• Anurag Kashyap’s UGLY to Open, Aparna Sen’s GOYNAR BAKSHO to Close New York Indian Film Festival

    UGLYUGLY

    The New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) celebrating its 14th year will kick off with the Opening Night Gala film:  Anurag Kashyap’s UGLY, described as a sensational tale of corruption, indifference, and systemic violence that begins when a 10-year-old daughter of an aspiring actor disappears. The festival  will run May 5 to 10, 2014 in New York City.

    We are thrilled to be opening this year’s New York Indian Film Festival with Anurag Kashyap new film UGLY,” said festival director Aseem Chhabra. “Anurag has been in the forefront of India’s growing indie film movement, always pushing the boundaries and inspiring the new generation of filmmakers. Personally I am a big fan of his films.”

    GOYNAR BAKSHOGOYNAR BAKSHO

     In addition, actress and filmmaker Aparna Sen will close the festival with her latest work, GOYNAR BAKSHO.  Sen began her career as an actress in Satyajit Ray’s 1961 masterpiece THREE DAUGHTERS (released as TWO DAUGHTERS in the US.)

    In her latest work Sen provides a refreshing and vibrant take on acclaimed Bengali novelist Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay’s famous tale of three generations of women and their changing position in society, as seen in relation to an inherited box of jewels. The film features the talents of her daughter, Konkona Sen Sharma, who rose to fame in another Aparna Sen film, MR. AND MRS. IYER.

    Actress and first time director Geethu Mohandas with showcase her film LIAR’S DICE as this year’s Centerpiece. LIAR’S DICE was in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition section at Sundance this January, and has been hailed by Variety as “an assured feature debut” and “quietly effective.” The film follows Kamala, a young woman from Chitkul village and her girl child Manya, whoembark on a journey leaving their native land in search for her missing husband.  It stars India’s leading indie film actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who was recently seen as the eager office worker in Ritesh Batra’s THE LUNCHBOX.

    OPENING NIGHT GALA

    UGLY
    New York Premiere
    India/2014/128 minutes|
    Director: Anurag Kashyap|
    Cast: Rahul Bhatt, Abir Goswami, Sandesh Jhadev, Siddhant Kapoor
    Logline: A terrible tale of corruption, indifference, and systemic violence starts when 10-year-old daughter of an aspiring actor disappears.

    CENTERPIECE

    LIAR’S DICE
    |New York Premiere
    India/2014/1O4 minutes
    Director: Geethu Mohandas
    Cast: Nawazuddin Siddiqui,  Geetanjali Thapa, Manya Gupta
    Logline: The film follows Kamala, a young woman from Chitkul village and her girl child Manya, who embarks on a journey leaving their native land in search for her missing husband. 

    CLOSING NIGHT

    GOYNAR BAKSHO
    India/2013/141 minutes
    Director: Aparna Sen
    Cast: Konkona Sen Sharma, Moushumi Chatterjee, Saswata Chaterjee, Paran Banerjee
    Logline: Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay’s famous tale of 3 generations of women & their changing position in society, seen in relation to a box of jewels, handed down from one generation to the next. 

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  • Gia Coppola’s ‘Palo Alto’ – Feature Adaptation of James Franco’s Collection of Short Stories is Centerpiece Presentation for 2014 San Francisco International Film Festival

    Palo Alto

    Gia Coppola’s feature debut – the teen-centered drama Palo Alto, starring Emma Roberts, Jack Kilmer and James Franco has been selected as Centerpiece presentation of the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival (April 24–May 8). Palo Alto is  adapted from Franco’s book Palo Alto Stories. The Festival’s Centerpiece is designed to showcase talented young directors with their latest film. Writer-director Gia Coppola is expected to attend the screening.  

    Actress Zoe Levin in a scene from Gia Coppola's PALO ALTO, based on short stories by James Franco, playing at the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival, April 24- May 8, 2014.

    We couldn’t ask for a better fit for the Festival’s Centerpiece selection,” said San Francisco Film Society Executive Director Noah Cowan. “A skilled adaptation of the writings of one of our most interesting contemporary artists, a locally-set story, and the feature debut of the newest member of one of this country’s most remarkable and prolific film families. This is going to be quite a night!”

