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October 31, 2009

Yes... feeding squirrel-like kitten with chopsticks

Posted by Ray Pride at 02:49 PM | Comments (0)

October 26, 2009

Good days? Bad days? Good days.


Week later, two million views, still a classic.

Posted by Ray Pride at 12:32 PM | Comments (0)

October 23, 2009

Charles and Ray Eames' Polaroid SX-70 promo film


Technology arrives...

Posted by Ray Pride at 11:30 AM | Comments (0)

October 22, 2009

Out of the box: Richard Kelly's 1996 The Goodbye Place

Posted by Ray Pride at 11:20 AM | Comments (0)

October 21, 2009

VIFF 2009 trailers: Sexuality and Subtitles


Vancouver's fest trailers are always pretty swell.

Posted by Ray Pride at 10:02 AM | Comments (0)

October 20, 2009

42Below Vodka's 42-filmmaker 42-second film project: Flora Sigismondi, Kenneth Anger

Posted by Ray Pride at 03:41 PM | Comments (0)

42Below Vodka's 42-filmmaker 42-second film project: David Lynch, Asia Argento

Posted by Ray Pride at 11:37 AM | Comments (0)

42Below Vodka's 42-filmmaker 42-second film project: Abel Ferrara, Harmony Korine

Posted by Ray Pride at 05:34 AM | Comments (0)

October 18, 2009

Picturing Chicago International Film Festival 45 award ceremonies

The Chicago International Film Festival's 45th edition runs through Thursday, but juried awards were handed out Saturday night at the Pump Room of the Ambassador East Hotel. In the International Feature Film Competition, three prizes went to Tina Mabry's Mississippi Damned, a Gold Hugo for Best Film, a Gold Plaque for Best Supporting Acress to Jossie Harris Thacker and another GP for Mabry's screenplay. Andrea Arnold's Fish Tank took a Silver Hugo Special Jury Award for "esthetic boldness" along with a GP for Michael Fassbender for Best Supporting Actor. Vincere took Silver Hugos for Marco Bellocchio as Best Director, Giovanna Mezzogiorno as Best Actress and Filippo Timi for Best Actor, along with a Gold Plaque for Best Cinematography, Daniele Cipri. Hipsters took a Gold Plaque for Best Art Direction. Only a handful of winners were present: the Mississippi Damned crew was happy to be there. New Directors and Short Film nods listed in the festival press release after the jump, along with video (below) of Martin Landau accepting an Achievement Award in the Chicago hotel where North by Northwest was shot. [Ray Pride.]

John Russell Taylor's 39th Chicago International Film Festival


This is critic John Russell Taylor's 39th consecutive CIFF, he says.

David Robinson
David Robinson served on the documentary jury.

Bruce Webb, director, The Be All And End ALL
Bruce Webb directed competition entry The Be All And End All.

Martin Landau
Martin Landau says the film industry has changed in 50 years.

Bisset signs
A scrum of autograph hunters outside the hotel sought a signature from jury president Jacqueline Bissett.

Remarks

CHICAGO, October 18, 2009 – Michael Kutza, Founder and Artistic Director of the Chicago International Film Festival, Mimi Plauché, Head of Programming, and Jesse Berkowitz, Documentary and Short Film Programmer, proudly announce the winners of the 2009 45th Chicago International Film Festival competitions. The announcement was made at the famed Pump Room at the Ambassador East Hotel.

At the Festival, Chicago audiences are able to choose from 145 films from 45 countries, showcasing both established masters and rising new filmmakers. Competitions were held in the International Feature Film, New Directors, Documentary and Short Film categories, along with a special Chicago Award for a local filmmaker. The Festival’s highest honor is the Gold Hugo, named after the mythological God of Discovery.

Award Winners:

International Feature Film Competition

Gold Hugo for Best Film to MISSISSIPPI DAMNED (US) for its powerful and uncompromising portrait of the compounding frailties and difficulties of a struggling black community.

