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Anaheim Sets Schedule

by editor on October 14, 2010

Coverage of the Anaheim International Film Festival:

From the Orange County Register:  ”Our hope is to provide a broad range of programming for Anaheim and for Orange County in general,” said Matt Bolish, the festival’s director of programming. “We’re aiming to bring something new into town, as opposed to recycling.”

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FESTWORKS’ Matt Bolish to lead Anaheim International Film Festival as Director of Programming


The Anaheim International Film Festival (AIFF) has signed FESTWORKS, the premier film festival consultancy, to provide artistic direction and programming for its inaugural event, taking place October 13-17 at UltraStar Cinemas at the Anaheim GardenWalk. FESTWORKS’ principals Rose Kuo, Robert Koehler, John Wildman and David Rogers launched their firm earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival after a highly celebrated year for the AFI FEST 2009. FESTWORKS’ Matt Bolish, also an AFI Fest veteran, is serving as director of programming for the Anaheim International Film Festival.

Kuo said, “FESTWORKS is thrilled to be on the ground floor of an event with such vast potential. The Anaheim International Film Festival is debuting strong right out of the gate, focusing on high quality programming that represents a global community of talented filmmakers.” Koehler added, “With the diminishing number of art house distributors, film festivals have become more meaningful as advocates for filmmakers – and we are thrilled to be part of that mission in Anaheim and Orange County.”
“The Anaheim International Film Festival offers universal appeal for studios, distributors and a new generation of filmmaking talent,” said Bolish. “We are working on an exciting and diverse programming lineup that will include world cinema, special curated sections, international showcases, retrospectives and more. At its heart, the AIFF will represent the creative endeavor and meaningful storytelling that is the foundation of independent film.”

Matt Bolish started his career in New Line Cinema’s production resources department where he worked on dozens of feature films and television shows. He is a veteran of film festivals including AFI FEST, Outfest and Dallas International Film Festival. In 2010, Bolish was named the director of programming for the Los Angeles Greek Film Festival where he helped deliver an expanded film program and record attendance. Bolish will be supported by FESTWORKS programmer Matt Kaszanek and AIFF Shorts Film Programmer Derek Horne.

“The FESTWORKS team brings to AIFF an amazing breadth and depth of experience, and a stellar reputation for collaboration and creativity,” said AIFF Executive Director Jo Moulton. “This group has successfully executed festivals with the highest standards and critical praise. Their collective passion for film ensures a successful inaugural presentation of the Anaheim International Film Festival. We are thrilled to have them on board.”

The inaugural Anaheim International Film Festival runs Oct. 13-17, 2010 at the Anaheim GardenWalk. Thousands of attendees are expected to visit the five-day festival and participate in film screenings, master classes and workshops taught by industry professionals, and star-studded gala events. Tickets will be available to the general public beginning September 15, 2010. For more information, please call (714) 991-9110 or visit www.anaheimfilm.org.

About AIFF

The Anaheim International Film Festival marks the addition of a world-class cultural event to Southern California and the international film festival circuit. The AIFF mission is to create an environment that inspires, nurtures and showcases the work of emerging independent film talent while paying tribute to accomplished film artists in the international, national and local film communities. For more information, visit www.anaheimfilm.org.

About Festworks

Festworks is a next generation, full-service film festival consultancy, bringing 20 years of film industry experience delivering high profile film festivals, events and programs, with the highest standards, audience and critical praise, international press, marketing outreach and sponsor satisfaction.  Reach us at www.festworks.com.

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Kiarostami’s CERTIFIED COPY

by Larry Gross on June 5, 2010

Startlingly fluid, beautiful and funny in light and unexpected ways, CERTIFIED COPY bears a startling resemblance to Linklater’s BEFORE SUNSET.  Kiarostami is in an elegant wistful elegiac frame of mind here.   The love he feels for Italian art, food, and the Tuscan backgrounds is palpable.  What is also is striking is that Kiarostami, who has made his reputation as the poet laureate of peasant life in remote northern Iran, comes out of the closet revealing himself to be an urbane sophisticated member of global bourgeois with all of it’s post modern freedoms and anxieties.

CERTIFIED COPY is a minor masterpiece – gentle, comedic and surprisingly romantic – in which memory art and love are ingeniously braided together.

