• “Liza, the Fox-Fairy” “Landfill Harmonic” Win Audience Awards at 2015 Leeds International Film Festival

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    Liza, the Fox-Fairy The dark Hungarian black comedy Liza, the Fox-Fairy is the winner of the 2015 Leeds International Film Festival Audience Award for New Narrative Feature, and Landfill Harmonic directed Graham Townsley, Brad Allgood is the winner of the Audience Award for New Documentary Feature. Liza, the Fox-Fairy is about a 30 year old nurse whose only friend is Tomy Tani, the ghost of a Japanese pop singer from the 1950s that only she can see, and who comes to believe she may be a Fox-Fairy from Japanese mythology. LIFF29’s audience have described the film as ‘exceptionally funny, sweet and charming’ and a ‘beautiful, hilarious, touching love story’ with a brilliant Japanese pop soundtrack. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWxLLyr9aOU New Narrative Feature 1. Liza, the Fox-Fairy 2. In The Crosswind 3. Assassination Classroom 4. Brooklyn 5. Embrace of the Serpent 6. Victoria 7. Green Room 8. Crow’s Egg 9. Taxi Tehran 10. Carol Landfill Harmonic is described as a testament to the transformative power of music and the resilience of the human spirit. In Paraguay there is a children’s orchestra living next to one of South America’s largest landfills. A music teacher and a rubbish picker scavenge materials from the dump to make instruments for the local children; flutes from pipes, guitars from packing crates and violins from oil drums. When their story goes viral the ensemble are propelled into the global spotlight, touring with some of their favourite heavy metal bands. However, when a natural disaster devastates their community, the orchestra provides an instinctive source of hope. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCjbd21fYV8 New Documentary Feature 1. Landfill Harmonic 2. The Wanted 18 3. Warriors 4. Do You Own the Dancefloor? 5. Black Roses: The Killing of Sophie Lancaster

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  • “Son of Saul” Wins Top Award at 2015 Zagreb Film Festival

    SON OF SAUL The 2015 Zagreb Film Festival Golden Pram Award went to the Hungarian film Son of Saul by Lászlo Nemes. Son Of Saul, the winner of Grand Prix at the Cannes, Film Festival is the directorial debut of Lászlo Nemes. October 1944, Auschwitz-Birkenau. Saul Ausländer is a Hungarian member of Sonderkommando – the Jewish prisoners’ unit isolated from the rest of the camp. They are in charge of taking other prisoners to gas chambers and burning corpses. While working in one of the crematoriums, Saul finds the body of a boy and is convinced it is his son. Shaking off his lethargy, he decides to secretly arrange a real Jewish funeral for the boy. While other members of Sonderkommando are planning to rebel and escape, Saul takes upon himself the impossible mission of saving the boy’s body from the flames. To this end, he makes his way through the concentration camp in search of a rabi who would perform the ritual https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwC9DsWyxQc The Golden Pram for Best Short Film went to the French film A Few Seconds by Nora El Hourch, and the Best Checkers Film is The Beast by Daina O. Pusić. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0k3EJYdF6U Special mentions were awarded in each of the categories, as well. The Best PLUS Film is the Dutch entry Prince, directed by Sam de Jong, and the HT Audience Award went to the French film The New Kid by Rudi Rosenberg. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgXbuIcGInA Special mentions in the feature competition went to the Danish film A War (Krigen), directed by Tobias Lindholm and the Australian film Tanna, directed by Bentley Dean and Martin Butler. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qRkE5ZrPzs0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMmpaj3K7dY

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  • First 9 Films in Midnight Section Revealed for 2016 Sundance Film Festival

