for years and all newly restored, shot at shows in Toronto and Buffalo on the last leg of the ’79-’80 tour (with an amazing band: Muscle Shoals veteran Spooner Oldham and Terry Young on keyboards, Little Feat’s Fred Tackett on guitar, Tim Drummond on bass, the legendary Jim Keltner on drums and Clydie King, Gwen Evans, Mona Lisa Young, Regina McCrary and Mary Elizabeth Bridges on vocals) interspersed with sermons written by Luc Sante and beautifully delivered by Michael Shannon. More than just a record of some concerts, Trouble No More is a total experience. Master Class: Vittorio Storaro and Ed Lachman The cinematographers behind two of this year’s true visual wonders—titled, appropriately, Wonderstruck and Wonder Wheel—sit down with NYFF Director Kent Jones for a conversation about the craft of cinematography and their own astonishing careers in particular. Vittorio Storaro, who has had lengthy creative partnerships with Bernardo Bertolucci, Francis Coppola, and Carlos Saura, has now worked with Woody Allen to create one of his greatest aesthetic achievements; Ed Lachman, who has worked extensively with many filmmakers from Wim Wenders to Steven Soderbergh, is now perhaps best known for his collaboration with Todd Haynes, with whom he has created a remarkable movie set in two wholly distinct lost worlds: New York in the twenties and the seventies. Without a Net Dir. Rory Kennedy, USA, 2017, 56m Many of us assume that the world, or at least the country, is now fully connected, but throughout American classrooms there exists a digital divide. In a shockingly large number of schools, access to technology, connectivity, and teacher-training is nonexistent. Many of those underserved schools are located just a few miles from fully equipped schools with technologically adept teachers in better funded districts. This new film from Rory Kennedy, in which we see the situation through the eyes of students, educators, policy experts, and advocates across the country, clearly lays out the steps we must take a to bring our public education system into the 21st century. Verizon, a producer of the film, has over the last five years, committed more than $160 million to help close the digital divide. FILM COMMENT AT NYFF EVENTS Film Comment Presents: A Gentle Creature Dir. Sergei Loznitsa, France/Germany/Lithuania/The Netherlands, 2017, 143m North American Premiere This tragicomic pageant by Sergei Loznitsa (My Joy, NYFF48) brings a roiling energy and a lunatic sense of desperation to its larger-than-life vision of today’s Russia. Inspired by a Dostoevsky short story, A Gentle Creature follows an unnamed woman (Vasilina Makovtseva) moving through a prison town underworld after attempting to visit her incarcerated husband. Loznitsa uses the town as a microcosm for a country where corruption and authority are so intertwined as to be indistinguishable. A Gentle Creature brings its own genius to a Russian tradition of social panoramas, and as the film takes a turn into the carnivalesque and the infernal, it gets at the deeply troubled slumber of a beleaguered country. Film Comment Live: The Cinema of Experience At this year’s NYFF, filmmakers are rising to the challenge of representing race and immigration at a pivotal time in our nation’s history. Our guests will discuss how cinematic technique is used to reflect such experiences and what is different about the latest generation of storytelling. Filmmakers Chat For the second year, Film Comment gives you the rare chance to see some of today’s most important filmmakers in dialogue with each other. A selection of directors whose films are screening at this edition of NYFF will talk together in a discussion moderated by Film Comment editor-in-chief Nicolas Rapold. Festival Wrap In what is becoming an annual tradition, Film Comment contributing critics and editors gather for the festival’s last weekend and talk about the films they’ve seen, discussing—or arguing about—the selections in the lineup, from Main Slate and beyond. RETROSPECTIVE – JUST ADDED Nice Girls Don’t Stay for Breakfast Bruce Weber, 2017, USA In the late 1990s, the great photographer and filmmaker Bruce Weber managed to convince Robert Mitchum to appear before his camera for a filmed portrait. Weber shot Mitchum in 35mm black and white, hanging with friends and cronies in restaurants and hotel rooms and singing before a microphone in a studio recording standards for a projected album. When Mitchum passed away in 1997, Weber parked his beloved project and it was some time before he went back into his footage. Nice Girls Don’t Stay for Breakfast (a great title, from a Julie London song), still a work in progress, is a beautifully textured full-throttle portrait of a man who came from—and for many was the very embodiment of—a bygone era, speaking and enacting its prejudices, its longings, and its charms. He was also a great artist with the sensibility of a poet, as you’ll see.

