• HAPPY AS LAZZARO Wins Best Film at 54th Chicago International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_30997" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]HAPPY AS LAZARRO HAPPY AS LAZARRO[/caption] The 54th Chicago International Film Festival hosted its Awards Ceremony and taking home the top prize, the Gold Hugo for Best Film, in the International Feature Film Competition, is director Alice Rohrwacher’s Happy as Lazzaro, a film the jury recognized for its poetic cinematic language and formal rigor. The Silver Hugo for Best Director was awarded to Jia Zhangke for Ash Is Purest White and the Silver Hugo Special Jury Prize was awarded to Joy, directed by Sudabeh Mortezai. Director Ash Mayfair took home top honors in the New Directors Competition with a Gold Hugo for The Third Wife and the Silver Hugo was awarded to Joël Karekezi for The Mercy of the Jungle. The Roger Ebert Award, presented to an emerging filmmaker with a fresh and uncompromising vision, was awarded to directors Andréa Bescond and Eric Métayer for Little Tickles, and the Chicago Award was presented to Michael Paulucci for Hashtag Perfect Life. The Founder’s Award, given to one film across all categories that captures the spirit of the Chicago International Film Festival for its unique and innovative approach to the art of the moving image, was presented to Felix van Groeningen’s Beautiful Boy. “Each year, the films presented in our competitions represent the excellence and diversity of filmmaking from around the world, and this year was no exception,” said Festival Artistic Director Mimi Plauché. “We are proud to honor these extraordinary films from around the world and here at home, saluting a diverse lineup of singular filmmakers and their work.”

    Winners of 54th Chicago International Film Festival Awards

    International Feature Film Competition

    Gold Hugo: Best Film Happy as Lazzaro Italy/Switzerland/France/Germany Dir. Alice Rohrwacher Silver Hugo: Special Jury Prize Joy Austria Dir. Sudabeh Mortezai Silver Hugo: Best Director Jia Zhangke, Ash Is Purest White China/France Silver Hugo: Best Actor Jesper Christensen, Before the Frost Denmark Silver Hugo: Best Actress Zhao Tao, Ash is Purest White China/France Silver Plaque: Best Screenplay Stéphane Brizé and Olivier Gorce, At War France Silver Plaque: Best Cinematography David Gallego, Birds of Passage Colombia/Mexico/Denmark/France Silver Plaque: Best Art Direction Angélica Parea, Birds of Passage Colombia/Mexico/Denmark/France

    New Directors Competition

    Gold Hugo The Third Wife Vietnam Dir. Ash Mayfair Silver Hugo The Mercy of the Jungle Belgium/France/Rwanda Dir. Joël Karekezi Roger Ebert Award Little Tickles France Dirs. Andréa Bescond, Eric Métayer

    Documentary Competition

    Gold Hugo [Censored] Australia Dir. Sari Braithwaite Silver Hugo Ex-Shaman Brazil Dir. Luiz Bolognesi Silver Hugo The Raft Sweden Dir. Marcus Lindeen

    Out-Look Competition

    Gold Q-Hugo Retablo Peru/Germany/Norway Dir. Alvaro Delgado Aparicio Silver Q-Hugo Rafiki Kenya/South Africa/Germany/Netherlands/France/Norway/Lebanon Dir. Wanuri Kahiu Special Mention Hard Paint Brazil Dirs. Filipe Matzembacher, Marcio Reolon

    Documentary Short Film Competition

    Silver Hugo: Circle U.K./Canada/India Dir. Jayisha Patel Gold Plaque: Edgecombe U.S. Crystal Kayiza Special Mention: Black 14 U.S. Dir. Darius Clark Monroe

    Animated Short Film Competition

    Silver Hugo: Bloeistraat 11 The Netherlands Nienke Deutz Gold Plaque: Weekends U.S. Trevor Jimenez Special Mention: Opening Night U.S. Margaret Bialis

    Live Action Short Film Competition

    Gold Hugo Mamartuille Mexico Dir. Alejandro Saevich Silver Hugo Hair Wolf U.S. Dir. Mariama Diallo Special Mention Nyi ma lay Singapore Dir. Wei Liang Chiang

    Chicago Award

    Hashtag Perfect Life U.S. Dir. Michael Paulucci

    Founder’s Award

    Beautiful Boy U.S. The Founder’s Award is personally presented by Festival Founder Michael Kutza to the single film across all categories he feels best embodies the spirit of curiosity, optimism and love of film that led to his starting the Chicago International Film Festival 55-years ago. “Beautiful Boy is an emotional drama which remains full of hope and humanity with two of the most stunning performances of the year,” remarked Kutza.

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  • JOY Wins Best Film at 62nd BFI London Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_32312" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]JOY directed by Sudabeh Mortezai JOY directed by Sudabeh Mortezai[/caption] Sudabeh Mortezai’s Joy, the award-winning film that that tackles the vicious cycle of sex trafficking in modern Europe is the winner of the Best Film Award at this year’s 62nd BFI London Film Festival.  Other winners include Lukas Dhont’s feature debut, Girl won the First Feature Competition – Sutherland Award, and What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire? by Roberto Minervini won for Best Documentary. Tricia Tuttle, BFI London Film Festival Artistic Director said: “The 2018 LFF Awards nominations demonstrate the vibrancy of global filmmaking and I’m delighted for the winning filmmakers who have triumphed at the 62nd BFI London Film Festival. After much jury deliberation, our wonderful juries have selected four extraordinary films which encourage dialogue and understanding around issues of race, class, gender and sexuality. I applaud Sudabeh, Lukas, Roberto and Charlie for their boldly distinctive work and hope that our awards can help focus even more attention from UK and global audiences on their truly deserving films. For the first time, we’ve also placed audiences at the very heart of the awards celebration and I’m thrilled to be presenting the winners to packed houses of adventurous filmgoers.”

    62nd BFI London Film Festival Award Winners

    JOY – Sudabeh Mortezai, Official Competition (Best Film Award) Winner of both the first ever Hearst Film Award 2018 for Best Female Direction and the 2018 Europa Cinemas Label at the 75th Venice International Film Festival, Sudabeh Mortezai (whose debut feature Macondo competed for the LFF’s Sutherland Award in 2014), presents a vital and hugely affecting drama that tackles the vicious cycle of sex trafficking in modern Europe. It follows the life of Joy, a young Nigerian woman, who works the streets to pay off debts to her exploiter Madame, while supporting her family in Nigeria and hoping for a better life for her young daughter in Vienna. GIRL – Lukas Dhont, First Feature Competition (Sutherland Award) Lukas Dhont’s (Headlong, Boys on Film X) feature debut was also bestowed with the coveted Camera d’Or and Queer Palm at the Cannes Film Festival, and has been selected as the Belgian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards. GIRL is the story of Lara, a transgender teenager who dreams of becoming a ballet dancer in this extraordinary coming-of-age story. Lukas Dhont’s richly empathetic and beautifully realised film sensitively explores Lara’s complex inner emotions, expressing so much even when she herself cannot quite find the words. WHAT YOU GONNA DO WHEN THE WORLD’S ON FIRE? – Roberto Minervini, Documentary Competition (Grierson Award) Selected for the main competition section of the 75th Venice International Film Festival, Roberto Minervini’s (The Other Side, Stop The Pounding Heart) thought-provoking and all-too-relevant documentary follows a Louisiana community during the summer of 2017, in the aftermath of a string of brutal police shootings of black men that sent shockwaves throughout the country. A meditation on the state of race in America, this film is an intimate portrait of the lives of those who struggle for justice, dignity, and survival in a country not on their side. LASTING MARKS – Charlie Lyne, Short Film Competition (Short Film Award) Charlie Lyne’s short documentary (Beyond Clueless, Fear Itself) charts the story of sixteen men put on trial for sadomasochism in the dying days of Thatcher’s Britain. Men with shared sexual desires, lucky to have found each other, yet unfortunate to be considered criminal for expressing them. Rungano Nyoni, Short Film Competition President stated: “In a strong and diverse Shorts selection, Charlie Lyne’s LASTING MARKS fascinated us all by resurrecting forgotten history. Uniquely presented as a slideshow of court documents and organised via an oral history by the prosecuted Roland Jaggard, Lyne recounts the story of a group of men put on trial for sadomasochism in the 1980s. A must-watch.“

