January 2003


Next Cinema Lounge

The Cinema Lounge meets on Monday, January 13 at 7:00pm to talk with special guest Tom Wiener, author of The Off-Hollywood Film Guide which reviews 700 of the best independent films.

Cinema Lounge, a film discussion group, takes place the second Monday of every month at 7:00 PM at Borders Books, 600 14th St., NW in Washington, DC (near the Metro Center Metro stop).



Vote NOW!

Vote for The Best of 2002 and Win

No acceptance speeches. No statues. No media sponsored parties. Just your opinion and your chance to win.

The Washington DC Film Society announces the third annual vote for The Best of 2002. This is your chance to vote for your favorite movies, performances, and director of 2002. Logon to the DC Film Society website and click The Best of 2002 to cast your ballot and win.

Yes, win! All ballots will be entered in a drawing to win great prizes such as tickets to the 11th Annual Capital Oscars Party, and more. Hurry! The voting booth is only open January 1-31, 2003. Vote and win!



The German Film Festival in Edinburgh

By Jim McCaskill

EDINBURGH, Scotland. German films have had a difficult time breaking into the US market. Tom Tykwer has had the most luck recently starting with Run, Lola, Run (1998), Princess and the Warrior (2001) and 2002's Heaven. In the past 50 years there have been directors who have found an audience in the US (Wim Wenders, Werner Hertzog, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Doris Dorrie) but none seem to have make big at the box office. There may be several competing German film traditions that account for this. Early German films seemed to be spins on the Faust legend, Unendlichkeit, going beyond normal human limitation. In order to find an audience in Germany recent films have had to be films that were not very German. They could not make reference to history, either recent or long past. They could not refer to real social problems (no environmental issues, nothing on housing shortage). And, most important, no film could show a common German responsibility.

Films that made it at the box office in Germany followed a Hollywood formula. One reason for that is that a wide reaching film culture does not seem to exist. This is not to say that there are no cine fans. There are--but not in large numbers. Only recently has the attendance level reached the European average of 2.1 films per year. Box office receipts have gone up around 20% in the last few years. Film production is also increasing (75 films in 2000, 83 films in 2001).

With this in mind it is interesting to see what is included in a German Film Festival. Recently the Export-Union of German Cinema in association with the Goethe-Institut presented nine recent films. Seven were clearly German films but two seemed to be odd choices for a German Film Festival. They were both made in New York and had primarily New York actors. German directors and German funding but obviously New York films. They may have kicked off the festival for scheduling reasons. Brits don't attend films they have to read any better than they do in the US. Starting with films in English might have whetted the appetite for more German films. One of the films, Love the Hard Way (Peter Sehr directed), may have been included as it starred the Hot Young Star, Adrien Brody (superb in Roman Polanski's The Pianist and highly touted as a certain nominee for Best Actor Oscar). This 2000 film was not one of my favorites but a German friend of mine liked it a lot. Brody has clearly come a long way from the short lived 1988 Mary Tyler Moore TV series, Annie McGuire.

The second New York film was Cinemania (Angela Christlieb/Stephen Kijack, 2002, Germany) a documentary following five compulsive-obsessive film goers. The was an interesting film though some what exploitive of their peculiarities.

Films that I recommend were Naked (Nackt, Doris Dorrie, Germany, 2002), The Longing (Das Verlangen, Iain Dilthey, 2002), 12 Past Midnight (Null Uhr 12, Bernd Michael Lade, Germany). Naked is based on the play, "Happy" and follows six friends whose lives have taken different paths. One couple made a killing in the stock market, another recently broke up but do not want the others to know. The third seem happy but are they? Clever photography and staging made this an enjoyable film.

The Longing looks at harsh life in a south German village. Exceedingly well acted, Lena (Susanne-Marie Wrage) is trapped in a loveless marriage. A serial killer on the loose breaks life apart for everyone. It is harsh, unloving, angry at times but always captivating.

The closing film, 12 Past Midnight, was my favorite, a caper film involving the theft of 30 million marks (obviously pre-Euro). An armored truck is held up and the only lead the police have is a security tape of three men, two women holding bags in a nearby subway station. None seem to know the others. No one shows signs of sudden wealth. Who committed the robbery?

