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Offering a good mix of foreign and independent film, the first Middleburg Film Festival will run from October 24th through the 27th, avoiding some of the more obvious choices from this year, in favor of many newcomers. Opening the festival will be Alexander Payne’s Nebraska, starring Will Forte and Bruce Dern. The centerpiece will be Justin Chadwick’s Mandela: The Long Walk to Freedom, starring The Wire’s Idris Elba as Nelson Mandela. Other films include Stephen Frears’s Philomena, John Wells’ August: Osage County, and Teller’s Tim’s Vermeer.
Executive Director of the Middleburg Film Festival Susan Koch said, “We are thrilled to present out line up for the first Middleburg Film Festival. Our goal was to curate an engaging slate of films, drawing from the U.S. and abroad and across all genres, that will satisfy casual movie goers and avid film lovers alike. We are grateful for the generous support of our distributors and are looking forward to a glorious weekend of film, music and conversation.”
Middleburg’s film list verifies Koch’s statement. It should have a little bit of something for everyone. Even the independent films on the list look palatable to mainstream audiences, while remaining artistic enough for the hard-core movie scholars. Tickets are now on sale. For tickets, showtimes, and a complete film list, go to www.middleburgfilm.org.
The Middleburg Film Festival
October 24th-27th, 2013
As if anyone needed another reason to go to Las Vegas. Now, in addition to being a roving pleasure park with over 120 casinos and more clubs then you can go to in a weekend as well as the location of the wildly popular EDM festival the Electric Daisy Carnival, Las Vegas is home to the Life is Beautiful Festival, a banquet of music, arts, food and learning in downtown Las Vegas. The first, hopefully annual two day festival takes place on Saturday, October 26th and Sunday, October 27th and is expected to be widely attended. Between Vegas’s incumbent attractions and the weekend festival of high-profile musicians, speakers, craft-cocktails and arts both theatrical and installed, the festival promises to entertain and enrich in equal measure. Whether it skews more towards learning or boozing is a matter of choice with a lineup as jam-packed as this one.
Tackling social issues from a broad range of filmmakers, the Margaret Mead Film Festival (October 17 – 20, 2013) at the American Museum of Natural History (79th Street and Central Park West, NY, NY) continues to bring some truly unique films to the screen.
Calle López, directed by Gerardo Barroso and Lisa Tillinger examines a “microcosm of Mexican society” as two photographers move to downtown Mexico City with their newborn child and begin documenting the life around them. Both directors will be in attendance.
Chimeras, directed by Mika Mattila documents a Chinese artists' meteoric rise to fame as he contends with tempting Western ideals, maintaining his integrity as an artist, and juggling his family life.
Miss Nikki and the Tiger Girls, directed by Juliet Lamont juxtaposes the political turmoil of Myanmar with a burgeoning all-girl Burmese rock band’s tour through Australia, and the bold feminist themes of their music.
This is only a small sampling of the films being shown. Other events include performances by Fernando Cellicion, and panel discussions on how art, cinema, and even video games are being used to preserver global and ancient cultures.
The Margaret Mead Film Festival continues to bring great programming that embodies cultural diversity and grassroots filmmaking.
To learn more, go to: http://www.amnh.org/explore/margaret-mead-film-festival
The Margaret Mead Film Festival
October 17 – 20, 2013
The American Museum of Natural History
79th Street and Central Park West
New York, New York 10024
This year's opening night selection at the New York Film Festival is Paul Greengrass's gripping thriller, Captain Phillips, a docudrama about the kidnapping of an American ship captain by Somali pirates in 2009. This director has cultivated a consistent style at least since his Bloody Sunday, deploying a handheld camera and relying on intensive editing — in many respects his technique is representative of current practice in Hollywood but Greengrass has proven himself to be one of the most adept filmmakers working in this mode and has not yet departed from a high standard. Tom Hanks gives one of his strongest and most satisfying performances to date as the film's hero but the picture as a whole is a triumph of casting with hardly any named stars. Captain Phillips is largely shot in bright daylight and given the digital format's inability to reproduce the high-contrast of film stocks, this decision proves to be something of liability even if the gritty texture that results has a certain consonance with the narrative material.
Ben Stiller's The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, this year's Festival Centerpiece, is a romantic comedy about the travails of a hapless daydreamer as he timidly pursues a co-worker he has a crush on, with the protagonist's daydreams providing a pretext for parodies of contemporary action filmmaking. Based on a classic James Thurber short story — previously filmed in the 1940s with Danny Kaye — this has several very imaginative and beautifully realized comic and visual ideas as well as consistently well-observed dialogue — however, the film too frequently capitulates to clichés, sentimentality and uninspired construction. The actors, on the other hand, are superb, with Stiller himself as the eponymous hero, Kristen Wiig as the object of his affections, and a terrific supporting cast including Adam Scott, Kathryn Hahn, Shirley MacLaine, Patton Oswalt, and Sean Penn.
This year's closing night selection is Spike Jonze's clever, often exhilaratingly creative sci-fi comic romance, Her, about a professional letter-writer — touchingly played by Joaquin Phoenix — who, amazingly, falls in love with his computer operating system, an advanced artificial intelligence, voiced by Scarlett Johansson, in one of her best roles to date. The director-writer and his talented cinematographer, Hoyte van Hoytema — who brilliantly shot the recent version of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy — achieve one of the most satisfying visual presentations within the digital format to be seen at this festival. (Jia Zhangke's A Touch of Sin, Joel and Ethan Coen's Inside Llewyn Davis, Jim Jarmusch's Only Lovers Left Alive, and James Gray's The Immigrant were also standouts in this respect, although thus far the recent works of David Fincher as well as Francis Ford Coppola's Tetris seem to remain the gold-standards for digital photography in world cinema at present; however, most of the other films here were evidence that the special requirements of digital have not yet been fully absorbed and mastered even by most of the premier cinematographers — and directors — in the world.) This festival has, unsurprisingly, been graced by copious superior acting and Her is no exception, with wonderful support from Amy Adams, Olivia Wilde, and, above all, Rooney Mara. (Brian Cox, Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader also memorably contribute in brief, voice-only parts.) Her is certainly a worthwhile entry although it falls a little short of fully exploring the implications of its ingenious premise, suffering slightly in comparison with, for example, with Michel Gondry's (and Charlie Kaufman's) moving and dazzling Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, the eccentric sensibility of which Her often recalls.
To learn more, go tohttp://www.filmlinc.com/nyff2013/
The 51st New York Film Festival
September 27 – October 13, 2013
The Film Society of Lincoln Center