Archive for the ‘Film Festivals’ Category

The 12th annual Savannah Film Festival October 31-November 7.

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

The 12th annual Savannah Film Festival, hosted by the Savannah College of Art and Design, will take place from Saturday, October 31-Saturday, November 7.

Films to receive special gala screenings will include Jean-Marc Vallée’s “The Young Victoria”; Oren Moverman’s “The Messenger,” with Moverman and stars Woody Harrelson and Ben Foster in attendance; Grant Heslov’s “The Men Who Stare at Goats”; Pedro Almodovar’s “Broken Embraces”; Lone Sherfig’s “An Education”; the United States premieres of James Ivory’s “The City of Your Final Destination,” with Ivory in attendance, and Nick Moran’s “Telstar,” with Moran and star Con O’Neill in attendance; Jodie Markell’s “The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond” (from a screenplay by Tennessee Williams); Cannes Palme d’Or winner Michael Haneke’s “The White Ribbon”; and Lee Daniels’ “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire,” winner of the Grand-Jury Prize at Sundance and the Audience Award at the Toronto Film Festival. Daniels and star Gabourey Sidibe will be in attendance.

Academy Award nominee Patricia Clarkson (“Pieces of April,” “Vicki Cristina Barcelona”) will receive an Outstanding Achievement in Cinema Award after a screening of Woody Allen’s “Whatever Works”. Emmy and Academy Award nominee Woody Harrelson (“Cheers,” “The People vs. Larry Flynt”) and Ben Foster (“3:10 to Yuma”) will also receive Outstanding Achievement in Cinema Awards prior to their screening of “The Messenger.” Emmy Rossum (“The Phantom of the Opera”) will receive the Young Hollywood Award prior to a screening of her film “Dare,” and Jeremy Renner will receive the Spotlight Award for his performance in “The Hurt Locker,” which will also screen at the festival. Scott Caan(“Ocean’s 11”), the writer and star of “Mercy,” one of the festival’s competition films, also will attend.

Past festival guests and honorees include Peter O’Toole, Michael Douglas, Jane Fonda, Sidney Lumet, Kathleen Turner, Norman Jewison, Tommy Lee Jones, John Waters, David Benioff, John Sayles, Brett Ratner, Charlie Rose, George Segal, James Franco, James Ivory, Jeff Daniels, Alec Baldwin, Peter Bart, Army Archerd, Roger Ebert, Terrence Malick, Sydney Pollack, the Redgrave siblings—Vanessa, Lynn and Corin—Alan and Marilyn Bergman, Malcolm McDowell and Milos Forman, among others.

In addition to the special screenings, the festival will showcase 22 professional films (features, documentaries, shorts and animation) and 12 student films in competition. The jurors for the competition are actress Patti D’Arbanville (“Rescue Me”), actress/producer Rita Gam, writer/director Ingrid Rockefeller, writer/director Michael Sucsy (Emmy-Award winning “Grey Gardens”) and writer/director David Twohy (“Pitch Black”).

For more information on the festival and a complete schedule of events, visit www.scad.edu/filmfest.

Doha Tribeca Film Fest Announces Line-Up and ‘Amelia’ as Opening Night Film

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

The inaugural Doha Tribeca Film Festival (DTFF) announced today it will open with a special screening of director Mira Nair’s “Amelia,” a thrilling account of legendary aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart starring two-time Academy Award® winner Hilary Swank and Golden Globe® winner Richard Gere. Organizers also revealed the 32 films that will comprise the rest of the Festival’s film slate. 12 of the films have roots in the Middle East and the balance is a diverse selection of acclaimed titles from the international festival circuit, from both emerging and established directors. The DTFF will run from October 29 to November 1, 2009 in Doha, Qatar.

Festival activities will be centred at the internationally-acclaimed, I.M. Pei-designed Museum of Islamic Art, an architectural homage to modernity and history that underscores the unique character of Doha. In addition, open-air screenings around the city will include a showing of the 1969 Egyptian film, “The Mummy (Al-Momia).” This classic, a restored print presented by Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Foundation, will be shown outdoors at the Souq Waqif, a traditional Middle Eastern bazaar in the heart of Doha.

The film program is highlighted by such titles as “Cairo Time,” starring Patricia Clarkson, “A Serious Man,” the critically hailed new film from Academy Award® winners Joel and Ethan Coen, and “The Informant!” from director Steven Soderbergh, a Warner Bros. release starring Matt Damon.

