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Festivals and Events
We like to cover independent and eclectic film festivals whenever and wherever we can, as well as more established festivals’ chosen highlights. We also welcome submissions of coverage.
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A couple of interviews from Cannes’ Semaine de la Critique 2013
10 April 2015, by Abla KandalaftInterview with Antonio Piazza and Fabio Grassadonia, directors of Semaine de la Critique winner Salvo. Interview with Daria Belova, director of Come and Play (Komm und spiel) -
NN by Héctor Gálvez - Cartagena International Film Festival 2015
9 April 2015, by Abla KandalaftThe title of Héctor Gálvez’s second feature film refers to the shorthand used to designate unidentified bodies, in this case, the unclaimed remains of a man exhumed by a team of forensic pathologists in Peru.Team leader Fidel is intrigued by an unspoilt black and white photograph of a young woman found in the pocket of the shirt worn by the victim and sets out to uncover his identity. The film is a muted, restrained and touching ode to the nameless victims of state-sanctioned brutality in (…) -
Masterclass with Marlon Nowe at Brussels’ Anima Festival
26 March 2015, by Alex WiddowsonBrussels’ Anima Festival kicked off with a masterclass presented by Disney 3D animator Marlon Nowe. Nowe was one of the lead animators on Frozen (2013) and created the online animation school Animsquad. I have found that Frozen’s world of shifting polygons and sophisticated material simulations hold none of the beauty found in the pre-CGI, hand-drawn Disney features. Clearly, a lineage is maintained from some of the more successful productions of the 90’s in terms of narrative, character (…) -
Interview with Jeffrey Schwarz, director of Vito (2013) and Tab Hunter: Confidential (2015) – BFI:Flare
25 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeIn 1981 Vito Russo adapted his travelling lecture The Celluloid Closet into a book of the same name. The lecture and the book represent the first concerted effort to look at the history of cinema from a queer perspective. Years later the book was made into a documentary, finished and released after Russo’s death from AIDS. A young assistant editor on that project, Jeffrey Schwarz, went on to make Vito, a film about Russo’s life which revealed its subject to be a key activist in the struggle (…) -
Out to Win - BFI Flare
21 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeOut To Win is a pumped-up documentary, primed to convince sports fans of the need to address homophobia within various games and to praise and support LGBT players brave enough to come out. Whether it converts non-believers into sports fans is another matter. I found the opening montage of out-and-proud athletes strutting their stuff (in a sporty way) to Queen’s ‘We Will Rock You’ to be rather exhilarating, and my ears pricked up when an interviewee explained that the appeal of sport lies in (…) -
Do I Sound Gay - BFI Flare
21 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeIn a documentary with a deliberately suspect premise – one man seeks to de-gay his voice – that quickly gives way to a fun and enlightening delivery, David Thorpe uses voice as a hook to examine gay male identity – or is it gay? It turns out that 40% of male voices perceived to be gay belong to men who identify as straight and vice-versa. One explanation offered by one of the language experts interviewed by Thorpe is that our voices are a collage of the kind of voices we were most drawn to (…) -
Dark Rivers of the Heart - BFI Flare Shorts
21 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeA film described as ‘unflinching’ is of course one that makes you flinch. The four shorts and one music video in BFI Flare’s ‘Dark Rivers of the Heart’ programme all deliver on those face-screwing, look-away-can’t-look-away moments. Kai Stänicke’s eye-catching promo for The Hidden Cameras’ Carpe Jugular features a sexually democratic dance floor where everyone gets off with each other, except that for ‘getting off with’, read ‘beating the shit out of’: not so idyllic. The remaining films in (…) -
Girlhood - BFI Flare
21 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeWhatever you do, you will always be some man’s bitch. This is an observation coolly relayed by a female character in Céline Sciamma’s five-act drama, set in the outskirts of present day Paris and centring on a sixteen year old girl. Every scene of Girlhood (Bande de Filles) resists and subverts this pernicious epigram as we follow the cruel trajectory of protagonist Marieme, who becomes known as Vic while she graduates from girl gang member to professional drug supplier. This is taut, artful (…) -
fiveFilms4freedom - BFI Flare
18 March 2015, by Ryan OrmondeBFI Flare: fiveFilms4freedom FiveFilms4freedom (say it ten times) is a showcase of short films selected from this year’s BFI Flare festival to be promoted by the British Council and hosted online via the BFI player. On Wednesday 25th March 2015 the two organisations are asking people from more than 50 countries and regions to participate in the simultaneous viewing of the programme. This cinematic postcard hasn’t come solely from the UK – one film is Danish and two are American – and yet (…) -
Burroughs: The Movie - Glasgow Film Festival
12 March 2015, by Nisha RamayyaBurroughs: The Movie, directed by Howard Brookner, is a compilation of film footage, photographs, and sound recordings collected in St Louis, New York, Colorado, and London during 1978-1983. Aaron Brookner, the director’s nephew, raised funds to restore and rerelease the documentary on the occasion of Burrough’s 100th birthday in 2014 (Howard Brookner died in 1989, Burroughs died in 1997). On the Kickstarter webpage, Aaron explains his motivations: ‘[Burroughs’] thoughts are still an (…)