Saturday, February 28, 2009

Two Lovers


Okay I will admit it. Sometimes I have “problems” watching movies that tell stories about men; the opposite is that I almost have no “problem” with stories about women… But definitively this man story gave me no problem as since the first scene, when Leonard tries to commit suicide, grabbed my attention, all my feelings were absolutely touched and I so gladly embarked in this extremely good voyage about damaged people.

Definitively helped a lot that Joaquin Phoenix played Leonard and if is true that this is his last movie, I will surely miss him, especially because this very touching performance. Also Gwyneth Paltrow (Michelle) and Vanessa Shaw (Sandra) have remarkable performances as his love interest performing two very opposite women types.

This James Gray movie tells about Leonard going back to live with her parents after the parents of his ex-fiancé suspended the wedding due to genetic incompatibility. But he’s a true mess that comes to life when he meets his new vivacious neighbor Michelle and perhaps less interested but still attracted to, Sandra the daughter of the future business partner of his father. But you really have to see how Joaquin Phoenix is shifty, selfish, vulnerable, uncertain and keen to love someone again; he truly is remarkable. Also the story looks/feels like a good old-fashion tale that if not because the use of cells and computers will look definitively timeless.

The film has excellent production values plus a nice cinematography with very good framing and views of always nice to discover again and again New York City. Worth to mention is Isabella Rossellini great performance with amazing expresions and some quite funny moments. The movie premiered in 2008 Cannes film festival were was in competition for the Golden Palm, has been honored in many festivals and awards including a nomination for best foreign film at the 2009 Cesar Awards.

The movie definitively is best suited for mature audiences that enjoy solid good storytelling dramas with excellent performances by great actors.

Enjoy!!!

34th César Award Winners


Last night the Academy had the awards ceremony and here are the winners.

Best Film: Séraphine
Best First Film: Il y a longtemps que je t'aime, Philippe Claudel
Best Foreign Film: Valse avec Bachir, Ari Folman
Best Director: Jean-François Richet for Mesrine
Best Actress: Yolande Moreau in Séraphine
Best Actor
: Vincent Cassel in Mesrine
Best Supporting Actress: Elsa Zylberstein in Il y a longtemps que je t'aime
Best Supporting Actor: Jean-Paul Roussillon in Un conte de Noël
Best Female Newcomer: Déborah François in Le premier jour du reste de ta vie
Best Male Newcomer
: Marc-André Grondin in Le premier jour du reste de ta vie

To check all the winners go here. I have been “dying” to see Séraphine and according to what I have been reading plus the trailers I know that I will enjoy it a lot; still I’m sorry that Kristin Scott Thomas didn’t won the award, but I know that Yolande Moreau performance is extraordinary. So glad that Vincent Cassel won as well as Mesrine’s director, Cassel performance is truly remarkable and unforgettable and the movie is high quality entertainment.

A la prochaine!

Sita Sings the Blues – Final


About a year ago this film premiered in the 2008 Berlinale and was competing for a Teddy Award, among other prizes. Then the animated movie was nominated in the 2008 Gotham Independent Films Awards where won the Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You Award, director Nina Paley won the Emerging Filmmaker Award at the Denver International Film Festival and the movie is nominated at the Independent Spirit Awards in the Someone to Watch award.

The good news is that on March 7th the film will play on New York PBS station Thirteen WNET and will be available on the station’s web site. The film has a rather curious story that I reproduce here for all to know and hopefully learn that no matter how little you think your film could make, you better make deals with the legal owners of whatever you decide to include in your film. The article excerpt comes from the New York Times, was written by Margy Rochlin and you can read the full article here.

After the final credits rolled, the gangly, curly-haired Ms. Paley bounded onstage and announced, “You’ve all just participated in an illegal act.’ ” Though Ms. Hanshaw’s recordings are not protected by federal copyright, those who own the rights to the songs themselves charge tens of thousands of dollars that Ms. Paley does not have to use them — which is also more than independent distributors have offered for a theatrical release.

Because of an exception in the copyright act, public television stations can broadcast music without having to clear individual licenses, and Sita will be shown on the New York PBS station WNET on March 7, after which it will be available on the station’s Web site. “My thing,” Ms. Paley said in November, sounding glum, “is that I just want people to see it.”


The best news is that now many of us will have the incredibly good opportunity to watch the animated film –that I imagine could be similar to Persepolis- at the PBS station website from February 26th. To check the news in the PBS station go here where you can check the trailer (the trailer is also here) and for those interested here is the synopsis:

Sita is a goddess separated from her beloved Lord and husband Rama. Nina is an animator whose husband moves to India, then dumps her by email. Three hilarious shadow puppets narrate both ancient tragedy and modern comedy in this beautifully animated interpretation of the Indian epic Ramayana. Set to the 1920’s jazz vocals of Annette Hanshaw, Sita Sings the Blues earns its tagline as “The Greatest Break-Up Story Ever Told”.

I’m thankful to Ms. Paley for giving us this amazing opportunity and be sure that I’ll be watching the film.

Last Update

Just finished watching the movie and is truly awesome! Animation is great but the best is that the movie is structured similar to a Bollywood movie with songs and dances; the songs are 1920’s vocals by Annette Hanshaw and Sita in those moments really recalls Betty Boop. Fantastic! Most impressed with Nina Paley storytelling skills as the parallel stories, one about Sita and the other about Nina, are the best “man dump woman’ story that I have seen lately, if not ever!

A must be seen for those that like unusual animation, Bollywood movies and/or great women stories well told.

Enjoy!!!

Many thanks to robin for the direct link that is here.

Friday, February 27, 2009

The World Unseen


Not an easy movie to review as I believe that the movie is more mainstream than lesbian interest. So to be fair I’ll do what I did before and try to review it from a mainstream point-of-view and then from a lesbian interest pov.

The first film by Shamim Sarif to be released –she also wrote the screenplay and the novel- tells about two Indian-born women that find attraction in the 50’s South Africa when awful government-sanctioned racism and sexism apartheid was in full enforcement. Miriam (Lisa Ray) has three children from a stern and unfaithful husband and as a human being is quietly suffocating with her senseless marriage. Amina (Sheetal Sheth) is a free-spirited woman of mixed races blood that runs a café with a “colored” business partner; she is “violating” many apartheid laws as she’s “mixed”, has a black business partner and her café serves white and “colored” people. On top she’s an “open” lesbian that dresses unconventionally for those years as she wears pants instead of dresses and/or the Indian traditional outfits. When the two women meet attraction is set but their fears to “everything” that surrounds their lives makes their “romance” not that possible.

Yes, I believe that the central story is a total lesbian interest romance, but the way that the screenplay was written does not really allow to see the lesbian romance as the center story, as tells so many collateral stories that all are told in a “telegraphed” way that you really have a hard time to see the story as lesbian interest and becomes easier to see it as mainstream, like many mainstream cinema viewers state in their comments.

According to what I read seems like some mainstream viewers and critics enjoyed the movie for the story that tells about apartheid with some “discovering” that it was not only applied to blacks, but to all “colored” people. Most recommend the movie to lesbian and straight audiences, but most also claim that the movie as a movie is not that good due to the lack of skills the writer/director shows when dealing with sensitive issues like the clash between the personal and the political in a land torn by racism and sexism and an end product that looks/feels more like a bland melodramatic made for TV movie.

So, as a mainstream movie I find that the movie lacks continuity due to poor editing, screenplay does not allow good characters development, cinematography is below average, very poor art direction with terrible sets and poor lighting, poor framing (with one or two exceptions that were not only interesting but looked like visual poetry… so Sarif has potential, hmm!) and other tech flaws that honestly make the film not so easy to watch if you enjoy good cinema.

Knowing that the movie had a low budget and thinking that’s the movie belong to the lesbian interest genre I will try to forget about production values and see only the central story. Even when I do see the lesbian interest central story I had a hard time to clearly see it in the screen as there were so many interesting things going on that totally distract my attention from their relationship. The café with interracial and police situations, Miriam disgusting husband and me trying to understand his motives, ditto for Farah; Omar flirting with the post office lady and the appalling car situation, etc. etc. The film has so many other stories that are interesting but mentioning them definitively took time away from the “central” romance between Miriam and Amina and became totally underdeveloped and if we take out all the other stories, I believe that the romance was “telegraphed” in perhaps not more than half hour.

