April 2005


Last updated on April 1, 2005. Please check back later for additions.

Contents

FilmfestDC
The Oscars Party
An Interview with John Boorman, Director of In My Country
An Interview with Stephen Chow
Make Your Movie!
The Film Fanatic Challenge Comes to DC
An Interview with Mercedes Alvarez, Director of The Sky Turns We Need to Hear From You
Calendar of Events



From Beijing to Bollywood

The 19th Annual D.C. International Film Festival

For the first time in its 19-year history, Filmfest DC will recognize its outstanding films with awards for selected movies, including a juried competition acknowledging new works deserving of increased awareness and an audience award designating festivalgoer’s top choices.

This year’s festival focus, “From Beijing to Bollywood”, will feature new films from China and India. Other sections will include Global Rhythms, World View and free programs for children and seniors.

Filmfest DC will present its usual eclectic mix of more than 80 new features, documentaries, and short films from around the world. The 12 days of the festival, which begins with an opening ceremony on April 13th and runs through April 24th, will be filled with international guest directors, movie premieres, and special events.

Filmfest DC’s 24-page catalog will be distributed through The Washington Post on Friday, April 8. Two centerfold ads will appear in the Washington City Paper on April 1 and 15. For more information on Filmfest DC, go to
the website or call 202-628-FILM.



An Overflow Crowd Enjoys the 13th Annual Party

By Karrye Y. Braxton, DC Film Society Publicity Committee Member

A crowd of 230 patrons was thrilled to watch the Academy Awards at the Washington, D.C. Film Society’s 13th Annual Party--"And The Winner Is"--on February 25, 2005. They kept coming ... they kept coming ... What was it that drew them? Was it the prospect of seeing Chris Rock’s mug up on the big screen, thanks again to the Arlington Cinema ‘N’ Drafthouse? Was it to enjoy the quips and insights of ever-faithful co-hosts, Joe Barber and Bill Henry? Was it the numerous mentions of the 13th Annual Party by the Washington Post, even in Desson Thomson’s column, even though he was hosting the Official Oscar Party? (Thank you so much, Mr. Thomson!) Perhaps it was the tremendous list of silent auction items, including (for the first-time) two round-trip tickets on AirTran valued at $1,000.

Whatever it was, this largest crowd ever (so far!) to enjoy the Film Society’s Annual Party cheered at the entrance of the new Academy Award host, Chris Rock. In an unprecedented move, local film critics Joe Barber and Bill Henry ("The Movie Guys") gave the people what they wanted. The audience voted to watch the entire red carpet pre-show crowd. Once the festivities were underway, the Film Society’s annual party audience roared with delight at the Academy Awards Show’s first African-American male host.

Joe and Bill provided commentary after each award category, asking trivia questions that stumped many in the audience, as well as finally releasing the Film Society’s Best Of picks for each of the major categories. While Film Society members agreed with most of the Academy’s choices, as Million Dollar Baby garnered our votes for Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress. However, Film Society members chose Sideways as Best Picture, making the night not so predictable.

Joe and Bill also reminded the crowd of the delectable Silent Auction gifts from donors such as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, AFI Silver Theatre, AirTran Airways, Allied Advertising (on behalf of the studios, Avalon Theatre, FilmFest DC, Bonnie Joranko, Landmark E St. Cinema and Matt Cowal, National Building Museum, James Parker Jr., Red Sage, Reel Affirmations, Regal Gallery Place, Round House Theatre, The Shakespeare Theatre, Signature Theatre, Dov S-S Simen, Terry Hines & Associates (on behalf of the studios), Theater J, Warner Theatre, Washington Jewish Film Festival, Washington Performing Arts Society, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company and Zola Restaurant.

Joe Barber acknowledged that Chris Rock was very funny, but “he’ll never work in Hollywood again after this show,” after Mr. Rock compared the achievements of President Bush to working at The Gap. Soon after this quip, the crowd chuckled appreciatively as Robin Williams auditioned to get his Oscar host job back with voice-overs of various animated characters while announcing the Best Animated Feature Film award nominations.

