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Film Festivals

Tribeca Drive-In Screens Across The Country

 Blackfeet Boxing: Not Invisible

Tribeca Films is the latest organization to take their films to the drive-in. The Tribeca Drive-In features screenings at Orchard Beach, NY, Nickerson Beach, NY, the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, The AT&T Stadium in Arlington, and The Hard Rock Stadium in MIami. As part of the many films being screened is two documentaries from ESPN:

  • 30 for 30’s Be Water
    July 18 at AT&T Stadium (TX) & Nickerson Beach (NY)
    The film explores the fascinating story of kung-fu legend and movie star Bruce Lee and his rise to fame after being rejected by Hollywood in 1971. After this crushing blow, Lee returned to his parents’ homeland of Hong Kong to complete four iconic films. Exploring questions of identity and representation through rare archival footage, interviews with loved ones, and Bruce’s own writings, Be Water captures Lee’s charisma, passion, philosophy, and the eternal beauty and wonder of his art.

 

  • ESPN Films’ Blackfeet Boxing: Not Invisible
    Multiple dates & locations
    This short film exposes the crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous Women and takes you inside a gym formed on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Montana that teaches young girls how to defend themselves in response to violence. It is a film about fighting—for respect, identity and acknowledgment. There are no scorecards or knockouts on the Reservation; the prize at the Blackfeet Nation Boxing Club is far more vital: survival.

Other films being screened at Tribeca’s Drive-Ins include:

  • Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure
  • Selena
  • Girls Trip
  • John Wick
  • Casino Royale
  • Inside Man
  • Beetlejuice
  • The Bodyguard
  • Crazy Rich Asians

And many more.

To learn more, go to: https://www.tribecafilm.com/drive-in

Various Locations

New York Film Festival Announces Collaboration With Other Fall Film Fests

 

An NYC staple for decades, the New York Film Festival announced it will be collaborating with the Venice, Toronto, and Telluride film festivals in the coming fall season. Still scheduled for September 25 to October 11, 2020, it is currently unclear if the festival will be virtual or taking place at Lincoln Center. While the New York Film Festival has not gone into any specifics about their plans, a press release sent out July 8 said “This year, we've moved away from competing with our colleagues at autumn festivals and commit instead to collaboration. We are sharing ideas and information. We are offering our festivals as a united platform for the best cinema we can find. We're here to serve the filmmakers, audiences, journalists and industry members who keep the film ecosystem thriving. We need to do that together.”

To learn more, go to: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/

New York Human Rights Watch Film Fest takes to Streaming

Coded Bias

The latest film fest to switch to a digital platform is the New York edition of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival (HRWFF). Running June 11 - 20, 2020, the HRWFF will be streamed for audiences from https://www.hrwfilmfestivalstream.org/.

The opening night film, Belly of the Beast, directed by Erika Cohn, looks into the oppressive practice of involuntary sterilizations of women in the federal prison system. Radio Silence, from Juliana Fanjul,  tells the story of fierce radio journalist Carmen Artesegui, who was censored by the Mexican government for fighting against corrupt disinformation. Máxima, directed by Claudia Sparrow, about the noted environmental Goldman Prize winner Máxima Acuña, who fought intimidation, violence and criminal prosecution in a fight to keep her home in Peru. Coded Bias looks at how the world of AI has been dominated by white men, leading to misinformation being taken as fact. Down a Dark Stairwell, about criminal justice and race in NYC, and the HBO film Welcome to Chechnya by David France (How to Survive a Plague) which uses deep fake technology to mask the identities of gay Chechnians trying to escape the country.

Many of the films will also include live Q&As with filmmakers and special guests that will be streamed (be sure to register for them ahead of time).

To learn more, go to: https://ff.hrw.org/new-york-digital-edition

Human Rights Watch Film Festival New York: Digital Edition
June 11 - 20

Museum of the Moving Image takes First Look Festival to MUBI

Nofinofy

Interrupted by the Covid 19 pandemic, the Museum of the Moving Image is shifting the 2020 First Look Festival to the streaming platform MUBI. The festival features four films: ManBird Talk (Dir. Xawery Żuławski), Searching Eva (Dir. Pia Hellenthal), Transnistra (Dir. Anna Eborn), and Nofinofy (Dir. Michael Andrianaly), will stream each Monday in May exclusively on MUBI.

  • Nofinofy
    Available Starting May 4
    Dir. Michael Andrianaly. France, Madagascar. 2019, 72 mins. When his hairdressing salon is destroyed by the municipality, Romeo must leave the high street of Toamasina for a harder-to-find shack in a residential neighborhood. Intimately observed yet effortlessly reflective of issues confronting Madagascar today, Nofinofy is a marvel of economy as of patient empathy.
  • Transnistra
    Available Starting May 12
    Dir. Anna Eborn. Sweden, Denmark, Belgium. 2019, 96 mins. Shot on 16mm and set in the self-declared nation of Transnistria (Priednestrovia), this film follows a group of 16 year olds over a cycle of seasons, witnessing the end of their youth and their first attempts forging futures either within or beyond their small community.
  • Searching Eva
    Available Starting May 18
    Dir. Pia Hellenthal. Germany. 2019, 84 mins. A writer, a model, a queer activist, a sex worker, a social media personality—all of these apply to the Italian-born Eva Collé. Yet, director Pia Hellenthal takes care to never define Eva, whose notoriety is dispersed among various platforms and avatars and purposely avoids being pigeonholed into a fixed identity.
  • Bird Talk
    Available Starting May 25

    Dir. Xawery Żuławski. Poland. 2019, 138 mins. Working from an unrealized script by his father, the late Andrzej Żuławski, award-winning Polish filmmaker Xawery Żuławski unleashes a wild, urgent, friskily entertaining explosion of cinema, spilling into hybrid nonfiction. In a society increasingly leaning towards conformity, faith, and reactionary politics, the film highlights characters operating on its fringes.

First Look is the Museum’s annual festival of new, innovative international cinema. The 9th edition, scheduled for March 11 through 15, was cut short after the first two days as the Museum building was closed in efforts to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus. The Museum of the Moving Image also features streaming films on its website of View From Home and Live Online streaming events.

To learn more, go to: http://movingimage.us/ or https://mubi.com/

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