    SHORTS

    Shorts Program 1: Narrative Showcasing both established and emerging filmmakers, this program features six unique films from around the world. TRT: 84m Programmed by Gabi Madsen Hedgehog’s Home Eva Cvijanović, Canada/Croatia, 2017, 10m In this stop-motion tale, a hedgehog’s love of his humble abode perplexes his predators, who deliver their dialogue in rhyming couplets. New York Premiere All Over the Place Mariana SanguinettiArgentina, 2017, 10m While moving out of the apartment she shared with her ex-boyfriend, Jimena reflects on closure and the future in a stream-of-consciousness message on his answering machine. North American Premiere A Gentle Night Qiu Yang, China, 2017, 15m When their 13-year-old daughter disappears on her way home from school, a couple’s feelings of helplessness conflict with their desire to act. New York Premiere Douggy Matvey Fiks, USA/Russia, 2017, 19m Tow-truck driver Douggy’s mind is on a series of unanswered phone calls as he goes through the motions of his last two night shifts. Fiks renders his routine’s quietude and rusty infrastructure in warm 16mm grain. North American Premiere Scaffold Kazik Radwanski, Canada, 2017, 15m Filmed in fragmentary close-up, Scaffold stitches together the conversations, interactions, and people-watching that make up the daily grind for two Bosnian-Canadian construction workers. U.S. Premiere Bonboné Rakan Mayasi, Palestine/Lebanon, 2017, 15m A Palestinian man serves time in an Israeli jail, but he and his wife still hope to conceive a child. With the help of a bonbon wrapper, the couple overcomes physical obstacles in a race against the clock. U.S. Premiere Shorts Program 2: Genre Stories This is the third annual edition of a program focusing on the best in new horror, thriller, sci-fi, pitch-black comedy, twisted noir, and fantasy shorts from around the world. TRT: 92m Programmed by Laura Kern Creswick Natalie James, Australia, 2016, 10m As a woman helps her dad pack up his home, it becomes apparent that it may be inhabited by more than just memories. New York Premiere The Last Light Angelita Mendoza, USA/Mexico, 2017, 11m Spanish with English subtitles The innocence and the developing evils of youth collide when two children’s paths cross in an abandoned house. New York Premiere Birthday Alberto Viavattene, Italy, 2017, 15m A corrupt young nurse messes with the wrong patient on the day she turns 100. U.S. Premiere Program Gabriel de Urioste, USA, 2017, 8m In the Digital Age, finding real love is more challenging—and glitchier—than ever. World Premiere Hombre Juan Pablo Arias Muñoz, Chile, 2017, 21m Spanish with English subtitles While on a hunting trip with his father, a teenage boy must contend with multiple monsters. North American Premiere Drip Drop Jonna Nilsson, Sweden, 2016, 7m Alone one night, a woman is terrorized by water that manifests itself in unusual ways. New York Premiere Hitchhiker Damien Power, Australia, 2015, 20m Right before brilliantly deconstructing camping films in Killing Ground, its director made this noirish homage to road movies. World Premiere Shorts Program 3: New York Stories This program, now in its third year, showcases work from some of the most exciting filmmakers living and working in New York today, including established names and ones to watch. TRT: 79m Programmed by Dan Sullivan Unpresidented Jason Giampietro, USA, 2017, 14m Giampietro confronts our uncertain political moment head-on with this dark comedy, in which a man attempts to justify his having bet on Trump to win the 2016 presidential election. New York Premiere Cheer Up Baby Adinah Dancyger, USA, 2017, 12m The experience of a young woman (India Menuez) who has been sexually assaulted by a stranger on the subway is rendered with psychological menace and sensory dislocation in Dancyger’s elliptical tale. World Premiere The Layover Ashley Connor & Joe Stankus, USA, 2017, 10m This subtle, funny miniature offers a tender glimpse at the shared life of two flight attendants as they observe the one-year anniversary of their beloved dog’s passing. World Premiere My Nephew Emmett Kevin Wilson, Jr., USA, 2017, 19m This visually ravishing and thought-provoking work portrays one of the USA’s great shames—the 1955 murder of 14-year-old Emmett Till by two white men in Mississippi—and movingly reminds us of this dark episode’s enduring relevance. New York Premiere The Road to Magnasanti John Wilson, USA, 2017, 15m Wilson welcomes us to the terrordome with his latest, in which he hilariously and chillingly illustrates NYC’s not-so-gradual transformation into a late-capitalist paradise-cum-dystopia. World Premiere Mr. Yellow Sweatshirt Pacho Velez & Yoni Brook, USA, 2017, 9m A man’s inability to get a subway turnstile to accept his Metrocard encapsulates NYC’s ongoing public transit crisis in Velez and Brook’s elegant and formally audacious documentary. New York Premiere Shorts Program 4: Documentary For its second year, NYFF showcases films from around the world that capture the versatility and depth of short nonfiction. TRT: 90mProgrammed by Tyler Wilson Cucli Xavier Marrades, Spain, 2017, 17m A widowed truck driver considers the nature of his companionship with a dove in this ethereal, moving work about loss and renewal. New York Premiere The Brick House Eliane Esther Bots, Netherlands, 2016, 16m With meticulous detail, Bots sensuously captures the placid movements and sounds of two friends inside a Dutch apartment as they share memories—both pleasant and harrowing—of their childhood in Tanzania. North American Premiere The True Tales / Les histoires vraies Lucien Monot, Switzerland, 2017, 22m Shooting on 16mm, Monot constructs a buoyant ode to his father, who wanders in and out of scripted scenarios that deconstruct his personal history while refracting his family’s unspoken loss. U.S. Premiere Two / Due Riccardo Giacconi, France/Italy, 2017, 16m Giacconi’s schematic, almost surreal essay film maps the development of a utopian residential neighborhood planned by Silvio Berlusconi in the seventies, and offers a representation of the not-yet prime minister’s lasting impact on Italian culture. North American Premiere The Disinherited / Los Desheredados Laura Ferrés, Spain, 2017, 19m In this funny and tender portrait that deftly blurs documentary and fiction, Ferrés’s father reluctantly endures the demise of his family business while trying to retain his dignity. North American Premiere

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  • 2017 imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival Announces Film + Video Line-Up of 115 Features + Shorts by Indigenous Artists

    [caption id="attachment_24175" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Out of State (d. Ciara Lacy) Out of State (d. Ciara Lacy)[/caption] The 2017 imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival will present over 100 feature films, documentaries, shorts, and music videos created by Indigenous filmmakers with almost three quarters of the films (72%) made by Indigenous female directors. The festival will include Our People Will Be Healed, the 50th documentary in 50 years from revered filmmaker, Alanis Obomsawin, keeping on the subject of her last four films: children’s rights. Our People Will Be Healed focuses on the Cree community of Norway House, Manitoba, and their innovative approach to educating First Nations students. Documentary features receiving their world premieres at imagineNATIVE include Indictment: The Crimes of Shelly Chartier (d. Shane Belcourt, Lisa Jackson) that peels back the layers of the truecrime story revolving around a captivating reclusive woman from a small northern Manitoba reserve whose catfishing of an NBA superstar made international headlines; and Glwa: Resurgence of the Ocean-Going Canoe (d. Hillary Beattie, Vina Brown) that tells the story of Tribal Canoe Journeys – a decades old gathering on the Northwest Pacific coast. imagineNATIVE will present additional feature length documentaries including the Canadian premiere of Out of State (d. Ciara Lacy) following two Indigenous Hawaiian inmates incarcerated in Arizona; the North American premiere of Rio Verde. El Tiempo de los Yakurunas (d. Alvaro Sarmiento, Diego Sarmiento) which explores the perception of time in three small villages intertwined by the Amazon river; the international premiere of MANKILLER (d. Valerie Red-Horse Mohl) examining the legacy of the formidable Wilma Mankiller, who overcame rampant sexism to emerge as the Cherokee Nation’s first female Principal Chief; and Birth of a Family (d. Tasha Hubbard) about three sisters and a brother separated at birth reconnecting for the first time. imagineNATIVE will also present the world premieres of two dramatic features including Juliana & the Medicine Fish (d. Jeremy Torrie) which follows the story of 12-year old Juliana as she’s forced to repair an awkward relationship with her father (Adam Beach) following her mother’s death; and Kayaking for Beginners (d. Zoe Hopkins) where 14-year old Ella is determined to travel the length of the Inside Passage to testify against a proposed pipeline that would see oil tanker traffic through her beloved homeland waters. imagineNATIVE will also present Sweet Country, from director Warwick Thornton and starring Hamilton Morris and Sam Neill in a period western set on the Northern Territory frontier where justice itself is put on trial. imagineNATIVE will also screen a number of short film programmes with ten varied themes including the anticipated return of The Witching Hour, the annual midnight horror/comedy series; Receptors, a series of experimental, dramatic, and documentary shorts; Ambient Light, shedding a light on the polar region with five shorts from Sweden, Greenland and North America; and Channel 51 Igloolik, celebrating 30 years of Inuit video art with a world premiere screening of Bowhead Whale Hunt by Carol Kunnuk and Zacharias Kunuk – the first episode from the seven-part television series, Hunting with my Ancestors. The 18th Annual imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival will take place October 18 to 22, 2017 in Toronto, Canada.

