KINO! is back and ready to deliver new German films to downtown New York this April. Now in its fourth year as an independent festival, KINO!2017 will showcase twelve feature-length films: one North American premiere, five US premieres, four East Coast premieres and two New York premieres plus the Next Generation Short Tiger 2016 line-up. All of this year's programs will be held at the Sunshine Cinema, Landmark Theatres, from March 31-April 6, 2017.
It has been a truly astounding year for contemporary German cinema as Maren Ade's TONI ERDMANN heads to the Academy Awards® this year. The out-of-the-box comedy has made waves in Hollywood, with its most recent announcement of a US remake starring Jack Nicholson and Kristen Wiig.
KINO! is thrilled to announce this year's guests including, lead actress of ORIGINAL BLISS, Martina Gedeck, actress Carla Juri of PAULA, director Kai Wessel of FOG IN AUGUST and director Nicolette Krebitz of WILD.
KINO!2017 opens on March 31st with the US premiere of the colorful biopic of German artist Paula Modersohn-Becker, PAULA, with lead actress Carla Juri (BLADE RUNNER 2049) in attendance. PAULA heads to New York City after a fantastic success in Germany, where it topped the art-house charts for four weeks. Opening night will include a post-screening discussion with Juri moderated by festival consultant Marian Masone. Furthermore, Deutsches Haus at NYU will host an in-depth conversation between Carla Juri and the film scholar and author Noah Isenberg entitled "Let's Talk About Paula: A Conversation with Carla Juri" on April 1 at 4:30 pm.
In the centerpiece event DJ Raphaël Marionneau will be at the turntables to provide the soundtrack for the screening of the newly restored Fritz Lang classic DESTINY, presented by Bertelsmann. The international media company was the main sponsor of this silent movie's digital restoration, which was carried out by the Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation last year, making it available again with its typical 1920s coloration. Legendary filmmakers from Hitchcock to Buñuel have cited DESTINY as a major source of inspiration and influence. The story in three acts tells the tale of a woman who pleads with the Grim Reaper to spare her lover's life.
KINO!2017 continues to showcase the vast diversity within contemporary German cinema with a range of fresh and exciting new films, including the radical Sundance favorite WILD by German actress and director Nicolette Krebitz, the tale of a young woman who escapes from urban societal strictures; documentary POWER TO CHANGE - THE ENERGY REBELLION, in which project developer Edy Kraus vows it is possible for Germany to be using 100% renewable energy by 2030; THE VERDICT by Lars Kraume (THE PEOPLE VS FRITZ BAUER), receiving its North American premiere at KINO!2017, which brings an interactive film experience to the courtroom drama, in with audiences voting on whether the defendant is guilty or innocent.
The cast stars some of Germany's most high profile actors, such as festival guest Martina Gedeck, one of Germany's biggest actresses and star of ORIGINAL BLISS, who will join for an artist talk. Gedeck played the lead role in the German Oscar® winner THE LIVES OF OTHERS and in THE BAADER MEINHOF COMPLEX, nominated for the Oscar® for Best Foreign Language Film and Golden Globes®. She has starred in countless films and has won more than thirty German and international awards. Gedeck was part of the Grand Jury of the International Venice Film Festival and the International Jury of the Berlinale. She is also a voting member of the European Film Academy, the German FilmAcademy and the German Academy of Performing Arts.
This year’s edition was programmed by New York professionals such as sales agent Meghan Wurtz, journalist Karl Rozemeyer and festival consultant Marian Masone who have selected a wide cross-section of high quality, remarkable films.
KINO!2017 PROGRAM
24 WEEKS (24 WOCHEN), Anne Zohra Berrached, 102 min., East Coast Premiere
Sunday, April 2, 8:30pm
Thursday, April 6, 6pm
It’s Ladies Night at a comedy club and Astrid steps onto the stage in a shimmering short dress. She teases the crowd, “So… notice anything different?” Her baby bump clearly shows she’s pregnant. “I couldn’t care less what it is as long as it’s a girl,” she announces. “But listen up: a kid ain’t keeping me off the stage. You can tell a decent joke and lactate!”
The baby, tests later show, is a boy. But the tests also bring a series of unexpected complications to the surface. Astrid’s breezy, lighthearted view of the world collapses into a dark abyss fraught with moral challenges when her doctor informs her that the fetus has a 98% chance of being born with down syndrome: “Some have very severe Down’s; others have a very mild form. In Germany there’s the option of late-term abortion—theoretically, until the end of the pregnancy.”
Astrid and Markus, her long-term boyfriend and manager, wonder what their son will look like, if he will be able to clean up his room or eat or shower by himself. Will they be able to cope with bringing him up along with their young daughter Nele? They not only decide to have their son, but also to publicly announce he’ll be born with Down Syndrome. As a celebrity, Astrid cannot escape the media spotlight on their decision. The couple then learns the fetus has two holes in his heart and his chances of long-term survival are severely reduced. Having made his decision, Markus steadfastly believes they should keep their son. But doubt begins to undermine Astrid’s certainty. Yet after 24 weeks, can she face the pain and heartache of an abortion?
ALL OF A SUDDEN (AUF EINMAL) Asli Özge, 112 min., US Premiere
Friday, March 31, 5pm
Wednesday, April 5, 4pm
The party begins to wind down in the early morning, and by three a.m. everyone has left Karsten’s apartment—everyone except a mysterious woman called Anna whom he’d apparently never met before. Talking leads to kissing. Then she inexplicably collapses. In a state of panic, Karsten’s immediate instinct is to run to a nearby clinic, only to find its doors locked. By the time he returns Anna is dead. At face value his actions may seem understandable, even commendable. However, as his friends, his colleagues, his girlfriend and the police begin to probe deeper into the events of that night, suspicion grows.
Why did Karsten not call for an ambulance as soon as he realized Anna needed medical help? Had Anna, who was unknown to any of the other party guests, really slipped in uninvited? Did Karsten and Anna simply kiss or were they more intimate? His girlfriend—who was away on a business trip that evening—wants to know why Anna’s pantyhose were found in the apartment. Had they perhaps met before the night of her death?
As evidence appears to mount against Karsten, his privileged world begins to unravel: he’s demoted at work, media coverage of Anna’s death intensifies, and he becomes increasingly isolated. Then it’s revealed that Anna is the wife of a Russian factory worker, and the opportunity arises to exploit the social difference between Karsten and his alleged victim’s immigrant family. The accused killer hardens and fights back with renewed ruthlessness and greed. Not only a dark thriller, ALL OF A SUDDEN also unspools as a scathing critique of the power of bourgeois superiority to triumph against all odds.
DESTINY (DER MÜDE TOD), Fritz Lang, 97 min., US Premiere
Monday, April 3, 8pm
Silent film with live music by DJ Raphaël Marionneau
Presented by Bertelsmann
DESTINY, filmed shortly after the First World War, is regarded as a reflection on the traumas of the war. Images as gloomy as they are fantastical tell the story of a young woman who must pass tests to reclaim her lover from Death. This haunting work established Fritz Lang as one of Germany’s leading directors and earned him international acclaim.
For the restoration, the Murnau Foundation used sources from the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Munich Film Museum and the Národní filmový Archive in Prague, among others. Thanks to this digital renewal, the silent movie shines in new splendor after nearly a century. The world premiere of the digital version of DESTINY with new symphonic movie music took place at last year’s Berlinale.
FOG IN AUGUST (NEBEL IM AUGUST), Kai Wessel, 126 min., US Premiere
Saturday, April 1, 6pm
Sunday, April 2, 3pm
Director Kai Wessel in attendance.
Ernst Lossa is 13 years old when he arrives at a Third Reich mental hospital in 1942. Though he has no psychiatric problems, he has been involved in petty crime and is committed because of his connection to the Yenish community, a discriminated people under the Nazi regime.
The institution, which houses adults and children with a wide range of disabilities (including mental retardation, epilepsy and cerebral palsy), is run by chief physician Dr. Werner Veithausen. Tasked by the Third Reich with eradicating those deemed too flawed to live, the doctor employs various murderous procedures, including giving victims raspberry juice laced with poison and devising a new program whereby patients are slowly starved by eating a soup that has been so overcooked it is devoid of any nutritional value. A staunch believer in eugenics, or ‘racial hygiene,’ Veithausen views himself as part of the scientific avant-garde on a mission that will ultimately strengthen the Reich’s workforce.
Meanwhile Ernst adapts to life at the institution with unexpected ease, and soon makes firm friends with his fellow patients, finally finding a sense of belonging and a form of family life. As he develops a deep affection for a girl institutionalized with him, he begins to suspect that Veithausen is responsible for the escalating string of deaths at the institution. He soon realizes that he and the girl he loves may too be added to the list for eradication.
Based on Robert Domes' 2008 novel, FOG IN AUGUST is the first German feature film to focus exclusively on the Nazi euthanasia program in which it is estimated that at least 5,000 children lost their lives.
FUKUSHIMA, MON AMOUR (GRÜSSE AUS FUKUSHIMA), Doris Dörrie, 104 min. East Coast Premiere
Friday, March 31, 3pm
Saturday, April 1, 4pm
When Marie arrives in Tokyo from Europe she changes into clown garb, hoping to meet up with an entertainment troupe from the foreign aid organization Clowns4Help. But instead she is joined on the bullet train to Fukushima by only one other clown. Her exaggerated makeup and absurd costume are brought into even starker relief against the bleak destruction of Fukushima’s lonely ravaged landscape. Radiation levels are high; all along the ghostly coastline are black fields of plastic bags containing contaminated soil.
People fled their homes. The few that remained, mainly elderly folk, now live in temporary shelters. Marie’s attempts to provide a brief distraction from their hardships fall flat. She panics and storms off, blurting out: “I’m a stupid, fucking spoiled, arrogant German bitch!” It’s clear she left her home to flee her own demons and is not emotionally equipped to handle the silent pain and heartache that now engulf her.
Satori, an elderly woman (and supposedly Fukushima’s last geisha) dupes Marie into helping her move back into her ruined house in a desolate, unsafe area. “What would you do if your entire world ceased to exist, if you lost everything?” Satomi asks. But Marie has recently experienced a loss of her own and is as adrift in this strange landscape as Satori. Despite their tragicomic differences, the two women find solace and ultimately redemption in their unlikely bond.
Director/screenwriter Doris Dörrie lensed FUKUSHIMA, MON AMOUR in black and white in the Fukushima region of Japan in the wake of the earthquake and the ensuing 15-meter tsunami that disabled three reactors and later resulted in the calamitous nuclear tragedy of March 2011.
HANNA’S SLEEPING DOGS (HANNAS SCHLAFENDE HUNDE), Andreas Gruber, 120 min. New York Premiere
Tuesday, April 4, 5:30pm
Wednesday, April 5, 8pm
22 years after the end of the Second World War, the inhabitants of the small Austrian provincial town of Wels are still impacted by dangerous reminders of Nazi Germany. Sirens wail and nine-year-old Johanna and her family, along with other townsfolk, must evacuate their homes. Road construction has unearthed unexploded munitions. But before the bomb can be safely removed, it detonates. A dog is killed. “Those war criminals!” shouts one of Johanna’s neighbors. Anger against the Allied bombings and latent allegiance for the German occupiers is still evident among many families in Wels. “Secrecy—at some point everything comes out and blows up in your face,” utters Ruth, Johanna’s blind grandmother.
Johanna overhears her father telling her mother that only he can see her as she truly is. A schoolteacher tells Johanna that her grandmother’s accent denotes that she’s not from Wels. Then, when her mother forbids her and her brother from entering a Catholic Youth singing competition, arguing that such public exposure is unacceptable, Johanna begins to realize that she and her family are outsiders in her hometown, and that her family is harboring a shameful secret.
When Johanna discovers that her tormented mother and grandmother are Jewish, she asks: “But what does it mean?” Throughout the war and beyond, her mother and grandmother had to keep their Jewish identity hidden. Robbed of their name, their religion, and their Zionist ideals, they chose to call her Johanna instead of Hanna and brought her up Catholic.
Based on a semi-autobiographical novel by Elisabeth Escher, HANNA’S SLEEPING DOGS explores a young girl’s embrace of her heritage and her family’s past as she grapples with a newly found self image.
MARIJA, Michael Koch, 100 min., US Premiere
Monday, April 3, 6pm
Tuesday, April 4, 3:30pm
MARIJA opens with a back-of-the-head tracking shot of the film’s titular character as she strides down a busy Dortmund neighborhood street. The subject’s confident, determined walk shows a woman who approaches life with a no-nonsense, steely drive. As the director’s camera continues to stalk Marija, it’s apparent the film will be told from her perspective—and hers is a view of Germany that remains underexposed.
Marija is a Ukrainian immigrant who ekes out a living as a hotel chambermaid. She rigorously secrets away a cash portion of her monthly salary in her small, spartan apartment with the ambition that one day she’ll own a hair salon. When she’s fired from her job for pilfering, there are no tears, no anguished pleas. Marija resolutely, coldly accepts her fate.
To keep her apartment, she acts as an assistant and escort to her Turkish landlord. When their arrangement turns abusive, Marija is employed by Georg, a German businessman, as a translator. Her shrewd intelligence helps cement Georg’s shady deals with various Russian contractors. While his feelings for Marija extend beyond their business arrangement, her precise emotions remain impenetrable. But when Georg is arrested, Marija must chose between helping her benefactor and securing her own dreams.
