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God Will Provide Has its World Premiere at Montreal World Film Festival

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The short-film "God Will Provide", directed by Luís Porto, will have its world Premiere at Montreal World Film Festival today at 4pm, in the Quartier Latin 11. It will also screen on the 7th September, at 11:30am, in the Quartier Latin 9.

 

1984. Maria lives alone in the countryside, on a remote village. She is a woman of strong moral and religious beliefs. Alone and isolated, she has no way of justifying a sudden and unwanted pregnancy.

Title: God Will Provide (Deus Providenciará)

 

Year: 2015

Length: 15min

Country: Portugal

Director: Luís Porto

Actors: Isabel Abreu

 

 

 


A Sunday Kind of Love to have World Premiere in Montreal

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A Sunday Kind of Love

Synopsis

Adam Loule, 31, is trying to write the next great novel.  It isn’t going well. His previous books have all been failures, and now he’s only surviving thanks to his girlfriend Tracy, 29, a successful lawyer. His blind obsession for greatness has recently put a strain on their relationship, not that Adam's noticed.  He does however notice the beautiful and flattering Emma, 25, especially when she tells Adam she also goes by another name, Death…and she’s here for him.

Not surprisingly, Adam doesn’t believe her, regardless of her infinite knowledge of his most embarrassing secrets, until she takes another guy whose time is up. As Adam descends into panic, Emma assures him death isn’t all that bad.  She’s going to give him until tomorrow to finish his book, which will make him famous and become the classic he’s always dreamed of writing. She can see the future after he dies when he isn’t around to screw it up. Living only results in poverty and obscurity. Adam decides he’ll take his chances and live, as what good is fame if you can't be around to bask in it.  Adam pleads with Emma and she finally relents.  If he can prove that living is better than his dreams coming true, she might let him live.  

Adam thinks about Tracy, but Emma doesn’t buy it. Tracy’s moving up in the world and is quickly going to tire of the supporting a struggling writer who doesn’t notice her, and dreams of becoming George Clooney as soon as he's famous so women can get past the awkwardness and khakis.   Realizing she might be right, Adam tries to make amends with Tracy, but unable to see Emma, she doesn’t believe him and wonders if this is about another very real woman.  After two years together, she wants to move on with life and is wondering if he's the guy to do it with. As Adam continues to try and find things worth living for, he begins to connect with Emma.  The attraction is mutual. Emma wants to quit being Death, but is afraid to take the next step and has been looking for someone to go past the gates with. She wants to go with Adam.   Suddenly, the afterlife isn’t looking so bad.

Torn between the two women, his desire for fame, and with dawn about to break, Adam must decide if what he’s dreamed about is worth dying for, and if the woman he truly loves is in the present or the hereafter.

Premiere of Invention for Destruction a film by Karel Zeman from Czech Republican

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INVENTION FOR DESTRUCTION

1958 / N&B / 78 min / Czech Republic
 

Dir.: Karel  Zeman
Cast: Lubor Tokos, Arnost Navrátil, Miroslav Holub, Frantisek Slégr, Václav Kyzlink, Jana Zatloukalová.
Prod.: Ondrej Beranek, Punk Film
 

Synopsis
THE FABULOUS WORLD OF JULES VERNE (Czech: Vynález zkázy, literally The Deadly Invention or An Invention for Destruction) is a 1958 Czech adventure film directed by Karel Zeman. Based on several works by Jules Verne, primarily his 1896 novel Facing the Flag, the film evokes the original illustrations for Verne's works by combining live actors with various forms of animation. In it an evil millionaire named Artigas plans to use a super-explosive device to conquer the world from his headquarters inside an enormous volcano.
 

Screenings
Sunday, August 30th 2015 -  7:30 PM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12
Monday, August 31st 2015 - 2:30 PM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12
 

 

A necessary complement
 
FILM ADVENTURER KAREL ZEMAN
2015, 101 min / Canada / Czech Republic
 

 

Synopsis
A look at the life, work and significance of the genius of fantasy and animation. Contemporary filmmakers from around the world are interviewed to find out why his films are still alive and in many ways unsurpassed. Terry Gilliam, Tim Burton, Koji Yamamura, Kosei Ono and others talk about their inspiration by Karel Zeman. His film The Fabulous World of Jules Verne was released in 70 countries. Zeman was unique and solitary; he created his own handmade world based purely on his imagination. Finally, students of animation at Zlin university remake three of Zeman’s best scenes using the original methods. How do they compare?
 
Screenings
Sunday, August 30th 2015 - 4:30 PM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12
Monday, August 31st 2015 - 11:00 AM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12

World premiere of Yony Leyser's debut feature DESIRE WILL SET YOU FREE

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World premiere of Yony Leyser's debut feature DESIRE WILL SET YOU FREE   in Montreal. 

Venue:  Cinema Quartier Latin Cinema 15

 

DESIRE WILL SET YOU FREE is Yony Leyser's debut fiction feature and his follow up to his acclaimed 2010 documentary feature "William S Burroughs: A Man Within" which was released theatrically in several countries including the USA via Oscilloscope. 

 

Ezra, an American writer of Palestinian and Israeli parentage living in Berlin, spends his days clubbing, taking drugs, having pseudo-philosophical conversations and wanting to be more punk, whilst wishing he wrote more. Most of his time is spent with his privileged
dark, but witty friend Catharine, who has an unsettling fetish for Nazi paraphernalia. As the two of them look for their next excitement fix, they end up in one of Berlin’s famous gay hustler bars.
Almost on a dare Ezra meets Sasha, a Russian immigrant working as an escort. Ezra pulls Sasha on a journey through Berlin’s underground and queer scenes. He discovers the stomping ground for hedonism and exploration. He discovers remnants of WWII,
The Weimar Republic, Bowie and the present day party kids. Much like taking a drug itself, the line between reality and desire is blurred in the land of excess. What starts out as a seemingly conventional gay relationship reveals itself as more complex and dynamic as their true inner desires are revealed.
Filmed entirely in Berlin, the film uses real locations where many Berlin based personalities give performances some playing themselves. These include ‘Godmother of Punk’ Nina Hagen as Oracle, cult musician and performance artist Peaches, along with Rosa Von Praunheim, Rummelsnuff, Blood Orange, and Einstuerzende Neubauten and Blixa Bargeld (formerly of Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds).

First highlights and films to watch from Venice

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Christopher Plummer is a 90 year old Holocaust  Avenger in Atom Egoyan's "Remember" 

 
"Remember" Atom Egoyan (Canada, Germany).
A new film from Canadian-Armenian Atom Egoyan is always an event and the current entry takes up a most peculiar subject: a 90 year old Jewish Holocaust survivor out to get revenge on a former Nazi Camp guard who murdered his family some seventy years ago and is living in the States under an assumed name.
The aged avenger is played by British vet Christopher Plummer, age 85, with assistance from a number of other prominent elder filmsters: Swiss actor Bruno Ganz (74), German veteran Jürgen Prochnow (74 -the submarine captain of "Das Boot" 1981)-- and iconic american character actor Martin Landau, (87! - Academy award for best suporting actor as Bela Lugosi in "Ed Wood" 1994)
The cast alone makes this an eagerly awaited attraction. Plummer also had a central role as a prying customs inspector in Egoyan's genocide masterpiece, "Ararat", 2002.
Release blurb: "The darkest chapter of the 20th century collides with a contemporary mission of revenge".
 
Everest" by Icelandic director Baltazar Komákur will be the curtain raiser on the Lido at the 72nd Venice film festival on September 2nd. All star cast features Jake Gyllenhall, Keira Knightey, Emily Watson, Josh Brolin and Australian actor Jason Clarke. The subject: A disaster drama about climbers from two different expeditions fighting for survival during a fierce snowstorm on Mount Everest. The story is based on the real events of the 1966 Mount Everest disaster which led to the deaths of several climbers.
 
 
A main competition film raising high expectations is "The Danish Girl", co-directed by 46 year old Englishman Tom Hooper (The King's Speech, 2010) and Swedish veteran Lasse Hallström, 69 (My Life as a Dog) --  British actor Eddie Remayne's follow-up to his 2014 Best Actor Oscar as crippled British astrophysicist Stephen Hawking in "The Theory of Everything" is sure to be a hot ticket on the Lido. This time around Eddie portrays a man who became a woman in the first sex change operation of the twentieth century.  Redmayne (33) plays a boy who literally becomes a girl! ~~ to wit,  a well  known Danish artist, male, who undegoes genital restructuring surgery in the early 1900s to become a woman -- preceding the American transsexual celebrity of Christine Jorgenson by half a century. Given the sexual confusion now rampant in the so-called "advanced" Western Democracies this one is destined to become a gay cult classic if nothing else ...
 
 
Other titles raising great expectations include: 
Israeli veteran maverick director Amos Gitai's latest offering: Rabin, the Last Day, (Rabin, le dernier jour) an Isaeli French coproduction.  The assassination in 1995 of the controversial Israeli prime minister by a JEWISH extremist shocked the nation and had tremendous repercussions throughout the region. Gitai's film deals with the last day of Rabin's life and is sure to be a shocker itself. Gitai was also in competition here last year so it looks like Venice is getting to be a habit. 
 
 
Venice bound … Eddie Redmayne in The Danish Girl -- Versatile British actor Eddie Remayne's followup to last years Best Actor Oscar as wheelcheer bound British astrophysicist Stephen Hawking, is sure to be hot ticket on the Lido. This time around Eddie portrays a man who surgically becomes a woman in the first sex change operation of the twentieth century. 
 
Other films in Competition at Venice
 
Blood of My Blood, Marco Bellocchio (Italy).                      
Looking for Grace, Sue Brooks (Australia).                            
Equals, Drake Doremus (US).                                              
Beasts of No Nation, Idris Elba (US) 
Per amor vostro, Giuseppe M. Gaudino (Italy, France)
Marguerite, Xavier Giannoli (France, Czech Republic, Belgium)
A Bigger Splash, Luca Guadagnino (Italy, France)
The Endless River, Oliver Hermanus (South Africa, France)
Anomalisa, Charlie Kaufman, Duke Johnson (US)
L’attesa, Piero Messina (Italy).  11 minutes, Jerzy Skolimowski (Poland).                          
Francofonia, Aleksander Sokurov (France, Germany, Netherlands)
 
Noted French director, Bertrand Tavernier ("La vie et rien d’autre") will receive a well earned Golden Lion for Career Achievement.
 