The Slurb (Das Sams, Germany, 2001) is a clever children's film that might find an audience in the US if it is dubbed in English. Few five year olds read subtitles. A mild-mannered man lives an ordinary life until a Speckled Little Unidentified Redheaded Being (SLURB) who is mischievous and can make wishes come true comes into his life. A fun film loved by the audience of wee bairns who saw this matinee.

Other films in the festival, in descending order of my preference, were: Queens of the Dust (Antje Kruska/Judity Keil, Germany, 2001) a documentary of three older cleaning women in Berlin. Sophiiiie! (Michael Hofman, Germany, 2002) follows the downward spiral of a self destructive pregnant woman. [NOTE: This film is showing in DC on January 19]. Mutants (Mutanten, Katalin Godros, Germany/France 2001). A 13 year old girl is convinced that an extraterrestrial virus is loose, reducing all adults to friendly, mindless beings. Only the moody 16 year old with a police record for stealing cars and 19 year old woman are immune. Her theory and the point of this film vanish when they visit the spot where her parents were killed.



Moscow Film Museum in Danger

By Jim McCaskill

EDINBURGH, Scotland. Sources in Moscow report that while all public and commercial building are brightly lit, by mayoral decree, for the winter festivities, one building is strangely dark. In early December the electricity was cut off for the Moscow Film Museum. This closed the theatre, which had 300 to 500 visitors each night, the exhibition space and the library. It appears that this internationally famous cinema institution has been caught in the power play by Kinozentr. They want to force the museum out of its current building and into smaller, more expensive one. The Moscow Film Museum is one of the few venues in the country to show Russian films.

Naum Kleiman, director of the Film Museum, said, "The whole building is owned by the Russian Filmmakers Union and has all the legal papers. Kinozentr has no title to this building. In addition the museum is a State Museum and protected by law against such attacks.

Because the Moscow Film Museum is nationally and internationally recognized as a prestigious stronghold of film culture several international organizations (French Union des Journalistes de Cinema, Federation Internationale de la Presse Cinematographique, Friends of the German Film Archive among them) have sent messages of support to Mr. Kleiman and urged Mikhail Shvidkoi, Minister of Culture of the Russian Federation to do everything possible to bring this conflict to a conclusion that will keep its operation in the same location.

Jean Luc-Godard wrote urging support for the Moscow Film Museum He also wrote of his longtime friendship with Mr. Kleiman and admiration for his work, as well as his personal interest in the museum, which he has supported since its inception.

The international attention has had some effect. After the Polish actor and filmmaker Jerzy Stuhr's visit was cancelled and the Polish Embassy's strong letter of protest led to the electricity being suddenly restored. Mr. Shvidkoi announced that the Ministry of Culture would take Moscow Film Museum's side in a lawsuit against Kinozentr. Shvidkoi said, "To conserve the Museum of Cinema is our holy duty."

Kleiman thanked those who sent email and letters of support but warned, "The struggle is not yet over. But in these dramatic days, we have felt all the strength of our colleagues' solidarity in the face of criminals." Support may be sent to
Kleiman and Shvidkoi. Information on the Moscow Film Museum can be found on their website.



Rabbit-Proof Fence

With Rabbit-Proof Fence playing now in Washington, take a minute to review the interview in the November Storyboard with the director and actors.



Rotterdam and Berlin Film Festival feature new film makers

By Jim McCaskill

EDINBURGH, Scotland. Both the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) (January 22-February 2) and the Berlin Film Festival (February 6-16) will feature filmmakers from new upcoming directors. Forty-five film projects will be highlighted in the acclaimed Rotterdam CineMart, a merchandizing arm of the Festival aimed at uniting worthy films and film distributors. Fifteen films will be shown in the Panorama Section of the Berlin Film Festival. For these young directors it is a major opportunity for their work to be shown in such prestigious festivals.

