Original Sin (PECADO ORIGINAL)(2019)

  • AN UNEXPECTED LOVE and World Premiere of DAYS OF LIGHT Bookend 2019 AFI Latin American Film Festival Lineup

    AN UNEXPECTED LOVE, directed by Juan Vera
    AN UNEXPECTED LOVE, directed by Juan Vera

    The 2019 AFI Latin American Film Festival will take place September 12–October 2 at the historic AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring, MD. Celebrating its 30th edition this year, the festival honors Ibero-American cultural connections during National Hispanic Heritage Month. This year’s festival will showcase 53 films, nearly 40% of the films are directed by women.

    Read more


  • Ashland Independent Film Festival Unveils Complete 2019 Lineup of Over 150 Films

    Moonlight Sonata: Deafness in Three Movements by Irene Taylor Brodsky
    Moonlight Sonata: Deafness in Three Movements by Irene Taylor Brodsky

    The Ashland Independent Film Festival announced its lineup of over 150 films for the eighteenth annual festival, April 11-15, 2019, in Ashland, Oregon.

    Read more


  • 25th Austin Film Festival Announces Full Lineup, BEN IS BACK, WIDOWS, GREEN BOOK

    [caption id="attachment_30734" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Widows L-R: Michelle Rodriguez, Viola Davis, and Elizabeth Debicki star in Twentieth Century Fox’s WIDOWS. Photo Credit: Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox.[/caption] Steve McQueen’s and Gillian Flynn’s modern-day thriller Widows, Peter Farrelly’s drama Green Book starring Mahershala Ali and Viggo Mortensen, Mike Leigh’s period piece Peterloo are among the the full schedule of films announced for the 25th Anniversary edition of the Austin Film Festival  taking place this October 25 to November 1. The festival lineup also includes Mickey Rourke-starring boxing drama Tiger, Paul Dano’s Wildlife starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Carey Mulligan, and Julia Roberts and Lucas Hedges family drama Ben is Back bowing as AFF’s Centerpiece selection. Other World Premieres include The Dancing Dogs of Dombrova (a comedy about estranged siblings traveling to Poland to track down the remains of the their grandmother’s childhood dog), F/11 and Be There (a documentary about famed photographer Burk Uzzle), The Amaranth (a thriller about a mysterious retirement community), A Girl Named C (Emily Kassie’s documentary about a family grappling with the discovery that their 11-year-old daughter was raped), and Waiting for the Miracle to Come (Lian Lunson’s whimsical drama starring Willie Nelson and Charlotte Rampling).

    Austin Film Festival’s 2018 slate

    Marquee Features

    And Breathe Normally Writer/Director: Isold Uggadottir Ben is Back Writer/Director: Peter Hedges Boy Erased Writer/Director: Joel Edgerton Can You Ever Forgive Me? Writers: Nicole Holofcener, Jeff Whitty Director: Marielle Heller El Chicano Writers: Ben Hernandez Bray, Joe Carnahan Director: Ben Hernandez Bray Everybody Knows Writer/Director: Asghar Farhadi The Favourite Writers: Deborah Davis, Tony McNamara Director: Yorgos Lanthimos The Front Runner Writers: Matt Bai, Jay Carson, Jason Reitman Director: Jason Reitman Fullsterkur Director: Todd Sansom Green Book Writers: Nick Vallelonga, Brian Currie, Peter Farrelly Director: Peter Farrelly Happy as Lazarro Writer/Director: Alice Rohrwacher Little Woods Writer/Director: Nia DaCosta The Long Dumb Road Writers: Hannah Fidell, Carson Mell Director: Hannah Fidell Peterloo Writer/Director: Mike Leigh Shoplifters Writer/Director: Hirokazu Koreeda Tiger Writers: Michael Pugliese, Prem Singh Director: Alister Grierson Widows Writers: Gillian Flynn & Steve McQueen Director: Steve McQueen Wildlife Writers: Paul Dano, Zoe Kazan Director: Paul Dano Worlds of Ursula K. LeGuin Writer/Director: Arwen Curry

    Marquee Television

    Counterpart Season 2 Episode 1 Premiere Creator: Justin Marks Executive Producer: Jordan Horowitz Friends from College Season 2 Episode 1 Premiere Creators: Francesca Delbanco & Nicholas Stoller