Silver Hugo for Special Jury Award to FISH TANK (UK) for its aesthetic boldness in taking us into a grim public-housing environment and showing us the transcendent spirit of a young girl that struggles to overcome the adult lies that engulf her.

Silver Hugo for Best Director to Marco Bellocchio (VINCERE, Italy) for taking us into the privileged details of a love story so well drawn that we cannot renege on what we have felt between the two main characters.

Silver Hugo for Best Actress to Giovanna Mezzogiorno of VINCERE (Italy) for her astonishing understanding of love, its depth and its degradation.

Silver Hugo for Best Actor to Filippo Timi of VINCERE (Italy) for bringing such a commanding virility to a young Mussolini that we are both entranced and repelled by his climb to power and evil.

Gold Plaque for Best Supporting Actress to Jossie Harris Thacker in MISSISSIPPI DAMNED (US) for her character’s multiple and believable life changes that give us insight into the tragedy that jealousy, alcohol, and neglect can lead to.

Gold Plaque for Best Supporting Actor to Michael Fassbender in FISH TANK (UK) for his stunning charismatic presence that infuses life into this sad family momentarily and then absconds in shameful weakness.

Gold Plaque for Best Screenplay to Tina Mabry of MISSISSIPPI DAMNED (USA) for it's well observed unfolding character depictions in a Mississippi community that keep us both fascinated and horrified by the events that life brings.

Gold Plaque for Best Cinematography to Daniele Ciprì (VINCERE, Italy) who has taken the human face, given its images breath in every sense, and allowed us into each second of this film’s dramatic contortions.

Gold Plaque for Best Art Direction to HIPSTERS (Russia) for its infectiously colorful and imaginative sets and its stimulating counterbalancing of a modern generation set against Soviet darkness.

Silver Plaque to BACKYARD (Mexico) for its exposé of the horrible crimes of violence against women in Juarez.

The International Feature Film Competition Jury includes jury president Jacqueline Bisset (UK), Shohreh Aghdashloo (Iran), Duane Byrge (US), Pablo Cruz (Mexico), and Bruce Sheridan (New Zealand).

New Directors Competition

Gold Hugo to GIGANTE (Uruguay), a humorous and poignant story of people striving to connect in a contemporary world of isolation and loneliness. The film and its charm center on the admirably conceived central figure of the gentle, vulnerable and lovelorn giant.

Silver Hugo to MADE IN CHINA (USA), an exemplary demonstration of guerrilla film-making, shot at speed but conceived and assembled with wit, charm, coherence and a distinctively wry view of 21st century entrepreneurism.

Gold Plaque to PARTNERS (Switzerland/France). PARTNERS treats its brutal theme of the young trapped into commercial vice and violence without forfeiting affection for the victims or belief in their fundamental yearning for love and escape. We particularly admired the film’s skillful structure and excellent ensemble performances.

The New Directors Competition Jury includes Charin Alvarez (USA),Chiara Arroyo Cella (Spain), Leonardo Garcia Tsao (Mexico),and David Robinson (UK).

Docufest Competition

Gold Hugo to COOKING HISTORY (Austria/Slovakia/Czech Republic) for its originality and humor, and for presenting a view of war from an unexpected angle, so as to shock, entertain, and educate.

Silver Hugo to RACING DREAMS (USA) for revealing in an unsparing yet sympathetic way the inner life of young people aspiring to break into professional sports.

Gold Plaque in Direction to SOUNDTRACK FOR A REVOLUTION (USA) for its inventive combination of historical footage, interviews, and musical performance.

The Documentary Jury includes John Russell Taylor (UK), Matt Irvine (USA), Alison Cuddy (USA).

Short Film Competition The Gold Hugo for Best Short Film goes to THE HISTORY OF AVIATION (Hungary) for successfully weaving stunning cinematography, excellent performances, beautiful costumes and tantalizing sets with an unconventional story structure to illustrate a failure in aviation history.

