The 2015 New York Asian Film Festival (NYAFF), is back for its 14th edition and will run from June 26 to July 11. The festival takes place from June 26 to July 8 at the Film Society and July 9 to 11 at SVA Theatre . Initial details include notable awards to be presented to director Ringo Lam, superstar Aaron Kwok, and actor Shota Sometani. The festival will also host a slew of North American film premieres, as well as spotlight the works of Korean female directors and honor the memory of Japanese legends Ken Takakura and Bunta Sugawara with a joint tribute.
Hong Kong’s legendary director Ringo Lam (City on Fire) will receive the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award. One of Hong Kong’s most influential directors, Lam was directing comedies when City on Fire was released in 1987, fusing the social-protest movie with kinetic action filmmaking. It was followed by the massive hit Prison on Fire later that year, and thenSchool on Fire, a movie so unblinking that nervous Hong Kong censors sliced it to ribbons. Lam became one of the city’s best action filmmakers, and one of the few local directors to be so deeply concerned with the price of progress, the corrosive influence of money on human relationships, and the lives of the little people crushed beneath the wheels of change. In 2003, he directed what was to be his final feature and went into semi-retirement, only to be lured out again in 2015 with Wild City, in which Lam’s tooth-and-claw vision of modern urban living remains untamed.
Hong Kong’s superstar actor-singer Aaron Kwok (Divergence, After This Our Exile, Cold War) will receive the festival’s 2015 Star Asia Award onJune 26. One of Hong Kong’s Four Heavenly Kings of Cantopop, Kwok has won dozens of awards for his chart-topping albums. For over 30 years, he has performed steadily both on television and in movies and is respected for his box-office star power as well as his outstanding acting chops. Kwok has worked with some of Hong Kong’s finest directors, like Johnnie To, Jacob Cheung, Andrew Lau, and Patrick Tam. His self-described Method acting was rewarded in 2005 and 2006 when he won back-to-back Golden Horse awards for Best Actor, a feat previously achieved only by Jackie Chan. Kwok was awarded his first Best Actor prize was for his performance in 2005’s Divergence, but it was his work in the 2006 After This Our Exile, for which he won his second award, that blew audiences away. In that film, Kwok’s fearless portrayal of a gambling addict exhibited a serious commitment to his craft as well as a complete lack of vanity. He then went on to give a series of startling performances in films like Yim Ho’s Floating City, the blockbuster Cold War, as well as his upcoming tour de force, Port of Call.
Japanese actor Shota Sometani will attend the festival on July 4, on the occasion of the New York premiere of Kabukicho Love Hotel, to receive the Screen International Rising Star Award. Director Ryuichi Hiroki will also be in attendance. This marks the second year of a partnership with Screen International, with whom the NYAFF will honor an emerging talent in the East Asian film world each year. At age 22, Sometani is already a leading man in both blockbusters and indie gems and has earned critical acclaim on the international film festival circuit. In 2011, he received the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best New Young Actor at the Venice Film Festival for his performance in Himizu, along with his co-star Fumi Nikaido (last year’s recipient of the Screen International Rising Star Award).
Notable NYAFF titles this year will include the North American premieres of Nobuhiro Yamashita’s La La La at Rock Bottom (pictured above) and Yim Soon-rye’s The Whistleblower and the international premiere of Namewee’s Banglasia, which was banned in Malaysia, its home country.
The festival will also feature a section on Korea’s production company Myung Films, highlighting a few of their major works — Cart, The President’s Last Bang, The Isle, and Waikiki Brothers — as part of a greater focus on women who work behind the camera. Producer Shim Jae-myung and directors Yim Soon-rye (The Whistleblower) and Boo Ji-young (Cart) will be in attendance.
Japanese film legends Ken Takakura and Bunta Sugawara, both of whom passed away last November, will be the subject of the first joint tribute outside of Japan, which will feature the brand-new digital remaster of the 1973 classic Battles Without Honor and Humanity—screened for the time in North America—among others.-
Sneak Peak at Lineup for 2015 New York Asian Film Festival
The 2015 New York Asian Film Festival (NYAFF), is back for its 14th edition and will run from June 26 to July 11. The festival takes place from June 26 to July 8 at the Film Society and July 9 to 11 at SVA Theatre . Initial details include notable awards to be presented to director Ringo Lam, superstar Aaron Kwok, and actor Shota Sometani. The festival will also host a slew of North American film premieres, as well as spotlight the works of Korean female directors and honor the memory of Japanese legends Ken Takakura and Bunta Sugawara with a joint tribute.
Hong Kong’s legendary director Ringo Lam (City on Fire) will receive the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award. One of Hong Kong’s most influential directors, Lam was directing comedies when City on Fire was released in 1987, fusing the social-protest movie with kinetic action filmmaking. It was followed by the massive hit Prison on Fire later that year, and thenSchool on Fire, a movie so unblinking that nervous Hong Kong censors sliced it to ribbons. Lam became one of the city’s best action filmmakers, and one of the few local directors to be so deeply concerned with the price of progress, the corrosive influence of money on human relationships, and the lives of the little people crushed beneath the wheels of change. In 2003, he directed what was to be his final feature and went into semi-retirement, only to be lured out again in 2015 with Wild City, in which Lam’s tooth-and-claw vision of modern urban living remains untamed.
Hong Kong’s superstar actor-singer Aaron Kwok (Divergence, After This Our Exile, Cold War) will receive the festival’s 2015 Star Asia Award onJune 26. One of Hong Kong’s Four Heavenly Kings of Cantopop, Kwok has won dozens of awards for his chart-topping albums. For over 30 years, he has performed steadily both on television and in movies and is respected for his box-office star power as well as his outstanding acting chops. Kwok has worked with some of Hong Kong’s finest directors, like Johnnie To, Jacob Cheung, Andrew Lau, and Patrick Tam. His self-described Method acting was rewarded in 2005 and 2006 when he won back-to-back Golden Horse awards for Best Actor, a feat previously achieved only by Jackie Chan. Kwok was awarded his first Best Actor prize was for his performance in 2005’s Divergence, but it was his work in the 2006 After This Our Exile, for which he won his second award, that blew audiences away. In that film, Kwok’s fearless portrayal of a gambling addict exhibited a serious commitment to his craft as well as a complete lack of vanity. He then went on to give a series of startling performances in films like Yim Ho’s Floating City, the blockbuster Cold War, as well as his upcoming tour de force, Port of Call.
Japanese actor Shota Sometani will attend the festival on July 4, on the occasion of the New York premiere of Kabukicho Love Hotel, to receive the Screen International Rising Star Award. Director Ryuichi Hiroki will also be in attendance. This marks the second year of a partnership with Screen International, with whom the NYAFF will honor an emerging talent in the East Asian film world each year. At age 22, Sometani is already a leading man in both blockbusters and indie gems and has earned critical acclaim on the international film festival circuit. In 2011, he received the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best New Young Actor at the Venice Film Festival for his performance in Himizu, along with his co-star Fumi Nikaido (last year’s recipient of the Screen International Rising Star Award).
Notable NYAFF titles this year will include the North American premieres of Nobuhiro Yamashita’s La La La at Rock Bottom (pictured above) and Yim Soon-rye’s The Whistleblower and the international premiere of Namewee’s Banglasia, which was banned in Malaysia, its home country.
The festival will also feature a section on Korea’s production company Myung Films, highlighting a few of their major works — Cart, The President’s Last Bang, The Isle, and Waikiki Brothers — as part of a greater focus on women who work behind the camera. Producer Shim Jae-myung and directors Yim Soon-rye (The Whistleblower) and Boo Ji-young (Cart) will be in attendance.
Japanese film legends Ken Takakura and Bunta Sugawara, both of whom passed away last November, will be the subject of the first joint tribute outside of Japan, which will feature the brand-new digital remaster of the 1973 classic Battles Without Honor and Humanity—screened for the time in North America—among others.
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“The Chicken” “Bihttoš” Win Short Film Awards at 2015 Seattle International Film Festival
The 2015 Seattle International Film Festival announced today this year’s ShortsFest Jury Award winners. The Chicken (pictured above), directed by Una Gunjak, and described by the jury as an expertly crafted narrative that explores life and death through the eyes of a young girl, is the winner of the Grand Jury Prize, Live Action Short Film. Bihttoš, an unconventional documentary that explores the complex relationship between a father and daughter, directed by Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers won the Grand Jury Prize Documentary Short Film. This years Festival running May 14 through June 7, features 164 short films, including 25 World, 18 North American, and 11 US premieres.