So, as a lesbian interest movie I find it that the “central” story becomes secondary and inconsequential as if the two women were only friends the film would have worked the same, as the real story impact is on the collateral tales.

I imagine that the book has to be different and according to what I read it seems that in the book the lesbian relationship is important to the story. So it becomes a must be read book for me, as this honored novel won a Betty Trask Award and the Pendleton May First Novel Award for Shamim Sarif; but also because Sarif found her inspiration in the tales of her grandmother that lived in South Africa in those years.

Anyway, I believe that for those that enjoy the lesbian interest genre the film will leave them unsatisfied wanting to know more about the characters; while mainstream viewers that are unfamiliar with apartheid would feel the full impact of the apartheid story.

I definitively enjoyed this movie less that the other Sarif movie, it was too messy for my taste and cannot recommend it for lesbian interest audiences as a lesbian interest movie. Perhaps the book is better and if so I will comment it here after I read it. Still because of the apartheid story I find it interesting, but the movie flaws are too many for me and had a hard time watching the movie.

Enjoy!

I Can’t Think Straight


After a VERY LONG wait (almost 2 years since I first learn about the movie) I was able to watch it and even when has some very noticeable flaws as a movie I have to admit that I found it highly entertaining and light as feather which was a very welcome feeling after watching so many serious mainstream dramas.

This film is Shamim Sarif debut that was put on hold due to financial problems, that’s why The World Unseen –her second film- was released before and somehow you can tell that is Sarif’s debut as honestly the film does not flow swiftly and to my eyes there are some continuity problems due mainly to editing. But whatever flaws the movie has I’m sure that most of viewers are willing to and did fill the obvious story gaps with their imagination, just as I did.

Tells about beautiful Tala letting her upper class family prepare the festivities to her fourth try to the altar (previous three were cancelled by Tala at the last moment) in Amman, Jordan. But Tala is not the typical Christian Arab woman as she had the courage to open her own business in London. Then you have Leyla a quiet/shy Hindu Muslim living at her parents' home, with a boyfriend that looks more like a friend and some clues that definitely tells us that she’s in an identity discovery path. When both women meet in London sparkles arise from the very first time and thankfully the characters take their time to consummate their attraction and you have to see how everything happens in the most jet-set scenarios (female polo players??), quiet/nice places (Oxford) and upper class London and Amman mansions.

But besides the two very different personalities romance, the story also tries to tell about Palestinian anti-Semitism via Tala’s mother –a character that truly looks and behaves like Cruella de Vil- that it’s very funny even when says truly hard to hear remarks. Also deals with other sensitive issues like gays marrying straights, family tolerance –or not- to their close family homosexuality and other cultural situations that I imagine that in the novel also by Sarif surely are well developed, but in the movie the main and secondary characters really are one-dimensional and there is an oversimplification of all the characters and situations that becomes quite obvious when the first clear “story jump” happens thanks to poor editing. Sometimes is better to focus in only one issue as when trying to cover many issues is not that easy, especially with complex issues like the ones touched in this film.

Still, I believe that the movie is entertaining and with good production values if I think only in the lesbian interest genre as the end product has a style that is really light and enjoyable, which is great for a change. Perhaps the other genre movie that has a similar style is very enjoyable Nina’s Heavenly Delights, so if you enjoyed that movie probably you will enjoy this one as much.

Performances are adequate and have to admit that the performance I enjoyed the most was Tala’s mother Reema performed by Antonia Frering. I know is an awful character but she did performed it quite well. Lisa Ray (Tala) and Sheetal Sheth (Leyla) have acceptable performances and excel only when they do expressions, especially Sheth with her big-big eyes.

I really was looking forward to watch this movie as well as The World Unseen, but I also imagined that I had to read the novels. After watching both movies I know that I have to read both books to find if whatever I imagined in the many story gaps match what the written story tells.

I’m looking forward to see more movies by Shamim Sarif but I hope that her storytelling and filmmaker techniques improve as I do believe that she has very good stories that deserve excellent storytelling in the big screen.

I was reading what viewers commented in the net and most liked the movie lightness with some having not positive feelings about some sensitive issues touched “so lightly” in the movie. So, there is always the possibility that some of you readers could react not so positive to the movie; but in the dry world of lesbian interest cinema, good light stories do not come that often, so I imagine most us are glad that there are filmmakers trying to explore romance with a different scenario.

I did enjoy the lightness feeling while watching and definitively this movie is a keeper in my collection when the DVD “finally” becomes available.

Enjoy!!!

20th Ankara International Film Festival


From March 12 to 22 the fest will take place in Turkey with many categories that will screen movies, shorts and documentaries. These are the films they will screen in the From All Over The World category.

Idiots and Angels, Bill Plympton, USA, 2008
Purgatorio (Purgatory), Roberto Rochin Naya, Mexico, 2008
O rodičích a dětech (Of Parents and Children), Vladimír Michálek, Czech Republic, 2008
Happy-Go-Lucky, Mike Leigh, UK, 2008
Delta, Kornél Mundruzcó, Germany and Hungary, 2008
Desierto Adentro (The Desert Within), Rodrigo Pla, Mexico, 2008
Peur(s) du Noir (Fear(s) of the Dark), Blutch, Charles Burns, Marie Caillou, Pierre Di Sciullo, Lorenzo Mattotti, and Richard McGuire, France, 2007
Kino Lika, Dalibor Matanić, Croatia, 2008
Avaze gonjeshk-ha (The Song of Sparrows), Majid Majidi, Iran, 2008
Hot Dog, Bill Plumpton, USA, 2008
Tokyo!, Michel Gondry, Leos Carax, and Bong Joon-Ho, France, Japan, South Korea and Germany, 2008
Turneja (The Tour), Goran Marković, Bosnia & Herzegovina and Serbia, 2008
Sanguepazzo (Wild Blood), Marco Tullio Giordana, Italy and France, 2008
C’est pas moi, je le jure! (It’s not me, I swear!, Philippe Falardeau, Canada, 2008
Låt den rätte komma in (Let The Right One In), Tomas Alfedson, Sweden, 2008

Most of the movies are known to the blog, but there are some new ones in the animation genre and there are some other interesting films in the National Feature Film Competition showcasing films from produced or co produced by Turkey. To check all the films, shorts and docs go here.

49th Cartagena de Indias International Film Festival


From today until March 7th the fest will take place in the nice Colombian city and here are the films in the official competition.

Veronica, Mauricio Farias, Brazil
Chega de Saudade, Lais Bodanzky, Brazil
El Cuerno de la Abundancia, Juan Carlos Tabio, Cuba
Amorosa Soledad, Martin Carranza and Victoria Galardi, Argentina
Acne, Federico Veiroj, Uruguay and Argentina
Una Semana Solos, Celina Murga, Argentina
La Buena Vida, Andres Wood, Chile
Forasteros, Ventura Pons, Spain
La Nana, Sebastian Silva, Chile
El Camino, Ishtar Yasin, Costa Rica
Los Girasoles Ciegos, Jose Luis Cuerda, Spain
Lake Tahoe, Fernando Eimbcke, Mexico
Espiral, Jorge Perez Solano, Mexico
El Arriero, Guillermo Calle, Colombia
Pasajeros, Andres Cotler, Peru
Entre Os Dedos, Tiago Guedes and Federico Serra, Portugal

There are many more movies in sections like Colombian Cinema Competition, Female Filmmakers (with interesting experimental films) and many more. To check the sections and all the movies, shorts and docs go here.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Coming Soon


For those so kind to ask me if I haven’t seen any movies because I’m not posting the reviews I have to tell them and all of you that yes, I have been seeing movies but unfortunately I haven’t had the necessary time to do the reviews due to my traveling and not really having my head in the right place to write (lol!).