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  • THE LORD EAGLE , MARKS OF MANA, ETERNITY Win at 2018 imagineNATIVE Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_32308" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Toyon Kyyl (The Lord Eagle) Toyon Kyyl (The Lord Eagle)[/caption] At the 19th Annual imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival’s Awards Presentation, the esteemed Sun Jury and Moon Jury selected the winners, awarding the top prizes – Best Dramatic Feature to Toyon Kyyl (The Lord Eagle) by Eduard Novikov,  and Best Indigenous Language Production to Wiñaypacha (Eternity) by Oscar Catacora.  The Alanis Obomsawin Award for Best Documentary Work Long Format went to Marks of Mana by Lisa Taouma. Throughout the Festival, imagineNATIVE also presented awards at the Industry Award Reception and the Bullseye Music Contest.

    2018 imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival Award Winners

    Best Dramatic Feature Toyon Kyyl (The Lord Eagle) by Eduard Novikov $2000 cash award sponsored by Bellmedia Best Indigenous Language Production Wiñaypacha (Eternity) by Oscar Catacora $1000 cash award sponsored by Indigenous Media Initiatives The Kent Monkman Award for Best Experimental Work Eatnanvuloš Lottit (Birds in the Earth) by Marja Helander $500 cash award sponsored by imagineNATIVE Best Audio Work Trans Mountain Pipeline, B.C. Wolf Cull and Dog Sled Massacre by Crystal Favel $500 cash award sponsored by imagineNATIVE Best Digital Media Work Aeasi by Amie Batalibasi $500 cash award sponsored by Unifor Best Interactive Work Biidaaban: First Dawn by Lisa Jackson $500 cash award sponsored by imagineNATIVE The Jane Glassco Award for Emerging Talent ANORI (Wind) by Pipaluk Kreutzmann Jorgensen $2000 cash award sponsored by The CJ Foundation The Ellen Monaque Award for Best Youth Work A World of Our Own by Morningstar Derosier $500 cash award sponsored by RBC & Humber College Aboriginal Resource Centre The Cynthia Lickers-Sage Award for Best Short Work Biidaaban (The Dawn Comes) by Amanda Strong $1000 cash award sponsored by VTape Best Documentary Work Short Format FAST HORSE by Alexandra Lazarowich $1000 cash award sponsored by TVO The Alanis Obomsawin Award for Best Documentary Work Long Format Marks of Mana by Lisa Taouma $2000 cash award sponsored by CBC Docs The August Schellenberg Award of Excellence Michael Greyeyes $1500 cash award sponsored in part by ACTRA National, and generous individual donations. Sun Jury Prize Sgaawaay K’uuna (Edge of the Knife) by Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen Haig-Brown Moon Jury Prize My Friend Michael Jones by Ian Leaupepe, Samson Rambo APTN/imagineNATIVE Web Series Pitch Ryan Cooper and Adeline Bird $30,000 in cash and $20,000 of in-kind prizing and mentorship presented by APTN and supported by Technicolor, Innovate by Day, William F White International, TIFF, WIFT-T, T.O. Webfest and new supporters Bedtracks and Bizable Media NFB/imagineNATIVE Digital and Interactive Prize Gail Maurice The Rising Director Mentorship Award Alexandra Lazarowich Created in partnership with Laura J. Milliken of Big Soul Productions and with the support of the CMPA The Rising Producer Mentorship Award Darcy Waite Created with the support of the DGC Bullseye Music Prize Indigo $10,000 cash award sponsored by imagineNATIVE and Slaight Music

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  • Children’s and Youth Program of 2018 Nordic Film Days Lübeck to Showcase 36 Films

    [caption id="attachment_32293" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Paradise 89 by Madara Dislere Paradise 89 by Madara Dislere[/caption] This year’s Children’s and Youth program at the 2018 Nordic Film Days Lübeck comprises 36 films, including 16 feature narratives and 20 shorts.  The 11 German and international premieres among the features alone are impressive proof of the festival’s importance to the children and youth film industry. “The selection of films for the Children’s section of the has rarely been as serious, and yet so diverse and entertaining as it is this year”, says long-term section curator Franziska Kremser-Klinkertz. Numerous filmmakers have taken on serious subjects this year, tackling them in ways that make them accessible and tangible to young people. One example is the political-historical film “Paradise ‘89” (LV/GER 2018). Set in the summer of 1989, amid sea changes in Europe and Latvia’s pursuit of independence, it depicts events from the children’s point of view, and is a worthy complement to the NFL focus on the Baltic states this year. “Summer Children” (ICE/NOR 2017) also has an historical perspective, addressing a dark chapter in Iceland’s post-war history.From football to super-heroes with environmental leanings, all the way to science-fiction for kids, the palette of films covers almost everything that children’s films have to offer. Sometimes in animated form, and sometimes with formidable performances by young actors. This year’s films for young adults are authentic and stirring. In “Money Problem” (SWE 2017), two girls think having enough will solve all their problems. It’s a dramatic journey as they learn just how wrong they are. This unconventional film by Swedish director Nikeisha Andersson is as much a milieu study as it is an absorbing story about friendship. “The Comet” (SWE 2017) and “Adam” (GER/ICE/US/MEX 2018), meanwhile, are proof that touching movies can be made on small budgets and with limited production facilities. Variety is also on hand in the short film programs, targeting an assortment of age groups. “Shorts for Shorties” features films for children from four to six years old. The films in the program “Stories of Meetings and Friendship” have been selected for children 10+, while the shorts for the 14+ age group deal with “Love, Death, and Togetherness”. Two prizes are awarded in the Children’s and Youth film section. The recipient of the Children’s and Youth Film Prize of the Gemeinnützigen Sparkassenstiftung is chosen from among all features in the section. This year’s jury includes director Thomas Heinemann (“Lola on the Pea”), up-and-coming actor Tristan Göbel (“Goodbye Berlin”, “Bright Nights”), and Marjo Kovanen, director of the Finnish school cinema association.