DTFF was founded through a long-term partnership between the Qatar Museums Authority and Tribeca Enterprises. Uniquely Qatari in its identity, the Festival is modelled on the success of Tribeca Film Festival’s dedication to engage the local community and promote filmmaking talent. Its ongoing aim is to inspire, engage and educate a new generation of cinema appreciation locally; discover, mentor and fund regional filmmaking talent; foster a community through art and entertainment; and encourage open discussion and debate.

Festival organizers also announced that in its first year, 31 of the 33 films in the line-up will be eligible for two audience-based awards each carrying unrestricted cash prizes amounting to $50,000 (USD). Audience award winners will be announced at DTFF’s closing night ceremony on November 1, 2009. During the ceremony, the Festival will also announce a screenplay development and filmmaker grant program, illustrating its commitment to develop and support filmmakers year-round in the region.

The following is a list of all of the titles:

  • About Elly (Darbareye Elly), directed and written by Asghar Farhadi. (Iran) – Qatar Premiere. Sepideh (Golshifteh Farahani) plans a weekend getaway with friends and invites her son’s kindergarten teacher, Elly (Taraneh Alidousti) to join, but a well-intentioned game of romance quickly turns tragic when she disappears. Saving face overtakes telling the truth as fear and guilt ensnare the group in mystery and lies. Winner of the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival’s Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature. In Persian with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Amelia, directed by Mira Nair, written by Ronald Bass and Anna Hamilton Phelan. (USA) – Special Screening. From acclaimed director Mira Nair comes the thrilling story of Amelia Earhart, the woman who changed the face of aviation forever. Amelia chronicles Earhart (Two-time Academy Award® winner Hilary Swank) from her childhood roots in rural Kansas, through her early days as an adventurous student of the most respected male aviators, and to her rise to fame and subsequently heartbreaking disappearance on her world-renowned mission around the world in 1937. Golden Globe® winner Richard Gere stars as Earhart’s husband, promoter and publishing magnate George P. Putnam and Ewan McGregor stars as her long time friend and lover, pilot Gene Vidal. In English with Arabic subtitles. Fox Searchlight.
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  • Assila, directed by Thamer Al Zedi, written by Fedina Lydia and Itiqal Al Tair. (Hungary, UAE, Lebanon, Egypt) – World Premiere. Iraqi filmmaker Al-Zedi creates a stunning and artistic world to take families on an animated journey into the life of beautiful mare, Assila. Abandoned as a filly and facing death, Assila finds happiness when rescued by village children. When her new life is threatened years later, Assila is forced to run the most challenging race of her life. With themes of family, loyalty, love and courage, Assila is an inspirational story for the whole family. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • Big River Man, directed by John Maringouin. (USA/UK) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Martin Strel – overweight and over 50 – attempts the world’s longest, most dangerous swim: 3,375 miles down the Amazon battling gangs, isolated tribes, crocodiles, toxic waste, lethal whirlpools, and toothy piranhas. Plus, he does all this while guzzling two bottles of wine a day while under the watchful gaze of filmmaker John Maringouin. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Bright Star, directed and written by Jane Campion. (UK/Australia) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Truly a transcendent work, Bright Star chronicles the final years of poet John Keats and the one love affair of his life. While avoiding the usual clichés of period dramas, filmmaker Jane Campion brilliantly realizes the 19th century world’s distinction between passion and sex. Abbie Cornish’s portrayal of Keat’s love, Fanny Brawne, is particularly exquisite. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Buried Secrets (Dowaha), directed and written by Raja Amari. (Tunisia/Switzerland/France) – Qatar Premiere. Living ‘below stairs’ in an abandoned estate is a strict Tunisian woman and her two daughters, happily hidden from the world until a free-spirited couple and their children move into the house. Filmmaker Raja Amari takes a camera and intrudes on characters who are intruding on each other in a way that proves no secret can stay buried. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • Cairo Time, directed and written by Ruba Nadda. (Canada/Ireland) – Middle Eastern Premiere. In a poignant story about a woman, her missing husband, and his best friend, Ruba Nadda directs powerful yet restrained performances from Patricia Clarkson and Alexander Siddig. While awaiting her husband’s return, Juliette (Clarkson) and Tareq (Siddig) fall into a friendship that says what words never can, and that forever changes their world. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Capitalism: A Love Story, directed by Michael Moore. (USA) – Qatar Premiere. Once again, documentary filmmaker Michael Moore turns his critical, richly engaging, and deeply satirical storytelling on the world, and particularly America’s, crisis. In a film about the failures of capitalism, Moore analyzes what he calls “the biggest robbery in the history of the United States.” In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Coco Before Chanel (Coco avant Chanel), directed by Anne Fontaine, written by Camille Fontaine. (France) – Middle Eastern Premiere. From humble beginnings to the pinnacle of fashion and style, Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel always followed her heart. Here, filmmaker Anne Fontaine directs Audrey Tautou in a graceful embodiment of the reluctant courtesan and budding genius who would become one of the greatest style icons of all time. Benoît Poelvoorde, as the doting heir Étienne Balsan, and Alessandro Nivola, his British colleague, round out the dynamic cast. In French with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • An Education, directed by Lone Scherfig, written by Nick Hornby. (UK) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Rebellion and repression are percolating through the world of pre-Beatles England just as 16 year old Jenny meets a much older suitor/teacher. As Jenny learns the ways of the world — of smoke and art and music not her mother’s — she confronts the classic coming of age questions in a film that perfectly blends realism and poetry. Recipient of the audience award at Sundance International Film Festival. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • The Greatest, directed and written by Shana Feste. (USA) – Middle Eastern Premiere. In The Greatest, director Shana Feste literally opens a door to welcome you home to a family of grief. When the Brewer’s son suddenly and unexpectedly dies, his mother, father, and brother all spiral into their own particular neurosis. Until, that is, the dead son’s girlfriend shows up and everything changes. Susan Sarandon and Pierce Brosnan star as mother and father Brewer. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Harry Brown, directed by Daniel Barber and written by Gary Young. (UK) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Michael Caine portrays ex-marine Harry Brown, a lonely widower with only one friend in the world. When that friend is killed by the neighborhood gang, Harry takes matters into his own hands to find those responsible. Director Daniel Barber’s camera takes us deep into the dank streets and decaying crack houses of modern day London, while also taking us deep into the minds of men. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • The Informant!, directed by Steven Soderbergh, written by Scott Z. Burns and Kurt Eichenwald. (USA) – Qatar Premiere. Steven Soderbergh’s latest opus tracks the playful, quirky and self-conscious journey of corporate executive turned government spy Mark Whitacre, played by delightful Matt Damon. As eccentric and true to period as we have come to expect of Soderbergh’s films, The Informant! captures imagination and attention. In English with Arabic subtitles. Warner Bros.
  • Kobe Doin’ Work, directed by Spike Lee. (USA) – International Premiere. With unprecedented access and utilizing 30 cameras, Spike Lee brings the audience onto the court with superstar Kobe Bryant as his Lakers battle the Spurs in a game with major playoff implications. Through pre-game prep, fast breaks, team huddles, and post-game interviews, it’s just another day at the office for one of the NBA’s best. In English with Arabic subtitles. An ESPN Films presentation.
  • London River, directed by Rachid Bouchareb, written by Rachid Bouchareb, Olivier Lorelle, and Zoé Galeron. (UK/France/Algeria ) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Taking its cue from any culture clash, London River bridges the worlds of two parents of the suspected victims in the aftermath of the July 2005 bombings. British Elisabeth (Brenda Blethyn) is initially wary of French African Ousmane (Sotigui Kouyaté), but the two soon find a connection that brings them together despite it all. In English and French with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • The Mummy (Al-Momia), directed by Shadi Abdel Salam. (Egypt) – Qatar Premiere. The Mummy is a film about history rich with questions of heritage, ancestry and respect. The film discusses survival versus death and carries a kind of sadness about our mortality and morality. Filmed in 1969, this important Egyptian film has been painstakingly and beautifully restored by Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Foundation. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • Restored in 2008 by The World Cinema Foundation at Cineteca di Bologna/L’Immagine Ritrovata Laboratory with the support of the Egyptian Ministry of Culture from the original sound and camera negative preserved by the Egyptian Film Centre.