The Film Society audience stared in stunned silence as Beyoncé Knowles performed three songs, including one in French, the Best Song nominee from The Chorus, featuring the American Boy Chorus. The only other time that the audience was so quiet was during the Silent Auction match-ups, as contenders vied for prizes such as a Hotel Rwanda screening invitation signed by Oscar nominees Don Cheadle and Sophie Okonedo, Les Choristes Oscar-nominated song sheet music signed by Oscar nominee writer/director/composer Christophe Barratier, and Beyond the Sea soundtrack signed by director/writer/producer/star (and Oscar winner) Kevin Spacey. There were also lots of autographed posters from movies, including Maria Full Of Grace, signed by director/writer Joshua Marston and 2005 Oscar nominee Catalina Sandino Moreno, Kinsey, signed by director/writer and Oscar-winner Bill Condon, Vera Drake signed by 2005 Oscar-nominated director/writer Mike Leigh and star Imelda Staunton, Garden State, signed by director/writer Zach Braff, our favorite from Scrubs, and The Sea Inside, signed by star and previous Oscar-nominee Javier Bardem.

During another commercial interlude, Joe Barber and Bill Henry asked who was the only woman awarded an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for playing a man… Linda Hunt. Joe chortled, does the Oscar for Cate Blanchett playing Katherine Hepburn tout up to another Oscar for Miss Hepburn? During a break, Joe Barber suggested that the Academy show film clips with the song performances versus live song performances by stars not from the movie. At the end of the evening, the lucky clairvoyant of the “Pick the Winners” contest won a basket of prizes, beating out several others who had guessed the winners correctly. So, who will host the Awards next year? Having run up the Silent Auction prices, the audience began taking bets on this!

The Film Society owes hearty thanks to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Allied Advertising, Allison Silberberg from the Filmbiz Happy Hour, Tony Fisher and Arlington Cinema N Drafthouse, Entertainment Weekly, Terry Hines and Associates and Women in Film and Video. The Film Society in addition bows in gratitude to our stalwart volunteers, including Director Michael Kyrioglou, Associate Directors Brian Niemiec and Jim Shippey as well as Committee heads and members Jorge Bernardo, Karrye Braxton, Billy Coulter, Cheryl Dixon, Daniel Fiorito, Raiford Gaffney, Annette Graham, Larry Hart, David Horowitz, Bonnie Joranko, Kandace Laass, Stephen Marshall, Ky Nguyen, Cate Nielan, James Parker, Jr., Nina Reynoso, Adam Spector, Catherine Stanton, Linda Schwartz, Tuan Tran and of course, Liz Wagger!



An Interview with John Boorman, Director of In My Country

By Larry Hart, DC Film Society Member

“Ubuntu” is a uniquely African principle that seeks harmony among peoples by allowing absolution for transgressions in place of retribution. This principle was the basis for South Africa’s “Truth and Reconciliation Commission”, lasting four years in the 1990s, and the subject of British director John Boorman’s new film, In My Country.

Boorman has a 40-year history of pioneering techniques in filmmaking that have been imitated endlessly, often by American directors. The revenge gangster flick, Point Blank, in 1967, showed that the world of gangsters had become more like the corporate bureaucracy we have all become frustrated in dealing with. The haunting Deliverance, in 1972, found a dark side of rural America we forgot existed in our urban and suburbanized culture and the autobiographical Hope and Glory gave us a new take on the blitz in England during World War II from a child’s point of view.