    60th Nordische Filmtage Lübeck Feature Films Children’s and Youth program

    Adam / Adam / Adam Deutschland / Island / USA / Mexiko / 2018 / 72 Min. Director(s): Maria Solrun Drug abuse landed Adam’s mother in an institution. Now he is responsible – for her and for himself. A drama with strong performances and a driving techno beat. Alone in Space / Ensamma i Rymden / Allein im All Schweden / 2018 / 84 Min. Director(s): Ted Kjellsson The Earth of the future is uninhabitable. So Gladys and her brother Keaton travel to a distant planet. The problem is, they are alone in space. Or are they? Captain Morten and the Spider Queen / Morten Lollide laeval / Käpt’n Morten und die Spinnenkönigin Estland / Irland / Belgien / Großbritannien / 2018 / 78 Min. Director(s): Kaspar Jancis Morten wants to be a ship’s captain, just like his father. His dream is fulfilled when a scientist shrinks the young boy down to the size of an insect. Land of Glass / Landet af glas / Land aus Glas Dänemark / 2018 / 87 Min. Director(s): Marie Rønn, Jeppe Vig Find More than just wolves lurk in the foggy Danish forests. A 13-year-old boy makes a supernatural discovery in this modern mystery-adventure story. Money Problem / Para Knas / Abgebrannt Schweden / 2017 / 78 Min. Director(s): Nikeisha Andersson Money here, money there – everybody needs dough. But in this film, two friends from the outskirts of Stockholm learn the hard way what really counts in the end. Monky / Monky / Monky Schweden / 2017 / 87 Min. Director(s): Maria Blom A boisterous film about a difficult subject – a monkey turns the life of a family in mourning upside down and, in the process, puts them back on the right path. Paradise ’89 / Paradīze ’89 / Paradies ’89 Lettland / Deutschland / 2018 / 90 Min. Director(s): Madara Dišlere Latvia in the summer of 1989: Four girls enjoy the liberty of the countryside. But there are major changes in the air, both private and political. Summer Children / Sumarbörn / Sommerkinder Island / Norwegen / 2017 / 84 Min. Director(s): Gu∂rún Ragnarsdóttir After their parents separate, Eydís and Kári are sent to a care home. In the film’s magical images, real hardship meets the power of children’s imagination. Super Furball / Supermarsu / Supermeerschweinchen Finnland / 2018 / 85 Min. Director(s): Joona Tena Emilia’s boring life comes to an abrupt end when she’s bitten by a guinea pig. Suddenly she has super powers – not to mention a set of killer incisors! Team Albert / Team Albert / Team Albert Dänemark / 2018 / 90 Min. Director(s): Frederik Nørgaard Law? An MBA? No, Albert’s career plan is YouTube. In this coming-of-age comedy, Danish Internet star Albert Dyrlund plays the lead – with a lot of self-mockery. The Ash Lad: In the Hall of the Mountain King / Askeladden – I Dovregubbens hall / Espen und die Legende vom Bergkönig Norwegen / Irland / Tschechien / 2017 / 100 Min. Director(s): Mikkel Brænne Sandemose A very special kind of legendary hero – in order to free a princess from the claws of a giant troll, inept Espen Ash Lad has to take his courage in hand. The Comet / Kometen / Der Komet Norwegen / 2017 / 72 Min. Director(s): Bård Røssevold Gustav is searching for his father, who disappeared twelve years ago as a comet was passing Earth. Was he really kidnapped by extra-terrestrials? The Falcons / Víti í Vestmannaeyjum / Die Falken – alle für einen Island / Schweden / 2018 / 95 Min. Director(s): Bragi _ór Hinriksson Set on an island off Iceland’s coast, when 10-year-old Jon’s team enters a children’s football tournament, he learns about fairness and friendship. The Heart / Hjärtat / Das Herz Schweden / 2018 / 100 Min. Director(s): Fanni Metelius Mika and Tesfay fall in love, move in together, drift apart, and find each other again. They realize more and more how very different they are from each other. The War Game / Krig / Kriegsspiel Schweden / 2017 / 84 Min. Director(s): Goran Kapetanović Eleven-year-old Malte gets caught between two children’s gangs. A talented military strategist, he has no problem making sure the situation escalates. Vitello / Vitello / Vitello Dänemark / 2018 / 72 Min. Director(s): Dorte Bengtson Monster attacks, kidnapping kitties, a day lived in reverse. Vitello is a rascal with a million ideas. But most of all, he wants to find out who his father is.

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  • HORIZONTI, THE SILENCE OF OTHERS Win at 2018 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_32289" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Horizon (Horizonti) Horizon (Horizonti)[/caption] The Santa Fe Independent Film Festival’s 10th Anniversary winners were honored today, with Horizonti directed by Tinatin Kajrishvili winning Best Narrative Film,  and The Silence of Others directed by Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar wining Best Documentary. SFIFF also honored animator and director Bill Plympton with the Lifetime Achievement Award and, a Visionary Award for documenteur Alexandria Bombach.

    2018 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival Award Winners

    Lifetime Achievement Bill Plympton Visionary Award Alexandria Bombach Best Narrative Horizonti directed by Tinatin Kajrishvili Best Documentary The Silence of Others directed by Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar Best New Mexico Documentary Hiro’s Table directed by Lynn Hamrick Best New Mexico Feature I Am That directed by Joy Marzec Best New Mexico Short Falling directed by Ewen Wright Best U.S. Narrative Short One Small Step directed by Aqsa Altaf Best Int’l Narrative Short Gaze directed by Farnoosh Samadi Best Documentary Short Period. End of Sentence directed by Rayka Zehtabchi Best Animated Short Weekends directed by Trevor Jimenez Best Experimental Short My Dead Dad’s Porno Tapes directed by Charlie Tyrell

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  • Namrata Singh Gujral’s 5 WEDDINGS Opens in Theaters on October 26th [Trailer]

    5 Weddings “5 Weddings,” by Indian female director Namrata Singh Gujral follows an American journalist who travels to “heartland India” to cover the five main ceremonies at Indian weddings, only to end up fascinated with the transgender dancers (Hijras) who typically dance at these colorful celebrations. Complications arise when she falls in love with her shadow cop whose instructions are to keep her story censored. The film will open theatrically around the globe on October 26th, 2018 beginning in the USA with Los Angeles, CA, New York, NY, Chicago, IL and Cambridge, MA, among others in the U.S., and internationally (in 15 countries and multiple languages) including: Canada, Mexico, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Russia, Poland, Indie, Pakistan,Singapore, China, Australia, New Zealand, Fiki, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia and the Ivory Coast, with many more locations to follow after this worldwide launch date. “5 Weddings” is described as an enthralling narrative of cultural clashes, transgender tangles and lost love along the heartfelt journey of life, symbolized by the universal ups and downs of a wedding celebration. “5 Weddings” is a feature film with comedy, drama and romance that showcases the vibrant ceremonies at India’s weddings, with a very important sub plot that features Hijras, a sect of transgender dancers who have been an integral part of Indian wedding tradition for centuries. Gujral, long ahead of the trans-casting debate that now features prominently in Hollywood, always knew she wanted to cast authentically for a community that has so often been swept aside and underserved in every culture —casting trans actors as trans characters in India. In the vein of “The 100 Foot Journey,” “Monsoon Wedding” and “Bride and Prejudice,” this film is helmed by Namrata Singh Gujral (“1 a Minute”), an Indian American filmmaker with a penchant for cause projects. Boasting a universally acclaimed cast with Rajkummar Rao (India’s official entry to Academy Awards 2018 “Newton”), Nargis Fakhri (Bollywood blockbuster “Rockstar”), Oscar nominee Candy Clark (“American Graffiti”) and Golden Globe nominee Bo Derek (“10″), “5 Weddings” opens in cinemas worldwide on September 21st, 2018. Other Hollywood star cast includes Broadway star Anneliese van der Pol (“Beauty and The Beast”), Mariana Paola Vicente (“The Lucky Man,” “Miss Universe 2010”), Robert Palmer Watkins (“General Hospital”), Dawn Richard (“Danity Kane”) and Rupak Ginn (“Royal Pains”). Also starring from India are Suvinder Vicky (“Chauthi Koot” Un Certain Regard Cannes 2015), Shiwani Saini (“Sarbjit”), Saru Maini (“Dangerous Husn”) and Diljott (“Teshan”). This film marks second Hollywood projects for both Fakhri and Rao. Fakhri was earlier seen in the Melissa McCarthy film “Spy” and Rao will be seen in the Freida Pinto film “Love Sonia.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gN7AeJ-mEIA