But so I do not forget let me share the movies that will have a review “soon”…

The Day the Earth Stood Still, Scott Derrickson, USA, Canada and Australia, 2008 – Really bad!
Breakfast with Scot, Laurie Lynd, Canada, 2007 – fun to watch entertaining gay interest film

Yao a yao yao dao waipo qiao (Shanghai Triad), Zhang Yimou, France and China, 1995 – not only is a Zhang Yimou film but Gong Li is the star – Fantastic!!! A must be seen for Zhang Yimou and Gong Li fans.
Qiu Ju da guan si (The Story of Qiu Ju), Zhang Yimou, China and Hong Kong, 1992 – simply beautiful and compelling drama of a determined woman played by none other that Gong Li… yes I’m watching her movies and still have a few more to see.

I’ll be adding more titles as soon as I see them and/or finally write the reviews…

23rd London Lesbian & Gay Film Festival


From March 25 to April 5 the fest will take place in London and they will be screening some movies that premiered at the recent Berlinale, so if you live around London I suggest you do not miss the early opportunity to see some lesbian interest movies that seem could be interesting. Here are some of the movies they will screen.

Opening Night Gala: Pusinky (Dolls), (Lesbian Interest)
Closing Night Gala: Baby Love (Gay Interest)
Centerpiece Screenings
Ghosted, Monika Treut (Lesbian Interest)
Burn The Bridges, (Gay Interest)

Europe
Après lui, Gaël Morel, France – Starring Catherine Deneuve – “sexuality is not the focus here. Instead, director Gaël Morel (À Toute Vitesse, Le Clan) and co-writer Christophe Honoré (Les Chansons d’amour) have put together a beautifully controlled meditation on the suffocating nature of grief, driven by a remarkable performance from Deneuve at the film's centre.” Definitively a must be seen for me (Gay Interest)

Bandaged, Maria Beatty, Germany and USA, 2009 (Lesbian Interest) Seems interesting even when is “old-style horror”; read the synopsis here.

Born in ’68, Jacques Martineau and Olivier Ducastel, France, 2008 Starring Laetitia Casta, not sure but I think is Gay Interest. A must be seen for me and I know is not suited for all audiences as running time is 170 minutes! Read synopsis here.

Fuera de Carta (Chef’s Special), Nacho G. Veililla, Spain; starring Javier Camara and is a Gay Interest comedy that definitively I will see. Read synopsis here.

To Faro, Nana Neul, Germany, 2008 (the so-called German Boys Don’t Cry – Lesbian Interest)

There are more movies in the Europe section but I listed the ones that called my attention. In the World section there are some lesbian interest documentaries and movies, like Dreams Deferred: Sakia Gunn Film Project, The Secrets, Lion’s Den, Steam, To Each Her Own, Tru Loved, Lady Trojans, Fucking Different Tel Aviv, black./womyn.: conversations with lesbians of African descent, and “funny” Bi the Way. Great program, isn’t?? Check info for each film here

If you like shorts –as much as I do- check the shorts especially in the following compilations.

Choices - A programme of shorts addressing the highs and lows of lesbian life, in amusing and heartwarming ways.
Girls, Gifts and Getaways - The women in these shorts are looking for a lover, a change in their relationship or a way to escape.

But there are other lesbian interest shorts in the other compilations that you can check here.

Unfortunately I have to publish this post right now and I won’t be able to check the other sections for more lesbian interest films. But I know there are more. This is an incredible good fest with many LGTB films and a good selection of lesbian interest movies, documentaries and shorts. Great!!!

The link to all the section is here.

Cheers!!!

13th Sofia International Film Festival


From March 5 to 15 the fest will take place in beautiful Bulgaria capital and here are some of the films they will screen.

OPENING NIGHT: "The Billy Goat," Georgy Djulgerov (Bulgaria)
CLOSING NIGHT: "Palermo Shooting," Wim Wenders (Germany-France-Italy)
BRITISH GALA:"Slumdog Millionaire," Danny Boyle (U.K.)
TURKISH GALA: "Three Monkeys," Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Turkey)
BULGARIAN GALA: "Farewell to Hemingway," Svetoslav Ovcharov (Bulgaria)
AWARDS CEREMONY GALA: "Waltz With Bashir," Ari Folman (Israel-Germany-France-U.S.)
TOLERANCE GALA: Milk, Gus Van Sant (USA)

OFFICIAL SELECTION

"Autumn," Ozcan Alper (Germany-Turkey)
"Awakening From a Dream," Freddy Mas Franqueza (Spain)
"Possible Lives," Sandra Gugliotta (Argentina)
"The Firm Land," Chapour Haghighat (France-India-Iran)
"For My Father," Dror Zahavi (Germany-Israel)
"Baksy" (Native Dancer), Guka Omarova (Russia-Kazakhstan)
"Franklyn," Gerald McMorrow (U.K.)
"Chiko," Ozgur Yildirim (Germany)
"The Happiest Girl in the World," Radu Jude (Romania)
"Cumbia Callier," Rene Villareal (Mexico)
"Bahrtalo" Robert Lakatos (Hungary)
"Zift," Yavor Gardev (Bulgaria)

I been following the development of this fest at their official site but up to today most of the pages do not work; still if you want to check info about the fest go here.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

32nd Japan Academy Prize Winners


Since today I miraculously have a quiet moment, I decided to review all the posts with awards nominations that I haven’t posted the winners. So if you browse the blog you will find that I updated many posts with the winners.

As mentioned when I posted the nominees, I do not read Japanese but from different sources I found the winners that were announced around February 27th and here they are.

Best Picture: Departures
Best Animated Picture: Ponyo
Best Director: Yojiro Takita (Departures)
Best Screenplay: Kundo Koyama (Departures)
Best Actor: Masahiro Motoki (Departures)
Best Actress: Tae Kimura (All Around Us)
Best Supporting Actor: Tsutomu Yamazaki (Departures)
Best Supporting Actress: Kimiko Yo (Departures)
Best Music: Joe Hisaishi (Ponyo)
Best Cinematography: Takeshi Hamada (Departures)
Best Lighting Direction: Hitoshi Takaya (Departures)
Best Art Direction: Towako Kuwajima (Paco & the Magical Book)
Best Sound Recording: Satoshi Ozaki, Osamu Onodera (Departures)
Best Film Editing: Akimasa Kawashima (Departures)
Best Foreign Language Film: The Dark Knight

If you read Japanese please check the winners here and if you find something wrong in the post please let me know. Google translator gives very awkward and/or literal translations. Thanks.

Monday, February 23, 2009

81st Academy Awards Winners


Here are the winners in the major categories. To check all the winners, as well as the Sci-Tech awards go here.

Best Motion Picture of the Year: Slumdog Millionaire
Foreign Language Film of the Year
: Departures, Yojiro Takita, Japan
Best Animated Feature Film: WALL-E
Best Director: Danny Boyle for Slumdog Millionaire
Best Actress in a Leading Role: Kate Winslet in The Reader
Best Actor in a Leading Role: Sean Penn in Milk
Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Penelope Cruz in Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Best Actor in a Supporting Role
: Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight
Best Adapted Screenplay
: Simon Beaufoy for Slumdog Millionaire
Best Original Screenplay: Dustin Lance Black for Milk

As I imagined Slumdog Millionaire got the award in all the categories where it was nominated, with one exception Achievement in Sound Editing where The Dark Knight won.

From the 13 nominations The Curious Case of Benjamin Button had won three awards for Achievement in Visual Effects (truly deserved), in Makeup (well deserved) and Art Direction (was better than the other nominees).

The mother of all awards is over for now and we will have to wait a year for another American award season that I hope –in general- honors “better” movies than the current season or perhaps now maybe the world opens to Bollywood movies to discover that Slumdog Millionaire was not that exceptional or unique. Sigh.

2009 Academy Awards Show


It pays to have low expectations as I did enjoy last night show with a new format that looked like “Broadway meets Hollywood” at least in the beginning and in the musical segments. Hugh Jackman is really good singing, dancing and entertaining and now I’m looking forward to watch him on Broadway!!! … I’m still not sure if I would like him to host the Oscars again but definitively I will try to catch a Broadway show with him.

