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New Directors/New Films has showcased the work of emerging artists for over 40 years, and continues to celebrate the most innovative voices in filmmaking. Presented by Lincoln Center's Film Society and MoMA.
As New Director/New Films opens March 21, 2012, at MoMA, here are some recommendations from noted film writer/reviewer David D'arcy with more to come. --ed
The Ambassador
directed by Mads Brugger
(Denmark)
Anything but diplomatic, this documentary/mockumentary by Mads Brugger, the Colbert of Denmark, made its debut at IDFA in Amsterdam late last year. Its political incorrectness will offend some tender souls, as it did at Sundance. Brugger, posing as a businessman, buys an Liberian ambassadorship to the Central African Republic, and then opens a factory in which pygmies, roaring drunk when we meet them, will make matches one day.
Activist film making has existed in one form or another for decades, but it was not until the 2006 film, An Inconvenient Truth, that
the world of environmentalist filmmaking was pushed to the forefront. There has always been a stalwart figure in the world of environmental cinema that continues to support enviromental activist cinema: The Environmental Film
Festival in the nation's capital.
Celebrating its 20th anniversary, The Environmental Film Festival (March 13-25, 2012), will exhibit 180 documentary, narrative, animated, archival, experimental and children’s films from 42 countries.
Films are screened at over 60 venues throughout the Washington metropolitan area, including museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theaters. Most screenings are free.
The annual Dallas International Film Festival takes place on April 12th – 22nd, 2012, in its titular Texas neighborhood showcaseing some of the finest new films to be released around the globe including two world premieres and nine Texas premieres. Approximately 180 films from all over the world will be screened over its 11 days.
The festival is a presentation of the Dallas Film Society. In addition to producing one of the largest festivals in the southwest, the Society produces numerous year round events, screening series and partnership programs with arts organizations around the city.
The Film Society celebrates films and their impact on society. As a non-profit organization, it recognizes filmmakers for their achievements in enhancing the creative community, provides educational programs to students to develop better understanding of the role of film in today's world, and promotes the City of Dallas and its commitment to the art of filmmaking.
For the first year since the festival’s inception there will be a Festival Village at the fashionable Mockingbird Station. The Festival Village will serve as the hub of the festival where filmmakers and film fans will have the chance to mingle and network at the Festival Lounge, and CBS Radio will present its first ever Music Lounge -- showcasing local music to the public every evening for the festival’s 11-day duration.
New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) teams up again with Telefilm Canada to present the ninth annual Canadian Front series, which runs from March 14 - 19, 2012 at the midtown museum.
Since NYC is the center for independent filmmaking in the United States, it's only natural that it be the host city for this annual series that highlights the best of Canadian cinema from the previous year.
Canadian Front is screening five dramas, four documentaries and three comedies, with eight of the films coming from Quebec, two from Ontario, and one each from Nova Scotia and British Columbia. There are 10 different languages spoken in the films being shown.
In addition to director Philippe Falardeau's drama Monsieur Lazhar, a foreign-language Oscar nominee (and Canada's official Academy Award entry), this year's selection has a larger number of comedies than usual — from Canada's East (Andrew Bush's Roller Town, from Nova Scotia) and West (Aaron Houston's Sunflower Hour, from British Columbia) coasts, and from the more traditional filmmaking centers of Quebec (Ken Scott's Starbuck) and Ontario (Ingrid Veninger's I Am a Good person, I Am a Bad Person). Minority communities are strongly represented as well, especially in Ivan Grbovic's debut film, Romeo 11, about Montreal's Lebanese community, and Yves Sioui Durand's Mesnak, which was shot in part in the Innu language.
Among those making their return to MoMA are the Inuit filmmaker Zacharias Kanuk, with Sirmilik, a short film shot in Nanvit's National Park; and Jean-Marc Vallée, whose melodrama Café de Flore stars Vanessa Paradis and was shot in both Canada and France. Two unusual and compelling documentaries complete the selection: Briggite Poupart's Over My Dead Body examines the compromised life of Montreal choreographer David St-Pierre, and Carl Leblanc's The Heart of Auschwitz investigates an extraordinary object in the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre.
Said Executive Director of Telefilm Canada Carolle Brabant, “This year’s Canadian Front demonstrates that Canadian cinema is truly global, with movies that enthrall markets around the world. From dramas to documentaries, by way of comedies, New Yorkers will be able to see a range of original stories through these 11 feature films and one short.
"The line-up includes, notably the New York premieres of Philippe Falardeau’s Monsieur Lazhar, which we are proud to present in following Philippe’s wonderful Oscar run, and of Jean-Marc Vallée’s Canada-France co-production Café de Flore, starring Vanessa Paradis. Both these films have captivated movie-lovers worldwide.”