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  • DOGMAN Wins Top Awards at 2018 Cape Town International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_31629" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]DOGMAN DOGMAN[/caption] The Italian film, Dogman is the overall winner of this year’s  2018 Cape Town International Film Market and Festival winning three awards including the most coveted award, The Grand Prix, as well as awards for Best Director Award and Best Actor. The film competed at this past year’s Cannes Film Festival where Marcello Fonte also won for Best Actor. The CTIFMF’s Opening Film, and South Africa’s official official submission for the Oscar’s, Sew the Winter to My Skin, directed by Jahmil X. T Qubeka, won the Award for Best South African Feature Film, whilst Rehad Desai’s Everything Must Fall won for Best South African Documentary, and the Best South African Short Film was won by Rea Moeti’s Mma Moeketsi. South African film Kanarie also took home the award for Best LGBTQ Film, while Kenyan Director of Supa Modo, Likarion Wainaina, won the award for Best New Director in the New Voices category and was described by the jury as “a true new voice of contemporary cinema. The director succeeds in bringing its audience into the shoes of a kid, showing us the world through her eyes, without ever trivialising nor overdramatizing a difficult topic such as a child’s illness. The director shows an uncommon capacity of leading his actors and keeping a difficult balance between drama, comedy and fairy tale.” The LGBTQ category jury had this to say of Kanarie: “For skillfully and seemingly effortlessly weaving together multiple compelling characters, along with issues of nationalism, religion and sexuality, we award the prize for Best LGBTQ Film to Christiaan Olwagen’s Kanarie. This well-paced and consistently poignant story of a teenage boy in 1980s South Africa, who joins the national defense force choir, humorously portrays the struggle of finding oneself despite overbearing social pressure. With a stunning central performance, innovative visuals and a sensitive balance between comedy and drama, the film heralds the arrival of a strong new voice on the local cinema landscape.” Additionally, the CTIFMF Market announced the winners of the Works in Progress and Screenwriters Guild Pitch competition. The jury made a unanimous decision to support Buddha in Africa by Nicole Shafer with the highest award: “For its unique subject and its meticulous patient development, for the crossroad of important themes, and for the different worlds that have overlapped and met in tangible captivating characters…the jury chose to give the combined two prizes to the very promising Malawi set film project Buddha in Africa by Nicole Shafer.” “For the subtle way of dealing with witchcraft issues and allowing us, through the eyes of a young character, to get deep into a touching Kenyan grandma and her family, the Jury awarded 2 weeks of Sound Design by Raphsody and 2 Weeks of Final Sound Mix by The Moving Billboard Picture Company to The Letter by Maia Lekow and Chris King.” Rene van Royen is a local voice, and as described by the jury, Toorbos is “an accomplished and assured feature debut from Rene Van Rooyen. While a period setting the skill and voice of this filmmaker is tremendous and undeniably fresh. We are guided through the magic and the wonder of the forest which is beautifully and thoughtfully captured and brought to life through our strong central female character.” Kenya’s Mugambi Nthiga was a cowriter on 2 of the latest Kenyan festival hits, Kathi Kathi and SUPAMODO, which screened as part of the 2018 Festival Program. For its engaging characters and its unexpected and clever use of genre elements to tackle a problem too often ignored in African societies that is post traumatic stress disorder, the jury gives the subtitling and credits award to Lusala. From Madagascar, a place in need of the basics, Madagascar. Bolomboto is an immersion documentary on the daily life of young people detained in Madagascar’s prison. It is an important and political film that offers a unique perspective on the Malagasy youth thanks to a strong cinematic vision.” The producer is invited to the Festival de Amien in France in November to further advance the project. They also will receive Publicity mentorship from Versveld Associates and a 50 000 Rand cash award from Hollard Film Guarantors. Meg Rickards and Tracey Farren with project Snake won WGSA top award and Cate Wood Hunter was runner up with Family Roots.

    Winners of 2018 Cape Town International Film Market and Festival Awards

    Best South African Short Film Rea Moeti Mma Moeketsi SPECIAL MENTION Buks Rossouw Cast Iron can’t be welded Best International Short Film Aldo Sotelo Lázaro Stardust 2018 Cape Town International Film Festival Winners Awards Best Documentary Feature Leonard Retel Helmrich The Long Season Best South African Documentary Rehad Desai Everything must Fall Best Editing Lee Chatametikool Chonlasit Upanigkit Malila the Farewell Flower Best Cinematography Mong-Hong Chung The Great Buddha+ Best Script Alec Figuracion The Eternity Between Seconds Best Actress Ariane Ascaride Isabella Best Actor Marcello Fonte DogMan Best South African Feature Film Jahmil X.T. Qubeka Sew The Winter To My Skin Best LGBTQ Film Christiaan Olwagen Kanarie SPECIAL MENTION Alvaro Delgado Aparicio Retablo Best New Director Likarion Wainaina Supa Modo Best Asian Film Anucha Boonyawatana Malila the Farewell Flower Best Director Mateo Garone Dogman Grand Prix Matteo Garone Dogman

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  • 2018 St. Louis International Film Festival to Screen 413 Films + Opening Night Premiere of DESTROYER

    [caption id="attachment_31640" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]DESTROYER Starring Nicole Kidman DESTROYER Starring Nicole Kidman[/caption] The 27th Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) will run November 1 to 11, and screen 413 films: 88 narrative features, 77 documentary features, and 248 shorts. The fest also will feature 14 special-event programs, including the closing-night awards presentation. The festival will kick off on Thursday, November 1, with the local premiere of “Destroyer,” directed by former St. Louisan Karyn Kusama, who will attend the screening. SLIFF will present the usual array of fest buzz films and Oscar contenders, including “3 Faces,” “Ash Is Purest White,” “Ben Is Back,” “Boy Erased,” “Capernaum,” “The Captain,” “The Chaperone,” “Cold War,” “Destroyer,” “Diane,” “Dogman,” “Everybody Knows,” “The Front Runner,” “Green Book,” “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “The Image Book,” “Little Woods,” “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” “Mapplethorpe,” “Non-Fiction,” “Shoplifters,” “Support the Girls,” “Transit,” “Vox Lux,” “Widows,” “Wildlife,” and “Zama.” The festival will honor seven significant film figures with the annual awards: Joe Edwards and John Goodman with Lifetime Achievement Awards;  Jason Reitman with a Contemporary Cinema Award Jim Finn, Jane Gillooly, and Karyn Kusama with Charles Guggenheim Cinema St. Louis Awards; and Melanie Mayron with a Women in Film Award. As part of the fest’s ongoing response to the Ferguson uprising, SLIFF again will feature a major stream of programming entitled Race in America: The Black Experience and offer a third edition of Mean Streets: Viewing the Divided City Through the Lens of Film and Television, which addresses the persistent issue of segregation.