The Silver Hugo Grand Jury Prize for Short Film goes to GOOD ADVICE (Sweden). This film, about a ten-year old who creates audio messages for his yet-to-be-born sibling, is perfectly succinct –never missing an opportunity to engage, relate or humor in a way that moves the story toward its unexpected payoff.

The Silver Hugo for Best Animated Short Film goes to SKHIZEIN (France). The jury admires the filmmaker's ingenuous use of animation to tell the story of a man literally beside himself. This is a highly original film with extraordinary art direction that is beautifully and technically accomplished.

The Gold Plaque for Best Experimental Short Film goes to PHOTOGRAPH OF JESUS (UK) which depicts interesting and, at times, bizarre requests for photographs from the Hulton Archive/Getty Images. Director and Animator Laurie Hill did an excellent job in illustrating and bringing to life these request with the usage of animation, excellent production design, and engaging sound design.

The Gold Plaque for Best Student Short Film goes to CHERRY ON THE CAKE (UK), for its striking story line, moving metaphors, and indelible imagery.

The Gold Plaque for Best Essay Short Film goes to THE ILLUSION (Cuba). Using candid voiceover and a diaristic shooting style, The Illusion conveys a young woman's tumult in leaving her native Cuba for the first time to visit her estranged father in London.

A Special Mention for Best Ensemble Performances goes to SHORT TERM 12 (USA), which successfully rises above the conventions of the troubled teen and mental illness film sub-genres through it's affecting and detailed performances.

A Special Mention for Animated Short Film goes to ATTACHED TO YOU (Sweden). Acknowledged for its stunning claymation, superb attention to detail, and compelling story line, this film takes viewers on a stirring allegorical journey of the most unique, yet most common bond that exists - the bond between a mother and her child.

The Short Film Jury includes Jacinta Banks, John Bleeden, Gabe Clinger, and Armando Ibanez.

Chicago Award Competition

The Chicago Award goes to WET. A well-crafted poetic film, WET is a beautiful metaphor for isolation and loneliness. It is thought-provoking, quizzical, and original.

A Special Mention goes to GIRLS ON THE WALL, an emotionally powerful piece speaking to art as a way to heal.

A Special Mention goes to AN EVENING WITH EMERY LONG. Performances are pitch-perfect. It is a meticulously crafted, character-driven slice of life.

The Chicago Award Jury Includes Kathleen Ermitage, Betsy Steinberg, and Mike McNamara

Tribute Awards

MARTIN LANDAU receives a Lifetime Achievement Award. For his cinematic brilliance and striking screen presence the Chicago International Film Festival is proud to honor Martin Landau with its Lifetime Achievement Award.

UMA THURMAN receives a Career Achievement Award. Displaying an ability to continually deliver exceptional performances, Uma Thurman has become an icon in American cinema.

Willem Dafoe receives a Career Achievement Award. Willem Dafoe has mesmerized audiences with his provocative performances. The Chicago International Film festival is proud to honor him with its Career Achievement Award.

Patrice Chéreau receives a Career Achievement Award. Drawing from cinema, live theater, and opera, Patrice Chéreau has distinguished himself as a world-class director.

Lee Daniels receives an Artistic Achievement Award. With each successive film, Lee Daniels solidifies himself as one of the most successful filmmakers in the industry.

GABOUREY SIDIBE receives a Breakthrough Performance Award. The Chicago International Film Festival is proud to honor Gabourey Sidibe for her emerging talent anticipating her future success and contributions to the film world.

Posted by Ray Pride at 03:24 PM | Comments (0)

October 16, 2009

An hour of Hitchcock on the "Tomorrow" show


The wavy rainbows when the VHS recorder was restarted after commercial are a nice throwback as well. The other embeds are below on a single page. Via @Ebertchicago. And here's sixteen or so hours for your iPod: the complete recordings of the Hitchcock-Truffaut interviews.






