Post(s) tagged with "afi"

Day 3, Spend Your Weekend at AFI FEST!

We’re starting our first and only weekend of screenings for AFI FEST 2012, so come to Hollywood and spend the next couple of days seeing free films from around the world.

Tonight’s Gala is ON THE ROAD, in which director Walter Salles gives Jack Kerouac’s coming of age novel new life with a screen adaptation that burns brightly and boldly.

Grauman’s Chinese Theatre
6925 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood, CA 90028

Media check-in: 5:30 p.m.
Red carpet arrivals: 7:15 p.m.
Program begins: 8:00 p.m.

We’re also offering no less than three Special Screenings today:

THE CENTRAL PARK FIVE is Ken Burns’ documentary about a group of teenagers who were forced to give false confessions and were wrongfully convicted for raping and beating New York City jogger Trisha Meili.

Media check-in: 2:30 p.m.
Red carpet arrivals: 3:00 p.m.
Program begins: 3:30 p.m.

HOLY MOTORS, director Léos Carax’s visionary film in which Denis Lavant plays a shadowy figure who inhabits many roles.

Media check-in: 5:30 p.m.
Red carpet arrivals: 6:15 p.m.
Program begins: 7:00 p.m. (at the Egyptian Theatre)

WEST OF MEMPHIS casts a light on the brutal murder of three young boys and the 18-year struggle to exonerate the teenagers convicted of the crime.

Media check-in: 5:30 p.m.
Red carpet arrivals: 6:15 p.m.
Program begins: 7:15 p.m. (at the Egyptian Theatre)

Expected to appear: ON THE ROAD (Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart, Amy Adams, Walter Salles, Roman Coppola, Charles Gillibert, Rebecca Yeldham, Jose Rivera, Danny Glicker and Gustavo Santoalalla); THE CENTRAL PARK FIVE (Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana, Korey Wise, Sarah Burns, Ken Burns and David McMahon); HOLY MOTORS (Eva Mendes, Léos Carax); WEST OF MEMPHIS (Amy Berg, Billy McMilin, Lake Bell, David Byrne, Matthew Cooke, Anthony Hines, Lucinda Williams and Rebel Wilson); ALL THE LIGHT IN THE SKY (Jane Adams, Sophia Takal, Kent Osborne, Lindsay Burdge, David Siskind and Adam Donaghey); LAURENCE ANYWAYS (Suzanne Clément and Melvil Poupaud ); and ABCs OF DEATH (Adam Wingard, Adrian Garcia Bogliano, Simon Barrett, Jon Schnepp, Marcel Sarmiento and Jason Eisener).

AFI Fest Black & White Nights-Day 2

Mike Ott on Survival and Escape

PEARBLOSSOM HWY
11/04/12 - Chinese 6, 7:00 p.m.
11/07/12 - Chinese 1, 1:45 p.m.

By Katie Datko

On a map, the real Pearblossom Highway looks kind of like a scar bisecting northern LA County, a jagged stretch of mostly two-lane highway heading from the suburbs just north of LA east to the high desert. It’s probably no coincidence, then, that PEARBLOSSOM HWY, Mike Ott’s follow-up feature to his multiple award-winning indie film festival sensation LiTTLEROCK (which played at AFI FEST 2010 and won the Audience Award) is about wounds — specifically, the need to heal the fractures caused by denial or neglect and the longing for belonging and acceptance.

Partly based on the real lives of the main characters, Cory (Cory Zacharia) and Atsuko (Atsuko Okatsuka), PEARBLOSSOM HWY is a humanistic yet barbed tale, darker and in many ways more poignant than its predecessor. The characters may be familiar to Ott fans, but both Cory and Atsuko have been given new back-stories. Cory is an unemployed whippet-huffing, orphaned rockstar-wannabe who longs to make it on reality TV. Atskuo, Cory’s friend and videographer who’s also an urchin of sorts, has been sent by her Japanese grandmother to live in Antelope Valley with her uncle’s family while trying to pass the U.S. citizenship test.

In PEARBLOSSOM HWY, Ott pushes the envelope on all levels. The intertwining narrative threads of the two main characters’ rites of passage mirror each other: Cory makes tapes for his TV show audition and manages to reconnect with his older brother, Jeff (John Brotherton); Atsuko raises money to go back to Japan to visit her ailing grandmother the only way she knows how — by selling herself — becoming increasingly more detached as the film progresses.

It might seem as though Cory’s story is front and center, but it’s really Atsuko’s journey that commands the viewer’s attention. Even though it’s unnerving on many levels, we get a clear sense of her slow unraveling — framed through mirrors, windows and montages of highways and truck stops. Atsuko’s first scene with a Japanese client shows her standing against a curtained window, her client’s voice off-screen. While she may seem childlike and innocent, she nevertheless stands her ground, asserts herself and, interestingly, speaks back to him not as a coy, deferential call girl, but using an informal, familiar tone. Even though Atsuko’s image becomes increasingly refracted, it is through her language that she seems to hold onto her sense of ‘self.’