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  • Actress Rachel Brosnahan to Narrate Climate Change Documentary, PARIS TO PITTSBURGH

    [caption id="attachment_32267" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Rachel Brosnahan in “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”Amazon Rachel Brosnahan in “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”Amazon[/caption] Award-winning actress and activist Rachel Brosnahan, star of the hit series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, will narrate Bloomberg Philanthropies’ upcoming climate change documentary, Paris to Pittsburgh.  The film will premiere on National Geographic, Wednesday, December 12th at 9PM ET/PT and is produced by RadicalMedia in partnership with Bloomberg Philanthropies. Paris to Pittsburgh brings to life the impassioned efforts of individuals who are battling the most severe threats of climate change in their own backyards. Set against the national debate over the United States’ energy future – and the Trump administration’s explosive decision to exit the Paris Climate Agreement – the film captures what’s at stake for communities around the country and the inspiring ways Americans are responding. To view the trailer, visit ParistoPittsburgh.com. At the recent Emmy Awards, Brosnahan, a Global Citizen ambassador who has worked on anti-poverty and get-out-the-vote initiatives in the past, used her acceptance speech time to strongly encourage those watching to “vote, show up, and bring a friend to the polls.” “Paris to Pittsburgh shines a light on the many forgotten communities and people who have been affected by climate change in our country, as well as solutions for how we can fight back and reduce our carbon footprint,” said Brosnahan. “I’m proud to be part of this poignant and powerful documentary, and admire the pro-active approach Bloomberg Philanthropies has taken with this project and this issue; we need meaningful change.” Paris to Pittsburgh explores the very real social and economic effects of climate change-fueled disasters – from America’s heartland to the nation’s coastlines and the island of Puerto Rico. The film features stories behind climate-related recovery and resiliency, as well as innovative efforts to reduce carbon emissions. It showcases cities, states, businesses and citizens taking their own action in the face of federal inaction. Front and center is Pittsburgh, the boomtown formerly reliant on coal. When President Trump announced the U.S. withdrawal from the worldwide Paris Climate Agreement, Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto didn’t follow. Instead, he and his city affirmed their commitment to ambitious energy efficiency goals. Mayor Peduto and Pittsburgh’s story is one of the many examples of bold economic and climate leadership in the film. “America is not walking away from Climate Action; that’s the strong, clear message of Paris to Pittsburgh,” said Katherine Oliver, the film’s Executive Producer and a Principal at Bloomberg Philanthropies. “And who better to underscore that message than Rachel Brosnahan, a forward-looking and engaged role model for these times. We are thrilled that she has lent her strong voice and spirit of activism to this project.” Oliver further explained that Bloomberg Philanthropies has long believed in the power of informed storytelling to change minds and ignite positive change, and that’s why filmmaking has become such a key component of its strategy. Paris to Pittsburgh is produced by the Academy Award and Emmy-winning production company RadicalMedia, in partnership with Bloomberg Philanthropies. The film is co- directed by Emmy Award winner Sidney Beaumont and Emmy Award winning filmmaker Michael Bonfiglio. Beaumont also produced the film. Executive Producers are Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Joe Berlinger, Jon Kamen and Katherine Oliver. Co-producers are Lindsay Firestone and Katie Dunn. Antha Williams of the Bloomberg Philanthropies environment program served as a consulting producer.

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  • Film Society of Lincoln Center Announces 3rd My First Film Fest for Young People