     Emma Roberts stars in Gia Coppola's PALO ALTO, based on short stories by James Franco, playing at the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival, April 24- May 8, 2014.

    Good girl April (Emma Roberts) grapples with her attraction to her soccer coach Mr. B (James Franco), stoner artist Teddy (Jack Kilmer) finds trouble under the influence of his defiant best bud Fred (Nat Wolff) and promiscuous Emily (Zoe Levin) pins her fragile sense of self on her many sexual encounters. With this adaptation of Franco’s book of short stories, fifth-generation filmmaker Gia Coppola makes an assured feature debut mining the field of troubled adolescence that both her grandfather Francis and aunt Sofia explored before her. Coppola makes the genre wholly her own with an original take on aimless youth that captures not just the sex, drugs and alcohol, but also the angst and alienation. 

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  • ‘Begin Again’, ‘Calvary’ and ‘The One I Love’ Added to 2014 San Francisco International Film Festival

    Begin AgainBegin Again

    John Carney’s Begin Again (USA 2013), John Michael McDonagh’s Calvary (Ireland/UK 2014) and Charlie McDowell’s The One I Love (USA 2014) have been added to the film schedule for the 57th San Francisco International Film Festival (April 24–May 8).

    When failed record executive Dan (Mark Ruffalo) meets tentative but talented singer-songwriter Greta (Keira Knightley) in a Manhattan nightclub, he dedicates himself to making her a star in a bid for career and personal redemption. He is in a bad place in his life, his career and marriage in shambles, and so is she, her heart broken by her rock star ex-boyfriend Dave (Maroon 5 front man Adam Levine). While the talented Greta lacks ambition, Dan, desperate for one more hit record and validation in the eyes of his estranged wife (Catherine Keener) and daughter (Hailee Steinfeld), has enough drive for the both of them. Ruffalo’s committed performance as the not always likable, but ultimately sympathetic, impresario rediscovering his passion and reclaiming his soul is what makes this tale of redemption soar as writer/director John Carney (SFIFF 2007) scores another winner in his return to the romantic musical. Begin Again plays Wednesday May 7, 6:00 pm at Sundance Kabuki Cinemas. The Weinstein Company will open the film in Bay Area theaters in July.

    CalvaryCalvary

    The words coming from the other side of the confessional are chilling: after first relating the rape he suffered in childhood at the hands of a priest, the anonymous voice promises Father James Lavelle (Brendan Gleeson) that in a week’s time he is going to murder him. Not because the pastor had a hand in his or anyone else’s molestation, but because assassinating a good priest will make more of a statement. With that arresting opening begins Calvary, Gleeson’s second collaboration with writer/director John Michael McDonagh after The Guard (2011). This darkly comedic drama frames trenchant observations of the Catholic Church’s history dealing with abuse allegations in Ireland within a daft mystery/passion play with Father Lavelle reluctantly thrust into the role of the martyr marked to die for the sins of others. Calvary plays Thursday May 8, 6:00 pm at Sundance Kabuki Cinemas. Fox Searchlight Pictures will open the film in theaters this coming August.

    The One I LoveThe One I Love

    The One I Love follows longtime couple Ethan (Mark Duplass) and Sophie (Elisabeth Moss) in their attempt to mend their rocky relationship. While the two are still in love, in the past few years a mean streak has started to color all of their interactions and squabbling has replaced sex. Dedicated to salvaging what was once a healthy and loving relationship, the pair start seeing a therapist (Ted Danson) who suggests that they spend a weekend at an idyllic country property with a 100% success rate at mending ailing relationships. Ethan and Sophie eagerly sign up, and the house is even more gorgeous than the marriage counselor described—rolling greenery, a swimming pool, even a small cottage behind the main house. Almost immediately, the two are more affectionate, flirty and fun than they’ve been in years. Something must be wrong here. The One I Love plays Tuesday May 6, 9:15 pm at Sundance Kabuki Cinemas. Radius – TWC will open the film in theaters this summer. 

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  • SNOWPIERCER Starring Tilda Swinton, Octavia Spencer to Open 20th Anniversary, 2014 Los Angeles Film Festival

    snowpiercer directed by bong joon ho

     The Los Angeles Film Festival announced the North American Premiere of Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer as the opening night film of the 2014 festival, which runs June 11 to June 19, 2014. The film’s release is set for June 27th from RADiUS-TWC.

