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Film Festivals

Harlem International Film Fest

hi logoTaking inspiration from the Harlem Renaissance, the Harlem International Film Festival (September 19 – 23, 2012) at the Schomburg Center (515 Malcolm X Boulevard) embraces the unique stories that all people have to tell. Not only a venue for international cinema, HI emphasizes the history, art, and youth culture of Harlem. HI brings together a unique selection of films from countries who’s cinematic achievements often go unnoticed.

The opening night celebration is the New York premiere of Angad Bhalla’s Herman’s House, a documentary about an artist’s friendship with one of America’s longest serving solitary prisoners. Herman’s House will be preceded by a dance showcase by Deeply Rooted Dance Theater. Both Bhalla and the Deeply Rooted dancers will be doing a that evening.

A Gran Plan is a Singaporean film about a 10 year old Eurasian boy from a broken home and an Indian grandmother and the journey both have to try and find a complete life. Director Sangeeta Nambiar will be in attendance and do a Q&A after the screening.

The Chebeya Affair – A Crime of The State is a work of Congolese cinema and a court-room drama examining the suspected murder of a human rights activist at the hands of several police officers.  

In Bringing King to China, after her father is killed in a suicide attack in Iraq; a woman relocates to China to teach civil rights and puts on a play about Martin Luther King while attempting to reconcile cultural differences and the global image of America’s foreign policy.

Many of the films in HI are very political in nature and broach subjects that are current, daring, and dangerous.  HI embodies the artistic and socially minded works of the Harlem Renaissance.

To learn more, go to: http://www.harlemfilmfestival.com/

Harlem International Film Festival
September 19 – 23, 2012

Schomburg Center
515 Malcolm X Boulevard
New York, NY 10037

Oscar Winning Irish Short Films at Lincoln Center

SixShooterWith the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s highly anticipated 50th edition of their New York Film Festival coming soon, it’s admirable to see that they haven’t lost sight of smaller and more niche productions.

September 12 -13, 2012, the Film Society of Lincoln Center will be exhibiting Oscar Winning Irish Short Films at the Film Center Amphitheater (144 West 65th Street), featuring five different shorts from contemporary Irish directors.

The series is put on in conjunction with Irish Film New York (IFNY), and the small cross-section of films pulls off a refreshing amount of variety in subject matter and style. The Shore, directed by Terry George about two longtime friends in Northern Ireland trying to reaffirm their bonds in the face of a monumental cultural conflict.

The Door, directed by Janita Wilson, was shot on location in Chernobyl and follows a family that has, since 1986, have been trying to piece their lives back together. Based on the book The Chernobyl Prayer by Svetlana Alexievich.

Six Shooter, direct by Martin McDonagh (In Bruges), prevails an air of intensity as a man that has just lost his wife meets a dangerous stranger on a train.

Granny O'Grimm's Sleeping Beauty, directed by Nicky Phelan, is an off-beat and comedic animated film as a surly grandmother gives her own twist on the classic fairytale.

Oscar Winning Irish Short Films presents a unique look at an oft-overlooked world of film-makers and shows that there is much more to Irish cinema than Once.

To learn more, go to:  http://www.filmlinc.com

Oscar Winning Irish Short Films
September 12 -13, 2012

Film Center Amphitheater
144 West 65th Street
New York, NY 10023

A Tribute to FIFA: The International Festival of Films on Art Hits Lincoln Center

For even the most eager festival-goer, swarms of characters caught up in plots can cause vertigo. As if to shore up public immunity, the Film Society of Lincoln Center is prescribing A Tribute to FIFA: The International Festival of Films on Art (September 19 to 23, 2012) prior to the 50th New York Film Festival (September 28 - October 14).

Detox yourself in four days with real stories about artistic creativity.

The Rx comes from Canada. Since 1981, Montreal has been home to FIFA's annual booster of cinema about art forms as mingled as painting, sculpture, architecture, digital art, design, fashion and photography. Beyond the visual arts, the program additionally
steinfamily mainfavors films exploring theater, dance and music, among other performing arts. Literature too bobs up among the predominantly documentary fare. Comparing the language of film to that of another expressive medium doesn't get much more literal than this.

Read more: A Tribute to FIFA: The...

Toronto International Film Fest Unleashes Cinema Onslaught

yellowThese days to have a film festival, you need an angle. Press (Tribeca), Prestige (Cannes), general wackiness (Alamo Drafthouse). The Toronto International Film Fest (September 6 – 16, 2012) at the TIFF Bell Lightbox Theater (350 King Street West  Toronto, ON M5V 3X5, Canada) and various other venues,  emphasizes something for everyone. TIFF has more than 300 films from over 60 countries every September.

The scope of this festival is really staggering. Forgeign dramas, animation, family films, horror, genre films, and more fill out TIFF. Trying to find a common element in all these films, other than enthusiastic innovation, is difficult. Films are grouped into categories like Short Cuts Canada, TIFF Kids, TIFF Docs, Masters, Gala Presentations, Vanguard, and Contemporary World Cinema.

Eagerly anticipated is Nick Cassevetes’ (The Notebook) bizarre incest/road-trip movie, Yellow in which a young substitute teacher escapes from her drudging everyday life by fantasizing bizarre parallel realities. Other TIFF films include:

  • Fly With Crane
    The second from Chinese director Li Ruijun, is a touching testament to our need to die with dignity.
     
  • The Gatekeepers
    In an unprecedented and candid series of interviews, six former heads of the Shin BetIsrael's intelligence and security agency — speak about their role in Israel's decades-long counterterrorism campaign, discussing their controversial methods and whether the ends ultimately justify the means.
     
  • Gangs of Wasseypur: Part One & Two
    Anurag Kashyap's decade-spanning gangster epic chronicles the bloody turf war between two competing criminal families during the tumultuous era of Indian independence and industrialization.
     
  • The Last Supper
    Though born a commoner, Liu Bang (Liu Ye) — later to be known as the Son of the Dragon — is destined to become the first emperor of the Han Dynasty
     
  • The Last Time I Saw Macao
    Part memoir, part city symphony, part noir-ish B-movie adventure, the new feature from critically acclaimed filmmaking duo João Pedro Rodrigues and João Rui Guerra da Mata (To Die Like a Man) is a sensual, shape-shifting ode to one of the world's most mythic, alluring and exoticized cities.

For years Canada has been building up a reputation as a sort of haven for cinema. The TIFF represents that ideal with a focus on bringing new and interesting forms of cinema from as many walks of life, styles, and directors as possible.

To learn more, go to: http://tiff.net

Toronto International Film Festival
September 6 – 16, 2012

TIFF Bell Lightbox Theater
350 King Street West  T
oronto, ON M5V 3X5, Canada

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