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Orientation: A New Arab Cinema (August 24 – 29, 2012) at the Film Society of Lincoln Center (165 West 65th Street) showcases Arab filmmakers telling stories of a world that has led to, and changed, since the Arab Spring. These are internationally minded filmmakers, many of whom have honed their craft abroad and look to shine new light on subjects where once others feared to tread.
Orientation is conducted in conjunction with the Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF), which was founded in 2004 to give Arab filmmakers an international platform to be seen.
Along with the Brasil Summerfest, MoMA will be holding its own celebration of Brazilian culture. No stranger to great screening great works of film, The Museum of Modern Art (11 West 53rd Street, NY, NY), in conjunction with the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival, presents the 10th installment of the Premiere Brazil! film series July 12- 24, 2012.
As this is the tenth anniversary of the festival, many of the directors being featured have taken part in previous installments. This includes
along with several newcomer directors such as Kiko Goifman and Claudia Priscilla. Films being screened include
Premier Brazil offers a great selection of new and old Brazilian directors and continues the tradition of great film series at MoMA.
To learn more, go to http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/films/1283
Premiere Brazil
July 12-24
The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd Street
New York, NY 10019
Nearly 20 years ago GenArt was launched as an arts and entertainment organization dedicated to supporting emerging talent, especially of its founders' generation. To support that mission it founded the GenArt Film Festival (GAFF) which continues this month in its 17th edition.
GAFF has established itself as one of New York’s most celebrated film festivals showcasing emerging filmmakers and actors.
Running from August 8-14, 2012, the festival’s unique format premieres one feature film and one short for seven consecutive nights, each followed by a Q&A with the cast and after-party. GAFF uniquely allows film lovers to experience a movie premiere like a true insider.
The 14 selected films include performances from actors such as Bryan Greenberg, Laura Prepon, Kathy Bates, Dreama Walker, and Mickey Sumner, with directorial debuts from Ryan Eggold and Jaime King.
Opening the festival will be the comedy Missed Connections, directed by Martin Snyder and starring Jon Abrahams, Mickey Sumner, Julia Jones, and Malcolm Barrett. And closing this year’s festival will be the world premiere of The Kitchen, directed by Isai Shetton and starring Laura Prepon, Dreama Walker, and Bryan Greenberg.
Confirmed notable attendees include:
Bryan Greenberg
Laura Prepon
Mickey Sumner
Toby Hemingway
Julia Jones
Jon Abrahams
Waris Ahluwalia
Greta Gerwig
Chris Benz
Annabelle Dexter Jones
Martin Snyder (Missed Connections director)
John Shepard
Gina Busch
Nelson Cheng (The Magic Life director)
Michael Friedland
Megan Boone
Jennifer Clary (The Silent Thief director)
Josh Pence
Nathan and Marc Zellner
Tate Ellington
Pepper Binkley
Adam Chambers
Jillian Clare
Vito Cottone
Ishai Setton (The Kitchen director)
Ryan Eggold (Literally, Right Before Aaron director)
Adam Rose
members of the band MGMT
GenArt CEO Marc Lotenberg
Jury members include award-winning writer, director, and producer Jay Duplass; entertainment journalist Ben Lyons; Webby-Award winning critic and host Matt Singer; and ABC News Radio host David Blaustein.
Each night the fest follows a basic schedule of a cocktail reception at 6:30 and then, at 7:30 the screening begins followed by Q&A with cast and after-party.
SCHEDULE:
The GenArt Film Festival’s week of premieres has spotlighted some of the talented emerging filmmakers in North America. GenArt’s roster of events and programs are tailored to give up-and-coming filmmakers a platform to propel them into the spotlight. GenArt has helped launch the careers of countless influential filmmakers including:
Now noted actors who have all made debuts with GenArt as well include:
For updates regarding the GenArt Film Festival follow on Twitter (@GenArt) and through the festival’s hashtag: #genartfilmfest or go to: www.genart.com
The 17th Annual GenArt Film Festival
August 8 - 14, 2012
School of Visual Arts Theatre
333 West 23rd Street
New York City
August 8-13 after-parties:
Thompson LES
190 Allen St.
Lower East Side
Closing night party, August 14:
Gallery Bar
120 Orchard St.
Lower East Side
“Why do robots always get a bad rep?” was the rhetorical quibble that prompted social robotist Heather Knight to found the Robot Film Festival last year. Now back for its second installment (July 14, 2012 at Manhattan's 3LD Art & Technology Center), the fest aims to burnish the image of artificially intelligent creatures, which Knight vindicates as "good guys if we design them right.”
As befits a celebration of automata, RFF is quick and efficient enough to achieve its task in one day. It's up and at it with mimosas, caffeine and a morning matinee screening of Jake Shreier's directorial debut, Robot & Frank.
The sci fi comedy follows retired cat burgler (Frank Langella), who persuades his humanoid robot caretaker (voice of Peter Sarsgaard) to assist on one last heist. It snagged an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation award at this year's Sundance Film Festival, and is RFF's designated feature to assay its 2012 theme evaluating the impact of emerging technologies: "Are Robots Man’s New Best Friend?"
"Robots are not merely a type of character, but rather a medium for character -- just as animation and puppets and costumes allow us to experiment with our conceptions of ourselves and others,” observes Festival co-producer Marek Michalowski of BeatBots.
Though RFF calls itself a film festival, live performances, art installations and robot demos render the algorithm intriguingly more complex. It's really more of a variety show spliced with a TED Conference and flowing with mood lubricants.
The day culminates with the 2nd annual Botsker Awards, where the verdicts of RFF's juried short film showcase will be revealed amid the robo-antics of emcee and comedian/musician Reggie Watts.
Botsker categories include:
Held in a venue evocative of Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, the ceremony will kick off with the descent of mini-humanoids across the red carpet and close with Josh Ventura and Data the Robot -- his sidekick programmed by Knight -- in a number billed as a "human-robot dance."
Also getting his groove on will be BeatBots’ Keepon robot. Attendees are invited to pose on the Step & Repeat with the human-sized robot Millennia, known for her flirty come ons and snide asides.
Knight's résumé is hardly the usual festival curator's. She runs Marilyn Monrobot, a robot theater company which creates socially intelligent robot performances and sensor-based electronic art.
Her background includes stints at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Syyn Labs (with whom she built the award-winning This Too Shall Pass music video for OK GO), Aldebaran Robotics and the Personal Robots Group at the MIT Media Lab. Knight graced the 2011 Forbes List for 30 under 30 in Science.
Whether festival-goers will be too distracted by their mobile devices to absorb the concepts and queries of the Robot Film Festival remains to be seen. “Are we also out-of-touch with human character?" wonders Knight.
This Bastille Day rise up and storm the Festival barracks to find out. For more info or tickets, go to: http://robotfilmfestival.com or @robotfilmfest
Robot Film Festival
Saturday, July 14, 2012
10:30 am - 10 pm
3LD Art and Technology Center
80 Greenwich St.
New York, NY 10006