    Narrative Features

    Above the Clouds Writer: Simon Lord Director: Leon Chambers ClaraClara Writers: Akash Sherman, James Ewasiuk Director: Akash Sherman The Comet Writer: Torben Bech Director: Bård Røssevold Delia & Sammy Writer/ Director: Therese Cayaba Fishbowl Writers: Stephen Kinigopoulos, Piero Iberti Director: Stephen Kinigopoulos, Alexa Kinigopoulos Last Summer Writer/Director: Jon Jones Laugh or Die Writers: Heikki Kujanpää, Mikko Reitala Director: Heikki Kujnapää Love Goes Through Your Mind Writers: Shruti Swaminathan, Ronak Shah Director: Ronak Shah Major Arcana Writer/Director: Josh Melrod Speaking in Tongues Writers: Nathan Deming, Lawrie Doran Director: Nathan Deming Undercliffe Writer: Bruce McLeod Director: Lisa Mulcahy

    Comedy Vanguard Features

    Antiquities Writers: Daniel Campbell, Graham Gordy Director: Daniel Campbell The Dancing Dogs of Dombrova Writer: Michael Whatling Director: Zack Bernbaum In Reality Writers: Ann Lupo, Esteban Pedraza, Aaron Pryka Director: Ann Lupo Lost & Found Writer/Director: Liam O Mochain Original Sin (Pecado Original) Writers: Jean Lee, Maia Nikiphoroff Director: Jean Lee Simple Wedding Writers: Sara Zandieh, Stephanie Wu Director: Sara Zandieh

    Dark Matters Features

    Alive. Writers: Jules Vincent, Chuck McCue Director: Rob Grant The Amaranth Writer: Eileen Shields Director: Albert Chi Beyond the Night Writer/Director: Jason Noto The Black String Writers: Brian Hanson, Richard Handley Director: Brian Hanson The Dark Red Writers: Dan Bush, Conal Byrne Director: Dan Bush Empathy, Inc. Writer: Mark Leidner Director: Yedidya Gorestman Ghost Light Writer: John Stimpson, Geoffrey Taylor Director: John Stimpson The Lake Vampire Writer/Director: Carl Zitelmann

    Documentary Feature

    A Girl Named C Director: Emily Kassie Care to Laugh Director: Julie Getz F/11 and Be There Director: Jethro Waters Fathers of Football Director: Bradley Beesley For The Birds Director: Richard Miron Ghosthunter Director: Ben Lawrence The Interpreters Directors: Andres Caballero, Sofian Khan Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story Writers: Jon Strong, Ted Haddock, John King, Mike Quinn Jr. Director: Jon Strong The Money Stone Director: Stuart Harmon Surviving Bokator Writers: Mark Bochsler, Kevin Schjerning, Fernanda Rossi Director: Mark Bochsler Turning Point Director: James Keach

    Texas Independent Features

    Also Starring Austin Writer: Mike Blizzard, Laura Colwell, Lara Morgan Director: Mike Blizzard The Iron Orchard Writer: Gerry De Leon Director: Ty Roberts Jules of Light and Dark Writer/Director: Daniel Laabs Texas Cotton Writers: Tyler Russell, Jameel Khaja Director: Tyler Russell Waiting for the Miracle to Come Writer/Director: Lian Lunson

