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Spring is springing. Green shoots are poking through, daylight is waxing and the Tribeca Film Festival is hatching its lineup. The 11th TFF (April 18 - 29, 2012) announced slate has film fans chirping lustily as they prep to hibernate in dark plexes following winter's end.
Hope springs eternal that the narrative selection will dazzle -- and indeed, this year shows promise -- yet it's the documentary silo that has consistently delivered at lower Manhattan's hallmark fest.
This year, a trio of nonfiction films will receive Special Screenings. There's Tracy Holder and Karen Thorsen's Joe Papp in Five Acts, about the legendary Public Theater founder and his imprint on artists from Meryl Streep to James Earl Jones.
And the performing arts motif extends to two music-themed works: Danny Bennett's The Zen of Bennett, tracking Tony Bennett's recording of a duets album with Lady Gaga, Aretha Franklin and other stars, and Queen: Days of Our Lives, Matt O'Casey's five-decade history of the band, including Freddie Mercury's swan song.
For its 9th installment, the True/False Film Festival (March 1-4, 2012) returns to Columbia, Missouri for a unique combination of film festival, carnival, summer camp and political discussion. True/False brings a unique blend of films,some discovered at Sundance or Toronto, others making their premiere, but all deeply engaging and provocative.
The theme of the festival deals with documentaries, but also films about discovery or unearthing the truth. Rather than just a few movies in a dark room with a bloated party and pedantic step-and-repeats, True/False is a festival with a sense of purpose along with a sense of humor.
To simply call True/False a film fest does not totally do it justice as it also has an extensive programing that includes over 30 bands that perform through the course of the festival, field trips, campfire stories (really!) with film makers, stand-up comedy, breakfast, parades, folk and outsider art exhibitions, and celebration of “Buskers” (antiquated colloquialism for street-performers).
True/False features a whopping 40 feature films covering everything from artistic expression in the face of political oppression (Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry), shocking horror (V/H/S), to charming looks into the psyches of nerds (Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope). Special free screenings happen outdoors at the Great Wall, a wall outside a Methodist Church, that offers a unique viewing experience. There are also 20 short films and panel discussions which are free and open to the public that cover politicals, film making, technology, and more.
True/False also created the True Life Fund. Fesitval organizers state that "The True Life Fund demonstrates that documentaries can create change by offering tangible assistance to the real-life subjects of a new non-fiction film. And it acknowledges that documentary filmmakers and festivals thrive because of the stories given to us by people often of limited means."
This year the True Life Fund focuses on Bully, which chronicles a year in the life of five kids and their families who courageously share their stories to inspire change in how society deals with bullying. To assist the True Life Fund is the True Life Run marathon, in which participators can win prizes from local businesses and passes to next year’s festival.
Never before has a film festival had such a varied and wild assortment of programming. True/False is a festival in the truest sense of the word. Combining film, documentary, arts, and performance, True/False dares to do more than simply pander to big studios or pigeonhole itself. True/False is a new breed of film festival that believes in re-invention.
To learn more, go to www.truefalse.org
True/False Film Festival
March 1-4, 2012
Columbia, Missouri
Entering its fifteenth year, the Brooklyn Film Festival (June 1-10 at indieScreen and Brooklyn Heights Cinema) is in its late submission rounds for accepting entries.
The deadline for late submissions is March 7, 2012 for entries submitted through Withoutabox or films can be sent in by mail until March 7. The Brooklyn Film Fest is a British Academy Awards (BAFTA) qualifying festival.
Past winning films include Battle for Brooklyn, A Morning Stroll, and Scrapper.
Brooklyn Film Fest spokespeople state that the “…BFF mission is to provide a public forum in Brooklyn in order to advance public interest in films and the independent production of films. To draw worldwide attention to Brooklyn as a center for cinema. To encourage the rights of all Brooklyn residents to access and experience the power of independent filmmaking, and to promote artistic excellence and the creative freedom of artists without censure. BFF, inc. is a not-for-profit organization.”
To learn more, go to http://www.brooklynfilmfestival.org/
The Brooklyn Film FestJune 1-10Since 1996, Rendez-vous with French Cinema has introduced New Yorkers to the newest and -- sometimes, as last year with Bertrand Tavernier’s The Princess of Montpensier -- best films from France. Even though the 2012 edition is no different (25 new features and a handful of shorts are scheduled during its run at the Film Society, IFC Center and BAM), there’s a bonus: a sidebar of classic and contemporary films that, like the recent Film Comment Selects series, gives Rendez-vous greater breadth.