Youth (2015)

  • 20 New Films Added to Lineup for 2015 Virginia Film Festival incl. ‘PARADISE, FL,’ ‘KRISHA’

    Paradise, FL The 2015 Virginia Film Festival have added more than 20 new films to the lineup.  The Festival, presented by the University of Virginia and the Office of the Provost and Vice Provost for the Arts, will take place from November 5-8 at venues throughout Charlottesville.  The Festival also revealed that Alex Neustaedter, the young star of Ithaca, will join in a post-screening discussion that will include director Meg Ryan, actor Lois Robbins, and producer Janet Brenner. The 16-year-old Neustaedter portrays the lead role of Homer in this coming-of-age story about a small-town telegraph bicycle who delivers messages of love, hope, pain, and even death, to the good people of Ithaca, only to have one of those messages change his life forever. Brooklyn – The profoundly moving story of Ellis Lacey (Saorise Ronan), a young Irish immigrant woman torn between two countries as she leaves behind the comforts of her mother’s home for the shores of New York City, where the intoxication of new love is challenged by the realities of her past. Youth – Fred (Michael Caine), a retired orchestra conductor, is on holiday at a resort spa with his daughter and his film-director best friend Mick (Harvey Keitel), who is shooting what may be his final film there. As the two men face, and discuss, the twilight of their careers and lives, Fred receives an invitation from Queen Elizabeth II to perform for Prince Philip’s birthday. Krisha Krisha – Following a prolonged battle with addiction and self-destruction, Krisha returns to the family she abandoned for a holiday celebration, only to see old wounds reopened. Writer/director Trey Edward Shults recreates painful incidents from his past, and casts family members to give the film, expanded from an award-winning 2014 short film of the same name, to achieve a uniquely authentic feel. Paradise, FL – When his friend’s wife ends up in the hospital, a struggling gulf coast oyster fisherman moves in to care for the couple’s young kids, and finds himself fighting for a family he didn’t know he needed. (pictured above) Heart of a Dog – Selected for competition in this year’s Venice International Film Festival after its September premiere at the Telluride Film Festival, musician and performance artist Laurie Anderson’s meditation on love and death is playful, lucid, and heartbreaking. Sparked by the death of her beloved terrier Lolabelle, Anderson draws on her childhood experiences and political beliefs, using her own compositions, 8 millimeter films from her family archive, and animation to help guide the journey of Lolabelle’s spirit. Lucifer – An angel falling from heaven to hell unexpectedly lands in a Mexican village where his presence affects the villagers in surprising ways. Lucifer is a mesmerizing, moving, and unique experiment in form, presented in director t Gust Van Den Berghe’s original format, Tondoscope, which features a lens he created for the film that allows it to be projected in a circular format. Embrace of the Serpent – This epic story, inspired by the journals of the first explorers of the Colombian Amazon, Theodor Koch-Grunberg and Richard Evans Schultes, encompasses the first contact, encounter, approach, betrayal, and, in the end, life-changing friendship between an Amazonian shaman who is the last survivor of his people and two scientists who spend 40 years in the Amazon in search of a sacred plant to heal them.  

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  • SUFFRAGETTE to Open 2015 Savannah Film Festival; Lineup Includes BROOKLYN, SON OF SAUL, TRUTH, YOUTH

    SUFFRAGETTE, starring Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter and Meryl Streep, SUFFRAGETTE from BAFTA Award-winning director Sarah Gavron will open the 2015 Savannah Film Festival taking place October 24 to 31, 2015. “Suffragette” is a moving drama that will empower all who are striving for equal rights in our own day and age. Written by Emmy Award winner Abi Morgan, “Suffragette” is inspired by the early-20th-century campaign of the Suffragettes, who were activists for Women’s Suffrage – risking their very lives for the right of women to vote. The cast includes Academy Award nominees Carey Mulligan and Helena Bonham Carter, Golden Globe Award nominees Brendan Gleeson and Romola Garai, British Independent Film Award winner Anne-Marie Duff, BAFTA Award winner Ben Whishaw, and three-time Academy Award winner Meryl Streep. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y4jBXQM7mIk Additional films confirmed for the 2015 Savannah Film Festival include: “Brooklyn” – The profoundly moving story of Eilis Lacey, a young Irish immigrant navigating her way through 1950s Brooklyn. Lured by the promise of America, Eilis departs Ireland and the comfort of her mother’s home for the shores of New York City. The initial shackles of homesickness quickly diminish as a fresh romance sweeps Eilis into the intoxicating charm of love. But soon, her new vivacity is disrupted by her past, and Eilis must choose between two countries and the lives that exist within. The film is distributed by Fox Searchlight. Director: John Crowley. Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson, Julie Walters and Jim Broadbent. “I Saw the Light” – “I Saw the Light” tells the story of Hank Williams, the iconic, influential country singer and songwriter of the 1940’s and early 50’s whose meteoric rise and fall, including his death at age 29, has become part of American folklore. Writer-director Marc Abraham has created a compelling, historically accurate narrative of Hank’s career that examines his tormented creative genius and the turbulent domestic life that inspired him to write some of his best-known songs. By literally going back in time, you see Hank as he was, living his life on his terms, battling his demons and ultimately creating music for the ages. The film is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. Director: Marc Abraham. Starring: Tom Hiddleston, Elizabeth Olsen, Cherry Jones, Bradley Whitford, Maddie Hasson and Wren Schmidt. “Krisha” – The story of a woman’s return to the family she abandoned years before, set entirely over the course of one turbulent Thanksgiving. When Krisha shows up at her sister’s Texas home on Thanksgiving morning, her close and extended family greet her with a mixture of warmth and wariness. Almost immediately, a palpable unease permeates the air, one which only grows in force as Krisha gets to work cooking the turkey and trying to make up for lost time by catching up with her various relatives, chief among them her nephew, Trey. As Krisha’s attempts at reconciliation become increasingly rebuffed, tension and suspicion reach their peak, with long-buried secrets and deep-seated resentments coming to the fore as everyone becomes immersed in an emotionally charged familial reckoning. The film is distributed by A24. Director: Trey Edward Shults. Cast: Krisha Fairchild, Robyn Fairchild, Bill Wise and Trey Edward Shults. “Lady in the Van” – A big screen adaptation of writer Alan Bennett’s iconic and celebrated memoir. The film tells the true story of the relationship between Alan Bennett and the singular Miss Shepherd, a woman of uncertain origins who ‘temporarily’ parked her van in Bennett’s London driveway and proceeded to live there for 15 years. Their unique story is funny, poignant and life-affirming. The film is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. Director: Nicholas Hytner. Cast: Maggie Smith, Alex Jennings, Jim Broadbent, Frances De La Tour, and Roger Allam. “Mia Madre” – Margherita is a director shooting a film with the famous American actor, Barry Huggins, who is quite a headache on set. Away from the shoot, Margherita tries to hold her life together, despite her mother’s illness and her daughter’s adolescence. The film is distributed by Alchemy. Director: Nanni Moretti. Cast: Margherita Buy and John Turturro. “Miss You Already” – The friendship between two life-long girlfriends is put to the test when one starts a family and the other falls ill. The film is distributed by Roadside Attractions. Director: Catherine Hardwicke. Cast: Drew Barrymore and Toni Collette. “Room” – Both highly suspenseful and deeply emotional, “Room” is a unique and touching exploration of the boundless love between a mother and her child. After 5-year-old Jack and his Ma escape from the enclosed surroundings that Jack has known his entire life, the boy makes a thrilling discovery: the outside world. As he experiences all the joy, excitement, and fear that this new adventure brings, he holds tight to the one thing that matters most of all—his special bond with his loving and devoted Ma. Based on the international bestselling book by Emma Donoghue. The film is distributed by A24. Director: Lenny Abrahamson. Cast: Brie Larson, William H. Macy, Joan Allen and Jacob Tremblay. “Son of Saul” – Saul Ausländer is a Hungarian member of the Sonderkommando, the group of Jewish prisoners isolated from the camp and forced to assist the Nazis in the machinery of large-scale extermination. While working in one of the crematoriums, Saul discovers the body of a boy he takes for his son. As the Sonderkommando plans a rebellion, Saul decides to carry out an impossible task: save the child’s body from the flames, find a rabbi to recite the mourner’s Kaddish and offer the boy a proper burial. The film is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. Director: László Nemes. Cast: Géza Röhrig, Levente Molnár, Urs Rechn, Todd Charmont, Sándor Zsótér and Marcin Czarnik. “Touched With Fire” – Two manic depressives meet in treatment and begin a romance that brings out all of the beauty and horror of their condition. The film is distributed by Roadside Attractions. Director: Paul Dalio. Cast: Katie Holmes, Luke Kirby and Christine Lahti. “Truth” – Based on the book “Truth and Duty” by Mary Mapes that tells the incredible true story of Mary Mapes (played by Cate Blanchett), an award-winning CBS News Journalist and Dan Rather’s producer, who broke the Abu-Ghraib prison abuse story, among others. The film chronicles the story Mapes and Rather uncovered that a sitting US president may have been AWOL from the United States National Guard for over a year during the Vietnam War. When the story blew up in their face, the ensuing scandal ruined Dan Rather’s career, nearly changed a US Presidential election, and almost took down all of CBS News in the process. The film is distributed by Sony Pictures Classics. Director: James Vanderbilt. Cast: Cate Blanchett, Robert Redford, Topher Grace, Elisabeth Moss and Dennis Quaid. “Youth” – From Paolo Sorrentino, the director of Italy’s Oscar foreign language winner “The Great Beauty” comes “Youth,” about two longtime friends vacationing in the Swiss Alps. Oscar winning actor Michael Caine plays Fred, an acclaimed composer and conductor, who brings along his daughter (Rachel Weisz) and best friend Mick (Harvey Keitel), a renowned filmmaker. While Mick scrambles to finish the screenplay for what he imagines will be his last important film, Fred has no intention of resuming his musical career. The two men reflect on their past, each finding that some of the most important experiences can come later in life. The film is distributed by Fox Searchlight. Director: Paolo Sorrentino. Cast: Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Rachel Weisz and Jane Fonda.