Although In My Country uses standard techniques to tell its story, the subject is still highly controversial both within and outside South Africa. The TRC, as it was known, held out the promise of amnesty for those who tortured and murdered prisoners during the apartheid regime if they confessed their crimes and could show they were following orders. The film is based on the book by Afrikaans poet Antjie Krog who covered the TRC hearings as a reporter. Screenwriter Ann Peacock, also a South African native, takes the real character of Krog, changes her name to Anna Malan (Juliette Binoche) and surrounds her with fictional characters. Washington Post (!) reporter Langston Whitfield (Samuel L. Jackson) is bitter about his own country’s treatment of African-Americans and cannot understand the whole “Ubuntu” concept. He is determined to expose its flaws by interviewing a Col. De Jager, brilliantly portrayed by Brendan Gleeson, a composite villain who is described as the most notorious torturer for the South African police. The film also plunges into the guts of the hearings themselves, which were held in all parts of the country, with heart rendering portrayals of the victims families and their conflicting feelings.

On his promotional tour for the film, Boorman held court at the Fairmont Hotel and said that he disagreed with those artists who boycotted South Africa during Apartheid and traveled widely there at the time. “I argued that art is fundamentally subversive and that it was counterproductive not to allow these plays and films to be shown in South Africa, that they were more likely to change if they were seen,” Boorman told us. “As a result, I was able to travel beyond the cities into the rural areas and made many contacts with people who were fighting against Apartheid at great risk to themselves, very courageously.”

Boorman said he kept up with his contacts there and became determined to make a film there once Apartheid was defeated and felt Peacock’s screenplay, four years in the making, was the right vehicle. Boorman was equally enthusiastic about Juliette Bonoche’s portrayal of Krog/Malan. Boorman said he chose Binoche because of the emotional depth and and intellectual honesty that came through in Kieslowski’s Blue, one of his “Three Colors” series, and says it paid off. “I introduced Juliette to Antjie and she consumed her like a werewolf, or something. She even wore some of her clothes in the film. Antjie took Juliette on a trip to the (Orange) Free State (the home she had to leave because of her anti-Apartheid activities) and she absolutely inhabited the character by the time of the shooting. Working with her has been a revelation in that she has the ability to show fragility and strength at the same time.” Boorman said although the other characters in the film were technically fictional, they represented many similar victims stories and that the De Jager character also was based on an actual perpetrator.

As for the TRC, Boorman pointed out that the “Ubuntu” concept comes straight from the tribal experiences of the native population. “Typically, a tribe would be made up of 100 or 200 people who all knew each other intimately. There was no prison, where someone could be locked up, so they had to find some other way of dealing with crime. So the tribe would work to confront the victim with the perpetrator and after a long time it would end with understanding and forgiveness. If this failed, the only sanction would be expulsion from the tribe, which would lead to death or madness. This was Nelson Mandela’s reasoning in favoring the TRC.” Mandela, incidentally, endorsed the film, calling In My Country “a beautiful and important film [that] will engage and influence not only South Africans but people all over the world.”

Boorman said financing the film wasn’t easy and needed help from South Africa’s Industrial Development Bank, and then “cobbled together” the financing bit by bit. As for the state of filmmaking today, the septuagenarian Boorman decried the decline of American films since the so-called “golden age” of the late 1960s and 70s after which, Boorman said, “disaster fell in the form of Star Wars.” “The studios then realized the audience they were looking for was 14 year old boys and they began to make films for them and that still dominates the business. The rest of us sit in an ‘art ghetto.’ There’s this enormous gap between the blockbuster film that grosses hundreds of millions of dollars and the “art house” film that’s lucky to gross $2 million in America.” As a result, Boorman said the studios have all but abandoned financing films and just pay for the distribution. Undaunted, Boorman is working on the adaptation of a fifty year old French book by Margaret Yourcenar on the memoirs of the Emperor Hadrian. He doesn’t sound ready to give in to the studio marketing types just yet.

In My Country is scheduled to hit the DC area screens April 1.



Doin' the Kung Fu Hustle: A Short Chat with Stephen Chow

By James Shippey, DC Film Society Co-Director

A rather stormy morning was the setting for day. The washed out streets of the West End led me to the fashionable hotel where I was to meet the writer-director-star of the blender film Kung Fu Hustle. Of course, even though this was to be only his second interview of the day, things were running late. At least I can thank the concierge for providing me the New York Times (featuring a section about upcoming film festivals no less) and some mineral water. As I glanced around at the preternaturally large bowls of fruit seemingly everywhere, I was finally summoned upstairs to the penthouse, where along with a young writer from American University, we were introduced to Stephen Chow and his mostly silent translator. Chow speaks in better than passable English. [Note: the other interviewer is identified as "AU."]