    imagineNATIVE 2017 Programmed Film + Video

    • ᎤᎧᏖᎾ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏴᏓᏆᎶᏍᎩ (Uktena and Thunder), d. Joseph Erb
    • 2 Spirit Dreamcatcher Dot Com, d. Thirza Cuthand
    • A Prayer for the Lost, d. Natasha Francis
    • Amásání (The Grandma), d.  Stacy Howard
    • Anna Marina, d. Trevor Mack
    • Aqtuqsi (My Nightmare), d. Mary Kunuk
    • Atte munnje sáni saji  (Just Give Me the Word), d.  Sara Margrethe Oskal
    • Bayline, d. JJ Neepin
    • Believer, d.  Migizi Pensoneau
    • Birth of a Family, d. Tasha Hubbard
    • Blight, d. Perun Bonser
    • “Bowhead Whale Hunt” Hunting with My Ancestors, d. Carol Kunnuk, Zacharias Kunuk
    • Braids, d. Cole Stevens-Goulais
    • Brown Lips, d. Nakkiah Lui
    • Bzindan (Harmony), d. Nadia McLaren
    • CALVING (CAPS), d. Nathan Adler
    • Captivity Narrative, d. Jason Asenap
    • CARRY THE FLAG, d. Danielle MacLean
    • Creatura Dada, d. Caroline Monnet
    • Cry Wolf, d. Dianne Ouellette
    • Dear Hatetts, d. Kerry Barber
    • Demons, d. Morningstar Derosier
    • Dislocation Blues, d. Sky Hopinka
    • Empire State, d. Govind Deecee, Terry Jones
    • Experiments in Light, d. Jaene Castrillon
    • Flat Rocks, d. Courtney Montour
    • Fox in the Box, d. Travis Shilling
    • From Up North, d. Trudy Stewart
    • Glwa: Resurgence of the Ocean-Going Canoe, d. Hillary Beattie, Vina Brown
    • Gos leat don? (Where Are You?), d. Egil Pedersen
    • Guolli (Fish), d. Jouni West
    • Holy Angels, d. Jay Cardinal Villeneuve
    • I Will Always Love You Kingen, d. Amanda Kernell
    • In Moment, d. Samay Arcentales Cajas
    • Indictment: The Crimes of Shelly Chartier, d. Shane Belcourt, Lisa Jackson
    • Inuk Hunter, d. George Annanack
    • Issaituq (Waterproof), d. Bruce Haulli
    • J’aime les filles (I Like Girls), d. Diane Obomsawin
    • Juliana & The Medicine Fish, d. Jeremy Torrie
    • Just One Word, d. Jani Lauzon
    • Juuret On (Under Two Skies), d. Anssi Kömi, Suvi West
    • Ka Puta Ko Au, d. Amie Batalibasi, Renae Maihi, Kelton Stepanowich
    • Kat Waj, d. Teresa Jiménez
    • Kayaking For Beginners, d. Zoe Hopkins
    • Kchi-Nendizan (Big Pride), d. Lena Recollet, Miles Turner
    • Keepers for the Old People, d. Michael Keshane
    • Keeping the Legends at Heart, d.
    • KEEWAYDAH (Let’s Go Home), d. Terril Calder
    • Kéwku, d. Sean Stiller
    • Kia Tau (Be at Rest), d. Michelle Latimer, Chris Malloy, Yamin Tun
    • Last Drinks at Frida’s, d. Bjorn Stewart
    • Laundry, d. Becs Arahanga
    • Lelum’ (Home), d. Asia Youngman
    • MANKILLER, d. Valerie Red-Horse Mohl
    • MARIA, d. Jeremiah Tauamiti
    • Meke, d. Tim Worrall
    • Metal Road, d. Sarah Del Seronde
    • Mikinakay: Trail of the Turtle, d. Erica Daniels
    • Morit Elena Morit, d. Inga-Wiktoria Påve
    • My Father’s Tools, d. Heather Condo
    • MY SOUL REMAINER, d. Nanobah Becker
    • NATALIE, d. Qianna Titore
    • NDNs on the Airwaves, d. Jackson 2Bears
    • Nieiddaš ja guollečikŋa (Girl with a Fish Necklace), d. Egil Pedersen
    • No Reservations, d. Trevor Carroll
    • North of South, d. Francisco Huichaquo, Casey Koyczan, Alejandro Valbuena
    • Nutag-Homeland, d. Alisi Telengut
    • Nuuca (Take), d. Michelle Latimer
    • Occupation Of Memory, d. Jade Baxter
    • Ôtênaw, d. Conor McNally
    • Our People will be Healed, d. Alanis Obomsawin
    • Our Protection For Our Future Generations, d. Bella Brown, Trinity Hunt, Nathanial Mason-Brown
    • Out of State, d. Ciara Lacy
    • PaPa, d. Ryan Alexander Lloyd
    • People of the Pines, d. Shane Ghostkeeper, Joshua Whitford
    • Possum, d. Dave Whitehead
    • Qulliq (Oil Lamp), d. Susan Avingaq, Marie-Helene Cousineau, Madeline Ivalu
    • Rae, d. Kawennáhere Devery Jacobs
    • Raven, d. Razelle Benally
    • Ravggon – Goaikkanasat, d. Henry Kestilä
    • Red Card World: The Tree, d. Cara Mumford
    • Riiji Carver, d. Kimberley West
    • Rio Verde. El tiempo de los Yakurunas (Green River. The Time of the Yakurunas), d. Alvaro Sarmiento, Diego Sarmiento
    • ROTO (The Lake Within), d. Louise Potiki Bryant
    • Shaman, d. Echo Henoche
    • Slincraze – Stállu, d. Egil Pedersen
    • Snaglines, d. Howard Adler, Charlotte Hoelke
    • Snow, d. Nivi Pederse
    • STACK, d. Dana Claxton
    • Sunday Fun Day, d. Dianna Fuemana
    • Sweet Country, d. Warwick Thornton
    • The End of the World, d. Clayton Windatt
    • The Fire, d. Liselotte Wajstedt
    • The Importance of Dreaming, d. Tara Audibert
    • The Last Walk, d. Anna Hoover, Pipaluk K. Jørgensen, Mikisoq H. Lynge, Jerri Thrasher
    • The Mountain of SGaana, d. Christopher Auchter
    • Thirza Cuthand Is an Indian Within the Meaning of the Indian Act, d. Thirza Cuthand
    • This Wild Season, d. Jonathan Elliott
    • Three Thousand, d. Asinnajaq
    • Thunderbird Strike, d. Elizabeth LaPensee
    • TRENCH, d. Trevor Solway
    • Tsanizid (Wake Up), d. Beric Manywounds
    • Twilight Dancers, d. Paola Marino, Theola Ross
    • Under Your Always Light, d. Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
    • Unikausiq (Stories), d. Mary Kunuk
    • Unintentional Mother, d. Mary Galloway
    • [untitled & unlabeled], d. Terry Jones
    • Versaearcolonion, d. Chandra Melting Tallow, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
    • Vulkan (Volcano), d. Ann Holmgren
    • Walk In Dreams, d. Jonathan Thunder
    • Water, d. John Harvey
    • Zaasaakwe (Shout with Joy), d. Madison Thomas