    “Snowpiercer is a wild ride and a spectacular way to open the 20th Anniversary of the Los Angeles Film Festival which is dedicated to the visionary spirit of L.A. that inspires artists around the world,” said Stephanie Allain, Festival Director.

    “I’m thrilled to have Bong Joon-ho’s amazing Snowpiercer to kick off the 2014 Los Angeles Film Festival,” said David Ansen, Artistic Director for the Festival. “As fans of The Host and Mother know, Bong takes popular genres to a visionary new level.  Here he puts us on a speeding train in a frozen post-apocalyptic future — in the company of Chris Evans, Tilda Swinton, Song Kang-ho, Ed Harris, Octavia Spencer, Jamie Bell and John Hurt — and treats us to a wild, funny and darkly provocative ride.  You’ve never seen anything quite like it!”

    According to RADiUS co-presidents Tom Quinn and Jason Janego: “We are thrilled Snowpiercer has been selected for the Los Angeles Film Festival’s coveted opening night slot.  David and his team always curate a terrific slate and we look forward to kicking things off with Bong’s sci-fi masterpiece.”

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  • Palm Beach International Film Festival to Kickoff this Week with BELLE and Closes with Jason Priestley’s CAS & DYLAN

    Belle, directed by Amma AsanteBelle, directed by Amma Asante

    The Palm Beach International Film Festival (PBIFF) announced its film line-up for the 19th edition, taking place April 3 to 10, 2014.  Opening Night kicks off with Belle, directed by Amma Asante. The film, which stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Emily Watson, Tom Felton, Sam Reid and Tom Wilkinson, is inspired by the true story of Dido Elizabeth Belle (Mbatha-Raw), the illegitimate mixed race daughter of a Royal Navy Admiral.  Raised by her aristocratic great-uncle Lord Mansfield and his wife, Belle’s lineage affords her certain privileges, yet the color of her skin prevents her from fully participating in the traditions of her social standing. Left to wonder if she will ever find love, Belle falls for an idealistic young vicar’s son bent on change who, with her help, shapes Lord Mansfield’s role as Lord Chief Justice to end slavery in England.

    Cas & Dylan, directed by Jason PriestleyCas & Dylan, directed by Jason Priestley

    The fest will close with Cas & Dylan, directed by Jason Priestley, starring Richard Dreyfuss, Tatiana Maslany and Jayne Eastwood. A Canadian comedy/drama, Cas & Dylan is about what happens when a dying doctor, who plans to check out on his own terms, takes a reluctant detour when he inadvertently winds up on the lam with an ‘anything-but-normal’ 22-year old girl. Director Jason Priestley will attend.

    PBIFFwill present the  Lifetime Achievement Award to Emmy and Tony award-winning actor Robert Morse, who appears in Rick McKay’s film, Broadway: BEYOND the Golden Age at this year’s festival.

    The festival will also honor director Rick McKay with the Visionary Award, celebrating his on-going  achievement of documenting and preserving the history of the Broadway stage with stories told  directly from the legends who were there, while illustrating their tales not only with amazing, rare  archival performance footage but also through their home movies and photos as well. McKay  returns to Palm Beach after premiering his award-winning documentary Broadway: The Golden Age,  which won at PBIFF ten years ago, and this year will have a very special early sneak preview of his  new film Broadway: BEYOND the Golden Age, due to be released in the Fall of 2014, followed by  an audience Q&A and Award presentation.

     

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  • Jon Favreau’s latest film CHEF selected to Open 2014 Montclair Film Festival

    chef-jon-favreau

    Chef from Jon Favreau has been selected as the opening night film of the Montclair Film Festival which runs April 28 to May 4, 2014 in Montclair, New Jersey.  Chef, which had its World Premiere last month at the SXSW Film Festival, also screens as part of the upcoming Tribeca Film Festival in New York City later this month.  Favreau wrote, directed and stars in the comedy film that also features Sofia Vergara, Scarlett Johansson, John Leguizamo,Bobby Cannavale, Dustin Hoffman and Robert Downey Jr. Favreau plays Carl, a chef who loses his job and decides to launch a food truck business, while attempting to reunite his estranged family. 

