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The Berlinale Turns 60

The Berlin International Film Festival, running February 11 to 21, hits the big Six-O this year. Set in the capital of Germany, the "Berlinale," as it's popularly dubbed, holds an exalted place in the pantheon of film festivals. Not only is it known as a hotbed of quality work, but, with nearly 500,000 annual admissions, it's also said to be the largest publicly-attended cinema showcase.

This year's edition kicks off with the world premiere of Apart Together (Tuan Yuan), about a former soldier who returns to Shanghai to seek his 1949 love. Attending Berlin's birthday celebration will be the film's Chinese director and 2007 Golden Bear winner, Wang Quan'an, as well as key cast members.

That's more than can be said of Polish-French director Roman Polanski, whose new thriller, The Ghost Writer, will have its world premiere on February 12, but who is serving his sixth month of house arrest in Switzerland.

That the 70-something Oscar-winner remains mired in a child rape case decades older than the victim is now partly explains the hum surrounding this story of a writer (Ewan McGregor) who tripwires over a global conspiracy while penning the former British premier's (Pierce Brosnan, channeling Tony Blair) memoirs.Is it just me, or does this sound like another law-of-the-jungle misadventure from German filmmaker and this year's Head of the Jury, Werner Herzog?

Also from the legal and moral murk comes Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's Howl, with actor James Franco as beat poet Allen Ginsberg during the 1957 obscenity trial involving his publisher. Other US contenders for first prize include Noah Baumbach's Greenberg, starring Ben Stiller in an adult coming-of-age tale set in Manhattan. Playing out of competition is a Cold War-era thriller from Martin Scorsese, Shutter Island. Dennis Lehane's novel provides the brief for a U.S. marshal (Leonardo DiCaprio), who probes a psychiatric prisoner's sudden disappearance.
 
From the UK, there's The Killer Inside of Me, about a Texan deputy sheriff who turns out to be a  homicidal maniac. (Perhaps it's just a coincidence that the new edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders [DSM] was published on the eve of the Festival.) The thriller by 1995 Golden Bear nominee Michael Winterbottom stars Casey Affleck, Kate Hudson, Bill Pullman and Jessica Alba
 
Hollywood won't be the only star system to twinkle in Berlin. Bollywood nova Shah Rukh Khan is expected to dazzle his Berlinale fans with My Name Is Khan, about an Indian Muslim facing down prejudice in post 9/11 America. (It opens in the U.S. February 12.) Shahada echoes similar themes in its portrait of young Muslims living and struggling in Berlin.
 
Europe is represented by Mammuth, with Gerard Depardieu as the lead, and Thomas Vinterberg's newest work, Submarino
 
In addition to Apart Together, Chinese productions gracing the Festival include A Woman, A Gun and A Noodle Shop, from Golden Bear-winning director Zhang Yimou, and the latest Jackie Chan kung-fu comedy.
 
As ever, the Berlinale will screen classic works from the archives. This year, audiences will see a restored version of Fritz Lang's original 1927 silent film, Metropolis, thanks to the 2008 discovery of a negative containing scenes that had been long been considered lost.
 
The Festival, which runs through February 21, will woo young viewers with "Generation," one of three out-of-competition events. Presented in collaboration with the Berlinale Talent Campus, the slate spans Ghanian/Kenyan director Hawa Essuman's Soul Boy; Helmut Dziuba's Sabine Kleist, 7 Jahre; and a cleaned up version of the documentary Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today.
 
Themes of "family and reunions" undergird many of this year's films, explained Festival director Dieter Kosslick. Right on time for the new DSM....

For more info and a complete schedule: http://www.berlinale.de/en/HomePage.htm

Berlin International Film Festival
Feb. 11 - 21 2010
Potsdamer Straße 5

10785 Berlin
Germany
phone +49 · 30 · 259 20 · 0
fax +49 · 30 · 259 20 · 299

"It Came From Thon!" Boston Sci Fi Film Fest

The 35th Annual Boston Science Fiction Film Festival is being held February 5-15, 2010 at the Somerville Theatre, located at 55 Davis Square, Somerville, Massachusetts (adjacent to Boston). This year, the Festival expands to 10 days with over 70 films submitted from all over the world. The venerable genre fest will highlight a new feature or shorts program every night, culminating in the traditional non-stop 24 hour marathon starting noon on February 14.

The 'Thon, as it affectionately came to be called, is something special. It began as a 24-hour film marathon when, in 1976, the now-defunct Orson Welles Cinemas held a 24-hour science-fiction retrospective. SF1 started at noon on the Sunday of Presidents Day weekend and ended at noon the following day.

Every year since then, 'Thon has bloomed in winter to bring a community of SF lovers together, sharing one room for 24 straight hours of classics, premieres, cartoon, schlockers and everything in-between.