Added Laurence Kardish, Senior Curator, Department of Film at MoMA, “Canadians have a gift for humour, sometimes dry, sometimes slippery, which is evident in this year's survey, and moves east from Halifax with a Saturday-Night-Live straight face Roller Town, through Quebec with an all too relevant Starbuck, and the Toronto mini-budget comedy i am a good person / i am a bad person, and ends on the West Coast with the Vancouver foul-mouthed and hilarious mockumentary The Sunflower Hour,”
“But all that is good is not necessarily funny, such as the documentaries The Heart of Auschwitz and Over My Dead Body, about the idea of mortality, and Bestiary, about the notion of what's real, and two emotionally stunning dramas, Romeo Eleven, a first film about a young man with a disadvantage, and Café de Flore, about two intertwining narratives about intense loves.”
Telefilm Canada is a federal cultural agency dedicated to developing and promoting the Canadian audiovisual industry. It provides financial support to the private sector to create distinctively Canadian productions that appeal to domestic and international audiences. It also administers the Canada Media Fund’s programs. For more info on Canadian filmmaking visit www.telefilm.gc.ca
Bestiary (Bestiaire)
East Coast premiere
Writer/director Denis Côté
In the southern Quebec tourist destination of Parc Safari, celebrated Canadian auteur Denis Côté observes the animals and their relationships to their environment, man and each other.
Café de Flore
New York premiere
Writer/director Jean-Marc Vallée
A DJ in contemporary Montreal is mysteriously bonded to a single mother in 1969 Paris in this new drama from C.R.A.Z.Y. writer/director Jean-Marc Vallée, making a return appearance at Canadian Front.
The Heart of Auschwitz (Le Cœur d’Auschwitz)
East Coast premiere
Director: Carl Leblanc
Writers: Luc Cyr and Carl Leblanc
The incredible true story of a hand-made valentine given to a camp inmate in Auschwitz, its survival through the horrors of war, and the filmmaker who tracked down its surviving signatories.
i am a good person / i am a bad person
International premiere
Writer/director: Ingrid Veninger
During a film-festival jaunt to present her confrontational new work, an increasingly insecure, questioning director agonizes over life choices thus far and a murky future.
Mesnak
U.S. premiere
Director: Yves Sioui Durand
Writers: Louis Hamelin, Robert Morin and Yves Sioui Durand
When urban Aboriginal Dave leaves Montreal in search of his birth mother, he discovers, in a northern reserve community, hidden truths that explain his past.
Monsieur Lazhar
New York premiere
Writer/director: Philippe Falardeau
In this Oscar-nominated drama, an Algerian immigrant teacher takes over a sixth-grade Montreal class following his predecessor’s suicide and guides his charges through their loss.
The National Parks Project: Sirmilik
East Coast premiere
Director: Zacharias Kanuk
Canadian Front alumnus Zacharias Kunuk, director of Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner, joins with musicians Dean Stone, Andrew Whiteman and Tanya Tagaq on this short profiling his northern Nunavut homeland.
Over My Dead Body
International premiere
Director: Brigitte Poupart
As he awaits the double-lung transplant that could save his life, controversial Montreal-based choreographer Dave St. Pierre prepares new work and ruminates on dance.
Roller Town
New York premiere
Director: Andrew Bush
Writers: Andrew Bush, Mark Little and Scott Vrooman
The laughs come rolling non-stop in this affectionate, frequently bawdy spoof of 1970s roller-disco movies from the white-hot online sketch comedy collective Picnicface.
Romeo Eleven (Roméo Onze)
U.S. premiere
Director: Ivan Grbovic
Writers: Ivan Grbovic and Sara Mishara
Obsessed with a mysterious woman he met in an online chat room, second-generation Lebanese immigrant Rami finally seems able to overcome the shyness induced by his cerebral palsy. The film screened at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival.
Starbuck
New York premiere
Director Ken Scott
Writers: Martin Petit and Ken Scott
David, a 40-something wastrel, discovers his sperm bank’s misdeeds have resulted in his fathering 533 children, 142 of whom now want to know who their father is. To date, the film has earned almost $3.5 million at the Canadian box office.
Sunflower Hour
East Coast premiere
Writer/director Aaron Houston
Inspired by Christopher Guest’s mockumentaries, this is the story of four very damaged puppeteers as they vie to audition for a popular children’s television show.
For more information about the films and screening schedule, go to: http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/films/1254 or www.canadianfront2012.ca
Canadian Front
March 14 - 19, 2012
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
On 53rd/54th Sts. between 6th &5th Ave's
New York