Alex, Yerevan,
 

No lack of stars on The Lido this year, with Competition Jury, a Star Lineup in its Own Right

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By Alex Deleon <filmfestivals.com
           
Fourth year Festival director Alberto Barbera has announced in "La Stampa" that in order to stimulate recently declining public interest there will be a recharged emphasis on big name stars on the red carpet at the 2015 festival. A list of A-listers as long as your sleeve expected to tread the carpetry includes the likes of: Johnny Depp, Eddie Redmayne, Jake Gyllenhaal, Diane Kruger, Tilda Swinton, Keira Knightley, Emily Watson, Ralph Fiennes, Benedict Cumberbatch,  Robert DeNiro, Michael Keaton, Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Kevin Bacon, Juliette Binoche, and enough others to fill the rest of this page.  Because of the fabulous Adriatic beach resort setting and the prestigious cinema history waft in the air Venice has always been an astral attraction, but this year the star magnetism is out in full force. Let us not forget that this is the oldest film festival in the world, established by non other than Il Duce, Benito Mussolini, way back in 1936. Over the years just about all of the most illustrious international stars and megastars of filmdom have checked in and out and left their astral imprint on the spirit of The Lido.
 
This year the nine member competition jury, one of the strongest in years, would in itself do justice to any festival in terms of celebrity clout.
To start with the jury is headed by Mexican star director Alfonso Cuarón,  53, whose megahit "Gravity", with Clooney and Bullock stranded in space suits, swept up seven Academy awards in 2014, and was the curtain raiser at the 70th Festival here two years ago --
plus three other gold plated directors: 
Turkish auteur Nure Bilge Ceylan, 56,  winner of the Palme d’Or at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival for "Kis uykusu" (Winter Sleep)  and generally regarded as the most talented and innovative of Turkish directors currently active;
Anglo-Polish helmer, Pawel Pawlikowsi, 57, who has lived most of his life in England but returned to his native Poland to make the Concentration camp drama "Ida", his fifth feature (on  top of  many acclaimed documentaries) which swept multiple awards all over Europe this year and took home the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 87th Academy Awards in February.
      
 
Finally Taiwanese Hou Hsiao-hsien, 68, leading figure of Taiwan's New Wave cinema movement, and best director prize in Cannes this year for the flashy martial arts extravaganza.  “The Assassin” 
Actresses:
Diane Kruger, 39, from Germany; Helen of Troy opposite BRAD PITT in "Troy", 2004, and multiple International successes since, such as Tarantino's "Inglorious Basterds", 2009.
 Elizabeth Banks, 41,  of Spiderman and Hunger Games fame as actress.        In 2015, she made her directorial debut with the comedy Pitch Perfect 2, whose opening weekend gross of  $69M set a record for a first time director.
  Many festivals (such as Cannes) seat airhead young actresses on their juries as Eye Candy, but these gorgeous ladies have been around the industry long enough to make serious judgements and reflect the savvy of the Venice establishment.
 
This jury will award the covered Golden Lion for Best Film, Silver Lion for Best Director, Grand Jury Prize, Coppa Volpi for Best Actor, Coppa Volpi for Best Actress, “Marcello Mastroianni” Award for Best New Young Actor or Actress, Award for Best Screenplay, plus a Special Jury Prize
 
 
     
    Elizabeth Banks, living proof that beautiful blonds are not necessarily dumb.
 
.Orizzontib ( HORIZONS) -- Major films out of Competition -- more or less the equivalent of Un Certain Regard at Cannes:
The members of the international Jury of the Orizzonti section, in addition to its president, American director Jonathan Demme, are:
• French director and screenwriter Alix Delaporte, in competition in Venice in 2014 with Le dernier coup de marteau (The Last Hammer Blow), for whichRomain Paul won the “Marcello Mastroianni” Prize
• Spanish actress Paz Vega, who rose to international stardom in 2001 for Lucia y el sexo (Sex and Lucia) by Julio Medem, thanks to which she won the Goya award for Best Debut Actress
• Hong Kong director Fruit Chan, twice in competition at the Venice Film Festival, with Durian Durian (2000) and Hollywood, Hong Kong (2001). In 2014 he directed The Midnight After, presented at the Berlin Film Festival.
• Italian actress Anita Caprioli, who among her many successful roles, starred in Immaturi (2011) and Corpo celeste (2011) by Alice Rohrwacher
 
The Jury of Orizzonti will award the following prizes, with no ex-aequo (shared) awards permitted: Orizzonti Award for Best Film; Orizzonti Award for Best Director; Special Orizzonti Jury Prize; Orizzonti Award for Best Actor or Actress; and Orizzonti Award for Best Short Film.
 
Full Jury  Biographical notes
Venezia 72 (Competition)
• Alfonso Cuarón (President), Mexican director winner of an Oscar for Gravity. He has often participated in the Venice Film Festival, where in 2001 he presented Y tu mama también, a film that won the Osella for Best Screenplay and the Marcello Mastroianni award for Best Actor and Best Actress. He was in competition again in 2006 with Children of Men, winning the Osella for Best Cinematography. The film won three Oscar nominations. His last film,Gravity (2013), had its world premiere preview screening as the opening film of the 70th Venice International Film Festival, and won seven Oscars.
• Emmanuel Carrère, French author, screenwriter and director. He was also a film critic for the magazine Positif and in 1982 wrote an essay on Werner Herzog. His first novel was L’Amie du jaguar (1983). It was followed by eleven books which have won important prizes; some of them have been adapted to the screen, such as La Classe de neige (Class Trip, 1998), directed by Claude Miller,  L’Adversaire (The Adversary, 2002) by Nicole Garcia and La Moustache (2005) directed by Carrère himself. In 2003 he directed the documentary Retour à Kotelnitch, presented at the Venice Film Festival in the Nuovi Territori section.
• Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Turkish director. His first two feature-length films, Kasaba (The Town, 1997) and Mayis Sikintisi (Clouds of May, 1999), were presented at the Berlin Film Festival. With Uzak (Distant, 2003), Iklimler (Climates, 2006), Üç Maymun (Three Monkeys, 2008) and Bir Zamanlar Anadolu'da (Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, 2011), all screened at the Cannes Film Festival, he won two Grand Prix, an award for Best Director, one for Best Actor, and the Critics’ Award. On the Croisette, he earned definitive recognition with the Palme d’Or in 2014 for Kis uykusu (Winter Sleep).
• Pawel Pawlikowski, Polish director and winner of an Oscar for Ida. He moved at an early age to England, where he made his debut in cinema with several acclaimed documentaries. His first fiction feature film, Last Resort, was presented at the Venice International Film Festival in 2000 and won a Bafta as Best Debut Film, and soon afterwards My Summer of Love (2004) won the prize for Outstanding British Film of the Year at the Bafta awards. His most recent film Ida (2013), acclaimed by international critics, won the Oscar for Best Foreign-Language Film, along with many other awards in festivals around the world.
• Francesco Munzi, Italian director, the big winner at the 2015 David di Donatello awards for Anime nere. He made his debut as a director in 2004 with the feature-length film Saimir presented at the Venice International Film Festival in the Orizzonti section, where it won the Special Mention for the “Luigi De Laurentiis” Award for a Debut Film. In 2008 he made Il resto della notte, presented in the Quinzaine des Réalisateurs section of the Cannes Film Festival. In 2014 he directed Anime nere, presented in competition at the 71st Venice International Film Festival, where it was highly acclaimed by critics and audiences alike. The film triumphed at the David di Donatello awards in 2015, winning nine statuettes, including Best Film and Best Director.
• Hou Hsaio-hsien, director and winner of the Golden Lion in Venice in 1989 for his film A City of Sadness. The film that brought him international fame was The Boys from Feng-kuei (1983), which preceded three strongly autobiographical films: A Summer at Grandpa’s (1984), A Time to Live, A Time to Die (1985) and Dust in the Wind (1986). After winning the Golden Lion, Hou returned to Venice in 2004 with the film Café Lumière, a work that is also a tribute to the cinema of Ozu. He again earned critical acclaim for The Assassin (2015), presented in competition at the 68th Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Prix de la mise-en-scène.
• Diane Kruger is a German actress, who played the cult character Bridget von Hammersmark in Inglourious Basterds (2009) by Quentin Tarantino. She rose to international fame in her role as Helen in Troy (2004) by Wolfgang Petersen, subsequently acting for auteurs such as Bille August, Benoît Jacquot and Andrew Niccol. She appeared at the Venice Film Festival in 2009 in Mr. Nobody, which was presented in competition and won the Osella prize for Best Screenplay. She also acted in the film Inhale (2010) by Baltasar Kormákur.
• Lynne Ramsay is a director and screenwriter from Great Britain, hailed by the Los Angeles Times as one of the brightest British directors of her generation. She has twice won the Prix du Jury in the short-film section of the Cannes Film Festival, first with her debut short Small Deaths (1996) and later with Gasman (1998). She has written and directed three feature films: Ratcatcher (1999), Morvern Callar (2002) and We Need to Talk About Kevin(2011), all presented at the Cannes Film Festival, where she also served as a member of the competition jury in 2013. We Need to Talk About Kevin won her a nomination at the Golden Globe and Bafta awards, and has won many international prizes as well.
• Elizabeth Banks is an American actress and director. She appeared in the Spiderman trilogy and has worked with directors such as Steven Spielberg, Oliver Stone, Judd Apatow and Kevin Smith. She won three nominations at the Emmy awards for the acclaimed television series 30 Rock and Modern Family. She is in the main cast of the Hunger Games saga, and recently was the voice talent for the co-star of The Lego Movie (2014). She made her debut as a director of feature-length films with the hit comedy Pitch Perfect 2 in 2015.
 
Orizzonti (HORIZONS)
 
 
• Jonathan Demme (President) is one of the most important American independent auteurs and winner of an Oscar for Best Director for The Silence of the Lambs (1991). He has directed over forty films, many of which have become cult movies, starting with the famous Melvin and Howard (1980) and Philadelphia (1993). He has presented many of his films at the Venice Film Festival, including The Manchurian Candidate in 2004, Jimmy Carter Man From Plains in 2007, Rachel Getting Married in 2008, I’m Caroline Parker: the Good, the Bad and the Beautiful in 2011 and Enzo Avitabile Music Life in 2012.
 
 
  
 
 
 

Only for the Week End premieres in Montreal

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The screening will be on September 6th at 6:30 PM / Quartier Latin Screen 10 (350 Rue Emery - Montreal - Quebec)

Check the trailer of "Solo per il Weekend"

We have attached the Digital Press Kit of the film in PDF format

 

'SOLO PER IL WEEKEND'

A film by Director Kobayashi

Produced by Director Kobayashi and Indiana Production

 

All your life can change in a weekend

 

It may seem like Las Vegas, but it's Milan. Aldo Broggi, a copywriter addicted to psychiatric drugs, get dumped by his sexually unsatisfied wife.
That's when he will meet an old criminal friend of his, who will get everybody involved in all sorts of shenanigans, completely out of control.
Illegal gambling houses, sexy women, mysterious briefcases, swimming pools. 
Total madness? No, just Milan.

CAST

Alessandro Roja, Stefano Fresi, Matilde Gioli, Francesca Inaudi, Malik Bernhardt, Pia Engleberth, Marina Rocco, Walter Leonardi, Jake La Furia.

 

2016 BlueCat Screenplay Competition

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2016 BlueCat Screenplay Competition Call For Entries
Every entry receives script analysis.
 
