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The 34th annual Mill Valley Film Festival 2011 (MVFF) is taking place October 6 - 16, 2011 at 142 Throckmorton Theatre, CinéArts@Sequoia and Mill Valley Community Center in Mill Valley, as well as venues in Corte Madera, Larkspur and San Rafael, California.
The Mill Valley Film Festival was founded in 1978 by California Film Institute director Mark Fishkin, and is well known for the quality of its programming. The Festival has an "impressive track record for launching new films and new filmmakers, and has earned a reputation as a filmmakers' festival by offering a high-profile, prestigious, noncompetitive environment for celebrating the best in independent and world cinema."
This year MVFF pays tribute to Glenn Close, the Academy Award-nominated and multi-award-winning actress. Clips from some of her films will be screened along with an onstage interview. Her new film, Albert Nobbs, is based on a George Moore short story by way of an Off-Broadway play in which Close starred and won an Obie award for her performance as Nobbs.
Other Tributes are:
The Opening Night film is Jeff Who Lives at Home, directed by Jay and Mark Duplass and starring Susan Sarandon, Ed Helms and Jason Segel as Jeff.
Unemployed Jeff lives with his mother -- a poet-philosopher disguised as a do-nothing 30-year-old slacker. Jeff knows that he has a place in the universe, and today he's ready to go out and find it. "In our achievement-obsessed world, it's all too easy to dismiss a person like Jeff. But what a pity that would be."
The Centerpiece Film is My Week With Marilyn, directed Simon Curtis, who will be present. Based on the memoir by Colin Clark, the film chronicles the week Clark spent showing Marilyn Monroe the sights of England while she was there to film The Prince and the Showgirl. Michelle Williams portrays Marilyn Monroe, with Kenneth Branagh as Laurence Olivier, and Eddie Redmayne as production assistant Clark.
The Special Premiere film is A Few Best Men, directed by Stephan Elliott, starring Xavier Samuel and Olivia Newton-John. When David travels to the Australian outback for his wedding, he is aided and (mostly) abetted by his "best men".
The Closing Night film is The Artist, directed by Michel Hazanavicius. "Cannes Best Actor Jean Dujardin is a silent-film star resisting the transition to sound in this French production co-starring Bérénice Bejo, set in 1927 Hollywood."
The Festival is offering a chance for viewers to see three 2011 Foreign Language Academy Award submissions:
Forgiveness of Blood (Albania)
dir. Joshua Marston
A family in Albania goes about their business, passing daily through land they used to own. But the current owners are finally fed up, a fight ensues and one of the opponents is killed. The family‛s pleasant life is gone as they cope with the repercussions.
Miss Bala (Mexico)
dir. Gerardo Naranjo
A young woman in Mexico clings to her dream of winning a beauty contest despite the pervasive influence of organized crime.
Pina (Germany)
dir. Wim Wenders
Wenders utilizes the magical toolbox that is 3-D technology to show us the brilliant work of choreographer Pina Bausch. "One of the finest uses of 3-D technology to date, Pina brings to life what Bausch has left to us following her sudden death in 2009: "Dance. Dance or otherwise we are lost."
Other documentaries are:
Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel
dir. Lisa Immordino Vreeland with Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt, Frédéric Tcheng
How does one become Diana Vreeland? The late fashion editor and cult figure, then 80 years old, answered: "The first thing to do, my love, is arrange to be born in Paris. After that, everything flows quite naturally." The life and times of the "High Priestess of Fashion" is followed through archival footage, family photos and recorded conversations with George Plympton -- but the most prevalent voice is her own.
Thumbs
dir. Bill Couturié
A portrait of six teens in their quest for the US National Texting Championship. That‛s right, Texting -- the newest bee where, with two thumbs and a cell phone, the contestants compete in New York City for a $50,000 prize.
Voices from the Shadows
dir. Natalie Boulton, Josh Biggs (UK)
Psychiatric prejudice and medical ignorance hamper the solution to one of the most prevalent illnesses of the 21st century: myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), aka chronic fatigue syndrome. "A call to action for anyone who cares about the health and well-being of their community, this powerful film is equally a tribute to those whose voices must be heard."
Heist: Who Stole the American Dream?
dir. Donald Goldmacher, Frances Causey
"Everything in this country is about money. Everything." Thus begins yet another outrage-stirring documentary about our financial disaster. "There's no denying the American economy has gone from bad to worse to apocalyptic.... Fortunately, the film offers strategies for the non-billionaires among us, including voting crook-enabling politicians out of office. Getting mad as hell can't hurt, either."
What Happened Here
dir. Rob Nilsson
Inspired by the autobiography of Leon Trotsky, co-leader of the Bolshevik Revolution, Nilsson launched a quest to find the roots of Trotsky's hidden Jewish ancestry. The quest led him to Ukraine, and to the making of this cinematic essay, including WW II footage with Trotsky's personal reflections, accounts of Stalin’s enforced famines, the Nazi invasion and genocide.
A few new narrative features are also screening, including:
The Butcher's Wife / Wangliang's Ideal
dir. Gao Xiongjie (China)
A butcher and his wife have not yet consummated their marriage, pending the wife‛s passing her college entrance exams (her fourth try). "This domestic tragedy asks if a principled man and woman have a right to the life of their choice, or does marriage spell the end of all dreams?"
The Soul of Flies / El alma de las moscas
dir. Jonathan Cenzual Burley (Spain)
The journey through the Spanish countryside with two long-lost half-brothers -- the uptight and unimpressionable Miguel and the affectionate and sentimental Nero -- as they make their way to their estranged father's funeral. When Miguel agrees to meet Nero "at a remote Spanish train station, it's for one reason: to find closure. But after the two realize the train station is abandoned, their personal lives inconveniently open up and intertwine as they hitchhike, steal a motorbike and argue the entire way to paying final respects to the father they've never met. Soon they realize they have more in common than they thought."
ELIMINATE: Archie Cookson
dir. Rob Holder (UK)
British agent Archie Cookson is no James Bond -- hell, he‛s not even George Smiley. So why is he, a mere drone whose task is translating Russian recordings, suddenly targeted by the higher-ups in MI6 for elimination? Gradually, Archie begins to remember what it means to be a man of action. This first feature by Holder is a "darkly comic indie homage to the classic British spy movies of the '60s."
The Prize / El premio
dir. Paula Markovitch (Mexico/Germany/France/Poland)
Ceci, a seven year old girl, has to keep a huge secret, but she doesn't completely understand what is the secret about. The life of her family depends on her silence, as Ceci and her mom must stay hidden from the military in 1970's Argentina.
Other events include:
For more information, go to www.mvff.com.
Mill Valley Film Festival 2011
October 6 - 16, 2011
142 Throckmorton Theatre
142 Throckmorton Avenue
Mill Valley, CA
Century Cinema
41 Tamal Vista Blvd.
Corte Madera, CA
Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center
1118 Fourth Street
San Rafael, CA
CinéArts@Sequoia
25 Throckmorton Avenue
Mill Valley, CA
Cinemark Larkspur Landing
500 Larkspur Landing Circle
Larskpur, CA
Mill Valley Community Center
180 Camino Alto
Mill Valley, CA
Albert Park/San Rafael Community Center
618 B Street
San Rafael, CA