ShortsFest jurors chose winners in the Live Action, Animation, and Documentary categories. All ShortsFest films shown at the Festival are also eligible for Golden Space Needle Audience Awards. Each ShortsFest Grand Jury winner will receive $1,000, and the winners in the three categories are eligible for the Academy Awards® in their respective Short Film category (Live Action, Animated, or Documentary).
SIFF 2015 SHORTSFEST AWARD WINNERS
LIVE ACTION
GRAND JURY PRIZE
The Chicken (Croatia, Germany), directed by Una Gunjak
JURY STATEMENT: An expertly crafted narrative that explores life and death through the eyes of a young girl. With a film full of authentic performances, Iman Alibalic is extraordinary as the six-year-old protagonist who receives a live chicken from her father for her birthday, and soon realizes it’s meant for dinner. This is an emotional film with a production quality that continues to move the story along and underscore the realities of life in a war zone.
SPECIAL JURY MENTION
Hole (Canada), directed by Martin Edralin
JURY STATEMENT: Hole is a brave exploration of human sexuality and yearning for intimacy through the eyes of a lonely, forgotten, disabled man in the heart of Toronto. Ken Harrower delivers a captivating performance that transcends any labels or limitations and speaks to the need for human connection.
DOCUMENTARY
GRAND JURY PRIZE
Bihttoš (Canada), directed by Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
JURY STATEMENT: For its ambitious approaches to visual storytelling and imaginative recounting of an exceptional family history.
ANIMATION
GRAND JURY PRIZE
The Mill at Calder’s End (USA), directed by Kevin McTurk
JURY STATEMENT: There exists a tendency to laud the new-new stories, new techniques, new talent. With the animation award, the jury is pleased to celebrate a film that is decidedly old-school, breathing life into a bygone style, iterating in a story tradition that is centuries old. For this fusion of the modern and classic, we are happy to award Kevin McTurk for The Mill at Calder’s End.
FUTUREWAVE SHORTS AWARDS
“WAVEMAKER AWARD (GRAND PRIZE)
In recognition of superior artistic and technical achievement.
Audio Input (USA), directed by Sho Schrock-Manabe
JURY STATEMENT: For its insightful and engaging portrait of podcasting, an audio art form, through a collage of interviews and images.
PRODIGY CAMP SCHOLARSHIPS
Each winner will be awarded a $1000 scholarship to the Prodigy Camp.
I’m Not Here (South Africa), directed by Jack Markovitz
Minimum Max (USA), directed by Josh Ovalle
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Lucie Borleteau’s FIDELIO: ALICE’S ODYSSEY Wins Top Award at 2015 Montclair Film Festival
The 2015 Montclair Film Festival (MFF) for the first time announced competition awards, with Lucie Borleteau’s FIDELIO: ALICE’S ODYSSEY (pictured above) taking home the Narrative Feature Jury prize. The narrative competition jury also awarded a special jury prize to Yury Bykov’s THE FOOL for storytelling.
The festival inaugurated two awards in honor of the late David Carr and Bruce Sinofsky, both Montclair residents. THE RUSSIAN WOODPECKER, directed by Chad Gracia, took home the Bruce Sinofsky Prize in the festival’s Documentary Feature competition. This award was established in memory of Bruce Sinofsky and was presented by Sinofsky’s long time friend and collaborator Joe Berlinger (PARADISE LOST I, II, AND III).
Brad Barber and Scott Christopherson’s PEACE OFFICER took home the David Carr Award for Truth in Non-Fiction Filmmaking, which honors a filmmaker, selected by the festival, who utilizes journalistic techniques to explore important contemporary subjects. The award was presented by Ta-Nehisi Coates, a longtime friend and colleague of Carr.
Elise DuRant’s EDÉN was awarded with the Future/Now prize, honoring emerging low-budget American independent filmmaking, and Marah Strauch’s SUNSHINE SUPERMAN took home the New Jersey Films Award, which honors a selected group of films made by New Jersey artists. The junior jury prize went to Alexandra Shiva’s documentary HOW TO DANCE IN OHIO.
“We’re thrilled to be launching these awards for our fourth installment, and to honor the diverse group of talented filmmakers,” said MFF founder and Chairman Bob Feinberg. “This has been a significant year for us and it truly exemplifies the festival’s impact and growth, as we continue to lay the groundwork for many more successful years ahead.”
“This year’s festival featured over 135 films and we are incredibly proud of each and every one of our filmmakers. These inaugural awards represent the best of what our festival can offer – global stories that have an intimate, connection to our audiences and help Montclair connect to the world of cinema,”said MFF Executive Director Tom Hall.
Congratulations to the 2015 winners of The Montclair Film Festival Awards:
David Carr Award for Truth in Non-Fiction Filmmaking Winner
PEACE OFFICER
Directors – Brad Barber and Scott Christopherson
Narrative Feature Competition Winner
FIDELIO: ALICE’S ODYSSEY
Director – Lucie Borleteau
Narrative Feature Competition
Special Jury Prize for Storytelling
THE FOOL
Director – Yury Bykov
Bruce Sinofsky Prize for Documentary Feature Competition Winner
THE RUSSIAN WOODPECKER
Director – Chad Gracia
Future/Now Winner
EDÉN
Director – Elise DuRant
New Jersey Films Competition Winner
SUNSHINE SUPERMAN
Director – Marah Strauch
Junior Jury Winner
HOW TO DANCE IN OHIO
Director – Alexandra Shiva
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US Premiere of Black (NWA) Kicks Off Film Lineup for 2015 Chicago African Diaspora International Film Festival
The 2015 Chicago African Diaspora International Film Festival (ADIFF) taking place from June 12-18, will showcase 17 documentary and fiction films set in The United States, Angola, Cuba, Brazil, Canada, Haiti, St Vincent, New Zealand, the UK, Senegal, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Argentina, Uruguay, and Honduras.
The festival will open with the US Premiere of Black (NWA) (pictured above), a fiction film that chronicles the lives of four people living in a neighborhood plagued by poverty and violence, aspiring to freedom and happiness. “This gritty look at gang culture in Montreal North is incredibly timely in that central to the drama are the tense relations between the police and the black community. This has become a hot-button issue in recent months following a number of controversial high-profile cases of police officers in the U.S. shooting unarmed black men.” – Montreal Gazette. Lead actor Remy St Eloi will be in attendance for a discussion after the screening.
Several films in this year’s ADIFF had their premiere in major international film festivals. Based on a novel by “Whale Rider” writer Witi Ihimaera, White Lies – New Zealand’s entry in the 2014 Oscar competition for best foreign-language film and Toronto International Film Festival official selection – is an intense drama that explores with great humanity and sensitivity such difficult topics as race relations, bleaching and abortion.
First presented at the Montreal World Film Festival is the Chicago Premiere of the impressive epic drama based on a true story, Njinga Queen of Angolaabout a 17th century Queen who fought for freedom against Portuguese colonialism.
Screened at the Toronto and Venice film festival in 2000 is the epic drama Adanggaman, a provocative retelling of the African slave experience, based on facts. ADIFF will also bring back The Pirogue (Cannes Film Festival, 2012), a powerful immigration drama about a group of African men and one woman who leave Senegal for Europe on a fishing boat at the risk of their lives. The pirogue by Moussa Toure is part of the Great African Films collection, a DVD series that celebrates great African filmmakers. The Pirogue can be found in Great African Films Vol. 4 with the work of Khady Sylla, a renowned Senegalese filmmaker.
The strong African retention in New World cultures as expressed through music, dance, and religious traditions is celebrated in four documentaries screening in ADIFF 2015. The program Candomble & Santeria with the screening of Oggun: an Eternal Presence & Summer of Gods explores African based religions. Tango Negro: The African Roots of Tango moves in and out of Uruguay and Argentina as it illustrates the ever present African component in Tango, Candombe, Milongon and other African based musical styles found in the Rio de la Plata region. In Candombe, musician Fernado Nunez sees himself as the heir to “candombe,” a dance and musical expression initiated by his enslaved ancestors.
For its CENTERPIECE, the festival will present the GARIFUNA CELEBRATION program with two documentaries: Revolutionary Medicine: A Story of the First Garifuna Hospital and Homeland (Yurumein) both about the Garifuna people in Honduras and St. Vincent respectively. The screenings will be followed by a discussion with local members of the Garifuna community.
