LEARNING TO DRIVE (2014)

  • Karlovy Vary International Film Festival to Honor Patricia Clarkson + Close with LATE NIGHT

    Out of Blue starring Patricia Clarkson
    Out of Blue starring Patricia Clarkson

    Distantly related to The Devil Wears Prada, the enchanting comedy Late Night that wowed audiences at this year’s Sundance will close the 54th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. After a glittering career of twenty-five years, charismatic but jaded queen of late-night talk shows Katherine Newbury (Emma Thompson) discovers her viewing figures are rapidly spiralling. But then spontaneous Molly turns up looking for a job. Might she be the desirable female element lacking in Katherine’s team of egocentric alpha males and frustrated oddballs?

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  • LISTEN TO ME MARLON Wins Best Film at 2015 Traverse City Film Festival

    Listen to Me Marlon The Traverse City Film Festival, founded, programmed, and run by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore, just wrapped its 11th edition which ran  July 29-August 2, 2015 in beautiful Traverse City, Michigan. The festival welcomed over 100,000 avid cinema lovers. “This year’s festival brought some of the best films we’ve ever had, and we had more filmmakers here to share the stories of those film with audiences than ever before. Everyone I’ve spoken with has their own special moment from the festival – for me, celebrating the 100th birthday of the State Theatre with Geraldine Chaplin in attendance was a once in a lifetime experience,” said Moore. The 2015 official program added new sections which sold out quickly, including #Tween (movies for the generation currently coming of age), and The Sidebar: Food on Film (the best in culinary cinema, followed by candid conversations between the stars of the Northern Michigan food scene and sample bites prepared by the chefs and inspired by the films), and LGBTQ (marking the Supreme Court’s historic ruling on gay marriage). Closing Night’s gala screening of “Grandma” began with Michael Moore legally marrying a gay couple, live on the stage of the State Theatre. The Founders Grand Prize for Best Film, the festival’s top prize, went to “Listen to Me Marlon.” Best Documentary went to “The Wanted 18” and Best Comedy to “Finders Keepers.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cekn77FeK4A https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCfIVdmIbgY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Etx0cHsVcqg The festival’s Changemaker Award went to Iraq veteran Ross Caputi for his film “Fear Not the Path of Truth,” and its Discovery Award to Kauother Ben Hania for her satirical film “Challat of Tunis.” Audience Award winning films included “A Brave Heart: The Story of Lizzie Velasquez” for Best Documentary and “Tangerines” for Best Foreign Film. AUDIENCE AWARD WINNERS OF 2015 TRAVERSE CITY FILM FESTIVAL Audience Award Winner for Best Kids Short: “The Present“ Audience Award Winner for Best Narrative Short: “Birthday“ Audience Award Winner for Best Documentary Short: “Naneek“ Audience Award Winner for Best Kids Film: “Fiddlesticks“ Audience Award Runner Up for Best Foreign Film: “The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared“ Audience Award Winner for Best Foreign Film: “Tangerines“ Audience Award Runner Up for Best American Film: “Learning to Drive“ Audience Award Winner for Best American Film: “Kill the Messenger“ Audience Award Runner Up for Best Documentary Film: “The Hunting Ground“ Audience Award Winner for Best Documentary Film: “A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story“ SHORT FILM WINNERS Founders Prize Special Mention Short Film: “Let Your Light Shine“ Founders Prize for Best Narrative Short: “Discipline“ Founders Prize for Best Documentary Short: “My Enemy, My Brother“ FOUNDERS AWARDS Lifetime Achievement Award: Geraldine Chaplin Visionary Award: Robert Altman Michigan Filmmaker Award: Roger Corman Discovery Award: Kaouther Ben Hania, “Challat of Tunis“ Changemaker Award: Ross Caputi, “Fear Not the Path of Truth“ Stuart J. Hollander Prize for Best Kids Film: “Fiddlesticks“ Buzz Wilson Prize for Best Avant-Garde Film: “Journey to the West“ Founders Prize Special Award: “7 Chinese Brothers“ Founders Prize Special Award: “The Trials of Spring“ Founders Prize Special Award: “The Wolfpack“ Founders Prize Special Award: “Roseanne for President!“ Founders Prize Special Award: “The Armor of Light“ Founders Prize Special Award: “Wild Tales“ Founders Prize Special Award: “Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem“ Founders Prize Special Award: “The Last Five Years“ Roger Ebert Prize for Best Film by a First Time Filmmaker: “T-Rex“ Stanley Kubrick Award for Bold and Innovative Filmmaking: “Tangerine“ Founders Prize for Best Documentary: “The Wanted 18“ Founders Prize for Best Comedy: “Finders Keepers“ Founders Prize for Best Drama: “Two Days, One Night“ Founders Prize for Best Film: “Listen to Me Marlon“ TCFF DOWNTOWN WINDOW DECORATION CONTEST First Place: Great Lakes Bath & Body and Paperworks Studio Second Place: Toy Harbor Third Place: Haystacks FIM GROUP BUMPER CONTEST First Place Claire Holloway DECISION TIME $1,000 Second Place Brian Steinberg SHORT AND TALL $300 Third Place Mike DeRosa THE KID AND HIS CITY $200 The 12th annual Traverse City Film Festival will take place July 26 – 31, 2016.