James Shippey: Ok, let’s get started. First, welcome to Washington. You sure have yourself one exceptional film here. I must say will be very interesting seeing how we accept it over here. There are a lot of things in the film I would like to ask you about, as well as to some things you can add your insight. I guess first thing I would to ask you is did you always envision yourself as playing Sing, the central role in the film?

Stephen Chow: As a central character in my movie? Yes, of course, because I am Sing!
James Shippey: So you did write the role for yourself?

Stephen Chow: Yes, for Kung Fu Hustle. That is the way I do my job, you see. First, the character, we start from there. With the characters we expand to the story from all of the characters. That is how I do it.

AU: Was it a daunting job following the global success of Shaolin Soccer?

Stephen Chow: I don’t think the whole world likes soccer movies.

AU: I meant, it was your most successful film to date, finding a global audience.

Stephen Chow: Well, not really here in the States. Was it really successful here? Let me ask you, what made you want to see it?

AU: My father had told me about it. He works for the press in another city, and had obtained a screener copy of it. He liked it a lot and recommended it to me. So was it hard to follow up?

Stephen Chow: Yes, but not really. For me, there still a lot of Chinese sentiments I would like to bring to Western audiences. (Asks Shippey:). What did you think about Kung Fu Hustle?

James Shippey: Oh, I liked it.

Stephen Chow: Was there anything fresh in there for you?

James Shippey: Ah, there was something I wanted to ask you therein. I did see a lot of references aimed more at Western audiences. The Stanley Kubrick bit.

Stephen Chow: The Shining, yes.

James Shippey: And the chase with Sing and the Landlady is very much akin to what we see in Looney Tunes and Walter Lantz’s work. Those things would be more familiar to Americans and other Westerners. Was this intentional to hook Westerners into the story?

Stephen Chow: Yes, but overall it still a very traditional Chinese martial arts story. Did I make a mistake in this?

James Shippey: No.

Stephen Chow: It’s like if I were a chef. I would serve you a traditional Chinese dish, not a burger, since you can always get a burger!

James Shippey: True, and while you have these elements there, I don’t believe you made the entire film in that direction. For example, when Sing sees Buddha in the clouds, I don’t think we have the exact thing in a Western context. It still plays into a high level comedy, almost absurdist. You move the story along from the low level and mundane to the battle between Sing and the Beast, which becomes almost godlike. In recent memory this reminds us of The Matrix in structure, which, coincidentally, you also have the same martial arts choreographer. So, there are these elements, but I see that you have brought them together with the traditional Chinese elements successfully. Now, I don’t want to be putting words into your mouth, which unfortunately I think I have been doing, but was this your intent?

Stephen Chow: Yes, of course. I work with what I am familiar with, and there you go, Kung Fu Hustle, for example.

AU: In mentioning Yuen Wo Ping, I wanted to ask you about working with him. In Kung Fu Hustle there are big action sequences, like with the blind assassins. What was it like filming those? Was that something new for you?

Stephen Chow: That was the most difficult sequence I have ever made, in Kung Fu Hustle. The idea was crazy, having a musical instrument designed to kill people. One thing I want to say is that Yuen Wo Ping is such a good action director. He’s one of the best in the world. He looks so much like a grand master, but he really has an open mind. He is open to all sorts of different opinions, no matter how crazy they are. Now the fight sequence with the two musicians involved a lot of CGI. It’s quite different from the other fighting sequences, the more traditional fights (in the film) which were performed without wire work or CGI. In Kung Fu Hustle you will see some different kinds of action design, some different styles. That’s the real difficulty in this movie: how to put all of these things into one movie without confusing the audience. Don’t have them asking ‘is it Bruce Lee, or is it The Matrix, or some other thing?’ If you do it the wrong way, that becomes the problem for the audience because it is not uniform. So far, I haven’t heard any complaints about this with Kung Fu Hustle, so I think we did a good job!

