Wednesday, September 28, 2022
2022 NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL
This will mark the sixtieth year of the New York Film Festival, an event that has long introduced audiences to the latest cinematic works from the world's celebrated filmmakers and exciting new talent. This year's fest will begin on September 30th and conclude on October 16th.
The new film from Noah Baumbach, "White Noise", which had it's world premiere at the Venice Film Festival last month, will be the Opening Night selection that will make it's North American premiere. This bold adaptation of the Don DeLillo’s 1985 novel stars Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig in a satire about an accidental airborne toxic event that terrifyingly changes their comfortable suburban lives.
The photographer Nan Goldin, who is a subject in this year’s Centerpiece selection "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed", has created two posters (one pictured above) to celebrate the fest's milestone. This documentary by Laura Poitras (which won the top prize of the Golden Lion at Venice) explores the legal battle between Goldin and the Sacklers, the family behind the pharmaceutical company, Purdue Pharma who she held personally accountable for her opioid addiction.
James Gray's latest feature, "Armageddon Time" has been selected as the NYFF 60th Anniversary Celebration screening. This semi-autobiographical, coming-of-age drama, set in 1980's Queens, is about a sixth grade boy (Banks Repeta) who dreams of becoming an artist. Yet his parents (Jeremy Strong and Anne Hathaway) have other plans for his future while he struggles to understand the racism from people (including his parents) about his friendship with an African-American classmate (Jaylin Webb).
The Closing Night selection will be "The Inspection", the riveting feature film debut by Elegance Bratton. Based on Bratton's own experiences, Jeremy Pope stars as a troubled young gay man, forced to live on the streets due to conflict with his homophobic mother (Gabrielle Union), who decides to join the Marines in an attempt to turn his life around. But this is during the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" era, making this even more of a challenge for him.
Other films in the Main Slate include North American and US premieres from international filmmakers like Marie Kreutzer ("Corsage"); Frederick Wiseman ("A Couple"); Jerzy Skolimowski ("EO"); Mia Hansen-Løve ("One Fine Morning"); Cristian Mungiu ("R.M.N."); Davy Chou ("Return to Seoul"); Pietro Marcello ("Scarlet"); Alice Diop ("Saint Omer").
Some highlights from the Spotlight section of the fest includes the film critic, Elvis Mitchell's first time behind the camera with the documentary, "Is That Black Enough for You?!?" which takes an engaging yet scholarly look at the African-American revolution in cinema during the 1970's; The Oscar-winning British director, James Ivory looks back at himself in the documentary, "A Cooler Climate" which he co-directed with Giles Gardner that reveals the contents of a recently found box of film shot in the 1960's during Ivory's life-changing trip to Afghanistan; "Sr" explores the life and career of Robert Downey Sr., the visionary filmmaker best known for his counterculture comedies (who passed away at eighty-five in 2021) from director Chris Smith. And the world premiere of "Till", Chinonye Chukwu’s heartfelt examination of the tragic aftermath of the horrific murder of Emmett Till, a fourteen year old boy from Chicago, with his mother, Mamie (Danielle Deadwyler) demanding the world see what was done to her son, helping to ignite the civil rights movement.
For the complete list of films, events and to purchase tickets, please click below:
NYFF60
Wednesday, September 14, 2022
JEAN-LUC GODARD (1930 - 2022)
Jean-Luc Godard, one of the most important and influential filmmakers who dramatically shifted the potential of cinema by challenging the conventions of the art form, has died at the age of ninety-one. With the release of his debut feature, "Breathless" in 1960, he helped to establish what would be known as the French New Wave movement which rejected traditional filmmaking methods to explore experimentation with narrative, editing and visual style, which effectively reinvigorated motion pictures. He was also one who strongly championed the idea of the auteur theory which stated that the director was the clear 'author' of a film despite there being many people involved in the making of the project.
Godard was born into wealth and comfort with his father, Paul was a Swiss doctor and his mother, Odile was the daughter of Julien Monod, a founder of the Banque Paribas. While he did not attend films regularly when he was young, Godard became intrigued with cinema by reading about it in the magazine, La Revue du cinéma. But his interest intensified when he joined several ciné-clubs in Paris, groups dedicated to film screenings and discussions. This lead to Godard to explore film criticism and founded a short-lived magazine, Gazette du cinéma with Jacques Rivette and Maurice Schérer (who would later become better known as filmmaker, Éric Rohmer). He would go on to write for the just established film journal, Cahiers du Cinéma in 1951.
During this time, Godard got his hands on a camera and began to make short films, becoming friendly with other aspiring filmmakers, Alain Resnais, Claude Chabrol, Jacques Demy, Agnès Varda and François Truffaut. Now determined to make his first feature film, Godard went to the 1959 Cannes Film Festival where he got financing from producer Georges de Beauregard and asked Truffaut if he could use an idea they had come-up together about a car thief.
With his follow-up film, "Une femme est une femme (A Woman Is a Woman)" in 1961 (which would star his future wife, Anna Karina), this began a period, lasting about eight years, where Godard would go on to make movies that reflected his love of Hollywood and film history yet told through his particular vision of cinema. This included "Bande à part (Band of Outsiders)", "Alphaville", "Pierrot le Fou", "Masculin Féminin", "Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle (Two or Three Things I Know About Her)", "La Chinoise", "Week-end" and the other film Godard is probably best known for, "Le Mépris (Contempt)", from 1963 that starred Brigitte Bardot, Michel Piccoli and Jack Palance.