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    Yoga Hosers, Kevin Smith The 2016 Sundance Film Festival announced the nine feature films that will screen in its Midnight section, which has launched films including The Blair Witch Project, SAW, Super Troopers, The Babadook, Black Dynamite, What We Do In The Shadows, Dead/Alive, Delicatessen, The Descent and Hard Candy. The 2016 Sundance Film Festival takes place January 21 to 31, 2016, in Park City, Salt Lake City, Ogden and Sundance, Utah. MIDNIGHT From horror flicks to comedies to works that defy any genre, these unruly films will keep you on the edge of your seat and wide awake. 31 / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: Rob Zombie) — Five friends are kidnapped on the day before Halloween and are held hostage in a terrifying place named Murder World. While trapped, they must play a violent game called 31, in which the mission is to survive 12 hours against a gang of evil clowns. Cast: Sheri Moon Zombie, Malcolm McDowell, Richard Brake, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Jeff Daniel Phillips, Meg Foster. World Premiere Antibirth / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: Danny Perez) — In a desolate community full of drug-addled marines and rumors of kidnapping, a wild-eyed stoner named Lou wakes up after a crazy night of partying with symptoms of a strange illness and recurring visions. As she struggles to get a grip on reality, the stories of conspiracy spread. Cast: Natasha Lyonne, Chloë Sevigny, Mark Webber, Meg Tilly, Maxwell McCabe-Lokos. World Premiere The Blackout Experiments / U.S.A. (Director: Rich Fox) — A group of friends discover the dark underworld of the ultra-scary, psychosexual horror experience called Blackout. But what starts as a thrill ride through the unknown becomes deeply personal, developing into an obsession that hijacks their lives and blurs the line between reality and paranoid fantasy. World Premiere Carnage Park / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: Mickey Keating) — The year is 1978. A team of wannabe crooks botch a small-town bank heist and flee with their hostage deep into the California desert, where they inexplicably find themselves in a harrowing fight for survival against a psychotic ex-military sniper. Cast: Ashley Bell, Pat Healy, Alan Ruck, Darby Stanchfield, James Landry Hébert, Larry Fessenden. World Premiere The Greasy Strangler / U.S.A. (Director: Jim Hosking, Screenwriters: Jim Hosking, Toby Harvard) — When Big Ronnie and his son Brayden meet lone female tourist Janet on Big Ronnie’s Disco Walking Tour—the best and only disco walking tour in the city—a fight for Janet’s heart erupts between father and son, and the infamous Greasy Strangler is unleashed. Cast: Michael St. Michaels, Sky Elobar, Elizabeth De Razzo, Gil Gex, Jesse Keen, Joe David Walters. World Premiere Outlaws and Angels / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: JT Mollner) — With a notorious bounty hunter closing in on their trail, a gang of cold-blooded outlaws invades the home of a seemingly innocent frontier family, where an unexpected game of cat and mouse ensues throughout the night, leading to seduction, role reversal, and ultimately bloody revenge. Cast: Chad Michael Murray, Francesca Eastwood, Luke Wilson, Teri Polo, Madisen Beaty, Nathan Russell. World Premiere Trash Fire / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: Richard Bates Jr.) — When Owen is forced to confront the past he’s been running from his whole adult life, he and his girlfriend, Isabel, become entangled in a horrifying web of lies, deceit, and murder. You’ll laugh. You’ll cry. You’ll be scarred for life. Cast: Adrian Grenier, Angela Trimbur, AnnaLynne McCord, Fionnula Flanagan, Matthew Gray Gubler, Ray Santiago. World Premiere Under the Shadow / United Kingdom, Jordan (Director and screenwriter: Babak Anvari) — Tehran, 1988: As the Iran-Iraq War rumbles into its eighth year, a mother and daughter are slowly torn apart by the bombing campaigns on the city coupled with the country’s bloody revolution. As they struggle to stay together amidst these terrors, a mysterious evil stalks through their apartment. Cast: Narges Rashidi, Avin Manshadi, Bobby Naderi, Ray Haratian, Arash Marandi. World Premiere Yoga Hosers / U.S.A. (Director and screenwriter: Kevin Smith) — Colleen Collette and Colleen McKenzie are teenage besties from Winnipeg who love yoga and live on their smartphones. But when these sophomores get invited to a senior party by the school hottie, the Colleens accidentally uncover an ancient evil buried beneath their Canadian convenience store. Cast: Lily-Rose Depp, Harley Quinn Smith, Johnny Depp, Justin Long, Austin Butler, Tyler Posey. World Premiere (pictured above)

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  • Johnny Depp “Black Mass” to Receive Actor Award at 2016 Palm Springs International Film Festival