James Shippey: You start the film with the (CG) butterfly, and then we move to a scene which is clearly on a soundstage, where we are introduced to the Axe gang. This suggests to us in the West, influences like The Wizard of Oz. In following that, I wanted to ask you about your use of unexpected characters becoming the heroes. Was that coming from your eastern experience, your western influences, or your desire to surprise your audiences?

Stephen Chow: That is the message behind the film. For me it is hard to judge people from how they look outwardly. What I am trying to say is that even the ordinary people; they have their strength behind them. That is my idea as why you see (in the film) the people of Pigsty, all so ordinary, but also powerful.

AU: Have you thought about making an English language film?

Stephen Chow: I’m not sure, but why not? As long as it’s a film about things I like and know how to do it, then I would probably go for it. I wouldn’t do it just for any specific market, though.

James Shippey: Would you make another film with Sing?

Stephen Chow: Yeah, actually right now I am thinking: sequel!

James Shippey: Thank you so much for taking the time, Stephen!



Make Your Movie!

Coming to DC for one weekend only! Dov S-S Simens' 2-Day Film School on April 23-24 at the AFI Silver Theater, 9:00am to 5:00pm each day. Quentin Tarantino, Guy Ritchie, and Robert Rodriguez all took the same film class before making their first movie. Learn everything you need to know to make your movie from A to Z: Writing and optioning a great script; raising funds; hiring cast and crew; directing; marketing; and getting a distribution deal.

Early Bird Discount! Sign up before April 7. Visit
the website to register and obtain more information. You can also e-mail your questions.



The Independent Film Channel Brings "The Film Fanatic Challenge" to D.C.

Attention movie buffs: The Independent Film Channel (IFC) is bringing “The Film Fanatic Challenge,” a traveling movie trivia game based on its popular TV game show, to Washington, DC! Throughout the month of April, Washington, DC film lovers will have a chance to show off their knowledge of movie trivia by squaring off against other film buffs. Each participant who enters will have a chance to win an Apple mini ipod. On the final night, Saturday, April 30th, participants will enter to win an IFC Home Theater System, and will have the chance to win a trip for two to the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. Anyone 21 and older is invited to come on and play.

Dates and Locations:
April 4, 5, and 6. From 9:00pm to 12:00 midnight
Garrett's Restaurant, 3003 M Street, N.W., 202-333-1033

April 11, 12, and 13. From 9:00pm to 12:00 midnight
Garrett's Restaurant, 3003 M Street, N.W., 202-333-1033

April 21, 22, and 23. From 8:00pm to 11:00pm
My Brother’s Place, 237 Second Street, NW, 202-347-1350

April 28, 29 and 30. From 8:00pm to 11:00pm
My Brother’s Place, 237 Second Street, NW, 202-347-1350

For more information, please visit
the website or call 212-563-7656.



An Interview with Mercedes Alvarez, Director of The Sky Turns

By James McCaskill, Storyboard European Correspondent

The 2005 IFFRotterdam made a concerted effort to highlight talented young directors. Mercedes Alvarez was just one of those selected and the choice of film The Sky Turns (El Cielo Gira, Spain, 2005) was validated when the film won IFFR's feature competition prize, the VPRO Tiger Award. In making the award, the judges said, "El Cielo Gira is a richly subjective diary of a film. Mercedes Alvarez provides us access to the last inhabitants of a village with their humorous and profound commentary on the passing of time and life and death through her simple and sincere directing. Her sense of timing and sensitivity to the light and quality of landscape was a poetic meditation, a welcome in these time of contemporary culture."