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  • Natalia Gurkina’s CONFESSION and Justin Wu’s OVERTIME Win TIFFxInstagram Shorts Festival

    2017 TIFFxInstagram Shorts Festival Winners Natalia Gurkina’s Confession and Justin Wu’s Overtime have been crowned the winners of TIFFxInstagram Shorts Festival which showcases 60-second micro-shorts. “This year’s festival attracted an impressively diverse and comprehensive group of entries, including 40 percent from female filmmakers,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “We are so glad the TIFFxInstagram Shorts Festival is able to provide a unique and inclusive platform for emerging filmmakers from around the world to create and showcase their work.” This year’s esteemed jury, including actor Isabelle Huppert, actor Ashton Sanders, music video visionary Director X, actor and director Lake Bell, director and producer Karan Johar and Fast Retailing’s President and Head of Global Creative John C. Jay have deliberated and selected their favourite film of the finalists. Natalia Gurkina’s Confession will be awarded the Jury’s Choice Award. Additionally, Justin Wu’s Overtime has been selected as the winner of the Fan Favourite Award by the public, who voted via Instagram likes throughout the festival. Both winners will be celebrated at the TIFFxInstagram Shorts Festival Awards Reception during the Toronto International Film Festival. The winner of the Jury’s Choice Award Presented by UNIQLO is: Confession, dir. Natalia Gurkina @madhatterzero Russia A love story within a love story, a nod to Russian melodrama and a film within a film shot on iPhone. Based in Moscow, Gurkina is a 26 year old filmmaker and comics writer. She studied filmmaking at Moscow Film School from 2014-2016. The idea for her short film Confession came to her completely spontaneously, and she shot it on an iPhone 5s days later. The winner of the Fan Favourite Award Presented by UNIQLO is: Overtime, dir. Justin Wu @justinwu France Overtime contrasts the tender love of a father with the brutal world in which he works. Justin Wu got his start as an art & fashion photographer, and more recently began his career in filmmaking. His work varies greatly from TV commercials, gallery art installations, and international fashion editorials. His first experimental film, Coup de grâce, was exhibited and screened at the modern art museum, Centre Pompidou, in Paris last fall. Following that, his first narrative short, Le devoir, won the 2014 Grand Prize for Best Emerging Director at an Academy Award qualifying film festival last summer.

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  • 2017 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival to Host Indie Film Legend John Waters’ Live One Man Show

    John Waters A special evening with John Waters will be a highlight of the 2017 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival on Saturday, October 21st. The main event of the evening will be John Waters’ LIVE with Meow Wolf as Presenting Sponsor, in his one-man-show, “John Water – This Filthy World: Dirtier & Filthier, as he highlights his impressive film career and perverse taste. The living independent film legend (Hairspray, Pink Flamingos) who William Burroughs dubbed “The Pope of Trash,” will follow his show with a book signing of his latest title Role Models. “Waters and Meow Wolf began as art on the edge and now are at the center of pop culture, like SFIFF, so we are honored to collaborate with Meow Wolf for such a special evening with Mr. Waters” said Liesette Paisner Bailey, Festival Director. John Waters grew up in Baltimore in the 1950s, obsessed by violence and gore, both real and on the screen. With his counterculture friends as his cast, Waters began making silent 8mm and 16mm films in the mid-’60s. By the early 1970s, he was making features, breaking into world-wide notoriety with Pink Flamingos (1972) – a bold exercise in ultra-bad taste. Waters successfully crossed over to Hollywood with Hairspray (1988). Waters continues to create daring independent films today. His film Hairspray was turned into the eight time Tony award-winning broadway musical. The 2017 Ninth Annual Santa Fe Independent Film Festival will begin on Wednesday October 18, 2017, and come to a close on Sunday October 22, 2017, holding five (5) days of independent film, interactive social events, and numerous instructive and exploratory workshops.