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    BLACK MASS starring Johnny Depp The 27th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) will present Johnny Depp with the Desert Palm Achievement Award, Actor at its annual Awards Gala for his performance in Black Mass. The Festival runs January 1-11, 2016. “Johnny Depp is one of the most versatile and dynamic actors of our time,” said Festival Chairman Harold Matzner. “In his latest film, Black Mass, Depp, in a stunning transformation, creates a gripping and multi-layered portrait of infamous gangster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger. He delivers an astounding performance that has earned raves from both critics and audiences and is sure to garner awards attention. It is our honor to present the 2016 Desert Palm Achievement Award, Actor, to Johnny Depp.” Depp can currently by seen in “Black Mass,” which tells of the unholy alliance between ruthless mobster James “Whitey” Bulger (Depp) and childhood friend-turned-FBI agent, John Connolly (Joel Edgerton). The bond, forged growing up on the streets of South Boston, would test the limits of loyalty in a town that answers to its own, unwritten code. Blinded by ambition, Connolly convinces Bulger to inform on their common enemy, the Italian Mafia. The deal allows Bulger to expand his criminal empire with complete impunity, threatening to destroy both men, their families, and the very city that made them. Based on true events, the film is directed by Scott Cooper and features an ensemble cast, also including Benedict Cumberbatch, Rory Cochrane, Jesse Plemons, Dakota Johnson, Julianne Nicholson, Kevin Bacon, W. Earl Brown, David Harbour, Corey Stoll, Peter Sarsgaard, Adam Scott and Juno Temple. The screenplay is by Mark Mallouk and Jez Butterworth, based on the book by Dick Lehr and Gerard O’Neil. Produced by John Lesher, Brian Oliver, Scott Cooper, Patrick McCormick and Tyler Thompson. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CE3e3hGF2jc Past actor recipients of the Desert Palm Achievement Award include Jeff Bridges, Bradley Cooper, Daniel Day-Lewis, Colin Firth, Matthew McConaughey, Sean Penn, Brad Pitt and Eddie Redmayne. In the years they were honored, Bridges, Day-Lewis, McConaughey, Penn and Redmayne went on to win the Academy Award® for Best Actor, while Cooper, Firth and Pitt received Oscar® nominations.

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  • Filmmakers Thomas Vroege and Tom Fassaert Win Awards at 2015 IDFA

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    A Family Affair, Tom Fassaert The 2015 IDFA International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam just officially opened with the screening of A Family Affair directed by Tom Fassaert (pictured above) and presented awards to filmmakers Thomas Vroege and Tom Fassaert. The 2015 Dutch Cultural Media Fund Documentary Award of €125,000 went to Thomas Vroege to fund his film plan for Theater of the Crowd, and Tom Fassaert, director of A Family Affair, received The Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Documentary Award of €50,000. Theater of the Crowd is film essay on the ongoing refugee crisis in Europe; a documentary about freedom that follows the narrative principles of Greek tragedy. The refugee crisis is a threat to the fractured foundations of a continent undergoing an identity crisis. How should we go about defending the ideal of freedom? The jury had this to say about the winning film plan: ‘Making artistic choices demands faith in your abilities, sense of conviction and, above all, ambition. The winning plan is brimming with ambition. It is experimental and courageous and it dares to go way off the beaten track. Taking an essayistic approach to questioning and investigating this pressing social issue, it is both topical and timeless.’ Filmmaker and video artist Thomas Vroege was born in 1988 and graduated in 2012 from the St. Joost Art Academy in Breda. His graduation film The Son & The Stranger won him the Dutch Film Fund’s Wild Card Award for that year’s most promising graduation documentary. His short film So Help Me God, which premiered at the 2015 Netherlands Film Festival, focuses on the financial world and the seemingly unassailable position of bankers. Vroege is currently making 9 Days, an installation on the Syrian civil war. In preparation for this piece, he recently filmed 9 DAYS – From My Window in Aleppo. He is also working with Mark Jan van Tellingen on the development of PARANOIA.WATCH, an app that aims to make measurable the effect of terrorism on society. The Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Documentary Award was presented to filmmaker Tom Fassaert for the production of a new documentary. Tom Fassaert was born in Naarden in 1979 and graduated in 2006 from the Netherlands Film Academy with the short documentary Doel. This film led a year later to the release of his much-praised debut De Engel van Doel. Filmed in black-and-white, it tracks the decline of Doel, a Belgian village threatened by the expansion of the port of Antwerp. Fassaert has been working for the past few years on A Family Affair, in which he visits his grandmother Marianne in South Africa, hoping to discover more about his family’s history and his grandmother’s problematic relationship with her children. This honest and personal family drama has established Fassaert’s reputation as one of the Netherlands’ most talented filmmakers. A second, keenly anticipated, film is a confident and stylish tour de force, again with an excellent storyline. Fassaert knows what he wants to say, and he knows how to say it. The Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Documentary Award rewards talented filmmakers with a sum of €50,000, enabling the recipient to make a documentary film of his or her own choice. The award is granted to documentary filmmakers who have already demonstrated their qualities in practice and gained some recognition for their work. The previous recipients of the award are Klaartje Quirijns (2011), Renzo Martens (2012), Boris Gerrets (2013) and Jessica Gorter (2014). Lastly, IDFA director Ally Derks was made a Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres, and the French ambassador to the Netherlands Laurent Pic presented her with the Ordre des Arts et Lettres.