Submit by Sept 1st to receive analysis by Oct 1st.
Entry Fee: $40 Shorts | $60 Features
 
Submit by Oct 15th to receive analysis by Nov 10th.
Entry Fee: $50 Shorts | $65 Features
 
Final Deadline: November 15th, 2015 (analysis will be sent by January 15th, 2016)
Entry Fee: $60 Shorts | $70 Features
 
 
 
 
AWARDS
 
BEST FEATURE SCREENPLAY: $15,000 Grand Prize
Four Finalists: $2,500 Prize
 
BEST SHORT SCREENPLAY: $10,000 Grand Prize
Three Finalists: $2,000 Prize
 
 
INTERNATIONAL AWARDS
 
THE CORDELIA
Best Feature Screenplay from the UK
$2,000 Prize
 
THE ROSHAN 
Best Feature Screenplay from India
$2,000 Prize
 
THE JOPLIN
Best Feature Screenplay from outside the USA, Canada or the UK
$2,000 Prize
 
 
BlueCat Screenplay Competition

22nd Oldenburg International Film Festival honors Joanna Cassidy with Tribute

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"I think I scare people. I really have to watch myself." - Joanna Cassidy

 

The 22nd Oldenburg International Film Festival has its guest star in Joanna Cassidy, a Hollywood icon who can look back on nearly fifty successful years in the film industry.

 

The actress will present her latest film, the neo-noir thriller "Too Late" alongside the director, Dennis Hauck, at the international premiere gala in Oldenburg. In addition, the festival will honor her with a Tribute and will screen "Blade Runner", "Under Fire" and "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" that she will also introduce.

 

In 1974 Cassidy moved from San Francisco to Los Angeles, initially to work in television. She took on cameo appearances in TV's "Mission: Impossible" and "Starsky & Hutch". In cinema, she appeared in the 80s in films that have long since become classics. After her breakthrough on the big screen with her role of the replicant Zhora in Ridley Scott's "Blade Runner", she acted with the likes of Nick Nolte and Gene Hackman in Roger Spottiswoode's "Under Fire", one the best films of the year, according to the film critic Roger Ebert. Cassidy's performance was highly praised and her role as a clever, strong, and independent woman established her cinematic image. Joanna Cassidy also left a lasting impression alongside Bob Hoskins in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" by Robert Zemeckis, the pioneering mixture of live action and cartoon, film noir and family film.

 

Joanna Cassidy is one of the very few actresses of her generation that never had a problem working with TV and cinema projects simultaneously. Some of her more recent work includes the path-breaking series "Six Feet Under" as well as "Body of Proof", "Call Me Fitz" or currently, "Odd Mom Out". She stood in front of the camera for more than 150 projects, was nominated for multiple Emmys, and won the Golden Globe for "Buffalo Bill" in 1984.

 

The Oldenburg International Film Festival is pleased to welcome Hollywood star Joanna Cassidy in September as its guest of honor.


 

Films in Official Competition at London BFI Film Festival

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11 Minutes

Jerzy Skolimowski’s ‘catastrophic thriller’ interweaves the lives of multiple characters during a fateful eleven minutes with unexpected consequences.

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Beasts of No NationBeasts of No Nation

A chilling portrait of the plight of child soldiers, told from the perspective of one young boy.

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Cemetery of SplendourCemetery of Splendour

Acclaimed Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul returns with a typically sublime, lyrical and visually ravishing tale of a unit of soldiers afflicted by a strange malady.

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ChevalierChevalier

Athina Rachel Tsangari follows Attenberg with a biting and strange dissection of the male ego, featuring six men on a boat.

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The DaughterThe Daughter

Ibsen’s ‘The Wild Duck’ is relocated to contemporary rural Australia, but in theatre director Simon Stone’s feature debut it still retains the Norwegian playwright’s powerful bite.

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DesiertoDesierto

The sophomore feature from Jonás Cuarón is an edge-of-the-seat thriller set on the Mexican/American border.

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EvolutionEvolution

A young islander confronts the enigmas of boyhood and the sea in this poetic horror story, the long-awaited second feature by French visionary Lucile Hadžihalilović.

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OfficeOffice

Hong Kong crime director par excellence Johnnie To offers up an equally exuberant, financial-world set musical that has to be seen to be believed.

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RoomRoom

Jack and Ma live in Room. Now Jack is five-years-old he discovers there may be more to the world.

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Son of SaulSon of Saul

A devastating portrait of life in a concentration camp, seen from the extremely subjective perspective of a Sonderkommando, this is a blistering debut from a new Hungarian director.

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Sunset SongSunset Song

Terence Davies returns to the festival with this glorious adaptation of Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s 1932 novel.

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TangerineTangerine

A real-time drama, shot on iPhones in downtown LA and featuring two transsexual hookers in a vengeful mood, this is the ultimate in filmmaking on the fly.

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Very Big ShotVery Big Shot

Hilarious black comedy about a Beirut drug dealer trying to go legit for the sake of his two brothers finding himself at odds with his crime boss.

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The programme for the 59th BFI London Film Festival was announced

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The programme for the 59th BFI London Film Festival in partnership with American Express® launched today, with Festival Director Clare Stewart presenting this year’s rich and diverse selection of films and events. BFI London Film Festival is Britain's leading film event and one of the world's oldest film festivals. It introduces the finest new British and international films to an expanding London and UK-wide audience. The Festival provides an essential platform for films seeking global success; and promotes the careers of British and international filmmakers through its industry and awards programmes. With this year’s industry programme stronger than ever, offering international filmmakers and leaders a programme of insightful events covering every area of the film industry‎ LFF positions London as the world’s leading creative city.

The Festival will screen a total of 238 fiction and documentary features, including 16 World Premieres, 8 International Premieres, 40 European Premieres and 11 Archive films including 5 Restoration World Premieres.[1] There will also be screenings of 182 live action and animated shorts.  A stellar line-up of directors, cast and crew are expected to take part in career interviews, ScreenTalks, Q&As and a new programme of Industry Talks: LFF Connects. The 59th BFI London Film Festival will run Wednesday 7 – Sunday 18 October 2015.

Taking place over 12 days, the Festival’s screenings are at venues across the capital, from the West End cinemas – Vue West End and the iconic Odeon Leicester Square; central London venues – BFI Southbank, BFI IMAX, Picturehouse Central, the ICA, Curzon Mayfair, Curzon Soho, Cineworld Haymarket and Ciné Lumière; and local cinemas – Ritzy Brixton, Hackney Picturehouse, Curzon Chelsea, Vue Islington and Rich Mix.  Additional screenings and events will take place at Tate Modern. Audiences across the UK can enjoy the Festival via simultaneous screenings in their local cinemas.

 

GALAS

OPENING & CLOSING NIGHT GALAS

The Festival opens with the European Premiere of SUFFRAGETTE, starring Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham Carter, Anne-Marie Duff, Brendan Gleeson, Ben Whishaw and Meryl Streep. Director Sarah Gavron returns to the Festival for a third time with a film that tells the story of the ordinary British women at the turn of the last century who risked everything in the fight for equality and the right to vote.

Audiences around the UK will have the chance to enjoy a live cinecast from the Opening Night red carpet via satellite to cinemas across the UK, followed by an exclusive preview screening of Suffragette. All the red carpet action will also be live-streamed on the BFI’s YouTube channel, thanks to our partners at Pathé and Google.

The European Premiere of STEVE JOBS will close the Festival, directed by Danny Boyle whose films Slumdog Millionaire (2008) and 127 Hours (2010) previously closed the Festival. Based on Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography, the film takes us behind the scenes of the digital revolution to create a revealing portrait of the man at its epicentre. The film stars Michael Fassbender in the title role, Academy Award® winner Kate Winslet, Seth Rogen, Jeff Daniels, Michael Stuhlbarg and Katherine Waterston.

 

HEADLINE GALAS

Among the other highly anticipated Galas are the previously announced American Express Gala of Todd Haynes’ CAROL, a beautiful 1950s romantic drama about a young woman working as a clerk in a department store who meets and falls in love with an alluring woman trapped in a loveless convenient marriage.  The film stars Academy Award® winner Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara, who won the Best Actress Award at this year’s Cannes Film Festival for her role in the film. The Accenture Gala is the European premiere of TRUMBO, directed by Jay Roach and starring Bryan Cranston in a cracking performance as Dalton Trumbo, the Hollywood screenwriter who was blacklisted after refusing to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1947.  Diane Lane, Helen Mirren, Elle Fanning, Louis C.K. and John Goodman round out the cast. We are delighted to welcome back Official Airline Partner to this year’s Festival, Virgin Atlantic who will present Scott Cooper’s chilling crime drama BLACK MASS starring Johnny Depp, Benedict Cumberbatch and Joel Edgerton. The May Fair Hotel Gala is the European Premiere of the stirring drama BROOKLYN starring Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson and Emory Cohen, adapted for the screen by Nick Hornby from Colm Tóibin’s best-selling novel about the exquisite pain of choosing between an Irish homeland and the new promise of America.  The Centrepiece Gala supported by the Mayor of London is the European Premiere of director Nicholas Hytner’s THE LADY IN THE VAN adapted from writer Alan Bennett’s play and starring Maggie Smith, Alex Jennings, Jim Broadbent, Frances De La Tour and Roger Allam.  The Festival Gala is Ben Wheatley’s HIGH-RISE starring Tom Hiddleston as Dr. Robert Laing, a man who has just taken ownership of a luxurious apartment in this brilliant satire based on JG Ballard’s classic novel. The Archive Gala is the World Premiere of the BFI National Archive restoration of SHOOTING STARS, directed by A.V. Bramble and Anthony Asquith (1928).

 

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

This year, the Festival introduces three Special Presentations, they are: the Experimenta Special Presentation, Guy Maddin and Evan Johnson’s phantasmagoric opus THE FORBIDDEN ROOM which screens at BFI IMAX; the Documentary Special Presentation, Davis Guggenheim’s HE NAMED ME MALALA an inspiring portrait of an incredibly brave and resilient young woman who carries a message of hope for women in the world; and the previously announced Fellowship Special Presentation of James Vanderbilt’s TRUTH starring Cate Blanchett in honour of the actress receiving the BFI Fellowship at this year’s LFF Awards Ceremony.

 

STRAND GALAS

The nine programme strands are each headlined with a gala, they are: the Love Gala, Luca Guadagnino’s A BIGGER SPLASH; the Debate Gala, Stephen Frears’ THE PROGRAM; the Dare Gala, Yorgos Lanthimos’ THE LOBSTER; the Laugh Gala, Ondi Timoner’s BRAND: A SECOND COMING (European Premiere); the Thrill Gala, Deepa Mehta’s BEEBA BOYS (International Premiere); the Cult Gala, S. Craig Zahler’s BONE TOMAHAWK (International Premiere); the Journey Gala, Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s THE ASSASSIN; the Sonic Gala, Hany Abu-Assad’s THE IDOL (European Premiere) and the Family Gala is Rob Letterman’s GOOSEBUMPS (European Premiere). 