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  • 34th Vancouver International Film Festival Reveals Films in Gala and Special Presentation

    BROOKLYN starring Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson and Emory Cohen The 34th Vancouver International Film Festival will run from September 24th to October 9th, 2015 with John Crowley’s Brooklyn starting the festival off in the Opening Night Gala spot. With scripting by Nick Hornby (Wild, An Education), this 50s-era immigration film is an exhilarating tale of female empowerment. Marc Abraham’s I Saw the Light holds the Closing Night Gala position with a feature on the life of country star Hank Williams. Produced by Vancouver’s Bron Studios, this film reflects the best in BC’s ongoing production boom. Canadian productions remain front and centre when Philippe Falardeau’s My Internship in Canada opens the Canadian Images program, while Patricia Rozema’s Into the Forest takes the BC Spotlight Awards Gala spot. The complete list of films in the Gala and Special Presentation categories include: Opening Gala Brooklyn (JOHN CROWLEY, UK/IRELAND/CANADA) Lured from Ireland by the American Dream, Eilis (Saoirse Ronan) instead lands in a hardscrabble reality of cramped boarding houses and grungy dancehalls. As homesickness grips her, she’s also torn between two admirers (Domhnall Gleeson and Emory Cohen). With Nick Hornby scripting, John Crowley crafts a stirring 50s-era immigration tale that also serves as an exhilarating profile of female empowerment. “Classily and classically crafted in the best sense.” — Hollywood Reporter https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=2&v=15syDwC000k Closing Gala I Saw the Light (MARC ABRAHAM, USA) Having played gods and monsters with aplomb, Tom Hiddleston takes centre stage as country music legend/renegade Hank Williams. In turns as rambunctious as a barn dance and as reflective as a ballad, Marc Abraham’s film chronicles Williams’ rapid ascent to stardom and the tragedy of a career cut short by substance abuse. Laid to rest at only 29, Williams left behind a truly remarkable body of work. Handling the singing chores himself, Hiddleston does the man—and his music—proud. Canadian Images Opening Film My Internship in Canada (PHILIPPE FALARDEAU, CANADA) Philippe Falardeau (Monsieur Lazhar) returns with an energetic, laugh-out-loud political comedy that couldn’t be more timely. Steve Guibord (Patrick Huard, brilliant) is an independent Quebec MP travelling to his northern riding with a new Haitian intern. Soon after finding themselves caught in the crossfire of activists, miners, truckers, politicians and aboriginal groups, it turns out that Guibord somehow holds the decisive vote in a national debate that will decide whether Canada will go to war in the Middle East! The fabulous Suzanne Clément co-stars. BC Spotlight Awards Gala Into the Forest (PATRICIA ROZEMA, CANADA) The BC coastal forest is in all its glory as a father and his two daughters drive off to their remote and idyllic getaway home. They have little sense at first of the growing apocalypse that they are leaving in their wake. It will come to them. Ellen Page, Evan Rachel Wood, Max Minghella, Callum Keith Rennie and Michael Eklund star in this Patricia Rozema-directed adaptation of Jean Hegland’s novel. Spotlight Gala Beeba Boys (DEEPA MEHTA, CANADA/INDIA) Mix propulsive bhangra beats, blazing AK-47s, bespoke suits, solicitous mothers and copious cocaine, and you have the heady, volatile cocktail that is Deepa Mehta’s latest film, an explosive clash of culture and crime. Jeet Johar (Indian star Randeep Hooda) and his young, charismatic Sikh crew vie to take over the Vancouver drug and arms trade in this all-out action/drama. Blood is spilled, heads are cracked, hearts are broken and family bonds are pushed to the brink. Special Presentations Arabian Nights (MIGUEL GOMES, PORTUGAL) Miguel Gomes’ (Tabu, Our Beloved Month of August) astonishing three-volume, six-hour epic draws inspiration from the tales of Scheherazade (here played by Crista Alfaiate) and once again uses a fascinating combination of reality and fiction to comment on Portugal’s past, present and future. “There’s Bunuelian satire, lo-fi crime, Brechtian allegory, and high fantasy all in the mix. It’s dizzying stuff… a film that’s moving, sad, exciting, fiery, and funny.” — Indiewire Dheepan (JACQUES AUDIARD, FRANCE) Jacques Audiard’s (A Prophet, Rust and Bone) latest dramatic inquiry into life on society’s margins is an alternately gripping and tender love story about the eponymous former Tamil fighter (Antonythasan Jesuthasan) and his improvised family, who exchange war in Sri Lanka for violence of another kind in Paris. “A searing yet hopeful slow-burn drama… Audiard delivers another distinctive [work] with this portrait of a family forged out of necessity…” — Hollywood Reporter Palme d’Or, Cannes 15 High-Rise (BEN WHEATLEY, UK) Ben Wheatley’s bold adaptation of JG Ballard’s novel takes no prisoners. This scorching satire on class, hedonism and depravity in an imploding luxury apartment building is an even more apocalyptic class polemic than Snowpiercer. Throw in exquisitely unsettling turns from Tom Hiddleston and Jeremy Irons, a string quartet cover of ABBA’s 1975 hit “SOS,” an orgy or two and spice with cannibalism, and you have a tour de force of astonishing architectural ambition. Ingrid Bergman: In Her Own Words (STIG BJÖRKMAN, SWEDEN), CANADIAN PREMIERE Casablanca, Notorious, Voyage to Italy… That Ingrid Bergman, three-time Oscar winner, is one of filmdom’s all-time greats is inarguable. Narrated by Swedish (and now Hollywood) star Alicia Vikander, Stig Björkman’s intimate exploration of Bergman’s personal and professional life benefits immensely from the cooperation of Bergman’s daughter Isabella Rossellini, who allowed him access to never-before-seen private footage, notes, letters, diaries and interviews. The result is a rich and multicoloured portrait of this extraordinary human being—in her own words. Louder Than Bombs (JOACHIM TRIER, USA/FRANCE) When a war photographer (Isabelle Huppert) dies on assignment, her husband (Gabriel Byrne) struggles to mount a retrospective while dealing with his grieving sons (Jesse Eisenberg, Devin Druid) and her combative colleague (David Strathairn). Joachim Trier (Oslo, 31st August) poses tough questions about family, marital responsibility and balancing one’s calling and kin. “A smart, measured tale steeped in understatement and complimented by first-rate performances…” — Indiewire Room (LENNY ABRAHAMSON, IRELAND/CANADA/UK) Directed by Lenny Abrahamson and based on the best-selling Man Booker Prize-nominated novel by Irish-Canadian author Emma Donoghue, this is the story of five-year old Jack, who lives in an 11-by-11-foot room with his mother. Since it’s all he’s ever known, Jack believes that only “Room” and the things it contains (including himself and Ma) are real. Then reality intrudes and Jack’s life is turned on its head… A remarkable and disturbing work. A Tale of Three Cities (MABEL CHEUNG, HONG KONG/CHINA) A rousingly entertaining movie romance, this historical drama tells the deeply moving story of kung fu superstar Jackie Chan’s parents. Both grew up in China’s tumultuous 20th century, swept by war, revolution and resistance. When charismatic customs officer Fang (Lau Ching-wan) meets impoverished young widow Chen (Tang Wei), an unbreakable bond is forged. Together, their love endures through extraordinary adventures, as they head towards a future in Hong Kong. This Changes Everything (AVI LEWIS, CANADA) Naomi Klein (Shock Doctrine) has risen to prominence around the world as one of Canada’s most forceful and relevant public intellectuals. Her cogent call to direct action has inspired youth, helped chart roadmaps for social progressives and environmentalists, and yet worried those who believe that her critique of capitalism plays into the hands of right wingers who think climate change is a socialist plot. Join us, Naomi Klein and director Avi Lewis for this special presentation of This Changes Everything. Youth (PAOLO SORRENTINO, ITALY/FRANCE/SWITZERLAND/UK) Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel and Rachel Weisz anchor Paolo Sorrentino’s gorgeous follow-up to The Great Beauty. Fred (Caine), a retired composer, and friend Mick (Keitel), a film director, are sojourning in a stunning Swiss alpine spa. Surrounded by bodies old and young, supple and sagging, they reconsider their pasts–while Sorrentino choreographs the action with exquisite control. “Sorrentino’s… brightly effusive visual imagination can be intoxicating…” — New York Times Canadian Images Special Presentations Hyena Road (PAUL GROSS, CANADA) In Paul Gross’ film, ripped from the headlines, a sniper, who has never allowed himself to think of his targets as human, becomes implicated in the life of one of them. An intelligence officer, who has never contemplated killing, becomes the engine of a plot to kill. A legendary Mujahideen warrior, who had put war behind him, is now deeply involved. Three different men, three different worlds, three different conflicts, yet all stand at the intersection of modern warfare. Remember (ATOM EGOYAN, CANADA) Atom Egoyan returns with a completely original take on the darkest chapter of horror in the last century. Christopher Plummer plays a man who’s looking for the person who might be responsible for wiping out his family, as he strains to seize the evanescent memories of long-ago brutality. The all-star cast includes Henry Czerny, Martin Landau and Bruno Ganz. Benjamin August’s screenplay will keep you guessing until the very end.