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  • “Tangerine” “Taxi” “The Tribe” Among 5 Films Nominated for 2016 Cinema Eye Heterodox Award

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    The Tribe directed by Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy Five films have been nominated for the 2016 Cinema Eye Heterodox Award. The Heterodox Award honors a narrative fiction film that imaginatively incorporates nonfiction strategies, content and/or modes of production. The five films nominated the 2016 Cinema Eye Heterodox Award are: Arabian Nights: Volume One (The Restless One) directed by Miguel Gomes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yONovEHyvXo God Bless the Child directed by Robert Machoian and Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXAgEO4rMSw Tangerine directed by Sean Baker https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALSwWTb88ZU Taxi directed by Jafar Panahi https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eM2tblIkL4g The Tribe directed by Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeYO_EoHP0k This marks the sixth year for the Heterodox Award at Cinema Eye. Previous winners of the award were Matt Porterfield’s Putty Hill (2011), Mike Mills’ Beginners (2012), Jem Cohen’s Museum Hours (2013), Carlos Reygados’s Post Tenebras Lux (2014) and Richard Linklater’s Boyhood (2015). The Heterodox prize will be presented on Tuesday, January 12th in New York City at the 2nd annual Honors Lunch during Cinema Eye Week.

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  • “Louder Than Bombs” “Mediterranea” Win Awards at 2015 Stockholm International Film Festival