Also premiering in the festival this year are Obama Mama, a documentary about Stanley Ann Dunham, mother of the nation’s first black president,Reshipment, a documentary by Afro-Cuban filmmaker Gloria Rolando about the historical connection between Cubans and Haitians, and the U.S. premiere of Ken Bugul – Nobody Wants Her, a powerful documentary who leads us into the secret world of an assertive African woman artist and writer and her brave fight for freedom and acceptance.
ADIFF CHICAGO 2015 FILM SYNOPSIS
THE SUMMER OF THE GODS
The Summer of the Gods revolves around Lili, a six year old Afro-Brazilian who unites with her native religious ancestry on a summer visit to her family’s rural village. Soon after arriving in Northeast Brazil, where Afro-Brazilian religious traditions still endure, Lili encounters Orishas. As these African deities help her cope with a gift that has previously vexed her, Lili’s grandmother upholds Afro-Brazilian religious practices as a revered local priestess. To ensure that these customs carry on after her grandmother passes, the gifted Lili is led on a mystic and supernatural adventure of initiation. Directed by Eliciana Nascimento, 2014, Brazil/USA, Drama, 21mins, Portuguese with English subtitles. OGGUN: AN ETERNAL PRESENCE Gloria Rolando relates the patakin or mythical story of Oggun, the tireless warrior who, enamored of his mother, decided as punishment to imprison himself in the mountains. Only Ochun, goddess of love, succeeded in captivating him when she let fall a few drops of honey on the lips of the god of metal, war, progress, and civilization. Oggun is the first effort of the team known as Images of the Caribbean, now chartered as an independent video group. Directed by Gloria Rolando, 1992, Cuba, Documentary, Spanish, 52 min, Spanish, English subtitles. BLACK / NWA BLACK chronicles the lives of four people living in a neighborhood plagued by poverty and violence, aspiring to freedom and happiness. KADHAFI, a 26 year-old aspiring Algerian rapper and ex-member of a street gang, just out of prison, wants to steer clear of troubles. FLEUR, a 17 year-old Haitian mother in an abusive and passionate relationship with her daughter’s father, dreams of leaving the ghetto and becoming a nurse. SUZIE, a 20-year-old white stripper who falls for a gang member. DICKENS, 16 year-old Haitian wants to be part of the street gang controlled by his older brother. Directed by Yves Christian Fournier, 2015, Canada, Drama, 110 min, French/Creole with English subt THE PIROGUE A group of African men and one woman leave Senegal in a pirogue captained by a local fisherman to undertake the treacherous crossing of the Atlantic to Spain where they believe better lives and prospects are waiting for them.Directed by Moussa Touré, 2012, Senegal/France/Germany, 86 min, French, Wolof, Spanish, English subt. OBAMA MAMA Stanley Ann Dunham was an anthropologist with a Ph.D, a lifelong traveler and the mother of the first Black president of the United States. Her intelligence, progressive politics, and activism made for a profound life—one whose inspiration continues to resonate through her son, President Barack Obama. The “largeness of her heart,” as her son describes it, is the centerpiece of this inspiring documentary. Directed by Vivian Norris, 2014, 83 min, United States/Poland/France, Documentary, English. RESHIPMENT / RE-EMBARQUE The voices of prominent historians join the memories of Haitians and their descendants in Cuba to understand a chapter of the complex economic and social history of the Caribbean: the presence in the Island of Cuba of thousands of West Indian laborers, especially from Haiti. For many, it was a great bargain of cheap labor. For others, the realization of the dream of every immigrant: make money and return home. Reshipment demonstrates that despite the discrimination suffered by the Haitians since this period, the Creole language, religious and other musical and dance traditions remain in the cultural landscape of Cuba. The film also recalls the Haitian generation who garnered years of stay in Cuba and were victims of a “reshipment” as if they were damaged goods–a forced repatriation to Haiti when they were no longer needed in the sugar cane fields or coffee plantations. As the life of Haitians in Cuba has moved between dreams and setbacks, this film is not only a fitting reminder of the often forgotten chapter in Cuban history but a tribute to the unsung Haitian heroes who wove an important passage between two Caribbean nations. Directed by Gloria Rolando, 2014, Cuba/Haiti, Documentary, 58 min, Spanish, English subt NJINGA, QUEEN OF ANGOLA In the 17th century, a warrior woman fights for the independence of Angola. After witnessing the murder of her son and watching her people being humiliated by Portuguese colonizers, Njinga will become a Queen and struggle for the liberation of her people embodying the motto: those who stay fight to win. This epic drama is based on the real life story of Queen Anna Njinga(c. 1583 –1663), also known as Ana de Sousa Njinga Mbande, queen of the Ndongo and Matamba Kingdoms of the Mbundu people in Angola. Directed by Sergio Graciano, 2013, 109 min, Angola, Biography, Portuguese with English subt. WHITE LIKE THE MOON A Mexican-American girl struggles to keep her identity when her mother forces her to bleach her skin. White Like the Moon is a revealing film about a dilemma not very well known outside Latino communities; that of the myth of the light skin superiority in Indigenous and Indigenous descendant communities.Directed by Marina Gonzalez Palmier, 2001, 23mins, USA, Drama in English WHITE LIES Based on a novel by “Whale Rider” writer Witi Ihimaera, White Lies – New Zealand’s entry in the 2014 Oscar competition for best foreign-language film – is an intense drama that explores with great humanity and sensitivity such difficult topics as race relations, bleaching and abortion. Paraiti is the healer and midwife of her rural, tribal people – she believes in life. But new laws in force are prohibiting unlicensed healers, making the practice of much Maori medicine illegal. She gets approached by Maraea, the servant of a wealthy woman, Rebecca, who seeks her knowledge and assistance in order to hide a secret which could destroy Rebecca’s position in European settler society. This compelling story tackles moral dilemmas, exploring the nature of identity, societal attitudes to the roles of women and the tension between Western and traditional Maori medicine. Directed by Dana Rotberg, 2014, New Zealand, 96mins, Drama, English and Maori with English subt. REVOLUTIONARY MEDICINE: A STORY OF THE FIRST GARIFUNA HOSPITAL The inspiring documentary tells the story of how the hospital’s alternative health model is transforming communities on Honduras’ Northern Coast and standing as an alternative to an increasingly privatized national health system. Could a remote hospital that runs on solar panels, in a community with no paved roads or electricity provide a new global model for health care? Directed by Jesse Freeston & Beth Geglia, 2013, 41 min, Honduras/Canada/ United States, Documentary in Spanish with English subt. HOMELAND (YURUMEIN) This is the untold history of the indigenous Carabis/Garifuna of St. Vincent: their near extermination and exile by the British 200 years ago and their return to reconnect with those left behind. A powerful, untold story of Caribbean renaissance, rupture and repair in post-colonial St. Vincent. Directed by Andrea E. Leland, 2014, 50 min, St. Vincent/Garifuna, documentary, English. GLORIOUS EXIT Jarreth Merz, a Swiss-Nigerian actor living in Los Angeles, is summoned to Nigeria to bury his father. Nigerian tradition mandates the eldest child to take charge of a father’s burial. Although he accepts the responsibility, he struggles with why he feels morally responsible toward Nigerian tradition and a family whom he hardly knows. Jarreth starts a journey of self-discovery. Directed by Kevin Merz , 2008, 75 min, St. Nigeria/Switzerland, documentary, English and German with English subtitles. THE STORY OF LOVERS ROCK Lovers Rock, often dubbed ‘romantic reggae’ is a uniquely black British sound that developed in the late 70s and 80s against a backdrop of riots, racial tension and sound systems. Live performance, comedy sketches, dance, interviews and archive shed light on the music and the generation that embraced it. Lovers Rock allowed young people to experience intimacy and healing through dance- known as ‘scrubbing’- at parties and clubs. This dance provided a coping mechanism for what was happening on the streets. Lovers Rock developed into a successful sound with national UK hits and was influential to British bands (Police, Culture Club, UB40). Menelik Shabazz, 2011, 96mins, UK, musical documentary, English KEN BUGUL – NOBODY WANTS HER An expressive aesthetic as rhapsodic as the written words of Bugul herself, Ken Bugul: Nobody Wants Her is a filmic ode to the brilliance of this revered Senegalese writer. Determined to set her own path in life, Ken Bugul (born Mariètou Mbaye Biléoma) left Senegal and spent 20 years living in Europe, only to feel an even deeper loneliness and alienation. She belonged neither here nor there. Encountering crushing rejection upon her return to Senegal, at her most destitute and desperate, Bugul sought refuge in her writing. Her debut novel, The Abandoned Baobab, already captured Bugul’s unique idiosyncratic style and cemented her position as a novelist. Painting a mosaic picture of Bugul’s life and times, this powerful documentary leads us into the secret world of an assertive African woman artist and her brave fight for freedom and acceptance. Silvia Voser, 2013, 62mins, French/Swiss documentary, French with English subtitles. CANDOMBE More than two hundred years ago, there was an influx of slaves from Africa into Uruguay. Long after their empancipation, these individuals continued to comprise the poorest and most marginalized strata in society. Musician Fernado Nunez sees himself as the heir to “candombe,” a dance and musical expression initiated these individuals, his slave ancestors. As the far-reaching, socio-cultural legacy of of candombe has yet to be acknowledged, Fernando Nunez and his friends from the back street quarter of Montevideo have taken on the responsibility of keeping these important cultural roots alive in the consciousness of the Uruguayan people. Directed by Rafael Deugenio, 1993, Uruguay, Documentary, 16 min, Spanish w/ English subt. TANGO NEGRO: THE AFRICAN ROOTS OF TANGO Tango Negro explores the expression of African-ness inherent in the dance of the “tango” and the contribution of African cultures to the dance’s creation. Angolan director, Dom Pedro, details the dance’s early cultural significance as a depiction of the social life of captured African slaves and provides an expansive compilation of musical performances and interviews from tango enthusiasts and historians alike. Tango Negro provides a novel insight into the depth of tango’s sub-Saharan African musical influence, a presence that has crossed oceans and endured the tides of forced bondage. Directed by Dom Pedro, 2013, France, Documentary, 93 min, French, Spanish, English subt. ADANGGAMAN Set in the late 17th century, on the Western coast of Africa, “Adanggaman” is an epic fiction film about a rebellious young man, who refuses to marry his parents’ choice of a bride, flees his village one evening, only to return to find his father and girlfriend slain, his village destroyed and his mother captured by a tribe of Amazon warriors. His efforts to free his mother lead to the kingdom of Adanggaman, where captives are held before sale. Roger Gnoan M’Bala, 2000, 90mins, Ivorian, Burkinabé, French, Swiss and Italian historical drama film, Bambara, Baoulé and French with English subtitles.