    [caption id="attachment_32260" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Tito and the Birds / Tito e os Pássaros Tito and the Birds / Tito e os Pássaros[/caption] The third edition of My First Film Fest, a weekend-long showcase of classic and new cinematic works that speak to the experiences and curiosity of young people, returns November 9 to 11, presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. My First Film Fest is the Film Society’s home for the next generation of movie lovers, nurturing the sense of discovery, excitement, and education of the film festival experience while shining a light on the indelible significance of the moving image. This year’s slate includes premieres of outstanding recent offerings from around the world alongside repertory classics that exemplify turning points in film history. Featuring free educational screenings as well as in-cinema discussions and introductions, this is an opportunity for children, teenagers, and young adults alike to actively engage with our growing film culture. Highlights of this year’s festival include the New York premiere of Gustavo Steinberg, Gabriel Bitar, and André Catoto’s dazzling animated film Tito and the Birds, with Steinberg in person; richly human documentary A Polar Year, a fish-out-of-water tale of a young man who leaves his family farm to teach Danish in remote Greenland, with director Samuel Collardey in person for the New York premiere; Wanuri Kahiu’s Rafiki, a tender tale of young love and acceptance shot on the streets of Nairobi, Kenya; Naoko Yamada’s A Silent Voice, based on the manga by Yoshitoki Oima; and a selection of clever and thought-provoking narrative, documentary, experimental, and animated short films for audiences 13 and up. Featured repertory titles include Yasujirô Ozu’s Good Morning, a playful, loose remake of the director’s silent classic I Was Born, But…; Don Siegel’s mid-century sci-fi classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers, presented on 35mm; Czech animator Jiri Trnka’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, in a special encore screening from FSLC’s Trnka retrospective The Puppet Master; and the captivating, visually stunning Porco Rosso, from Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki. FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS A Polar Year / Une année polaire Samuel Collardey, France, 2018, 94m Inuktitut and Danish with English subtitles New York Premiere In search of adventure, 28-year-old Anders leaves his family farm in Denmark to teach Danish in a remote village of Greenland. Cue cultural whiplash, as the bewildered Anders finds himself an outsider in a forbidding tundra where his rambunctious students would rather be dog-sledding than stuck in school. But gradually, as he immerses himself in the traditions of the Inuit community—and bonds with a boisterous 8-year-old boy—Anders discovers his place in the village. Showcasing the dazzling, otherworldly beauty of Greenland’s arctic vistas, this richly human documentary celebrates our capacity for cross-cultural connection. Ages 11 and up Friday, November 9, 6:30pm (Q&A with director Samuel Collardey) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=830ginDdFTE Rafiki Wanuri Kahiu, Kenya, 2018, 83m English and Swahili with English subtitles Strikingly shot on the streets of Nairobi, this tender tale of young love and acceptance is a vibrant, hopeful look at growing up gay in contemporary Kenya. Though their fathers are political rivals, Kena and Ziki—spirited, ambitious young women determined to make something of their lives—forge a connection that leaves their friends and neighbors gossiping. As their friendship deepens into a romance, they must withstand the virulent homophobia that surrounds them while remaining true to themselves and their love. Suffused with gorgeously expressive light, color, and music, Rafiki is a bold statement of compassion from one of Kenyan cinema’s brightest talents. Ages 15 and up Friday, November 9, 9:00pm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGAWuMuumDQ A Midsummer Night’s Dream / Sen noci svatojanske Jiri Trnka, Czechoslovakia, 1959, 35mm, 72m English version Revered as the pioneer of a remarkable new genre of animation that utilized puppets, Czech animation master Jiri Trnka had enormous impact on the development of animation in his country, and he inspired the careers of an entire generation of filmmakers around the globe. In this bewitching adaptation of Shakespeare’s romantic fairy tale—perhaps Trnka’s masterpiece—the love lives of mortals and forest sprites mingle during one magical moonlit evening. For his final feature, Trnka deploys the full force of his imagination and technical wizardry to evoke the story’s enchanted-woodlands setting, a garlanded, pastel dreamscape awash in starry-night atmosphere, colorful festoons of flowers, and exquisitely wrought fantasy creatures. All ages Saturday, November 10, 5:00pm Encore screening selected from our April retrospective The Puppet Master: The Complete Jiri Trnka. Tito and the Birds / Tito e os Pássaros Gustavo Steinberg, Gabriel Bitar & André Catoto, Brazil, 2018, 73m Portuguese with English subtitles New York Premiere As a pandemic of (literally) paralyzing mass hysteria sweeps over his city—fueled by fear-mongering corporations, TV news, and politicians—one brave boy, 10-year-old Tito, sets out to stop the madness. Could the secret to saving his community really lie with the pigeons with whom he’s formed a unique bond? What could the birds be trying to tell humanity? Dazzlingly animated in a bold, painterly style, this child’s-eye parable for our anxiety-ridden times issues a much-needed reminder: we are infinitely stronger when we refuse to let fear divide us. A Shout Factory release. Ages 11 and up Saturday, November 10, 6:45pm (Q&A with director Gustavo Steinberg) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9aMR9dWWar0 Porco Rosso / Kurenai no buta Hayao Miyazaki, Japan, 1992, 94m Japanese with English subtitles The great Hayao Miyazaki brings his wondrous visual imagination to this rip-roaring blend of comic strip thrills, classic Hollywood-style romance, and boisterous comedy. In a storybook vision of 1930s Italy, the eponymous porcine aviator soars across the skies as he tangles with bumbling air pirates, takes on a spirited young woman as his sidekick, and vies with an upstart rival for ultimate daredevil bragging rights. Interweaving rollicking action with heartfelt pro-feminist, anti-fascist themes, Porco Rosso is a captivating, one-of-a-kind aerial adventure as only Studio Ghibli could dream up. All ages Saturday, November 10, 8:45pm Good Morning / Ohayô Yasujirô Ozu, Japan, 1959, 35mm, 94m Japanese with English subtitles Graced with an impish wit and endearing sweetness, this charmer from Yasujirô Ozu is a playful look at the often humorous misunderstandings between adults and children. A loose remake of the director’s silent classic I Was Born, But…, Good Morning tells the story of two brothers who find creative ways to rebel when their parents refuse to buy them a television set—a simple premise that yields rich insights into intergenerational family dynamics. Boasting glorious color cinematography and unabashedly silly gags, Good Morning makes for a perfect introduction to one of cinema’s consummate masters. Ages 11 and up Sunday, November 11, 2:00pm A Silent Voice / Koe no katachi Naoko Yamada, Japan, 2017, 130m Japanese with English subtitles From one of Japan’s most fascinating and daring young animators comes a poignant film about challenges of teenage life. Based on the manga by Yoshitoki Oima and winner of the Japanese Movie Critics Award for Best Animation, A Silent Voice follows deaf sixth grader Shoko and her classmate Shoya, who, years later, has to make amends for the time he spent bullying her. Naoko Yamada’s thoughtful coming-of-age story is both gorgeously hand-drawn and emotionally engaging to firmly establish the filmmaker as an auteur to follow for many years to come. Ages 13 and up Sunday, November 11, 6:00pm https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nfK6UgLra7g Invasion of the Body Snatchers Don Siegel, USA, 1956, 35mm, 80m This mid-century sci-fi classic was produced on a famously small budget with minimal practical effects, yet sixty-plus years later it retains its power to thrill and chill young and older audiences alike. A near-palpable sense of uncanny dread looms over the story of Miles Bennell (Kevin McCarthy), a young doctor who gradually discovers that the inhabitants of his sleepy California town are being replaced with mysteriously inhuman replicates. Adapted from a serialized novel, Siegel’s film would spawn several Hollywood remakes over the decades—a testament to its enduring legacy as an influential landmark. Ages 11 and up Sunday, November 11, 8:30pm Shorts Program (TRT: 84m) This collection of clever and thought-provoking narrative, documentary, experimental, and animation films is sure to captivate viewers of ages 13 and up. Sunday, November 11, 4:00pm The Tesla World Light Andrew Rankin, Canada, 2017, 8m New York Premiere Inspired by actual events in Nikola Tesla’s life, this electrifying short draws as much from the conventions of experimental film as it does from animated documentary. Who’s Who in Mycology Marie Dvorakova, Czech Republic/USA, 2017, 15m Czech with English subtitles New York Premiere Marie Dvorakova’s Student Academy Award–winning film is a visually exhilarating and funny flight of fancy about a young trombone player whose humdrum night takes a turn for the bizarre. Nada Gabriel Martins, Brazil, 2017, 27m Portuguese with English subtitles U.S. Premiere A high school senior (Clara Lima) boldly questions the conventional wisdom of her parents and peers in this refreshing coming-of-age story about what it means to live a meaningful life. War of the Worlds Manuel Brito, Portugal, 2018, 14m North American Premiere Using a bizarre cutout animation style, Manuel Brito offers an uncanny interpretation of Orson Welles’s infamous War of the Worlds radio play. Familiar Tale / Relato Familiar Sumie García, Mexico/Japan, 2018, 20m New York Premiere This moving documentary about memory and loss documents the life of Yukio Saeki, an 86-year old photographer who has been living in Mexico since 1955.

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  • Paul Sorvino to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award at Beaufort International Film Festival