NEXT GENERATION SHORT TIGER 2016, US Premiere
Monday, April 3, 4pm
FREE ADMISSION
ORIGINAL BLISS (GLEISSENDES GLÜCK), Sven Taddicken, 102 min., New York Premiere
Sunday, April 2, 6pm
Thursday, April 6, 8pm
Actress Martina Gedeck in attendance.
Helene used to go to church. Now she believes God has abandoned her. “He was in everything I touched. I could taste it when he had touched me. His love was so great. Can you imagine when such a love leaves you?” she laments. Now Helene whiles away her days cleaning her suburban home, preparing meals for her husband and performing other banal chores, seemingly in a trance. Emotionally frozen and dogged by insomnia, she passively allows life to wash over her.
Her husband berates and abuses her. “It kills me that you sell yourself short! You make yourself so small. That’s not why I married you,” he angrily shouts, slamming her hand in a drawer. A private doctor is called. Two nails must be removed from her bleeding fingers.
Then one day, Helene overhears the musings of Eduard E. Gluck, a self-help guru, on the radio. Her takeaway from his proclamations is that anyone can steer reality with one’s thoughts; anyone can reprogram oneself like a computer. With a renewed sense of purpose, Helene seeks him out at a hotel conference. He tells her he cannot give her the spiritual experience she needs. Yet that evening, they meet for dinner. “Where and when were you last happy with no end in sight,” he asks. “When did you experience original bliss?”
The increasing sexual tension between them results not in a romantic interlude, but instead with Eduard blurting out his pornographic desires to her over the phone. Over time, Helene uncovers Gluck's voyeurism and psychosexual obsessions as well as his profound self-loathing. Yet, ultimately, in each other they recognize the love and affection they have both long been seeking.
PAULA, Christian Schwochow, 123 min., US Premiere
Friday, March 31, 7:30pm, opening film
Saturday, April 1, 1:30pm, followed by Deutsched Haus at NYU discussion with lead actress Carla Juri at 4:30pm
Lead actress Carla Juri in attendance.
“It’s much too rough, Miss Becker. What have I been teaching you?” says Paula’s instructor to his young pupil, critiquing her painting of an apple. “Precision and accuracy,” she replies sullenly. “And to portray nature exactly as it is,” he adds. “And my emotions,” retorts Paula Becker. Her affirmation that she will paint as her emotions dictate pre-empts how the avant-garde artist would live her life: driven by raw emotion, rebellious passion and a determination to overthrow societal convention.
From as early as she could recall, Paula was told women would never produce anything creative except children. History has proven her contemporary critics wrong, but the sacrifices she had to endure for the sake of her art were arduous and only minimally rewarding during her lifetime.
She meets Otto Modersohn, a fellow painter with whom she shares a kindred spirit. They marry in 1901, and she becomes stepmother to his two-year-old daughter. Feeling restless and stifled in Germany, Paula leaves her husband and pursues her life-long desire to paint in Paris. There she not only flirts with a more hedonistic lifestyle and experiences a belated sexual awakening but also develops the artistic vision that will eventually make her one of the leading lights of Expressionism.
She returns to Otto in 1907; her daughter is born the same year. Nineteen days later Paula suddenly dies at the age of 31. Her modest ambition to leave the world with “three good paintings and a child” is more than fulfilled. By the time of her death, Paula Modersohn-Becker left behind 750 paintings and became the subject of the first museum in the world to be dedicated to the work of a female painter.
POWER TO CHANGE – THE ENERGY REBELLION (POWER TO CHANGE – DIE ENERGIEREBELLION), Carl A. Fechner, 94 min., East Coast Premiere
Wednesday, April 5, 6pm
Thursday April 6, 3:30pm
Could Germany be using 100% renewable energy by 2030? It’s a belief held by Edy Kraus, a project developer whose idea is to generate energy from pellets made out of renewable resources and waste materials. He’s confident this goal is attainable even though every year the German economy currently spends around 100 billion euros on fossil fuels. Kraus is one of several green revolutionaries featured in POWER TO CHANGE – THE ENERGY REBELLION who are striving to develop renewable innovations.
They discuss the common goal of eventually reducing carbon emissions to virtually zero with Amir Roughani, a technology entrepreneur who, as a young graduate believed in the future of renewable energy, but who later lost his faith in its possibilities. How, he began to question, could such small-scale solutions as windmills and solar panels meet the growing energy needs of an industrial nation like Germany?
Even though the development of renewable energies has already generated savings of around 12 billion euros in Germany, other forces, such as fossil fuel lobbyists, are working hard to discredit the green energy sector and to undermine the transition to renewables.
From the student who believes we can organize transport into a more environmentally friendly business by using kite-powered ships to the inventor of celitement, a cement substitute that releases up to 50% less CO2 gas, Roughani approaches each green entrepreneur he meets in this documentary with a healthy dose of skepticism. His doubt is reversed, and even though our planet is plagued by global conflicts over limited resources and the uneven distribution of wealth, POWER TO CHANGE generates enough excitement and hope to give even the greatest pessimist faith in a brighter, greener future.
THE VERDICT (TERROR – IHR URTEIL), Lars Kraume, 120 min., North American Premiere
Tuesday, April 4, 8pm
On May 26, 2016 at 8:29 p.m., Major Lars Koch of the German Air Force shot down a Lufthansa passenger plane using an air-to-air guided missile. All 164 passengers on board were killed. The jet had been hijacked and was en route to crash into a packed Berlin soccer stadium. This is the fictional premise of the interactive courtroom drama THE VERDICT, an adaptation of a play by best-selling author Ferdinand von Schirach, which broadcast last year on the German network ARD. Viewers in Germany, Switzerland and Austria were tasked with deciding the fate of Major Koch by phoning in or posting online the verdict they thought should apply.
Is the defendant guilty of first-degree homicide? If so, then the viewer must contend that no human being is an object and that lives cannot be measured in numbers. The viewer must hold that it is a breach of the German constitution to weigh one life against another, and that the plane’s passengers were defenseless victims whose dignity and inalienable rights were disregarded—not only by the terrorists, but also by Koch.
Or should the defendant be acquitted? To acquit is to admit that our legal order cannot solve every moral dilemma without contradiction. If so, then the viewer must accept that when Lars Koch pulled the trigger, he chose “the lesser evil” and is, in the eyes of the law, untarnished. An acquittal would also amount to a rejection of the notion that the passengers might have gained access to the cockpit or that the Lufthansa pilot could have averted the crash.
What say you? Is Major Koch guilty or should he walk free?
WILD, Nicolette Krebitz, 97 min., East Coast Premiere
Saturday, April 1, 8:30pm
Sunday, April 2, 1pm
Director Nicolette Krebitz in attendance.
Ania’s chance encounter with a wolf one morning in a secluded park near her apartment leaves her unnerved but thrilled. As soon as she gets to work at her mundane office job, she begins researching wolves. Perhaps as an offering or to lure the animal back, she leaves a prime cut of meat near the place of the lupine sighting. At night she listens intently to the wolf’s howling.
Her fascination with the wolf is never clearly articulated, which is hardly surprising: Ania is a loner who keeps largely to herself. “That’s what I like about you, Ania. You never ask silly questions,” her older boss observes. She later calmly rebuffs his stilted advances toward her. She’s a young woman of few words who seems socially awkward, almost uncomfortable among almost all of the humans who surround her. Ania seems to have little interest in men; she has no boyfriend and lives alone in a nondescript high-rise apartment that she used to share with her recently hospitalized grandfather. To relax, she frequents a pistol shooting range—an activity she enjoys alone.
Since locking eyes with the wolf, Ania cannot escape the seductive lure of the animal. Her interest in the creature soon turns to obsession. In an elaborate plan, she coaxes and traps the beast, taking him to her apartment. And so begins her definitive retreat from the world at large. In this modern fable, like Little Red Riding Hood, Ania is seduced both metaphorically and physically by an animalistic force, led astray from the conventions and norms of a society to which she no longer relates.
KINO!2017 is produced by German Films in collaboration with the German Information Center, Bertelsmann, Deutsches Haus at NYU, and media sponsor The Village Voice. The KINO!2017 Audience Award is again powered by Fandor, the leading streaming service.
German Films Service + Marketing GmbH is the national information and advisory center for the promotion of German films worldwide. It was established in 1954 under the name Export-Union of German Cinema as the umbrella association for the Association of German Feature Film Producers, the Association of New German Feature Film Producers and the Association of German Film Exporters.
KINO!2017
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A collection of reviews of films from off the beaten path; a travel guide for those who love the cinematic world and want more than the mainstream releases.
Monday, March 6, 2017
Tucson Cine Mexico, United States’ Longest-Running Festival Celebrating Contemporary Mexican Cinema, Announces 2017 Program
Tucson, AZ [March 6, 2017] – Tucson Cine Mexico, a partnership between the University of Arizona Hanson Film Institute, New York-based Cinema Tropical, and Mexico City’s Ambulante, today announced the 2017 festival program. All films in the 14th edition of the festival are Arizona premieres. This year’s festival will run from March 22 – 26. As always, Tucson Cine Mexico events are free.
With a focus on presenting the best of the latest films from Mexico, co-directors Vicky Westover and Carlos Gutiérrez have this year selected films ranging from a bizarre-yet-true crime story from veteran auteur and “master of the Mexican bizarre” Arturo Ripstein, to a debut documentary from director María José Cuevas that swept multiple awards at the past Morelia Film Festival.
Vicky Westover said “As in past years, Mexican filmmakers created many exceptional films from which to choose for Tucson Cine Mexico audiences. Carlos and I are excited to present a selection of films that showcase a rich diversity in genre, style, content, and creative approach. We're also delighted to welcome to Tucson Maria José Cuevas, the incredibly talented first-time director of our Opening Night Film, Bellas de Noche."
The festival’s event schedule is as follows:
WEDNESDAY MARCH 22, 6:30PM, Tucson Museum of Art Lobby
ARTIST/FILMMAKER TALK: MARÍA JOSÉ CUEVAS “HEROINES OF SIN AND PLEASURE”
Co-presented by Tucson Cine Mexico and the Tucson Museum of Art
The showgirls – the Bellas de Noche – of Mexico City in the 1970s and 80s were political and cultural icons. Mexico City-based director, writer, and cinematographer María José Cuevas spent ten years examining the rich photographic archive of these showgirls, five of whom are the subject of Tucson Cine Mexico's Opening Night Film. In this talk, featuring sensational magazine spreads and film excerpts from the archive, Cuevas will discuss the powerful emergence of the showgirls in an era of economic crisis and the growing wave of women’s liberation, the history of this erotic art form, and what has become of it today. In conversation with Laura Gutiérrez, Associate Professor, Latin American Performance Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
FRIDAY MARCH 24, 6:30PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: BELLAS DE NOCHE / BEAUTIES OF THE NIGHT
(Opening Night Film, with director in person)
María José Cuevas’ engrossing debut documentary feature offers a moving portrait of five of Mexico’s most popular showgirls of the late 1970s and 80s, almost forty years after they ruled Mexico’s entertainment world. With a keen eye and devoid of any sensationalism, Cuevas enters the fascinating world of these women who have struggled to reinvent themselves after the decline of the burlesque heyday era in Mexico. “A beautifully crafted exploration of ageism with a powerful vision, and an empowering take on what it means to grow old in a culture obsessed with youth and beauty.” (Palm Springs Film Festival)
FRIDAY MARCH 24, 9:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: UN MONSTRUO DE MIL CABEZAS / A MONSTER WITH A THOUSAND HEADS
When Sonia (Jana Raluy) receives the news that her husband’s cancer has progressed to a terminal stage, she races to secure the insurance company approval for the care that can help him. Met with indifference and negligence at every turn, Sonia’s desperation triggers a primal survival instinct as a series of increasingly violent confrontations unfolds. A sharp, urgent tale of a distraught woman intent on protecting her family at all costs, director Rodrigo Plá’s latest film is an engrossing combination of thriller, drama and timely socio-political commentary.
SATURDAY MARCH 25, 7:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: CARMÍN TROPICAL
Set on the coast of Oaxaca, Carmín Tropical tells the story of Mabel (José Pescina), a muxe (Mexico’s third gender) who returns to her hometown to find the murderer of her friend Daniela. She finds herself on a journey that takes her through nostalgia, love, and betrayal in a town where transvestism takes on an unusual dimension. Rigoberto Perezcano’s second feature film has a “killer ending in store that’s a real nail-biter” (The Hollywood Reporter).
SATURDAY MARCH 25, 9:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: LA CALLE DE LA AMARGURA / BLEAK STREET
Based on a true—yet bizarre—crime story, the latest film by veteran auteur Arturo Ripstein is a black-and-white lusciously shot noir melodrama that tells the story of two prostitutes (Patricia Reyes Spíndola and Nora Velásquez) who mistakenly kill two twin mini-luchadores in downtown Mexico City in a robbery attempt to make ends meet. “Ripstein plunges into a Mexico City demimonde of crime, prostitution, and wrestling… (and) imbues his Buñuelian tableaux with both empathy and dark humor” (Film Form).