    Other reported highlights include for this year include the return of Michael Moore for a discussion on documentaries, a talk by Kevin Smith, two conversations with Stephen Colbert and a screening of “The Wizard of Oz” on the final morning of the festival.

    chef-jon-favreau1

    chef-jon-favreau2

    The complete lineup of films is now available on the festival’s website.

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  • Check out the Official Poster and Trailer for ‘The Hornet’s Nest’

    the hornets nest

    Check out the official poster and trailer for the Afghanistan war documentary, The Hornet’s Nest, directed by Christian Tureaud and David Salzberg, and scheduled to be released nationally in theaters on May 23rd, 2014.  Armed only with their cameras, Peabody and Emmy Award-winning conflict Journalist Mike Boettcher, and his son, Carlos, provide unprecedented access into the longest war in U.S. history. Mike and Carlos Boettcher are the only reporters devoted to full time coverage of U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. They began their embed with U.S. forces in August 2008. 

    The film is described as the story of an elite group of U.S. troops sent on a dangerous mission deep inside one of Afghanistan’s most hostile valleys, told through the narrative of Journalist Mike Boettcher, and his son, Carlos attempting to reconnect under unimaginable circumstances, who are assigned to cover the conflict for one of the United States’ major broadcast networks.

    The Hornet’s Nest is a groundbreaking and immersive feature film, using unprecedented real footage to tell the story of an elite group of U.S. troops sent on a dangerous mission deep inside one of Afghanistan’s most hostile valleys.

    The film culminates with what was planned as a single day strike turning into nine intense days of harrowing combat against an invisible, hostile enemy in the country’s complex terrain where no foreign troops have ever dared to go before. Two embedded journalists, a father and son, bravely followed the troops through the fiercest and most blood-soaked battlegrounds of the conflict. What resulted is an intensely raw feature film experience that will give audiences a deeply emotional and authentic view of the heroism at the center of this gripping story.

     http://youtu.be/qBt-GTfgLh4

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  • THE CONTEST, REGRET!, WINDSTORM Nominated for European Film Academy Young Audience Award 2014

    efa young audience award nomimations 2014 THE CONTEST, REGRET! and WINDSTORM

    Three films, THE CONTEST, directed by Martin Miehe-Renard, REGRET, directed by Dave Schram, and WINDSTORM, directed by Katja von Garnier, have been nominated for the EFA (European Film Academy) Young Audience Award 2014. On Young Audience Film Day on 4 May, the three nominated films will be screened to a audiences of 12 – 14 year-olds in 17 cities across Europe. And it is the young audience that will act as a jury and vote for the winner right after the screenings.

    THE CONTEST 

    the contest

    DIRECTED BY: Martin Miehe-Renard
    WRITTEN BY: Martin Miehe-Renard, Gitte Løkkegaard & Hans Hansen
    PRODUCED BY: Henrik Møller-Sørensen & Marcella Dichmann
    90 min, Denmark

    REGRET 

    regret spijt

    DIRECTED BY: Dave Schram
    WRITTEN BY: Maria Peters & Dick van den Heuvel
    PRODUCED BY:  Dave Schram, Maria Peters & Hans Pos
    95 min, The Netherlands

    WINDSTORM

    windstorm

    DIRECTED BY: Katja von Garnier
    WRITTEN BY: Kristina Magdalena Henn & Lea Schmidbauer
    PRODUCED BY: Ewa Karlström & Andreas Ulmke-Smeaton
    103 min, Germany

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  • First Time Fest is BACK in NYC April 3-7

    Julie Taymor

    Tony Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated director Julie Taymor will be the FIRST TIME FEST’S 2014 John Huston Award For Achievement In Cinema recipient, announced FTF Co-Founders Johanna Bennett and Mandy Ward.  Ms. Taymor will also be represented in the Fest’s ‘First Exposure’ Retrospective Program where she will attend to present and discuss with the audience her first feature film, Titus.

    Presented to an individual who has made a significant contribution to the art of cinema, and whose presence in our community has offered leadership and inspiration to other cinema artists, the John Huston Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinema is named in honor of one of America’s greatest filmmakers.