"My only previous work was a short film, African Wind (El viento africano, Spain, 1997)," Alvarez told me. "In 1998 I enrolled in Pompeu Fabra University's master's in Creative Documentary program." Alvarez worked as scenic director on Jose Luis Guerin's full length documentary Under Construction (En construccion, Spain, 2001), showing a talent for landscape that shines through her documentary. The Sky Turns is an outgrowth of the UPF master's course.

Alvarez's sensitive handling of the subject, the death of the village of her birth, in less talented hands could have descended into a maudlin film. Declining population is common to villages from Ireland to Italy. Already the population of an island in the Outer Hebrides requested to be relocated as it fell below the number needed for a viable community. "I needed to make a film marking the sad demise of Aldealsenor. It had to be a documentary using the last few elderly citizens as no actor could say what they would say... I wanted to show their own ideas of life and philosophy... These are people who are attached to a specific place, specific time." She continued, "These people talk of their truths, and it becomes as universal truth."

Dinosaur footprints are forever cast in stones around the village. That will be a reminder for ages that dinosaurs once lived here. You cannot help but wonder what will mark the thousand years of human existence in this corner of Spain. Roman soldiers bivouacked here and Roman coins are occasionally found here. In 1900 there were 300 citizens here. Then 200, then 100. That has dwindled to fourteen elderly inhabitants. Within a decade or so all will be gone. Already abandoned buildings are crumbling. This is the last generation. "I was three years old when my family left," she said. "I worked on this film for almost two years; one year filming and nine months editing. I wanted to make an intimate film, to be very close to the people. To let their confessions come through. I used a small crew to gain that closeness."

One of the last in the community is the artist Pello Azketo. Now almost blind, he continues to paint from memory. Thirty years ago he was a prolific member of the Pamplona School. Today his sight, like the last residents, this community is fading away. Out of the remaining villages two old friends emerge as the soul of the film with their poignant remembrances. In the end they, like the community, fade into the sunset.



Posted last month

Q&A With Danny Boyle, Director of Millions

If you missed the audience Q&A with Danny Boyle (posted later in March), you can catch up with it here.



Posted in February

Interview with the director of Beautiful Boxer

The February Storyboard had an interview with Ekachai Uekrongtham, director of Beautiful Boxer, one of the films featured in this months FilmfestDC. Check it out if you plan to see the film.



We Need to Hear From YOU

We are always looking for film-related material for the Storyboard. Our enthusiastic and well-traveled members have written about their trips to the Cannes Film Festival, London Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival and the Berlin Film Festival. We also heard about what it's like being an extra in the movies. Have you gone to an interesting film festival? Have a favorite place to see movies that we aren't covering in the Calendar of Events? Seen a movie that blew you away? Read a film-related book? Gone to a film seminar? Interviewed a director? Read an article about something that didn't make our local news media? Send your contributions to Storyboard and share your stories with the membership. And we sincerely thank all our contributors for this issue of Storyboard.



Calendar of Events

FILMS

American Film Institute Silver Theater
A series of films by French director Bernard Tavernier begins April 1 with Life and Nothing But (1989) and ends April 18 with Tavernier in person for Holy Lola (2004). See the website for the complete list of 12 films ranging from 1974 through 2004.

A series of three films Japanese films complements the Cherry Blossom Festival. Titles include The Makioka Sisters (1983), and two Washington premiers Dolls (2002) and Bright Future (2003). Please check the website for other films including one-time only shows of 15 (2002) and Shake Hands With the Devil: The Journey of Romeo Dallaire (2004).

Freer Gallery of Art
For the Cherry Blossom Festival, the Freer presents its Third Annual Anime series of four films. All are on April 2. At 11:00am is Tokyo Godfathers (Satoshi Kon, 2003); at 1:30pm is Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence (Mamoru Oshii, 2004); at 4:00pm is Tree of Palme (Takashi Nakamura, 2001); and at 7:00pm is Appleseed (Shinji Aramaki, 2004). In addition to the films Gilles Poitras, author of Anime Essentials and The Anime Companion will be on hand to introduce the films and sign books, artist and animator Steve Bennett will conduct a drawing workshop at 2:00pm and the DC Anime Club will put on a costume show.

