Ayla: The Daughter of War[/caption]
Can Ulkay’s debut feature Ayla The Daughter of War, based on the true story of a soldier in the Korean War who risks his own life to save a half-frozen little girl, won the Best of Fest Award and the Director’s Choice Award for Best Foreign Film at the 24th Sedona International Film Festival. The film was selected as Turkey’s official candidate for the best foreign-language film at this year’s Oscar.
Rod McCall ‘s Rose, featuring Cybill Shepherd, James Brolin, Pam Grier and Cindy Pickett about a widowed ex-cop who decides to go on a solo road trip to the Southwest in a motorized wheelchair after discovering she may have a life-threatening illness; and Django, the story of guitarist and composer Django Reinhardt and his flight from German-occupied Paris in 1943, tied for Director’s Choice Best Feature Film.
Instrument of War, a film about B-24 bomber pilot Clair Cline’s experience as a POW after being shot down in northern Germany during World War II, and inspired by true events, took the Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Film. 2018 Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Film, The Insult, won the Audience Award for Best Foreign Film.
Django
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2018 Sedona International Film Festival Winners – “Ayla The Daughter Of War” Wins Best of Fest Award
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Ayla: The Daughter of War[/caption]
Can Ulkay’s debut feature Ayla The Daughter of War, based on the true story of a soldier in the Korean War who risks his own life to save a half-frozen little girl, won the Best of Fest Award and the Director’s Choice Award for Best Foreign Film at the 24th Sedona International Film Festival. The film was selected as Turkey’s official candidate for the best foreign-language film at this year’s Oscar.
Rod McCall ‘s Rose, featuring Cybill Shepherd, James Brolin, Pam Grier and Cindy Pickett about a widowed ex-cop who decides to go on a solo road trip to the Southwest in a motorized wheelchair after discovering she may have a life-threatening illness; and Django, the story of guitarist and composer Django Reinhardt and his flight from German-occupied Paris in 1943, tied for Director’s Choice Best Feature Film.
Instrument of War, a film about B-24 bomber pilot Clair Cline’s experience as a POW after being shot down in northern Germany during World War II, and inspired by true events, took the Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Film. 2018 Academy Award nominee for Best Foreign Film, The Insult, won the Audience Award for Best Foreign Film.
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MY FATHER’s WINGS Wins Grand Prix Award at Cape Town International Film Festival
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My Father’s Wings by Kivanç Sezer[/caption]
The 2017 Cape Town International Film Market & Festival announced its winners – with My Father’s Wings by Kivanç Sezer winning the Grand Prix Award, and Catching Feelings by Kagiso Lediga winning the award for Best South African Feature Film.
Over the ten days of the festival, energy of local young filmmakers combined with the enthusiasm from the many local and international experts, professionals and guest speakers, has proven that Cape Town’s film industry is thriving.
Pitching Competition
The winner of this year’s prize worth $20 000 is Nathan Theys, for Ronald. The runner-up prize worth $10,000 awarded to Brett Michael Innes for Callus.South African Short Film –Honorable Mentions
Jaap by Ian Morgan Meticulously crafted, Jaap may start off with stereotypes, but the characters turn out well-rounded in the end. Director Ian Morgan has created a quirky, funny, poignant and endearing road trip movie. Post by Jesse Brown Post is an immersive sensory experience. A short, hand-held camera documentary it paints a portrait of filmmaker Jesse Brown’s grandfather, showing off an intimacy between the two that is both playful and real, yet sublime.Best Short Film
Intergalactic Samurai by Hagar Ben-Asher Well-rounded, polished, emotionally visceral and with an ending to make your hair stand on end, this story of two young Ethiopian girls in Israel will subtly teach you something you didn’t know. The story about identity is universal but will be of relevance to South Africans. The superb performance Hagar Ben-Asher gets out of her two characters immediately grabbed us and left us gasping is Intergalactic Samurai.Best Actor
Pankaj Tripathi as Salim in Mango DreamsBest Actress
Antoinette Louw as Molly Fischer in An Act of DefianceBest Script
Jean van der Velde for An Act of DefianceBest Editing
Mustafa Presheva for Ayla: The Daughter of WarBest Cinematography
Massimo Moschin for The Last ProseccoBest Documentary Film
Hana by Giuseppe Carrieri Giuseppe Carrieri ‘s Hana was selected for its real documented incidents in 4 different countries concerning a human issue, connecting through the pain and the high Film language a well-made story telling documentaryBest LGBT Film
Special Mention Award KA Bodyscapes by Jayan K. Cherian In India homosexuality is criminalized in law, with high levels of persecution and harassment. In this context, KA Bodyscapes is a courageous film. It is a film about working class LGBT people struggling against both homophobia and sexism. Set in Kerala, the film weaves together several narratives that highlight the vulnerabilities of economic marginalization, violence, state harassment, and powerful queer resistance, in the daily realties of women and LGBT people. Best LGBT Film Heartstone by Guðmundur Arnar Guðmundsson This is an extraordinarily crafted film, dealing with the crisis in contemporary masculinity and how a heteronormative structure damages all genders and sexualities. It is a coming of age story of young people that mirrors the harsh and isolated, yet breathtaking, Icelandic fishing village in which it is set. Heartstone is a stunning debut feature with raw, visceral performances, sensitive directing, truthful screenwriting and poetic cinematography.Best South African Feature Film
Catching Feelings by Kagiso Lediga The film is a refreshing film that not only showcases the talent of its writer and director but also introduces the audience to characters and conversations that they will recognize instantly from their own lives. Well executed and vibrant, it is a love letter to Johannesburg and a deserving addition to the canon of South African cinema.Best New Director
Manouj Kadaamh for HorizonBest Director
Visa Koiso-Kantilla- Star BoysGrand Prix Award
Kivanç Sezer for My Father’s Wings
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Toronto’s Diaspora Film Festival to Showcase Music Films, DJANGO, HARMONIA, MORRIS FROM AMERICA
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MORRIS FROM AMERICA[/caption]
The 17th Diaspora Film Festival (DFF) will run from November 2 to 5, 2017 in Toronto under the theme Music of Diaspora. The festival will showcase films where music makes a major element of the storytelling, including DJANGO, HARMONIA, and MORRIS FROM AMERICA.