    Julie Taymor is one of the most adventurous directors working today, known for her visionary work on stage and screen. She is a recipient of the MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship and won two Tony Awards – including Best Director – for The Lion King,which is the highest grossing Broadway show of all time.Her most recent stage triumph was the production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Theater for a New Audience.  Taymor is also an accomplished director of opera, with productions including an astounding realization of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex (broadcast on PBS) in Matsumoto, Japan; The Magic Flute for the Metropolitan Opera and The Flying Dutchman andElliot Goldenthal’s Grendel for the LA Opera.  Taymor made an astonishing debut as a film director with her adaptation of Shakespeare’s Titus (screening on Friday at FTF), starring Anthony Hopkins and Jessica Lange, and has directed three other films: Frida – the story of Mexican artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, starring Salma Hayek and Alfred Molina (which earned six Oscar nominations and won two); Across the Universe, a phantasmagorical musical featuring the music of the Beatles that was a Golden Globe nominee for Best Picture; and The Tempest – her second reinvention of Shakespeare – starring Helen Mirren as Prospera. With her boundless imagination and originality, she is the ideal recipient of our John Huston Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinema.

    Johanna Bennett and Mandy Ward also are pleased to announce two additional participants in the Fest’s ‘First Exposure’ Retrospective Program Presenting Debut Films By Now Prominent Directors.  Tom McCarthy will be attending FTF with his first film, The Station Agent (also expected to attend are some of his great cast including Michele Williams, Peter Dinklage, Patricia Clarkson, and Bobby Cannavale); and Lake Bell will be on hand to discuss with the audience her first directorial effort In A World(she starred as well and won the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at Sundance for her script).

    FIRST TIME FEST is a unique film festival celebrating first-time feature filmmakers. Aimed at discovering and providing exposure for the next generation of great filmmakers from around the world, FTF is a five-day event with a competition section showcasing new and exciting debut films, and a series of screenings and discussions with now-prominent filmmakers presenting their first films and then mentoring the first-timers.

    The Second Time Around for FIRST TIME FEST is set for April 3 – 7, 2014, and it will be based at NeueHouse (110 East 25th St.).  NeueHouse will be the location for panels, workshops, selected film presentations, parties and the filmmaker lounge.   Most screenings, including all the competition films, will take place at the AMC Loews Village 7 (11th St. & Third Ave.) 

    Martin Scorsese, who presented Darren Aronofsky with the first John Huston Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cinema last year, stated, “This venture is very very important to encourage young filmmakers.”

    FTF will present ten Competition Films, which will be judged by a panel of industry luminaries and the FTF audience. All of the films in competition at FTF are the very first feature of the writer, director, producer, editor, cinematographer or composer of each film.  All competition screenings will be followed by “Hot-Seat” discussions between the jury and filmmakers, and all audience members will vote on the films as well. Together, the jury and audience will ultimately select the Grand Prize winner, which is offered theatrical distribution and international sales representation from the renowned American film distributor, Cinema Libre Studio.  And with FTF’s new relationship with Scandinavian Locations – the consortium of Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish and Danish film commissioners – the winning filmmaker will also receive a trip to Norway and Sweden to spend a week at a writer’s cottage in Northern Sweden to work on their next project.  Scandinavian Locations will also be hosting our Filmmaker Kick-Off event on April 2 at NeueHouse.

    Tom McCarthy and Lake Bell join FIRSTTIMEFEST’s retrospective series, First Exposure which showcases the auspicious and ambitious debuts by artists who went on to become major filmmakers, with personal appearances by the filmmakers.  Also appearing this year: our Opening Night director Jennie Livingston presenting Paris is Burning,Albert Maysles (Salesman), Julie Taymor (Titus), Michael Moore (Roger & Me), Kelly Reichardt (River of Grass), Cinematographer Frederick Elmes (Eraserhead), James Toback (Fingers), and Peter Bogdanovich (Targets).

    FTF’s Stand Alone series will feature incredible conversations with Peter Bogdanovich, and Michael Moore.