 

 

AWARDS AND COMPETITIONS

The Best Film Award will again be handed out in Official Competition; the Sutherland Award in the First Feature Competition and the Grierson Award in Documentary Competition. This year there is also the newly introduced Short Film Award, presented to one of a shortlist of 12 films selected from across the programme. Each section is open to international and British films.

 

OFFICIAL COMPETITION

The Official Competition line-up, recognising inspiring, inventive and distinctive filmmaking, includes the following:

·         Jerzy Skolimowski, 11 MINUTES

·         Cary Fukunaga, BEASTS OF NO NATION

·         Apichatpong Weerasethakul, CEMETERY OF SPLENDOUR

·         Athina Rachel Tsangari, CHEVALIER

·         Simon Stone, THE DAUGHTER

·         Jonás Cuarón, DESIERTO (European Premiere)

·         Lucile Hadžihalilović, EVOLUTION

·         Johnnie To, OFFICE (European Premiere)

·         Lenny Abrahamson, ROOM

·         László Nemes, SON OF SAUL

·         Terence Davies, SUNSET SONG

·         Sean Baker, TANGERINE

·         Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, VERY BIG SHOT (European Premiere)

 

FIRST FEATURE COMPETITION

Titles in consideration for the Sutherland Award in the First Feature Competition recognising an original and imaginative directorial debut are:

·         Mai Masri, 3000 NIGHTS (European Premiere)

·         Eva Husson, BANG GANG (A MODERN LOVE STORY)

·         Magnus von Horn, THE HERE AFTER

·         Trey Edward Shults, KRISHA

·         Yared Zeleke, LAMB

·         Esther May Campbell, LIGHT YEARS

·         Ariel Kleiman, PARTISAN

·         Eugenio Canevari, PAULA

·         Bentley Dean, Martin Butler, TANNA

·         Piero Messina, THE WAIT

·         Nitzan Gilady, WEDDING DOLL (European Premiere)

·         Robert Eggers, THE WITCH

 

 

 

DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

The Grierson Award in the Documentary Competition category recognises cinematic documentaries with integrity, originality, and social or cultural significance. This year the Festival is screening:

·         João Pedro Plácido, (BE)LONGING

·         Mor Loushy, CENSORED VOICES

·         David Sington, THE FEAR OF 13 (World Premiere)

·         Alexandria Bombach, Mo Scarpelli, FRAME BY FRAME (European Premiere)

·         Alexander Sokurov, FRANCOFONIA

·         Frederick Wiseman, IN JACKSON HEIGHTS

·         Walter Salles, JIA ZHANGKE, A GUY FROM FENYANG

·         Tomer Heymann, MR. GAGA (International Premiere)

·         Patricio Guzmán, THE PEARL BUTTON

·         Sarah Turner, PUBLIC HOUSE (World Premiere)

·         Jennifer Peedom, SHERPA (European Premiere)

·         Hanna Polak, SOMETHING BETTER TO COME

 

SHORT FILM AWARD

In its inaugural year, the Short Film Award recognises short form works with a unique cinematic voice and a confident handling of chosen theme and content. This year the Festival is screening:

·         João Paulo Miranda Maria, COMMAND ACTION

·         Till Nowak, DISSONANCE

·         Nina Gantz, EDMOND

·         Peter Tscherkassky, THE EXQUISITE CORPUS

·         Mees Peijnenburg, A HOLE IN MY HEART

·         An van Dienderen, LILI (International Premiere)

·         Maïmouna Doucouré, MOTHER(S)

·         Shai Heredia, Shumona Goel, AN OLD DOG’S DIARY (European Premiere)

·         Caroline Bartleet, OPERATOR (World Premiere)

·         Jörn Threlfall, OVER

·         Vivienne Dick, RED MOON RISING (World Premiere)

·         Ziya Demirel, TUESDAY

 

FILM GUESTS

Key filmmaking talent due to attend the Festival’s gala and special presentation screenings include: Carey Mulligan, Helena Bonham-Carter, Meryl Streep, Sarah Gavron, Michael Fassbender, Kate Winslet, Danny Boyle, Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara, Todd Haynes, Bryan Cranston, Helen Mirren, Jay Roach, Benedict Cumberbatch, Scott Cooper, Saoirse Ronan, John Crowley, Nick Hornby, Colm Toíbín, Maggie Smith, Alex Jennings, Nicholas Hytner, Alan Bennett, Tom Hiddleston, Ben Wheatley, Luca Guadagnino, Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, Yorgos Lanthimos, Ben Foster, Stephen Frears, Ondi Timoner, Randeep Hooda, Deepa Mehta, S. Craig Zahler, Hany Abu-Assad, Guy Maddin and Davis Guggenheim.

Additional filmmaking talent attending for films in competition include: for Official Competition: Jerzy Skolimowski, Cary Fukunaga, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Athina Rachel Tsangari, Jonás Cuarón, Lucile Hadžihalilović, Lenny Abrahamson, Brie Larson, Terence Davies, László Nemes, Sean Baker; First Feature Competition: Mai Masri, Eva Husson, Magnus von Horn, Trey Edward Shults, Yared Zaleke, Esther May Campbell, Nitzan Gilady, Ariel Kleiman, Eugenio Canevari, Robert Eggers, Piero Messina; Documentary Competition: João Pedro Plácido, Mor Loushy, David Sington, Walter Salles , Tomer Haymenn, Patricio Guzmán, Sarah Turner and Hanna Polak.

The Festival will announce its complete guest line-up for all sections in early October.

 

STRANDS / PATHWAYS

The Festival programme is organised into categories clustered around the themes of Love, Debate, Dare, Laugh, Thrill, Cult, Journey, Sonic, Family and Experimenta– an approach designed to help Festival-goers find the films that appeal the most to them and to open up the Festival for new audiences.

 

LOVE

Love is a complex and many splendoured thing. The Love Gala is Luca Guadagnino’s feature A BIGGER SPLASH set on the volcanic, windswept Sicilian island of Pantelleria and starring Tilda Swinton as a rock star, Matthias Schoenaerts as her filmmaker lover, Ralph Fiennes as a cocky music producer and Dakota Johnson as his petulant, sexy daughter.

Other titles in this section include: Naomi Kawase’s sweet, light and leisurely AN; Tom Geens’ COUPLE IN A HOLE, about a couple living in an underground forest dwelling to be left alone to deal with their mysterious grief; DEPARTURE, Andrew Steggall’s delicate first feature about longing, loneliness and nostalgia for a sense of family that may have never existed; Jacques Audiard’s Palme d’Or-winner about a makeshift family trying to cement their bonds, DHEEPAN;  the World Premiere of Biyi Bandele’s FIFTY, a riveting exploration of love and lust, power and rivalry and seduction and infidelity in Lagos; the European Premiere of Maya Newell’s documentary GAYBY BABY, following the lives of four Australian children whose parents all happen to be gay; Mark Cousins returns to LFF with his metaphysical essay film I AM BELFAST, Stig Björkman’s documentary INGRID BERGMAN – IN HER OWN WORDS, a treasure trove of Bergman’s never-before-seen home movies, personal letters and diary extracts alongside archive footage; Hirokazu Kore-eda’s beautiful OUR LITTLE SISTER, focusing on the lives of four young women related through their late father in provincial Japan; the European Premiere of Mabel Cheung’s sweeping Chinese epic based on the true story of Jackie Chan’s parents A TALE OF THREE CITIES and Guillaume Nicloux’s VALLEY OF LOVE starring Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu in a tale of love, loss, memory and the mystical.

 

DEBATE

Debate thrives on conversation, which is never more engaging than when the world outside the cinema is reflected back at us.  This year’s Debate Gala is Stephen Frears’s THE PROGRAM starring Ben Foster as cyclist Lance Armstrong, charting his rise to near canonization and his subsequent fall from grace.

Other highlights in this section include: Pablo Larraín’s THE CLUB, a mordant morality tale set in a sleepy Chilean coastal town, which won Berlin’s Grand Jury Prize; CHRONIC, Michel Franco’s uncompromising study of grief and isolation, featuring a revelatory performance by Tim Roth; brothers Tarzan and Arab Nasser’s feature directorial debut, DÉGRADÉ, a smart drama that moves seamlessly between humour and despair, set in a women’s hair salon in Gaza; the European Premiere of George Amponsah’s intimate documentary THE HARD STOP, revealing the story of Mark Duggan’s friends and family following his death after being shot in a ‘Hard Stop’ police procedure in 2011; Jonas Carpignano’s engrossing feature debut, THE MEASURE OF A MAN which won Vincent Lindon Best Actor at Cannes Film Festival, MEDITERRANEA, an ultra-topical tale of two young African men from Burkina Faso who, in search of a better life, make the difficult and dangerous trip across the Sahara desert and Mediterranean Sea to reach Italy; the drama MUCH LOVED, Nabil Ayouch’s searing, no-holds-barred look at the world of prostitution in Morocco; David Evans’ thought-provoking documentary MY NAZI LEGACY, which raises the harrowing question, ‘What if your father was a Nazi?’; the World Premiere of John Dower’s MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE which features Louis Theroux as he heads to Los Angeles to explore the Church of Scientology; Sebastián Silva’s beguiling, seductive and confrontational NASTY BABY; PAULINA, Santiago Mitre’s intelligent parable for contemporary Argentina, which won the Critics Week Grand Prize in Cannes; TAKLUB, Brillante Ma Mendoza’s riveting ode to a Filipino city wreaked by a typhoon; and Jafar Panahi’s latest film, TAXI TEHRAN, winner of the Golden Bear at this year’s Berlinale and set and shot from inside a car.

 

DARE

Here you’ll find films that are in your face, up-front and arresting, taking you out of and beyond your comfort zone.  The Dare Gala is Yorgos Lanthimos’ THE LOBSTER which stars Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, Olivia Coleman, John C. Reilly, Léa Sedoux and Ben Whishaw in a bleakly hilarious skewering of fundamentalist diktats and rituals that is also a tender plea for genuine intimacy amid society’s self-imposed absurdities.