SUNDAY MARCH 26, 2:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: EL CHARRO DE TOLUQUILLA
The documentary profiles Jaime García—a mariachi singer and braggart who lives his life like a chauvinistic vintage Mexican movie character, but with one difference: he is HIV-positive. José Villalobos’ remarkable debut film offers a playful and incisive look at masculinity through the Mexican popular figure of the charro cantor (singing cowboy), as Jaime chooses between maintaining his reckless lifestyle or becoming a family man.
Tucson Cine Mexico has a new online hub – www.tucsoncinemexico.org is the source for all festival event details and free tickets.
Screening Information:
All 2017 Tucson Cine Mexico screenings will take place at Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18 (5455 S Calle Santa Cruz, Tucson 85706). Tickets will be free and open to all. Advance tickets will be available at www.tucsoncinemexico.org from March 1. Free tickets will also be available at the venue on screening days. Note that tickets do not guarantee seats. Seating will be available to ticket holders on a first-come first-served basis. Patrons are encouraged to arrive early to secure seats.
The Hanson Film Institute (hansonfilm.org) is concerned with the art and business of film. The Institute works in partnership with diverse UA entities and local, national, and international organizations. The Institute produces educational programs, public events, and creative projects that provide educational and professional development opportunities for students, faculty, and filmmakers. The Institute contributes to the University's land-grant mission by producing film events and films that address societal issues. The Institute places a special focus on Mexican and Native American filmmaking.
Cinema Tropical (cinematropical.com) is a non-profit media arts organization dedicated to promoting, programming and distributing Latin American cinema in the United States. Founded in 2001 with the mission of distributing, programming and promoting what was to become the biggest boom of Latin American cinema in decades, Cinema Tropical brought U.S. audiences some of the first screening of films such as Amores Perros and Y Tu Mamá También. Through a diversity of programs and initiatives, Cinema Tropical has become a dynamic and groundbreaking organization creating better and more effective strategies for the distribution and exhibition of foreign cinema in this country.
About our sponsors: Tucson Cine Mexico 2017 acknowledges the support of the following sponsors. SILVER Cox Media, Topline Entertainment BRONZE Film Tucson, La Estrella Bakery, UA Department of Spanish & Portuguese, Vantage West WITH SUPPORT FROM Tucson Museum of Art, UA College of Fine Arts, UA Center for Documentary, UA Center for Latin American Studies, UA College of Humanities, UA College of Social & Behavioral Sciences, UA Department of Gender & Women’s Studies, UA Institute for LGBT Studies, UA Office of Global Initiatives, UA Southwest Center
With a focus on presenting the best of the latest films from Mexico, co-directors Vicky Westover and Carlos Gutiérrez have this year selected films ranging from a bizarre-yet-true crime story from veteran auteur and “master of the Mexican bizarre” Arturo Ripstein, to a debut documentary from director María José Cuevas that swept multiple awards at the past Morelia Film Festival.
Vicky Westover said “As in past years, Mexican filmmakers created many exceptional films from which to choose for Tucson Cine Mexico audiences. Carlos and I are excited to present a selection of films that showcase a rich diversity in genre, style, content, and creative approach. We're also delighted to welcome to Tucson Maria José Cuevas, the incredibly talented first-time director of our Opening Night Film, Bellas de Noche."
The festival’s event schedule is as follows:
WEDNESDAY MARCH 22, 6:30PM, Tucson Museum of Art Lobby
ARTIST/FILMMAKER TALK: MARÍA JOSÉ CUEVAS “HEROINES OF SIN AND PLEASURE”
Co-presented by Tucson Cine Mexico and the Tucson Museum of Art
The showgirls – the Bellas de Noche – of Mexico City in the 1970s and 80s were political and cultural icons. Mexico City-based director, writer, and cinematographer María José Cuevas spent ten years examining the rich photographic archive of these showgirls, five of whom are the subject of Tucson Cine Mexico's Opening Night Film. In this talk, featuring sensational magazine spreads and film excerpts from the archive, Cuevas will discuss the powerful emergence of the showgirls in an era of economic crisis and the growing wave of women’s liberation, the history of this erotic art form, and what has become of it today. In conversation with Laura Gutiérrez, Associate Professor, Latin American Performance Studies, University of Texas at Austin.
FRIDAY MARCH 24, 6:30PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: BELLAS DE NOCHE / BEAUTIES OF THE NIGHT
(Opening Night Film, with director in person)
María José Cuevas’ engrossing debut documentary feature offers a moving portrait of five of Mexico’s most popular showgirls of the late 1970s and 80s, almost forty years after they ruled Mexico’s entertainment world. With a keen eye and devoid of any sensationalism, Cuevas enters the fascinating world of these women who have struggled to reinvent themselves after the decline of the burlesque heyday era in Mexico. “A beautifully crafted exploration of ageism with a powerful vision, and an empowering take on what it means to grow old in a culture obsessed with youth and beauty.” (Palm Springs Film Festival)
FRIDAY MARCH 24, 9:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: UN MONSTRUO DE MIL CABEZAS / A MONSTER WITH A THOUSAND HEADS
When Sonia (Jana Raluy) receives the news that her husband’s cancer has progressed to a terminal stage, she races to secure the insurance company approval for the care that can help him. Met with indifference and negligence at every turn, Sonia’s desperation triggers a primal survival instinct as a series of increasingly violent confrontations unfolds. A sharp, urgent tale of a distraught woman intent on protecting her family at all costs, director Rodrigo Plá’s latest film is an engrossing combination of thriller, drama and timely socio-political commentary.
SATURDAY MARCH 25, 7:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: CARMÍN TROPICAL
Set on the coast of Oaxaca, Carmín Tropical tells the story of Mabel (José Pescina), a muxe (Mexico’s third gender) who returns to her hometown to find the murderer of her friend Daniela. She finds herself on a journey that takes her through nostalgia, love, and betrayal in a town where transvestism takes on an unusual dimension. Rigoberto Perezcano’s second feature film has a “killer ending in store that’s a real nail-biter” (The Hollywood Reporter).
SATURDAY MARCH 25, 9:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: LA CALLE DE LA AMARGURA / BLEAK STREET
Based on a true—yet bizarre—crime story, the latest film by veteran auteur Arturo Ripstein is a black-and-white lusciously shot noir melodrama that tells the story of two prostitutes (Patricia Reyes Spíndola and Nora Velásquez) who mistakenly kill two twin mini-luchadores in downtown Mexico City in a robbery attempt to make ends meet. “Ripstein plunges into a Mexico City demimonde of crime, prostitution, and wrestling… (and) imbues his Buñuelian tableaux with both empathy and dark humor” (Film Form).
SUNDAY MARCH 26, 2:00PM, Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18
ARIZONA PREMIERE: EL CHARRO DE TOLUQUILLA
The documentary profiles Jaime García—a mariachi singer and braggart who lives his life like a chauvinistic vintage Mexican movie character, but with one difference: he is HIV-positive. José Villalobos’ remarkable debut film offers a playful and incisive look at masculinity through the Mexican popular figure of the charro cantor (singing cowboy), as Jaime chooses between maintaining his reckless lifestyle or becoming a family man.
Tucson Cine Mexico has a new online hub – www.tucsoncinemexico.org is the source for all festival event details and free tickets.
Screening Information:
All 2017 Tucson Cine Mexico screenings will take place at Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18 (5455 S Calle Santa Cruz, Tucson 85706). Tickets will be free and open to all. Advance tickets will be available at www.tucsoncinemexico.org from March 1. Free tickets will also be available at the venue on screening days. Note that tickets do not guarantee seats. Seating will be available to ticket holders on a first-come first-served basis. Patrons are encouraged to arrive early to secure seats.
The Hanson Film Institute (hansonfilm.org) is concerned with the art and business of film. The Institute works in partnership with diverse UA entities and local, national, and international organizations. The Institute produces educational programs, public events, and creative projects that provide educational and professional development opportunities for students, faculty, and filmmakers. The Institute contributes to the University's land-grant mission by producing film events and films that address societal issues. The Institute places a special focus on Mexican and Native American filmmaking.
Cinema Tropical (cinematropical.com) is a non-profit media arts organization dedicated to promoting, programming and distributing Latin American cinema in the United States. Founded in 2001 with the mission of distributing, programming and promoting what was to become the biggest boom of Latin American cinema in decades, Cinema Tropical brought U.S. audiences some of the first screening of films such as Amores Perros and Y Tu Mamá También. Through a diversity of programs and initiatives, Cinema Tropical has become a dynamic and groundbreaking organization creating better and more effective strategies for the distribution and exhibition of foreign cinema in this country.
About our sponsors: Tucson Cine Mexico 2017 acknowledges the support of the following sponsors. SILVER Cox Media, Topline Entertainment BRONZE Film Tucson, La Estrella Bakery, UA Department of Spanish & Portuguese, Vantage West WITH SUPPORT FROM Tucson Museum of Art, UA College of Fine Arts, UA Center for Documentary, UA Center for Latin American Studies, UA College of Humanities, UA College of Social & Behavioral Sciences, UA Department of Gender & Women’s Studies, UA Institute for LGBT Studies, UA Office of Global Initiatives, UA Southwest Center
My Scientology Movie (2015) opens Friday
I saw MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE last year at Tribeca. Wit the film opening Friday I'm reposting the review.
Louis Theroux wants to interview the head of the Church of Scientology David Miscavige but finds he's not allowed so he decides to investigate the Church and hire an actor to play him. The film then follows Theroux as he stages various things the Church doesn't want people to know about with the help of former members of the organization.
Very good film is a perfect companion piece to Alex Gibney's GOING CLEAR since the informtion here looks at things from a more on the ground angle. The film also highlights just how nuts the Church members can be when we watch as they show up to film Theroux and try to impede him from making the film. Its a wickedly funny film at times and will make you very wary about the craziness around the Church.
The film isn't perfect.There are way too many driving sequences and Theroux keeps going back to places in an effort to provoke the Church into responding. They do but after awhile I wished he would go on to something else- kind of like when Marty Rathbun, the former Inspector General of the Church asks him to stop asking the same questions over and over again.
Actually the treatment of Rathbun is a problem with the film. While he is the way to know the Church's secrets he is also the guy who knows where the bodies are buried so things are not always crystal clear with him. You know things are going on behind his eyes. Theroux is aware there is a problem but he picks the worst time to confront him about it- when Rathbun is reeling from having his wife and son threatened and is highly agitated. Theroux then kind of picks a fight and has Rathbun blow up. Its the wrong way to handle it and it kind of wrecked my respect for Theroux at that point since it seemed such a jerky thing to do.
Reservations about Theroux aside if you have any interest in the film go see it because thi is the sort of thing you just can't make up.
MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE opens in theaters Friday
Louis Theroux wants to interview the head of the Church of Scientology David Miscavige but finds he's not allowed so he decides to investigate the Church and hire an actor to play him. The film then follows Theroux as he stages various things the Church doesn't want people to know about with the help of former members of the organization.
Very good film is a perfect companion piece to Alex Gibney's GOING CLEAR since the informtion here looks at things from a more on the ground angle. The film also highlights just how nuts the Church members can be when we watch as they show up to film Theroux and try to impede him from making the film. Its a wickedly funny film at times and will make you very wary about the craziness around the Church.
The film isn't perfect.There are way too many driving sequences and Theroux keeps going back to places in an effort to provoke the Church into responding. They do but after awhile I wished he would go on to something else- kind of like when Marty Rathbun, the former Inspector General of the Church asks him to stop asking the same questions over and over again.
Actually the treatment of Rathbun is a problem with the film. While he is the way to know the Church's secrets he is also the guy who knows where the bodies are buried so things are not always crystal clear with him. You know things are going on behind his eyes. Theroux is aware there is a problem but he picks the worst time to confront him about it- when Rathbun is reeling from having his wife and son threatened and is highly agitated. Theroux then kind of picks a fight and has Rathbun blow up. Its the wrong way to handle it and it kind of wrecked my respect for Theroux at that point since it seemed such a jerky thing to do.
Reservations about Theroux aside if you have any interest in the film go see it because thi is the sort of thing you just can't make up.
MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE opens in theaters Friday
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Why LOGAN (2017) isn't the be all and end all (spoilers)
Hailed by many as the next great superhero film or the reinvention of the genre LOGAN is in fact no such thing.
The film set 12 years into the future has Logan and Caliban caring for a deteriorating Professor X. As far as anyone knows there are no more mutants being born. The plan is to buy a boat and sail off into oblivion. However a frantic woman is looking for Wolverine. She needs him to get a certain young girl to North Dakota so that she can get to safety...
Set in an alternate reality from any of the previous Wolverine and XMen films, Logan is best taken as a Marvel Elseworlds story - this is a might be what happened tale as opposed to a this is the next chapter. If you need any proof lets start with the film acknowledges comic adventures and has other continuity details that don't line up with earlier films.
Full of foul language and bloody violence the film earns it's R rating. It is also full of realistic violence and some very good set pieces. There is much to like or even love with the film...
... however coming out of the screening I found I liked the film but was very disappointed. It wasn't remotely what the reviews had made it out to be (not that they ever should be). The film isn't a grand reinvention or rethinking. The film is simply the same old story that we've seen in a variety of versions in ten or so other X films stripped down. It's a good film but nowhere near a great one.