    Between films, we will be hosting an array of Industry Panels with notable producers, financiers, agents, composers, critics and other members of the entertainment industry. Panels at FTF are intimate gatherings between attendees and special guests where questions are encouraged and discussion is lively.  Among the panels are “What’s Up, Doc;” “Help Me Help You;” “Show Me the Money;” “We Need a Bigger Boat – producing Independent Cinema;” “The Critical Eye;” “From Rock to Score” presented by the Grammys; and “Sell Baby Sell.”

    A special panel, Women in Entertainment and Media, sponsored by the by the Royal Bank of Canada Wealth Management Group, will include Brooke Shields, Daphne Rubin-Vega and Carol Alt.

    Johanna Bennett and Mandy Ward are the co-founders of FIRSTTIMEFEST .  As an accomplished philanthropist, actor, and social entrepreneur, as well as the daughter of singer Tony Bennett, Johanna Bennett has immersed herself within the entertainment and artistic community her entire life. Mandy Ward has worked in the film industry for the past decade in varied capacities, namely as a film producer of several projects. Mitch Levine, CEO of The Film Festival Group, is producing the festival. Through his company, Mitch offers consulting services and expertise to film festivals, film commissions, distribution companies and filmmakers around the world, and was formerly the CEO and Executive Director of the renowned Palm Springs International Film Festival. The Festival’s Director of Programming is David Schwartz, the Chief Curator of Museum of the Moving Image.

    Among FIRSTTIMEFEST’s wonderful sponsors and supporters are: NeueHouse, Scandinavian Locations and the Village Voice.

    For Tickets, Passes, Program, Schedule and Additional Festival Information – Visit The Festival Website at http://www.firsttimefest.com

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  • Review of Great New Doc: “Finding Vivian Maier”

    by Francesca McCaffery

    Finding Vivian Maier

     John Maloof and his brother were raised working at outdoor flea markets and swap meets with their father…From a very  early age, John Maloof could spot a deal. When working on a book about the history of Chicago, he attended an Auction at a small auctioneer’s store, sitting quietly in the back, and bidded a mere $780 for a box containing over 25,000 negatives shot by an unknown, female photographer. A savvy veteran of these auctions, and now a real estate agent and local historian, he was looking for photos and negatives of old-time Chicago, he was hoping to get a little lucky. He ended up purchasing, for even less money, tens of thousands of more negs and rolls of film, as well as most of her rmaining personal possessions from storage, from another buyer. All of these images had been taken by a woman named Vivian Maier.

     As his life and work on the Chicago book took over, Maloof ended up simply  stashing away the old boxes in a closet for a long while. Dusting them off one day, hunting again for some random,  still images of Chicago, he began to discover some of the most insightful, gorgeous and timely images of street photography he had ever seen. Entranced by the glorious, black and white stills, and in possession of a sophisticated artistic instinct and taste,  he then set about to find out, exactly, just who this Vivian Maeir woman  really was.

    Through meticulous research of the items and letters of hers that he had also purchased, he began the tremendous process of discovery: Maloof first started his search online, finding absolutely nothing. Being a self-proclaimed “obsessive kind of person,” Maloof tracked down a family that knew Maier well- who had in fact, had employed her. As their nanny.

     During this same period, Maloof also begun further scanning several of the thousands of negatives he had (there were much, much fewer printed images of paper- and those were mostly damaged) and started sending them to art historians and museums, to see if he could somehow arrange a show, or gallery representation or opening.

     He was, much to his great disappointment, systematically turned down by the art world. Maloof then set upon his newfound mission to bring Maier’s incredible photographs to the world on his own. Through actual live interviews with Maier’s now fully grown “charges,” we learn that the adults who employed her did not realize she was a serious photographer, but the children certainly did: They were dragged around to “bad” sections of town, docks, poor areas, were Maier somehow had the quiet charisma to elicit the most beguiling self-portraits from total and complete strangers. (The close-up portraits are especially, staggeringly impressive and moving.)

     Maeir also lived and worked as a nanny in New York City, and this is where her photography comes into a thrilling, full, mature bloom: There are images of  ecstatic children, bums, glorious street scenes of all stripe, decaying urban landscapes and building fronts, tired businessmen, well-dressed dames, cops: All injected with incredible, dry bits of humor, gorgeous composition and highly intuitive, natural lighting. There is also her incredible ability to capture the explicit poignancy and miracle of the moment- the true gift of any street photographer.