  • No One Knows About Persian Cats (Kasi az gorbehaye irani khabar nadareh), directed by Bahman Ghobadi, written by Bahman Ghobadi, Roxana Saberi, and Hossein M. Abkenar. (Iran) – Qatar Premiere. Director Bahman Ghobadi penetrates Tehran’s underground music movement as he follows two teens on their attempt to form a new band. At times critical and at times beautiful, No One Knows About Persian Cats is a love/hate letter to Tehran itself. In Persian with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • One-Zero (Wahed-Sefr), directed by Kamla Abu Zekry, written by Mariam Na’oum. (Egypt) ̶ Qatar Premiere. It is the final game in the Africa Cup and Egypt is playing Cameroon. The frenzied streets of Cairo are silent as everyone gathers to watch it. Eight lives cross paths at their boiling points and for a brief moment in time they find respite. Kamla Abu Zekry brings the character of Egypt alive and the issues of class, religion and gender to light in her multifarious story of contemporary Egypt. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • Only When I Dance, directed by Beadie Finzi. (Brazil/UK) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Two teenage ballet dancers from the working-class favelas of Rio are determined to dance their way to a better life, but to do so they must grow up against harsh prejudice, doubt and some of the best dancers in the world. This inspiring documentary trails their path to beat the odds and follow their dream of making it in the elite world of professional ballet. In Portuguese, English and French with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Pomegranates and Myrrh (Al Mor wa al Rumman), directed and written by Najwa Najjar. (Palestine) – Qatar Premiere. In a beautiful feature debut, filmmaker Najwa Najjar creates a love triangle between talented dancer, Kamar “Caramel,” the man of her dreams and newlywed husband, Zaid, and her handsome choreographer, Kais. Through examining the bittersweet reality of life under conflict in Pomegranates and Myrrh, Najjar illustrates her own stand against the occupation. Yasmine Al Massri, Ashraf Farah, and Ali Suleiman star. In Arabic, English and Hebrew with English subtitles
  • Racing Dreams, directed by Marshall Curry. (USA) – Middle Eastern Premiere. What Little League is to baseball, go-karting is to auto racing. Oscar®-nominated director Marshall Curry (Street Fight) follows the exhilarating and emotional journeys of three top racers competing for the national championship. Three adolescents and their families must discover if they have the talent and dedication—and sponsorship dollars—to one day become NASCAR superstars. Winner of the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival’s Best Documentary Feature Award. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Red Cliff (Chi bi) directed by John Woo. (China/Japan/South Korea/Taiwan/USA) – Qatar Premiere. An epic struggle of the effects of war on individual relationships and fueled by striking performances and grand battle scenes, John Woo’s Red Cliff lives up to the expectations of being the most expensive Asian film ever produced. Staring Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Zhang Fengyi, and Chang Chen among others. In Mandarin with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Road, Movie, directed and written by Dev Benegal. (India/USA) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Not interested at the prospect of overtaking his family’s hair oil business, young Vishnu jumps at the chance to drive across India. Along the way, he meets a beautiful woman, a young runaway, and a wandering old entertainer. When they are stopped by corrupt cops, they discover a secret that changes their entire journey. From the producers of In the Bedroom and Lost in Translation. In Hindi with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Samson and Delilah, directed and written by Warwick Thornton. (Australia) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Warwick Thornton’s impressive debut is a feature about survival and being saved, much as Thornton credits cinema as ‘saving’ him. An unconventional love story, Samson and Delilah follows aboriginal petrol-sniffing Samson (Rowan McNamara) and indigenous Delilah (Marissa Gibson) on their road to the other side. In English and Warlpiri with Arabic subtitles.
  • Scheherazade: Tell Me a Story (Ehky ya Scheherazade), directed by Yousry Nasrallah, written by Wahid Hamed. (Egypt) – Qatar Premiere. Tell me the story of women from opposite ends of the social spectrum. Weave their challenges together, and show me the fabric of the relationship between men and women. Showcase a master storyteller, and you’ll see one unforgettable ‘night’ of cinema exploring the contemporary condition of women in Cairo. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • The September Issue, directed by R.J. Cutler. (USA) – Qatar Premiere. Documentary filmmaker R.J. Cutler takes us behind the fashion, the runways, and the style into the secretive world of high fashion magazine Vogue’s iconic editor Anna Wintour. Through unprecedented access at a truly fascinating institution, Cutler both perpetuates and unravels one of the world’s best dressed myths. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • A Serious Man, directed and written by Joel and Ethan Coen. (USA) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Just, fair, and all around do-gooder Larry Gopnick really only wants a little council and a little wisdom from his Rabbi. Instead, he’s assailed by a freeloading brother, a disenchanted wife, a blackmailing student, and a dire suburb. Joel and Ethan Coen bring together a superb cast from the Yiddish theatre for a perfectly witted chronicle of the (un)fairness of it all. In English with Arabic subtitles. Focus Features
  • Sin Nombre, Cary Jôji Fukunaga. (USA/Mexico) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Good-girl Sayra of Honduras meets teen gang members Smiley and Casper of Mexico on a US-bound freight train as each is striving to claim a better life. Hugging rooftops and escaping from neighborhoods riddled with violence, these three young heros are caught up in a film of chase and romance. In Spanish with English and Arabic subtitles. Focus Features.
  • Son of Babylon (Ibn Babil), directed by Mohamed Al-Daradji, written by Jennifer Norridge and Mohamed Al-Daradji. (Iraq/UK/Netherlands/France/Palestine/UAE/Qatar) – Qatar Premiere. On a journey to find her son, an elderly mother (Shazada Hussein) sets out on the 500 km journey across Iraq. As filmmaker Mohamed Al-Daradji follows her across a post Saddam Hussein country, he shows us a war torn world filled with the bitterness of merely surviving and the desperation/hope for a shared future. In Arabic with English subtitles.
  • South of the Border, directed by Oliver Stone. (USA) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Oliver Stone set out to determine whether Venezuela President Hugo Chávez was really the “anti-American” force the media claimed he was. What ended up, however, is a film where Stone sits down with seven South American presidents and documents larger sentiments and trends between the United States and its ‘South of the Border’ neighbors. In English, Spanish and Portuguese with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Team Qatar, directed by Liz Mermin. (UK) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Equal parts competition movie and cultural examination, Team Qatar follows the first Qatari national debate team and their springy English coach as they train in Doha, London, and New York in preparation for the world championship in DC. Will this vibrant multicultural team handle the pressure and succeed on the world stage? In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • The Time That Remains, directed and written by Elia Suleiman. (UK/Italy/Belgium/France) – Qatar Premiere. Nazareth-born filmmaker Elia Suleiman turns the camera toward his own family in a film that he directs, produces, and stars in. From moments of true hilarity to the heartache of being an exile in your own land, “The Time That Remains” travels across 50 years of Palestinian history, while never letting us leave home. In Hebrew and Arabic with English and Arabic subtitles.
  • Turtle: An Incredible Journey, directed by Nick Stringer, written by Melanie Finn. (UK/Austria/Germany) – Middle Eastern Premiere. Filmmaker Nick Stringer has captured the essence of struggle as he follows one loggerhead turtle from birth on a Florida beach, into the ocean, and toward the Arctic. The loggerhead turtle’s 25-year journey is one of the most treacherous and amazing migrations in nature, and Stringer has made an extraordinarily beautiful and suspense-filled film. Narrated by Miranda Richardson. In English with Arabic subtitles.
  • Kate Winslet Narrates New Doc By Icelandic Helmer Fridriksson