To complement its exhibit "Asian Games: The Art of Contest" is a series of 4 films, all from Japan, all innovatively using games as subjects, plots or metaphors. On April 15 at 7:00pm is Pale Flower (Masashiro Shinoda, 1964); on April 17 at 2:00pm is Tokyo Olympiad (Kon Ichikawa, 1965); on April 22 at 7:00pm is Ping Pong (Fumihiko Masuri, 2003); and on April 29 at 7:00pm is Winter Days (2003), a collaboration among 35 animation artists.

National Gallery of Art
To complement the Toulouse-Lautrec exhibit is a short series of cabaret films. On April 3 at 4:30pm is Moulin Rouge (E.A. Dupont, 1928), followed by a short film Toulouse Lautrec--Peintre de la vie nocturne (Boris Zatouroff, 1945) and The Girl from Moulin Rouge (Alexander Korda, 1932). On April 9 at 2:00pm is Moulin Rouge (Baz Luhrmann, 2001), and on April 9 at 4:30pm is Queen of the Moulin Rouge (Ray C. Smallwood, 1922) preceded by L'Attrait de Paris (1908).

In April a series of films by Russian director Kira Muratova begins with Three Stories (1997) on April 23 at 4:00pm. On April 24 at 4:00pm is The Tuner (2004) and on April 30 at 2:00pm is Chekhov's Motives (2002). More follow in May.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
April 1 at 8:00pm is Hunting Down an Angel of Four Passions of the Soothsayer Poet (2002) constructed from silent archival footage. On April 21 at 8:00pm is a program of films and videos by Yang Fudong.

National Museum of African Art
On April 9 at 2:00pm is Life is Rosy (1987), one of Africa's first internationally successful musicals with Congolese pop star Papa Wemba. On April 24 at 2:00pm is The Village Teacher (1991), Bassek ba Kobhio's first film about the oppression of a reform-minded village teacher.

Museum of American History
"Reel Quick" is a series of four films celebrating jazz appreciation. On April 6 are two documentaries about Duke Ellington, Person to Person (1957) and Twentieth Century: Duke Ellington Swings Through Japan (1964). On April 13 is The Sound of Miles Davis. On April 20 are two more Duke Ellington television shows featuring Ellington in concert and conversation and on April 27 is Thelonius Monk in Paris. All are at noon and all are introduced by film archivists or jazz archivists.

Films on the Hill
A series of three films commemorates the sinking of the Titanic in April 93 years ago. No other ship in history has attracted so much attention, stirred up such powerful emotions or accumulated as many legends and myths as the Titanic. A series of 3 films from Denmark, Germany and the US begins on April 6 at 7:00pm with Atlantis (August Blom, 1913) based on the novel by Nobel Prize winner Gerhart Hauptmann. On April 13 at 7:00pm is Titanic (Herbert Selpin, 1943), made in Nazi Germany and said to be the only film which led to its director being executed (by Goebbels). On April 15, the exact anniversary of the disaster is Titanic (1953) the first big Hollywood treatment with Barbara Stanwyck and Clifton Webb, at 7:00pm.

Washington Jewish Community Center
On April 4 at 7:00pm is the re-scheduled screening of Facing Windows (Ferzan Ospetek, 2003); this film won four Italian Oscars. On April 9 at 10:00pm is Psychedelic Zion (Isri Halpern, 2000), a 55-minute video about three rave organizers and their parties. This was a cult film in Israel and the second most successful documentary released in theaters in 2001. Party afterwards with a local DJ and local breakdancers. On April 19 at 7:30pm is The Last Sephardi (Miguel Angel Nieto, 2003), a documentary video about the post-Inquisition wanderings of Jews expelled from Spain and where they ended up.

Pickford Theater
A short series "John Carpenter--The Beginnings" includes Dark Star (1974) on Aprikl 5 at 7:00pm; Assault on Precinct 13 (1976) on April 14 at 7:00pm and Halloween (1978) on April 22 at 7:00pm. See the website for others.

