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Film Festivals

Brooklyn Film Fest Submission Deadline: March 7

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.  

battle for brooklyn

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 Fest
June 1-10

indieScreen
285 Kent Avenue,
Brooklyn, NY 11211

Brooklyn Heights Cinema
70 Henry Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201

Rendez-vous 2012: The French Are Coming (Again)

Moon ChildSince 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.

Read more: Rendez-vous 2012: The French Are...

The Weird and the Wonderful of New Orleans at BAMcinématek

24210 Mar Ctek web DownbyLaw PDP

From March 28 to April 1 and on April 8, 2012, the BAMcinématek will present New Orleans on Film, featuring 10 films on the fabled city, leading up to New Orleans music legend Dr. John’s nine-night residency at BAM’s Howard Gilman Opera House this spring.

The Jim Jarmusch film Down by Law features musician Tom Waits and John Lurie, as well as Roberto Benigni (yes, the same actor/director who made Life is Beautiful) as three wrongfully imprisoned convicts on the lamb. Down By Law portrays New Orleans as a nexus of constant duality. A place where someone can be mired in despair, and yet be able to meet a companion that is equally mired.  

Down by Law is a film as much about the strangeness of Americana as it is about the strangeness of New Orleans.As eclectic and fascinating as the actual city of New Orleans is, so too is this festival. 

Spanning almost every genre of film, the oldest film in the festival is the 1934 Mae West starrer, Belle of the Nineties, while the most recent are the 2009 Abel Ferrara's post-Katrina crime drama Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans and Disney’s return to traditional animation, The Princess and the Frog.  This festival embraces New Orleans both as a place of strange possibility and as a place of seedy but beautiful despair.

Paul Schrader’s 1982 remake of Val Lewton’s Cat People is a smoldering film that eschews Lewton’s subtlety for acts of debauchery punctuated by bloodshed. Nastassja Kinski slinks across a New Orleans in which the humidity is almost palpable to the viewer. While it lays the stereotypes of voodoo and decadence a little thick, Cat People is still a cult classic.

On the other side of the coin is Disney’s Princess and the Frog, a film which began to pull Disney back to traditional animation after several clumsy attempts at making CGI films without Pixar holding their hand. While the Randy Newman score can be distracting at times, Princess has a wonderful aesthetic combining 1920’s art deco evocative of Disney animator Mary Blair (Sleeping Beauty), with excellent natural and urban landscapes brought to life with post-Lion King elasticity.

Often when we think of New Orleans on film, we go to either the vested but somewhat tired classics like A Streetcar Named Desire, or to the absurdly stereotyped "Big Easy" of films like Live and Let Die

This festival creates a picture of New Orleans that feels more whole, a place that is simultaneously beautiful and terrible, an exotic and fragile world that is bound by the same burdens of humanity as anywhere else, but still maintaining and unmistakable charm.

To learn more go to: http://www.bam.org/BAMcinematek

New Orleans on Film
March 28 - April 1
 
BAMcinématek
30 Lafayette Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217

Cinequest Film Festival 2012: Celebrating World-Class Cinema

Cinequest 22Prepare yourself as one of the most expansive, explosive and highly anticipated film festivals in California returns with a bang.

Cinequest Film Festival 2012, a 13 day festival of unparalleled quality, excitement and pure cinematic magic will run from February 28th – March 11th, unveiling over 155 fantastic films in the best state-of-the-art venues in the country, such as the palatial California Theatre, Camera 12 Cinemas and San Jose Repertory Theatre, equipped with Barco DCI-compliant projection digital servers and digital and 35mm projection.

Read more: Cinequest Film Festival 2012:...

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