Films at the Rotterdam festival range from a Chinese/USA production of Xiang Er Kui by Zhang Yang to Nacer Khemir's Tunisian film Bab Aziz. The other film with a US connection is the Ecuador/Mexico/USA production of Cronicas (La Horra de la Verdad) from Sebastian Cordero. France leads the way with eight films: La Ronde de Nuit (Edgardo Cozarinsky, France/Argentina, La Nuit de La Verit, (Fanta Regina Nacro, France/Burkina Faso), Let the Wind Blow (Partho Sen Gupta, India/France), Beta Santa Patrice Toye, Belgium/France), Wild Side (Sebastien Lifshitz), Chemins de Traverse (Manuel Poirier), Hymen (Emmanuelle Caquille), 29 Palms (Bruno Dumont), with the last four films all produced by France alone. A complete list of films, directors and production companies can be found on the website. A complete list of all films can be found after January 16.

Canada has three films in the Panorama Section of the Berlin festival: Flower and Garnet (Keith Behrman), Owning Mahowny by British director Richard Kwietniowski and Girl King by Ilena Pietrobruno. The US has none in this section. Panorama is a separate section featuring art house films or films often written and produced by their director. Films from Germany, Israel, Japan, Hong Kong, Korea, India, Great Britain, Spain and Italy are included. The complete list is now up on their website.

IFFR has selected Indian filmmaker Girish Kasaravalli for a retrospective as their Filmmaker in Focus. He is the last of the New Kannada Cinema directors still working. They began as an artistic group to preserve the Kannada language and culture of southern India. Kosaravalli's work, including his latest film Dweepa (The Island, 2002), shows a detailed portrait of individuals against the backdrop of overpowering political system or social uncertainties. Dweepa is a good example of this as he shows a family of four refusing to leave their home that is threatened by rising water levels. They do not know that a government built dam is flooding their area.



Rotterdam Chooses Tiger Award Finalists

By Jim McCaskill

The International Film Festival Rotterdam has selected fourteen first or second features from around the globe for the festival's VPRO Tiger Award Competition 2003. The competition lineup contains eight world premieres, five international premieres and one European premiere.

The ninth VPRO Tiger Award Competition contains two Hubert Bals Fund supported films Grieta by Santiago Loza, Argentina and Os Narradores de Javé (Javé Valley) by Elaine Caffé, Brazil and one former CineMart project Nói Albinoi (Noi, the Albino) by Dagur Kári, Iceland.

The fourteen films in IFFR 2003's VPRO Tiger Award Competition: (in alphabetical order by director's name)

Le Chignon d'Olga (Olga's Chignon) by Jérôme Bonnell (France/Belgium, 2002) international premiere

Os Narradores de Javé (Javé Valley) by Eliane Caffé (Brazil/France, 2003) world premiere, Hubert Bals Fund supported film

Marion Bridge by Wiebke von Carolsfeld (Canada, 2002) international premiere

Mu Di Di Shanghai (Welcome to Destination Shanghai) by Andrew Cheng (China, 2003) world premiere

De Arm Van Jezus (The Arm of Jesus) by André van der Hout (The Netherlands, 2003) world premiere

Kakuto by Iseya Yusuke (Japan, 2002) international premiere

Nói Albinoi (Noi, the Albino) by Dagur Kári (Iceland/Germany/United Kingdom/Denmark, 2003) world premiere, former CineMart project

Grieta by Santiago Loza (Argentina, 2003) world premiere, Hubert Bals Fund supported film

1/2 Miete (1/2 Rent) by Marc Ottiker (Germany, 2002) international premiere

Jiltoo-Neun Na-E Him (Jealousy Is My Middle Name) by Park Chan-Ok (South Korea, 2002) international premiere

Bodysong by Simon Pummell (United Kingdom, 2002) world premiere

Safar-E Mardan-E Khahestari (Journey of the Gray Men) by Amir Shahab Razavian (Iran/Japan, 2002) European premiere

S Ljubov'ju, Lilja (With Love, Lilja) by Larisa Sadilova (Russia, 2002) world premiere

The Principles of Lust by Penny Woolcock (United Kingdom, 2003) world premiere

Winners will be announced at the conclusion of the festival, February 2, 2003.