My problems come from four places:
1- The pacing of the film is glacial. Yes there are great explosions of violence, but for a lot of the film its people talking or traveling. There isn't a great deal that is actually done. The film runs two and a quarter hours and it feels like it. I could feel the clock ticking. A brief pit stop at one point had me glance at my watch and I was shocked to find out that less than an hour had passed
2- The film is full of itself and its own self-importance. There is a ponderous nature to the film. It is clearly insisting it is about something- fathers and children, redemption, ect ect.This is a film that thinks it's going to be profound simply by weakening a mythic figure and then killing him off. Like many over thought art films it thinks that death is profound, and that killing off beloved characters instantly add weight to everything it is trying to do. The film moves like it is an art film and one that it is saying great things even to the point of silliness (for example the turned cross- which brought chuckles in my theater)...
3-...except we've been here before. The film is a western riff (SHANE). The plot is nothing new just another variation on the "hunt the mutants" plot in every other X MEN movie. The film is also a kind of remake of MAD MAX 2 (ROAD WARRIOR) with the girl replacing the boy, and scraggly Aussies in the lead. Add in all the similarities to all the comic book story lines that are exactly the same and you realize there is nothing new here. If you want proof all I have to say is...
4-...X-24. Really? How many times has a hero fought another version of himself? In comics? In films? And this is considered groundbreaking? No, not even close. I would have accepted it if it wasn't Logan's twin. The twin bit was way too much and I broke with the film at that point.Its a profound stupid (and a certain "r" word) that completely wrecks any notion of the film being profound. X-24 single handedly removes the film's chance of even being called groundbreaking when its a twist so over used anyone using it in any form should have to go to prison.
I could go on with other problems but it's not worth it.
And I need to restate- this isn't a bad film, just not nowhere near a great one.
Definitely worth a look but beyond that... you're on your own.
The film set 12 years into the future has Logan and Caliban caring for a deteriorating Professor X. As far as anyone knows there are no more mutants being born. The plan is to buy a boat and sail off into oblivion. However a frantic woman is looking for Wolverine. She needs him to get a certain young girl to North Dakota so that she can get to safety...
Set in an alternate reality from any of the previous Wolverine and XMen films, Logan is best taken as a Marvel Elseworlds story - this is a might be what happened tale as opposed to a this is the next chapter. If you need any proof lets start with the film acknowledges comic adventures and has other continuity details that don't line up with earlier films.
Full of foul language and bloody violence the film earns it's R rating. It is also full of realistic violence and some very good set pieces. There is much to like or even love with the film...
... however coming out of the screening I found I liked the film but was very disappointed. It wasn't remotely what the reviews had made it out to be (not that they ever should be). The film isn't a grand reinvention or rethinking. The film is simply the same old story that we've seen in a variety of versions in ten or so other X films stripped down. It's a good film but nowhere near a great one.
My problems come from four places:
1- The pacing of the film is glacial. Yes there are great explosions of violence, but for a lot of the film its people talking or traveling. There isn't a great deal that is actually done. The film runs two and a quarter hours and it feels like it. I could feel the clock ticking. A brief pit stop at one point had me glance at my watch and I was shocked to find out that less than an hour had passed
2- The film is full of itself and its own self-importance. There is a ponderous nature to the film. It is clearly insisting it is about something- fathers and children, redemption, ect ect.This is a film that thinks it's going to be profound simply by weakening a mythic figure and then killing him off. Like many over thought art films it thinks that death is profound, and that killing off beloved characters instantly add weight to everything it is trying to do. The film moves like it is an art film and one that it is saying great things even to the point of silliness (for example the turned cross- which brought chuckles in my theater)...
3-...except we've been here before. The film is a western riff (SHANE). The plot is nothing new just another variation on the "hunt the mutants" plot in every other X MEN movie. The film is also a kind of remake of MAD MAX 2 (ROAD WARRIOR) with the girl replacing the boy, and scraggly Aussies in the lead. Add in all the similarities to all the comic book story lines that are exactly the same and you realize there is nothing new here. If you want proof all I have to say is...
4-...X-24. Really? How many times has a hero fought another version of himself? In comics? In films? And this is considered groundbreaking? No, not even close. I would have accepted it if it wasn't Logan's twin. The twin bit was way too much and I broke with the film at that point.Its a profound stupid (and a certain "r" word) that completely wrecks any notion of the film being profound. X-24 single handedly removes the film's chance of even being called groundbreaking when its a twist so over used anyone using it in any form should have to go to prison.
I could go on with other problems but it's not worth it.
And I need to restate- this isn't a bad film, just not nowhere near a great one.
Definitely worth a look but beyond that... you're on your own.
Nightcap 3/5/17 we will not be covering SXSW, Random Oscars thoughts, Links
| Not sure what we need to resist |
The AV Club reported Thursday that the festival has a clause warning any non US band that plays outside of their slots that they face deportation. The Fest claims it’s standard business language and intended to prevent destruction and that they wouldn't really use it.
Perhaps- but it’s bullshit and if you would never use why did you include it?
I have no problem with them canceling shows, hotels and other things the festival provides, the deportation is something I won’t stand for. If for no other reason they invited them here.
While I am sure in a less tense political climate it might not be taken so seriously, but right now it smells to high heaven and with the bile spewing from the Trump White House it smacks intolerance.
Unseen won't stand for it.
While SXSW has taken some steps to correct the problem, for now the language remains and so does the ban.
----
The Oscars…
Yea well they got a lot of it right. I actually was okay with them until the Best Actor and Actress awards
I can’t believe that LALA LAND won the Oscar for cinematography over SILENCE. Emma Stone was good but hardly the best. She’s done better- say Cabaret on Broadway. (Yes I know it isn’t a film). Not so sure about Casey Affleck not because of his abuse, more the realization its basically what he does every time out of the box. Also Denzel’s performance has grown larger in my head.
Damien Chazelle looked, as someone pointed out, like supervillain.
I want to thank Donald Trump for knocking TONI ERDMAN out of the running for Foreign Film and assuring WHITE HELMETS won the short doc.
It was an okay group of awards and until the Best Picture screw up a rather bland show.
--
Look for new releases, festival films and one or two old films this week,
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Randi's links
Weird tricks on UK roads
Artists fight fascism
Conspiracy photos
The Last Days of Hot Metal Typesetting
A Short film about Mia Wolff
Warren Ellis revisits WIld Storm
The Shadow TV show
Color photos of the Disney Studio
Looney Tunes in the 30's
Bob's Book Review
Tale of Kitto Katto
The event that helped end whaling
Box Office Disasters
If Amalie was a food show
9th Annual Boston Underground Film Festival Unleashes Cinematic Sensory Onslaught on Cambridge from March 22nd through the 26th Titles Include Prevenge, Hounds of Love, The Void, Bitch and More!
Cambridge, MA – The 19th annual Boston Underground Film Festival returns to Harvard Square to kick off New England’s Spring festival season, bringing with it a smorgasbord of phantasmagoria, dark comedy, thrillers, killers, and chillers to the Brattle Theatre and Harvard Film Archive from March 22nd through the 26th. This year’s schedule boasts an eclectic selection of weird, wonderful programming packed with flavors for cineastes of all tastes!
Bookending this year’s festival of sensory-melting bliss are 2016 TIFF Midnight Madness juggernaut Prevenge and ferocious feminist satire Bitch, on the heels of its 2017 Sundance world premiere. Veteran actress, co-writer of 2012’s Sightseers, and first-time director/writer/star Alice Lowe’s bloody British baby bump (off) slasher comedy Prevenge appropriately births BUFF’s five days of cinemania and cinemonstronsity when it splatters the Brattle Theatre screen Wednesday March 22nd, fresh from its SXSW 2017 screening. And closing out this year’s filmic feast is filmmaking triple-threat director/writer/actor Marianna Palka’s delightfully disturbing dive into dissociative doggone delirium, Bitch.
Bubbling up from down-under, also coming to Boston fresh from SXSW 2017, is not-to-be-missed Aussie crime thriller Hounds of Love, a masterful feat of tension, terror, and restraint from Perth-based, wildly talented first-time feature filmmaker Ben Young. In stark contrast to some of BUFF’s darker fare, prepare to meet your new obsession with first-time filmmaker Bill Watterson’s Slamdance 2017 standout Dave Made a Maze, which will beguile and a-maze with its hilarious odyssey through one man’s intricately crafted, booby trapped, livingroom box fort labyrinth; awe-inspiring stop-motion animation and strong lulz await.
BUFF alum Steven Kostanski & co-directing partner Jeremy Gillespie, both of Astron-6 fame, are coming to Boston, bringing with them their moody, atmospheric, tentacular modern horror masterpiece The Void. Speaking of creatures, BUFF is beyond thrilled to welcome legendary creature creator and make-up effects maestro Gabe Bartalos, who will present his phantasmagorific nightmare Saint Bernard for the first time ever to a North American audience.
BUFF is psyched beyond belief to be hosting the East Coast Premiere of 68 Kill from mad genius Trent Haaga, director of BUFF’s 2011 Director’s Choice Award-winner Chop and writer of 2013’s Cheap Thrills & 2008’s Deadgirl. Haaga’s highly anticipated punk rock heist film unites BUFF regulars AnnaLynne McCord & Matthew Gray Gubler in the ultimate highway to hell road film. Additional beloved BUFF alumni will be in attendance with fresh cuts this year, including multi-award-winning, Massachusetts-based horror filmmaker Skip Shea, who unveils his deeply personal first feature, Trinity, to a hometown audience.
As usual, we’ll have: Our kid-friendly annual Saturday Morning Cartoons program with cereal smorgasbord, programmed by renowned curator, author, and Monster Fest Festival Director Kier-La Janisse; a veritable bounty of shorts programming celebrating fantastic music videos, animation, transgressive horror; and more! So. Much. More!
Individual screening ticket prices vary and will be available online and at the Brattle Theatre box office on the day of screening. Festival passes, which include admission to all films and parties, are available at a significantly reduced rate through BUFF’s ongoing Kickstarter through March 17th. Passes, thereafter, will be available for $180 at www.bostonunderground.org/tickets.
Festival Passes & Ticket Package Presales are available through Kickstarter until March 17th: bit.ly/KickstartBUFF19
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BOSTON UNDERGROUND FIRST WAVE:
BITCH - East Coast Premiere
Marianna Palka | USA | 2017
Caged in the suburbs of our discontent, a woman (Marianna Palka) snaps and enters a fugue state, consumed by the psyche of a vicious dog. Her philandering, stay-at-work husband (Jason Ritter) must grudgingly assume the role of family caretaker, forcing him to engage with his four children and sister-in-law (Jaime King) as they attempt to strengthen their familial unit and entice mom back to reality. Marianna Palka writes, directs, and stars in her bitingly funny and profound fourth feature.
DAVE MADE A MAZE - East Coast Premiere
Bill Watterson | USA | 2017
Dave (Nick Thune) is an artist who has yet to complete anything of significance in his short career; out of frustration, he builds an elaborate box fort in his living room. When his girlfriend and friends (including Kirsten Vangsness, Adam Busch, and Meera Rohit Kumbhani) enter against his protests, he must save them all from a series of fantastical pitfalls, booby traps, and creatures of his own creation. Actor Bill Watterson writes and directs his hilarious and idiosyncratic first feature.
HOUNDS OF LOVE - East Coast Premiere
Ben Young | Australia | 2016
In Ben Young’s tense, chilling feature debut, 17-year-old Vicki Maloney is randomly abducted from a suburban street by a disturbed couple and held prisoner in their home. As she observes the volatile dynamic between her captors, she soon realizes the key to survival lies in driving a wedge between them.
PREVENGE - East Coast Premiere
Alice Lowe | UK | 2016
In her directorial debut, Alice Lowe (Sightseers, Hot Fuzz, Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place) writes, directs and stars in a pitch black comedic tale of vengeance about seven-months-pregnant Widow Ruth and the unborn serial killer that compels her on her homicidal rampage.
SAINT BERNARD - North American Premiere
Gabe Bartalos | USA/France | 2013
Prolific creature designer Gabe Bartalos (Brain Damage, Tim and Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie, Gremlins 2, and the Leprechaun series) crafts a phantasmagoric vision of a classical music conductor descending into insanity with his sophomore feature. Seemingly vanished from a short-lived run on the festival circuit in 2014, BUFF is proud to give this must-see nightmare, and the visionary filmmaker who created it, a proper North American premiere.
68 KILL - East Coast Premiere
Trent Haaga | USA | 2017
Trent Haaga (writer of Deadgirl, Cheap Thrills) returns to the director’s chair following 2011’s Chop with a punk-rock after hours thriller about femininity, masculinity and the theft of $68,000. When Liza (AnnaLynne McCord) asks her boyfriend Chip (Matthew Gray Gubler) to help her rob her wealthy sugar daddy, he can’t say no. Once they step into the man’s home, Chip & Liza embark on a breakneck roadtrip to hell. Adapted from Bryan Smith’s 2013, no-holds-barred crime novel of the same name.
THE VOID - New England Premiere
Jeremy Gillespie, Steven Kostanski | Canada | 2016
ASTRON-6’s Jeremy Gillespie & Steven Kostanski return with a Carpenteresque saga of brutal, cosmic dread, packed with creatures straight out of hell. In the middle of a routine patrol, officer Daniel Carter (Aaron Poole) happens upon a blood-soaked figure limping down a deserted stretch of road in the middle of the night. When he rushes the young man to a nearby rural hospital, he finds that patients and personnel are transforming into something... inhuman. As the horror intensifies, Carter must lead the other survivors into the subterranean depths of the hospital in a desperate bid to save their lives and end the nightmare before it's too late.