Other highlights in this strand include: Miguel Gomes’ mixes fantasy, documentary, docu-fiction, Brechtian pantomime and echoes of MGM musical in the epic ARABIAN NIGHTS; the World Premiere of William Fairman and Max Gogarty’s CHEMSEX, an unflinching, powerful documentary about the pleasures and perils associated with the ‘chemsex’ scene that’s far more than a sensationalist exposé; the European Premiere of CLOSET MONSTER, Stephen Dunn’s remarkable debut feature about an artistic, sexually confused teen who has conversations with his pet hamster, voiced by Isabella Rossellini; THE ENDLESS RIVER a devasting new film set in small-town South Africa from Oliver Hermanus, Diep Hoang Nguyen’s beautiful debut, FLAPPING IN THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE, a wry, weird socially probing take on the teen pregnancy scenario that focuses on a girl whose escape from village life to pursue an urban education has her frozen in mid-flight; LUCIFER, Gust Van den Berghe’s thrillingly cinematic tale of Lucifer as an angel who visits a Mexican village, filmed in ‘Tondoscope’ – a circular frame in the centre of the screen; the European premiere of KOTHANODI a compelling, unsettling fairytale from India; veteran Algerian director Merzak Allouache’s gritty and delicate portrait of a drug addicted petty thief in MADAME COURAGE; Radu Muntean’s excellent ONE FLOOR BELOW, which combines taut, low-key realism with incisive psychological and ethical insights in a drama centering on a man, his wife and a neighbor; and QUEEN OF EARTH, Alex Ross Perry’s devilish study of mental breakdown and dysfunctional power dynamics between female best friends, starring Elisabeth Moss.

 

LAUGH

This year’s Laugh strand encompasses richly diverse geography, subject matter and senses of humour, from gleeful to bittersweet and wickedly satirical.  This year’s Laugh Gala is the European Premiere of BRAND: A SECOND COMING, an energetic, complex and frequently hilarious documentary about Russell Brand directed by Ondi Timoner.

Other titles in this strand include: comic visionary Jaco Van Dormael’s scabrously provocative, philosophically asute parable THE BRAND NEW TESTAMENT, which poses the question ‘What if God were Belgian and a cantankerous, vindicative slob who runs the whole show from a dilapidated apartment in Brussels?’; the World Premiere of Chanya Button’s debut feature BURN BURN BURN starring Downton Abbey’s Laura Carmichael, which takes the road trip buddy movie on its own smart, female-centric spin; Ali F. Mostafa’s FROM A TO B, a ‘dramedy’ following three estranged childhood companions who embark on a road trip to commemorate the fifth anniversary of a friend’s death and offers a new perspective on life in the Gulf and Middle East; Paul Weitz’s GRANDMA, a supremely enjoyable ‘road movie’ starring Lily Tomlin as the gloriously profane septuagenarian whose curt words and emotional armour can’t quite mask her broken heart; Bao Nguyen’s Saturday Night Live documentary LIVE FROM NEW YORK!; MEN AND CHICKEN, Anders Thomas Jensen’s dark, twisted and extremely animalistic comedy as black as pitch, but with the sweetest heart, starring Mads Mikkelsen; Fernando León de Aranoa’s black comedy A PERFECT DAY, a freewheeling tale centering on two veteran aid workers starring Benico Del Toro and Tim Robbins; the International Premiere of Brendan Cowell’s debut RUBEN GUTHRIE about an advertising exec trying to quit the booze, which spikes social observations with dark, wounded humour and the European Premiere of Japanese auteur/icon Takeshi Kitano’s latest comedy, RYUZO AND HIS SEVEN HENCHMEN, about a group of elderly, retired Yakuza who reteam to take revenge on a younger rival gang.

 

THRILL

This year’s Thrill strand features nerve-shredders that’ll get your adrenalin pumping and will keep you on the edge of your seat.  The Gala presentation for this strand is the International Premiere of Deepa Mehta’s BEEBA BOYS, an energetic gangster movie that also explores South Asian family values set in Vancouver’s Sikh immigrant badlands and starring Randeep Hooda.

Other highlights in this section include: the European Premiere of Choi Dong-hoon’s colourful period bullet opera, ASSASSINATION; the European Premiere of Daniel Junge’s thrill-a-minute BEING EVEL about the legendary daredevil Robert Craig ‘Evel’ Knievel; the European Premiere of David Farr’s crafty and suspenseful study in paranoia, THE ONES BELOW starring David Morrissey and Clémence Poésy; Atom Egoyan’s latest drama REMEMBER, offering a provocative study of the nature of evil as well as serving as a stark reminder of the atrocities of 20th century history, starring Christopher Plummer and Martin Landau; Gabriel Clarke and John McKenna’s gripping documentary STEVE MCQUEEN: THE MAN & LE MANS, featuring unseen archive footage, contemporary interviews and previously unheard commentary from McQueen himself; Stephen Fingleton’s thrilling, post-apocalyptic debut THE SURVIVALIST; Sebastian Schipper’s exhilarating one-shot sensation, VICTORIA; and THE WAVE, Roar Uthaug’s high-octane and nerve-shredding portrayal of a potential catastrophe.

 

CULT

In the Cult strand, the dark side is welcomed with outcasts and reprobates taking centre stage in this year’s crop of films. The Cult Gala is the International Premiere of S. Craig Zahler’s gloriously imaginative genre hybrid BONE TOMAHAWK starring Kurt Russell in a film with enough surprises to satisfy even the most jaded horror hounds and western fans.

Other highlights in this strand include: the World Premiere of Thierry Poiraud’s DON’T GROW UP, a stylish and inventive film about a group of teens on an unnamed island who wake up to find their youth facility eerily abandoned; the World Premiere of Jon Spira’s affectionate documentary ELSTREE 1976 about the bit performers who appeared in George Lucas’ box office behemoth Star Wars; GHOST THEATER, the latest film from director Hideo Nakata, the forerunner of J-horror; GREEN ROOM, Jeremy Saulnier’s latest exercise in edge of the seat suspense, starring Patrick Stewart, Imogen Poots and Anton Yelchin; returning for the third year running, Sion Sono screens LOVE AND PEACE, his tale of punk rock and talking turtles; and the fantastically prolific Takashi Miike’s riotous, unruly gangster vampire concoction YAKUZA APOCALYPSE.

 

JOURNEY

Journey is all about the temporal voyage.  This year’s Journey Gala is Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s breathtakingly elegant and mesmerizing first foray into wuxia (martial arts), THE ASSASSIN, which won him the Best Director prize at the Cannes Film Festival this year. Hou Hsiao-Hsien is the subject of retrospective – Also Like Life– at BFI Southbank this month in the lead-up to the Festival and will participate in a career interview on Monday 14 September at BFI Southbank.

Other titles in this section include: Radu Jude’s vivid, Wallachian western AFERIM!, COWBOYS, the directorial debut of Jacques Audiard’s A Prophet and Rust and Bone co-writer Thomas Bidegain; the breathtaking ethnographic Colombian Amazon odyssey EMBRACE OF THE SERPENT; James Ponsoldt’s THE END OF THE TOUR starring Jason Segel as writer David Foster Wallace and Jesse Eisenberg as Rolling Stone journalist David Lipsky in this engrossing two-hander; Writer-Director Jayro Bustamante’s IXCANUL VOLCANO, the European Premiere Stevan Riley’s enthralling Marlon Brando documentary LISTEN TO ME MARLON; Jia Zhangke’s ambitious, astute and humane MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART; the European Premiere of Sylvia Chang’s often-ethereal magic-realist drama love story, MURMUR OF THE HEARTS; the European Premiere of THE NEW CLASSMATE about a single mum in India battling to ensure her daughter’s future; SEMBÈNE!, Samba Gadjigo and Jason Silverman’s incisive documentary on acclaimed African filmmaker Ousmane Sembène; Chloé Zhao’s SONGS MY BROTHERS TAUGHT ME; and Paolo Sorrentino’s deliciously bittersweet drama YOUTH, starring Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Rachel Weisz, Paul Dano and Jane Fonda.

 

SONIC

‘We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams’, so goes Arthur O’Shaughnessy’s 1873 poem Ode, and so goes this year’s Sonic strand.  The Sonic Gala is the European Premiere of two-time Oscar-nominated director Hany Abu-Assad’s new film THE IDOL, based on the incredible true story of Mohammad Assaf, winner of ‘Arab Idol’.

Other highlights in this strand include: the World Premiere of Bernard MacMahon’s documentary THE AMERICAN EPIC SESSIONS, a haunting collision of past and present, presided over by the high priests of the great tradition of American music, Jack White and T Bone Burnett; the World Premiere of James Caddick and James Cronin’s documentary ELEPHANT DAYS, which charts The Maccabees creative process as they record their 4th album Marks To Prove It in an anonymous studio in Elephant and Castle; JANIS: LITTLE GIRL BLUE, Oscar-nominated director Amy Berg’s Janis Joplin documentary drawing on archival footage, contemporary interviews and the singer’s personal correspondences; punk filmmaker Khavn De La Cruz’s RUINED HEART: ANOTHER LOVE STORY BETWEEN A CRIMINAL AND A WHORE, an irreverent orgy of sex and crime with a banging soundtrack at its core; the International Premiere of Bobbito Garcia’s STRETCH AND BOBBITO: RADIO THAT CHANGED LIVES, a documentary about The Stretch Armstrong and Bobbito Show which broadcasted on New York’s WKCP radio in the 1990’s and featured unsigned at the time artists such as Jay Z, Nas and Eminem; and the European Premiere of THEY WILL HAVE TO KILL US FIRST: MALIAN MUSIC IN EXILE, Johanna Schwartz’s debut feature which intelligently captures the complexity and emotion of the life of musicians forced into exile and desperate to keep their music alive.

 

FAMILY

Showcasing films for the young, as well as the young at heart, this year’s Family section is a truly international affair, kicking off with the Family Gala, the European Premiere of Rob Letterman’s GOOSEBUMPS, featuring Jack Black. 

Other highlights are ADAMA a deeply moving animation about the life of a young boy in West Africa in 1914; Mamoru Hosoda’s THE BOY AND THE BEAST, an exquisitely animated fable about a boy who has run away from home and is alone in the human world following the passing of his mother; Jury Feting’s CELESTIAL CAMEL, a fascinating and thrilling tale about a 12 year old herder whose father has sold a young colt who may be the fabled ‘celestial camel’; Academy Award® winner Gabriele Salvatores’ THE INVISIBLE BOY, a charming coming of age tale about a shy boy, picked on by his peers, who gets his wish to hide from the world when he discovers a Halloween outfit that makes him invisible;  Alexandre Heboyan and Benoît Philippon’s hugely enjoyable CGI animated adventure MUNE, about a faun who lives in a faraway world; Studio Ghibli’s beautiful drama WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE, directed by Hiromasa Yonebayashi; and the World Premiere of Tim Clague and Danny Stark’s WHO KILLED NELSON NUTMEG?, featuring Bonnie Wright from the Harry Potter series.

There is a dedicated section for animated shorts for younger audiences which bring together eclectic, exciting and colourful films from all around the globe. English language and subtitled, suitable for all ages. Amongst the highlights of this year’s 14 titles is director Sanjay Patel’s SANJAY’S SUPER TEAM from Pixar.

 

EXPERIMENTA

Experimenta, the LFF showcase of experimental cinema and artist moving image is programmed in partnership with LUX for a third year and is supported by the Arts Council England. Focused on films and videos by artists, it aims to screen films that use the moving image to change the way we think of film and how it functions. The Experimenta Special Presentation is THE FORBIDDEN ROOM, a gleeful, hypnotic and totally deranged epic directed by Guy Maddin and Evan Johnson.