    2015 Stockholm International Film Festival winners Norwegian director Joachim Trier’s Louder Than Bombs was awarded the Bronze Horse for Best film at the 2015 Stockholm International Film Festival. In Louder Than Bombs “an upcoming exhibition celebrating photographer Isabelle Reed three years after her untimely death brings her eldest son Jonah back to the family house – forcing him to spend more time with his father Gene and withdrawn younger brother Conrad than he has in years. With the three of them under the same roof, Gene tries desperately to connect with his two sons, but they struggle to reconcile their feelings about the woman they remember so differently.” Mediterranea by Jonas Carpignano was also a big winner, taking the awards for Best First Film, Telia Film Award, and Best Actor for Koudous Seihon. The complete list of awards for 2015 Stockholm International Film Festival Best film: Louder Than Bombs by Joachim Trier The prize for best film goes to an aesthetic masterpiece, a film that innovatively uses all cinematic components to move freely between present, past, dream and imagination. With this tightly woven family drama, the director gradually patches together our broken inner places and makes us visible to ourselves – and to each other. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QO1dLlaGvTs Best first film: Mediterranea by Jonas Carpignano The prize goes to a director who takes us on a journey to a place where reality triumphs with its hidden contempt. An unsentimental yet tender film about dreams, struggles and hopes for a better life that at the same time mirrors the contemporary state of the world. The director has with this knockout of a debut created a multifaceted and pressing real-life drama that leaves no one unaffected. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sk4SrMxTiS4 Best director: László Nemes, Son of Saul The award goes to a film that makes us hold our breath and instead become part of the film’s own pulse. With furious pacing, constant motion, a consistently subjective point-of-view and with long, meticulous and masterly executed sequences, the director takes a whole new perspective on a subject that has been depicted countless times, but never with this intensity – and never this good. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOHDtPZmYj8 Best script: Deniz Gamze Ergüven and Alice Winocour, Mustang The writers of this film depict a serious topic with both humor and warmth. It is a touching story of sisterhood, an empowering film that challenges patriarchal oppression with its stale views on female sexuality. Conservative values are placed in opposition to modern society, the life within each of us – and every person’s right to their own bodies. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rU9JAN8LtIk Best cinematography: Manuel Dacosse, Evolution The prize for best cinematography goes to a cinematic masterpiece, a story that could as well take place in the subconscious as on a metaphorical plane or another planet. A hauntingly beautiful universe distilled through the lens of a master, with a singular visual expression that provokes goose bumps in the soul. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PkKZ2qx5f6g Best actress: Julija Steponaityte, The Summer of Sangaile The prize for best female lead goes to an actress who illuminates the screen with her absolute presence. It is a subtle yet multifaceted acting we are witnessing, at the same time cool and vulnerable, arrogant and passionate. She makes us curious – and we want to see more! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YY2990FsBAA Best actor: Koudous Seihon, Mediterranea The prize for best male lead goes to an actor who owns the story in every scene. It’s a portrait of a fighter, a street-smart survivor and a fellow human, who opens our hearts on his journey through a torn world full of dangers. He manages to convey a feeling of hope and faith in humanity in the midst of the brutal reality of the story. Best documentary: Behemoth by Liang Zhao Abandon all hope you who enter here. This filmmaker digs deep inside the bowels of its subject, showing us the monster of greed hiding in our destructive civilization. This film unveils hell right here on earth in a beautiful, emotive and poetic way. Through the power of great imagery, storytelling and empathy we are given a chance to perceive and finally end this abuse of the earth than of each other. Pure and utterly necessary. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4kbx8x748Y Stockholm Impact Award: Leena Yadav, Parched Through superb acting giving a unique insight into the minds and hearts of women in rural India told with colourful, sensual cinematography. This film is a paradoxical celebration of life in tough circumstances, creating both anger and joy, giving fuel for debate as well as hope for change when addressing a burning question that affects, not half, but the whole of our society. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpqKBf36bQ0 Best short film: A Few Seconds by Nora El Hourch In a very unique and bold way of storytelling the director manage to show how much humanity in the characters in such a short time. There are so many layers of emotions in this film. We are excited to discover this new talent in her future work. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L0k3EJYdF6U Stockholm Rising Star: Aliette Opheim This year’s Rising Star is awarded an actor who inhabits a deep sensibility as well as an immense power. Who delves into diverse roles with great courage and integrity. With the sense of carrying a secret. Telia Film Award: Mediterranea by Jonas Carpignano With a warm, humanistic touch Jonas Carpignano has written and directed a film with acute relevance and unexpected humour. Populated by brilliantly crafted and depicted characters with complexity, throughout the story, with an outstanding Koudous Seihon in the male lead. A beautiful film that humanizes what it is to live in the world today and offers a unique glimpse into experiences shared by many of the people fleeing across the Mediterranean Sea. FIPRESCI best film: Macadam Stories by Samuel Benchetrit The FIPRESCI award goes to Samuel Benchetrit’s Macadam Stories (Asphalte), an insightful, melancholic and tender comedy, filled with quirky deadpan humour. Three separate stories are seamlessly interwoven around the theme of urban loneliness and the longing for human connection, all beautifully drawn, highly nuanced and perfectly paced, while the excellent performances allow the characters humanity to shine through the cracks. Stockholm Achievement Award: Ellen Burstyn An icon of contemporary American cinema, a bold actress with great integrity, who has given life to groundbreaking characters. Her performances have left a lasting impression with a relentless struggle for independence and freedom. Stockholm Lifetime Achievement Award: Stephen Frears This year’s receiver of the Lifetime Achievement Award is a filmmaker who is not afraid to take a stand for those who exist at the margins of society. Regardless of what form the story takes, Stephen Frears shows us that he is a director with a genuine curiosity for people’s life stories. Stockholm Visionary Award: Yorgos Lanthimos This director gives us a perspective that is both challenging and headstrong. His films offer the audience an unpredictable cinematic trip that forces us to discover an inconvenient reflection of our own behaviour, logic and desires. And yet we cannot stop looking, identifying and yes, very oddly smiling. 1 km Film-scholarship: I turn to you by Victor Lindgren Two siblings are forced to experience the implosion of their parents’ relationship. The director poses an inconvenient question to us in the audience, can a child’s will to survive overcome the self-destructive desires of the parent. The film seamlessly connects refined form with emotional impact and the director shows great courage and promise. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLDziuNrc6c iFestival Award: Tisure by Adrian Geyer Voted for by the 2015 Stockholm Film Festival audience.