TRINITY - Boston Premiere
Skip Shea | USA | 2016
Award-winning Massachusetts-based filmmaker, writer, artist and actor Skip Shea brings to life a deeply personal and disturbing first feature based on the true story about a moment in the life of a clergy abuse survivor. While at a coffee shop, a man accidentally bumps into the priest who abused him when he was a child, triggering a surreal, PTSD-induced dissociative moment that sends him on a twisted journey through his past.
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Stay tuned for upcoming announcements, including our second wave of feature film title announcements, attending guests, and a bountiful program of short films. The full BUFF 2017 Program, and individual ticket sales, will go live on March 8, 2017 at www.bostonunderground.org & www.brattlefilm.org.
Attachments area
Bookending this year’s festival of sensory-melting bliss are 2016 TIFF Midnight Madness juggernaut Prevenge and ferocious feminist satire Bitch, on the heels of its 2017 Sundance world premiere. Veteran actress, co-writer of 2012’s Sightseers, and first-time director/writer/star Alice Lowe’s bloody British baby bump (off) slasher comedy Prevenge appropriately births BUFF’s five days of cinemania and cinemonstronsity when it splatters the Brattle Theatre screen Wednesday March 22nd, fresh from its SXSW 2017 screening. And closing out this year’s filmic feast is filmmaking triple-threat director/writer/actor Marianna Palka’s delightfully disturbing dive into dissociative doggone delirium, Bitch.
Bubbling up from down-under, also coming to Boston fresh from SXSW 2017, is not-to-be-missed Aussie crime thriller Hounds of Love, a masterful feat of tension, terror, and restraint from Perth-based, wildly talented first-time feature filmmaker Ben Young. In stark contrast to some of BUFF’s darker fare, prepare to meet your new obsession with first-time filmmaker Bill Watterson’s Slamdance 2017 standout Dave Made a Maze, which will beguile and a-maze with its hilarious odyssey through one man’s intricately crafted, booby trapped, livingroom box fort labyrinth; awe-inspiring stop-motion animation and strong lulz await.
BUFF alum Steven Kostanski & co-directing partner Jeremy Gillespie, both of Astron-6 fame, are coming to Boston, bringing with them their moody, atmospheric, tentacular modern horror masterpiece The Void. Speaking of creatures, BUFF is beyond thrilled to welcome legendary creature creator and make-up effects maestro Gabe Bartalos, who will present his phantasmagorific nightmare Saint Bernard for the first time ever to a North American audience.
BUFF is psyched beyond belief to be hosting the East Coast Premiere of 68 Kill from mad genius Trent Haaga, director of BUFF’s 2011 Director’s Choice Award-winner Chop and writer of 2013’s Cheap Thrills & 2008’s Deadgirl. Haaga’s highly anticipated punk rock heist film unites BUFF regulars AnnaLynne McCord & Matthew Gray Gubler in the ultimate highway to hell road film. Additional beloved BUFF alumni will be in attendance with fresh cuts this year, including multi-award-winning, Massachusetts-based horror filmmaker Skip Shea, who unveils his deeply personal first feature, Trinity, to a hometown audience.
As usual, we’ll have: Our kid-friendly annual Saturday Morning Cartoons program with cereal smorgasbord, programmed by renowned curator, author, and Monster Fest Festival Director Kier-La Janisse; a veritable bounty of shorts programming celebrating fantastic music videos, animation, transgressive horror; and more! So. Much. More!
Individual screening ticket prices vary and will be available online and at the Brattle Theatre box office on the day of screening. Festival passes, which include admission to all films and parties, are available at a significantly reduced rate through BUFF’s ongoing Kickstarter through March 17th. Passes, thereafter, will be available for $180 at www.bostonunderground.org/tickets.
Festival Passes & Ticket Package Presales are available through Kickstarter until March 17th: bit.ly/KickstartBUFF19
###
BOSTON UNDERGROUND FIRST WAVE:
BITCH - East Coast Premiere
Marianna Palka | USA | 2017
Caged in the suburbs of our discontent, a woman (Marianna Palka) snaps and enters a fugue state, consumed by the psyche of a vicious dog. Her philandering, stay-at-work husband (Jason Ritter) must grudgingly assume the role of family caretaker, forcing him to engage with his four children and sister-in-law (Jaime King) as they attempt to strengthen their familial unit and entice mom back to reality. Marianna Palka writes, directs, and stars in her bitingly funny and profound fourth feature.
DAVE MADE A MAZE - East Coast Premiere
Bill Watterson | USA | 2017
Dave (Nick Thune) is an artist who has yet to complete anything of significance in his short career; out of frustration, he builds an elaborate box fort in his living room. When his girlfriend and friends (including Kirsten Vangsness, Adam Busch, and Meera Rohit Kumbhani) enter against his protests, he must save them all from a series of fantastical pitfalls, booby traps, and creatures of his own creation. Actor Bill Watterson writes and directs his hilarious and idiosyncratic first feature.
HOUNDS OF LOVE - East Coast Premiere
Ben Young | Australia | 2016
In Ben Young’s tense, chilling feature debut, 17-year-old Vicki Maloney is randomly abducted from a suburban street by a disturbed couple and held prisoner in their home. As she observes the volatile dynamic between her captors, she soon realizes the key to survival lies in driving a wedge between them.
PREVENGE - East Coast Premiere
Alice Lowe | UK | 2016
In her directorial debut, Alice Lowe (Sightseers, Hot Fuzz, Garth Marenghi’s Dark Place) writes, directs and stars in a pitch black comedic tale of vengeance about seven-months-pregnant Widow Ruth and the unborn serial killer that compels her on her homicidal rampage.
SAINT BERNARD - North American Premiere
Gabe Bartalos | USA/France | 2013
Prolific creature designer Gabe Bartalos (Brain Damage, Tim and Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie, Gremlins 2, and the Leprechaun series) crafts a phantasmagoric vision of a classical music conductor descending into insanity with his sophomore feature. Seemingly vanished from a short-lived run on the festival circuit in 2014, BUFF is proud to give this must-see nightmare, and the visionary filmmaker who created it, a proper North American premiere.
68 KILL - East Coast Premiere
Trent Haaga | USA | 2017
Trent Haaga (writer of Deadgirl, Cheap Thrills) returns to the director’s chair following 2011’s Chop with a punk-rock after hours thriller about femininity, masculinity and the theft of $68,000. When Liza (AnnaLynne McCord) asks her boyfriend Chip (Matthew Gray Gubler) to help her rob her wealthy sugar daddy, he can’t say no. Once they step into the man’s home, Chip & Liza embark on a breakneck roadtrip to hell. Adapted from Bryan Smith’s 2013, no-holds-barred crime novel of the same name.
THE VOID - New England Premiere
Jeremy Gillespie, Steven Kostanski | Canada | 2016
ASTRON-6’s Jeremy Gillespie & Steven Kostanski return with a Carpenteresque saga of brutal, cosmic dread, packed with creatures straight out of hell. In the middle of a routine patrol, officer Daniel Carter (Aaron Poole) happens upon a blood-soaked figure limping down a deserted stretch of road in the middle of the night. When he rushes the young man to a nearby rural hospital, he finds that patients and personnel are transforming into something... inhuman. As the horror intensifies, Carter must lead the other survivors into the subterranean depths of the hospital in a desperate bid to save their lives and end the nightmare before it's too late.
TRINITY - Boston Premiere
Skip Shea | USA | 2016
Award-winning Massachusetts-based filmmaker, writer, artist and actor Skip Shea brings to life a deeply personal and disturbing first feature based on the true story about a moment in the life of a clergy abuse survivor. While at a coffee shop, a man accidentally bumps into the priest who abused him when he was a child, triggering a surreal, PTSD-induced dissociative moment that sends him on a twisted journey through his past.
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Stay tuned for upcoming announcements, including our second wave of feature film title announcements, attending guests, and a bountiful program of short films. The full BUFF 2017 Program, and individual ticket sales, will go live on March 8, 2017 at www.bostonunderground.org & www.brattlefilm.org.
Attachments area
Devil in the Dark (2016)
DEVIL IN THE DARK is a good little film. When it gets going it is a nice little thriller about two brothers who try to heal their estrangement by going off on a hunting trip only to find that there is something evil in the woods.
Part family drama, part horror film DEVIL IN THE DARK takes a little bit to get going. The film starts off with a scary moment as the two brother’s father tries to find them when they were children. The sequence ends with one of the boys staring at something in the dark. It’s a creepy moment that is the last one for a while. While there are some nice moments the film doesn’t really gain traction again until the brothers get into the woods. It’s only then that the film really gets back into scary territory.
I’m going to do something here that is not a supposed to be done by a film writer and let you know straight out that my feelings for the film were affected by the fact that I’ve seen six or seven (maybe more) similar films in the last couple of months. Distributors of all sizes seem to be releasing a whole spate of evil in the woods films and having sat through a good number of them they have started to blend together. While some have been good and some bad none have really stood out. I’ve reviewed some and I’ve ignored some- and I was going to pass on this film except for two things, one the performances of the two leads are very good and worth seeing, and most importantly the sting in the tail is perfect. Understated, real and on point. I got to the end and thought “yes that was worth it”. It’s a small moment, and I don’t want to over sell it but that small moment made the film worth it for me.
DEVIL IN THE DARK is out on VOD nationwide in the U.S. from Momentum Pictures on Tuesday, March 7th.
Part family drama, part horror film DEVIL IN THE DARK takes a little bit to get going. The film starts off with a scary moment as the two brother’s father tries to find them when they were children. The sequence ends with one of the boys staring at something in the dark. It’s a creepy moment that is the last one for a while. While there are some nice moments the film doesn’t really gain traction again until the brothers get into the woods. It’s only then that the film really gets back into scary territory.
I’m going to do something here that is not a supposed to be done by a film writer and let you know straight out that my feelings for the film were affected by the fact that I’ve seen six or seven (maybe more) similar films in the last couple of months. Distributors of all sizes seem to be releasing a whole spate of evil in the woods films and having sat through a good number of them they have started to blend together. While some have been good and some bad none have really stood out. I’ve reviewed some and I’ve ignored some- and I was going to pass on this film except for two things, one the performances of the two leads are very good and worth seeing, and most importantly the sting in the tail is perfect. Understated, real and on point. I got to the end and thought “yes that was worth it”. It’s a small moment, and I don’t want to over sell it but that small moment made the film worth it for me.
DEVIL IN THE DARK is out on VOD nationwide in the U.S. from Momentum Pictures on Tuesday, March 7th.
Saturday, March 4, 2017
THE WORLD OF US (2016) New York International Children's Film Festival 2017
One has to praise The New York International Children's Film Festival for programming THE WORLD OF US for kids. The film is a warts and... warts... look at the life of a school girl who is an outsider. Its a film that rocked the adults in the audience and had Joe Bendel and myself just looking at each other and not wanting to go there.
Sun is a sweet little girl who is the outcast of her class. Constantly picked on and chosen last for everything. She is abused at every turn by anyone her own age. During summer break she meets and becomes friends with Jia, the new girl in town. The girls bond but when school starts up Jia moves away from Sun for the cool girls, the leader of which was also once Sun's friend until she too turned.
For anyone who was an outsider this is going to be a painful reminder of the slings and arrows suffered growing up. This film hurt because it gets it all dead on right. This is the way it feels growing up and how it feels when friends turn unexpectedly. I was watching pieces of my life play over again and I was shifting uncomfortably in my seat. Suddenly I was 7 or 8 again.
To be honest the picking on Sun isn't constant, but it's close, and it feels like it. I freely admit that I was much more sensitive to it since there is a tendency in many Korean films to have characters belittle and abuse each other. I don't like it in action movies and thrillers and I surely don't like it when kids do it to each other especially when I know it's what many kids do.
Credit director Ga-eun Yoon with making a film that doesn't sugar coat it. The girls in this film are terrible as often girls of that age can be in packs. The lives of both Sun and Jia are not happy, their home lives are a mess and we see it all. To be certain their parents care but at the same time they can't be there all the time and Sun is left to figure it out herself.
In trying to discuss the film afterward with JB we both were thrilled that NYICFF showed the film because perhaps it will teach some kids some empathy for what it's like when you are picked on. We also liked that New York audiences were getting a chance to see it since the film seems destined to fall between the cracks, it maybe too intense for kids and distributors may not touch it because they think it won't play well for adults since it has children in the lead- but it will,
I do want to take exception to the festival reading of the end of the film. While not dire I'm not so certain that the ending is as hopeful as they would want to make out. I think it can be taken several different ways.
Uncomfortableness aside. I do think this is a great film on every level and for those who want to see a perfect reflection of life I highly recommend the film.
THE WORLD OF US plays again March 12. For tickets and more details go here.
Sun is a sweet little girl who is the outcast of her class. Constantly picked on and chosen last for everything. She is abused at every turn by anyone her own age. During summer break she meets and becomes friends with Jia, the new girl in town. The girls bond but when school starts up Jia moves away from Sun for the cool girls, the leader of which was also once Sun's friend until she too turned.