The festival opens with the Toronto premiere of TEHRAN TABOO, which premiered at this year’s Cannes Film Festival 2017 and was nominated for Golden Camera and Critics’ Week prizes.
THEY tells the story of young J who is exploring their gender identity. THEY was also nominated for Camera d’Or and Queer Palm at Cannes Film Festival 2017 and is also a Toronto premiere.
Along with THEY there are three other films that deal with coming of age challenges. MORRIS FROM AMERICA is a comedy about a young African-American boy trying to fit in with German kids. In BABAI (Father), a young Kosovo boy goes through a difficult journey to Germany to find his dad, while in SON OF SOFIA, a young Russian boy finds a new dad when he decides to move to Greece to live with his mom. All Toronto premieres.
HALAL FOR BEGINNERS is a fresh out of production Irish comedy about the first halal meet factory in Ireland, North American premiere.
Shahab Hosseini, the winner of Best Actor at Cannes Film Festival 2016, plays an Iranian immigrant in the UK trying to forget his past with no plan for the future in the Toronto premiere of GHOLAM. In a reverse migration, a young Surinamer-Dutch man goes back to his hometown in search of his roots.
DFF 17 closes with THE 90 MINUTES WAR, a palestinian-Israeli comedy where the politicians of both sides decide to resolve long-standing conflicts through a soccer match.
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Tehran Taboo[/caption]
Tehran Taboo
Ali Soozandeh, Germany/Austria, 2017, 96 min, in Farsi with English Subtitles
Nominated, Camera d’Or and Critics’ Week Grand Prize, Cannes FF 2017; winner, FIPRESCI, Jerusalem FF2017
The lives of three strong-willed women and a young musician cross paths in Tehran’s schizophrenic
society where sex, adultery, corruption, prostitution and drugs coexist with strict religious laws.
Django
Etienne Comar, 2017, France, French, 117min
Nominated for Golden Bear, Berlin FF 2017
1943, occupied Paris. Django Reinhardt the brilliant and carefree jazz guitarist plays to standing-room-
only crowds. Meanwhile his gypsy brethren are being persecuted throughout Europe.
They
Anahita Ghazvinizadeh, US, 2017, 80 min
Nominated, Camera d’Or, Queer Palm, Cannes FF 2017
Fourteen-year- old J goes by the pronoun ‘They’ and lives with their parents in the suburbs of Chicago. J is exploring their gender identity and has to make a decision whether or not to transition.
Diaspora in Short
A compilation of award winning short films from around the globe.
Harmonia
Ori Sivan, Israel, 2016, 98 min, in Hebrew and Arabic with English Subtitles
Winner, Best Cinematography, Jerusalem FF 2016; Nominated for four Israeli Film Academy 2016
Harmonia is a modern adaptation of the mythological triangle between the childless Abraham and Sarah and young Hagar. When Hagar, a young horn player from East Jerusalem joins the West Side Orchestra, she bonds with Sarah and offers to have a baby for her from Abraham, her husband.
Halal for Beginners
Conor McDermottroe, Irland/Germany, 2017, 100 min, in English
Partly based on true events, this warm-hearted comedy about Ireland’s first Halal meat factory tells the story of young Muslim Raghdan Aziz trying to find his place in the world of small town Sligo.
Gholam
Mitra Tabrizian, UK, 2017, 104 min, in Farsi and English with English Subtitles
With Shahab Hosseini, winner of Best Actor, Cannes Film Festival 2017
Gholam is an enigmatic quiet Iranian cab driver. Once a war hero, he has disappeared from the battlefield without a trace. He does not want to look back into his past and has no conviction for the future.