By 1968, Godard seemed to have become disillusioned by his fame and the history of conventional cinema, referring to most of it as "bourgeois", deciding to largely move away from mainstream filmmaking and began to shift his focus by taking more of an active political stance in his life and films. His work during this time involved protesting against wars and social injustice, avant-garde documentaries and "Tout Va Bien", a political drama in 1972 which starred Yves Montand and Jane Fonda.
Godard returned to more traditional filmmaking in 1980 with "Sauve qui peut (la vie) (Every Man for Himself)" with Isabelle Huppert and Nathalie Baye. He continued to work regularly throughout the rest of the 1980's and '90's, which included experimental films inspired by Bizet's opera ("Prénom Carmen (First Name: Carmen)"); a modern re-telling of the story of the virgin birth ("Je vous salue, Marie (Hail Mary)"); and an adaptation of a William Shakespeare play ("King Lear"). By the turn of the century, Godard's output had slowed down, making five feature films and essentially abandoning a clear narrative structure, focusing instead on a fragmented montage of images and even experimenting with 3D with "Adieu au Langage (Goodbye to Language)" in 2014. Godard's final film, "Le Livre d'image (The Image Book)" was released in 2018 and was an avant-garde essay about the modern Arabic world.
While he did suffer from some health issues, Godard was not seriously ill yet was simply tired of living. He decided to end his life on September 13th with the assistance of voluntary euthanasia which is legal in Switzerland where the director has lived off and on since childhood. Godard was married twice; to Anna Karina, the Danish actress appeared in eight films with Godard, who were married for five years until 1965. Karina passed away in 2019. He then married French actress, Anne Wiazemsky in 1967, who performed in his films, "La Chinoise" and "Week-end", with the couple ending their marriage in 1979. Wiazemsky died of breast cancer in 2017.
What I think has made Jean-Luc Godard continue to be such a remarkably enduring yet certainly divisive figure in cinema was his strong passion for artistic freedom, to creatively challenge himself with bold, unorthodox work that in turn would entice, frustrate and surprise viewers, opening them up to explore the endless possibilities of meaning in his films.
Sunday, September 11, 2022
WINNERS OF THE 2022 VENICE FILM FESTIVAL
This year's Venice Film Festival has ended with Laura Poitras receiving the top prize of the Golden Lion for her latest non-fiction work, "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed". This is only the second time in this International fest's long-running history that a documentary has won this award (following "Sacro Gra" by Gianfranco Rosi in 2013) and the Oscar-winner Poitras has become the third female filmmaker in a row to win this honor. "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed" examines photographer, Nan Goldin's legal battle against the Sackler family for her becoming addicted to their opioids.
The rest of the top prizes went to only a handful of other films; Luca Guadagnino received Best Director for his coming-of-age romantic-horror film, "Bones and All' with the co-star of the film, Taylor Russell winning the Best Young Actor prize. Cate Blanchett received her second Volpi Cup for Best Actress (which she won fifteen years ago for playing Bob Dylan in "I'm Not There") for her mesmerizing turn as a tempestuous, classical music conductor in Todd Field's "Tár", his first feature film in sixteen years. Colin Farrell won for Best Actor for his work in Martin McDonagh's black comedy, "The Banshees of Inisherin" with the director receiving the Best Screenplay prize for the film. And Alice Diop, the French-Senegalese filmmaker who has made her name making several well-received documentaries, received the runner-up prize of Best Film for her first narrative film, "Saint Omer". This story about a pregnant novelist doing research for a book at the trial of a Senegalese woman accused of murdering her baby also won Diop the award for Best Debut Feature.
Here is a partial list of winners of the 2022 Venice Film Festival:
Golden Lion for Best Film: "All the Beauty and the Bloodshed"
Grand Jury Prize: "Saint Omer"
Silver Lion for Best Director: Luca Guadagnino, "Bones and All"
Luigi de Laurentiis Award for Best Debut Feature: Alice Diop, "Saint Omer"
Special Jury Prize: "No Bears"
Best Screenplay: Martin McDonagh, "The Banshees of Inisherin"
Volpi Cup for Best Actress: Cate Blanchett, "Tár"
Volpi Cup for Best Actor: Colin Farrell, "The Banshees of Inisherin"
Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young Actor: Taylor Russell, "Bones and All"
Orizzonti (Horizon) Awards:
Best Film: "World War III"
Best Director: Tizza Covi and Rainer Frimmel, "Vera"
Best Screenplay: Fernando Guzzoni, "Blanquita"
Special Jury Prize: "Bread and Salt"
Best Actress: Vera Gemma, "Vera"
Best Actor: Mohsen Tanabandeh, "World War III"
Best Short Film: "Snow in September"
Friday, September 2, 2022
MOST ANTICIPATED MOVIES TO SEE THIS FALL 2022
I can't believe that Labor Day is almost upon us. Not only is it a day to honor and recognize the labor movement and the contributions of laborers in the US but it is also long considered the start of the fall movie season. I have usually put together my own list of movies I am highly anticipating to see over the next four months of the year but time has escaped me, which doesn't allow me enough of an opportunity to do the research to properly share my opinion. So I will offer Vulture's round-up of the upcoming fall/winter movies with twenty-four given a special highlight.
Please click below to read:
24 Movies We Can’t Wait to See This Fall 2022