    Thursday, August 27th, 2009

    Academy Award-winning actress Kate Winslet has come on board of THE SUNSHINE BOY, the Toronto-bound documentary about autism by the Icelandic director Fridrik Thor Fridriksson (Academy Award nominated for CHILDREN OF NATURE).

    Winslet has committed to do the narration of the film, which is a first-person account by Frontier Filmworks producer Margret Dagmar Ericsdottir of her passionate quest to understand her severely autistic son Keli (11).

    With a poet’s delicate touch Fridriksson explores the entire spectrum of autism, while not losing sight of Margret’s mission as she meets with the world’s leading experts on the disease. They end up in Austin, Texas, where Margret and her husband are astounded to see Keli’s mind unlocked by therapist Soma Mukhophadhyay.

    THE SUNSHINE BOY will have its world premiere in the Real to Reel section of the Toronto International Film Festival on September 12.

    EASY VIRTUE Music Video and London Film Festival Red Carpet Footage

    Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

    Here is the music video and Londo Film Festival Red Carpet Footage for the film EASY VIRTUE. The comedy is set to open November 7, 2008 in the UK. The film is directed by Stephan Elliott. EASY VIRTUE stars Jessica Biel, Ben Barnes, Kristin Scott Thomas, Colin Firth, Kimberley Nixon, Katherine Parkinson and Kris Marshall.