The new variety show format was not that bad and the idea of giving the least interesting awards by telling how a movie is made wasn’t bad at all but truth is that no matter what they try to do there are some awards that are not “entertaining” enough. Yep, I fall asleep somewhere in the middle because the show became a lot less interesting thanks to the unbelievable amount of commercial breaks (probably to set the stage for the next number) and to the unbelievable bad presentation of nominees in tiny and small screens when the big set was humungous. I do not know about you, but I definitively noticed that costume, makeup, etc nominees looked so plain in the really small screen that was the only “big” screen in the stage. This really demoted the great work that the producers and the director did to try to improve the entertaining part of an award show.

I was lucky enough to get a phone call somewhere in the show that woke me up and was able to watch live the end of the show with the major awards… so, since I taped the show I will watch again the opening (I liked a lot the opening) and whatever I missed. Then definitively I will fast forward the tedious and multiple breaks for ads, as well as some not interesting speeches.

Going back to what I saw, I found that the idea of having past award winners to present the nominees for the actors’ awards was really good. Somehow it was interesting to watch past Oscar winners saluting their peers, even when some behaved like if they were just reading the prompter, others seemed real and sincere (perhaps it was acting, but then they’re really good actors… lol!). I may be fully biased but the best was Marion Cotillard! (Of course, lol!).

One highlight of the award show was the homage to those that passed away as I cheered when Queen Latifah started to sing! That was a great choice. Speaking of singers finally it was John Legend who covered for Peter Gabriel who was an attendee and I’m not sure but I had the impression that the camera totally avoided him when his nomination was announced. Anyway the Bollywood numbers where okay and I like the song that won, but to my eyes the dancers were definitively NOT from India as they were not as amazing as when REAL Bollywood dancers do it, but I imagine that with the recession the show budget did not allowed to bring them from India and that’s a true shame.

The award show was definitively different but I wonder if different is better or not. Haven’t read a thing in the net about what critics’ and viewers think as I did want to do this post without any influence or contamination; but I will read as soon as I publish.

Let’s talk about the awards. The greatest shocker for me was Waltz with Bashir or The Class not winning but I haven’t seen Departures and definitively now more than ever is a must be seen for me; not that wasn’t before, is that in this part of the world is so hard to be able to watch and understand movies from Asia but eventually I know I will watch it and from trailers I know that is visually outstanding.

Another lesser surprise was Sean Penn winning best actor award and even him in his acceptance speech acknowledged that “he makes harder the acceptance within his Hollywood peers” but he was may favorite for the award when thinking about those actors that had possibilities and yep, liked his acceptance speech especially for whatever he can positively influence the equal rights for everyone struggle –at least in America.

The best category of the night –for me- was the best actress as not only was great to see the presenters (Sophia Loren, Shirley MacLaine, Halle Berry, Nicole Kidman and most of all Marion Cotillard) but greater was when Kate Winslet won the well deserved award for an unforgettable performance. Liked Kate acceptance speech but her backstage moment was a lot better with great answers to silly and good press questions. Have to say that I do agree with Shirley MacLaine when she told Anne Hathaway that she has a great voice, as that was another surprising moment in the opening.

The second best was obviously the Best Supporting Actress award with great appearances by Woopy Goldgerg, Tilda Swinton, Eva Marie Saint, Angelica Huston and Goldie Hawn saluting the nominees. Obviously the best was Woopy that was really funny. It was okay that Penelope won as I take the award more like a recognition to her mostly European work than for the role in Vicky Cristina Barcelona and if you paid attention to her acceptance speech you will notice that she also thinks like me (lol!).

No surprises in the Best Supporting Actor and not particularly liked Heath Ledger family receiving the award and everyone the camera showed having wet eyes. I was expecting a more natural and sincere emotional moment like in the Golden Globes or other awards where Christopher Nolan received the award in Ledger’s memory.

Liked the way they presented the screenplay categories and I’m so glad that Milk and Dustin Lance Black got honored with the award and not WALL-E. By the way, I do not know about you but for me the presentation of the animation segment and the nominees for best animated movie was a terrible display of what could have been a great showcase for technology advances in animation. That was really bad.

As expected Man On Wire won the best documentary and the only interesting part of this category presentation was seeing Jennifer Aniston presenting and the camera insistently going to Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt – is absurd what they will do to promote actors’ personal life gossip. Oops! Aniston did animation, not documentary... but you get what I mean!

By now most of you know that the big winner of the night was Slumdog Millionaire that won almost –if not all- the awards that was nominated for. From the Red Carpet show the only moment that gave me a true warm smile was when Ryan Seacrest interviewed the kids that looked cute in their formal attires but better was the answers they gave to the always dumb questions Seacrest asks. The movie winnings were expected when all the Guilds honored the movie, so no surprises here.

I think that I will not post the winners here; I want to keep the winners post “clean” so I’ll do another post and rename this one to reference only the show broadcast.

So, that’s it. The show in general was entertaining for me and now the challenge for 2010 is to find a way to have LESS breaks for commercials and to make interesting/entertaining the not major awards to keep the show even without ups and downs and eliminating awful major production flaws that demerit the total effort to improve the show.

The American award season might be over, but we that follow the world cinema know that the current award season has still some award shows to come from countries like France, Italy and others. So the fun is not over yet.

Cheers!

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Oscar Tonight


Finally tonight we will be able to see who wins an Oscar and even when I’m not home I will try to watch them live, but where I am right now the broadcast is really late, so I’m taping it just in case is too boring and I fall asleep before its over.

Yep, this year I’m wondering if is going to be entertaining because following all the awards has spoiled for me the suspense for most categories. I do believe that Slumdog Millionaire will win and you already know what I think about this movie. The only good thing I could think about this movie is that the child actors will travel outside India for the first time to attend the ceremony in Los Angeles, which I do hope it will be a good experience for them but I do wonder with all the possible contrast from an India slum to the glitz of Hollywood… so, the last category of the night is boring!

The director. Hmm… The odds go to Danny Boyle and the only surprise will be if he does not win!

The best actress. Kate has to win. Saw again The Reader and gee, she truly deserves the award. I believe that the only other actress with possibilities is Meryl Streep. If other actress gets the award it will be a good surprise.

The best actor. Last night Mickey Rouke won and perhaps gave the best acceptance speech of the night; if he wins tonight I imagine that he will be less “expressive” which would be a true shame, but if he does not control himself there will be a lot of blip*s! The only other actor that has a possibility is Sean Penn, but the Academy is not really fond of him, so it will be a huge surprise if he wins.

Actress supporting role. Penelope got the Spirit award but I do wonder if the Academy members will give the Oscar to her… strong contenders are Marisa Tomei and perhaps Viola Davis. I’m really glad that this is the first major award of the night as here surprises could really happen and I’ll be able to watch it!

Actor supporting role. No surprises here Heath Ledger has and will get it. But many are “complaining” that no acceptance speech will happen… a true and upsetting surprise will be if he does not get it.

Adapted screenplay. Will be Slumdog Millionaire and a surprise will be if the scripter does not get it. Original Screenplay. This is a guess, most say that WALL-E has to get it, but I hope that Milk gets at least this Oscar as I believe that the movie deserves at least one honor tonight.

Best Documentary. I know that Man On Wire will win and I do believe that deserves the honor.

Foreign Language Film: I really hope that Waltz With Bashir becomes the first Oscar Israel ever gets because the film is truly extraordinary. But I know that the Academy is reluctant to give awards to animated features and on top, to semi documentary films with controversial themes… so, the Cannes top award winner, The Class, perhaps has better opportunities. Unfortunately I haven’t seen yet the movie, but I know that soon I’ll be able to watch it.

Another category that I look forward to watch in the ceremony is the song competition, but this year this category is full with controversy as producers decided to do a medley and gave very little time to each of the three songs nominated. The time was so small that Peter Gabriel declined to perform “Down to Earth”, so who knows what we finally will be able to see. The only sure thing is that this category will look more like a Bollywood ceremony with two songs from Slumdog Millionaire competing, which by the way I really do not mind as music/song/dancing is one of the things that I love most of Bollywood movies.

To be honest the other categories are not that exciting in the award ceremony and I really hope that producers found an entertaining way to fill the time with a host (Hugh Jackman) that is not a comic by trade, clips from movies that are not boring, a nice salute to those Academy members that passed away this year and what else? No idea. As you can see I have no big expectations for tonight which is not as bad as it seems as will be quite easy to please me with an entertaining show… (lol!).