An extensive selection of work from across the world is presented including the World Premieres of William English’s HEATED GLOVES and THE HOST, in which director Miranda Pennell delves deeper into her past and her late parents’ involvement with the Anglo Iranian Oil Company (BP); Ben Rivers’ THE SKY TREMBLES AND THE EARTH IS AFRAID AND THE TWO EYES ARE NOT BROTHERS, the feature element of Ben’s current Artangel installation at BBC White City; EVENT FOR A STAGE by Tacita Dean, a filmed presentation of her live theatrical happening in collaboration with actor Stephen Dillane at the 2014 Sydney Biennial; the European Premiere of Omer Fast’s REMAINDER, a London-set thriller adapted from Tom McCarthy’s acclaimed  novel of the same name; the European Premiere of INVENTION which highlights the possibilities of camera movement and the development of artistic apparatus and Kevin Jerome Everson’s PARK LANES, set in an American bowling alley over the course of a day.   

 

SHORTS

A hugely diverse range of original and exciting short films that will captivate audiences span the festival strands this year.

Films of Love and Devotion explores and attempts to explain the old adage that the course of true love never did run smooth with Rob Savage’s  ABSENCE starring Paul McGann as a grieving man and OFFLINE DATING, a documentary about a single man’s search for love without the use of the internet. The Last Man Standingis a Girl programme explores the role of young women in society with GROOVE IS IN THE HEART, a tale of music and memory revealed through a school girl’s mixtape and A GIRL’S DAY from German director Hannah Ziegler. The Family at War shorts attempts to show what families are really like and how we survive them with TAMARA by Sofia Safonova and VIDEO where we see Elaine having trouble balancing life between her teenage daughter and a secret evening job. Funny How? How am I Funny? explores the comedy in cultural misunderstanding with OTHRWISE ENGAGED and black comedy KUNG FURY. The Fight or Flight programme charts the human response to extreme situations and Wild at Heart and Weird on Top presents eleven shorts that explore the history of film. In the Neighborhood is human stories of love, death and life-changing moments and includes Oscar Hudson’s LORD AND LIDL, where God unexpectedly shows up at the supermarket. London Calling is a selection of shorts from some of the capital’s most exciting new filmmakers and is supported by Film London. Sound Mirrors features nine diverse shorts all on a musical theme and Animated Shorts for Younger Audiences bring together a mix of exciting stories from around the world to surprise and delight children and adults alike.

 

 

 

TREASURES

Treasures bring recently restored cinematic riches from archives around the world to the Festival in London. The previously announced Archive Gala is the World Premiere of the BFI National Archive restoration of A.V. Bramble and Anthony Asquith’s silent film SHOOTING STARS (1928), presented with a new live score by John Altman, BAFTA and Emmy award-winning composer whose work includes Titanic and Goldeneye. Asquith’s feature debut not only announced the arrival of a significant new director, it is an exuberant, joyful pastiche of the movie industry and is a fascinating behind-the-scenes glimpse and searing comment on the shallowness of the star system. The film restoration and new score is supported by a number of generous individuals, trusts and organisations.

A number of other major restorations will have their World Premieres at the Festival:  Carol Reed’s atmospheric Graham Greene adaptation of OUR MAN IN HAVANA (1959), set in Cuba at the start of the Cold War, makes timely viewing as US/Cuba relations thaw; Ken Russell’s reworking of D.H. Lawrence scandalous classic WOMEN IN LOVE (1970) stars Oliver Reed, Alan Bates and Glenda Jackson and shows two couple’s contrasting searches for love, and was restored by the BFI National Archive working alongside cinematographer Billy Williams; A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS (1966) is directed by Fred Zinnemann from a script by great British screenwriter, Robert Bolt from Bolt’s play about Sir Thomas More, a perfect companion piece to Wolf Hall; Henry Fonda stars in the ripe-for-discovery WARLOCK (1959), a seething study of vengeance and repressed sexuality in a Utah mining outpost; and Bryan Forbes' THE RAGING MOON (1971) starring Malcolm McDowell and Nanette Newman in a tender story between two young people in wheelchairs which was ahead of its time in its attempts to change attitudes to disability.

From newsreels to comedy sketches, the 21 films that make up MAKE MORE NOISE! SUFFRAGETTES IN FILM (1934) are a historical accompaniment to our Opening Night film and a fascinating representation of women at the time that the battle for universal suffrage was being fought on the streets. 

Martin Scorsese said of Ousmane Sembène’s BLACK GIRL (1966): ‘An astonishing movie – so ferocious, so haunting and so unlike anything we’d ever seen. ’Sembène’s  first feature, which tells the tragic story of Diouana, a young Senegalese women eager to find a better life, draws from the Nouvelle Vague, but the film’s heart and soul is definitely African.  It is the perfect companion to Samba Gadjigo’s documentary SEMBÈNE!

And for a lighter-hearted but no less majestic cinema experience, George Sidney’s breathlessly delightful KISS ME KATE (1953) brings the Cole Porter penned musical to screen, here in magnificent 3D.

Rock and roll hall-of-famer Leon Russell is the heart of an ineffable, joyous collage of mesmerising live performance and vérité realism in A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON (1974), filmed between 1972-1974 by director Les Blank. Previously unavailable theatrically in the four decades since it was made.

Other highlights include Mira Nair’s Oscar-nominated debut feature SALAAM BOMBAY! (1988); the Holy Grail of silent comedy shorts, a previously-thought-lost Laurel and Hardy THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY (1927), and Luchino Visconti's fully restored masterpiece ROCCO AND HIS BROTHERS (1960), starring Alain Delon in a grand emotional opus on imploding fraternal tensions.

 

Screen Talks

We are delighted to announce this year’s programme of events will include Screen Talks with filmmaker Todd Haynes, actor Saoirse Ronan, casting director Laura Rosenthal and filmmakers Jia Zhangke and Walter Salles.

This year, the BFI warmly welcomes Todd Haynes to discuss his inspiring and critically acclaimed directing career.  His latest film, the poignant CAROL, is screening as the American Express Gala in this year’s LFF. A pioneer of the Queer Cinema Movement Todd Haynes’ films explore the themes of identity and sexuality beginning with the controversial SUPERSTAR: THE KAREN CARPENTER STORY, the acclaimed FAR FROM HEAVEN and the Bob Dylan biopic I’M NOT THERE in more recent years. – Thursday 15 October

We are thrilled to welcome Casting Director Laura Rosenthal to lead a Screen Talk about the work of a casting director when taking a film from script to screen. Having worked with a number of ground-breaking directors, Laura Rosenthal’s impressive credits include Paolo Sorrentino’s YOUTH, BUFFALO SOLDIERS, starring Joaquin Phoenix, THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDIATE and most recently CAROL, continuing her long-standing collaboration with Todd Haynes. – Saturday 10 October

Saoirse Ronan shines in The May Fair Hotel gala Brooklyn in which she delivers a nuanced, mature performance that not only reinforces her acting credentials, it signals a new phase in her already impressive career. She received Academy and BAFTA Award nominations for her performance in Joe Wright’s Atonement (2007), a BAFTA nomination for Peter Jackson’s The Lovely Bones and has worked subsequently with directors the calibre of Wright, Peter Weir, Neil Jordan, Kevin MacDonald and Wes Anderson. – Sunday 11 October

Internationally-acclaimed Chinese director Jia Zhangke and the Academy and BAFTA award-winning Walter Salles will partner in a Screen Talk dedicated to discussing Salles’ documentary JIA ZHANGKE: A GUY FROM FENYANG and their respective approaches to film making. Both established film makers, the documentary is a tribute from one artist to the other as well as a revealing look at Jia’s life and work offering audiences a rare insight into the creative mind. – Thursday 8 October

 

LFF Connects

LFF Connects is a brand new series of thought-provoking high-impact talks intended to stimulate new collaborations and ideas by exploring both the future of film itself and how film engages with other creative industries including television, music, art, games and creative technology. 

LFF Connects: Film – Friday 9 October

As previously announced, the inaugural LFF Connects will feature British filmmaker Christopher Nolan, internationally acclaimed for some of the most original, compelling and successful films in contemporary cinema (Interstellar, Inception, The Dark Knight, Memento), and Tacita Dean, lauded for her art work in film (and whose grand-scale Tate Modern exhibition FILM transfixed audiences).

Christopher Nolan and Tacita Dean are both passionate advocates within their fields for film – not simply as a technology – but as a medium that offers intrinsically rich and unique qualities needed by artists and filmmakers, as well as a hugely engaging experience for audiences. Moderated by BFI Creative Director Heather Stewart, the conversation about the future of film as a medium will also include Alexander Horwath, Director of the Austrian Film Museum.

More LFF Connects events will be announced in the lead-up to the Festival.

 

INDUSTRY & EDUCATION

The Festival offers a full benefits package for Industry delegates supported by The Mayor’s Office and Film London.  This year’s industry programme includes the new LFF Connects strand, a Global Symposium on gender in media in partnership with the Geena Davis Institute and Women in Film & Television, talent development programme NET.WORK@LFF with Creative England, the launch of Screen International’s UK Stars of Tomorrow 2015, a Foreign Language Oscar® panel with AMPAS, Press and Industry screenings at Picturehouse Central, the Digital Viewing Library, new delegate hubs, discounts at new partner venues and numerous networking opportunities with delegates and filmmakers.  Visit www.bfi.org.uk/lff/professional-delegates  for further details.

The also Festival offers an exciting Education programme, thanks to event partners and our funding contributors Arts Council England, the Film Music Foundation and IdeasTap. It includes films from the festival programme and special events for schools, students and young people, plus the LFF Young Jury Project supported by the BFI Film Academy, all featuring a wide range of film industry professionals. It also includes student accreditation scheme, and the 'Film School Programme' presented in partnership with the National Film & Television School, London Film Academy, London Film School and Birkbeck College.

 

BFI PLAYER

The BFI London Film Festival experience can be enjoyed UK-wide on BFI Player, the BFI’s VOD service, featuring a Festival digital channel showing regular red carpet action and film maker interviews. BFI London Film Festival content will be a key attraction in the range of services on BFI Player – at player.bfi.org.uk/

 

AND Festival 2015 Film Screenings

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Abandon Normal Devices

 

 

 

Surreal fairytales, cinematic pioneers & forest adventures

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Festival of New Cinema,

Digital Culture & Art

 

Grizedale Forest, Cumbria

18-20 Sept 2015

 

 

andfestival.org.uk

For the festival this year we bring you cult and new cinema from around the world with films which draw on the forest as site for refuge, work, adventure and transformation.

These film bring you deep into the forest and feature hauty princesses, sentinel beings and young runaways. You can sign up for the film retreat, drop into the mobile cinema or roll up to our outdoor drive in.

Book your tickets here.