    Release date for the U.S TBA

    Music Video



    Festival Footage




    Featuring at this year’s prestigious London Film Festival, Easy Virtue stars American actress Jessica Biel (The Illusionist, I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry) playing Larita, the avant-garde young woman who takes the Whittaker family by storm; Colin Firth (St. Trinian’s, Bridget Jones’Diary, Love Actually, The Girl with the Pearl Earring) as the war-weary head of the household Mr Whittaker; Kristin Scott Thomas (The Other Boleyn Girl, The English Patient, Gosford Park, Four Weddings and a Funeral), as the stoic but neurotic wife Mrs Whittaker, and Ben Barnes (Stardust, The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian) as Larita’s new husband John Whittaker.

    The twenties have roared… the thirties have yet to swing. John Whittaker, a young Englishman, falls madly in love with Larita, a sexy and glamorous American woman, and they marry impetuously. However when the couple returns to the family home, his mother Mrs Whittaker has an instant allergic reaction to her new daughter-in-law. Larita tries her best to fit in but fails to tiptoe through the minefield laid by her mother-in-law. Larita quickly realizes Mrs Whittaker’s game and sees that she must fight back if she’s not going to lose John. A battle of wits ensues and sparks soon fly. Mrs Whittaker manipulates every situation to undermine her, while Larita remains frustratingly calm and engineers sassy counter attacks. Before long, Mrs Whittaker’s manipulation starts to work on John and Larita feels their love is in danger of slipping away. In a grand finale, where the secrets from Larita’s past are revealed, she finally makes a break for freedom from the suffocating house…..

    The 2008 NICE Film Festival in New York

    Saturday, October 18th, 2008

    The 2008 New Italian Cinema Events Film Festival New York edition will take place from November 13 to 17 at the Tribeca Cinemas.

    The traveling festival is dedicated to presenting first films by Italian directors to an international audience. The festival will open with MAR NERO (“BLACK SEA”) in the presence of first-time director Federico Bondi, whose protagonist Ilaria Occhini won the award for Best Actress at the International Film Festival Locarno.

    One of this year’s special events is the North American premiere of “Puccini and the Girl” by Paolo Benvenuti, one of Italy’s most important independent film makers. Benvenuti will be present at the screening on November 16 at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center.

    Here are the films for this year’s festival.

    BLACK SEA (MAR NERO) Director: Federico Bondi, Italy 2008.

    Gemma (Ilaria Occhini) -an elderly widow- and Angela (Dorotheea Petre), her caretaker -a young Romanian recently arrived in Italy- live together in the same house. In their loneliness, they unconsciously search for one another until slowly, day after day, they establish a kind of friendship. But suddenly a violent, unexpected and tragic event happens: Angela’s husband (Vlad Ivanov), still living in Romania, has mysteriously disappeared. Angela would like to leave immediately to look for him but Gemma, with the selfishness typical of her age, doesn’t want to let her to go and be alone again. But Gemma is also a woman with a tender heart and something incredible happens: Gemma and Angela leave for Romania together. They find themselves at the delta of the river Danube, each looking for her own truth.

    THE GIRL BY THE LAKE (LA RAGAZZA DEL LAGO) Director: Andrea Molaioli, Italy 2007.

    A small village in northern Italy, 8am. Six-year-old Marta (Nicole Perrone), is walking home, having slept at her aunt’s house. A van pulls up: Mario (Franco Ravera), a mentally challenged local young man, convinces her to follow him to his farm. When her mother doesn’t see her come back, she calls for help. Inspector Sanzio (Toni Servillo) is an experienced policeman who recently moved to this remote area. A younger colleague Siboldi (Fausto Maria Scialappa), born in the valleys, becomes his guide to get to know the family ties and relationships of the small community. The two of them, accompanied by Alfredo (Nello Mascia), Sanzio’s loyal colleague since his time in homicide, will have to stay in town because another crime is about to be committed; a crime probably connected to one of the families in the village, born from a sentimental or emotional tie. Everyone in town could be the potential killer.

    DON’T WASTE YOUR TIME JOHNNY! (LASCIA PERDERE, JOHNNY!)
    Director: Fabrizio Bentivoglio, Italy 2007.