Read More

A Meditative and Engrossing Vision

LEVIATHAN
11/04/12 - Chinese 2, 7:15 p.m.

By Brad Franklin 

LEVIATHAN is a film that is both unique and indefinable. It is easier to say what it isn’t than what it is. It is not a typical documentary. Its subject is commercial fishing off the New Bedford Coast of Massachusetts, but it does not treat its subject as a documentary would. There is no narration. There is no (discernible) dialogue. The only non-visual communication between the filmmakers and the viewer is a biblical quote from Job (made ominous with a scary font) that elucidates the film’s title and an endnote honoring the countless vessels and crew lost in the very waters where they filmed. These are not negatives. These stylistic choices are what make the film a truly immersive experience in a way that no IMAX documentary could.

In essence, it’s a visual diary portrayed in hyper-realistic terms. The directors employ an essentially raw form of filmmaking by simply shooting the environment of a fishing vessel with cameras placed at impossible-seeming angles from improbable perspectives, leaving their intent equivocal. Sharp cuts interrupt uncommonly long scenes that encourage the viewer to absorb the full spectrum of emotion and information that the camera captures, which involve all facets of life and death on the boat. The camera is not passive; it is always interfacing with what it’s shooting. A single scene can illuminate the brutal and transient nature of life, and evoke awe and wonder at the glory of creation.

Despite its raw, HD video aesthetic, directors Lucien Castaing-Taylor (SWEETGRASS, AFI FEST 2009) and Véréna Paravel (FOREIGN PARTS) have crafted a beautiful and arresting record of modern life at sea. LEVIATHAN presents a common-seeming vocation as an encounter with the sublime. This is complemented with an artful eye toward edits. It is not always clear if an edit has been made, if the camera jumped or if something in the environment changed. When a clear cut does come along, you are usually transported to a completely different sphere of life on the boat, which is always jarring yet is part of the mechanism that keeps the film truly engaging throughout.

Most shots are extremely intimate, as the camera has no regard for personal space. It pushes in uncomfortably close to the fishermen’s faces and stays there, watching. It is literally left to languish on the deck with the dead or dying fish and is lowered down into the sea as it is passed between ships. Often, shots are upside down or so dark they are indecipherable, but this does not detract from the potency of the atmosphere; it creates it. Certain shots transcend their initial surface quality and take on a foreboding, almost frightening tension, partly due to the lack of a guiding voice, but also because of their length. In this way, LEVIATHAN stands with the QATSI trilogy in its meditative and engrossing stream-of-consciousness staring, albeit limited to the realm of commercial fishing.

If LEVIATHAN does have a thesis, it’s that documentary filmmaking needs neither narrative, identifiable characters or a clear message to engage an audience, as these things are discoverable without guidance.  

Brad Franklin is a writer based in Los Angeles.

A Drama of Restraint

BARBARA
11/04/12 - Egyptian, 6:15 p.m.
11/07/12 - Egyptian, 4:00 p.m.  

By Brad Franklin

Set in the German Democratic Republic in the ’80s, BARBARA begins with the struggle of the titular character’s (Nina Hoss) attempt to exit the misery of provincial life-in-exile. Shipped off to a small country hospital for applying for a visa to move west, Barbara maintains a formal manner and keeps to herself as she bides her time, waiting to escape. However, the kindness of her colleague, Andre (Ronald Zehrfeld), begins to warm her, creating a conflict between her present and future lives. As the film develops, it becomes less and less likely that Barbara will find the escape she seeks.

Though not a thriller in the traditional sense, BARBARA delivers a sustained tension as the plot unfurls. The narrative is not heavy-handed; instead, it builds the story around the action. Back-story and character motivation fall into place quietly without distracting from the thrust of the narrative. Who she is, how she came to be desperate to escape and who the strange men are that come to her apartment to abuse her all become clear without direct explanations.

Hoss delivers a great performance that is remarkably restrained. You can feel the conflict in Barbara and the anxiety behind her stiff facade (particularly in regards to those who can hurt her) but with her patients, she shows a remarkable, almost uncharacteristic depth of compassion.

Zehrfeld’s Andre draws out this side of her further through his own empathy and shy, yet open, longing for her. His performance brings vibrancy to an otherwise tedious world — by design, as many of the characters have little to be chipper about. Mirroring Barbara’s character, the film itself never becomes too sincere or sentimental. When any scene might become trite or romantic, it retreats and reverts to its previous dispassionate alignment or “apologizes” for its indulgence, generating tension and creating an atmosphere of dulled, remorseful pleasure.

The story serves to paint a fairly accurate picture of life in the GDR. The director/screenwriter (Christian Petzold) has a personal connection to the period and locale, and he made sure to maintain strict attention to detail, going so far as to ensure that the clothing was factually from the period. Everything is vintage; no reproductions were used. He wanted to be sure everything looked, worked (or didn’t work) and moved as it would have during that time. 