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Cannes 2010 – The Future of Cinema Wins

by Robert Koehler on May 23, 2010

You would have to go back to either 1999–when the Dardennes won for “Rosetta”–or 1997–when Abbas Kiarostami won for “Taste of Cherry” in a tie with Imamura Shohei for “The Eel” and when Tim Burton was a member of the jury–to find a Palme d’Or winner quite as satisfying and unconventional as tonight’s prize for Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s endlessly inventive, mystical and funny “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.” Going in, there were plenty of concerns about a jury comprised of such wildly disparate personalities as Tim Burton, Victor Erice, Alberto Barbera, Benicio Del Toro and Kate Beckinsale. But when the dust cleared, this turned out to be one of the most intelligent and independent-minded juries in recent Cannes history. As had been widely expected, the prizes were spread around among several Competition titles, with three films scoring the top film prizes for Jury (Mahamet-Saleh Haroun’s richly deserving win for “A Screaming Man”), Grand (Xavier Beauvois’ majestic “Of Gods and Men”) and Palme (Apichatpong). By the time the Beauvois was announced for the Grand Prize, the sense became overwhelming that Apichatpong would win the day, since most of the attending filmmakers had already won something. Kiarostami won via the official festival poster gal Juliette Binoche’s deserving best actress prize for “Certified Copy” (though I would have thought that Yun Junghee for his phenomenal lead performance in Lee Chang-dong’s “Poetry” would have warranted at least a tie). The tie instead went to the actors, with Javier Bardem’s sweaty portrayal of a dying man in Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu’s “Biutiful” and Elio Germano in Daniele Luchetti’s “La nostra vita,” widely perceived as the evening’s most curious prize. Lee’s prize for screenplay is a sign of a jury that thought through its choices; the most impressive aspect of “Poetry” is Lee’s fascinating, densely layered and structured screenplay, comparable in every way to “Secret Sunshine” and a further indication that Lee’s years as a novelist inform his approach as a film storyteller. Although he was heard to wisecrack with his bouncy cast of New Burlesque performers, “I didn’t know I was a director!,” Mathieu Almaric’s best director win for “Tournee” was a good way of giving something to one of French cinema’s hottest names. But Apichatpong’s Palme d’Or brings renewed meaning to the purpose of a prize which has increasingly been identified with establishment cinema, and in one dramatic stroke by a smart jury with nerve transforms it like one of Apichatpong’s jungle creatures into a whole new animal. Whatever anyone thought of the Competition going in, none of that matters now. A great film has gotten its due, and now, instead of gazing back, the Palme is looking forward.

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CANNES 2010 – BEFORE THE AWARDS

by Robert Koehler on May 23, 2010

Less than an hour before the announcement of the Palme and other prizes, rumors are swirling over possible winners based on sightings of who’s in Cannes….and who’s not. In the latter category, count Mike Leigh, which makes “Another Year” unlikely to win any prizes. Based on who has returned or stayed in Cannes, look to the following as strong contenders for awards: Apichatpong for his masterpiece on Monkey Ghosts, catfish, rookie monks who can see themselves and the infinite recyclings of life, “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives”; Xavier Beauvois for the widely admired drama about Cistercian monks caught in the midst of an Islamsit terror campaign, “Of Gods and Men”; Mahamet-Saleh Haroun for “A Screaming Man”; Lee Chang-dong for his exquisite drama of a grandmother in the midst of a complex life crisis, “Poetry”; Chinese director Wang Xiaoshuai for “Chongqing Blues”; and Cannes poster gal Juliette Binoche for best actress in Abbas Kiarostami’s “Certified Copy”; Javier Bardem for best actor for his physically and emotionally grueling performance as a dying man in Alejandro Gonzalez Innaritu’s “Biutiful.” A running parlor game all week has been who and what jury president Tim Burton might go for in a competition slate that frequently disappointed and underplayed somewhat deflated expectations. I felt from the start that it was a strategic error to not include Manoel de Oliveira’s “The Strange Case of Angelica” in the competition, based on its gorgeous black-and-white fantasy sequences if for nothing else–beyond the film’s sheer majesty and power, and Oliveira’s magnificently sustained sequences teetering on the edge between black comedy, pathos and reverie. (Claire Denis was so enthusiastic about Oliveira’s Un Certain Regard contender during the UCR awards announcement last night that many expected it as a lead-in to a prize; instead, it went to Hong Sang-soo for his genial “Ha Ha Ha.”) If, as now seems possible, Apichatpong wins the Palme d’Or, it will certainly rank as one of the most daring and notable choices by a Cannes jury since David Cronenberg’s 1999 jury selected the Dardennes Brothers’ “Rosetta,” and will be wildly applauded by the growing pro-Joe contingent still here in Cannes. On the other hand, there will be considerable satisfaction if Beauvois wins for his superbly rendered and classically staged drama which seemed to my eyes to be as much under the sway of Jean Renoir as any French film in recent years. Well, we’re 30 minutes away from the start of the awards, so, we’ll see soon….