    Caserta, Southern Italy, in 1976. In order to avoid being drafted, Faustino “Johnny” Ciaramella (Antimino Merolillo), fresh out of school, has to prove he is employed as a guitarist, and is the sole support of his widowed mother (Lina Sastri). But coaxing a contract out of slippery music manager Raffaele Nigro (Ernesto Mahieux) is proving difficult. Faustino plays for a hodgepodge outfit led by alcoholic Mimmo Falasco (Toni Servillo); but suddenly the summer tour comes to an end at Roccamorfina… When faded ’60s bandleader Augusto Riverberi (FabrizioBentivoglio) comes to town, Raffaele makes Faustino the maestro’s personal assistant. A little hustling by Raffaele gets Riverberi & Co. a decent gig, so they hire an amateur crooner renamed Jerry Como (Peppe Servillo) and the local beautician Annamaria (Valeria Golino). But Raffaele absconds with the box office, Riverberi returns to Milan, and Faustino is without a contract once more…

    LESSONS IN CHOCOLATE (LEZIONI DI CIOCCOLATO), Director: Claudio Cupellini.

    Mattia (Luca Argentero), an ambitious and ruthless building contractor, is forced to accept an unusual by the construction site accident of one of his illegal workers, Kamal (Hassani Shapi). To prevent Kamal from pressing charges, Mattia agrees to take Kamal’s place in an advanced course for chocolate pastry makers. Together with 6 other amateur foodie chocolate makers who are more skilled and experienced than him, he has to invent new chocolate recipes under the direction of a Master in Chocolate Art. For the inexperienced Mattia, who creates one disaster after another, this is the beginning of a nightmare, but also a voyage of discovery of an unexpected side of himself. The charming and slightly offbeat Cecilia (Violante Placido) helps him to uncover secrets of chocolate and of himself

    A NIGHT (UNA NOTTE), Director: Toni D’Angelo, Italy 2007.

    Four friends, Salvatore (Salvatore Sansone), Annamaria (Stefania Troise), Alfonso (Alfonso Postiglione) and Riccardo (Riccardo Zinna), are forty year-olds from a middle-class background; they are all originally from Naples but their jobs require them to live elsewhere. They return to their native city for the funeral of their closest friend, Antonio. After the wake, they decide to have dinner together. Talking about their lives, they share their memories and experiences. Taking stock of each other’s lives lasts throughout the night. A taxi driver, Raffaele (Nino D’Angelo), who drives them around for the rest of the night acts as a sort of Neapolitan Charon: he takes these lost souls through the maze of the city, and, as the humble man he is, teaches them something about life.

    COVER BOY – The Last Revolution (COVER BOY – L’ultima rivoluzione), Director: Carmine Amoroso, Italy 2007.

    Ioan (Eduard Gabia) is an illegal Romanian immigrant who has come to Rome seeking a better future. Michele (Luca Lionello) is a Roman fortysomething who lives on precarious jobs. They meet, make friends and Ioan accepts Michele’s invitation to share his room with him for 8 euros a day. Together they live through a number of experiences on the very margin of the city, enduring the vexations of a terrible landlady. The background of the story is a troubled Western world torn by the fall of the Communist ideology on one side and the Myth of Capitalism on the other. A capitalism whose vital criteria have become competition and the worsening and deepening of social diversities. Their strong friendship helps them to help one another, even if the compromises they have to make deeply affects their lives.

    THE REST OF THE NIGHT (IL RESTO DELLA NOTTE), Director: Francesco Munzi, Italy 2008.

    Silvana (Sandra Ceccarelli), the depressed wife of a provincial industrialist, persuades herself that Maria (Laura Vasiliu), their young Romanian maid, is responsible for the disappearance of some valuable objects. Without any proof, Silvana decides to fire Maria without notice. After desperately wandering around, Maria finds shelter with her former boyfriend, Ionut (Costantin Lupescu). The young man has just been released from prison and now shares a squalid apartment on the outskirts with his younger teenaged brother, Igor. The long-extinguished passion between Marie and Ionut flares up again. Soon they realize the family dynamics have changed. Victor (Victor Cosma) is suspicious of Maria and believes she will endanger his brother’s happiness. Meanwhile, Ionut has started to hang out with Marco Rancalli (Stefano Cassetti), a young cocaine addict with a difficult past. This gang of dropouts decides to target the industrialist’s family and events take a tragic turn