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  • SO HELP ME GOD, BEYOND WORDS Among Final Official Selections of San Sebastian International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_24161" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]SO HELP ME GOD SO HELP ME GOD[/caption] New films  SO HELP ME GOD by the Belgians Jean Libon and Yves Hinant, BEYOND WORDS by Polish helmer Urszula Antoniak, ALANIS by Argentine Anahí Berneri, MEMOIR OF PAIN by the French Emmanuel Finkiel, POROROCA by the Romanian Constantin Popescu and the THE CAPTAIN by German director Robert Schwentke, complete the Official Selection of the 65th edition of the San Sebastian International Film Festival, made up of 18 competing films, 3 movies participating out of competition and 4 special screenings. Emmanuel Finkiel (Boulogne-Billancourt, France, 1961) participates for the first time at San Sebastian with La douleur / Memoir of Pain, adaptation of the diary of anguish and desolation written by Marguerite Duras at the end of World War II, when no news was forthcoming of her husband, Robert Antelme, member of the Resistance and deported by the Gestapo. Among the films made by Finkiel, who was assistant director to Bertrand Tavernier, Krzysztof Kieslowski and Jean-Luc Godard, are Madame Jacques sur la Croisette (1997), César for Best Short Film; her debut, Voyages (1999), which garnered two César Awards and the Youth Award at Cannes; Nulle part terre promise (2008), Jean Vigo Award; and Je ne suis pas un salaud / A Decent Man (2016), winner of an award in Angoulême. In La douleur / Memoir of Pain she directs Mélanie Thierry (Babylon, A Perfect Day, Au revoir là-haut / See You Up There), Benoît Magimel (La Haine / Hate, La Pianiste / The Piano Teacher, Les petits mouchoirs / Little White Lies) and the musician and actor Benjamin Biolay (Stella, Personal Shopper). Constantin Popescu (Bucharest, 1973) directed the fragment Pig in Tales from the Golden Age (2009), by Christian Mungiu. His first feature, Portrait of the Fighter as a Young Man (2010), was selected for the Berlinale Forum and, with the second, Principles of Life (2010), he participated in Zabaltegi-New Directors at San Sebastian. In Pororoca, his third film, he narrates the transformation experienced by a family when one of their children disappears. Robert Schwentke (Stuttgart, Germany, 1968) debuted as a filmmaker in his native country with Tattoo (2002) and Eierdiebe (The Family Jewels, 2003). In 2005 he debuted with Flightplan, starring Jodie Foster, in the United States, where he has continued to work in the last decade: The Time Traveler’s Wife (2009), RED (2010) and the two instalments of the Divergente series, Insurgent (2015) and Allegiant (2016). In Der Hauptmann / The Captain he returns to Germany and to the last moments of World War II. The debut from Urszula Antoniak (Czestochowa, Poland, 1968), Nothing Personal (2009), bagged six awards at the Locarno Festival and was nominated for two European Film Academy Awards; her second work, Code Blue (2011), premiered at the Cannes Festival Directors’ Fortnight. Beyond Words, her fourth film, follows a young and ambitious lawyer whose father’s visit leaves him with painful memories of his roots. The first film by Anahí Berneri (Martínez, Argentina, 1975), Un año sin amor (A Year Without Love, 2005), won the Teddy Award at the Berlin Festival, to which she returned with Por tu culpa (It’s Your Fault, 2010). In San Sebastian she will compete for the third time after presenting Encarnación (Incarnation, 2007), winner of the Fipresci Prize, and Aire libre (Open Air, 2014), which had participated two years previously in the I Europe-Latin America Co-Production Forum. Berneri, who sat on the Festival’s Official Jury last year, describes in Alanis the difficulties experienced by a woman, mother of a young child, who works as a prostitute. In 1985, the graphic reporter and documentary-maker Jean Libon created the documentary series Strip-Tease, on which he was joined by the journalist Yves Hinant. Both directed, with Eric Cardot and Delphine Lehericey, the documentary Les arbitres (Kill the Referee, 2009), looking at the reality of referees in the 2008 European Championship. In Ni juge, ni soumise / So Help Me God the sardonic team behind the Strip-Tease series closely followed the anything-but-conventional examining magistrate in Brussels, Anne Gruwez. ALANIS ANAHÍ BERNERI (ARGENTINA) Cast: Sofía Gala Castiglione, Dante Della Paolera, Dana Basso, Silvina Sabater, Carlos Vuletich Alanis works as a prostitute. She has a baby and, with her friend Gisela, shares the flat in which she lives and attends to her clients, until two municipal inspectors close down her home and arrest Gisela, accused of procurement. Let down by everybody, Alanis heads for her aunt’s place, across from the Plaza Miserere. From this mixed race and violent neighbourhood, Alanis struggles to recover her dignity, help her friend and take care of her son. She offers her services in the street, but even that has its own rules and Alanis must fight for her place. BEYOND WORDS URSZULA ANTONIAK (POLAND – NETHERLANDS) Cast: Jakub Gierszał, Andrzej Chyra, Christian Löber Michael and his boss and best friend Franz feel at home in Berlin’s hip restaurants, bars and clubs. There is seemingly no difference between them, but Michael, who emigrated from Poland after the death of his mother several years ago, still pays extra attention to his accent. Michael is thrown into turmoil when a run-down Polish bohemian shows up on his doorstep and claims to be his father. Father and son, two complete strangers spend a weekend together, torn between empathy, rejection and mistrust. As Michael’s roots catch up with him, a painful crisis seems inevitable… DER HAUPTMANN / THE CAPTAIN ROBERT SCHWENTKE (GERMANY – FRANCE – POLAND) Cast: Max Hubacher, Milan Peschel, Frederick Lau, Alexander Fehling In the last moments of World War II, a 19 year old private, ragged and starving, steals a captain’s uniform. Impersonating an officer he gathers a group of deserters and proceeds to kill and plunder his way through a beaten Nazi Germany. The Captain marks writer/director Robert Schwentke’s return to Germany. LA DOULEUR / MEMOIR OF PAIN EMMANUEL FINKIEL (FRANCE) Cast: Mélanie Thierry, Benjamin Biolay, Benoît Magimel, Emmanuel Bourdieu When she finds two old notebooks in a forgotten box, Marguerite Duras remembers her past and the unbearable pain of waiting. In the 1944 Nazi-occupied France, the young and brilliant author is an active Resistance member with her husband Robert Antelme. When he is deported by the Gestapo, she throws herself into a desperate struggle to get him back. She develops a chilling relationship with local Vichy collaborator Rabier and takes terrible risks to save Robert, playing a cat-and-mouse game of unpredictable meetings all over Paris. Does he really want to help her? Or is he trying to dig up information about the anti-Nazi underground movement? Finally the war ends and camp victims return, an excruciating period for her, a long and silent agony after the chaos of the Liberation of Paris. But she continues to wait, bound to the torment of absence even beyond hope. NI JUGE, NI SOUMISE / SO HELP ME GOD JEAN LIBON, YVES HINANT (FRANCE – BELGIUM) The extraordinary, offbeat judge Anne Gruwez takes us behind the scenes of real life criminal investigations. For three years the satirical team behind the cult TV series Strip-Tease captured what no one had dared film before. Unapologetic and politically incorrect. You won’t believe your eyes. It’s not cinema: it’s worse! POROROCA CONSTANTIN POPESCU (ROMANIA – FRANCE) Cast: Bogdan Dumitrache, Iulia Lumanare, Costin Dogioiu, Stefan Raus, Adela Marghidan Cristina and Tudor Ionescu have founded a happy family with their two children, Maria and Ilie. He works for a phone company and she is an accountant. They are in their thirties and live in a nice apartment in a Romanian town. They live the life of an ordinary couple with their children. But one Sunday morning when Tudor takes his kids to the park, Maria disappears. Their lives abruptly change forever.