    Paul Sorvino Paul Sorvino will be presented the prestigious Pat Conroy Lifetime Achievement Award at the 13th annual Beaufort International Film Festival in February. The festival dates are February 19-24, 2019 with the Red Carpet Reception and Awards Gala taking place on Sunday, February 24th at the University of South Carolina, Beaufort, Center for the Arts. “If you look at his body of work in the film and television industries, his work on Broadway, his philanthropic efforts over the past six decades, you can see why we’re so very honored to present the Pat Conroy Lifetime Achievement Award to the legendary entertainer Paul Sorvino,” stated Beaufort Film Society President Ron Tucker. The award is named for Best Selling Author and Academy Award nominated Screenwriter Pat Conroy, who was a long time resident of Beaufort, SC before his death of pancreatic cancer in March 2016. “Beaufort’s long film history began with Pat when his novel The Great Santini was made into a feature film followed later by The Prince of Tides. Both films were shot right here in Beaufort,” stated Rebecca Tucker, Co-Director of the Beaufort International Film Festival. Paul Sorvino’s resume is as long and varied as any performer could hope for, including over one hundred eighty movies and television shows, two operas, three Broadway plays, musicals on Broadway and at major theaters across the country. For THAT CHAMPIONSHIP SEASON, he won six awards including the New York Drama Critics Award for Best Actor, Drama Desk, Obie, Outer Critics Circle, Clarence Derwent awards and a Tony nomination for playing the rich, morally bankrupt Phil Romano. His films include GOODFELLAS, NIXON (as Henry Kissinger), REDS, MONEY TALKS, SEE SPOT RUN, THE BRINKS JOB, BULWORTH, MAMBO ITALIANO, ROMEO AND JULIET, THE COOLER, DICK TRACY, THE BRONX BULL and and many, many others. An actor, director, best-selling author, screenwriter, professional bronze sculptor, pianist, business man, operatic tenor and passionate cook, Sorvino lives in New York and Los Angeles with his wife, Emmy award – winning television host and commentator Dee Dee Sorvino. He is the father of Michael, Amanda and Academy Award winning actress Mira Sorvino. Paul was recently chosen to be honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Paul is currently filming the American Crime Drama Television Series, The Godfather of Harlem, set to debut in 2019. The “Pat Conroy Lifetime Achievement” Award is sponsored by Leslie and Landon Thorne.

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  • 60th Nordic Film Days Lübeck Documentary Lineup Focused on Life in Nordic and Baltic Countries

    [caption id="attachment_32252" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Fuck Off 2 – Images from Finland Fuck Off 2 – Images from Finland[/caption] The documentary program for this year’s 60th Nordische Filmtage Lübeck (Oct. 30 – Nov. 4, 2018) promises to deliver an exciting cross-section of films on ways of life in the Nordic and Baltic countries, as well as vivid histories in Europe over the last 100 years. Of the 28 documentaries in the section, 16 will be in the running for the Documentary Film Prize awarded by the Lübeck trade unions.The award, to be presented at the 60th Nordic Film Days Lübeck on November 3, 2018, is given to a “socially and politically committed film”. Among this year’s documentarians is one of Finland’s most renowned directors and producers, Jörn Donner, who attempts in “Fuck Off 2 – Images from Finland” (FIN 2017) to capture the enormous changes that have occurred in the country since he made the classic documentary “Fuck Off – Images from Finland” in 1971. As he journeyed around the country and spoke with a wide diversity of people, he shed light on immense income disparity, rural depopulation, and attitudes towards migrants – subjects that are also addressed in some of the section’s other films. Jörn Donner, born in 1933, will be guest in Lübeck. Husband and wife team Janus Metz and Sine Plambech, who won the NFL Documentary prize in 2009, have also made a sequel of sorts with “Heartbound – a Different Kind of Love Story” (DEN/HOL/SWE 2018). The film shows an anthropological bent as it looks at marriages between Danes and Thais, providing deep insight into those special inter-cultural relationships in Denmark’s northern reaches. The films in the documentary section also look at other topical issues, such as the de-population of isolated European regions in “Estonian Stories. Kerro 40” (EST 2017) and “690 Vopnafjörður” (ICE 2017). The ramifications of technological progress for residents is the subject of “The River, My Friend” (SWI 2018) and “The Illuminators”, while changes to the working world in traditional trades such as commercial fishing play a role in “The Ocean – Fishing with Love” (DEN/FAR 2018) and “The Last in a Line of Fishermen” (SWE 2018). Lastly, the rise and fall of a modern high-tech company is examined in “Nokia Mobile – We Were Connecting People” (FIN/NOR/GER 2017). The importance of a structured life, education, and school systems for children and young adults is the subject of the two films “14 Cases” (EST 2017) and “To Be Continued” (LAT 2018), while by contrast, “My Heart Belongs to Daddy” (NOR/SWE 2018) and “The Night” (NOR/BEL/SWE 2017) look at the effects of drug addiction on families. Among the films that look back at history are “Bad Circumstances” (DEN 2018), about the conquest of Greenland, and “The Raven and the Seagull” (DEN/GL 2018) about the relationship between colony and colonial powers. Other films on historical subjects are “The Eyes of a War” (FIN 2018) by Jouko Aaltonen and Seppo Rustanius, about child soldiers in Finland’s civil war, as well as “Iceland Defense Force – Cold War Frontier” (ICE 2017), in which directors Guðbergur Davíðsson and Konráð Gylfason take a close look at a NATO base in Keflavik, Iceland. The 100th anniversary of the founding of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, as well as Icelandic independence provides the perfect occasion for other films in the documentary section. For instance, directors Raimo Jõeran and Kiur Aarma look back at the first Estonian government, portraying it as a wild “Rodeo” (EST/FIN 2018). “Bridges of Time” (LAT/LIT/EST 2018) also brings back memories – in this case of the Baltic New Wave cinema that provided a counterpoint to the official Soviet film regime of the time. It’s a documentary about documentaries whose directors developed a poetic cinematic language in the 1960s. One of those filmmakers is Lette Ivars Seleckis, born in 1934, who is expected in Lübeck this year, where he will not only join director Kristine Briede to present “Bridges of Time”, but also screen his newest documentary “To Be Continued” (LAT 2018), which observes Latvian children as they go through their first school year. A very special relationship is at the centre of this year’s Master Class on “Reality and Morality”, which focusses on the latest documentary by Norwegian director Erik Poppe, who recently created a bit of a sensation with “U – July 22” (NOR 2018, showing this year in the Specials section). In “Per Fugelli – I Die” (NOR 2018), Poppe accompanies his friend, the Norwegian physician and public health pioneer, through the final stages of Fugelli’s fatal cancer. The resulting film is both profound and absorbing. Erik Poppe himself will be at the Master Class to talk with young filmmakers about how to deal with highly sensitive subjects, and the filmmaker’s responsibility to his protagonists. He will also discuss the use of narrative filmmaking methods on documentary storytelling.