    Read more


  • 28 Feature Films to LA Premiere at 2018 DTLA Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_31965" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Octavio Is Dead! Octavio Is Dead![/caption] The 10th DTLA Film Festival, taking place October 17  to 21, announced today the 11 documentary and 17 narrative feature-length movies in the 2018 line-up, under the of women’s empowerment, a nod to the #metoo and #timesup movements. In keeping with the theme, 18 of the 27 (65%) of the new feature films screening at the festival are by women directors. In separate ceremonies, Rosanna Arquette and Malcolm McDowell are to be honored with the festival’s Independent Film Pioneer Award for their body of work in independent cinema. Arquette appears in two films in competition at the festival. She stars in Amanda Sthers’ “Holy Lands” as a matriarch attempting to hold her family together even as she must confront her own mortality. The film, co-starring James Caan, Tom Hollander and Jonathan Rhys Meyers, will screen as the festival Centerpiece presentation. Arquette also co-stars in Sook-Yin Lee’s “Octavio Is Dead!” a contemporary ghost story. In a career spanning four decades, Arquette has appeared in many signature roles, including “Desperately Seeking Susan” (1985), for which she earned a Best Actress Golden Globe Nomination, “Pulp Fiction” (1994), “After Hours” (1985) and “The Whole Nine Yards” (2000). Over the past year, she has become a public face of the #metoo movement. McDowell stars in the festival’s Los Angeles premiere screening of director Kayla Tabish’s “Culture of Fear,”a dystopian suspense thriller. Forever known for his iconic starring role as Alex in Stanley Kubrick’s “Clockwork Orange” (1971), he would go onto star in “O Lucky Man” (1973), based on his concept and the script that he co-wrote, Paul Schrader’s “Cat People” (1982), “The Caller” (1987) “Gangster No. 1” (2000), Robert Altman’s “The Company (2003), “The Employer” (2013) and literally dozens of other independent and studios releases spanning six decades. In the festival’s tradition of presenting an archival movie to conclude the festival, this year’s Closing Night Film will be a special 20th anniversary screening of director Kevin Rodney Sullivan’s “How Stella Got Her Groove Back”(1998) with appearances by the cast and crew. In “A Tuba To Cuba” filmmaker T.G. Herrington profiles a cultural institution, The Preservation Hall Jazz Band of New Orleans, as they journey to Cuba in search of musical camaraderie and historical root. In “Underdogs,”first-time director Téo Frank also is in search of musical origins but with the focus on hip-hop, as he travels from his native Paris to New York. Hip hop plays another leading role in Sam Bathrick’s “16 Bars,”the third documentary in the festival’s music series. The film follows three inmates as they collaborate with Grammy -Award-winning artist Speech of Arrested Development, discovering painful elements of their past in the process. Three inmates are also the subject of Tamara Perkins’ inspirational documentary “Life After Life”as they set out to prove their success on the other side. The theme of overcoming challenges permeates two films about veterans. In “Surviving Home,” co-directors Jillian Moul and Matthew Moul document the lives of four generations of warriors after returning from war. In Anita Sugimura Holsapple’s “Battlefield Home – Breaking The Silence,”a Vietnam era military child exposes the unflinching impact of war on family dynamics. A battle of another kind is the subject of filmmakers Tricia Russo’s and Craig E. Shapiro’s “Love Always, Mom,”an inspirational documentary about a stage-4 cancer survivor’s journey to build a family after diagnosis. Family is also the focus of Ensar Altay “Guardian of the Angels,”a documentary profile of a widower who continues to find his wife’s love in his care of their child with special needs. In co-directors Liza Meak’s and Kathryn Basiji’s documentary “The Edge of Success,”it’s youth who take matters into their own hands when their high school is plagued by suicide clusters. Social justice is manifested in myriad ways in fiction and nonfiction films screening at the festival. In Sally Colón-Petree’s documentary “Women Like Us,”three American women are inspired by the powerful women they encounter in Kenya, who against all odds are successfully confronting a host of social injustices from female genital mutilation to child prostitution. In “Give Us This Day”co-directors Michael Zimbalist and Jeff Zimbalist track a year in East St. Louis, the city with the highest homicide rate in the United States. Told from the perspectives of both police officers and residents, a community plagued by gun violence experiences complex challenges, heartbreak and hope. Also screening at the festival are two dramas that tackle social injustice. In Laura Somers’ “Rich Kids,”economic class divide is the backdrop as a group of teens from a low-income community break into a mansion to enjoy the good life if only for a day. Class divides also figures into the theme of Collin Schiffli’s dramatic feature “All Creatures Here Below,”about a destitute couple struggling to find refuge for themselves and a stolen infant.” The impact of crime is explored in Wes Miller’s “River Runs Red,”about a hardened detective (John Cusack) and a grieving father (George Lopez) who take the law into their own hands when police violence spirals out of control. Taye Diggs co-stars. Jay Francisco Lopez’s “Love, Cecy”is based on a true crime story of a promising high school student whose brutal murder was chronicled by the media nationwide. In Richard Levien’s “Collisions,”a 12-year-old must turn detective when she returns home with her younger brother to find their house ransacked and their immigrant mother missing. Searching for a lost loved one is also the theme of Ilana Rein’s suspenseful “Perception,” the story of a successful businessman who comes to believe that a small-time psychic has the power to reconnect with his dead wife. Psychological thrills freefall in Angela Matemotja’s “Elevate,” a set of intertwining stories about people trapped in elevators who must face their greatest fears. In Amanda Kramer’s “Paris Window,” adult siblings Julian and Sunny are caught in a trap of their own making as they maneuver hallucinatory paranoia and sinister conspiracies in their otherwise lovely pied-à-terre. Comedy and drama blur in several films screening at the festival. Director Sean McGinly uses a light touch to explore profound questions about life, love, friendship and family in “Silver Lake.”Wendy McColm’s “Birds Without Feathers”also navigates the shoals of human connections in her black comedy about six broken individuals on their quest for love. Nancy Goodman’s rom-com “Surprise Me”is a seemingly light-hearted story of an event planner but with a darker undercurrent about eating disorders. Jean Lee throws cautionto the wind in her absurdist comedy “Original Sin,”which follows the consequences to the marriage of a respectable couple when an enfant terrible artist pays a visit. Lines blur as well in Joy Shannon’s genre-bending “My Dead Selfie,”a ghostly horror story that tackles head-on issues of racism and racial identity in America. In Anne-Sophie’s “Ballet Blanc,” the innocence of childhood reveals itself as a bloody terror in a unsuspecting small town.

    Read more