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Cannes 2010 – NO COMMENT review

by Robert Koehler on May 23, 2010

Jean-Luc Godard (and his Les Inrocks interview) marked the starting point for this year’s Cannes blogging, partly because I anticipated that his “Film Socialisme” would certainly be one of the major films at the festival. It is that, and more, since the film’s impact will long outlast the mere week and a half of Cannes. Because he retains a large personality, with an equally large and calculated propensity to stir controversy, Godard’s actual position as an experimental filmmaker tends to get lost in the discussion. But “Film Socialisme” is a work that can’t be properly assessed without identifying it, first, as militantly experimental. Although broken into three roughly identifiable sections–the longest, opening section dwelling on a cruise liner in the Mediterranean (which is the ideal vehicle to launch a discussion on the sources and ramifications of European history, and which makes “Film Socialisme” the child of Oliveira’s similarly discursive movie-on-a-cruise-ship “A Talking Picture”); the second around a family and a gas station, featuring a France 3 journalist, a donkey and a fabulous llama; and a brilliant montage climax generated by a re-visit to Odessa and the steps made famous in Eisenstein’s “Battleship Potemkin”–”Film Socialisme” is a sustained essay, delivered as a text composed largely of citations from a vast range of sources. The past and future of Europe is the central subject; the perception of image with text is the experiment.

This is managed in several ways. First, in a different manner than Kirby Dick did in “Chain Camera” but with the same democratic attitude, Godard arranged for a group armed with cameras to shoot around the ship, and with various media, ranging from cell phone cameras to high-end HD. The variation in image quality (and sound quality, which Godard heightens for distortion at points, and crystal-clarity at others) is his most extensive exploration to date of the nature of the video image. It represents a kind of culmination of his three-decades-long experiments with video, Godard being the first major director of his era (along with Antonioni) to treat video as a legitimate alternative to film stock. The ship itself is Europe, with one identifiable American–Patti Smith–strolling through the corridors like a minstrel. On a single viewing, the text is as usual with Godard (though not more so than usual) only partly penetrable, and the comprehension is further altered by Godard’s other major experiment here: The English-language subtitles are abstracted, with complete sentences compressed to their key words. French-speaking viewers have said that the subtitles augment the spoken text, which is too much for the ear to absorb; Les Inrock critic-writer Serge Kagansky, who co-interviewed Godard and viewed the film beforehand, saw it naturally without subtitles and was interested to learn that “Film Socialisme” is perhaps not fully complete until the subtitles were added. With the subtitles, Godard not only plays a game of selecting words, but duplicating the wordplay he frequently enjoys doing with his on-screen graphics and titles, including jamming two words together. (If I’m able to see it again before leaving Cannes, I’ll provide examples–impossible on a single viewing.) This all creates a fascinating reading-watching-listening experience that expands cinematic spectatorship far more than any 3D innovations, even if, like adjusting to iambic pentameter in the first minutes of a Shakespeare performance, your motor functions aren’t ready for it. But it also underscores how Godard’s films are designed to be seen more than once, not as a failing of the work itself, but by design.