 
 
 
 
 

 

Opportunities

BFI LOVE: Moonrise Kingdom Drive in
Moonrise Kingdom
Sat 19 September 18:30

On Saturday Wes Anderson's award winning  Moonrise Kingdom takes centre stage as part of the BFI Love Season. Join us in our very own camp Ivanhoe as 12 year olds Suzy and Sam take refuge from the residents of New Penzance, an island off the coast of New England. She wears blue eyeliner he puffs a corncob pipe. They both take life very seriously. Expect pre cinema audiovisual performances. You can purchase tickets here.

 

 

 

Opportunities

Green Porno
Fri, Sat 12:00-20:00, Sun 12:00-18:00
Grizedale Forest, Lake District

Isabella Rossellini’s critically acclaimed videos Green Porno cover both land and sea! Delve into our mobile cinema and watch acclaimed actress Rossellini as she acts out the reproductive habits of insects and marine animals in a scientific yet comical way. 
 

 

 

 

Opportunities

Late Night Drive-In
Predator
Fri 18 September 21:00
 

"Run! Get to the chopper!" There’s something hidden in the trees - invisible to the naked eye, something not of this earth – a technologically advanced form, a sentinel being. Join us for a special screening of Predator in the forest. Stay alert, keep your car doors locked, prepare to be hunted. Purchase your tickets here.

 

 

 

Opportunities

Film Retreat / Losing the Plot
18-20 September 2015
Grizedale Forest, Lake District

A special and social opportunity to see some of the best cinema from around the world in a deep rural setting. Our screening programme features films which draw on the forest as a site for mysticism, adventure and transformation. The programme introduces new cinema from Filipino Raya Martin alongside significant documentary works from Margaret Tait, Chick Strand and Harun Farocki. Purchase your tickets here.
 

 

 

 

Opportunities

Hiker Meat / Jamie Shovlin
Fri, Sat 10:00-18:00, Sun 10:00-16:00
Grizedale Forest, Lake District

This bespoke screening space features props dedicated to an exploitation film that never existed by fictitious Italian director Jesus Rinzoli. Originally filmed on site at Grizedale Forest, Hiker Meat is set   on an American summer camp in the 1970's, and includes archetypal exploitation film characters from hitchhiking heroine to a charismatic  commune leader. Not for the faint hearted! See more here.
 

 

 

 

Claudia Cardinale receives the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at Cinefest

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Claudia Cardinale receives the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award of Hungary`s leading film festival, the Jameson CineFest - Miskolc IFF. On 11 September Ms. Cardinale will be present at the opening ceremony of the festival.

 

The divine CC: Claudia, Marcello Mastroianni’s – that is Guido, the director - love in the 8½; Angelica, Alain Delon’s – that is Tancredi Falconeri – love in The Leopard. Venus, Jean-Paul Belmondo’s love in the Cartouche. Jill, the dream of all men, in the Once Upon a Time in the West. Ginetta, in the Rocco and His Brothers. Gabriella, in The Immortal Bachelor. Molly, Klaus Klinski’s partner in Fitzcarraldo. Doroteia in Manoel de Oliveira’s last film Gebo and the Shadow. The festival`s Lifetime Achievement Award goes to the muse of Federico Fellini, Luchino Visconti, Werner Herzog, Sergio Leone and Claude Lelouch, to one of the greatest starts of modern cinema: Claudia Cardinale.

In 2002 she was awarded with a life achievement award in Berlin, in 1993 in Venice, she won the David di Donatello prize several times – but even more importantly, she is one of the faces of European cinema, the idol and icon of millions and the UNESCO`s Goodwill Ambassador. 

And what else could the opening film be if not a Cardinale movie (with Charles Bronson and Henry Fonda): the audience of the CineFest will enjoy the perfect picture and sound of the re-mastered Once Upon a Time in the West with its spectacular long shots and Morricone’s unforgettable music.

New York Peruvian Film & Art Showcase 2015: Focus on Migrations

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New York Peruvian Film & Art Showcase 2015:   September 15 – 18, 2015

The New York Peruvian Film & Art Showcase (NYPFAS) is proud to announce the film line-up and art program for 2015. Through documentaries, an art exhibition, short films, feature-length fiction and live music performances, the NYPFAS will try to portray Peru´s migration legacy as well as honor all of those citizens that, through origin or adoption, made the birth of a new nation possible.

 

This Showcase, which returns to New York City for a sixth year, will take place on September 15, 16, 17 and 18, 2015 (program and additional information enclosed) at the Instituto Cervantes – New York (211 E 49th St). This year’s program includes a diverse schedule of over 10 features, shorts and documentaries. The film selection presents, among many other groundbreaking works, Seeking the light, documentary by Delia Ackerman; Madeleine Truel: The Peruvian Heroine of the Second World War, documentary by Luis Enrique Cam; Guard dog, feature-length fiction by Daniel Higashionna and Baltazar Caravedo and Aunt Helga, fiction short movie by Ruben Carpio. A retrospective of Japanese- Peruvian master painter Venancio Shinki (September 14-19, 2015- Instituto Cervantes-Gallery) will be part of this year´s program. Shinki is one of the living masters of Peruvian painting; his artworks recall Eastern, Western, and Andean traditions, which links this visionary and groundbreaking artist with other great Latin American creators.  

This year´s highlight is the participation of the internationally renowned Peruvian singer, two-times Latin Grammy Award winner and Minister of Culture of Peru in 2011, Mrs. Susana Baca. This special event on Friday September 18, 2015 at 6.00 pm, will feature a live music performance, film screenings and the presentation of her book TheBitter Road of Sugar Cane, recently published.

The Sixth Edition of the New York Peruvian Film & Art Showcase is directed and produced by photographer and filmmaker Lorry Salcedo, in collaboration with the Trade Commission of Peru in New York, Peruvian American Cultural Institute (ICPNA), Mr. Jeffrey Rosen and Ana Maria Estrada de Rosen, the Center for American Studies in Lima (CEA), Cerveza Cusqueña - Backus Corporation, the Consulate of Peru in New York and the Film Library of the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (Filmoteca PUCP).

 

--

Javier Iturralde de Bracamonte

Marketing & Communications| New York Peruvian Film Showcase 

646 509 4298/ peruvianfilmshowcasepr@gmail.com

+ Info: http://nyperuvianfilmshowcase.com 

 

SIN & ILLY Still Alive Coming of Age Drama selected at Montreal World Fest

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SIN & ILLY STILL ALIVE selected at Montréal Film Festival will screen Tuesday September 1, 2015 - 02:00 PM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12

 

 

SIN & ILLY STILL ALIVE - Winner of the White Bembel - MBF AWARD
for best feature film, 8th LICHTER Filmfest Frankfurt International 2015

further festival participations:
achtung berlin - new berlin film award, Germany 4/2015
Neiße Film Festival, Germany, 5/2015
Montréal World Film Festival, Canada 9/2015
Salento International Film Festival, Italy 9/2015
International Film Awards Berlin, Germany 9/2015
Bali International Film Festival - Balinale, Indonesia 9/2015
Festival De Cine De Bogotá, Colombia 10/2015
https://www.facebook.com/pages/SIN-ILLY/252972178173010?ref=hl
www.abadonproduction.com


Come Away With Me will have its Canadian Premiere at the Montreal World Film Festival.

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Come Away With Me is a powerful, heart-felt short film relating to the issues of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Alzheimer's Disease. It won the Platinum Remi Award at WorldFest in Houston this year, the Best Director Award in the Woods Hole Film Festival, and recently came back from the Diversity in Cannes Film Festival.

The cast includes actor/director Ellen Gerstein (Shameless, Southland, & James Dean) and actor, Charlie Robinson (Night Court, Hart of Dixie, & The Game). Lastly, Hollie Cavanagh (American Idol Top 4) sang the title track song from the film called, "Come Away With Me Tonight."

2015, Colour, USA, Focus on World Cinema - short films 

 

Production Team

Director : Ellen Gerstein

Screenwriter : Dave Field

Cinematographer : Polly Morgan

Cast : Charlie Robinson, Ellen Gerstein

Music : Aaron Gilhuis

Film production and Sales : Prod.: Julie Janata, Ellen Gerstein, Lulu Productions, 454 North Orlando Ave. Los Angeles CA 90048 (États-Unis), luluproductions4@gmail.com.

 

 

Synopsis

Anne summons the courage to go to her high school reunion, hoping to rekindle the romance with Michael, a war hero with PTSD and Alzheimer’s and the love of her life. 

 

Director

-- Trained as an actress by Lee Strasberg, Ellen Gerstein is also a director and producer. Filmography: Waiting for Ronald (2003), Sylvie Rents a Kid (2013). 

 

 

Projections

Wednesday September 2, 2015 - 04:00 PM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 11
Monday September 7, 2015 - 11:40 AM - CINÉMA QUARTIER LATIN 12

“HAPPY” screening at Regard sur les films du Monde- @FFM 2015, by the youngest director of this year’s festival !

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Come check out “HAPPY”, official selection - Regard sur les films du Monde- @FFM 2015, written & directed by 24 year-old, NYU- Tisch graduate, Jordan Goldnadel - the youngest director of this year’s festival !

 

SCREENNING TIMES:

 

SEPTEMBER 1 / 5pm @ QUARTIER LATIN - L9.01.5 followed by Q&A with writer/director Jordan Goldnadel and leading actress Isabel Ryan. 

SEPTEMBER 2 / 9:10am @QUARTIER LATIN - L9.01.5

 

 

 

Synopsis Florent, 23, is an upper class Parisian who dreams of going back to America, where he attended college. One summer he meets Alessia, an American girl, lost in the streets of Paris.Together and with random encounters while on a journey from Paris to Normandy, they explore their passions, which draws them closer as well as brings up their clashing differences. As they face a crucial crossroad in their lives, they will uncover new sides of themselves, while struggling to determine who they are personally, professionally and sexually and trying to break free from their upbringings. 


 

Director Born in Paris in 1989, Jordan graduated from Tisch (NYU) in 2011. After directing 15 shorts, this is his first feature, directed at age 24, in Paris and Normandy, with an international team. Most recently he was the second unit director for an independent American feature, currently in post and has written and directed a short film about violence in France in the aftermath of the January 2015 Paris terror attacks. He’s also working on a new feature film.

 

 

WATCH THE TRAILER:

 

WEBSITE:

http://www.widemanagement.com/#!happy/c1kav

http://www.ffm-montreal.org/en/767-en_.html

DCP/HD - 2015 - France 

97min - Color - Drama

Original title: Happy

With Isabel Ryan, Jordan Goldnadel, Vladimir Perrin, 

Lea Moszkowicz, Arthur Jalta, Marcel Aloro, Charlotte Vercoustre

Produced by Third Generation


 

 

 

ABOUT CINÉFESTOZ

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The 8th annual CinéfestOZ showcased extraordinary Australian and French films over five days from 26 to 30 August 2015. CinéfestOZ is the product of an enormous community effort to celebrate great film and the best of the Australian and French film industry.