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  • Dates Revealed for 2016 Durban International Film Festival

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    Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) and the Durtban FilmMart (DFM) The annual Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) and the Durban FilmMart (DFM) have announced the dates for next year’s editions, which take place almost a month earlier than the usual July dates. The 2016 Durban International Film Festival will now take place from June 16 to 26, 2016 while the DFM will take place from 17 to 20 June, 2016 The events have been rescheduled due to a clash with the 21st International Aids Conference, which takes place at the end of Jul 2016. The AIDS conference will be using both the Elangeni and Maharani hotels, which are traditionally used as a festival and market hub. DIFF is hosted by the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Creative Arts and 2016 will mark its 37th edition. “Although it will require some concerted communication efforts, we are positive about the move to June,” says Kishore Gobardan Director of Professional Services in the College of Humanities at UKZN in which the CCA is housed. “The festival will now open on the Youth Day, which may free up people to take advantage of a possible long weekend, and creates thematic opportunities for the festival to look at the role of youth within the industry.” The DFM is a joint project of the Thekwini Municipality’s industry arm, the Durban Film Office and the DIFF, and 2016 marks its 7th edition. Toni Monty the Head of Durban Film Office says, “This may work well in favour of the DFM and DIFF because it is just before the July summer holidays in Europe which is traditionally used as a recess period for film-makers, and that often impacts on their availability in July.” The DIFF will soon be calling for submissions for the 2016 edition while the Durban FilmMart has already made a call for submissions of film projects with the due date being December 14, 2015. The 9th Talents Durban the intensive programe of seminars, hands-on training, workshops and industry networking activities in partnership with Berlinale Talents will take place from June 17-21, 2016.

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  • “Romeo Is Bleeding” Wins Top Awards at 2015 St Louis International Film Festival

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    Romeo Is Bleeding “Romeo Is Bleeding” directed by Jason Zeldes was a hit at the 2015 St Louis International Film Festival winning both the St. Louis Film Critics Association Joe Pollack and Joe Williams Awards for Best Documentary Feature and the Best of Fest Audience Choice Award – Leon Award for Best Documentary Film. In Romeo Is Bleeding, a young writer Donté Clark growing up in a city divided by a turf war, channels Shakespeare to help heal the ills of his community. Other top winning films include “Once in a Lifetime” directed by Marie-Castille Mention-Schaar taking the St. Louis Film Critics Association Joe Pollack and Joe Williams Award for Best Narrative Feature. The other audience favorite films include “Unlikely Heroes” directed by Peter Luisi winning the TV5MONDE Award for Best International Film, and “The Last Mentsch” directed by Pierre-Henry Salfati voted Best Film. 24th Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival Awards Charles Guggenheim Cinema St. Louis Award: Alex Winter Women in Film Award: Rosemary Rodriguez Contemporary Cinema Award: Trent Harris Shorts Awards Best Documentary Short: “The Surrender” directed by Stephen Maing Best Local Short: “Ferguson 365” directed by Chris Phillips Best Short Short: “Deathsong” directed by Malcolm Sutherland Best International Short: “Levitation” directed by Marko Mestrovic Best Animated Short: “Borrowed Time” directed by Andrew Coats & Lou Hamou-Lhadj Best Live-Action Short: “Birthday” directed by Chris King Best of Fest: “Beverley” directed by Alexander Thomas Midrash Award “Four Way Stop” directed by Efi da Silva https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uY5CpWtz2XQ Interfaith Awards Best Documentary Feature: “Thao’s Library” directed by Elizabeth Van Meter https://vimeo.com/125478494 Best Narrative Feature: “Three Windows and a Hanging” directed by Isa Qosja https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOnKHG13vXM Alliance of Women Film Journalists’ EDA Award @ SLIFF Best Documentary Feature: “Once My Mother” directed by Sophia Turkiewicz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lO6aTLM8X5s Best Narrative Feature: “Fidélio: Alice’s Odyssey” directed by Lucie Borleteau https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gF02VEgdlqw St. Louis Film Critics Association Joe Pollack and Joe Williams Awards Best Documentary Feature: “Romeo Is Bleeding” directed by Jason Zeldes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vjdh-TmRQCQ Best Narrative Feature: “Once in a Lifetime” directed by Marie-Castille Mention-Schaar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdvhyY1_rxw Best of Fest Audience Choice Awards Leon Award for Best Documentary Film: “Romeo Is Bleeding” directed by Jason Zeldes TV5MONDE Award for Best International Film: “Unlikely Heroes” directed by Peter Luisi Best Film: “The Last Mentsch” directed by Pierre-Henry Salfati https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9L_ypD7KnI New Filmmakers Forum Emerging Director Award (The Bobbie) “Aram, Aram” directed by Christopher Chambers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4BNiJtVDrTY