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  • Its a Tie. ASTRAEA and COME TO MY VOICE Win 18th Maine International Film Festival Audience Award

    Come To My Voice The 18th Maine International Film Festival closed on Sunday and unveiled the winner of its audience favorite award, with Astraea and Come To My Voice tied as the MIFF audience’s favorite. “We’re thrilled that MIFF audiences once again were adventurous and enthusiastic about exploring and discussing films from around the world,” said Festival Director Shannon Haines. “We had a fabulous slate of guests and an incredible array of films for MIFF audiences to enjoy. We look forward to seeing you all next year” In the film Astraea, directed by Kristjan Thor, – when an epidemic nearly wipes out the human race, a telepathic teenage girl named Astraea has visions of survivors living in New Brunswick. She leads her doubting brother on a 5000-mile journey through a silent and abandoned America into the snowbound wilderness, hoping to rebuild life as she knew it. As they head north, her clairvoyance intensifies and they encounter a wary young couple, homesteading on a remote lake in Western Maine. The grief and complexity—as well as the excitement and comfort—of encountering other normal humans pits itself against Astraea’s desire to keep moving and find her family. This post-apocalyptic film, spectacularly shot in wintry Maine landscapes, uses sensitivity and intellect rather than special effects to show not what humanity is running from, but what we’re running towards. https://vimeo.com/118208194 In Come To My Voice, directed by Hüseyin Karabey, which takes place in a snowy Kurdish mountain village, in the east of Turkey, an old woman Berfé and her granddaughter Jiyan are distressed. The only man in the household, Temo, the son of one and the father of the other, was arrested by the Turkish military. The commanding officer has been told that the villagers are hiding weapons, so he arrested all the men and announced that they will be kept in prison until their families hand over the weapons. The problem is that there are no weapons in the village. Desperate, Berfé and Jiyan embark on a long journey, in search of a gun which they could exchange for their beloved Temo. Will the old woman and her innocent granddaughter find a way out of the inextricable Kurdish identity conflict? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3Xbi0l61k0 Learning To Drive and Samba were tied for second place and Au Bord du Monde came in third place for the audience favorite award. Forty-four of the 47 films eligible for the award received at least one vote. Acclaimed actor Michael Murphy was presented the Mid-Life Achievement Award in honor of his diverse career that includes a long-time collaboration with director Robert Altman and work with Woody Allen, P.T. Anderson, Elia Kazan and Oliver Stone. MIFF screened the U.S. premiere of Murphy’s new film Fall before the award presentation on July 16. For the first time, MIFF hosted the World Filmmakers’ Forum through a grant from the National Endowment of the Arts. Filmmakers from France, Argentina, Turkey and Mexico will show their work and discuss their creative process and the state of international film.

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  • LEARNING TO DRIVE Wins Top Award at 2015 Provincetown International Film Festival

    LEARNING TO DRIVE directed by Isabel Coixet LEARNING TO DRIVE directed by Isabel Coixet won the HBO Audience Award / Best Narrative Feature, and PACKED IN A TRUNK: THE LOST ART OF EDITH LAKE WILKINSON directed by Michelle Boyaner won the HBO Audience Award / Best Documentary Feature at the 2015 Provincetown International Film Festival (PIFF). In LEARNING TO DRIVE, starring Patricia Clarkson and Ben Kinsley, a recently divorced book editor, on a path to self-sufficiency, and her driving instructor, a soft-spoken taxi driver from India on the verge of an arranged marriage, connect over their mutual anxieties. In 1924 artist Edith Lake Wilkinson was committed to an asylum and never heard from again.PACKED IN A TRUNK: THE LOST ART OF EDITH LAKE WILKINSON follows Edith’s great-niece, Emmy Award winning writer and director Jane Anderson, on her journey to find the answers to the mystery of Edith’s buried life. The complete list of awards and winners of the 2015 Provincetown International Film Festival (PIFF) – HBO Audience Award / Best Narrative Feature: LEARNING TO DRIVE directed by Isabel Coixet – HBO Audience Award / Best Documentary Feature: PACKED IN A TRUNK: THE LOST ART OF EDITH LAKE WILKINSON directed by Michelle Boyaner – The John Schlesinger Award, presented to a first time documentary and narrative feature filmmaker: BREATHE, directed by Mélanie Laurent (narrative) and OUTERMOST RADIO directed by Alan Chebot (documentary) – HBO Short Documentary Award: THE FACE OF UKRAINE: CASTING OKSANA BAIUL directed by Kitty Green – Jury Award / Best Narrative Short Film: MYRNA THE MONSTER directed by Ian Samuels – Jury Award / Best Animated Short Film: SYMPHONY NO. 42 directed by Réka Bucsi – Jury Award / Best New England Short Film: AWESOME_FCK directed by Isaak James – Jury Award / Student Short Film: SHARE directed by Pippa Bianco The Short Film Jury consisted of documentary filmmaker Jeff Dupre, producer Laura Heberton and Mark Elijah Rosenberg, founder and artistic director of Rooftop Films. The festival also announced the dates for next year’s event as June 15-19, 2016. Bobcat Goldthwait was presented with the 2015 Filmmaker on the Edge Award in conversation with PIFF resident artist John Waters at Town Hall on Saturday night. Jennifer Coolidge received the Faith Hubley Career Achievement Award in conversation with film critic and professor B. Ruby Rich.

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