This year's highlights:

The opening-night film is Sleep Dealer, an award-winner out of Mexico directed by Alex Rivera.  In this visually stunning film, water is used for blackmail, security has reached new dimensions, and "sleep dealers" work in factories.

One of the New England premieres is Mutant Swinger from Mars, directed by Michael Kallio.  Here, Martians come to Earth and force a mad scientist to create a "chick magnet."  This lovingly rendered sci-fi spoof parodies films like Young Frankenstein, The Ape Man and The Nutty Professor, with equal measures of Ed Wood and William Castle thrown in.

Making its world premiere is Caller ID, directed by Eric Zimmerman, a psychological sci-fi thriller based on real voicemail messages received from a disturbed woman. A group of graduate students study advanced techniques in psychopathology while their professor leads them through a series of bizarre experiments and perverse sexual research involving mind control. Each student must explore the caller's hidden psyche — as well as their own id. It stars James Duval (Donnie Darko, Independence Day), Nathan Bexton (Go, Nowhere) and Peter Greene (Pulp Fiction, The Mask).  A Q&A follows with the director and Bexton.

Another world premiere is Luopolis, directed by Matthew Avant. A conspiracy radio show caller claims that people from the future live on the moon and control our every action. Filmmakers Matt and Sonny chase the story deep into Louisiana’s Atchafalaya Basin, where an ominous underground compound raises more questions than answers. A Q&A with the director follows.

The Shorts Program has three tracks:

Little Space Oddities
Extra-Terrestrial Extravaganza
Planetary Paranoia


This year's selections for The 'Thon are:

Lathe of Heaven
District 9
Moon
The Thing
Godzilla Vs. Mothra
Night of the Creeps
9
The Day the Sky Exploded
Night of the Comet
Colossus: The Forbin Project
The Giant Gila Monster
Rabid

Of all the ways to be cooped up during a cold winter, this Festival has to be one of the best.

For more information, visit www.bostonsci-fi.com.  

Boston Science Fiction Film Festival ('THON)
February 5-15, 2010


Somerville Theatre
55 Davis Square
Somerville, MA

NY Sephardic Jewish Film Festival

The 14th NY Sephardic Jewish Film Festival is being held February 4-11, 2010 at the Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th Street in New York City. Since its founding in February 1990 as a biennial event, the NY Sephardic Jewish Film Festival has become the only annual Film Festival dedicated to showcasing Sephardic history, tradition and culture through film.

On Opening Night, in celebration of the 20th Anniversary of the Festival, its founders, Dr. Janice Ovadiah, Mr. Morrie Yohai and Israeli filmmaker Haim Shiran will be honored and the ASF Pomegranate Award will be presented.

The ceremony will be followed by the NY premiere of Coco and a post-screening reception. In this comic drama written, directed and starring Gad Elmaleh, Coco is a flamboyant self-made man who becomes a royal pain when planning the biggest show to date - the bar mitzvah of his son Samuel.

The films include:

The U.S. Premiere of Honor, starring Zeev Revah, Raymond Abecasis, Albert Iluz and many more of the leading stars of Israeli cinema. Honor portrays two Moroccan organized crime families that suffer the tragedies of their respective lives. Director Haim Bouzaglo will be on hand for post-screening discussion.

The 20th Anniversary screening of Pillar of Salt, based on the autobiographical novel by sociologist Albert Memmi. This drama captures the cultural richness and social complexity of a 13-year-old Jewish boy's life in Tunisia as he deals with the conflicting pressures from surrounding French and Arab societies.  Post-screening discussion with the director, Haim Shiran, recipient of the ASF Pomegranate Award. 

Salvador: the Ship of Shattered Hopes, directed by Nissim Mossek, has its NY Premiere. On the night of December 3, 1940, at the Black Seaport of Varna, Bulgaria, the Salvador - a rickety, old, sail-powered coal freighter - is finally towed out to sea and 352 Bulgarian Jews begin their voyage to Palestine. Ten hellish days later, the vessel is shattered to pieces on the shore, not far from Istanbul. Most of its passengers are lost at sea. While some of the survivors return to Bulgaria, most struggle on towards their original destination against all odds. Post-screening discussion with Dr. Ronnie Perelis, Alcalay Assistant Professor of Sephardic Studies, Bernard Revel Graduate School of Yeshiva University.

The two-part drama Revivre (Rebirth), about a journey of Jewish families from Poland, France, Morocco and Algeria making Aliya to pre-state Israel in 1946/1947. Part 1 deals with the major obstacles they endure trying to fulfill their dream and rebuild their lives in a Jewish state. Part 2 continues the journey as some of the families arrive in pre-state Israel, while others are held at a work-camp in Cyprus. In their new place, tensions grow between Arabs and Jews, Ashkenazim and Sephardim, and between secular and religious.
Post-screening discussion after both Parts with director Haim Bouzaglo.