Babai
Visar Morina, Germany/Kosovo, 2015, 104min, In German, Albanian, Serbian, English, with English
Subtitles
Winner, Best Director, Label Europa Cinema, Karlovy Vary FF 2015; One Feature Prize, Young German Cinema Award, Munich FF 2015
Ten-year- old Nori and his father Gezim roam the streets of Kosovo selling cigarette. When Gezim is lured west to Germany, Nori embarks on a dangerous journey to in search of his father. His tenacity, resilience, and sheer grit must be enough to guide him.
Home Is Where the Heart Is
Marc Waltman, The Netherlands, 2017, 100 min, in Dutch with English Subtitles
Axel is a white Surinamer who has been living in The Netherlands for 20 years. When his mom calls the family back for Christmas Alex reluctantly returns back to Surinam with his wife. Over dinner, however, the situation explodes.
Morris from America
Chad Hartigan, Germany, 2016, 91 min, in German and English with English Subtitles
Winner, Special Jury Award, Sundance FF 2016; Named Top Ten Independent Film by National Board of Review USA, 2016
Morris, a 13-year- old African-American moves to Heidelberg with his dad, a professional soccer coaches.
After his attempts to fit in with German kids, he falls for a girl at a youth club. He finds his way to open
up with his rapping talent and a help with his new German girlfriend.
Son of Sofia
Elina Psykou, France/Greece/Bulgaria, 2017, 111min, in Russian and Greek with English Subtitles
Winner, Jury Award, Tribeca FF 2017, Special Award, Sarajevo FF 2017
Athens, 2004 summer Olympic Games. 11-year- old Misha arrives from Russia to live with his mother,
Sofia. What he doesn’t know is
that there is a father waiting for him there. While Greece is living the Olympic dream, Misha will get violently catapulted into the adult world.
The 90 Minutes War
Eyal Halfon, Israel/Germany/Portugal, 2016, 90 min, in Hebrew, Arabic, English, Portuguese, with English
Subtitles
After years of bloodshed, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is about to be resolved. A moment before another round of violence, the ideal solution has been reached: a soccer game. One game that will decide who gets to stay in the holy land, and who must leave.
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Acclaimed Music Biopics DALIDA and DJANGO to be Released in US | Trailer
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Dalida[/caption]
The award-winning music biopics Dalida and Django, have been acquired by Under The Milky Way for theatrical releases commencing in Fall 2017 and Early 2018 respectively.
Accomplished filmmaker Lisa Azuelos’ much-anticipated Dalida biopic goes backstage with the enchanting Egyptian-born Italian singer who became France’s reigning pop star from the 1950s to the 1980s.
On the acquisition of Dalida, company co-founder Alexis Derendinger commented: “Quite simply, we were blown away by Sveva Alviti’s performance in Dalida. In her time, Dalida sold more records than Madonna and inspired generations of music lovers around the world. We are thrilled to bring Lisa Azuelos’s masterful interpretation of her story to US audiences.”
Recording in more than five languages, Dalida sold a record-breaking 170 million albums during her lifetime, with chart-topping hits spanning Edith Piaf-esque classics to emotional disco numbers. Following Dalida’s extraordinary rise from beauty pageant contestant to cabaret artist to international superstar, this visually stunning new film tells a captivating story of professional success and personal tragedy in exquisite period detail. Italian-model-turned actress Sveva Alviti paints a nuanced portrait of the star in her breakthrough role. Dalida is directed by Lisa Azuelos (LOL, Quantom Love) and stars Sveva Alviti, Riccardo Scamarcio, Jean-Paul Rouve and Nicolas Duvauchelle.
Opening Film of the 2017 Berlin Film Festival and an official selection of Rendez-vous With French Cinema, Django is a powerful biopic which will immerse viewers in a tumultuous chapter in the life of one of the 20th century’s greatest musical geniuses: the legendary Romani jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGgtO0WP9KU
Derendinger continued: “We were also astonished by first time filmmaker Etienne Comar’s Django, with Reta Kateb giving a powerhouse performance as the beloved musician and exceptional artist Django Reinhardt, fighting against Nazi-occupied France and the treatment of his community. In this time of political uncertainty worldwide, we believe the film will strike a chord with a wide audience domestically.”
Django is the much anticipated wartime biopic of the world-famous jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, elegantly interpreted by Reda Kateb (A Prophet, Zero Dark Thirty).
As the toast of 1943 Paris, Django thrilled audiences with his distinctive brand of “hot jazz” and charmed a league of admirers including his muse “Chinese Puzzle,” played by Cécile de France. But even as the rise of Nazism forces Reinhardt- whose music is considered degenerate under the Third Reich- to make a daring escape from Paris, he refuses to be silenced, using his music as a form of protest. Kateb’s powerful performance leads this spirited biopic that will keep audiences on their tapping toes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lw5DvTAVomA
Django is directed by writer/producer of “Of God and Men” Etienne Comar and stars Reda Kateb (“A Prophet”) and Cecile de France (“Hereafter”).