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  • Berlin Film Fest’s Christoph Terhechte to be Honored at Busan International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_24158" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Christoph Terhechte (far right) with John Hurt, Park Chan-Wook at Berlin Film Festival Christoph Terhechte (far right) with John Hurt, Park Chan-Wook at Berlin Film Festival[/caption] Berlin International Film Festival exec Christoph Terhechte will be the recipient of this year’s Korean Cinema Award at the 22nd Busan International Film Festival. The Korean Cinema Award is granted to a notable figure that has made significant contributions in promoting Korean cinema worldwide, and will be presented at the opening ceremony of the 22nd Busan International Film Festival. Christoph Terhechte, a head of Berlin International Film Festival’s Forum, has constantly invited Korean films and contributed to the globalization of Korean cinema. Since he was assigned as a head of Berlin Forum in 2001, numerous films, including Take Care of My Cat by Jeong Jae-eun, Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance by Park Chan-wook and A Tale of Two Sisters by Kim Jee-woon, have been invited to the Berlin International Film Festival and raised the status of Korean cinema. Christoph Terhechte has maintained his focus on Korean up-and-coming directors and selected diverse Korean films over the past five years; 10 Minutes (2013) by Lee Yong-seung, Non-fiction Diary (2013) by Jung Yoon-suk, A Dream of Iron (2013) by Park Kyung Kun and End of Winter (2014) by Kim Daehwan. In 2017, he invited Autumn, Autumn by a rookie director Jang Woojin as well as Korean classic Aimless Bullet by Yu Hyun-mok and a restoration version of The Last Witness by Lee Doo Yong. Christoph Terhechte has consistently introduced Korean films from oldest to newest and played an essential role in making a wide range of Korean cinema available to global audiences and diverse film industries. Christoph TERHECHTEㅣHead of Berlin International Film Festival ForumㅣGermany Christoph Terhechte was born in 1961, in the city of Münster, Germany. He studied political science and journalism at the University of Hamburg and started his career as a film journalist in 1984. After he worked as a writer of “taz”, a daily newspaper in Germany, Christoph moved to Paris, working as a freelance journalist. He also worked as a head editor in the film section at the Berlin city magazine “tip”. He promoted European cinema by working on the film selection and editorial work of the European Low Budget Film Forum in Hamburg. Christoph Terhechte has been a member of the selection committee of the Berlin International Film Festival Forum since 1997 and was appointed head of the Berlinale section in 2001. Working as a head of the International Forum of New Cinema of the Berlin International Film Festival, Christoph Terhechte has actively introduced Korean cinema to European audiences. Past Recipients of the Korean Cinema Award (Position held at the time of the award presentation) 21st Laurence HERSZBERG (Director-general of Forum des Images, France) 20th Wieland SPECK (Director of the Berlin International Film Festival Panorama, Germany) 19th Corinne SIEGRIST-OBOUSSIER (Director of Filmpodium, Switzerland) 18th Charles TESSON (Artistic Director of Cannes International Film Festival Critics’ Week, France) 17th HAYASHI Kanako (Festival Director of Tokyo FILMeX, Japan) 16th Julietta SICHEL (Former Program Director of Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Czech Republic) 15th Bruno BARDE (Festival Director of Deauville Asian Film Festival, France) 14th Riccardo GELLI (Director of Korea Film Festival in Florence, Italy) Jeannette Paulson HERENIKO (President of Asia Pacific Film.com, Former Director of Hawaii International Film Festival, USA) 13th Richard PEÑA (Director of the Film Society of Lincoln Center, USA) 12th Sabrina BARACETTI (Festival President of Udine Far East Film Festival, Italy) Jean-François RAUGER (Head Programmer of the Cinémathèque Française, France) 11th Martial KNAEBEL (Festival Director of Fribourg International Film Festival, Switzerland) TERAWAKI Ken (Former Director-General of Cultural Affairs Department of Japan, Japan) 10th Dieter KOSSLICK (Festival Director of Berlinale, Germany) Thierry FRÉMAUX (Artistic Director of Cannes International Film Festival, France) 9th YANO Kazuyuki (Festival Director of Yamagata International Documentary Festival, Japan) Phillip CHEAH (Festival Director of Singapore International Film Festival, Singapore) 8th PARK Byoung-yang (President of Asia Film Production, Japan) LEE Bong-ou (President of Cine Quanon, Japan) 7th Alain Jacques Louis PATEL (Festival Director of Deauville Asian Film Festival, France) 6th Eva ZAORALOVÁ (Festival Director of Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Czech Republic) 5th Martin & Anna Louisa GIROD (Directors of Stadtkino Basel, Switzerland) 4th Serge LOSIQUE (Festival Director of Montreal International Film Festival, Canada) LEE Young-il (Film Critic, Korea) 3rd Gilles JACOB (Festival Director of Cannes International Film Festival, France) Moritz de HADELN (Festival Director of Berlinale, Germany) 2nd Aruna VASUDEV (Editor-in-Chief of CINEMAYA, India) SATO Tadao (Festival Director of Fukuoka Film Festival, Japan) 1st Adriano APRÀ (Festival Director of Pesaro International Film Festival, Italy) Tony RAYNS (Film Critic, UK) Alain JALLADEAU (Festival Director of Festival des 3 Continents, France) Ulrich GREGOR (Director of International Forum, Berlinale, Germany) Larry KADISH (Programmer of Museum of Modern Art, USA) Ancha FLUBACHER-RHIM (Deputy Festival Director of Jeonju International Film Festival, Korea) Simon FIELD (Festival Director of Rotterdam International Film Festival, UK)