Posted by Ray Pride at 12:51 PM | Comments (0)

Für Falcon: A fictional, non-hoax balloon ride gone wrong


Roger Michel's beautifully edited opening scene of Enduring Love, dubbed in German, but it still looks swell.

Posted by Ray Pride at 05:27 AM | Comments (0)

October 15, 2009

Trailering Edge of Darkness

Posted by Ray Pride at 10:39 AM | Comments (0)

Oscar's got 65 foreign-language contenders

Sez the Academy:

Albania, “Alive!,” Artan Minarolli, director;
Argentina, “El Secreto de Sus Ojos,” Juan Jose Campanella, director;
Armenia, “Autumn of the Magician,” Rouben Kevorkov and Vaheh Kevorkov, directors;
Australia, “Samson & Delilah,” Warwick Thornton, director;
Austria, “For a Moment Freedom,” Arash T. Riahi, director;
Bangladesh, “Beyond the Circle,” Golam Rabbany Biplob, director;
Belgium, “The Misfortunates,” Felix van Groeningen, director;
Bolivia, “Zona Sur,” Juan Carlos Valdivia, director;
Bosnia and Herzegovina, “Nightguards,” Namik Kabil, director;
Brazil, “Time of Fear,” Sergio Rezende, director;
Bulgaria, “The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks around the Corner,” Stephan Komandarev, director;
oscahs2010.jpgCanada, “I Killed My Mother,” Xavier Dolan, director;
Chile, “Dawson, Isla 10,” Miguel Littin, director;
China, “Forever Enthralled,” Chen Kaige, director;
Colombia, “The Wind Journeys,” Ciro Guerra, director;
Croatia, “Donkey,” Antonio Nuic, director;
Cuba, “Fallen Gods,” Ernesto Daranas, director;
Czech Republic, “Protektor,” Marek Najbrt, director;
Denmark, “Terribly Happy,” Henrik Ruben Genz, director;

Estonia, “December Heat,” Asko Kase, director;
Finland, “Letters to Father Jacob,” Klaus Haro, director;
France, “Un Prophete,” Jacques Audiard, director;
Georgia, “The Other Bank,” George Ovashvili, director;
Germany, “The White Ribbon,” Michael Haneke, director;
Greece, “Slaves in Their Bonds,” Tony Lykouressis, director;
Hong Kong, “Prince of Tears,” Yonfan, director;
Hungary, “Chameleon,” Krisztina Goda, director;
Iceland, “Reykjavik-Rotterdam,” Oskar Jonasson, director;
India, “Harishchandrachi Factory,” Paresh Mokashi, director;
Indonesia, “Jamila and the President,” Ratna Sarumpaet;
Iran, “About Elly,” Asghar Farhadi, director;
Israel, “Ajami,” Scandar Copti and Yaron Shani, director;
Italy, “Baaria,” Giuseppe Tornatore, director;
Japan, “Nobody to Watch over Me,” Ryoichi Kimizuka, director;
Kazakhstan, “Kelin,” Ermek Tursunov, director;
Korea, “Mother,” Joon-ho Bong, director;
Lithuania, “Vortex,” Gytis Luksas, director;
Luxembourg, “Refractaire,” Nicolas Steil, director;
Macedonia, “Wingless,” Ivo Trajkov, director;
Mexico, “Backyard,” Carlos Carrera, director;
Morocco, “Casanegra,” Nour-Eddine Lakhmari, director;
The Netherlands, “Winter in Wartime,” Martin Koolhoven, director;
Norway, “Max Manus,” Espen Sandberg and Joachim Roenning, directors;
Peru, “The Milk of Sorrow,” Claudia Llosa, director;
Philippines, “Grandpa Is Dead,” Soxie H. Topacio, director;
Poland, “Reverse,” Borys Lankosz, director;
Portugal, “Doomed Love,” Mario Barroso, director;
Puerto Rico, “Kabo and Platon,” Edmundo H. Rodriguez, director;
Romania, “Police, Adjective,” Corneliu Porumboiu, director;
Russia, “Ward No. 6,” Karen Shakhnazarov, director;
Serbia, “St. George Shoots the Dragon,” Srdjan Dragojevic, director;
Slovakia, “Broken Promise,” Jiri Chlumsky, director;
Slovenia, “Landscape No. 2,” Vinko Moderndorfer, director;
South Africa, “White Wedding,” Jann Turner, director;
Spain, “The Dancer and the Thief,” Fernando Trueba, director;
Sri Lanka, “The Road from Elephant Pass,” Chandran Rutnam;
Sweden, “Involuntary,” Ruben Ostlund, director;
Switzerland, “Home,” Ursula Meier, director;
Taiwan, “No Puedo Vivir sin Ti,” Leon Dai, director;
Thailand, “Best of Times,” Yongyoot Thongkongtoon, director;
Turkey, “I Saw the Sun,” Mahsun Kirmizigul, director;
United Kingdom, “Afghan Star,” Havana Marking, director;
Uruguay, “Bad Day for Fishing,” Alvaro Brechner, director;
Venezuela, “Libertador Morales, El Justiciero"