If you feel like reading stuff from the internet about expectations for tonight I suggest you read Nikki Finke’s Deadline Daily as with her usual “acid” perspective tells what this year broadcast could mean to Americans. The article is here. I believe that we in the rest of the world are a little more excited that the Oscars are not ONLY American, but definitively there are some other comments that I do agree with her and others that made me think that perhaps now that geographical barriers had been torn down by the web, someone should be thinking of producing an award show that honors World Cinema and leave the Oscars to Americans that somehow care more about local box office success, show ratings and Americans viewership… what do you think???

So, let’s see what happens tonight and I hope I won’t fall asleep with a not entertaining show…

Saturday, February 21, 2009

2009 Film Independent’s Spirit Awards Winners


Winners are in Red... as they announce them online... This award show was really fun and crazy!!!

Yesterday the nominees where announced by the official press release and here are some of the categories.

Best Feature
Ballast
Frozen River
Rachel Getting Married
Wendy and Lucy
*The Wrestler

Best Director
Ramin Bahrani for Chop Shop
Jonathan Demme for Rachel Getting Married
Lance Hammer for Ballast
Courtney Hunt for Frozen River
*Tom McCarthy for The Visitor

Best First Feature
Afterschool, Antonio Campos
Medicine for Melancholy, Barry Jenkins
Sangre de Mi Sangre, Christopher Zalla
Sleep Dealer, Alex Rivera
*Synecdoche, New York, Charlie Kaufman

John Cassavetes Award (best feature made under $500,000)
*In Search of a Midnight Kiss, Alex Holdridge
Prince of Broadway, Sean Baker
The Signal, David Bruckner, Dan Bush, Jacob Gentry
Take Out, Sean Baker
Turn the river, chris eigeman

Best Female Lead
Summer Bishil for Towelhead
Anne Hathaway for Rachel Getting Married
*Melissa Leo for Frozen River
Tarra Riggs for Ballast
Michelle Williams for Wendy and Lucy

Best Male Lead
Javier Bardem for Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Richard Jenkins for The Visitor
Sean Penn for Milk
Jeremy Renner for The Hurt Locker
*Mickey Rourke for The Wrestler

Best Supporting Female
*Penelope Cruz for Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Rosemarie DeWitt for Rachel Getting Married
Rosie Perez for The Take
Misty Upham for Frozen River
Debra Winger for Rachel Getting Married

Best Supporting Male
*James Franco for Milk
Anthony Mackie for The Hurt Locker
Charlie McDermott for Frozen River
JimMyron Ross for Ballast
Haaz Sleiman for The Visitor

Best Foreign Film
*The Class, Laurent Cantet, France

Gomorrah, Matteo Garrone, Italy
Hunger, Steve McQueen, UK and Ireland
Secret of the Grain, Abdellatif Keniche, France
Silent Light, Carlos Reygadas, Mexico, France, Netherlands and Germany

2009 Robert Altman Award: Synedoche, New York, Charlie Kaufman

To read all the award winners go here and to check the all the nominees see the press release or the official site. The award ceremony will air live on IFC on Saturday, February 21 at 5pm EST.

For Almodovar Lovers'


And especially for my photographer friend that I know is "dying" to learn more and watch this movie... as much as I do. Here is the first teaser for Los Abrazos Rotos

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Australia


Not an easy to get engaged movie as what I call the first act (when Lady Sarah Ashley arrives to Australia from England) is not really attention grabber and is not until the second act (when they move the cattle) that things start to be interesting and the epic tale starts to grab your attention in crescendo until the climax and the end.

Directed and co written by Baz Luhrmann the movie tells a truly epic tale about an inheritance, a takeover complot, a true western genre look alike ride of 2,000 plus head of cattle over outstandingly beautiful landscape, a romance between the unlikely main characters, the couple’s bliss, WWII in Australia with the bombing of Darwin by Japanese forces (similar to Pearl Harbor) and most of all, the magic world of Australia’s aborigines, which for me was the most outstanding and enlighten side of the story.

As a movie is perhaps the most crowd pleaser and popular entertaining movie that Luhrmann has ever done and even if the movie is uneven, one particular part of the story will definitively move you. I’m referring to the parallel story about the appalling racial discrimination to mixed-race aboriginal children that it was not until 2008 that Australia’s government issued an official apology.

The movie narrator is a beautiful mixed-race aboriginal kid Nullah, played by Brandon Walters and it’s amazing the great performance this non-actor kid does up to the point that you will totally fall for him and his very expressive eyes. Also the romance between Lady Sarah (Nicole Kidman) and Drover (Hugh Jackman) has good chemistry and it does not bother at all to be watching two very handsome actors in the screen.

On the bad side some visual effects look too fake and there are some characters like the constant evil David Wenham that definitively are overacted. But this is a movie that belongs to Walters, Kidman and Jackman so it does not bother much. Then cinematography is good with some extraordinary sights of contrast full Australia. As a whole the movie is like one critic said and I reproduce because I find the image quite true “Australia provides a luxurious bumpy ride; like a Rolls-Royce on a rocky country road, it's full of bounces and lurches, but you can't really complain about the seat”.

The film has been collecting honors since premièred to top box office results in Sydney including Baz Lurhmann winning the Auteur Award, Brandon Walters winning the Outstanding New Talent at the 2008 Satellite Awards and Catherine Martin is nominated for Costume Design at the 2009 Oscar’s.

According to what I read not all viewers and critics’ liked the movie so I would not be surprised if some of you do not enjoy it, but I definitively had a good entertaining moment once the story picks up the pace.

Enjoy!!

2009 Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards Winners


Recently the FCCA had their award ceremony and here are some of the winners.

Best Film: The Black Balloon, Elissa Down
Best Director: Elissa Down for The Black Balloon
Best Actress: Noni Hazlehurst in Bitter and Twisted
Best Actor: William Mcinnes in Unfinished Sky
Best Supporting Actress: Toni Collete in The Black Balloon
Best Supporting Actor: Brandon Walters in Australia
Best Foreign Feature – English Language: Slumdog Millionaire, Danny Boyle and Loveleen Tandan
Best Foreign Language Film: The Diving Bell and The Butterfly, Julian Schnabel

To check all the winners go here.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

2009 Miami International Film Festival


The MIFF ’09 will run from March 6 to 15 and here are some of the films they will screen in competition. Most are known to the blog, some I have seen and others I’m “dying” to see; but there are new ones that could be interesting.

World Competition

Afterschool, Antonio Campos, USA, 2008
Tiro en la Cabeza (Bullet in the Head), Jaime Rosales, Spain and France, 2008
Pescuit Sportiv (Hooked), Adrian Sitaru, Romania and France, 2008
Je Veux Voir (I Want to See), Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, France and Lebanon, 2008
De Ofrivilliga
(Involuntary), Ruben Östlund, Sweden, 2008
Het Zusje Van Katia (Katia’s Sister), Mijke de Jong, Netherlands, 2008
Khamsa, Karim Dridi, France, 2008
Kisses, Lance Daly, Ireland and Sweden, 2008
Pokrajina St.2 (Landscape No. 2), Vinko Möderndorfer, Slovenia and Serbia, 2007
März (March), Händl Klaus, Austria, 2008
Bumaznyj Soldat (Paper Soldier), Alexey German Jr., Russia, 2008
Parque Vía, Enrique Rivero, Mexico, 2008
Il Passato E Una Terra Straniera (The Past is a Foreign Land), Daniele Vicari, Italy, 2008
Perfidy, Rodrigo Bellott, Chile, Bolivia and USA, 2009
Soi Cowboy, Thomas Clay, Thailand and UK, 2008
Teza, Haile Gerima, Ethiopia, Germany and France, 2008
Üç Maymun (Three Monkeys), Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Turkey, France and Italy, 2008

Ibero-American Competition

Gasolina (Gasoline), Julio Hernandez Cordon, Guatemala, 2008
El Truco del Manco (Handless Trick), Santiago A. Zannou, 2008
Historias Extraordinarias, Mariano LLinas, Argentina, 2008
Voy a Explotar (I’m Gonna Explode), Gerardo Naranjo, Mexico, USA and UK, 2008
Amorosa Soledad (Lovely Loneliness), Martin Carranza and Victoria Galardi, Argentina, 2008
La Nana (The Maid), Sebastian Silva, Chile and Mexico, 2008
Apenas O Fim (That’s It), Matheus Souza, Brazil, 2008
Tony Manero, Pablo Larrain, Chile and Brazil, 2008
Veronica, Mauricio Farias, Brazil, 2008
Una Semana Solos (A Week Alone), Celina Murga, Argentina, 2008
Burwa Dii Ebo (The Wind and The Water), Vero Bollow and The Igar Yala Collective, Panama, 2009

There are many more films, shorts and documentaries in the many sections the fest has and to check them go here.