    60th Nordische Filmtage Lübeck Documentary Program

    14 Cases / 14 Käänet / 14 Fälle Estland / 2017 / 85 Min. Director(s): Marianna Kaat Life between two cultures – for more than four years, this film followed Estonians of Russian descent, who have important decisions to make for their children. 690 Vopnafjör∂ur / 690 Vopnafjör∂ur / 690 Vopnafjör∂ur Island / 2017 / 57 Min. Director(s): Karna Sigur∂ardóttir The highs and lows of daily life. The film is an honest portrait of a small, isolated fishing village in eastern Iceland, which shatters many an Iceland cliché. Ahto. Chasing a Dream / Ahto. Unistuste jaht / Ahto. Chasing a Dream Estland / 2018 / 92 Min. Director(s): Jaanis Valk In 1938, Ahto Valter set out to circumnavigate the globe with his family and a crew hired via newspaper ads. Kodak sponsored the film to record his 18-month trip. Bad Circumstances / Slette omstændigheder / Widrige Umstände Dänemark / 2018 / 58 Min. Director(s): Max Kestner Hobby historian Holberg is trying to track down a mystery from the history of the Greenland expeditions. But the closer he comes to it, the more mysterious it becomes. Bridges of Time / Bridges of Time / Brücken der Zeit Lettland / Litauen / Estland / 2018 / 80 Min. Director(s): Kristine Briede, Audrius Stonys A documentary film about documentary films, made up of scenes from the Baltic New Wave, a group of directors who developed a poetic cinematic language in the 1960s. D Is for Division / Mūris / Unruhige Grenze Lettland / Tschechische Republik / 2018 / 87 Min. Director(s): Dāvis Sīmanis Latvia’s eastern border is regarded by many as a cultural dividing line between Russia and Europe. Davis Simanis visited it with his camera. A borderline experience. Fuck Off 2 – Images from Finland / Perkele 2 – Kuvia Suomesta / Fuck Off 2 – Bilder aus Finnland Finnland / 2017 / 93 Min. Director(s): Jörn Donner Is it worth living, loving and dying in today’s Finland? Jörn Dönner once again zeros in on social conditions in this sequel to the cult documentary “Fuck Off”. Heartbound – A Different Kind of Love Story / Hjertelandet / Herzensland – Eine etwas andere Liebesgeschichte Dänemark / Niederlande / Schweden / 2018 / 90 Min. Director(s): Janus Metz, Sine Plambech Between Thy and Thailand – a touching long-term film observation of Thai women who have sought a better life by marrying men from faraway, cold Denmark. Iceland Defense Force – Cold War Frontier / „Varnarliðið“ kaldastríðsútvörður / Iceland Defense Force – Vorposten des Kalten Kriegs Island / 2017 / 89 Min. Director(s): Gu∂bergur Daví∂sson, Konrá∂ Gylfason A meticulously researched documentary about a NATO base that existed in Keflavík, Iceland, from 1951 – 2006, giving the small country a role in the Cold War. Maj Doris / Maj Doris / Maj Doris Schweden / Norwegen / 2018 / 72 Min. Director(s): Jon Blåhed She is a star in the Sami community. The film is a warm-hearted portrait of artist and reindeer herder Maj Doris Rimpi as she moves through the arctic winter. My Heart Belongs to Daddy / Røverdatter / Räubertochter Norwegen / Schweden / 2018 / 83 Min. Director(s): Sofia Haugan How a young filmmaker tries to get her drug-addicted and criminal father back on the right track again. Disturbing, tragic – and funny. Nokia Mobile – We Were Connecting People / Nokia Mobile – Matkapuhelimen tarina / Nokia Mobile – We Were Connecting People Finnland / Norwegen / Deutschland / 2017 / 92 Min. Director(s): Arto Koskinen Once proud to work for Nokia, today some of them are ashamed of it. Former employees talk about the rise and fall of the Finnish mobile telephone giant. Per Fugelli – I Die / Per Fugelli – siste resept / Per Fugelli – Das letzte Rezept Norwegen / 2018 / 110 Min. Director(s): Erik Poppe In 2009, the doctor Per Fugelli became ill with cancer. In 2015, he stopped the treatment. In his view, health is all to do with the world in which we live. Rodeo / Rodeo / Rodeo Estland / Finnland / 2018 / 74 Min. Director(s): Raimo Jõerand, Kiur Aarma Government policies as a wild rodeo: This real political thriller reconstructs the term in office of Mart Laar, Estonia’s first prime minister after the Soviet era. Roots / Juured / Wurzeln Estland / 2018 / 102 Min. Director(s): Nora Särak, Aljona Suržikova, Heilika Pikkov, Anna Hints, Moonika Siimets, Kersti Uibo What are our roots? Six highly varied pieces by female Estonian documentary filmmakers on the subjects of home and family, shot for the country’s centenary. The Illuminators / Valontuoja / Die das Licht brachten Finnland / 2017 / 68 Min. Director(s): Antti Haase The documentary film maker Antti Haase tells the remarkable story of how his grandfather became Lapland’s father of light after the second world war. The Night / Natta pappa henta oss / Die Nacht, als uns Papa abholte Norwegen / Belgien / Schweden / 2017 / 65 Min. Director(s): Steffan Strandberg An autobiographical story about his childhood – director Steffan Strandberg’s mother was an alcoholic. In his film, he tackles difficult memories. The Ocean – Fishing with Love / Havi∂ – Kærleiki umbor∂ / Das Meer – Liebe an Bord Dänemark / Färöer / 2018 / 42 Min. Director(s): Eir í Ólavsstovu It’s the end of a tradition – only a single fishing boat still plies the waters of Eiði in the Faroe Islands. It belongs to Sonni and his wife Jenny. The Raft / Flotten / Das Floß Schweden / Dänemark / USA / Deutschland / 2017 / 98 Min. Director(s): Marcus Lindeen In 1973, eleven people crossed the Atlantic by raft. The reconstruction of a controversial social experiment, awarded at the CPH:DOX festival in Copenhagen. The Raven and the Seagull / Lykkelænder / The Raven and the Seagull Dänemark / Grönland / 2018 / 71 Min. Director(s): Lasse Lau A cinematic observation of relations between Greenland and Denmark. Echoes of colonial history resound along the coasts and icy landscapes of the far north. The River, My Friend / Älven min Vän / Der Fluss, meine Freundin Schweden / Schweiz / 2018 / 47 Min. Director(s): Hannah Ambühl A portrait of four women who live along Sweden’s Lule River. When the river opened to commercial traffic, their lives changed and traditions began to disappear. The Snowball Rolled South / Riedėjo gniūžtė į pietus / Der Schneeball rollte gen Süden Litauen / 2018 / 52 Min. Director(s): Ieva Balsiūnaitė The Lithuanian capital Vilnius was once a thriving centre of Jewish life. But at the end of the 19th century, tens of thousands of Jews left – for South Africa. To Be Continued / Turpinājums / Fortsetzung folgt Lettland / 2018 / 97 Min. Director(s): Ivars Seleckis This documentary film has five main protagonists. Ivars Seleckis followed children from various parts of Latvia throughout their first two years of school.

    Documentary program (shorts)

    As We’re Told / Vi bara lyder / Dienst nach Vorschrift Schweden / 2017 / 28 Min. Director(s): Erik Holmström, Fredrik Wenzel The most unpopular government agency in Sweden is the employment agency. Puppet animation based on research for the nonfiction book “Vi bara lyder”. Confessions of an Angry Mother / En arg mors bekännelser / Bekenntnisse einer wütenden Mutter Finnland / 2018 / 6 Min. Director(s): Catarina Diehl When the children were small, their mother says, she was distraught. Now she’s mostly angry. Report on daily routines and feelings that have long been taboo. Estonian Stories. Kerro 40 / Eesti lood. Kerro 40 / Estnische Geschichten. Kerro 40 Estland / 2017 / 28 Min. Director(s): Aljona Suržikova Celebrations are a must in rural areas. For three generations, Estonian folklore has been practised at the family club Kerro. Now the 40th anniversary is coming up. The Eyes of a War 1918 / Sodan Silmät 1918 / Die Augen des Krieges 1918 Finnland / 2018 / 22 Min. Director(s): Jouko Aaltonen, Seppo Rustanius During the Finnish civil war, both the Red Guards and the white forces had children fighting in uniform. “The Eyes of a War 1918” memorializes them. The Last in a Line of Fishermen / Den sista hummerfiskaren / Der letzte Hummerfischer Schweden / 2018 / 29 Min. Director(s): Karolin Axelsson Generational portrait on a cutter. Can filmmaker Karolin Axelsson learn from her father to fish lobsters and preserve the family tradition?

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