    Finding Vivian Maier

     Naturally, as more of Maier’s now grown  “children” are candidly interviewed by Maloof (and his co-director and co-writer, Charlie Siskel) we realize there was a sad, haunting darkness in her a nature, and an obvious trauma from her past, that had prevented her from fully connecting with her art, and with other people, in general. As she aged, she also grew increasingly eccentric, and some of the charge’s tales turn increasingly disturbing. (Interestingly, though, it was three former young boys she cared for, who as grown men, took it upon themselves to rent her an apartment , supporting her after she retired.)

    Finding Vivian Maier

     The interviews do make up the bulk of the film, as it always amazing to us to pick apart what composes the interior life of someone life- the ultimate in coulda-woulda- shoulda scenarios…But there is just enough of her work shown, in essence, to whet your appetite for more investigation into the actual images and her work, itself.

    I have heard much controversy over Maloof appropriating these images and reaping the financial benefit…(Well before this film’s notoriety, he had made her a “star” already on the internet and print media with his incredible discovery) But honestly- I have to completely disagree: This “mission’ of John Maloof’s, may, in fact, eventually leave him a very wealthy man, (Maier’s prints are on sale and being collected by celebrities and collectors world-wide) but the extraordinary richness of Vivian Maier’s work, one can safely say, would not be known to us without his dedication and obsessive nature. Vivian Maier’s work is probably on par with that of  Diane Arbus and Robert Frank. Hopefully, she will be soon accepted by the art establishment just as she is by the mainstream media. This is a wonderful, inspiring film, especially if your inner-artist is dying to make a splash on the canvas, screen or page. One is left with the feeling that a person truly owes it to the world to show it what you’ve got- and that’s no mean feat for a small, wonderful film like this. Go see it- it opens March 28th in selected cities.

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  • Lars von Trier’s “Nymphomaniac Vol 2”-No Gain from Her Pain

    By Francesca McCaffery

    Lars von Trier’s Nymphomaniac: Vol 2 review

    Lars von Trier’s Nymphomaniac: Vol 2, picks right up where Nymphomaniac, Vol 1 left off: the Young Joe (Stacy Martin) is in the midst of her relationship with her once long lost true love, Jerôme (Shia LaBeouf). (Here is my review on Vol 1 here.)

    The problem is, the sexually rapacious Joe had, in her own words, “Lost all feeling in my cunt.” Her genuine fillings for Jerome have left her unable to enjoy sexual intercourse with Jerôme. They keep trying unsuccessfully to get Joe off, until finally, an exhausted Jerôme declares that she’s like a wild animal, and well, he needs some “help with the feeding.”

    Permitting her to seek out others so she may seek the satisfaction she so craves, the young Joe suddenly, in the next scene, morphs into the 50-year old Joe (Charlotte Gainsbourg, who has been narrating since Volume 1) now sleepily pushing a baby stroller through a park, an infant boy asleep inside.  The scenes also cut back to the present, with Joe talking and hashing over incredible and risqué life story to Seligman (Stellan Skarsgard), whom we also learn some very interesting, though none too surprising, personal information about.

     Von Trier is indicating, in no small way, that Joe is not into, or going to, change: This is who she is, for better or worse. And it doesn’t take her long, through some strange word-of-mouth that I cannot fathom, for her to find the sadomasochistic K. K has a basement sort of office, where women wait sometimes for hours on end just to be (very) badly ministered by him. And this is no 50 Shades of Grey light BDSM, no sir: This is brutal, if not for the raw nature of the emotions, or lack thereof, on display. (K is also played by none other by Jamie Bell, of Billy Elliot fame, adding to the delicious weirdness and sterility of it all.)  When an almost near fatal occurrence happens when she is off to one of her appointments with K, Jerôme threatens to leave with her son, never seeing her again, if she continues.

    From here, the film veers into a strange, almost hallucinatory silly sort of strata, wherein Joe takes on a completely different, and rather criminal, profession, and decades seem to pass before our eyes: At first, I thought this ridiculous, but really, I feel von Trier was hoping to show that it really did not matter what the hell Joe did for a living: Her self-loathing was seeping into every, single aspect of her life, now even her “career.”. L (Willem Dafoe-always a pleasure to see) plays her new, shifty-eyed boss. She even meets and starts an affair with a teenage girl (Mia Goth- startling-looking and a lovely, natural actress) she is ordered by L to “recruit.” This also struck me, at first, as ludicrous, until you realize that she is experiencing love for the second time around, finally and strangely, in a maternal sense.