For anyone who was an outsider this is going to be a painful reminder of the slings and arrows suffered growing up. This film hurt because it gets it all dead on right. This is the way it feels growing up and how it feels when friends turn unexpectedly. I was watching pieces of my life play over again and I was shifting uncomfortably in my seat. Suddenly I was 7 or 8 again.
To be honest the picking on Sun isn't constant, but it's close, and it feels like it. I freely admit that I was much more sensitive to it since there is a tendency in many Korean films to have characters belittle and abuse each other. I don't like it in action movies and thrillers and I surely don't like it when kids do it to each other especially when I know it's what many kids do.
Credit director Ga-eun Yoon with making a film that doesn't sugar coat it. The girls in this film are terrible as often girls of that age can be in packs. The lives of both Sun and Jia are not happy, their home lives are a mess and we see it all. To be certain their parents care but at the same time they can't be there all the time and Sun is left to figure it out herself.
In trying to discuss the film afterward with JB we both were thrilled that NYICFF showed the film because perhaps it will teach some kids some empathy for what it's like when you are picked on. We also liked that New York audiences were getting a chance to see it since the film seems destined to fall between the cracks, it maybe too intense for kids and distributors may not touch it because they think it won't play well for adults since it has children in the lead- but it will,
I do want to take exception to the festival reading of the end of the film. While not dire I'm not so certain that the ending is as hopeful as they would want to make out. I think it can be taken several different ways.
Uncomfortableness aside. I do think this is a great film on every level and for those who want to see a perfect reflection of life I highly recommend the film.
THE WORLD OF US plays again March 12. For tickets and more details go here.
Bloodrunners (2016)
BLOODRUNNERS is a goof. A direct to video period vampire film it has the feel of a bunch of friends getting together to tell a good story and to have a good time. This is not to imply that this is a bad film rather that it completely enjoyable, but not necessarily scary.
Taking place in 1933, the tail end of prohibition, the film follows corrupt cop Jack Malone as he goes about shake down bootleggers. When he tries to shake down a new speak easy/jazz club he finds himself in over his head when he discovers that the man running the club (Ice T) isn’t just a mean jazz trumpeter but an ancient vampire who isn’t interested in hooch.
Seemingly made with tongue in cheek and with a desire to play dress up BLOODRUNNERS is a great deal of fun. Once you realize that the film isn’t going to be a nonstop scare fest- it’s more a prohibition crime drama for most of it- the film settles in and becomes the sort of thing is perfect watching on the couch with a big bowl of popcorn on a rainy Saturday night.
There are a couple of reasons why BLOODRUNNERS works as well as it does despite it’s low budget
First the film isn’t content on just being on thing. Not only is it a vampire film but it uses those tropes to turn the prohibition crime drama on it’s head. Things don’t go as expected. On top of that writer' director Dan Lantz does something that most writers of the last five or six decades never do and that is tie the character back to the First World War. Say what you will, Lantz brings in the Great War to stunning effect. The was something that hung over the whole lost generation and prohibition but once the Second World War happened people and especially Hollywood stopped referring back to it despite it haunting everyone who was there.
The second reason the film works is that cast is into the film. To be certain it’s clear at times that they are having a little too good time playing dress up, but at the same time they are clearly into what they are doing. There is real delight in the making of the film. Ice T is wonderful as the lead vampire. He is having a blast playing a jazz age trumpeter/bootlegger/vampire and his delight carries over. It’s a role that is going to be a revelation to anyone who only knows his music or his role on Law and Order SVU. He is so good that it’s entirely possible that he may lose the type casting and be able to take on other roles.
I had a blast seeing BLOODRUNNERS. While it isn’t the scariest film ever made it is a great deal of fun and I smiled all the way through.
Definitely worth a look when the film hits home video and VOD on March 7
Taking place in 1933, the tail end of prohibition, the film follows corrupt cop Jack Malone as he goes about shake down bootleggers. When he tries to shake down a new speak easy/jazz club he finds himself in over his head when he discovers that the man running the club (Ice T) isn’t just a mean jazz trumpeter but an ancient vampire who isn’t interested in hooch.
Seemingly made with tongue in cheek and with a desire to play dress up BLOODRUNNERS is a great deal of fun. Once you realize that the film isn’t going to be a nonstop scare fest- it’s more a prohibition crime drama for most of it- the film settles in and becomes the sort of thing is perfect watching on the couch with a big bowl of popcorn on a rainy Saturday night.
There are a couple of reasons why BLOODRUNNERS works as well as it does despite it’s low budget
First the film isn’t content on just being on thing. Not only is it a vampire film but it uses those tropes to turn the prohibition crime drama on it’s head. Things don’t go as expected. On top of that writer' director Dan Lantz does something that most writers of the last five or six decades never do and that is tie the character back to the First World War. Say what you will, Lantz brings in the Great War to stunning effect. The was something that hung over the whole lost generation and prohibition but once the Second World War happened people and especially Hollywood stopped referring back to it despite it haunting everyone who was there.
The second reason the film works is that cast is into the film. To be certain it’s clear at times that they are having a little too good time playing dress up, but at the same time they are clearly into what they are doing. There is real delight in the making of the film. Ice T is wonderful as the lead vampire. He is having a blast playing a jazz age trumpeter/bootlegger/vampire and his delight carries over. It’s a role that is going to be a revelation to anyone who only knows his music or his role on Law and Order SVU. He is so good that it’s entirely possible that he may lose the type casting and be able to take on other roles.
I had a blast seeing BLOODRUNNERS. While it isn’t the scariest film ever made it is a great deal of fun and I smiled all the way through.
Definitely worth a look when the film hits home video and VOD on March 7
GHOSTS OF DARKNESS
Two paranormal investigators from opposite ends of the belief spectrum must work together to unlock the mysteries behind a haunted house where murders have been occurring for hundreds of years.
Good but unremarkable haunted house film will keep you watching to see how it all comes out, but may not really scare you thanks to a few uneven performances and lighting that never brings on any chills (everything seems brightly lit). I really like the idea behind the film I just wish the execution was a bit better.
Worth a shot on a slow night
GHOSTS OF DARKNESS hits VOD tuesday
Friday, March 3, 2017
2017 Milwaukee Film Festival Call for Entries Now Open
Festival Offers to Pay for All Work Screened; Free Entry for All Films; $34,500 in Cash Prizes Promised
MILWAUKEE – Tuesday, February 28, 2017 – Milwaukee Film is now accepting entries for the 9th annual Milwaukee Film Festival, Sept. 28 - Oct. 12, 2017. Works of all genres, forms, and lengths will be considered. The deadline for all entries is Monday, June 12. The festival is in its sixth year of offering free submission for all films and, for the third consecutive year, Milwaukee Film will offer to pay for all work that is screened in the festival.
Milwaukee Film’s Artistic and Executive Director Jonathan Jackson said, “It’s been four months since our festival ended, and we’re ready to start watching films and conceptualizing the content for our 2017 edition. In addition, we are proud to continue our commitment to paying artists.”
Steven Caple Jr., director of The Land which was featured at the 2016 Milwaukee Film Festival, said, “It’s a great festival. For directors, it’s what you want out of screenings. This place has a setting that sparks your love for filmmaking. Everyone is enthusiastic and supportive. Milwaukee’s festival is very intimate and the one-on-one networking goes a long way.” During his visit to the Milwaukee Film Festival, HBO announced that Caple Jr. would be writing an Emmett Till miniseries from a producing team that includes Jay-Z, Will Smith, and Casey Affleck.
The Milwaukee Film Festival offers additional support to filmmakers in the form of cash awards. In 2017, that total is expected to be over $34,000. The following juried cash awards will be presented, with additional possible awards to be announced prior to the festival:
Herzfeld Competition Award ($10,000)
Cream City Cinema Jury Award ($5,000)
Milwaukee Music Video Award ($5,000)
Black Lens Jury Award ($5,000)
Documentary Jury Award ($5,000)
Cream City Cinema College Filmmaker Award ($2,500)
Shorter Is Better Award ($1,000)
Kids Choice Short Film Award ($1,000)
In addition, there will be two non-juried audience awards, presented by Allan H. (Bud) and Suzanne L. Selig.
The entry form and complete information regarding eligibility for the 2017 Milwaukee Film Festival Call for Entries is available at http://mkefilm.org/call-for-entries. Questions about submissions may be directed to entry@mkefilm.org.
The 2017 Milwaukee Film Festival runs September 28 - October 12. Passes and ticket 6-packs go on sale in May, with the best prices available to Milwaukee Film Members. For information on how to become a Member, visit http://mkefilm.org/membership.
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About Milwaukee Film Festival
More than 76,899 people attended the 2016 film festival, which screened 283 films and boasted 87 sold-out screenings. Among the lineup were award-winning films such as Cameraperson, The Fits,
Life, Animated, Morris from America, Queen of Katwe, and Tanna as well as special event screenings: the silent film classic, Metropolis, with live musical accompaniment by Alloy Orchestra, and the classic music documentary, Stop Making Sense, which turned into a 500-person dance party for the fourth year in a row.
More than 218 filmmakers and industry professionals were in attendance for last year’s festival, including Academy Award-winning filmmaker John Ridley (12 Years a Slave), Emmy-winning filmmaker Sam Pollard (Two Trains Runnin’), Quinton Aaron (The Blind Side), Martin Starr (Silicon Valley, Freaks and Geeks), and Mae Whitman (Arrested Development, Parenthood).
About Milwaukee Film
Milwaukee Film is a nonprofit arts organization dedicated to entertaining, educating, and engaging our community through cinematic experiences. In addition to our annual 15-day Milwaukee Film Festival, Milwaukee Film provides a number of year-round opportunities for film lovers, filmmakers, and educators. For more information, visit us online:
mkefilm.org | facebook.com/MilwaukeeFilm | Twitter: https://twitter.com/mkefilm | Instagram: @mkefilm
The 9th Annual Milwaukee Film Festival will be held September 28 – October 12, 2017.
About the Milwaukee Film Board of Directors
Milwaukee Film’s independent board is made up of the following members: Chris Abele (Past President); John P. Bania; Donna Baumgartner; Karen Ellenbecker; Jeff Fitzsimmons; Alexander P. Fraser (President); Cecelia Gore; Bill Haberman (Past President); Carmen Haberman; Susan Haise; Katie Heil; Patti Keating Kahn; Michael G. Klein; Tracey L. Klein (Past President); Michael J. Koss Jr.; Kenneth C. Krei; Mary Ann LaBahn; Alexander Lasry; Steve Laughlin (Past President); Emilia Layden; Marianne Lubar; Sara Meaney; Steve Mech; Barry Poltermann; Bob Pothier; John Ridley; Joseph A. Rock; Ramona Rogers-Windsor; Lacey Sadoff; Dave Stamm; Julia Taylor; John Utz. Emeritus members: Tom Barrett, Jacqueline Strayer.
MILWAUKEE – Tuesday, February 28, 2017 – Milwaukee Film is now accepting entries for the 9th annual Milwaukee Film Festival, Sept. 28 - Oct. 12, 2017. Works of all genres, forms, and lengths will be considered. The deadline for all entries is Monday, June 12. The festival is in its sixth year of offering free submission for all films and, for the third consecutive year, Milwaukee Film will offer to pay for all work that is screened in the festival.
Milwaukee Film’s Artistic and Executive Director Jonathan Jackson said, “It’s been four months since our festival ended, and we’re ready to start watching films and conceptualizing the content for our 2017 edition. In addition, we are proud to continue our commitment to paying artists.”
Steven Caple Jr., director of The Land which was featured at the 2016 Milwaukee Film Festival, said, “It’s a great festival. For directors, it’s what you want out of screenings. This place has a setting that sparks your love for filmmaking. Everyone is enthusiastic and supportive. Milwaukee’s festival is very intimate and the one-on-one networking goes a long way.” During his visit to the Milwaukee Film Festival, HBO announced that Caple Jr. would be writing an Emmett Till miniseries from a producing team that includes Jay-Z, Will Smith, and Casey Affleck.
The Milwaukee Film Festival offers additional support to filmmakers in the form of cash awards. In 2017, that total is expected to be over $34,000. The following juried cash awards will be presented, with additional possible awards to be announced prior to the festival:
Herzfeld Competition Award ($10,000)
Cream City Cinema Jury Award ($5,000)
Milwaukee Music Video Award ($5,000)
Black Lens Jury Award ($5,000)
Documentary Jury Award ($5,000)
Cream City Cinema College Filmmaker Award ($2,500)
Shorter Is Better Award ($1,000)
Kids Choice Short Film Award ($1,000)
In addition, there will be two non-juried audience awards, presented by Allan H. (Bud) and Suzanne L. Selig.
The entry form and complete information regarding eligibility for the 2017 Milwaukee Film Festival Call for Entries is available at http://mkefilm.org/call-for-entries. Questions about submissions may be directed to entry@mkefilm.org.
The 2017 Milwaukee Film Festival runs September 28 - October 12. Passes and ticket 6-packs go on sale in May, with the best prices available to Milwaukee Film Members. For information on how to become a Member, visit http://mkefilm.org/membership.