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2015 Brooklyn Film Festival Announces Film Lineup. Opens with Manson Family Vacation
The Brooklyn Film Festival announced their full slate of films for the 2015 edition, taking place May 30th to June 7th. For their 18th edition, the festival will open with the East Coast premiere of J. Davis’ Manson Family Vacation, starring Jay Duplass, Linas Phillips, Tobin Bell, Leonora Pitts, Adam Chernick and Davie-Blue, screening at new BFF venue the Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg. Executive produced by Jay & Mark Duplass, the film was acquired by Netflix at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival.
This year’s festival is comprised of 108 features and shorts from 26 countries spread over 5 continents and of these, 17 are world premieres and 30 US premieres, with Ryan Carmichael’s But Not For Me as the lone narrative feature world premiere. This New York City film stars Marcus Carl Franklin, Elena Urioste, Maria Vermeulen and Roger Guenveur Smith.
Other special events during the fest include the 11th annual KidsFilmFest 2015 on Saturday, May 30th at the Made in NY Media Center by IFP; the Filmmakers Party on June 3rd at Billet & Bellows; the BFF Exchange series of panels and a pitch session on June 6th; “The Illuminate Party,” also on June 6th, and the June 7th Awards Ceremony.
Main 2015 Brooklyn Film Festival venues are the Wythe Hotel and Windmill Studios in Greenpoint. Satellite locations include Nitehawk Cinema in Williamsburg, Made in New York Media Center By IFP in Dumbo, and BRIC House in Fort Greene.
The complete Feature lineup is as follows.
Opening Night
Manson Family Vacation Director: J. Davis – Two brothers (Jay Duplass and Linas Phillips) reunite when the more free-spirited brother shows up at the other’s door with nothing but a backpack. Together, they get to know each other again while touring the sites of Charles Manson’s exploits and exploring Manson’s contemporary life. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Narrative Features
Abby Singer/Songwriter Director: Onur Tukel – Divorced stockbroker Jamie Block was once an indie-rock star. Going through a life crisis, he teams up with a filmmaker to make a series of music videos in this trippy, funny film. EAST COAST PREMIERE
But Not for Me Director: Ryan Carmichael – Will is a young writer working at an ad agency as a copywriter. Like many others his age, he is hiding his true passion for philosophy and music and holding back his true thoughts, until a relationship with a young woman inspires him. WORLD PREMIERE
Devil Town Director: Harvey Mitkas – A young woman enlists a shady detective to help her find her missing sister in this neo-noir with a cast of indie film favorites.
Eadweard Director: Kyle Rideout – A psychological biopic that explores the mind of Eadweard Muybridge, the godfather of cinema, who was also the last American to receive a justifiable homicide verdict after killing his wife’s lover. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Funny Bunny Director: Alison Bagnall – A young canvasser and a loner teenager who is estranged from his parents go on a journey to meet Ginger, the animal activist with whom the teen has developed an online relationship. EAST COAST PREMIERE
God Bless the Child Directors: Robert Machoian and Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck – In this beautifully realized observational narrative, Harper, the oldest of five siblings, must take care of her siblings. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Inferno Director: Vinko Moderndorfer – In this Slovenian realist drama, young working class family must deal with the struggles of unemployment while the global economy crumbles and local labor rebels. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Sweaty Betty Directors: Joe Frank and Zachary Reed – Two stories come out of the row houses on the border of Washington, D.C. — a pig, Ms. Charlotte, is carted around, vying for a chance to be a team mascot for the Washington Redskins; and two teenage best friends come into ownership of a dog that they attempt to sell. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Valedictorian Director: Matthew Yeager – Ben feels less and less in touch with his life in New York City, and over a year, he must confront the connections — or lack thereof — he feels with those he considers close. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
Wildlike Director: Frank Hall Green – When teenage Mackenzie is sent to live with her uncle in Juneau, Alaska, she knows it’s not right for her. Shortly after arriving, she embarks on a journey headed south to find her mother.
Documentary Features
20 Years of Madness Director: Jeremy Royce – The founder of a mid-90’s Public Access TV show in Detroit reunites the cast twenty years later to make a new episode and discovers that his friends and former collaborators are struggling with the hard realities of adulthood.
Chameleon Director: Ryan Mullins – The elusive undercover journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas is one of Ghana’s most popular figures. Though the charismatic investigator has named and shamed various high profile malfeasants, his identity remains hidden. U.S. PREMIERE
Deep Web Director: Alex Winter – Thirty-year-old entrepreneur Ross William Ulbricht has been convicted for operating the online black market Silk Road. This comprehensive documentary tracks the history of the site and the vigorously pursued case against Ulbricht.
Frame by Frame Directors: Alexandria Bombach and Mo Scarpelli – Photography was outlawed in Taliban-ruled Afghanistan; however, with the fall of the Taliban, photographers have been key documenters of the changing nation.
Help Us Find Sunil Tripathi Director: Neal Broffman – Four weeks after disappearing from his apartment as a student at Brown University, Sunil Tripathi was accused of being Suspect #2 in the Boston Marathon bombings. The false accusations disrupted his family, steadfastly working with his friends to find him.
I Am Thor Director: Ryan Wise – Jon Mikl Thor was a bodybuilder, steel gender, and rock star in the 70’s and 80’s who led the theatrical band THOR. Today, he seeks to reclaim his mantle as a high-energy rock star. EAST COAST PREMIERE
Paradiso Director: Omar A. Razzak – Projectionist Rafael works hard to tidy up and maintain Madrid’s last remaining adult movie theater, Duque de Alba. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE
Placebo Director: Abhay Kumar – One of the most competitive medical schools, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) has an acceptance rate of less than 0.1%. The high academic standards leave a harsh toll on the students. U.S. PREMIERE
We Were Rebels Directors: Katharina von Schroeder and Florian Schewe – Agel took up arms when he was ten to participate in the fight for an independent South Sudan. After leaving the conflict, Agel has returned to an independent South Sudan, where he is the captain of the national basketball team and worries over the young nation’s fragile democracy.
Wild Home Directors: Jack Schurman and Robert Schurman – Deep in the woods of Maine, Bob Miner, a Vietnam Veteran rehabilitates abused and abandoned animals. He and his wife have built a kingdom for lions, tigers, hyenas, kangaroos, black bears, and over 200 other species of animals that attracts a diverse set of visitors.