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  • 2015 New Orleans Film Festival to Open with Ethan Hawke’s BLUE and Close with BROOKLYN

    Born to be Blue. Robert Budreau The 2015 New Orleans Film Festival will open with Born to Be Blue (pictured above), the biopic on jazz legend Chet Baker starring Ethan Hawke, fresh from its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, and closing the festival is the 1950s Irish immigration story, Brooklyn, starring Saoirse Ronan. The festival also announced its featured Centerpiece film, I Saw the Light, and its eight Spotlight films, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, Carol, Legend, Miss you Already, New Orleans, Here & Now, The Reflektor Tapes, Room and Youth, screening in multiple theaters across New Orleans. The New Orleans Film Society has also partnered with Deep South Studios and the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities to create the 2016 Create Louisiana Filmmakers Grant, which will be awarded to one local filmmaker at this year’s Festival before the closing night film on Thursday, October 22nd at the Prytania. Opening Night: Born to Be Blue Dir. Robert Budreau Ethan Hawke delivers a stunning performance as Chet Baker in this reimagining of the legendary jazz trumpeter’s struggle to overcome his drug addiction and stage a comeback. Born to be Blue finds Baker at the end of the 1960s, starring in a film about his own already-infamous life. He strikes up a passionate romance on-and-off the film set with actress Jane (the luminous Carmen Ejogo, from Selma). But his hopes for a bright future are darkened after a parking lot altercation leaves his mouth so damaged he can barely perform. Nevertheless he becomes determined to regain his place among his peers—chiefly his friend and collaborator Dizzy Gillespie, his rival Miles Davis and his reticent producer. Much more than a standard biopic, Born to Be Blue takes an imaginative approach, portraying the life of an artist whose contributions to the music world were as grand as his addictions were tragic. Closing Night: BROOKLYN starring Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson and Emory Cohen Brooklyn Dir. John Crowley Brooklyn tells the moving story of Eilis Lacey, a young Irish immigrant navigating her way through 1950s Brooklyn. Lured by the promise of America, Eilis departs Ireland and the comfort of her mother’s home for the shores of New York City. The initial shackles of homesickness quickly diminish as a fresh romance sweeps her into the intoxicating charm of love. But her new vivacity is disrupted by her past, and Eilis must choose between two countries and the lives that exist within. Based on Colm Toibin’s acclaimed novel, director John Crowley and writer Nick Hornby craft a deeply effective, sweeping romance. Surrounded by a stellar cast of supporting characters, Saoirse Ronan gives a captivating performance. The heart of this highly accomplished work evokes a timeless portrait of leaving home and the excruciating decisions one must make. Centerpiece Film: The festival’s Centerpiece Film is a music biopic, the Louisiana-shot I Saw the Light, about country crooner Hank Williams. The film, starring Tom Hiddleston and Elizabeth Olsen, also had its premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival this week. I Saw the Light Dir. Marc Abraham I Saw the Light is the story of the legendary country western singer Hank Williams, who in his brief life created one of the greatest bodies of work in American music. Both a celebration of musical genius and a poignant illustration of a restless soul, the film chronicles his meteoric rise to fame and its ultimately tragic effect on his health and personal life. Tom Hiddleston’s revelatory work is bolstered by a brilliant cast, in particular Elizabeth Olsen and Maddie Hasson, who embody the pain of women who, in their own ways, were as complicated and damaged as the man they loved. Written and directed by Marc Abraham, Louisiana-shot I Saw the Light is based on Colin Escott’s award-winning biography and also stars Bradley Whitford, David Krumholtz and Cherry Jones. Spotlight Films: The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution Dir. Stanley Nelson Change was coming to America and the fault lines could no longer be ignored—cities were burning, Vietnam was exploding and disputes raged over equality and civil rights. A new revolutionary culture was emerging that sought to drastically transform the system. The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense would, for a short time, put itself at the vanguard of that change. Acclaimed filmmaker Stanley Nelson goes straight to the source, weaving a treasure trove of rare archival footage with the voices of the people who were there: police, FBI informants, journalists, white supporters and detractors and Black Panthers who remained loyal to the party, and those who left it. A selection of this year’s Sundance Film Festival, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution is an essential history and a vibrant chronicle of the pivotal movement that birthed a revolutionary culture in America. CAROL Starring Cate Blanchett Carol Dir. Todd Haynes In this adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s seminal novel The Price of Salt, Carol follows two women from very different backgrounds who find themselves in an unexpected love affair in 1950s New York. A young woman in her 20s, Therese Belivet (Rooney Mara, in a role that won her the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival), is a clerk working in a Manhattan department store and dreaming of a more fulfilling life when she meets Carol (Cate Blanchett), an alluring woman trapped in a loveless, convenient marriage. As an immediate connection sparks between them, the innocence of their first encounter dims and their connection deepens. As conventional norms of the time challenge their undeniable attraction, an honest story emerges to reveal the resilience of the heart in the face of change. Also starring Sarah Paulson and Kyle Chandler in strong supporting roles. Legend Dir. Brian Helgeland Tom Hardy stars in Legend as identical twins Reggie and Ronnie Kray—Britain’s most infamous gangsters. Rising from humble roots to rule London’s nightclub scene for much of the swinging sixties, the duo rule until a fateful blend of hubris, mental illness, and a lust for violence bring their dream to a catastrophic end. Through dominion by means of assault, robbery and murder, the Krays forge alliances with American crime lords as they seek to make London into the Las Vegas of Europe. But success makes the volatile Ronnie increasingly careless, and their smoothly run and fantastically lucrative operation begins to spin violently out of control. Narrated by Reggie’s wife Frances (Emily Browning), Hardy gives a bravura double performance as both brothers in this exhilarating retelling of one of the most fascinating tales in modern crime. Miss You Already Dir. Catherine Hardwicke Miss You Already is an honest and powerful story following two best friends, Milly (Toni Collette) and Jess (Drew Barrymore), as they navigate life’s highs and lows. Inseparable since they were young girls, they can’t remember a time they didn’t share everything—secrets, clothes, and even boyfriends—but nothing prepares them for the day Milly is hit with life-altering news. A story for every modern woman, Miss You Already celebrates the bond of true friendship that ultimately can never be broken, even in life’s toughest moments. New Orleans, Here & Now Produced by Killer Films and Field Office Films This docu-series—directed by John Maringouin, Darius Clark Monroe, Angela Tucker, Lily Keber, Zack Godshall and Katie Dellamaggiore—is a collection of short films that inspire reflection of the city’s resurgence through gripping personal stories spanning multiple generations. From Tiffany Junot’s path to becoming the World Boxing Council Welterweight Champion of the World to the musical talents of the TBC Brass Band to the family history of a beloved Vietnamese restaurant, New Orleans, Here & Now offers a unique perspective of life in the city. Sponsored by FotoKem. The Reflektor Tapes Dir. Kahlil Joseph The Reflektor Tapes is a fascinating insight into the making of Arcade Fire’s international number-one album, Reflektor. The film recontextualizes the album experience, transporting the viewer into a kaleidoscopic sonic and visual landscape. The Reflektor Tapes charts the band’s creative journey as they lay foundations for the album in Jamaica, record in Montreal and play an impromptu gig at a Haitian hotel on the first night of Carnival, all before their breathtaking live show to packed arenas in Los Angeles and London. The film blends never-before-seen personal interviews and moments captured by the band to dazzling effect, and features 15 minutes of exclusive, unseen footage, filmed only for cinema audiences. Room Dir. Lenny Abrahamson Highly suspenseful and deeply emotional, Room is a unique exploration of the boundless love between a mother and child under the most harrowing of circumstances. Jack, a spirited five-year-old who is looked after by his devoted Ma (Brie Larson, Short Term 12) live a life confined to a windowless, 10-by-10-foot space, which they call “Room.” Despite this treacherous environment, Ma will stop at nothing to ensure that Jack is able to live a complete and fulfilling life. However, a risky escape plan brings them face-to-face with what may turn out to be the scariest thing yet: the real world. Based on the global bestseller by Emma Donoghue, Room is at once a taut narrative of captivity and freedom, an imaginative trip into the wonders of childhood and a profound portrait of a family’s bonds. Also starring Oscar® nominees Joan Allen and William H. Macy. Youth, Paolo Sorrentino Youth Dir. Paolo Sorrentino Youth, directed by Academy Award®-winner Paolo Sorrentino, follows two longtime friends vacationing in the Swiss Alps. Oscar®-winning actor Michael Caine plays Fred, an acclaimed composer and conductor who brings along his daughter (Oscar® winner Rachel Weisz) and best friend Mick (Harvey Keitel), a renowned filmmaker. While Mick scrambles to finish the screenplay for what he imagines will be his last important film, Fred has no intention of resuming his musical career. The two men reflect on their past, each finding that some of the most important experiences can come later in life. Paul Dano and Jane Fonda round out this all-star cast.

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  • 2015 Hamptons International Film Festival to Open with Paolo Sorrentino’s YOUTH; Unveils Long Island Films + Conflict & Resolution Films

    Youth, Paolo Sorrentino

    Paolo Sorrentino’s YOUTH will be the Opening Night film of the 2015 Hamptons International Film Festival in Southampton.

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  • 2015 Milwaukee Film Festival Unveils Entire Lineup, Opens with YOUTH, Closes with RAIDERS!