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  • Restaurant Documentary KING GEORGES Serves February 2016 Release Date | TRAILER

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    KING GEORGES KING GEORGES, a documentary that follows fiery French chef Georges Perrier’s crusade to save his world-renowned 40-year-old restaurant, Philadelphia’s Le Bec Fin, from closing, will be released in theaters on February 26, 2016 via Sundance Selects. The film directed by Erika Frankel just screened at 2015 DOC NYC. Fiery French chef Georges Perrier is on a crusade to keep his 40-year-old landmark restaurant, Le Bec-Fin in Philadelphia, relevant. Times have changed and the culinary world is full of new stars and shifting tastes. Perrier’s contemporaries – at Lutece, La Cote Basque, L’Orangerie – are gone and he is the last man standing of his generation. But how long can he reign? Featuring colorful interviews with chefs Daniel Boulud, Thomas Keller, Eric Ripert and former Mayor of Philadelphia Ed Rendell, first-time director Erika Frankel follows Perrier over four years from Le Bec-Fin’s raging inferno of a kitchen to quiet moments at home, capturing an intimate glimpse of a world-renowned artist in the twilight of his career. Perrier introduced America to grand European-style dining in the 1960’s and he went on to become one of the most accomplished chefs of his generation, honored and praised by the French government, James Beard Foundation and The New York Times. His Napoleonic demeanor, thick French accent and penchant for screaming, throwing plates and de-corking champagne bottles with a sword helped to build his legend. But underneath his commanding presence, he struggles with the demands of a grueling profession. His life revolves around work and at age 67, the pressure to keep things functioning at the high level he set forty years ago, is “killing me,” he says. He partners with young chef Nicholas Elmi (winner of Top Chef 2014), hoping to reinvigorate Le Bec-Fin, but Perrier struggles to let go, still insisting on washing the dishes every night after dinner service as the dishwashers stand around idle. More than a documentary about food, KING GEORGES is a touching story about passion, aging and art. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4OIbnG2R0Y

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  • BIFA Winner Richard Ayoade to Host 2015 Moët British Independent Film Awards

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    Richard Ayoade, The IT Crowd BIFA-winning writer, director, presenter and actor Richard Ayoade will host the 2015 Moët British Independent Film Awards. Richard was nominated for two BIFAs and a BAFTA for his debut film Submarine and won the BIFA for Best Screenplay. He starred in The Watch with Jonah Hill and co-wrote and directed The Double, starring Jesse Eisenberg. He won a BAFTA for playing Moss in The IT Crowd and featured in Nathan Barley, Time Trumpet and The Mighty Boosh, as well as Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place, which he also co-wrote and directed. His first book, Ayoade on Ayoade: A Cinematic Odyssey, was published by Faber & Faber in 2014. Richard said: “I have come to accept that I am now contracted to host this year’s Moët British Independent Film Awards, following in the esteemed footsteps of whoever dropped out. I’ve been told it’s been an outstanding year for British film, but I remember people saying very similar things last year. Let’s celebrate regardless.” BIFA said: “We are very excited that Richard will be hosting the Awards. He is funny, clever and a brilliant filmmaker. He also knows a spectacular amount about film. He’s the perfect host for the Awards and we’re really looking forward to the ceremony with him in charge.” The Moët British Independent Film Awards will take place on Sunday December 6, 2015, at Old Billingsgate.