BARBARA won the Best Director Silver Bear at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival and will be Germany’s entry for Foreign Language Film at next year’s Oscars®.

Brad Franklin is a writer based in Los Angeles.

AFI Fest Black & White Nights-Opening Night

HITCHCOCK Recaps

Our Opening Night Gala, HITCHCOCK, was a resounding success!  In addition, ALL the free ticket holders and all of the Rush Line got in last night — so don’t hesitate to come out for tonight’s Gala, LIFE OF PI IN 3D.

We’re also getting a lot of good press. Be sure to check out these photos galleries and coverage from last night:

Los Angeles Times: “No Suspense Here, HITCHCOCK Enthralls AFI FEST Crowd

The Wrap: “Party Photos: ‘Good Evening’ - HITCHCOCK Opens AFI FEST 2012

Hollywood.com: “HITCHCOCK Premiere at AFI FEST: A Classic Hollywood Tale of Love and Horror

Photos from Day 1 of AFI FEST Presented by Audi.

Youth in Transformation

ELECTRICK CHILDREN
11/02/12 - Chinese 1, 10:00 p.m.
11/05/12 - Chinese 5, 4:30 p.m. 

ONLY THE YOUNG
11/03/12 - Chinese 3, 1:30 p.m.
11/05/12 - Chinese 3, 4:45 p.m. 

By Annabel Campos

AFI FEST 2012 offers great films in the Young Americans section. Two films I recommend are ELECTRICK CHILDREN and ONLY THE YOUNG, which share similar themes about young people and their insecurities and transformations.

In director Rebecca Thomas’ ELECTRICK CHILDREN, the main character, 15-year-old Rachel (Julia Garner), who is pregnant, escapes her fundamentalist Mormon community in search of someone she thinks is a God-sent singer on a cassette tape. The documentary ONLY THE YOUNG by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims, features three teenagers who grow from immaturity to the beginning of adulthood.

Both films have a high-caliber of talent, both on- and off-screen. The cinematography of ELECTRICK CHILDREN is brilliant, from the earthy, prairie grassland colors to the soft, fluorescent, neon-lit faces in Las Vegas. The film contrasts the atmosphere of peaceful pastures versus the chaos of noisy streets; we soon find out that places that look safe might actually make for a miserable life.

One evening, Rachel and Clyde (Rory Culkin) share food in the kitchen of his parents’ suburban home; she asks if they can move in together, little aware that he has sneaked them into the house in the middle of the night because he’s prohibited from living there himself. Clyde later reveals that living with his parents feels like juvenile hall. His life seems screwed up, but he decides to take care of Rachel and her baby and we see Clyde change; he goes from being a lost garage-band boy to being a man.

Early on, ELECTRICK CHILDREN introduces a symbol of transformation: a red mustang horse that Rachel imagines running up and down grasslands, and more abstractly, she associates with the excitement of the outer world and the music she hears on a cassette tape.

Read More

FEST+, A Google Hangout On Air


JOHN DIES AT THE END

Join AFI FEST in an online conversation celebrating our Midnight movies and one of our New Auteurs, Brandon Cronenberg.

AFI FEST programmer Lane Kneedler and Fangoria Magazine Editor-in-Chief Chris Alexander will lead a conversation with the filmmakers behind ABCs OF DEATH, JOHN DIES AT THE END and ANTIVIRAL.

The best part — you get to be a part of the conversation! Just sign on via Google+ and join the chat LIVE as we dispatch from the heart of Hollywood.

Want to ask us something? Tweet @AFIFEST and we’ll respond on air!

In addition to Cronenberg, the chat will feature JOHN DIES AT THE END director Don Coscarelli, and a team of filmmakers from ABCs OF DEATH, including Simon Barrett, Adrian Bogliano, Marcel Sarmiento, Jon Schnepp, Marc Walkow and Adam Wingard.

When: Saturday, November 3, 3:00 p.m.
Where to Watch: Circle in @AFIFEST on Google+ or find @AFIFEST on YouTube
How to Join: Anyone with a Google+ account can circle in and ask a question. A Google Plus Account is not required just to watch. To join Google Plus, visit the tutorial here.

Fan Station Broadcasting Live from the Box Office! Anyone can join just by hopping over to the fan station at the AT&T Box Office on the 4th Floor of Hollywood and Highland and interact live with our digital panel. Stop by, get your tickets, and join the conversation!

About

AFI is America’s promise to preserve the history of the motion picture, to honor the artists and their work and to educate the next generation of storytellers. AFI provides leadership in film, television and digital media and is dedicated to initiatives that engage the past, the present and the future of the moving image arts.

As a non-profit educational and cultural organization open to the public, AFI relies on the generous financial support from moving arts enthusiasts like you to provide funding for its programs and initiatives. Become a member today and support your American Film Institute!

CONNECT

American Film Institute

AFI FEST presented by Audi


AFI Conservatory

AFI Silver Theatre

AFI Docs