    Youth, Paolo Sorrentino The 2015 Milwaukee Film Festival unveiled its entire film lineup of 303 films (27 more than in 2014) – 118 features and 185 shorts – from 50 different countries.  Opening the festival is Youth (pictured above), the most recent work from Italian director Paolo Sorrentino, who earned the 2014 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film with his film The Great Beauty. A beautifully shot drama, Youth follows Fred (Michael Caine), a retired longtime composer and conductor, who brings along his daughter (Rachel Weisz) and his best friend, renowned filmmaker, Mick (Harvey Keitel) who is working on his last screenplay, for a brief sojourn in the Swiss Alps. Peace Officer Recipient of both the Documentary Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award at the SXSW Film Festival, the Milwaukee Film Festival Centerpiece film, Peace Officer (pictured above), is one of several highly timely documentaries in this year’s festival. The film follows the personal narrative of former Utah Sheriff William “Dub” Lawrence as he reels from the death of his son-in-law at the hands of Utah’s SWAT Team, a unit Dub himself created. His personal story provides a lens through which larger issues of police militarization and the role of police officers are examined. Both the subject and filmmaking team are scheduled to attend. Raiders! Closing the festival is Raiders! (pictured above), a hilarious documentary about Chris Strompolos and Eric Zala, who spent their teenage years creating a shot-by-shot remake of the landmark 1981 Indiana Jones film, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Scheduled to attend are both director Jeremy Coon and the film’s editor, Milwaukee’s own Barry Poltermann, who also edited the cult favorite American Movie. 2015 MILWAUKEE FILM FESTIVAL SPOTLIGHT PRESENTATIONS – OPENING NIGHT, CENTERPIECE & CLOSING NIGHT OPENING NIGHT Youth (Italy, France, Switzerland, United Kingdom / 2015 / Director: Paolo Sorrentino) An early Oscar front-runner, Youth combines an amazing cast (Michael Caine, Rachel Weisz, and Harvey Keitel) and director (Paolo Sorrentino, whose The Great Beauty was the 2014 Foreign Language Oscar winner and 2013 Milwaukee Film Members-Only screening) for a deeply moving meditation on life and love. Filled with exquisite imagery, the film follows Fred (Caine), a retired longtime composer and conductor, who brings along his daughter (Weisz) and best friend, renowned filmmaker, Mick (Keitel) who is working on his last screenplay, for a brief sojourn in the Swiss Alps. As they reflect on their shared past, the men realize some of the most formative experiences can come later in life. Caine and Keitel give two of their finest performances. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-T7CM4di_0c FESTIVAL CENTERPIECE Peace Officer (USA / 2015 / Directors: Brad Barber, Scott Christopherson) Former Utah sheriff William “Dub” Lawrence is as familiar with the militarization of law enforcement as one could possibly be—founder of Utah’s first SWAT team, he presided over numerous drug busts and raids. But in a cruel twist of fate, he bared witness 30 years later to his son-in-law’s controversial death at the hands of the very unit he created. Utterly of the moment, Peace Officer follows Dub’s efforts to uncover the truth behind his tragedy while researching officer-related shootings that happened nearby. This Oscar-worthy exposé that shows the ever-widening gulf between the police and those they’re sworn to protect is appointment viewing in a country where unarmed protesters and innocent civilians are often being seen as threats. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9I_zlN63LTs CLOSING NIGHT Raiders! (USA / 2015 / Directors: Jeremy Coon, Tim Skousen) In 1981, Raiders of the Lost Ark dropped onto impressionable youngsters like a pulp-fueled megaton bomb, and while every kid wanted to be like Indiana Jones, teenagers Chris Strompolos and Eric Zala were determined to become him. What transpired over the next seven years as they remade Raiders shot for shot was the perfect storm of teen angst, creative determination, and lack of parental oversight as they hung from moving vehicles, recorded their first kisses, and set their mother’s basement on fire. Yet, they were unable to create the classic airplane hangar sequence. Uproariously funny and achingly sweet, Raiders! is the must-be-seen-to-be-believed documentary chronicle of their effort, extended 30 years as the now-grown men try to record that elusive sequence. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4UYBhDVm9k 2015 MILWAUKEE FILM FESTIVAL DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL FAVORITES The Armor of Light (USA / 2015 / Director: Abigail E. Disney) The Armor of Light is the story of one evangelical minister’s realization that his pro-life stance cannot exist in good conscience alongside a pro-gun one. Reverend Rob Schenck makes the bold decision to team with a grieving mother whose unarmed son was killed as a result of “stand your ground” laws and advocate for more strident gun control, despite his congregation’s heavy support of the NRA. These unlikely allies (Schenck is an anti-abortion activist, while the mother is pro-choice) undertake a tumultuous journey in this thoughtful and complex documentary that proves moral lines need not be drawn by party lines. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSP0Soy8ACk Dreamcatcher (United Kingdom / 2015 / Director: Kim Longinotto) If anyone can prove capable of getting through to the prostitutes, female prisoners, and at-risk teenagers in Chicago’s inner city, it will be the remarkable real-life heroine Brenda Myers-Powell. Having spent her teenage years in a drug-induced haze and 25 years as a prostitute herself, Myers-Powell knows just how powerful providing support and rehabilitation to these women can prove to be. Dreamcatcher is a critically acclaimed, award-winning, street-level view of this truly inspirational woman and her incredible efforts to break the cycle of physical abuse and poverty. Fans of The Interrupters (MFF2011) shouldn’t miss this! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMPXhevhw0U Finders Keepers (USA / 2015 / Directors: Bryan Carberry, Clay Tweel) Your standard story of boy meets grill, Finders Keepers is equal parts absurd and empathetic, yet always hysterically funny. After winning a smoker at auction only to discover it contained the amputated leg of its former owner, a fame-hungry bargain hunter sees this grisly surprise as an opportunity to earn a little cash—but now the previous owner requests its safe return. A media frenzy erupts around this small-town feud, culminating in a courtroom battle as plaintiff and defendant go out on a limb to argue ownership in this uniquely American portrait of greed, fame, and redemption. https://vimeo.com/115297331 Havana Motor Club (USA, Cuba / 2015 / Director: Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt) The once-vibrant tradition of auto racing in Cuba has been underground for more than 50 years, with Fidel Castro having outlawed the act as an elitist practice in 1959. But national reforms are allowing Cuba’s underground drag racing community to step out of the shadows and, hopefully, compete in the first sanctioned competition in over 50 years. Buoyed by a lively soundtrack, this character-driven documentary follows Cuba’s best racers as they scrap and scrape together the parts to augment their classic American hot rods in the hopes of having the ingenuity to be the first to cross the finish line. https://vimeo.com/123633476 He Named Me Malala (USA / 2015 / Director: Davis Guggenheim) This is an intimate portrait of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, who was targeted by the Taliban and severely wounded by a gunshot in Pakistan. The then-fifteen-year-old (she just turned eighteen) was singled out for advocating for girls’ education, and the attack on her sparked an outcry from supporters around the world. She miraculously survived and is now a leading campaigner for girls’ education globally as co-founder of the Malala Fund. Acclaimed documentarian Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth, Waiting for ‘Superman’) shows us how Malala, her father, Zia, and her family are committed to fighting for education for all girls worldwide. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtROMdwltJE Hip Hop-eration (New Zealand / 2014 / Director: Bryn Evans) In New Zealand, a group of elderly Kiwis (ages ranging from 68 to 95) are putting their best dancing feet forward with one goal in mind: competing in Las Vegas at a worldwide hip-hop dance competition. Branded The Hip Op-eration, these spirited dancers are aiming to prove that, at their age, popping and locking isn’t just confined to their joints. This is an inspirational, wildly funny, and altogether refreshing look at a brave group of people determined to prove the adage that age is just a number as they bump and grind their way into your heart. https://vimeo.com/101680486 How to Dance in Ohio (USA / 2015 / Director: Alexandra Shiva) First kisses and school dances are considered traditional points of transition for American teenagers, but for those on the autism spectrum, these intimate rites of passage can prove terrifying exercises in social anxiety. Into this hormonal minefield steps a group of courageous kids from Columbus, OH, who, despite an array of developmental challenges, set out to have their own spring formal. A coming-of-age journey proving the miracle of human connection, How to Dance in Ohio is surprisingly funny and, at other times, heartbreaking as it takes us into the group therapy sessions and private lives of some remarkable young people. Landfill Harmonic (USA, Paraguay, Brazil / 2015 / Directors: Brad Allgood, Graham Townsley) Taking the notion that one person’s trash is another’s treasure beyond one’s wildest imagination, members of Paraguay’s Recycled Orchestra of Cateura have forged all of their musical instruments out of repurposed goods from the massive landfill that looms over their neighborhood. Armed with a beautiful mission statement (“The world sends us garbage, we send back music”) and newfound fame after their performance footage goes viral, the orchestra takes to the world stage, performing sold-out shows and spreading their joyful idealism. But when natural disaster strikes back home, the orchestra must band together and provide a message of hope to their beleaguered town in this inspirational portrait of perseverance. https://vimeo.com/122542602 The Look of Silence (Denmark, Finland, Indonesia, Norway, United Kingdom / 2014 / Director: Joshua Oppenheimer) A critically acclaimed companion piece to the breathtaking look into the heart of darkness that was The Act of Killing (the sensation of MFF2013), The Look of Silence approaches the 1960s Indonesian genocide not from the perspective of its perpetrators but the survivors. It is an unflinching glimpse into forgiveness and denial, every bit the equal of its Oscar-nominated predecessor. Refusing to raise his children in a society cowed into silence, a young man returns to the scene of these atrocities to confront what murderers remain and make them look at the past—a dangerous proposition when they remain in power. https://vimeo.com/127067516 Mala Mala (USA, Puerto Rico / 2014 / Directors: Antonio Santini, Dan Sickles) A beautifully shot exaltation of Puerto Rico’s transgender community, Mala Mala is an exuberant look into gender identity in an evolving era. We follow drag queens (not least of which is April Carrión from RuPaul’s Drag Race), prostitutes, business owners, and others as they find themselves on the simultaneous frontlines of self-discovery and political activism and as they fight for equal treatment and acceptance from society. A candy-colored celebration that takes the time to sensitively and intimately explore the dark personal experiences that have shaped these trans folk, this is a timely portrait of a community on the rise. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3Gn_b38B6Q My Love, Don’t Cross That River (South Korea / 2014 / Director: Moyoung Jin) In what may be the most romantic documentary ever made (and the most successful Korean indie film of all time), we stay in a South Korean mountain village with 89-year-old Gyeyeul Kang and her husband, 98-year-old Byongman Jo, married for 76 years. We follow them over the course of a year, watching their intimate day-to-day routine (he picks flowers for her, she warms him by the hearth, they fall asleep with hands clasped tightly each night). But not even love can slow the passage of time, and this couple known locally as “100-year-old lovebirds” realizes their time together may be winding to a close. https://vimeo.com/109219991 Paper Tigers (USA / 2015 / Director: James Redford) An attempt to heal a broken system, Paper Tigers documents one rural community’s effort to do right by some of its at-risk youth. Walla Walla, Washington’s Lincoln Alternative High School is set at the epicenter of the community’s problems, right at the intersection of drug abuse, gang activity, and violence. When the school principal learns new information about the effects of childhood trauma on developing brains, he implements a new strategy to help the students heal. Following six students (armed with personal diary cams) throughout the year, we see the value of an educational system based in love, understanding, and healing. https://vimeo.com/110821029 Radical Grace (USA / 2015 / Directors: Rebecca Parrish) Following three fearless nuns who champion social justice and the equal treatment of women in the Catholic church at the risk of their placement in it, Radical Grace places us at the center of this struggle for the future of the church. When their platform of support for social and economic reform, the Affordable Care Act, and reintegration of ex-cons into society puts them directly in the crosshairs of the Vatican, these remarkable women refuse to back down—challenging the patriarchal system that values rules over people and winning over new converts (and a new pope) along the way. https://www.youtu.be/cFyLKlpVvYk Romeo is Bleeding (USA / 2015 / Director: Jason Zeldes) With gang warfare threatening to envelop the communities of Central and North Richmond, California, and his RAW Talent program being threatened with budget cuts, poet/mentor/creative director Donte Clark (himself mentored by educator Molly Raynor) channels all of the fears, anger, and unease he’s feeling into an explosive adaptation of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. An inspirational look at the power of art to imitate as well as transform lives and communities, Romeo is Bleeding is the story of a city on fire and how a group of young spoken-word artists band together to forge a new pathway beyond cyclical and senseless violence. https://vimeo.com/124903175 Sex(Ed): The Movie (USA / 2014 / Director: Brenda Goodman) A hilarious history of a severely sticky subject, Sex(Ed): The Movie charts the evolution of sex education videos in our classrooms, with guides ranging from Donald Duck to Marcia Brady and videos ranging from embarrassing to… well, more embarrassing. The film documents an ever-changing landscape of shifting moral, cultural, and political values over 100 years of intimate advice regarding copulating, be it the permissive swinging ’70s or the rigid abstinence-only campaigns of the ’80s, as part of our culture’s never-ending tradition of mortifying young kids in an effort to make sure they’re informed. This is an essential look at our history of sex (mis-)education. https://www.youtu.be/qZKksumq8qA T-Rex (USA / 2015 / Directors: Zackary Canepari, Drea Cooper) Meet the fiercest teenager in America: boxing phenom Claressa “T-Rex” Shields, on the hunt for Olympic gold in 2012 (the first year women’s boxing was included in the Summer Games). Determined to bring her family with her out of their challenging circumstances (her hometown is the economically depressed Flint, MI), Shields is the center of this crowd-pleasing story of female empowerment in the very non-feminine context of Olympic-level boxing. T-Rex is a stirring underdog story tracking one superlative athlete’s dream and her steadfast determination to achieve it even in the face of insurmountable odds. Meet a new kind of American heroine. https://vimeo.com/45863496 TransFatty Lives (USA / 2015 / Director: Patrick O’Brien) Patrick O’Brien, aka charismatic Internet sensation TransFatty, spent his days partying and making bizarre art films. But a sudden diagnosis of ALS left him with a stark timeline: two to five years to live. Instead of accepting his fate, O’Brien pushed forward, finding love and embracing fatherhood even as physical faculties failed him one by one (10 years later, he communicated his editing instructions on this film through movement of his pupils). An unabashed self-portrait of a man’s spirit growing as his body wilts, this Tribeca Film Festival Audience Award-winning documentary is a life-affirming look at one man’s incredible will to live. https://vimeo.com/123999591 Unbranded (USA / 2015 / Director: Phillip Baribeau) Four men look to herd sixteen horses over 3,000 miles of the American West’s toughest terrain of public lands (from Mexico to Canada) in the documentary adventure of a lifetime that is as exciting as the most action-packed Western. Out to prove the worth of their adopted mustangs and follow in the footsteps of the frontiersmen who preceded them, these best friends travel across exquisite landscapes and incur amazing peril on their journey across a vanishing frontier encroached upon by development and tourism. Unbranded is a throwback in every regard, a stirring celebration of those who run wild and free. https://vimeo.com/118964179 We Come as Friends (France, Austria / 2014 / Director: Hubert Sauper) The director of the Oscar-nominated Darwin’s Nightmare takes us on this modern odyssey, a dizzying, science fiction-like journey into the heart of Africa. At the moment when the Sudan, the continent’s biggest country, is being divided into two nations, an old “civilizing” pathology re-emerges— that of colonialism, clash of empires, and new episodes of bloody (and holy) wars over land and resources. Chinese oil workers, U.N. peacekeepers, Sudanese warlords, and American evangelists ironically weave common ground in this documentary voyage made possible by the director’s tiny, self-made flying machine built from tin and canvas. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0MgQLk2OCQ Welcome to Leith (USA / 2015 / Directors: Michael Beach Nichols, Christopher K. Walker) The North Dakota town of Leith (population: 24) sees its community grow by one with the arrival of notorious white supremacist Craig Cobb, who begins buying up plots of land with the goal of taking over the local government and making the town a white nationalist stronghold. Tensions rise as free speech is put to the test by this attempted takeover, with the citizens of Leith scrambling to make sure their unwanted neighbor doesn’t fulfill his chilling vision. An unsettling look at extremist views that still persist, Welcome to Leith is documentary as thriller, a pulse-pounding portrait of our melting pot brought to its boiling point. https://vimeo.com/85668727 2015 MILWAUKEE FILM FESTIVAL WORLDVIEWS Amour Fou (Austria, Luxembourg, Germany / 2014 / Director: Jessica Hausner) Berlin, the Romantic Era. Poet Heinrich von Kleist is desperately searching for someone to enter into a pact with—one both of love and of death. But his desire to enter into such a suicide pact remains unrequited until he meets the enchanting Henriette, a woman whose terminal illness makes for a perfect match in this dark romantic comedy. Impeccably lensed and exquisitely designed, Amour Fou is an artfully crafted and wholly unusual examination of love and death, a remarkable recreation of this real-life figure’s final days and a morbidly beautiful tragicomedy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLsFy343V8g Behavior (Conducta) (Cuba / 2014 / Director: Ernesto Daranas) A spirited septuagenarian teacher stands in defiance of an education system overrun by bureaucracy that threatens to sweep a troubled young student under the rug in this daring Cuban drama. The only hope macho eleven-year-old Chala has of overcoming his poverty-stricken upbringing (he trains fighting dogs to make money for his drug-addict mother) is through school and his sixth-grade teacher, Carmela, who has earned his begrudging respect and tentative friendship. But when misunderstood Chala is sent to reeducation school, Carmela must fight to preserve his future in this crowd-pleasing festival hit. https://www.youtu.be/0_UyFZOeh3c The Club (Chile / 2015 / Director: Pablo Larraín) Oscar-nominated director Pablo Larraín’s (Tony Manero, Post Mortem, No) latest is a searing chamber drama that sets its sights not on oppression, but suppression—four exiled priests are living out their lives in anonymity (mostly training and betting on a racing greyhound) in a small seaside town until the arrival of a fifth triggers an unraveling of their quiet existence, forcing them to come to terms with their sins. A Chilean film that handles its ultra-serious material with precise, darkly comic execution, The Club fills the increasingly claustrophobic setting with grimy atmosphere, a provocative allegory that won’t soon leave your thoughts. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e8c2DYoF7lA Court (India / 2014 / Director: Chaitanya Tamhane) A naturalistic courtroom drama that has racked up awards at nearly every festival it has played, Court is a fiercely intelligent look at India’s broken judiciary system and the bureaucracy that perpetuates it. Narayan Kamble is a traveling troubadour who takes his socially activist folk songs around working-class communities in an effort to wake them to the wholesale inequality of their day-to-day lives, only to be brought to trial on trumped-up charges accusing him of inspiring a menial worker to commit suicide, setting the stage for class politics writ large. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0I6jtTXVco Dearest (Qin ai de) (China, Hong Kong / 2014 / Director: Peter Ho-Sun Chan) Acclaimed Hong Kong director Peter Ho-Sun Chan (Perhaps Love) brings us this complex, suspense-filled melodrama of child abduction in China. Wen Jun, the proprietor of an Internet café in the huge southern city of Shenzhen, and his ex-wife, Xiaojuan, are bitterly divorced, busy parents. One day, kidnappers snatch their young son as he plays in the streets with his friends, leaving the parents distraught. With extraordinary commitment, they set out to find their lost son. Based on a child abduction that happened in Shenzhen in 2009, Dearest expertly dramatizes China’s high rate of child kidnapping. https://vimeo.com/104221333 Difret (Ethiopia / 2014 / Director: Zeresenay Berhane Mehari) In rural Ethiopia, it is not out of the ordinary for young women to be subjected to marriage abduction—a process by which their kidnappers become their husbands. Fourteen-year-old Hirut takes matters into her own hands, however, escaping her captors and shooting her would-be suitor dead. This would normally be a death sentence for a woman, but news of her brave actions reaches a fiercely independent female lawyer who aims to argue self-defense. Presented by Angelina Jolie, this riveting drama that won the audience award at Sundance and Berlin is a powerful reminder that gender equality is sometimes still a life-and-death struggle. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZO5dXzTU_cY Excuse My French (Lamoakhzaa) (Egypt / 2014 / Director: Amr Salama) Precocious youngster Hany’s upper-class existence is thrown into disarray when his father drops dead at dinner. With his mother no longer able to afford his private Christian school, Hany is thrown into the culture shock of public school, where he’s mistaken for Muslim and does nothing to dissuade his classmates, seeing it as an opportunity to fit in. A hilarious coming-of-age comedy that tackles social discrimination and satirizes the Egyptian education system, it’s no wonder the script for Excuse My French was held up by Egyptian censors for four years. Luckily for us, this warmly comic film now sees the light of day. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WH2xmxE8FUg The Farewell Party (Mita tova) (Israel, Germany / 2014 / Directors: Tal Granit, Sharon Maymon) A group of friends at a Jerusalem retirement home bands together to help their terminally ill friend end life on his own terms in this provocative dramedy that has proved a hit on the festival circuit. When the self-euthanizing device created by Ezekiel and his pensioner cohorts is used successfully, word leaks out among their peers, embroiling them in an ethical morass that only becomes greater when one in their own ranks seeks out its use. Witty and affecting, affording its elderly characters agency we rarely see in mainstream cinema, The Farewell Party tackles its controversial subject matter with good humor and poignancy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lU26gsCHtfc Güeros (Mexico / 2014 / Director: Alonso Ruizpalacios) An ill-timed water balloon deployment finds Tomas sent away to stay with his older brother Federico in Mexico City, with only a battered tape player and lone cassette. Upon arrival, Tomas is introduced to Fede’s derelict lifestyle alongside roommate Santos. This includes siphoning electricity from their downstairs neighbor to pass the time when school is halted by a student strike. When Tomas learns of his rock idol’s precarious health and physical proximity, it sends the trio on a whirlwind journey through the city in the hopes of meeting him. This is a delightful lark, riffing on the French New Wave movement and filled with sumptuous black-and-white photography. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cm49CH4qtSg A Hard Day (Kkeut-kka-ji-gan-da) (South Korea / 2014 / Director: Kim Seong-Hun) A thrilling “master class in throat-squeezing, stomach-knotting suspense” (Hollywood Reporter) that nonetheless takes the time to craft exquisite set pieces of macabre comedy, A Hard Day follows harried detective Ko’s titular day that begins with his mother’s funeral and only gets worse from there. A hit-and-run accident coupled with an Internal Affairs investigation into his corrupt department’s criminal activity tighten the vise grip on Ko’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day in this breathlessly paced and expertly edited film. Trust us when we say you’ll want to experience the wild twists of A Hard Day while shrieking and laughing alongside an audience. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fMHH08BRAOg The Kindergarten Teacher (Haganenet) (Israel, France / 2014 / Director: Nadav Lapid) From festival alum Nadav Lapid (Policeman, MFF2012) comes this unsettling portrait of fascination curdled into obsession, as we follow a woman determined to nurture her five-year-old student’s artistic talent no matter the personal cost. Nira, the titular teacher, is stunned by her student’s poetry and wishes to cultivate his rare gift. But as her lessons begin to cross personal and professional boundaries, her determination to value beauty and poetry in a society that ignores it threatens to unravel her life in this bizarre and engrossing drama from one of the stalwarts of the new wave of Israeli cinema. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjEsKb2slZY Margarita, with a Straw (India / 2014 / Directors: Shonali Bose, Nilesh Maniyar) Laila (an astonishing turn from French-Indian actress Kalki Koechlin) is a spirited university student, undeterred by her cerebral palsy from having the traditional college experience, romance and all. A transfer from Delhi University to NYU, she finds herself in an entirely new world in more ways than one. A relationship is struck with a fiery female activist on campus, one that allows for an awakening both creatively and sexually. An inspirational love story tackling subject matter rarely explored with lightheartedness, director Shonali Bose’s Toronto International Film Festival award-winning drama is joyous cinema that is bound to win your heart. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDh7n6bte-c One for the Road (En el último trago) (Mexico / 2014 / Director: Jack Zagha Kababie) Three octogenarian friends embark on a road trip to fulfill their friend’s final wish in this heartfelt Spanish comedy. He wishes for his prized possession—a napkin with a draft of a song by legendary Ranchera singer José Alfredo Jiménez—to be bequeathed to Jiménez’s official museum. The trio embarks on a journey in defiance of loved ones and fears for their safety, engaging in a series of comic adventures that remind them that their golden years need not be spent solely reflecting on past memories. They can, in fact, be an opportunity to create entirely new ones. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0nH7_iL6tA Run Boy Run (Lauf junge lauf) (Germany, France / 2014 / Director: Pepe Danquart) The remarkable true story of a Polish boy’s solitary struggle to outlast the Nazi occupation is given the epic treatment it deserves in Run Boy Run. Young Srulik (stirringly portrayed by twin brothers Andrzej and Kamil Tkacz) escapes the Warsaw ghetto into the woods, where he learns to evade capture and subsist on scraps. But a harsh winter forces him into civilization, where he must rely on the kindness of strangers and overcome betrayal if he intends to survive. Based on a best-selling book and brought to vivid life by Oscar-winning director Pepe Danquart, this Holocaust drama has won festival awards worldwide. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njjdP3gZ_pk The Second Mother (Que Horas Ela Volta?) (Brazil / 2015 / Director: Anna Muylaert) A contemporary take on the upstairs-downstairs melodrama, The Second Mother is a warmly humorous character study of a live-in housekeeper in Sao Paulo and the estranged daughter who comes to stay with her and the family she tends to. While working-class heroine Val is proud of the work she does for her employer, her daughter Jessica (in town to enroll in university) is less than impressed, upsetting the household status quo and throwing into question hierarchies and social structures long since established. Val is led to question where her loyalty resides—with her proxy family or with her own flesh and blood. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOrbWcObwR4 Theeb (United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Jordan, United Kingdom / 2014 / Director: Naji Abu Nowar) It is 1916, in a remote province of the Ottoman Empire, with dangers encroaching from all sides (the First World War and the Great Arab Revolt, to name two). Young Bedouin Theeb undertakes a crash course in survival when he stows away on his brother Hussein’s journey of escorting a British soldier through dangerous desert terrain to a distant wellspring in this modern classic adventure film. Shot on many of the same locations as the David Lean masterpiece Lawrence of Arabia, Theeb doesn’t wilt under such comparisons. This is a rousing adventure/coming-of-age story that provides epic drama without losing sight of its human focus. https://vimeo.com/137044587 Viktoria (Romania, Bulgaria / 2014 / Director: Maya Vitkova) A woman’s desire to escape the throes of Communist Bulgaria is thwarted by the birth of her daughter, Viktoria, who, despite being born without a belly button, is declared the “Socialist Bulgaria Baby of the Decade,” becoming an immediate cause célèbre of the apparatchiki. We follow them through this darkly comic absurdist epic, as both familial and political terrain shift under their feet with the collapse of the Communist regime, possibly allowing for mother and daughter to reconcile. Maya Vitkova’s directorial debut is a surrealist, visually driven marvel stacked with indelible imagery and a perfectly calibrated sense of the absurd. https://vimeo.com/124553076 Villa Touma (Palestine / 2014 / Director: Suha Arraf) A Palestinian household trapped in amber is awoken by the arrival of an orphaned niece in this family drama, from the co-writer of Lemon Tree (MFF2009) and The Syrian Bride. Teenaged Badia is made to live with her three aunts, women whose fashion and behavior are relics of the past, and their plans to make her a proper lady and marry her off prove disastrous. Villa Touma comes to our festival as a “stateless picture,” a Palestinian story funded by Israel and disowned by both—an example of life imitating art in the case of a movie steeped in Arab-Israeli conflict. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jMg-SWePBgw The Wonders (Le meraviglie) (Italy, Switzerland, Germany / 2014 / Director: Alice Rohrwacher) An evocative coming-of-age tale set on the fringes of society, The Wonders (winner of the Cannes Grand Prize) is a Fellini-esque portrait of the magical thinking of adolescence. Young Gelsomina is being groomed to take over her father’s simple beekeeping and honey production business (in addition to caring for her younger sisters), with little consideration given to her feelings on the matter. An incursion from a garish and surreal reality TV show competition in search of Italy’s “Most Traditional Family” (hosted by a wonderful Monica Bellucci) only serves to exacerbate the push and pull between their simple life and fast-encroaching modernity. https://vimeo.com/119395803 Zouzou (France / 2014 / Director: Blandine Lenoir) Family matriarch Solange welcomes her three adult daughters home for a weekend of revelry and catching up (and also maybe introducing the kids to her stodgy new beau). This de facto family reunion turns into a manhunt when 14-year-old granddaughter Zouzou skips out after being caught in flagrante delicto with her young love. An unapologetic examination of female desire, this bawdy French comedy tackles head-on the friction of family tradition colliding with modernity, as this family learns a little too much about one another’s love lives while also enacting compromise, forgiveness, and acceptance over the course of one crazy night. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWH8In39wvk