###
About Milwaukee Film Festival
More than 76,899 people attended the 2016 film festival, which screened 283 films and boasted 87 sold-out screenings. Among the lineup were award-winning films such as Cameraperson, The Fits,
Life, Animated, Morris from America, Queen of Katwe, and Tanna as well as special event screenings: the silent film classic, Metropolis, with live musical accompaniment by Alloy Orchestra, and the classic music documentary, Stop Making Sense, which turned into a 500-person dance party for the fourth year in a row.
More than 218 filmmakers and industry professionals were in attendance for last year’s festival, including Academy Award-winning filmmaker John Ridley (12 Years a Slave), Emmy-winning filmmaker Sam Pollard (Two Trains Runnin’), Quinton Aaron (The Blind Side), Martin Starr (Silicon Valley, Freaks and Geeks), and Mae Whitman (Arrested Development, Parenthood).
About Milwaukee Film
Milwaukee Film is a nonprofit arts organization dedicated to entertaining, educating, and engaging our community through cinematic experiences. In addition to our annual 15-day Milwaukee Film Festival, Milwaukee Film provides a number of year-round opportunities for film lovers, filmmakers, and educators. For more information, visit us online:
mkefilm.org | facebook.com/MilwaukeeFilm | Twitter: https://twitter.com/mkefilm | Instagram: @mkefilm
The 9th Annual Milwaukee Film Festival will be held September 28 – October 12, 2017.
About the Milwaukee Film Board of Directors
Milwaukee Film’s independent board is made up of the following members: Chris Abele (Past President); John P. Bania; Donna Baumgartner; Karen Ellenbecker; Jeff Fitzsimmons; Alexander P. Fraser (President); Cecelia Gore; Bill Haberman (Past President); Carmen Haberman; Susan Haise; Katie Heil; Patti Keating Kahn; Michael G. Klein; Tracey L. Klein (Past President); Michael J. Koss Jr.; Kenneth C. Krei; Mary Ann LaBahn; Alexander Lasry; Steve Laughlin (Past President); Emilia Layden; Marianne Lubar; Sara Meaney; Steve Mech; Barry Poltermann; Bob Pothier; John Ridley; Joseph A. Rock; Ramona Rogers-Windsor; Lacey Sadoff; Dave Stamm; Julia Taylor; John Utz. Emeritus members: Tom Barrett, Jacqueline Strayer.
Los Angeles' The Cinefamily presents INTO THE ZONE: A WEEKEND WITH ADAM CURTIS (March 17th - 19th, 2017) a rare and singular weekend with internationally acclaimed and BAFTA award-winning political documentarian and journalist Adam Curtis.
If you've been a long time reader of Unseen Films you know we are HUGE fans of Adam Curtis so we are thrilled that his his newest work HYPERNORMALISATION is being screened in Los Angeles in about two weeks with the man himself in attendance.
If you don't know Curtis's work you should. A brilliant documentarian/essayist he has a brilliant way of seeing the world and putting everything- and I do mean everything all together. He will expand your mind and change how you see the universe and yourself.
I wish I could go but I'm stuck in New York. Below is a the press release on the series which is the new film, films related to it and talks by Curtis
If you are anywhere near Los Angeles go.
Los Angeles - March 3, 2017: Los Angeles' The Cinefamily presents INTO THE ZONE: A WEEKEND WITH ADAM CURTIS, Friday March 17th - Sunday March 19th, a rare and singular weekend with internationally acclaimed and BAFTA award-winning political documentarian and journalist Adam Curtis.
Mr. Curtis will present the U.S. theatrical premiere screening of his acclaimed 2016 BBC documentary HyperNormalisation, a prescient work about how politicians and other power brokers construct new, slippery realities. He will also host and curate a weekend of films that explore the themes laid out in the film.
Additional highlights of the weekend include a "Show & Tell" evening talk with Curtis, and a very special Q&A with Curtis moderated by Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner (who cites Curtis' iconic film The Century of the Self as a key influence on Mad Men).
All screenings will take place in Los Angeles at The Cinefamily, located at 611 N. Fairfax Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90036.
Additional information and ticket sales:
http://www.cinefamily.org/films/into-the-zone-adam-curtis/
INTO THE ZONE: A WEEKEND WITH ADAM CURTIS - Schedule:
Friday, March 17th
7:30pm "Show & Tell" w/ Adam Curtis in-person
10:00pm Starship Troopers (Dir: Paul Verhoeven, 1997) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
Saturday, March 18th
3:00pm Orpheus (Dir: Jean Cocteau, 1950) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
6:30pm HyperNormalisation (Dir: Adam Curtis, 2016) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
Sunday, March 19th
6:00pm The Passenger (Dir: Michelangelo Antonioni, 1975) w/ Q&A moderated by Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner and Adam Curtis in-person
9:45pm Blow Out (Dir: Brian De Palma 1981) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
About HyperNormalisation
Adam Curtis's acclaimed 2016 BBC documentary employs masterfully edited found footage to investigate how, at a time of confusing and inexplicable world events, politicians and other power brokers construct new, slippery realities. Curtis tells a story that begins in 1975 in New York and Damascus, and ends with today's world. Cast: Adam Curtis, Donald J. Trump, Vladimir Putin.
Statement from Adam Curtis on his work and HyperNormalisation
"Those in power in society - the politicians, the journalists, the experts - maintain their power by telling us stories about the world. Those stories tell us what is true and what is false, what is right and wrong, and what is real - and what is illusion. But there come times when these stories begin to break down. And people start to distrust those in power - and their definition of what is real and what is fake. At that point you enter the Zone. The film HyperNormalisation tells the story of how we got to this place. It is also about the new systems of power that we cannot see - because we are trapped inside the Zone."
About Adam Curtis
Adam Curtis is an award-winning widely influential documentary filmmaker and journalist. He works for BBC television in London. His acclaimed films include The Century of the Self (2002), The Power of Nightmares (2004), All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (2011), Bitter Lake (2015) - and most recently HyperNormalisation (2016). His films go back into the recent past to tell dramatic stories that lead the viewer to look again at the present day - and help them make sense of it. They try to show how power really flows in today's complex society, not just through politics - but through science, public relations and advertising, psychology, computer networks and finance. Curtis has also done live shows with the immersive theatre group Punchdrunk and the band Massive Attack. His films have been shown at the Cannes film festival and have won awards - including 6 BAFTAs.
About The Cinefamily
THE CINEFAMILY is a Los Angeles nonprofit organization of movie lovers devoted to finding and presenting interesting and unusual programs of exceptional, distinctive, weird and wonderful films. The Cinefamily's mission is to reinvigorate film culture by fostering a spirit of community and a sense of discovery. We believe that movies work best as social experiences: they are more meaningful, funnier and scarier when shared with others.
The Cinefamily was founded in 2007 by brothers Dan and Sammy Harkham and Hadrian Belove, founder of Cinefile Video. The Cinefamily currently averages 14 shows per week, many of which are enhanced with special guests, live music, dance parties, potlucks, and other kinds of social fun. Over 65,000 patrons visit the Cinefamily annually. Please visit cinefamily.org for more information.
If you don't know Curtis's work you should. A brilliant documentarian/essayist he has a brilliant way of seeing the world and putting everything- and I do mean everything all together. He will expand your mind and change how you see the universe and yourself.
I wish I could go but I'm stuck in New York. Below is a the press release on the series which is the new film, films related to it and talks by Curtis
If you are anywhere near Los Angeles go.
Los Angeles - March 3, 2017: Los Angeles' The Cinefamily presents INTO THE ZONE: A WEEKEND WITH ADAM CURTIS, Friday March 17th - Sunday March 19th, a rare and singular weekend with internationally acclaimed and BAFTA award-winning political documentarian and journalist Adam Curtis.
Mr. Curtis will present the U.S. theatrical premiere screening of his acclaimed 2016 BBC documentary HyperNormalisation, a prescient work about how politicians and other power brokers construct new, slippery realities. He will also host and curate a weekend of films that explore the themes laid out in the film.
Additional highlights of the weekend include a "Show & Tell" evening talk with Curtis, and a very special Q&A with Curtis moderated by Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner (who cites Curtis' iconic film The Century of the Self as a key influence on Mad Men).
All screenings will take place in Los Angeles at The Cinefamily, located at 611 N. Fairfax Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90036.
Additional information and ticket sales:
http://www.cinefamily.org/films/into-the-zone-adam-curtis/
INTO THE ZONE: A WEEKEND WITH ADAM CURTIS - Schedule:
Friday, March 17th
7:30pm "Show & Tell" w/ Adam Curtis in-person
10:00pm Starship Troopers (Dir: Paul Verhoeven, 1997) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
Saturday, March 18th
3:00pm Orpheus (Dir: Jean Cocteau, 1950) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
6:30pm HyperNormalisation (Dir: Adam Curtis, 2016) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
Sunday, March 19th
6:00pm The Passenger (Dir: Michelangelo Antonioni, 1975) w/ Q&A moderated by Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner and Adam Curtis in-person
9:45pm Blow Out (Dir: Brian De Palma 1981) w/ Adam Curtis in-person
About HyperNormalisation
Adam Curtis's acclaimed 2016 BBC documentary employs masterfully edited found footage to investigate how, at a time of confusing and inexplicable world events, politicians and other power brokers construct new, slippery realities. Curtis tells a story that begins in 1975 in New York and Damascus, and ends with today's world. Cast: Adam Curtis, Donald J. Trump, Vladimir Putin.
Statement from Adam Curtis on his work and HyperNormalisation
"Those in power in society - the politicians, the journalists, the experts - maintain their power by telling us stories about the world. Those stories tell us what is true and what is false, what is right and wrong, and what is real - and what is illusion. But there come times when these stories begin to break down. And people start to distrust those in power - and their definition of what is real and what is fake. At that point you enter the Zone. The film HyperNormalisation tells the story of how we got to this place. It is also about the new systems of power that we cannot see - because we are trapped inside the Zone."
About Adam Curtis
Adam Curtis is an award-winning widely influential documentary filmmaker and journalist. He works for BBC television in London. His acclaimed films include The Century of the Self (2002), The Power of Nightmares (2004), All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (2011), Bitter Lake (2015) - and most recently HyperNormalisation (2016). His films go back into the recent past to tell dramatic stories that lead the viewer to look again at the present day - and help them make sense of it. They try to show how power really flows in today's complex society, not just through politics - but through science, public relations and advertising, psychology, computer networks and finance. Curtis has also done live shows with the immersive theatre group Punchdrunk and the band Massive Attack. His films have been shown at the Cannes film festival and have won awards - including 6 BAFTAs.
About The Cinefamily
THE CINEFAMILY is a Los Angeles nonprofit organization of movie lovers devoted to finding and presenting interesting and unusual programs of exceptional, distinctive, weird and wonderful films. The Cinefamily's mission is to reinvigorate film culture by fostering a spirit of community and a sense of discovery. We believe that movies work best as social experiences: they are more meaningful, funnier and scarier when shared with others.
The Cinefamily was founded in 2007 by brothers Dan and Sammy Harkham and Hadrian Belove, founder of Cinefile Video. The Cinefamily currently averages 14 shows per week, many of which are enhanced with special guests, live music, dance parties, potlucks, and other kinds of social fun. Over 65,000 patrons visit the Cinefamily annually. Please visit cinefamily.org for more information.
Special Guests at Metrograph in March/April Olivier Assayas, Madeline Anderson, Terence Davies, Kelly Reichardt, David Byrne, James Gray, and more!
March 10 Manfred Kirchheimer Presents Canners
Manfred Kirchheimer’s (Stations of the Elevated) deeply humane, Whitmanesque Canners receives a one-week run from March 10-16. Kirchheimer will appear in-person on March 10 following the 7:00pm screening.
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March 11 Olivier Assayas and Greta Gerwig In-Person Q&A for Clean
Assayas To Introduce Demonlover
On the heels of the release of his new film Personal Shopper, Olivier Assayas will appear in-person to present Clean and Demonlover. The third film in his "International Trilogy," Boarding Gate, will also screen. Assayas will be joined by actress Greta Gerwig for a Q&A following Clean, and he will introduce Demonlover. Special thanks to UniFrance and Air France. \
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March 11 Madeline Anderson: Three Films
Documentary titan Madeline Anderson will appear in-person presenting three films: Integration Report 1, A Tribute to Malcolm X, and I Am Somebody. The program will repeat on March 12, without Anderson appearing in-person.
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March 14-15 agnés b.: Rebellion, Resistance, Fun
Fashion designer, producer, and filmmaker agnés b. will present five films: The Asphalt Jungle, The Pope of Greenwich Village, It's a Gift, Z, and Women in Love on March 14 and 15. She will appear in-person at The Asphalt Jungle.
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March 17 Caveh Zahedi Presents The Show About the Show
Legendary independent filmmaker Caveh Zahedi will appear in-person on March 17 to present The Show About the Show, which receives an exclusive one-week engagement at Metrograph, through March 23.
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March 18 David Byrne Presents Stop Making Sense
Talking Heads frontman and NY legend David Byrne will appear in-person on March 18 for both screenings of Stop Making Sense, Jonathan Demme's legendary concert doc.
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March 18 Kelly Reichardt Presents Certain Women and Meek's Cutoff
The great Kelly Reichardt will appear in-person March 18 to introduce and participate in Q&As for two of her best films: Meek's Cutoff and Certain Women.