Posted by Ray Pride at 09:57 AM | Comments (0)

October 14, 2009

#chaosreigns: IFC embraces viral goofing for Antichrist

-1antigoof.jpg
IFC's circulating the link to Peter Debruge's The Satanic Mr. Fox mashup: a warning that there's footage from the thus-far most notorious scene from Antichrist. (But not involving human mutilation.) Here's the YouTube link.

Posted by Ray Pride at 11:22 AM | Comments (0)

October 09, 2009

John Woo at U.S. premiere of Red Cliff at Chicago International Film Festival

John Woo
John Woo screened


Woo was late to a pre-premiere reception; journalists traded Hong Kong gangster film scenarios for the director's non-appearance.

Thicket of things

Posted by Ray Pride at 10:13 PM | Comments (0)

October 07, 2009

The Girl and her Cat, Lumière brothers


Posted by Ray Pride at 09:57 AM | Comments (0)

October 06, 2009

The Serpentine Dance (1899), Lumière brothers

Posted by Ray Pride at 04:58 AM | Comments (0)

October 05, 2009

2012 or 2009?


"Film director, motion graphics designer and Art Center College of Design alumnus, Theo Alexopoulos, takes you on a visceral journey through the USGS ShakeOut Earthquake Scenario." Nice work, dude. I can say that from thousands of miles away.

Posted by Ray Pride at 08:57 AM | Comments (0)

October 03, 2009

Gay Talese on getting drunk at the New York Times

Posted by Ray Pride at 12:56 PM | Comments (0)

October 02, 2009

2012 roadblock

In short, "Spinning toycars convulsive tectonic infarction amandapeet teeth pudgycusack 911-2012 freefloating anxiety"

Posted by Ray Pride at 12:39 PM | Comments (0)

October 01, 2009

Two October photo shows: "Far. And Near."

Far. And Near.


Two photo shows start this weekend in Chicago: a selection of Chicago scenes by night [left], "Far" and smaller, more intimate portraits, including Michel Gondry, Emir Kusturica and Quentin Tarantino's mouth, "Near." Details including addresses, etc. at Far. And Near. [Larger image here.]

Posted by Ray Pride at 04:31 PM | Comments (0)

Mike Royko's 1987 Chicago Tribune commercial: "A great city deserves a great newspaper"


Movies that won't be made, stories that will be embroidered, characters not to be repeated. Wouldn't it be great to read 800 words a day, five days a week from Royko, about Chicago's grasp for Olympics 2016? Below: Scott Jacobs' 1982 short interview, Royko at the Goat.

Posted by Ray Pride at 12:23 PM | Comments (0)