Calendar of Events

FILMS

American Film Institute JUST ADDED!
In conjunction with the National Symphony's "Soundtracks: Music and Film" concert series with guest John Williams, the AFI presents a spectrum of films scored by this successful, award-winning composer plus some of his favorites scored by others. The films start January 20 and include Jaws (Stephen Spielberg, 1975), Captain from Castile (Henry King, 1947), The Cowboys (Mark Rydell, 1972), Black Sunday (John Frankenheimer, 1977), Family Plot (Alfred Hitchcock, 1976), The Magnificent Seven (John Sturges, 1960), Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958), The Killers (Don Siegel, 1964), Saving Private Ryan (Stephen Spielberg, 1998), Wuthering Heights (William Wyler, 1939), Images (Robert Altman, 1972), The Accidental Tourist (Lawrence Kasdan, 1988), Schindler's List (Stephen Spielberg, 1993). Also, a week-long run of Russian Ark (Alexander Sokurov, 2001) starts January 30 and runs through February 6.

Freer Gallery of Art
A series of films by Iranian women directors will be shown in January and February (more at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, see below). On January 17 at 7:00pm and January 19 at 2:00pm is Daughters of the Sun (Maryam Shahriar, 2001) and on January 24 at 7:00pm and January 26 at 2:00pm is Women's Prison (Manijeh Hekmat, 2002). More follow in February.

National Gallery of Art
In January, the Gallery starts a series of films by French director Marcel L'Herbier, all silent with live music accompaniment. The films are L'Argent (1929) on January 11 at 2:00pm, Feu Mathias Pascal (1925) on January 12 at 4:00pm, L'Homme du Large (1920) on January 18 at 3:00pm, and L'Inhumaine (1924) on January 19 at 4:00pm. Other French films in January include The Gleaners and I (Agnès Varda, 2001) on January 4 at 3:00pm, L'Etrange Monsieur Victor (Jean Grémillon, 1938) on January 25 at 3:00pm, and Lumière d'Eté (Jean Grémillon, 1943) on January 26 at 4:00pm.

A short series of "New Deal" films accompanies the exhibition Drawing on America's Past: Folk Art, Modernism, and the Index of American Design. The first set of films are The River (Pare Lorentz, 1937) and Power and the Land (Joris Ivens, 1941) on January 15, 16 and 17 at 12:30pm and January 19 at 12:00pm. A second set, The City (Ralph Steiner and Willard Van Dyke, 1939) and Valley Town (Willard Van Dyke, 1940) on January 22, 23 and 25 at 12:30pm. A third set will be shown in February.

Miscellaneous art films in January include De Kooning on De Kooning (Charlotte Zwerin, 1982) on January 2, 3 and 4 at 12:30pm and January 5 at 12:00pm; Van Gogh (Maurice Pialat, 1991) on January 5 at 4:00pm; and Anamorphosis (Stephan and Timothy Quay, 1991) shown with Inganni (Lidia Bagnoli, 2002) on January 29, 30 and 31 at 12:30pm.

National Museum of African Art
On January 10 at 7:00pm is Matamata and Pilipili (Tristan Bourland, 1996) with Christraud Geary as moderator; on January 17 at 7:00pm is a program of two documentary films on photographers: M&M Smith: For Posterity's Sake (1995) and Conversations with Roy DeCarava (1984); on January 24 at 7:00pm is Ernest Cole about the South African photojournalist with Christraud Geary moderating; and on January 31 at 7:00pm is Imperfect Journey (1994) about Haile Gerima's journey home to Ethiopia.

Museum of American History
On January 30 at 6:30 is An Untold Triumph: The 1st and 2nd Filipino Infantry Regiments (Noel Izon, 2002), about the 7,000 soldiers of Philippine heritage who joined the US Army during WWII. The director and writer will be present for questions.

Renwick Gallery
On January 8 at 1:00pm is a video documentary about Lewis and Clark; on January 15 at 1:00pm is All My Relatives, a documentary about the Lake Sioux reservation in North Dakota.