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BEST OF ENEMIES and MAVIS! to Bookend AFI DOCS 2015
Magnolia Pictures’ BEST OF ENEMIES, from director Robert Gordon and Academy Award®-winning director Morgan Neville (20 FEET FROM STARDOM), has been selected as the Opening Night film of the upcoming 2015 AFI DOCS taking place June 17 to 21, in Washington, DC and Silver Spring, MD. HBO’s MAVIS! from AFI DOCS alumna director Jessica Edwards has been named the Closing Night film selection.
AFI DOCS kicks off on June 17 with the Opening Night Gala and screening of BEST OF ENEMIES at the Newseum, followed by a discussion and Q&A with filmmakers Gordon and Neville. BEST OF ENEMIES features William F. Buckley, Jr. and Gore Vidal’s explosive debates during the 1968 Democratic and Republican National Conventions, aired live on ABC News. The documentary masterfully captures the dawn of pundit television as it is known today.
The festival concludes on June 21 with the Closing Night screening of MAVIS! at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, followed by a discussion and Q&A with director Jessica Edwards. Edwards returns to AFI DOCS after screening her short film SELTZER WORKS in 2010.
MAVIS! is the first documentary on gospel and soul music legend, and civil rights icon, Mavis Staples and her family group, The Staple Singers. The documentary features live performances and conversations with collaborators including Chuck D, Bob Dylan, Levon Helm, Prince, Bonnie Raitt, Jeff Tweedy and more. Mavis Staples’ message of family and equality is just as powerful now as it was when she began performing 60 years ago.
“We are delighted to present these exceptional films to open and close this year’s festival,” said Michael Lumpkin, Director of AFI DOCS. “BEST OF ENEMIES and MAVIS! both feature remarkable people who have made a mark on this country. These films will certainly inspire audience dialogue while providing great entertainment, both of which we embrace at AFI DOCS.”
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Vice and FilmBuff To Release Berlin Film Fest Hit “PRINCE”

FilmBuff in partnership with VICE Media will release in the U.S., PRINCE (PRINS), the feature debut from acclaimed Dutch music video director Sam de Jong. PRINCE first debuted at the 2015 Berlinale, where it received an honorary mention for the coveted Crystal Bear for Best First Feature. Produced by 100% Halal, PRINCE will be available in North America in theaters and all major VOD platforms starting August 14th, 2015.
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SWORN VIRGIN, WESTERN Among Winners of 2015 San Francisco International Film Festival Awards
The 2015 San Francisco International Film Festival which ran April 23 to May 7, 2015, presented by the San Francisco Film Society, announced the winners of the juried Golden Gate Award (GGA) competitions. Sworn Virgin, directed by Laura Bispuri won the Golden Gate New Directors Prize, and Western, directed by Bill Ross IV and Turner Ross won the Golden Gate Awards for Documentary Features.
GOLDEN GATE NEW DIRECTORS PRIZE
The Golden Gate Awards New Directors jury of the 2015 San Francisco International Film Festival was composed of producer and BFI Senior Production Executive Lizzie Franke, writer and filmmaker Ryan Fleck and producer Laura Wagner.
Winner: Sworn Virgin (pictured above), Laura Bispuri (Italy/Switzerland/Germany/Albania/Kosovo) * Receives $10,000 cash prize In a statement, the jury noted: “Laura Bispuri is a distinct new filmmaking talent who we are excited to follow as her career progresses. There is a great purity and truth in her approach to a story of contemporary female struggle. Bispuri has crafted a film, grounded by extraordinary performances, that is at once effortless and delicate, but also bold in its execution.” GOLDEN GATE AWARDS FOR DOCUMENTARY FEATURES The GGA Documentary feature competitions jury was comprised of filmmakers Kristine Samuelson and Robert Greene, and journalist Susan Gerhard. Documentary Feature Winner: Western, Bill Ross IV, Turner Ross (USA) * Receives $10,000 cash prize The jury noted in a statement: “The competition was remarkable and every film in the category presented a unique vision, which made our job very difficult and brought us to reconsider the very nature of cinema itself in the year 2015. Films of great ambition, exceptional intimacy and intricate sound design, offered up empathy and poetry in equal measure and charted new paths for the form. We give the GGA Documentary Feature award to Western, a film that compresses observation and symbolism to take the experience of ‘seeing’ in a bold direction. Though driven by characters, those characters never overwhelm the sense of place, and the tension between narrative and poetry, fact and fictional refraction inflect new meanings on how we see the West.” Special Jury recognition: Of Men and War, Laurent Bécue-Renard (France/Switzerland) The jury noted: “Of Men and War makes us understand the horrors of war without ever showing us a single frame of battle, offering access to interior psychologies most viewers have never seen before in a tightly structured, beautifully edited, minimalist piece of nonfiction.” Bay Area Documentary Winner: Very Semi-Serious, Leah Wolchok (USA) * Receives $5,000 cash prize The jury noted: “We award the Golden Gate Award for Bay Area Documentary Feature to Very Semi-Serious, which reminds us that humor has a purpose. It subtly reveals the vast array of personalities engaged in this art form, including women and young people making their way into a historically male-dominated field. Its brave ellipses in storytelling allow us to consider the intertwining of tragedy and comedy.” Special Jury recognition: T-Rex, Drea Cooper, Zackary Canepari (USA) The jury noted: “We recognize T-Rex for its ambition and courage. This film subverts the sports conquest genre and takes a clear-eyed view of race and class.” GOLDEN GATE AWARDS FOR SHORT FILMS The GGA Short Film jury consisted of filmmakers Grace Lee and Jonathan Duffy and curator Liz Keim. Narrative Short Winner: The Chicken, Una Gunjak (Germany/Croatia) * Receives $2,000 cash prize Documentary Short Winner: Cailleach, Rosie Reed Hillman (Scotland) * Receives $2,000 cash prize Animated Short Winner: A Single Life, Marieke Blaauw, Joris Oprins, Job Roggeveen (Netherlands) * Receives $2,000 cash prize New Visions Short Winner: Discussion Questions, Jonn Herschend (USA) * Receives $1,500 cash prize Bay Area Short First Prize Winner: The Box, Michael I Schiller (USA) * Receives $1,500 cash prize Bay Area Short Second Prize Winner: Time Quest, John Dilley (USA) * Receives $1,000 cash prize GOLDEN GATE AWARD FOR FAMILY FILM The Family Film jury consisted of Arts Education consultant Amy Balsbaugh, third grade teacher at Grattan School Susan DesBaillets and Head of Education and Community Programs at The Walt Disney Family Museum Hillary Lyden. Winner: The Story of Percival Pilts, Janette Goodey, John Lewis (Australia/New Zealand) * Receives $500 cash prize Family Film Honorable Mentions: Lava, James Ford Murphy (USA) and One, Two, Tree, Yulia Aronova (France/Switzerland) GOLDEN GATE AWARD FOR YOUTH WORK The Youth Works jury was comprised of local high school students Diana Garcia, Ramses Mosley-Wise and Sean Rossiter, with adult supervisor Lisa Landi, producer of Film School Shorts at KQED. Winner: Two and a Quarter Minutes, Joshua Ovalle (USA) * Receives $1,000 cash prize – including $500 donated by KQED Youth Work Honorable Mention: The Off / Season, Lance Oppenheim (USA) * Receives $250 cash prize donated by KQED
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First Greenwich International Film Festival Announces Lineup
The very first Greenwich International Film Festival which will take place from June 4 to June 7, 2015, in Greenwich, CT announced today its inaugural film selections, alongside their panel program, jurors and special events.
The Festival will feature 31 films, consisting of 5 narrative shorts, 4 documentary shorts, 10 narrative features, 5 documentary features, and 6 special screenings. As previously announced, Colin Hanks’ documentary ALL THINGS MUST PASS will screen on Opening Night on June 5th, with an Opening Night Party to follow.
“We are so proud of our Year One slate,” said GIFF founders Carina Crain, Colleen deVeer and Wendy Reyes. “The diversity of the films and filmmakers really illustrate what we are trying to do with GIFF–bringing in as many perspectives as possible and sharing those with our community.”
Additionally, the Festival will offer a series of panels covering television, sports, female filmmaking and, of course, film finance with names like Mark Teixeira, Alysia Reiner, Allan Houston, producer Cary Woods, ESPN’s Mike Greenberg, Producer Rachel Winter and Terence Winter (Creator, “Boardwalk Empire”).