11th Annual Costume Designers Guild Awards Winners


Winners are in Red.

The CDG announced yesterday their nominations and couldn’t find the news in their official site, but I imagine that later today it will be posted here. From different sources here are the nominations that I’ll verify when the CDG posts the list.

Excellence In Contemporary Film
"Iron Man" - Laura Jean Shannon & Rebecca Bentjen
"Mamma Mia!" - Ann Roth
"Sex and the City" - Patricia Field
*"Slumdog Millionaire" - Suttirat Larlarb
"The Wrestler" - Amy Westcott

Excellence in Period Film
"Changeling" - Deborah Hopper
"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" - Jacqueline West
*"The Duchess" - Michael O'Connor
"Milk" - Danny Glicker
"Revolutionary Road"- Albert Wolsky

Excellence in Fantasy Film
"Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian" - Isis Mussenden
*"The Dark Knight" - Lindy Hemming
"The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor" - Sanja Milkovic Hays

To check all the categories I suggest to read Variety. Winners will be announced on February 17th.

Monday, February 16, 2009

59th Annual Ace Eddie Awards Winners


Winners are in Red.

The American Cinema Editors announced the nominations for the 2009 Awards and here they are.

Best Edited Feature Film Drama
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Frost/Nixon
Milk
*Slumdog Millionaire

Best Edited Feature Film Comedy or Musical
In Bruges
Mama Mia
Tropic Thunder
Vicky Cristina Barcelona
*WALL-E

Best Edited Documentary
Bush’s War
Chicago 10
*Man on Wire

To check the nominees in the TV categories go here The award ceremony will take place on February 15. Think that by now we do realize that the same movies are in all the awards, so it's most likely that the Academy Awards will repeat the same movies.

23rd Annual American Society of Cinematographers Winners


Winner is in Red.

The ASC announced the nominations for this year awards and here they are.

Revolutionary Road
The Reader
*Slumdog Millionaire
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight

To read the announcement go here. The award ceremony will be on February 15 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza Hotel. I’m a little surprised that Slumdog Millionaire has a nomination, but then with all the buzz the movie has I shouldn’t be surprised and honestly I have a hard time to think about another English language movie that could take the slot… perhaps The Visitor or Frozen River???

13th Annual Art Directors Guild Awards Winners


Winners are in Red.

The ADG announced their nominations and here they are for some categories.

Period Films
Changeling
*The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Doubt
Frost/Nixon
Milk

Fantasy films
*The Dark Knight
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Iron Man
The Spiderwick Chronicles
Wall-E

Contemporary Films
Burn After Reading
Gran Torino
Quantum of Solace
*Slumdog Millionaire
The Wrestler

These categories are most interesting and the classification makes a lot of sense to me. To check the nominees in TV and other categories go here. Winners will be announced on February 14.

As many are commenting and I agree with them, the awards are becoming "boring" with Slumdog Millionaire winning, especially when you believe that the movie is good but not "that" good. At least in this classification other worthy movies are recognized and honored.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

59th Berlinale Award Winners




Last night the fest had their award ceremony and here are the winners that include two women directors in the top awards (bravo!).

Prizes of the International Jury

Golden Bear for the Best Film: La Teta Asustada (The Milk Of Sorrow), Claudia Llosa, Spain and Peru

Silver Bear The Jury Grand Prix (tie):
Alle Anderen (Everyone Else), Maren Ade, Germany
Gigante, Adrián Biniez, Uruguay, Germany and Argentina

Silver Bear for Best Director: Asghar Farhadi for Darbareye Elly (About Elly), Iran
Silver Bear for Best Actress: Birgit Minichmayr in Alle Anderen (Everyone Else), Maren Ade, Germany
Silver Bear for Best Actor: Sotigui Kouyate in London River, Rachid Bouchareb, Algeria, France and UK

Alfred Bauer Prize (tie):
Gigante, Adrián Biniez, Uruguay, Germany and Argentina
Tatarak (Sweet Rush), Adrzej Wajda, Poland

To check all the Jury Prizes go here.

Prizes of the Ecumenical Jury: Lille Sodat, Annette K. Ohlenson, Denmark
Special Mentions:
London River, Rachid Bouchareb, Algeria, France and UK
My One And Only, Richard Loncraine, USA

FIPRESCI Prize: La Teta Asustada (The Milk Of Sorrow), Claudia Llosa, Spain and Peru
Prize of the Guild of German Art House Cinemas: Sturm (Storm), Hans-Christian Schmid, Germany and Denmark

Berliner Morgenpost Readers’ Prize: Sturm (Storm), Hans-Christian Schmid, Germany and Denmark

Best First Feature Award: Gigante, Adrián Biniez, Uruguay, Germany and Argentina

To check the Best First Feature awards official announcement go here .

Peace Film Award 2009: The Messenger, Oren Moverman, USA
Amnesty International Film Prize: Sturm (Storm), Hans-Christian Schmid, Germany and Denmark

Panorama Section
Ecumenical Prize
: Welcome, Philippe Lioret, France
FIPRESCI Prize: Nord (North), Rude Denstand Langlo, Norway
C.I.C.A.E. Prize: Ander, Roberto Castón, Spain
Label Europa Cinemas (tie)
Nord (North), Rude Denstand Langlo, Norway and
Welcome, Philippe Loiret, France
Audience Award: The Yes Men Fix The World, Mike Bonano, Andy Bichlbaum, and Kurt Engfehr, USA

Forum Section
Ecumenical Prize
: Treeless Mountain, So Yong Kim, USA and South Korea
FIPRESCI Prize: Ai no mukidashi (Love Exposure), Sono Sion, Japan
C.I.C.A.E. Prize: Cea mai fericita fata din lume, (The Happiest Girl in the World), Radu Jude, Romania and Netherlands
Caligari Film Prize: Ai no mukidashi (Love Exposure), Sono Sion, Japan
NETPAC Prize (tie):
Ma dai fu de zhen suo (Doctor’s Ma’s Country Clinic), Cong Feng, China and
Eoddeon gaien nal (The Day After), Lee Suk-Gyung, South Korea
Tagesspiegel Readers’ Prize: Hayat var (My Only Sunshine), Reha Erdem, Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria

Teddy Awards
Feature Film
: Rabioso Sol, Rabioso Cielo (Raging Sun, Raging Sky), Julián Hernández, Mexico
Best Essay: Fig Trees, John Greyson, Canada
Short Film: A Horse is Not A Metaphor, Barbara Hammer, USA

ELSE Siegessäule Reader's Choice Award: City Of Borders, Yun Suh, USA

Pespektive Deutsches Kino
Dialogue en Perspective: Gitti, Anna Deutsch, Germany
Special Mention: Polar, Michael Koch, Germany and Switzerland
Actor’s Award
Franziska Petri in Für Miriam (For Miriam) by Lars-Gunnar Lotz, Germany
Jacob Matschenz in Fliegen (Fly) by Piotr J. Lewandowski, Germany

To check the Prizes of the Independent Juries go here.

Generation Kplus

Crystal Bear for Best Feature Film: C’est pas moi, je le jure! (It’s Not Me, I Swear!) by Philippe Falardeau, Canada
Special Mention: Max Pinlig (Max Embarrassing) by Lotte Svendsen, Denmark

Deutsche Kinderhilfswerk Grand Prix for Best Feature film: C’est pas moi, je le jure! (It’s Not Me, I Swear!) by Philippe Falardeau, Canada
Special Mention: Flickan (The Girl) by Fredrik Edfelt, Sweden

To read all the winners in the Generation section, including the Generation14plus category previously announced, go here.