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March 21 Memory Short Film Program with Filmmakers In-Person
"Memory Short Film Program" is an exclusive collection of short films by award-winning and emerging filmmakers. This one night only event consists of a mix of premieres and recent favorites from, among others, the New York Film Festival, SXSW and AFI Docs. Filmmakers Zia Anger, John Wilson, Sam Kuhn, Romain Gavras, Sophie Savidies, and more will appear in-person.
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March 29 Terence Davies Presents The Long Day Closes and Tammy and the Bachelor
The late Debbie Reynolds' gorgeous, mournful song "Tammy" provides the bridge to this program: The Long Day Closes and Tammy and the Bachelor. Davies will introduce and participate in Q&A for The Long Day Closes and introduce Tammy and the Bachelor.
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April 7-9 Mick Rock and Barbaby Clay In-Person for SHOT! The Psycho-Spiritual Mantra of Rock
Rock-n-roll's greatest living photographer Mick Rock will appear opening weekend for SHOT! The Psycho-Spiritual Mantra of Rock, along will filmmaker Barbaby Clay. Showtimes/details to be announced soon.
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April 8-9 Joan Tewkesbury Presents Nashville and Thieves Like Us
Joan Tewkesbury penned two of Robert Altman's peak accomplishments, Nashville and Thieves Like Us, and will appear in-person presenting both on April 8 and 9.
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April 11 Letterman: The Last Giant of Late Night with Jason Zinoman
Writer Jason Zinoman curated a series of films starring David Letterman, timed to the release of his biography Letterman: The Last Giant of Late Night. Titles include Man on the Moon, Private Parts, Cabin Boy, and Beavis and Butthead Do America. A book signing follows the screening of Cabin Boy on April 11.
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April 12 James Gray Presents The Lost City of Z in 35mm
Contemporary classicist James Gray will appear in-person on April 12 to present a special 35mm screening of his latest film The Lost City of Z. From the 12th to 15th of April, all of Gray's films will screen, which include Little Odessa, The Yards, We Own the Night, Two Lovers, and The Immigrant.
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April 13 Too Much and Not the Mood with Durga Chew-Bose
Timed to her inspired and visionary collection of essays, Too Much and Not the Mood, Durga Chew-Bose will appear in-person for Wanda on April 13 and Jeanne Dielman on April 15. A book signing will follow Wanda.
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April 14 My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea with Dash Shaw and more!
Dash Shaw's sensational My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea will receive a two-week exclusive NY run beginning April 14. Shaw and additional guests will appear in-person opening weekend.
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April 26 Paul Auster Presents Laurel and Hardy
On the occasion of the publication of Paul Auster's new book 4 3 2 1, Auster presents three Laurel and Hardy two-reelers featured prominently in the book: The Music Box, Helpmates, and Busy Bodies.
For more information on these and other screenings go to the Metrograph website.
DARK BELOW (2015)
DARK BELOW tells the story of a woman who is beaten and drugged by her dive instructor husband (I think that's who he is) and then dumped under a frozen lake in such away as to make it look like an accident happened and has to fight to stay alive as he struggles to keep her under water.
Presentation is everything and the presentation here is either going to thrill you or make you throw things at the screen. Told with out words and seemingly in endless slow motion DARK BELOW is an extreme example of form over content. We are suppose to groove on the visuals and music but the trouble is the slow motion destroys the emotion of the performances. it hard to connect with anyone when the film feels slightly more than a version of perfume commercial. Fifteen minutes in I was hoping for some thing more but it just wasn't there.
Normally the lack of words can work to a films advantage but here the lack of connecting details keeps us distant. Yes we know the basic story, but what this woman and this guy were connected never really made sense. I kept having the feeling that I was missing something. (To be honest it's entirely possible I did miss something since after 15 minutes I started not to wholeheartedly look at the screen.)
This is one of those films where I probably should have looked at the press noted but to me that's cheating since most people don't get those. (It probably wouldn't have answered my questions like why her face didn't freeze after hours in the water)
With a listed running time of 75 minutes the film is actually closer to 60 if you remove the end credits. I mention this because even at that brief running time the film feels overlong. To me it feels like this should have been a short but that they decided to expand it by using slow motion.
Not a bad movie as such, it's more a movie that is going to play best if you click with it...
DARK BELOW hits select theaters next Friday March 10th
Presentation is everything and the presentation here is either going to thrill you or make you throw things at the screen. Told with out words and seemingly in endless slow motion DARK BELOW is an extreme example of form over content. We are suppose to groove on the visuals and music but the trouble is the slow motion destroys the emotion of the performances. it hard to connect with anyone when the film feels slightly more than a version of perfume commercial. Fifteen minutes in I was hoping for some thing more but it just wasn't there.
Normally the lack of words can work to a films advantage but here the lack of connecting details keeps us distant. Yes we know the basic story, but what this woman and this guy were connected never really made sense. I kept having the feeling that I was missing something. (To be honest it's entirely possible I did miss something since after 15 minutes I started not to wholeheartedly look at the screen.)
This is one of those films where I probably should have looked at the press noted but to me that's cheating since most people don't get those. (It probably wouldn't have answered my questions like why her face didn't freeze after hours in the water)
With a listed running time of 75 minutes the film is actually closer to 60 if you remove the end credits. I mention this because even at that brief running time the film feels overlong. To me it feels like this should have been a short but that they decided to expand it by using slow motion.
Not a bad movie as such, it's more a movie that is going to play best if you click with it...
DARK BELOW hits select theaters next Friday March 10th
Imaginationland
IMAGINATIONLAND was supposed to be the second South Park film but the studios balked so trey and Matt simply rejiggered it released it as three episodes of the TV show. The result is that one of the most clever animated films is now hidden from the view of most people.
The plot of the show has the boys trying to see if leprechauns are real. If they are Stan will have to suck Cartman's balls. In the process the boys cross over into Imagination land just as terrorists invade with the idea of blowing up the wall between the good part of the world and the bad.
This may very well be the high point of the South Park series. It’s the point where Matt and Trey manage to be incredibly silly while teaching an important lesson about the importance of imagining things and believing in myth. As Stan says late in the story its very possible the made up characters have done more good and given more meaning than real people.
I know these thee shows are important to the guys because not only were they released as a movie on DVD in their own right, Matt and Trey did a commentary track for it where they talk through the whole film. You can see that they are very happy with what they were doing, something that they don’t seem to be with the series as a whole. As many fans of the fan the series has been very hit or miss over the last few years and this was the last time they seemed happiest.
Highly recomended
Thursday, March 2, 2017
Dead Awake (2016) Winter Film Awards
A young woman finds that she is stricken with sleep paralysis and she is hallucinating a dark figure trying to kill her as she sleeps. However it soon transpires that she is not hallucinating and that and evil force is trying to kill not only her but those around her.
Give them points for trying but DEAD AWAKE doesn't quite work. While generating some chills and having an interesting story the film is hurt by the fact that when the evil force comes out characters are lying still in a bed. It just ceases to work after the first time, which is a shame because the film has some nice moments and some pretty good performances.
Worth look for horror fans on an undemanding night
Dory should remain lost- FINDING DORY (20!6)
My displeasure at Finding Dory is such that I have to wonder if Pixar has lost its touch. A needless sequel it annoys more than it charms.
The plot has Dory remembering her parents and deciding to go find them she heads across the ocean to an aquarium where she hooks up with an octopus who wants to be in a place where he will be taken care of and left alone. Meanwhile Marlin and Nemo try to get in to the place.
Feeling more like a series of set pieces then a story the film intentionally brings back most of the characters from the first film whether they belong or not. Most are cameos that that feel shoe horned in. The plot moves from room to room in the aquarium seemingly based on have we rung every joke out of this situation. Yes it results in some great pieces- the otters- and some of the stuff with the octopus- mostly it feels artificial
The biggest problem with the film is the characters. In some cases some of the old characters don’t seem to work. Marlon seems whiney instead of protective. Many of the new characters seem like sitcom refugees (almost anyone Dory interacts with) while suddenly the world is full of creatures who aren’t anthropomorphic. The otters have personality but no characters, and a squid in the first act is a sea beast and not like anyone in Nemo.
The biggest problem is Dory herself. Pushed forward you realize what a limited character she is. The mantra “I have short term attention deficit disorder is repeated way too many times. While I am not offended by the running gag as some have been, I did run out of patience and after 15 minutes I began to physically wince each time it was said. Talk about one note- this is going in the dictionary as the very definition. It seems like it’s every third or fourth line.
While I laughed and smiled at bits (the otters and octopus in particular) mostly I was a annoyed.
I can’t recommend actually paying to see the film
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
The Curious Life of Piter Eustaquio Rengifo Uculmana (2014) WInter FIlm Awards
Puzzle box of a biography is told out of order by various people of a man whose initials spell out Peru.
Okay, this film has me vexed. Very much about something and very much compelling I honestly have no idea what this film is about. The story of a rogue and his adventures is certainly one that is interesting but the fact that it's all jumbled about makes it hard to know what.
Is this really about the man or the country? I'm not too sure..
Watching the film I found that I was both drawn in by the various stories and pushed aside. The stories themselves are compelling but for me everything never really hooked up. I was riveted and fascinated but at the same time the film was making me work so hard at trying to sus it all out my head hurt.
I like the film I just have no idea why or whats the the point.
Definitely worth a look for anyone who likes to work with their films.
The film plays tonight. For tickets and more information go here.
Okay, this film has me vexed. Very much about something and very much compelling I honestly have no idea what this film is about. The story of a rogue and his adventures is certainly one that is interesting but the fact that it's all jumbled about makes it hard to know what.
Is this really about the man or the country? I'm not too sure..
Watching the film I found that I was both drawn in by the various stories and pushed aside. The stories themselves are compelling but for me everything never really hooked up. I was riveted and fascinated but at the same time the film was making me work so hard at trying to sus it all out my head hurt.
I like the film I just have no idea why or whats the the point.
Definitely worth a look for anyone who likes to work with their films.
The film plays tonight. For tickets and more information go here.
Fuck You Jessica Blair (2017) Winter Film Awards
Director Karni Haneman stars, writes and directs an interesting, if not wholly successful inde comedy.
Karni, a detached Israeli meets New Yorker Jessica Blair who is on holiday. As the pair wander through the Israeli countryside they meet up with two Israeli men who, along with Jessica, begin to make her rethink the way things are.
A perfect copy of many American inde comedy buddy films JESSICA BLAIR is a highly intelligent often very funny film that in many ways is better than it's American counter parts. Part of the reason the film succeeds is that its setting and set up are better than the run of the mill. We are not in typical yuppie/hipster land so we don't instantly know the characters. Yes we can make some connections to types in films past but here there is enough variation that things aren't exactly that way. Additionally writer director Haneman doesn't have the characters introduced to us she drops us right into the action and we are left to fend for ourselves. I have to applaud her for treating the audience as a bunch of people who don't need to be spoon fed.
The problem with the film is that Haneman has over written the dialog. People don't act, they talk in long sequences that just go on and on. While the film is full of funny exchanges they all sound scripted. Jessica who is supposed to be from New York doesn't sound authentic but rather as if she were someone's idea of a New Yorker. At times the film plays as if it were meant for the stage with many sequences having limited cuts or camera movements. That's not bad but it makes you wonder how the film was put together. It doesn't quite work and it makes the film feel like Haneman was trying too hard to get everything perfect. She manages to get it but at the cost of the film not seeming real.
I want to suggest that Haneman has spent a bit too much time studying the verbal acrobatics of Kevin Smith or Quentin Tarantino who craft long perfect exchanges of dialog and monolog that sound great but which no one would ever say in real life.
Problems with perfection aside JESSICA BLAIR is a pretty good film and will be worth your time when it plays eventually at a theater near you
Karni, a detached Israeli meets New Yorker Jessica Blair who is on holiday. As the pair wander through the Israeli countryside they meet up with two Israeli men who, along with Jessica, begin to make her rethink the way things are.
A perfect copy of many American inde comedy buddy films JESSICA BLAIR is a highly intelligent often very funny film that in many ways is better than it's American counter parts. Part of the reason the film succeeds is that its setting and set up are better than the run of the mill. We are not in typical yuppie/hipster land so we don't instantly know the characters. Yes we can make some connections to types in films past but here there is enough variation that things aren't exactly that way. Additionally writer director Haneman doesn't have the characters introduced to us she drops us right into the action and we are left to fend for ourselves. I have to applaud her for treating the audience as a bunch of people who don't need to be spoon fed.
The problem with the film is that Haneman has over written the dialog. People don't act, they talk in long sequences that just go on and on. While the film is full of funny exchanges they all sound scripted. Jessica who is supposed to be from New York doesn't sound authentic but rather as if she were someone's idea of a New Yorker. At times the film plays as if it were meant for the stage with many sequences having limited cuts or camera movements. That's not bad but it makes you wonder how the film was put together. It doesn't quite work and it makes the film feel like Haneman was trying too hard to get everything perfect. She manages to get it but at the cost of the film not seeming real.
I want to suggest that Haneman has spent a bit too much time studying the verbal acrobatics of Kevin Smith or Quentin Tarantino who craft long perfect exchanges of dialog and monolog that sound great but which no one would ever say in real life.
Problems with perfection aside JESSICA BLAIR is a pretty good film and will be worth your time when it plays eventually at a theater near you
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