Further, the Festival features special events including: the Changemaker Gala, the Spotlight On event, the Opening Night Film and Party and an Awards Ceremony. On Saturday, June 6, longtime UNICEF Goodwill Ambassadors Harry Belafonte and Mia Farrow will be named as the inaugural Changemaker Honorees at a Gala. The event will be emceed by Kathie Lee Gifford.
“We are so excited about our special events and panel program,” said Crain, deVeer and Reyes. “They are designed with our audience in mind. The breadth of disciplines covered by the entertainment professionals participating will ensure lively discussions. We look forward to creating many memorable moments this year.”
The first-ever GIFF Film lineup is as follows:
NARRATIVE SHORTS
Dirty Laundry Day, directed by Jamil Lahham (USA). The lively routines of George Carlin and Bill Hicks are brought to vivid, wordless life in this animated short that packs a surprisingly vivid political and social message.
Grounded (Foreign Title: Au sol), directed by Alexis Michalik (France). Human struggles and corporate protocol intersect at an international airport, resulting in a greater understanding of what makes people operate..
I’ve Just Had a Dream, directed by Javi Navarro (Spain). Two girls. Two cultures. Two visions. A dream.
Load (Foreign Title: משא), directed by Niv Shpigel and Robert Moreno (Israel). A collision of the natural and the technological blur the distinctions between reality and imagination for an elderly man afloat at sea.
Mother’s Day, directed by Nico Raineau (USA). When faced with responsibilities she wasn’t at all ready for, an aimless woman learns that a young person’s perspective can change your outlook in a significant way.
DOCUMENTARY SHORTS PROGRAM
Coaching Colburn, directed by Jeff Bemiss and Trinity College Filmmakers (USA). James Colburn’s disabilities present many challenges, but the strength of his spirit and the support of loved ones creates amazing new possibilities.
Directed by Tweedie, directed by Duncan Cowles (Scotland/UK). 88 years into his life, a man takes it upon himself to become a filmmaker. The results are equally wondrous and baffling.
Santa Cruz del Islote, directed by Luke Lorentzen (USA/Columbia). An intimate, sensory-heavy look into the lives of fishers and the community that depends on them.
Shipwreck, directed by Morgan Knibbe (Netherlands). A community mourns the loss of life from a shipwreck. Amidst this inconceivable pain is the hint that life will continue.
NARRATIVE FEATURE COMPETITION
7 Minutes, written and directed by Jay Martin (USA). An aborted drug deal leads three desperate, down-on-their-luck high school buddies to hatch an ill-advised bank robbery in order to pay back a menacing drug lord in this taut, fast-paced thriller. Through clever cross-cutting, frenetic camera work and powerful performances from Jason Ritter, Kris Kristofferson and Leven Rambin, among others, “7 Minutes” cobbles together a tense, emotionally wrought narrative that keeps the viewer guessing until the final frame.
40-Love (Foreign Title: Terre battue), directed by Stéphane Demoustier (France/Belgium). We’ve all heard the story of the child with athletic promise whose parents push him to the breaking point, but “40-Love” presents us with the vastly different story of Ugo, a, 11-year-old tennis prodigy whose parents’ lackluster and disengaged sentiment makes him push himself to the breaking point to prove his talent and worth. Stephane Demoustiere’s psychological portrait of a down-on-his-luck father and his gifted son is thrilling from beginning to match point.
Between 10 and 12, (Foreign Title: Tussen 10 en 12), written and directed by Peter Hoogendoorn (Netherlands). Closely and intimately following two hours in the life of a family as they are informed of a loved one’s tragic death, “Between 10 and 12” faces harsh realities deliberately and with quiet emotion. This film will make you appreciate simplicity and silence for the inexplicable and boundless tension it creates and will astonish you with its rich composition and the honesty of its performances. Based on true events from first-time writer/director Peter Hoogendoorn’s life, the film delivers heartbreak and honesty in equal measure.
Jane Wants a Boyfriend, directed by William Sullivan (USA). Jane is a talented, ambitious young costume designer with Asperger’s Syndrome who enlists the help of her sister, Bianca (Eliza Dushku, Bring It On) to help her find her first boyfriend. After she is unexpectedly courted one night by Bianca’s aimless friend Jack, Jane finds her attempts to pursue her much sought after relationship thwarted by her well-meaning but overprotective older sister. Treading familiar territory with a surprisingly fresh and sensitive perspective, filmmaker William Sullivan tracks Jane’s everyday challenges as a woman on the autism spectrum while deftly exploring her complex relationship with her loving sister.
Night Owls, directed by Charles Hood (USA). A drunken one night stand goes downhill quickly when workaholic Kevin discovers that his one-time paramour Madeline is actually the jilted, vengeful mistress of his highly revered boss. To make matters worse, Madeline stages a dramatic, post-coital suicide attempt as a misguided play at revenge, and Kevin is forced to spend the rest of his night keeping her from falling asleep. adam Featuring two star-making performances from its enigmatic leads, “Night Owls” is a darkly comic masterpiece from emerging writer/director Charles Hood.
Summer of Sangaile, written and directed by Alanté Kavaïté (Lithuania, France, Netherlands). Mixing a tender, same-sex coming-of-age romance with the unique thrills of aviation, “Summer of Sangaile” plays like a melodrama-tinged, Lithuanian spin on Howard Hawks’ “Only Angels Have Wings.” Powered by razor-sharp compositions from writer/director Alanté Kavaïté (who snagged the Best Directing Award at this year’s Sundance Film Festival), beautiful locations, and brave turns by Aiste Dirziute and Julija Steponaityte, viewers will be wishing to see this again and again.
Uncle John, written and directed by Steven Piet (USA). Opening with a brutal and mysterious murder, “Uncle John” rapidly develops into an intriguing hybrid of crime drama and romantic comedy. At the center of the former is the eponymous Uncle John, laconic and mild-mannered, though full of dark secrets, while the latter revolves around John’s nephew, Ben, navigating the awkwardness of a budding office romance. Inevitably these stories converge, although in original and unexpected ways, culminating in a chilling denouement in this technically assured, tight and atmospheric filmmaking debut.
Victoria (Foreign Title: Eins Zwei Fünf Acht), directed by Sebastian Schipper (Germany). Shot in a single, pulse-pounding take in Berlin, “Victoria” is a masterful feat of filmmaking ingenuity as well as a thrilling, action-packed bank heist film in its own right. Weaving through the sleepy city streets in the early morning hours, the camera follows the titular Victoria, a beautiful young Spanish girl who meets a group of young local thugs at an underground club. What starts off as a relatively innocent courtship between Victoria and one of the guys quickly evolves into a tense, nail-biting crime drama, as our naive but game protagonist gets drawn into a rapidly escalating series of illicit activities.
WildLike, written and directed by Frank Hall Green (USA). Intimate and emotionally resonant, “WildLike” often brings to mind visions of a smaller, lower-key Wild—but this vivid, thorough exploration of a young woman’s bumpy and sometimes shocking path to self-discovery defiantly carves its own path. Along with an abundance of beautiful location work, the film is anchored by a breakthrough turn from alluring newcomer Ella Purnell and a complex performance by veteran Bruce Greenwood.
Zurich (Foreign Title: Und morgen mittag bin ich tot), directed by Frederik Steiner (Germany). Through sensitive direction and emotionally wrought storytelling, emerging filmmaker Frederik Steiner draws us head-first into the messy, complicated, and ultimately cathartic story of a young girl afflicted with cystic fibrosis who seeks to die with dignity. Bolstered by an entrancing breakout performance from Liv Lisa Fries, “Zurich” is unlike any film about terminal illness you’ve already seen.
DOCUMENTARY FEATURE COMPETITION
3 and 1/2 Minutes (USA) (pictured above) directed by Marc Silver and winner of this year’s US Documentary Special Jury Award for Social Impact at Sundance, “3 and 1/2 Minutes” is a taut, well-crafted recounting of the tragic and senseless murder of African American teenager Jordan Davis at the hands of white, middle-aged Michael Dunn. Cross-cutting between Dunn’s emotionally-wrought trial and interviews with Davis’ family and friends, the film delivers a potent commentary on Florida’s Stand Your Ground self-defense laws and the cycle of violence in America while intimately exploring the lives of those personally involved in the incident.