If you’re wondering the reason for so many awards, just think that most awards come with money attached that definitively helps production costs.

There are many great movies that were honored but this year, unlike last year, I am definitively looking forward to watch the top award winner La Teta Asustada that I hope is as good as Madeinusa. Congratulations to Peru and Claudia Llosa for the honor they received at this prestigious festival.

6th Annual Irish Film & Television Awards Winners


Winners in Red.

Recently the IFTA announced the nominations and the award ceremony will next February 14.

Best Film
32A
A Film With Me In It
The Escapist
*Hunger
Kisses

Best Director
*Lance Daly for Kisses
Ian Fitzgibbon for A Film With Me In It
Martin McDonagh for In Bruges
Declan Recks for Eden

Best Actress In a Lead Role
Jenn Murray in Dorothy
Kelly O’Neill in Kisses
Saorise Roan in City of Ember
*Eileen Walsh in Eden

Best Actor in a Lead Role
Colin Farrel in In Bruges
*Michael Fassbender in Hunger
Bredam Gleeson in In Bruges
Dylan Moran in A Film With Me In It

To check nominees in all the categories, including TV, please go here or check the press release here. To check all the winners go here.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

2009 Possible Cannes News


As the Berlinale is coming to an end attention turns to Cannes and speculation about what films will be screened this year start to appear. The final list we will only learn when the fest release it, but from the possible listings I’ve been reading there are some films that no matter if they make Cannes or not they seem to be very interesting and definitively I’m looking forward to watch them. Here are some examples.

Mr. Nobody by Jaco Van Dormael, starring Diane Kruger, Sarah Polley and Rhys Ifans; Sci-fi fantasy. IMDb
Coco and Igor by Jan Kounen, starring Anna Mouglalis; deals with Coco Chanel tempestuous relationship with composer Igor Stravinsky. Twitch
Coco Avant Chanel (Coco Before Chanel), Anne Fontaine, another Coco Chanel story starring Audrey Tautou. IMDb
Vengeance, Johnnie To, starring Johnny Hallyday as a hit man in Hong Kong and Sylvie Testud; thriller. IMDb
Inglourious Basterds, Quentin Tarantino. Trailer
Antichrist, Lars Von Trier, starring Charlotte Gainsbourg, Willem Defoe. IMDb
Bright Star, Jane Campion, about poet John Keats, played by Ben Whishaw, romance with Fanny Brawne, which was cut short by Keat’s untimely death at age 25. IMDb
Looking for Eric, Ken Loach, about Eric a football fanatic postman whose life is descending in to crisis receives some life coaching from the famously philosophical Eric Cantona. IMDb
Abrazos Rotos (Broken Embraces), Pedro Almodovar, Spain, starring Penelope Cruz, Blanca Portillo, Rossy de Palma; 1950’s noir film. IMDb
Agora, Alejandro Amenabar's historical drama about Egyptian philosopher Hypatia of Alexandria starring Rachel Weisz. IMDb
The Limits of Control, Jim Jarmusch, starring Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray, John Hurt, Gael Garcia Bernal, Hiam Abbass; a Spain-set road movie about the story of a mysterious loner, a stranger in the process of completing a criminal job. IMDb
Tetro, Francis Ford Coppola, about an Italian immigrant family starring Vincent Gallo, Maribel Verdu, Carmen Maura, Klaus Maria Brandauer. IMDb
White Material, Claire Denis, starring Isabelle Huppert. IMDb
L’Affaire Farewell (Farewell), Christian Carion, France, a KGB thriller staring Guillaume Canet, David Soul, Alexandra Maria Lara, Emir Kusturica (!) and Fred Ward as Reagan?? IMDb
This is Love, Matthias Glasner, Germany,about a hard-hitting look at child prostitution in Thailand. IMDb
Soul Kitchen, Fatih Akin, starring Moritz Bleibtreu and Birol Unel, comedy. IMDb
Io Sono Amore (I Am Love), Luca Guadagnino, starring Flavio Parenti and Tilda Swinton. A tragic love story set at the turn of the millennium in Milan. The film follows the fall of the haute bourgeoisie due to the forces of passion and unconditional love. IMDb
Il Grande Sogno (The Great Dream), Michele Placido, starring Elio Germano, Margherita Buy, Laura Morante; about a student revolt in Rome in 1968. IMDb
New York, I Love You that follows its predecessor Paris, Je t’Aime. Randall Balsmeyer as director of transitions and segments by Fatih Akin, Yvan Attal, Allen Hughes, Shunji Iwai, Wen Jiang, Scarlett Johansson (??!!), Shekhar Kapur, Joshua Marston, Mira Nair, Natalie Portman, Brett Ratner, and Andrei Zvyagintsev. IMDb

The year looks brighter with some interesting films to look forward to watch particularly anything and everything by Fatih Akin and Pedro Almodovar!

Absolutely Great News!!!

2009 Berlinale Generation 14plus Award Winners and other News


Yesterday this section of the Berlinale had their award ceremony and here are the winners.

Crystal Bear for Best Feature Film: My Suicide, David Lee Miller, USA, 2009
A rare theme which is both current and extremely tragic for young people has been persuasively tackled in this film. We were not only fascinated by the film’s gripping content also the highly original way in which it was made. The protagonist’s loneliness and his longing for love are authentic and awe-inspiring.

Special Mention: Mary and Max, Adam Elliot, Australia, 2008
Feeling lonely, excluded and misunderstood – for the Youth Jury, these were the main ideas expressed in the films in this year’s Generation 14plus competition. One of these films was a particular highlight. This film touches on the life’s most decisive moments. It is ironic, endearing and has an unrivalled aesthetic. Who am I and why am I? What is he meaning of friendship and how do I find my way to love and to my own self? Five years of production at the rate of five seconds a day definitely paid off!

To check the award winners for Shorts go here and if you are interested in learning the award winners of the Berlinale Shorts 2009 go here.

On other news the fest is honoring Manoel de Oliveira, the oldest active director in the history of film, with the Berlinale Camera. To read the press release go here.

In the Berlinale Talent Campus Wagah by Supriyo Sen from India wins the Berlin Today Award 2009 and Special Mention goes to My Super Sea Wall by Gina Abatemarco from the USA, to read the complete press release go here.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Rachel Getting Married


This was an unexpected surprise as the movie is interesting and attention grabber even when is about a wedding and gee I definitively do not like weddings, much less those that are definitively truly American. But this is not your regular wedding when Kym (Anne Hathaway) is released -from her 10th or so rehabilitation “try”-for a weekend to attend her sister biracial wedding.

Incredibly good performance by Anne Hathaway that you cannot take your eyes from her with moments that are hilarious and others that are heartbreaking, but there was one moment that her performance at the dinner table made very uncomfortable and embarrassed up to the point of me trying to “close” my ears… that’s how good she is.

Jonathan Demme did such a good work with the storytelling that you end up feeling like you’re just another guest, but most interesting is the hand held camera takes that totally take you inside the movie and allows unexpected turns to the story and to your walking inside the movie. Still according to what I read, most viewers couldn’t stand the movement and most claim that the movie make them dizzy, so if you haven’t watch mainly European hand held camera movies be prepared to not have still images the complete 114 minutes the movie lasts.

The movie has good cinematography but what makes it outstanding is the amazing use of the camera to introduce you inside the movie plus the storytelling that is not constantly funny or constantly high tense drama, is a little like a rollercoaster with ups and downs that ease the watching of the story and movie.

The movie has up-to-date 9 wins and 18 nominations most for Anne Hathaway performance that includes a nomination for Best Actress at the Oscars and honestly she truly deserves the nomination. But also the script written by Jenny Lumet (yes, she’s Sydney daughter) has many nominations and won the 2008 NYFCC Award for Best Screenplay; then Rosemarie DeWitt that plays Rachel also has nominations and won the 2008 Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress. To check most of the nominations and awards this movie has been collecting please browse the blog.