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  • 7 Narrative Feature Film Projects Win Fall 2015 San Francisco Film Society (SFFS) / Kenneth Rainin Foundation Filmmaking Grants

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    San Francisco Film Society Seven filmmaking teams will receive a total of $270,000 to help with the next stage of their creative process, from screenwriting to postproduction in the latest round of Fall 2015 San Francisco Film Society (SFFS) / Kenneth Rainin Foundation (KRF) Filmmaking Grants. The SFFS / KRF program has funded more than 50 projects since its inception, including Jonas Carpignano’s Mediterranea, which premiered at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival and has created buzz all over the international festival circuit; Chloé Zhao’s Songs My Brothers Taught Me, which screened at Sundance and Cannes and will be released in theaters this fall; Kat Candler’s Hellion and Ira Sachs’ Love Is Strange, both of which premiered to strong reviews at Sundance 2014; Short Term 12, Destin Cretton’s sophomore feature which won both the Narrative Grand Jury Award and Audience Award at South by Southwest 2013; Ryan Coogler’s debut feature Fruitvale Station, which won the 2014 Film Independent Spirit Award for Best First Feature, the Un Certain Regard Avenir Prize at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival, and both the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award in the narrative category at Sundance 2013; and Beasts of the Southern Wild, Benh Zeitlin’s debut phenomenon which won Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize and Cannes’ Camera d’Or in 2012 and earned four Academy Award nominations (including Best Picture). FALL 2015 SFFS / KRF FILMMAKING GRANT WINNERS The Fixer Ian Olds, writer/director; Paul Felten, co-writer; Caroline von Kuhn, producer – $75,000 for postproduction An Afghan journalist is exiled from his war-torn country to a small bohemian community in Northern California. When he attempts to turn his menial job on the local police blotter into “Afghan-style” coverage of local crime, he gets drawn into the backwoods of this small town — a shadow Northern California where sex is casual, true friendship is hard to come by and an unfamiliar form of violence burbles up all around him. Freeland Mario Furloni and Kate McLean, cowriter/directors; Laura Heberton, producer — $25,000 for packaging In the last season of black market marijuana growing before legalization, a mother and daughter must reconcile their differences in order to survive in an increasingly inhospitable world. Little Woods Nia DaCosta, writer/director/producer; Rachael Fung, producer — $25,000 for packaging Ollie sneaks into Canada to get medication for her terminally ill mother and other residents in her overwhelmed oil boomtown. She is caught and forced to stop her illegal business, even though it means leaving the people she aids with no better options. When her estranged sister Deb asks for her help, Ollie has to decide whether or not it’s worth it to help her when it will put both of their lives at risk. The Lusty (working title) Silas Howard, writer/director; Antonia Crane, cowriter; L.A. Teodosio, producer — $35,000 for screenwriting In San Francisco in the late 1990s, an army of strippers at the Lusty Lady confront dangerous labor practices and go on to create the first exotic dancers’ union in the world. Based on a true story. Ma/ddy Devon Kirkpatrick, writer/director — $35,000 for screenwriting In this dark comedy, life after death takes on a whole new meaning for a genderqueer widow following the loss of their wife. Over The Eaves Brent Green, writer/director; Thyra Heder, cowriter; Carly Hugo, Matt Parker and Alexandra Pitz, producers — $50,000 for preproduction A young boy living on a farm begins inventing strange, hand-made machines to ease the family’s hard labor, but his ambitions quickly grow. When his most daring invention backfires and changes life on Earth forever, the townspeople struggle to understand whether he has done them harm or shown them what they have been missing. Reza and the Refugees Aaron Douglass Johnston, writer/director/producer; Laura Wagner, producer — $25,000 for packaging A ragtag team of Middle Eastern political refugees in Holland enters the Eurovision song contest in an effort to save their friend from deportation and certain death.

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