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  • Poster and Watch Trailer for YOUTH Starring Michael Caine and Harvey Keitel | TRAILER

    Youth, Paolo Sorrentino Fox Searchlight Pictures has released the poster and trailer for YOUTH,  directed by Paolo Sorrentino (The Great Beauty), and starring Academy Award winner Michael Caine (The Cider House Rules, Kingsmen: The Secret Service) and Academy Award nominee Harvey Keitel (Reservoir Dogs, The Grand Budapest Hotel), which debuted earlier this year at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.  YOUTH will be released in theaters on December 4. Youth Poster Paolo Sorrentino From Paolo Sorrentino, the director of Italy’s Oscar foreign language winner THE GREAT BEAUTY comes YOUTH, about two longtime friends vacationing in the Swiss Alps. Oscar winning actor Michael Caine plays Fred, an acclaimed composer and conductor, who brings along his daughter (Rachel Weisz) and best friend Mick (Harvey Keitel), a renowned filmmaker. While Mick scrambles to finish the screenplay for what he imagines will be his last important film, Fred has no intention of resuming his musical career. The two men reflect on their past, each finding that some of the most important experiences can come later in life. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJNxQ8Wzr2I

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  • 2015 Chicago International Film Festival Reveals First 24 Films + Events incl. Cannes Winner DHEEPAN

    Dheepan

    The Chicago International Film Festival, revealed its first 24 films and several events to be featured at the 51st edition of the Festival taking place this October 15 to 29 2015.  This initial lineup announcement includes the top prizewinner from the Cannes Film Festival, a look at what it takes to build one of the world’s greatest restaurants, a once-lost Sherlock Holmes film, a Guillermo del Toro-produced buddy movie, and breakout performances from Michael Caine, Cate Blanchett, and Sarah Silverman.

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  • 2015 Austin Film Festival Reveals First 10 Films incl. CAROL, I SAW THE LIGHT, YOUTH

    CAROL Starring Cate Blanchett Austin Film Festival (AFF) announced the first slate of films included in the 2015 lineup of Festival screenings this October 29-November 5. The complete list of programming at the 22nd Austin Film Festival, including short films, competition titles, and Conference panels, will be announced in mid-September. 2015 Austin Film Festival FIRST 10: Carol (pictured in main image above) Texas Premiere Writer: Phyllis Nagy; Director: Todd Haynes Starring: Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara, Sarah Paulson, Kyle Chandler, Jake Lacy, Cory Michael Smith Casual New Series from Hulu In attendance: Creator/Executive Producer Zander Lehmann; Executive Producer/Director Jason Reitman; Executive Producer Helen Estabrook; Executive Producer Liz Tigelaar; Cast Tommy Dewey, Michaela Watkins, Tara Lynne Barr Fallen Stars World Premiere Writer/Director: Brian Jett In attendance: Writer/Director Brian Jett; Cast Ryan O’Nan, Michelle Ang; Producer Stephanie Marin I Saw the Light Texas Premiere Writer/Director: Marc Abraham Staring: Tom Hiddleston, Elizabeth Olsen, Bradley Whitford Memoria World Premiere Writer/Directors: Vladimir de Fontenay, Nina Ljeti In attendance: Writers/Directors Vladimir de Fontenay, Nina Ljeti; Cast James Franco, Sam Dillon Newcomer North American Premiere Writer/Director: Kai Berry In attendance: Writer/Director Kai Berry; Cast Anthony LaPaglia The Night is Young World Premiere Writer/Directors: Matt Jones, Dave Hill In attendance: Writer/Directors/Cast Matt Jones, Dave Hill Paperback World Premiere Writer/Director: Adam Bowers In attendance: Writer/Director Adam Bowers The Teller and the Truth World Premiere Writer/Director: Andrew Shapter In attendance: Writer/Director Andrew Shapter; All Cast and Crew Youth Texas Premiere Writer/Director: Paolo Sorrentino Starring: Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Rachel Weisz, Paul Dano, Jane Fonda

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