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  • Gun Violence Drama SHOT Starring Noah Wyle Opens September 22 | Trailer

    SHOT starring Noah Wyle The gun violence drama Shot starring Noah Wyle, Sharon Leal, and Jorge Lendeborg Jr. finally has a release date, the film will be released in theaters on September 22. The film directed by Jeremy Kagan, is described as a gripping drama about three lives irrevocably changed when a gun is accidentally fired on a busy Los Angeles street. SHOT begins as sound mixer Mark Newman (Wyle), is pumping up the volume on a bloody shootout scene in an action film. Hours later, after an argument with his wife Phoebe (Leal), Mark is suddenly felled by a real random bullet, and lies bleeding on the pavement with a chest wound. With Phoebe desperately trying to stop the bleeding, they both agonizingly wait for an ambulance to arrive as Mark fights for his life. Meanwhile, hidden behind a fence across the street, a teenager, Miguel (Lendeborg), watches in horror with the still smoking gun in his hand. A gun that was just handed to him by his cousin and meant to protect him against gang bullies. From the moment the shot rings out, Jeremy Kagan’s camera in real time daringly follows Mark from the street, to stretcher, to gurney, to examining table, as we watch the paramedics and medical teams in full life-saving mode. Through the imaginative use of split-screen, Kagan juxtaposes Mark’s medical crisis with Miguel’s moral one, as we simultaneously see the frightened young man wrestle with the fact that an innocent man was injured – or worse – as a direct result of his actions.

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  • Zurich Film Festival 2017 Gala Premieres – BATTLE OF THE SEXES, THE FLORIDA PROJECT and More

    [caption id="attachment_23729" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]The Florida Project THE FLORIDA PROJECT[/caption] With the 13th Zurich Film Festival, taking place September 28 to October 8, 2017, about a month away, the festival is giving a first look at the 2017 Gala Premieres films. Films from Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris, Mike White, Claire Denis, Sean Baker, Ruben Östlund, Michael Haneke, Yorgos Lanthimos and Luca Guadagnino will be presented as Gala Premieres. The festival previously announced the inclusion of AN INCONVENIENT SEQUEL: TRUTH TO POWER with Al Gore and THE WIFE with Golden Icon Award recipient Glenn Close.

    2017 Zurich Film Festival Gala Premieres

    BATTLE OF THE SEXES Directed by: Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris Cast: Emma Stone, Steve Carell, Andrea Riseborough BRAD’S STATUS Directed by: Mike White Cast: Ben Stiller, Michael Sheen, Jenna Fischer, Luke Wilson, Austin Abrams UN BEAU SOLEIL INTERIEUR Directed by: Claire Denis Cast: Juliette Binoche, Xavier Beauvois, Philippe Katerine, Josiane Balasko, Nicolas Duvauchelle, Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Gérard Depardieu THE FLORIDA PROJECT Directed by: Sean Baker Cast: Willem Dafoe, Brooklynn Prince, Valeria Cotto, Christopher Rivera, Bria Vinaite, Macon Blair, Sandy Kane, Caleb Landry Jones, Karren Karagulian THE SQUARE Directed by: Ruben Östlund Cast: Claes Bang, Elisabeth Moss, Dominic West, Terry Notary, Christopher Laessø, Marina Schiptjenko, Elijandro Edouard, Daniel Hallberg, Martin Sööder HAPPY END Directed by: Michael Haneke Cast: Isabelle Huppert, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Mathieu Kassovitz THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER Directed by: Yorgos Lanthimos Cast: Colin Farrell, Nicole Kidman, Barry Keoghan, Sunny Suljic, Raffey Cassidy, Alicia Silverstone CALL ME BY YOUR NAME Directed by: Luca Guadagnino Cast: Armie Hammer, Timothée Chalamet, Michael Stuhlbarg, Amira Casar, Esther Garrel, Victoire Du Bois, Vanda Capriolo, Antonio Rimoldi, Elena Bucci, Marco Sgrosso, André Aciman, Peter Spears

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  • 14 Short Films to Compete in International Film Students Meeting at San Sebastian Festival

    [caption id="attachment_24146" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]DE MADRUGADA (AT DAWN) INÊS DE LIMA TORRES (PORTUGAL) DE MADRUGADA (AT DAWN), INÊS DE LIMA TORRES (PORTUGAL)[/caption] Fourteen short films from Argentina, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Mexico, Portugal, Russia, Spain and the USA will compete in the International Film Students Meeting, at the 65th edition of the San Sebastian Festival. The event also includes masterclasses from filmmakers who will present their films in San Sebastian, such as Todd Haynes and Christine Vachon (Wonderstruck in Pearls), Raymond Depardon and Claudine Nougaret (12 jours / 12 Days in Zabaltegi-Tabakalera), José Luis Torres Leiva (El sueño de Ana / Ana’s Dream in Zabaltegi-Tabakalera), Marine Francen (Le Semeur / The Sower in New Directors) and Nobuhiro Suwa (Le lion est mort ce soir / The Lion Sleeps Tonight in the Official Selection). The Chilean filmmaker will also chair the Jury of the XVI Film Students Meeting.