Landfill Harmonic, directed by Brad Allgood and Graham Townsley (USA, Paraguay, Brazil, Norway). Globally, our planet generates approximately 1 billion tons of it a year, and the people of Cateura, Paraguay, who live amid a vast landfill, are surrounded by it constantly. With the help and encouragement of an inspirational teacher and a skillful craftsman who fashions instruments out of garbage, a symphony of its children have banded together to make beauty out of the massive heaps of trash they live in. Beautifully shot and inspirational, “Landfill Harmonic” is a feel-good family film that will make you appreciate the gift of music.
The Russian Woodpecker (Foreign Title: Orosz harkály), directed by Chad Gracia (UK, USA). Fedor Alexandrovich, an idiosyncratic Ukrainian artist, possesses an incendiary and dangerous conspiracy theory: far from a careless mistake, he believes the catastrophic Chernobyl Disaster of 1986 was actually an elaborate government cover-up designed to mask a failed 8 billion ruble antennae (known as the “Russian Woodpecker”) near the radioactive site intended to interfere with western radio frequencies. Rich with Soviet history and the stories of Chernobyl’s former citizens, this documentary chronicles the history behind one of the most chilling events of our time as well as Alexandrovich’s thrilling attempts to spread the word of his theory. Russian with English Subtitles.
Tiger Tiger, directed by George Butler (USA). Deftly navigating through the exotic and treacherous Sunderbands, an expansive mangrove forest bordering India and Bangladesh, Dr. Alan Rabinowitz, one of the top big cat biologists in the world, risks his life tracking tigers. Following closely behind is legendary filmmaker George Butler (Pumping Iron), documenting Rabinowitz’s latest (and potentially last, due to a recent diagnosis of terminal cancer) endeavor to halt the rapid, global extinction of the majestic cats. Intimate and riveting, Tiger Tiger is a compelling story of one man’s impossible quest to save a species.
Vaclav Havel: Living in Freedom (Foreign Title: Zivot podle Vaclava Havla), written and directed by Andrea Sedlackova (Czech Republic/France). Think the life of a deceased Czech intellectual, writer, and politician can’t have the urgency of a modern-day political thriller? Think again. “Václav Havel: Living in Freedom” propels its viewers forward with an uncanny level of insight into the enigmatic world of social life in the Soviet Union by anchoring its focus on the life of one of its greatest figures.
SPECIAL SCREENINGS
I Smile Back, directed by Adam Salky (USA). In an emotionally-wrought departure from her career-defining comedic roles, Sarah Silverman plays Laney Brooks, a suburban homemaker with a doting husband (Josh Charles, “The Good Wife”) and two healthy, beautiful children. But her struggles with mental illness and the demons of her past send her spiraling downward into drug addiction and extramarital affairs, threatening to upend everything she holds dear. The first narrative feature from director Adam Salky, “I Smile Back” is a psychological drama that examines one woman’s harrowing descent into chaos, and her desperate attempts to put her life back together.
The Keeping Room, directed by Daniel Barber (USA). A gut-punching, Civil War-era feminist manifesto from acclaimed director Daniel Barber (Harry Brown), “The Keeping Room” grips the viewer from its shocking opening scene to its powerful final frame. Featuring raw, emotionally-wrought performances from Brit Marling and Hailee Steinfeld, as Southern sisters fighting for their lives in their abandoned farm, and Sam Worthington, as a defected Union soldier drunk with power and lust, the film turns the traditional cat-and-mouse dynamic on its head while presenting a subtle societal critique of contemporary values.
Mania Days, written and directed by Paul Dalio (USA). After being sent to a psychiatric hospital for exhibiting worrying behavior associated with their manic-depressive disorder, artists Carla (Katie Holmes) and Marco (Luke Kirby) instantly fall in love. But the chemistry that binds them also fuels their instability and mania, and before long they begin to spiral out of control, relentlessly thwarting all attempts to end their increasingly volatile relationship. With a level of sensitivity not often imbued upon stories about mental patients, Greenwich native Paul Dalio probes the couples’ highs and lows, creating a truly original and eye-opening tragic love story.
The Overnight, written and directed by Patrick Brice (USA). Attractive, Type-A couple Alex and Emily (Adam Scott and Taylor Schilling), recent LA transplants, encounter flamboyant Kurt (Jason Schwartzman) at a neighborhood park and are invited to his palatial mansion for dinner with his wife and their kid. The night starts out innocently enough, but once the kids are put to bed, Alex and Emily begin to suspect that their new friends may have had less than savory motives for inviting them to dinner. A raucously funny, sexy and surprisingly sweet romp, “The Overnight” is full of twists and turns that are sure to keep the viewer guessing as this wild adult “playdate” unfolds.
Sing Your Song, directed by Susanne Rostock (USA) and presented in honor of this year’s Changemaker Honoree, Sing Your Song brings a legend to full, ebullient life while telling a story of historical change and upheaval, imbuing its viewer with a renewed sense of appreciation for the inimitable singer, songwriter, actor and activist Harry Belafonte. With a studied deftness, director Susanne Rostock strings together current-day appraisals and footage of Belafonte’s accomplishments into a cohesive portrait of making the world better.
Time Out of Mind, written and directed by Oren Moverman (USA). Richard Gere astounds with a poignant and moving performance in Time Out of Mind, a simple story of the trials and tribulations of homelessness in the slums of New York City. Helmed by the socially conscious director Oren Moverman—certainly one to follow in coming years—the film is powerful in its simplicity and documentary-like feel. With Jena Malone as Gere’s estranged daughter, and cameo performances from Steve Buscemi, Kyra Sedgwick, Michael K. Williams, and Jeremy Strong, this is a film that questions the qualities of humanity and faces the invisibility and despondency of homeless Americans.
The 2015 festival’s esteemed jurors will be:
Narrative Shorts: Jim Ragan (Writer, “Until 20”), Alysia Reiner (“Orange is the New Black”) and Oday Rasheed (Director, “Underexposure”)
Documentary Shorts: Silvana Paternostro (Associate Producer, “Che”), Bears Fonte (Programmer and Director, “The Secret Keeper”) and Daniel Patrick Carbone (Director, “Hide Your Smiling Faces”).
Narrative Feature Competition: Madeline Samit (Producer, “The Diary of a Teenage Girl”), David Kaplan (Producer, Obvious Child) and Jack Giarraputo (Producer, “Grown Ups”)
Documentary Feature Competition: Eric Eisner (Producer, “Hamlet 2”), David Levien (Writer, “Rounders”) and Mallory Lance (Associate Programmer and Manager of Programming Operations, Tribeca Film Festival).
Further, the Greenwich International Film Festival will have a Social Impact Jury, made up of David Gideon (Fmr Director of Lee Strasberg Institute, Professor of Acting Suny Purchase Theater Conservatory), Michael Covino (Executive Producer, “Babysitter”) and Anne Kern, PhD (Associate Professor of Cinema Studies, SUNY Purchase). This jury will present the Bill & Anne Bresnan Social Impact Award will be announced at the GIFF Opening Night Party, where they will receive a $10,000 award. Four category winners will be announced as well.
The following panels and special events are confirmed for GIFF 2015:
Opening Night Party, Friday, June 5th, 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. This star-studded event will be held after the Opening Night Film Premiere of ALL THINGS MUST PASS and will include a red-carpet entrance, musical entertainment fromThe Voice finalist, film clips, passed appetizers/desserts and open bar, and engaging audience activities. We expect an audience of 800 to 1,000 people including top actors, filmmakers, journalists, industry leaders, film lovers and Fairfield and Westchester County residents.
Scheduled to Attend: Jenna Bush Hager will serve as Master of Ceremonies and there will be a performance by The Voice finalist Blessing Offor. In addition to entertainment, the Bill & Anne Bresnan Social Impact Award will be announced and awarded.
The Changing Face of Television, Saturday, June 6th, 1:00pm. It is impossible to deny that the past decade and a half has witnessed a marked resurgence of elevated, quality television programming that has effectively heightened the status of an often under-appreciated medium. Thanks in part to boutique networks like HBO (whose trailblazing series The Sopranos is widely heralded as the pioneer of this New Golden Age), Showtime, AMC, F/X and boundary-pushing digital platforms like Netflix and Amazon Prime, contemporary television has managed to court Hollywood stars, command high production values and garner critical acclaim at an unparalleled level. Join our panel of industry insiders as they discuss the current landscape of television, tracing the history of the New Golden Age and predicting the illustrious future of the so called “Small Screen.”