I do recommend the movie for the story but most of all for the amazing storytelling technique with the hand held camera that totally introduces you inside the movie.

Enjoy!!!

3rd Annual SAFTA Awards


Last February 7th the South African Film and Television Academy had their award ceremony and here are the winners for feature films.

Best Director: Shamim Sarif for The World Unseen
Best Writing Team
: Shamin Sarif for The World Unseen
Best Ensemble Cast
: The World Unseen
Best Cinematographer
: Mike Downie and Amelia for The World Unseen
Best Supporting Actress
: Natalie Becker in The World Unseen
Best Supporting Actor: David Dennis in The World Unseen
Best Music Composition
: Confessions Of A Gambler

As we can notice The World Unseen got almost all the awards and this is another reason for me “dying” to see this film as well as I Can’t Think Straight… the wait has been VERY long!! Anyway congratulations to Shamim Sarif and all the team at Enlightenment Productions!

To check TV categories go here.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

38th New Directors/New Films Festival


Now in its thirty-eighth year, the renowned New Directors/New Films festival, presented jointly by The Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Museum of Modern Art, introduces New York audiences to the work of emerging or not-yet-established filmmakers from around the world. All of the films in New Directors/New Films are having either U.S. or New York premieres, and many of the screenings are introduced by the filmmakers.

The complete list of feature films at New/Directors/New Films 2009

$9.99 Tatia Rosenthal, Israel/Australia, 2008; Can the mysteries of life really be known for “the low-price of $9.99”? This timely and compelling stop-motion animated feature explores urban dreams and dilemmas. A Regent Releasing release.

Amreeka Cherien Dabis, USA/Canada/Kuwait, 2009; Cherien Dabis’s humanist miracle of a first film chronicles the bittersweet adjustment to a multicultural way of life after Muna, a single mother from Ramallah, and Fadi, her teenage son, move to Middle America.

Autumn / Sonbahar Oezcan Alper, Germany/Turkey, 2008; A stunning elegy to lost youth and lost ideals set in the majestic mountains east of the Black Sea, Oezcan Alper’s debut is a powerful harbinger for the emergence of a strong new wave in Turkish cinema.

Barking Water Sterlin Harjo, USA, 2009; Sterlin Harjo’s wise second feature affectionately travels Oklahoma’s roads, stopping now and then to reveal itself as one of American cinema’s most moving love stories—adult and unsentimental—in a long time.

Birdwatchers Marco Bechis, Italy/Brazil, 2008; The schism between the indigenous Guarani Indians and the wealthy Brazilian landowners who inhabit their ancestral land is brought to devastating life in this gripping, powerful docudrama. An IFC Films release.

Cold Souls Sophie Barthes, USA/Russia, 2008; Screenwriter/director Sophie Barthes deftly balances fantasy and reality in her witty, metaphysical tale of a successful actor (the great Paul Giamatti playing himself) undergoing a psychic breakdown while rehearsing a production of “Uncle Vanya.” A Samuel Goldwyn release.

The Cove Louie Psihoyos, USA, 2009; Award-winning National Geographic photographer Louis Psihoyos brings the environmental film to astounding new levels of drama and urgency in this exploration of Taiji, Japan, a village on the Pacific coast that is home to a longstanding whaling tradition and a deeply unsettling secret.

Every Little Step Adam Del Deo and James D. Stern, USA, 2008; In this documentary about casting the 2006 revival of “A Chorus Line,” the lives of dancers auditioning for the new production mirror the stories of some of the original cast members, whose experiences were captured on tape by the musical’s creator, Michael Bennett. A Sony Pictures Classics release.

The Fly / Mukha Vladimir Kott, Russia, 2008; In Vladimir Kott’s post-perestroika drama, a reluctant father and recalcitrant daughter try to out maneuver each other in a battle of wills that is as deadly as it is funny.

Give Me Your Hand / Donne-moi la main Pascal-Alex Vincent, France/Germany, 2008; This visually sumptuous ode to brotherly love and loathing by first time feature director Pascal-Alex Vincent follows virtually indistinguishable twin brothers Alexandre and Victor Carril in a buoyant escapade that turns surprisingly dark and dangerous. A Strand Releasing release.

Harmony and Me Bob Byington, USA, 2009; Bob Byington’s deadpan and hilarious slacker movie for the cell phone generation is straight out of that independent film capital, Austin, Texas, where a voluble young lyricist refuses to let go of the heartbreak caused when his girlfriend became his ex.

Home Ursula Meier, Switzerland/France/Belgium, 2008; An ordinary middle class family lives an ordinary life in their ordinary house that sits next to an unused highway. With no neighbors or cars for miles, all it takes is the opening of the highway to change the family’s dynamic.

Louise-Michel Gustave de Kervern and Benoit Delepine, France, 2008; When a group of women factory workers are blindsided by management’s relocation of the factory and are left with a pittance in severance pay, their very odd colleague Louise suggests they hire a hit man, the even odder Michel, to take care of business.

The Maid / La Nana Sebastian Silva, Chile, 2009; This sharply etched portrait of an tightly wound domestic servant and her passive-aggressive relationship to her middle-class family is given tremendous force and tragicomic relief in the remarkable, prizewinning title performance by Catalina Saavedra.

Mid-August Lunch / Pranzo di ferragosto Gianni Di Gregorio, Italy, 2008; Fifty-nine-year-old Gianni Di Gregorio (screenwriter of Gomorrah) stars in his utterly charming directorial debut as Giovanni, whose agreement to take in his landlord and best friend’s elderly mothers for a few days results in a wonderfully loose, improvisational award winner.

The Milk of Sorrow / La teta asustada Claudia Llosa, Spain/Peru, 2008; The legacies of rape and terror in Peru extend to the children born of victims. This remarkable film floats between fable and visceral reality, confronting fear and healing wounds through the power of the human spirit.

Ordinary Boys / Chicos normales Daniel Hernandez, Spain, 2008; In a small Moroccan village that was home to many of those responsible for the 2004 terrorist bombings in Spain, three young adults—an aspiring actor, a law student, and a small-time drug dealer—find themselves at a crossroads that will change the course of their lives.

Paper Soldier / Bumaznyj soldat Aleksei German Jr., Russia, 2008; Aleksei German Jr. pays homage to classic Russian cinema, the plays of Anton Chekhov, and the liberal era of Khrushchev in an impressionistic story of a confused doctor working with the first cosmonauts of the Soviet space program.

Parque Via Enrique Rivero, Mexico, 2008; If the only home you’ve known is one you’ve lived in as a servant, what would you do if the master decides to sell? A gripping portrait of quiet loyalty and impending abandonment.

Push: Based on the Novel by Sapphire Lee Daniels, USA, 2009; Destined to be one of the most hotly discussed films of the year, Push chronicles the world of Precious Jones, a seriously overweight, functionally illiterate, lonesome teenager pregnant with a second child by her own father. A Lionsgate release.

The Shaft / Dixia de tiankong Zhang Chi, China, 2008; Newcomer Zhang Chi charts the profound changes in a tightly knit family over a critical year in three separate, inter-related, and pitch-perfect stories.

Stay the Same Never Change Laurel Nakadate, USA, 2009; This audacious, slyly hilarious work dares to grapple with the terrifying complexities of tween-age girlhood.

Treeless Mountain So Yong Kim, USA/South Korea, 2008; A gently told yet heart-wrenching tale of a young girl’s journey from abandonment to maturity. An Oscilloscope Pictures release.

Unmade Beds Alexis Dos Santos, UK, 2008; Alexis Dos Santos returns to New Directors with his second feature, Unmade Beds, chronicling the adventures of free-spirited London expats sharing beds and true confessions on their way to defining themselves.

We Live in Public Ondi Timoner, USA, 2008; Insurant, insightful, and authentic, Ondi Timoner’s Sundance winner is a boundlessly resourceful insider’s view of Internet pioneer Josh Harris’s rise and fall and the heady times in the art and technology Wild West of 1990s Manhattan.

If you live in or nearby New York City I suggest you do not miss the fest that will run from March 25 to April 5, as has many outstanding movies. To check the Film Society of Lincoln Center go here and to check the MoMA go here.