    I am not going to give more away, because this film definitely needs to be experienced without forethought or preconception: All I will say is, I thought this second piece to the grand Volume 1 was an enormous let-down, until- I was on the train going home from the screening. The last scene of the film came back to me then, I realized, I felt it all at once. This is what will happen to you if you cannot connect, he seems to be suggesting: Intimacy itself will feel like the ultimate invasion, preventing you from EVER having a substantial relationship. Joe not only hates herself, but everyone else around her.

    Nymphomaniac, (both brilliant films togther)  is about an individual carving something out of an endless need, never finding fulfillment, never even coming close to it, and-in the end- literally ending what could be the only chance for a true emotional connection.

     “Fill all my holes” is a phrase desperately whispered by Joe in both films. Just as the line “The secret ingredient to sex is love” is spoken in Vol 1 by one of Joe’s childhood friends, without any irony at all, so, as well, is this one: Joe is begging others to do for her what she cannot. This is not a cultural critique, but a beautiful, astonishing and brutal character study of addiction and pain, one that just may teach you a thing or two about yourself. As I said in my review of Volume 1: Forget all the sex, if it’s “real,” CGI’d, or not. Just go and see Nymphomaniac Vol 2 for the way it will shake you to your very core.  

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  • Free Workshops at the 2014 Charleston International Film Festival

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     Charleston International Film Festival unveiled its 2014 workshop schedule, which includes a session with esteemed casting directors Laray Mayfield (Fight Club, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) and Laura Verbeke (Flight of the Conchords), as well as actor and former professional athlete Ed Marinaro (Hill Street Blues, Blue Mountain State).

    The four workshops planned for the seventh annual festival this April 9th – 13th feature insight and advice from the best in the business on topics ranging from casting and acting to video editing and virtual cinematography. As always, these valuable sessions are free and open to the public.

    Charleston IFF President/Co-Founder Summer Peacher said, “We want to remind the local community that there’s more to Charleston International Film Festival than screening incredible films. As part of an ongoing mission to educate and inspire through the art and science of film, we’re proud to offer these awesome workshops, free of charge.”

    If you can only make it out to one festival workshop, The Yin & Yang of Casting & Acting is a must-attend session. Professional casting director Laray Mayfield will share invaluable insight, experience, and inside knowledge gained throughout her successful career, which includes casting remarkable features including Fight Club, The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, The Social Network, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, and Footloose (2011). Mayfield also cast the first two seasons of House of Cards with her partner, Julie Schubert, earning the pair an Emmy for Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series.

    Additional panelists for the workshop include Laura Verbeke for casting, as well as veteran actor Ed Marinaro, who will field questions on acting, auditioning, and how to get an agent. Whether you’re an aspiring actor or just an avid film lover, The Yin & Yang of Casting & Acting is a unique experience to meet and learn from some of the industry’s best.

    Below is the complete workshop schedule for the seventh annual Charleston International Film Festival:

    Movie Editing Workshop

    What: Learn the fundamentals of video editing using non-linear software.
    When: Wednesday, April 9 at 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.
    Where: College of Charleston, Room 203
    25 Saint Philip Street, Charleston SC

    Animation Workshop

    What: Take a deep dive into virtual cameras, rotoscoping, and keyframing.
    When: Wednesday, April 9 at 3:30 – 5:00 p.m.
    Where: College of Charleston, Room 203
    25 Saint Philip Street, Charleston SC

    The Yin & Yang of Casting & Acting

    What: Jump on the casting couch and get a fresh perspective from both sides of the script.
    When: Saturday, April 12 at 9:30 a.m.
    Where: Charleston Music Hall
    37 John Street, Charleston SC

    Virtual Cinematography Demonstration

    What: See a live demonstration of motion-tracked virtual camera.  
    When: Saturday, April 12 at 3:00 p.m.
    Where: College of Charleston, Room 220 in the JC Long Building
    9 Liberty Street, Charleston SC

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