Scheduled to Attend: Marshall Fine (Moderator), Colin Hanks (“Fargo”), Thomas Kelly (Producer, “Copper,” “Blue Bloods”), Alysia Reiner (“Orange is the New Black”), Terence Winter (Creator, “Boardwalk Empire,” Executive Producer, “The Sopranos”), Charlie Collier (President and GM of AMC and SundanceTV)
Sports Guys on Sports Movies, Thursday, June 4th, 6:00pm. What’s the best baseball movie – “Bull Durham” or “Major League”? If you follow football, is it “Any Given Sunday”? And, of course, you’d argue over the best based on a true story film, “Friday Night Lights,” “The Blind Side” or “Rudy”? And where does one place “Rocky” in this discussion – best sports movie of all time? A panel of athletes and ESPN on-air talent will tackle the topic, and bring their insights – and passions – to a lively discussion of one of the most enduring conversation topics ever to take place over a beer…anywhere. This time, we all get to listen in. This event will include a happy hour and engaging audience activities.
Scheduled to Attend: Mike Greenberg (Moderator), Mark Teixeira, Allan Houston, Cary Woods (Producer, “Rudy”), Patrick Kerney and Ryen Russillo (SVP & Russillo).
Women in Production, Saturday, June 6th, 3:00pm. What is it that movie producers do? They make movies- but why was it a male dominated profession for so long? You will find out in this informative panel that examines how women producers have changed the way films are made something that is a shockingly recent concept.
Scheduled to Attend: Anne Kern, PhD (Moderator), Margot Hand (“Rudderless,” “Miss Julie”), Rachel Winter (“Dallas Buyers Club”), Amy Hobby/Anne Hubbell (“Secretary,” “Lucky Them”), Caroline Kaplan (“Boyhood,” “Time Out of Mind”)
Inside Film Financing, Saturday, June 6th, 10:00am. As important to movie making as cinematographers, production designers and composers are the people whose contributions underwrite all of those efforts and more: the film financiers. This panel will reveal the motivations from the people whose financial support, driven by sources from crowd funding to old school means, help filmmakers get their projects seen. These dreams no longer live only in movie theaters, but on platforms around the world so that they can be enjoyed by audiences.
Scheduled to Attend: Bears Fonte (Moderator), Jeff Lipsky (Adopt Films), Milan Popelka (Film Nation), Kristen Konvitz (Indiegogo), Clay Pecorin (Producer, “The Big Wedding”)
Changemaker Honoree Gala, Saturday, June 6, 7:00pm. This black-tie gala will honor longtime UNICEF Goodwill Ambassadors Harry Belafonte and Mia Farrow as the inaugural Changemaker Honorees, in recognition of their work to use film to impact positive social change.
Ms. Farrow will be recognized for her work as a powerful advocate for children. She campaigns tirelessly for their rights around the world, with a special focus on children impacted by armed conflict. Ms. Farrow has worked extensively to raise funds and awareness for children whose lives have been affected by violence in countries such as Angola, Chad, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti and Nigeria. Along with her son, Ronan, a UNICEF Spokesperson for Youth, she has visited Darfur, Sudan, several times to highlight the devastating impact of continued violence on women and children.
Mr. Belafone has established a long and distinguished record of human rights advocacy, beginning with the American civil rights movement in the 1950’s. He has been an eloquent campaigner for the world’s children. He has met with presidents, parliamentarians, and members of civil society to champion the cause of UNICEF and help create partnerships for children. In 1997, UNICEF honored Mr. Belafonte for ten years of service as a Goodwill Ambassador in a ceremony attended by then Secretary General Kofi Annan.
The Gala will include an awards presentation hosted by Kathie Lee Gifford, featuring a retrospective of their work, followed by a dinner at L’Escale Restaurant on the water.
The Social Impact Panel, Sunday, June 7, 11:00am. Why do some human rights stories garner more media coverage than others? Considering the vast multitude of human rights stories in today’s world, some are inevitably downplayed or downright ignored in favor of others—but what makes some issues more media-friendly than others and what are the potential risks of highlighting some issues while glossing over the others? Join our distinguished panel of filmmakers, human rights experts and humanitarians as they discuss the role of film and media in proliferating social issues around the globe.
Scheduled to Attend: Perri Peltz (Moderator), Brian Newman (Producer, “DamNation”), Tom Scott (Founder, The Nantucket Project) and Matisse Bustos Hawkes (The Witness Project) as well as a UNICEF representative (to be announced).
A Conversation with P. Riot, Sunday, June 7, 1:30pm. From punk performance artists to labor camp prisoners to internationally renowned political activists, Nadezhda (Nadya) Tolokonnikova and Maria (Masha) Alekhina, the duo at the heart of the feminist protest art collective known as P. Riot, are without a doubt two of the most wildly controversial figures of the past several years. Sentenced to two years’ imprisonment following an anti-Putin performance in Moscow Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in 2012, the incendiary pair immediately attracted a great amount of international media attention and support from the likes of Peter Gabriel, Sir Paul McCartney, Madonna, and Aung San Suu Kyi. Now free, P. Riot use their global renown to proliferate their sobering political message, launching a number of initiatives such as a prisoners’ rights NGO as well as their own independent news service, Mediazona, which focuses on reporting on, and reforming courts, law enforcement, and the prison system in Russia.
Join the festival for a screening of P. Riot’s latest video, I Can’t Breathe, followed by a discussion with Nadya Tolokonnikova and Masha Alekhina.
Children’s Acting Panel, Saturday, June 6, 1:00pm. Children are invited to an interactive workshop with Hollywood’s rising stars Calum Worthy (Disney’s “Austin & Ally”) and Karan Brar (Disney’s “Jessie”). Learn tricks of the trade, hear their stories and take a “selfie” with a star. Priority admission given to pass holders.
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Venezuelan actor Julio Mendez of BAD HAIR Killed in Venezuela
Venezuelan actor Julio Mendez who was featured in the critically acclaimed independent film “Bad Hair” has reportedly been killed in a shootout in Caracas, Venezuela. Julio Mendez was said to be among a group of people killed last Thursday night during a confrontation between officers and a group of alleged car thieves in downtown Caracas.
According to the reports, it was unclear if Mendez was among the suspects or was caught in crossfire.
The filmmakers behind the film”Bad Hair” confirmed his death in a tweet, saying “With infinite rage and pain we must point out that our beloved actor Julio Mendez was killed in Caracas…”
In Bad Hair (Pelo malo), winner of the Golden Seashell Award and Sebastiane Award at the 2013 San Sebastian Film Festival, writer/director Mariana Rondón chronicles Junior’s life in a housing project in contemporary Caracas, Venezuela, where he lives with his widowed mother and baby brother. While his mother struggles to find cleaning jobs to feed her family, Junior’s obsessions are of a more aesthetic nature. Above all, he longs for straight hair – ‘Good Hair’ – like that of his idol, a Justin Bieber – like pop singer. He wants his curly African hair to be straight for his school picture. His mother fears her son is gay, but his African grandmother is fond of the boy, and teaches him to dance to one of her favorite rock ‘n’ roll tunes. In ” Bad Hair,” the 21-year-old Mendez played a newspaper vendor, reportedly winning the role after accompanying a friend to auditions held in the Caracas slum where the movie is set. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uW0o1jz5d9YCon infinita rabia y dolor debemos informar que nuestro querido actor JULIO MENDEZ fue asesinado en Caracas la… http://t.co/HL9cuFxNoH
— Pelo Malo (@FilmPeloMalo) May 2, 2015
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WATCH Official Trailer for Sean Baker’s TANGERINE
Magnolia Pictures has released the official trailer for Sean Baker’s TANGERINE, which opens in theaters on July 10th, 2015.
It’s Christmas Eve in Tinseltown and Sin-Dee (newcomer Kitana Kiki Rodriguez) is back on the block. Upon hearing that her pimp boyfriend (James Ransone, STARLET, “Generation Kill”) hasn’t been faithful during the 28 days she was locked up, the working girl and her best friend, Alexandra (newcomer Mya Taylor), embark on a mission to get to the bottom of the scandalous rumor. Their rip-roaring odyssey leads them through various subcultures of Los Angeles, including an Armenian family dealing with their own repercussions of infidelity.
Director Sean Baker’s prior films (STARLET, PRINCE OF BROADWAY) brought rich texture and intimate detail to worlds seldom seen on film. TANGERINE follows suit, bursting off the screen with energy and style. A decidedly modern Christmas tale told on the streets of L.A., TANGERINE defies expectation at every turn.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALSwWTb88ZU

The Jury of the