Among the documentaries:

Mashala, a NY Premiere directed by Cyrus Sundar Singh, follows Canadian singer Ellen Gould Ventura on a journey of spiritual and musical discovery through Sephardic song as she joins with a group of gifted musicians from Chile, Morocco, Italy and Venezuela.  

In Azi Ayima (Come Mother), director Sami Shalom Chetrit takes a journey with his mother in search of classmates from her elementary school, the Alliance, which she attended 60 years ago in a little village in Morocco.  Through their stories of past and present, Morocco is reconstructed and comes to life, told for the first time by Moroccan women of the first generation to immigrate to Israel. Post-screening discussion with the director.

For further information, visit www.sephardicfilmfest.org

NY Sephardic Jewish Film Festival
February 4-11, 2010


Center for Jewish History
15 West 16th Street
New York City

Storm Warnings - Polish Cinema

The Film Society of Lincoln Center presents Storm Warnings: Resistance and Reflection in Polish Cinema from February 3-11, 2010 at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater in New York City. The series deals with a specific period of time in Poland, 1977-1989, when the unflinching visions of these filmmakers actually stood to affect social change. Filled with drama and impeccable technique, this is one important series that lovers of cinema will not want to miss.   

Polish filmmakers working from the late 1970s to the fall of Communism managed to produce extraordinarily rich and powerful films despite the enormous challenges and censorship they faced from the totalitarian regime. Some were influenced by the socially conscious films of the Neorealist movement and others by their commitment to Poland's burgeoning Solidarity movement. Well-known, like Agnieszka Holland, Krzysztof Kieslowski and Andrzej Wajda or less so, like Marcel Lozinski and Kazimierz Kutz, they all produced unflinching and profoundly moving visions of the regime's economic, political and spiritual failures.

Major works include:

Andrzej Wajda's Without Anesthesia a.k.a. Rough Treatment / Bez znieczulenia (1978) was praised as the first daringly critical portrait of modern-day Poland. The Oscar®-winning director’s drama focuses on a journalist whose post and privileges are taken away after he raises the issue of press freedom during an appearance on a television talk show.

Krzysztof Zanussi's Camouflage / Barwy ochronne (1977) is a philosophical thriller set on a university campus that becomes a metaphor for the Polish state. When impressionable 26-year-old academic Jaroslaw falls under the sway of veteran professor Jakub, he finds his youthful notions of morality and justice challenged by the older man’s world-weary cynicism. The director will appear at the Saturday screening.

Stanislaw Bareja’s Teddy Bear / Miś is a surreal comedy about the absurd plight of sports club manager Rysiek, a.k.a., “Teddy Bear,” whose efforts to accompany his team to a foreign tournament are thwarted when he discovers his ex-wife has torn pages out of his passport. A cult hit in Poland, where it spawned two sequels, Teddy Bear ranks among the most fearless satires of the decaying Communist state.

Also included are works that were banned outright and often remained unseen until years later:

Ryszard Bugajski's Interrogation / Przesłuchanie (1982/1989) is a harrowing, fact-based prison drama starring Krystyna Janda (Man of Marble, Mephisto) as Tonia, a cabaret singer in 1950s Warsaw who wakes up in jail after a night of drunken revelry to find herself accused of crimes against the state, and thus submitted to torture, humiliation and betrayal (director Agniezska Holland plays a cellmate). The film was banned upon its completion in 1982, viewed secretly on bootleg video copies, and finally premiered at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival, where Janda won the Best Actress prize for her performance.

Agnieszka Holland's remarkable A Woman Alone / Kobieta samotna (1981/1987) tells of a single mother living on the outskirts of Wroclaw struggling to support herself and her young son by working as a letter carrier, while also caring for an elderly aunt. She tries to convince local Party officials to improve her housing conditions, but she is unsuccessful. This film was also banned despite its award-winning premiere at Poland’s own Gdynia Film Festival.

Marcel Lozinski's How Do We Live / Jak żyć (1977/1981) is a 'mockumentary' about a socialist training camp for young marrieds.

Presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Polish Cultural Institute in New York, in association with the Polish National Film Archive and Polish Television, as part of Performing Revolution in Central and Eastern Europe, a festival coordinated by the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, November 2009 – March 2010.

For further information, visit http://filmlinc.com/wrt/onsale/polish10.html

Storm Warnings: Resistance and Reflection in Polish Cinema
Feb 3-11, 2010


Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center
West 65th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam Ave.
New York Cit
y

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