The formal experiments don’t stop there, but what struck me watching “Film Socialisme” after recently watching Godard’s 1980 “Every Man For Himself” as part of Indie Lisboa’s survey of the Berlinale Forum 40th anniversary was how Godard is now thoroughly  immersed in his second round of a radical, non-narrative phase following a narrative phase. In other words, we’ve been living for the past decade-plus (including such masterpieces as “L’histoire(s) du cinema” and “Eloge de l’amour”) through a new variation on his Dziga Vertov period with Jean-Pierre Gorin. The politics are, of course, different now: No less radical, yet independent, untethered to any party or ideological line, equally critical of every phase of contemporary European life. My colleague Larry Gross has aptly noted that “Film Socialisme” contains no caustic words against the U.S. or U.S. culture, though I suppose it could be argued that the lavish displays of conspicuous consumption on the cruise ship are at least partly an American creation, an American thing. Godard’s attention is trained on Europe and the Levant, with a kind of geographic tour guide list posted on screen that includes Egypt, Palestine, Hellas (Greece) and Barcelona. This is more or less Oliveira’s focus in “A Talking Picture”; the difference is one of a sense of history, with Oliveira concerned for the impact that contemporary terror may have on certain cultural traditions and continuities and its own additions to the historical record, while Godard is more combative, against what he perceives as a Germanic domination of the idea of “Europe.” I don’t read this as Godard taking a stance as a man of Switzerland against Germany, since he also tosses verbal scuds against his own country. (Besides, he readily celebrates Germany on the soundtrack, from several Beethoven cues to his habitual use of music from the catalog of Manfred Eicher’s ECM Records, based in Bavaria.) Instead, the laments that pepper the audio text in “Film Socialisme” seem to derive from a sadness for what Godard perceives as the small place which Europe has become, its rapid irrelevancy in the face of world historical movements. An American may easily counter that Europe is destined by geography to always be at the center of world history, and though it has become in Thomas Friedman’s phrase a “flatter” place, its range of cultural and linguistic diversity remains impressive and really pretty wonderful. What is certain is that a second viewing of “Film Socialisme” will evoke a completely different set of responses than the first, virginal viewing, and that ideas and issues that passed me by at first will stand if full foreground the second time around. (I’m wondering, for example, what bits about socialism that I didn’t perceive this time may hit me the next time.) What won’t go away regardless of how many times one views the film is Godard’s opposition to artists rights and intellectual property, which ends “Film Socialisme” on the kind of note that would make visitors to Pirate Bay smile. It’s actually here where the irascible J-L G finally points his guns at (corporate) Hollywood, with a display of the FBI warning against unauthorized copying. During the course of “Film Socialisme” (as he’s done countless times, most lavishly in “L’Histoire(s)”), Godard thieves from all sorts of movies, from John Ford’s “Cheyenne Autumn” to “Potemkin.” Is he a pirate? Godard answers, in the film’s final and already-classic graphic title: NO COMMENT. [click to continue…]

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Cannes – Day 3

by Robert Koehler on May 17, 2010

A view of the Palais red stairs before the madness begins on day 3.

The cast and crew of Cristi Puiu’s “Aurora” assembles on the Debussy stage with Cannes artistic director Thierry Fremaux. (Very tiny, for sure; this IPhone lacks telephoto.) “Aurora” isn’t in the black comic vein of Puiu’s “The Death of Mr. Lazarescu” or “Stuff & Dough”–it tracks the initially inexplicable behavior and actions of a man who works at a metal factory, and yet doesn’t seem to live exactly anywhere, yet also has multiple addresses he visits or habitates. He isn’t quite of this life, but one degree (or more) separate from everyone else he knows. Eventually, he assembles the parts to a gun, and proceeds to use it. In the end, Puiu (who directs himself, with a deliberately expressionless demeanor in roughly the first half and with increasingly virulent sarcasm in the latter scenes) constructs a slow-motion tragedy, but one entirely authored and directed by the character, who may or may not be acting out due to a terminal illness. (Which itself may be a feint, or the notions of a hypochondriac.) “Aurora” is a work grounded in physical reality while considering the enigmatic nature of human behavior. It resonates, and it’s impossible to stop thinking about it.

The scene in front of the Palais main entrance is always crazed during the festival, but this enormous Sumo-nurse, or whatever it is, may be enough to give small kids nightmares. The unknown passer-by on the left is not amused.

This is the first of three panoramic views of the Croisette and the Cannes beach area, as seen from the steps of the Quinzaine headquarters at 5:30 pm.

Second panoramic view of the Croisette.

Third view of the Cannes panorama.

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Cannes – Day 2

May 15, 2010

Before I check out of the Grand Hotel, I look out the northern view from my room’s veranda balcony. The rain has faded away. As a further reminder to us all in the Debussy, Tim Burton is Cannes jury president. The press waits in line for Im Sang-soo’s remake of the acidic 1960 THE HOUSEMAID–lines [...]

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Cannes 2010

May 14, 2010

Rachid Bouchareb’s HORS LA LOI generated a lot of political heat in France even before it screened for distributors today. Algeria news described the film as, “an Algerian-French co-production portraying the participation of soldiers of former French colonies in the World War II. The film recounts the saga of three brothers, from the massacres of [...]

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Cannes – Day 1 (cont.)

May 14, 2010

The mob descends on Cannes, here on the Croisette just in front the red stairs of the Palais, where “Robin Hood” blew into town as the opening night film. Later that night, the rains came, and my Cineaste magazine colleague Richard Porton and I were stuck in another mob blocked by gendarmes as the movie’s [...]

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