    2017 International Film Students Meeting Short Films

    13+ NIKICA ZDUNIĆ (CROATIA) Academy of Dramatic Arts (Croatia) Janka is on the verge of puberty. One day she goes to dance practice with her friend Zorana. While Zorana is preoccupied with topics such as kissing, new clothes, and parties, Janka is trying to retain her childish innocence for as long as possible. But she can’t escape the inevitable changes every girl has to undergo. 212 BOAZ FRANKEL (ISRAEL) The Sam Spiegel Film and TV School- Jerusalem (JSFS) (Israel) Another nearly-ordinary winter day in the life of 64-year-old Doron, director of a municipal home for the aged: the rain is pouring, someone nabbed his reserved parking spot, and Bela Schorr, occupant of Room 212, passed away that morning. DE MADRUGADA (AT DAWN) INÊS DE LIMA TORRES (PORTUGAL) Escola Superior de Teatro e Cinema (Portugal) In the hot month of August, Alice and her siblings go to their grandmother’s summer house. As the days go by, the house becomes a hive of slow straying bodies, as Alice becomes more and more ingrained in her grandmother’s colonial past. DEUX ÉGARÉS SONT MORTS / TWO YOUTHS DIED TOMMASO USBERTI (FRANCE) La Fémis (France) In a wild landscape Vera and Matteo live their first date of love. The girl’s father surprises them and assaults the boy. At the end of a fierce fight Matteo knocks down man. Vera asks the boy to take her to dance. Matteo, shaken, runs away. FIND FIX FINISH SYLVAIN CRUIZIAT, MILA ZHLUKTENKO (GERMANY) Hochschule für Fernsehen und Film München (University for Television and Film Munich) (Germany) “In Afghanistan, I saw a couple making love on a roof”: we know very little of the day-to-day work of the pilots carrying out “targeted assassinations” with military drones. Three Americans agreed to testify in voiceover about their experience, which is paradoxically one of intimacy and cruelty, over aerial images that they could have filmed themselves, to “Find, Fix, Finish” FIORA MARTINA JUNCADELLA, MARTÍN VILELA (ARGENTINA) Programa de Cine de la Universidad Torcuato Di Tella (Argentina) Fiora and Martina are preparing lunch. The situation is a staging of the real ties that bind them. As they eat, Fiora comes back over a past occurrence. Martina wants to know more and decides to question her. HEIMAT / HOMELAND SAM PEETERS (BELGIUM) Royal Institute for Theatre, Cinema and Sound (Belgium) Right-wing populism is spreading through Western Europe like wildfire. It is most popular in quiet, white neighbourhoods where people are shielded from different cultures and lifestyles. In this unscripted documentary, Sam Peeters portrays an ironic caricature of life in the Flemish suburbs, which reflects the current European zeitgeist. L’HOME LLOP / THE WOLFMAN LLUÍS SELLARÈS (SPAIN) ESCAC (Spain) Nico is half of the couple who stays at home while Mar is working, looking out the window the vastness of the forest and seeking for new ways to procrastinate. MICROCASTILLO (MICROCASTLE) ALEJANDRA VILLALBA GARCÍA (MEXICO) Escuela Superior de Cine (ESCINE) (Mexico) A typical family is being watched in their own home. The father, an accomplice to the situation, obliges the other members of the family group to participate in the dynamic. The mother tries to escape with her daughters, but to no avail. THE JUNGLE KNOWS YOU BETTER THAN YOU DO JUANITA ONZAGA (BELGIUM – COLOMBIA) LUCA School of Arts (Belgium) Colombia is a land of ghosts. Two siblings roam these mystical landscapes in search of their dead father’s spirit. Their journey takes them from Bogota to the Colombian jungle, through realms of thought and deep into their haunted dreams. Here they will find some answers and attract unexpected company. VĚZENÍ / IMPRISONED DAMIÁN VONDRÁSEK (CZECH REPUBLIC) FAMU – Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (Czech Republic) An offer of a job as a prison educator could help unemployed teacher Jakub resolve a difficult family situation. His father-in-law exacerbates his already low self-confidence, and the man most certainly imagined a different kind of son-in-law. The claustrophobic feelings Jakub experiences at the prison, however, lead him to a single question: Does he want to control others the rest of his life or be controlled by them? WANDERVOGEL MINA FITZPATRICK (USA) Northwestern University (USA) Dan Daily lives in the middle of the Texas desert where, in 2009, he opened a retreat for children who had killed their parents. Wandervogel starts when two documentary-makers arrive at Dailey’s house to shoot a film and find him dead. YA OSTAYUS / I’M STAYING GRIGORY KOLOMYTSEV (RUSSIA) Russian State University of Cinematography (VGIK) (Russia) Filatov comes back home after a lengthy absence to bury his brother. He should pick up his brother’s body from the neighboring village and bring it home. ZEIT DER UNRUHE / NEWS 23/06/2016 ELSA ROSENGREN (GERMANY) Deutsche Film- und Fernsehakademie Berlin (DFFB) (Germany) It’s the 23rd of June 2016. In the UK, a critical referendum is well underway, and across the Atlantic, an ominous American presidential campaign is gathering force. In Sweden, news broadcasting is carrying on as usual. In Germany, however, an identical, yet distorted, news broadcast is simultaneously being constructed by the citizens themselves.

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  • WOODPECKERS is Dominican Republic’s Entry for 2018 Oscar Race for Best Foreign Film | TRAILER

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    WOODPECKERS (CARPINTEROS) José María Cabral’s Woodpeckers (Carpinteros) was selected this week as Dominican Republic’s official submission for the 2018 Foreign Language Oscar category. Woodpeckers (Carpinteros) which premiered earlier this year at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival tells the story of handsome Dominican-Haitian Julián (actor Jean Jean in a breakout role) who begins a begins a jail sentence for petty theft inside the notorious Najayo prison just outside Santo Domingo. He becomes immersed in the system of “Woodpecking,” the unique sign language the male prisoners use to communicate with women in the adjacent penitentiary just over 400 feet away.  Julián’s entanglement with one female inmate, Yanelly (the astonishing Dominican actress Judith Rodriguez Perez), is the fuse that ignites the events of Woodpeckers, which was shot on location at the actual prison using real inmates for all but the lead roles. Director José María Cabral’s first feature film, Jaque Mate (2011), was selected as the Dominican entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards.

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