National Museum of Women in the Arts
Films by Iranian women directors (see also the Freer, above) are featured in January. On January 22 at 7:00pm is Runaway (Kim Longinotto and Ziba Mir-Hosseini, 2001), a documentary about runaway girls and on January 29 at 7:00pm is Nargess (Rakhshan Bani-Etemad, 1992).

Films on the Hill
One of Gary Cooper's little known films, The Wedding Night (King Vidor, 1935), is on January 15 at 7:00pm. Gary Cooper stars with Anna Sten, who Sam Goldwyn had tried to make into another Garbo. Errol Flynn stars as the real-life James J. Corbett, heavyweight boxing champion who beat John L. Sullivan in one of the ring's greatest upsets, in Gentleman Jim (Raoul Walsh, 1942) on January 17 at 7:00pm. A silent double feature A Woman of the World (Malcolm St. Clair, 1925) with the legendary Pola Negri and Pretty Ladies (Monta Bell, 1925) set in the Broadway backstage of the Ziegfeld Follies, is on January 29 at 7:00pm.

Pickford Theater
On January 7 is Second Chorus (H.C. Potter, 1941), a musical with Fred Astaire and on January 9 at 7:00pm is The Wrecking Crew (Phil Karlson, 1969), the fourth and final Matt Helm film. Check the website for others.

Goethe Institute
On January 13 at 6:30pm is Winter Adé (Helke Misselwitz, 1988), a documentary about East German women. More German films will be shown at Visions, also read about the German Film Festival in Scotland.

Griot Cinema at Erico Cafe JUST ADDED!
Freedom on My Mind (Connie Field and Marilyn Mulford, 1994), a documentary about the Mississippi freedom movement of the early 1960s is on January 15-19. At the River I Stand (David Appleby and Allison Graham, 1993), a documentary about the Civil Rights movement, is on January 22-26.

National Museum of Natural History
On January 17 at noon is Marathon Monks of Mount Hiei (2002), a documentary about the philosophy of Tendai Buddhism; and on January 25 and 26 at 1:00pm is Wedding Through Camera Eyes: Trilogy of Wedding Photography in Korea (2002).

--

FILM TALKS

A HREF="http://www.ushmm.org"> The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
On January 30 at 7:00pm is a talk, illustrated with film clips "Filmmakers Depict the Experiences of Homosexual Victims of the Nazi Era" with James D. Steakley author of the historical study The Homosexual Emancipation Movement in Germany.



FILM FESTIVALS

National Symphony Orchestra Film Festival
At the Kennedy Center's Concert Hall is a series of concerts of film music, one with a film showing. On January 23 is film showings with music by the National Symphony Orchestra. On January 23 at 7:00pm is "A Portrait of John Williams." John Williams will conduct a program of his film music, including Hook, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Jaws, Schindler's List, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and E.T. On January 24 at 1:30pm is "Music in Film: Made in Hollywood" with both John Williams and Leonard Slatkin conducting and providing commentary. The music includes that of Aaron Copland from The Red Pony, Leonard Bernstein from On the Waterfront and The Magnificent Seven, Alfred Newman from Wuthering Heights, Bernard Hermann from Vertigo and others. On January 25 at 8:00pm is "In Synch: How Do they Do It?" about the history and art of synchronizing music to the movies, with film clips, commentary, live performance and recorded soundtracks. Leonard Slatkin hosts a discussion after the concert. On January 30 at 7:00pm is "The European Aesthetic" beginning with the first "soundtrack" in movie history--Camille Saint-Saens' music for the 1908 film L'Assassinat du Duc de Guise and continuing with Sir William Walton's score for the 1944 Henry V, Arthur Honegger's music for the 1948 experimental film Pacific 231 and Dmitri Shostakovich's music for the 1964 Soviet film Hamlet. On January 31 at 8:00pm an abbreviated version of Fritz Lang's Metropolis will be shown with music by Arnold Schoenberg, Edward Grieg, Richard Wagner, Bela Bartok, and Richard Strauss. The film festival concludes on February 1 at 8:00pm with "A Portrait of John Williams," this time with Leonard Slatkin conducting the music of John Williams (see the January 23 program).



This on-line version of the newsletter was last updated on January 14. Please check periodically for additions and corrections.


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December, 2002
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