The festival attracts a diverse audience of film lovers and filmmakers from across Australia, through feature film premieres and a highly anticipated film selection, as well as the second annual $100,000 Film Prize awarded to an outstanding Australian film.

CinéfestOZ has also enjoyed a long-standing relationship with France ever since Jerome Paillard, executive director Marche du Film at the Cannes Film Festival, opened the second festival in 2009. Since then, the links between the South West of Western Australia and seaside towns such as St Tropez and Cannes have come into full focus.

Add to the mix the great food and wine on offer in the South West region and CinéfestOZ is the must-attend event of the year for film followers, filmmakers, film lovers and those who appreciate the beauty of this corner of Western Australia.

The festival hosted a record 68 events at venues across the South West from Bunbury to Augusta, including gala film evenings, winery lunches, short film side bar screenings, family film events, script workshops and free community screenings.

A total of 82 Australian and French feature films, documentaries and short films were screened, including four world premieres and 17 Western Australian premieres, which were attended by some of Australia’s best actors, directors and producers.

The festival is also a platform for short filmmakers, many of which premiered their films at this year’s CinéfestOZ. CinéfestOZ is supported by the State Government through Tourism WA’s Regional Events Program, which is funded by Royalties for Regions. Rio Tinto is a proud Premium Partner of CinéfestOZ. The festival acknowledges its strong partnership with ScreenWest, Western Australia’s screen funding and development agency.

The best way to experience CinéfestOZ is through Festival Platinum Passes, Gold Passes and Weekend Gold passes available via the CinéfestOZ website. Subscribe to the CinéfestOZ newsletter to learn more http://www.cinefestoz.com

 

Edited by Vanessa McMahon

Under Heaven to screen at Montreal as world Premiere

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 Dalmira Tilepbergen with Bruno Chatelin and Consul of Kyrgyzstan in Montreal

UNDER HEAVEN

UNDER HEAVEN "ASMAN ALDYNDA"

Style: Drama

Running time: 88 minutes

Language: Kyrgyz

Subtitles: English, Russian

Director : Dalmira Tilepbergen

Screenwriter : Dalmira Tilepbergen

Cinematographer : Akjol Bekbolotov

Editor : Eldiar Madakim

Cast : Anvar Osmonaliev, Taalaikan Abazova, Nurjigit Kanaev, Munara Dooronbekova

Music : Murzali Jenbaev

Film production and Sales : Prod.: Goulmira Kerimova, Kyrgyzfilm, 1 Dinara Asanova Street, Bishkek (Kirghizistan), tél.: +99 (631) 231 48 75, dalmira.cinema@gmail.com.

 

 

Synopsis

This modern day re-working of the biblical tale of Cain and Abel is set in a remote mountain village in Central Asia. Two brothers, rebellious Kerim and conscientious Aman, live with their mother and work at the family stonemason business. Their father has been forced to find work in Russia in order to pay off Kerim's debts, incurred as a result of his eldest son's drug dealing activities. The brothers both fall for a local village girl, Saltanat, which ultimately leads to a bitter dispute and unforeseen and tragic consequences. 

 

Director

Born in 1967, Dalmira Tilepbergen graduated philology from Kyrgyz National University and has worked as a teacher, journalist, librarian and assistant director at the Kyrgyzfilm National Studio. She has written and edited several volumes of poetry. She began making her own films in 2001 with a short, Cap for a Falcon, and followed quickly with other shorts and documentaries, including Fragile Wings (2004), Crush Down from the Seventh Floor (2005), First Born (2007), Year of Fire (2011) and Well Being (2012). UNDER HEAVEN is her first fiction feature. 

Logline: The Story about Cain and Abel is repeated today in a Central Asian mountain village.  Kerims (Cain) selfish thoughts and words directly turn into bitter reality ...

Moto: What goes around, comes around

Main idea: Dark feelings, such as jealousy or hunger for revenge are like stones falling in the mountains. They mess things up bringing death and misery. Once an evil thought is born inside your mind, it becomes uncontrollable. The only way to stop it is to admit that one is responsible for his thoughts as well as for his actions.

Elements: Although the main conflict is rather psychological, the story itself is fast-moving. It includes elements of love story and criminal drama. Some actions are made with a big share of humor. There are a lot of small details of day after day Asian life. We are also not afraid of showing some social problems for they are part of our being as well.   

The action takes place in modern times, in a small Asian mountain village. Two brothers Kerim and Aman are waiting for their father Adamkul to come back from Russia where he raises money to pay down Kerim’s dept. Both of them work as assistants of a stonemason who makes memorial stones. Aman dreams of the day he will build a big stone house for his family. This idea makes Kerim laugh.

A girl named Saltanat is in love with Kerim. She is an orphan and lives with her old grandmother. Kerim likes her too, but he does not really love her. Aman who is secretly in love with Saltanat is dying of jealousy. After he sees her and Kerim together he accuses his brother. Aman says it is Kerim’s fault their father has to work like a slave and Kerim does not even care. Kerim escapes back to the city to prove he can pay down his own dept.

After a little while Saltanat discovers that she is pregnant. Raised as a puritan girl, she feels ashamed and decides to commit suicide. Aman rescues Saltanat. He brings the unconscious girl to the blind shaman Aziz, who heals her.

Kerim comes home and finds out that his father was already buried. He also learns that Saltanat and Aman are going to get married. He never really loved Saltanat but he wants her back, it is a question of pride. Saltanat is adamant. Kerim gets angry with his brother for his happiness. Two brothers meet on the top of the top of the Mountain. Aman is also angry with his brother for Kerim did not show up at their father’s funeral. But Aman is strong enough to forgive. Kerim is not that strong. He hates his brother for Aman is everything Kerim could never become: he is loved, respected and peace minded. There is a moment Kerim wishes his brother would be dead… Like an answer to his wish, a big stone falls down and kills his brother before Kerim can warn him… Saltanat discovers what happened. She does not care if Aman was murdered by thought or by action. She just wants the murderer to leave. Kerim still cannot believe he is guilty. 

Meanwhile Oldjo – the gang’s leader – comes to the village searching for Kerim.   Oldjo’s gang members are beating Kerim in front of Mother. He invents a sophisticated torture for the woman. One son of hers will live the other should die. She must choose. Mother refuses to play his diabolic game. Tapan moves Aman to the hospital. He warns Kerim will be hunted. He has to run away.

Kerim walks on the road. A bus picks him up. For the first time he admits his guilt. For the first time he is ready to make something right. He decides to go back and bury his brother according to traditions.

But instead - he comes to his Mother’s funeral. All that happened was too much for her. Her heart could not do it. Kerim falls on his knees screeching for forgiveness. Kerim buries his mother. After that he goes up to the mountains. He finds the stone that injured Aman and turns it into a bulbul – the symbol of the worst enemy. Kerim means to make a bulbul of him self.

Step by step the villagers accept his repentance. They start to hand him some food and clothes; they call it “sadaga” (alms). Kerim finishes the bulbul. It starts to wind. The world around Kerim becomes pure as if washed from sin.

 

MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY by Dalmira Tilepbergen

"My name is Dalmira Tilepbergen. I was born on January 12, 1967 in Kyrgyzstan (Issyk-Kul region). When I was at 7, my father died and my mother took care of her 5 children alone. I started to write poems at school. After finishing school, from 1984 till 1989 I studied at Kyrgyz National University.

Since 1985 I started to publish my first poems in «Literary Kyrgyzstan» magazine and now I have the translations of my poems on English, Finnish, Chinese, Azerbaijanian languages. In 1989 I graduated University and got Russian philology diploma.

From 1990 till 2007 I was worked as librarian, teacher, journalist, assistant of film directors, editor in Kyrgyzfilm National studio.

Since 2001 I started to make short and documentary films as film director. Till today I have made many documentary and short films. So, now I am a member of Filmmakers Union of Russia and Kyrgyzstan, member of writers Union of Kyrgyzstan. I am a winner of the national award «Strana» (Moscow 2010). My short films was won in different International Film Festivals.

Since 2002 I'm a member of Bishkek PEN. From 2007 I am a president of  our PEN. In 2010 Bishkek PEN was renamed as Central Asian PEN. In 2011 I was elected second time to the position of CA PEN president.

In 2005 made first PEN project – International forum of women writers of Central Asia and Europe «Woman and censorship».

2008-2010 studied High courses for script writers and film directors in Moscow.

From 2011  I am an author and head of Summer school «Freedom of Expression in Central Asia» annual project.

In 2010 – made 2nd Ural-Altay PEN network conference in Issyk-Kul.

In 2012 – made 4th Ural-Altay PEN network conference in Bishkek.

In 2014 – made 80-th PEN International Congress in Bishkek.

In 2015 - made my first feature-length film «Under heaven»

My first language is Kyrgyz, second – Russian, third– English. I can also understand and speak a little all other Turkic languages.

I have one daughter. She is at 25 now."

Director Mehmet Eryilmaz talks about The Visitor, his film in Montreal World Competition

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MISAFIR / THE VISITOR

2015, Colour, Turkey, World Competition 

THE VISITOR

 

Production Team

Director : Mehmet Eryilmaz

Screenwriter : Mehmet Eryilmaz

Cinematographer : Cemil Kizildag

Editor : Ugur Hamidogullari, Sultan Ilhan, Taner Sarf, Mehmet Eryilmaz

Cast : Zümrüt Erkin, Tamer Levent, Ayten Uncuoglu, Hale Akinli, Ersin Umut Güler, Melek Çinar

Music : Sema

Film production and Sales : Prod.: Sultan llhan, Atlanta Film, Siracevizler Üçler, Apt.10/3, Sisli, Istanbul (Turquie), tél.: +90 (533) 644 56 80, info@misafirfilm.com; m.eryilmaz19@gmail.com

 

Synopsis

Ten years after being thrown out of her parental home, Nur hears that her mother is at death’s door. Taking her young daughter with her, Nur hurries back to her father’s world to see, and reconcile with her mother before it is too late. While the universal theme of mother-daughter relationships lies at the centre of the film, this is underpinned by an allusive subtext of incest, one of most common but least addressed social problems in Turkey. The individual stories of the family members combine with a sense of hope fuelled by tragedy to paint a portrait of the socially disconnected. 

 

Director

Mehmet Ery?lmaz graduated from the radio and television department of Marmara University. He continued his studies at the cinema and television department of Mimar Sinan University. After graduation, he started writing and directing his own short, experimental and documentary films. He has also earned recognition for his series of documentary films on traditional Turkish music. Selected filmography: The Songs of Naz?m Hikmet (2002), A Fairground Attraction (2008), A Holiday Morning in ?stanbul (2011). 

 

 

Projections

Tuesday September 1, 2015 - 11:30 AM - CINÉMA IMPÉRIAL
Tuesday September 1, 2015 - 07:00 PM - CINÉMA IMPÉRIAL

 
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