Goethe Institute
"Hollywood Goes to Berlin": two films made in 1948 includeing A Foreign Affair (Billy Wilder) on April 4 at 6:30pm and Berlin Express (Jacques Tourneur) on April 11 at 6:30pm. The Goethe Institute also takes part in FilmfestDC with "Selling Democracy", films of the Marshall Plan. These films were shown at the recent Berlinale, see Leslie Weisman's story in last month's newsletter.
A series of films starring Bruno Ganz will be at the Goethe Institute and other locations. (See the "Bruno Ganz" entry below).

National Geographic Society
The US ASEAN Film, Photography and Video Festival begins April 30 and runs through May 4. See the website for information.

National Archives
Local filmmaker Aviva Kempner will introduce her film The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg (2001) on April 15 at 7:00pm. A new documentary The Greatest Good (Steve Dunsky and Dave Steinke) about the forest service will be shown on April 29 at 7:00pm. The filmmakers will discuss their research for that film on April 29 at noon.

Reel Affirmations Xtra
On April 15 at 7:00pmm and 9:00pm is The Graffiti Artist showing at the Washington Jewish Community Center.



FILM FESTIVALS

FilmfestDC
See the story above.

The 2005 Rosebud Film and Video Festival
The 15th Annual Rosebud Film and Video Festival Nominee Showcase will be held April 9-10 at the Rosslyn Spectrum Theater, 1611 N. Kent Street, Arlington, Virginia. Rosebud is an annual competition open exclusively to DC, Maryland and Virginia film and video producers, seeking to honor the innovative, experimental, unusual, and deeply personal in creative film and video making. Twenty films (6 and a half hours worth) will be screened each day starting at 12:00 noon. These include documentaries, dramas and comedies characterizing the diversity of backgrounds and cultures in our region. An all day pass is $8.00 and includes re-entry privileges. Visit the website for a complete list of films and more information or call 703-524-2388.



FILM LECTURES

Smithsonian Associates

Brando: "The Greatest Actor of All Time" takes place on April 3 from 1:00pm to 3:30pm. Film historian Max Alvarez and Leslie Jacobson, chair of George Washington's theater and dance department complement their lecture with film clips examining the craft, career and influence of Marlon Brando (1924-2004). Discounts for DCFS members! To get the $15 rate, mention DC Film Society when ordering tickets.



FILM SERIES

Bruno Ganz
After seeing Bruno Ganz's latest film Downfall, you'll want to see more of this versatile actor. As series of films begins April 25 and continues through May at several locations: the Goethe Institute, the Embassy of France, and the National Gallery of Art. On April 25 at 6:30pm is Behind Me (Norbert Wiedmer, 2002) at the Goethe Institute; on April 26 at 7:30pm is In the White City (Alain Tanner, 1983) at the French Embassy; on April 27 at 6:30pm is Knife in the Head (Reinhard Hauff, 1978) at the Goethe Institute; on April 28 at 7:30pm is The Girl from Lorraine (Claude Goretta, 1980) at the French Embassy; and on April 29 at 6:30pm is Bread and Tulips (Silvio Soldini, 2000) at the Goethe Institute. The series continues in May. Please check the website to ensure you have the correct location.

Smithsonian Associates

Reel Surprises is a four-part series of films from festivals in the US and Canada. The films are: April 1 at 7:00pm Buffalo Bill's Defunct: Stories from the New West (Eliza Fox and Matt Wilkins, 2004) from the Seattle International Film Festival. The filmmakers will attend to discuss their film. On April 15 at 7:00pm is Last Goodbye (Jacob Gentry, 2004) from the Tribeca Film Festival. The director and producer will be present for questions and answers. The series continues in May (The Five of Us from the Montreal Film Festival and in June (Child Star from the Toronto Film Festival. Discounts for DCFS members! For the April films you can get two tickets for the price of one at the members rate--that is, two people for $10. This discount is available by phone (202-357-3030) or at the door only subject to availability.



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