April 2018


Posted April 1, 2018. Addition made April 4.

Contents

  • The 32nd Annual Filmfest DC
  • The 26th Annual "And the Winner Is..." Oscar Party
  • The Cinema Lounge
  • Adam's Rib: Lessons from High Noon
  • The Death of Stalin: Q&A with Director Armando Iannucci
  • We Need to Hear From You
  • Calendar of Events

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    Last 12 issues of the Storyboard.



    April 19-29

    Filmfest DC Returns for its 32nd Year of International Cinema

    From the press release

    Filmfest DC is back for its 32nd year in Washington, DC, bringing new and exciting international films to the community. Filmfest DC hosts 80 films from 45 countries to show across 11 days for 1 exciting festival.

    This year’s films span across a variety of categories, including World View (international), Trust No One (thrillers), Global Rhythms (music and dance), Justice Matters (social justice), Shorts (international, DC area and women-produced) and a new category, Cine Latino, featuring films from Chile, Brazil, Cuba, Argentina, and more.

    Filmfest DC kicks off on April 19th at Mazza Gallerie (5300 Wisconsin Ave, NW) but will host most screenings at Landmark E Street Cinema (555 11th St, NW) throughout the festival. They will close on April 29th at The Embassy of France (4101 Reservoir Rd, NW).

    The Opening Night film is Streaker (Peter Luisi) from Switzerland, about a high school teacher who trains and recruits streakers to disrupt soccer games and the Closing Night film is Just To Be Sure (Carine Tardiue) from France/Belgium), a comedy about a middle-aged man's search for his biological father. Other highlights of the festival include Playing God (the story of local lawyer Ken Feinberg’s emotional mission to calculate financial compensation for 9/11 victim’s families), Disobedience (an exploration of sexuality starring Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams, directed by Oscar winning filmmaker, Sebastian Lelio), The Cleaners (a look at Filipino content moderators contracted by Silicon Valley whose job is to decide what is and isn’t allowed on social media sites), How They Got Over (a movie that details how African American Gospel music became a the primary source for rock and roll – and will feature afterward, a live performance by the Howard Gospel Choir) and much more!

    Directors and filmmakers from many of these features will be present throughout the festival for questions and discussions. For full schedule, program and ticket information, please visit the festival website.

    For 30 years, Filmfest DC has sought to keep pace with global culture and social activities, taking a special focus on issues of the moment in hopes of increasing clarity and civil discourse. Filmfest DC is made possible by the support of our Board of Directors, sponsors, staff and hundreds of volunteers. Filmfest DC believes that good movies make the world a better place.



    Something Fishy This Way Comes

    The DC Film Society's 26th Annual Party "And the Winner Is..."

    By Charles Kirkland, DC Film Society Member

    On Sunday, March 4, 2018, The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences held its 90th Annual Oscar awards ceremony and strangely the DC Film Society held its annual party at the same time. The strangeness was not in that the two events were held at the same time but in the oddities that occurred in the evening.

    Despite shrinking numbers for Oscar awards viewing in recent years, the Arlington Cinema and Drafthouse was packed to capacity with an overwhelmingly and unusually large number of newcomers to the event. Director Michael Kyrioglou welcomed everyone during the Red Carpet show and introduced our returning hosts for the evening, WETA’s men Around Town, Tim Gordon and Travis Hopson. The dapper-dressed Gordon and Hopson who seemed like they stepped off the carpet themselves, welcomed the audience and took special care to bring the rookies up to speed about the schedule of the evening. They made sure that everyone knew about the silent auction, the Predict-the-Winners contest, and even the trivia contest for prizes that were to be held during the show.

    Then the show began. Kimmel opened well but it was nothing in comparison to the opening from our hosts. Gordon and Hopson opened with their usual jabs at each other and the coming festivities of the night. They shared their opinions on the upcoming results and entreated the audience for their thoughts. It was at that moment that it was clear that this was not the regular Film Society crowd.

    This crowd was alive! The requests and prodding from the hosts were effective but not nearly necessary. The whole Drafthouse was jumping with conversations, comments and clamor. Not only did they bite the bait of the hosts but they fought the hooks as they openly fought too the validity of two trivia questions posed by Tim Gordon.

    The most interesting part of the night turned out to be the Predict-the-Winners contest. One of the six categories in the contest for the night was the Best Animated Short where Kobe Bryant’s underdog film Dear Basketball won the Oscar. Three attendees had perfect ballots for the evening. Even stranger was the prediction by Travis Hopson that neither the favorite Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri nor the underdog, dark horse horror movie Get Out would win Best Picture. In one move, Hopson established himself as the Captain of the ship without anyone understanding until The Shape of Water won. As the fairy tale, fish story captured its Oscar, Hopson caught us all hook, line and sinker.

    Once the festivities ended and all the prizes were dispersed, another great night was had by all who packed into the party.

    Thanks go out to The DC Film Society Coordinating Committee Members and Volunteers, Tim Gordon, Travis Hopson, Allied Integrated Marketing, Arlington Cinema N Drafthouse, Filmfest DC, DC Shorts, PR Collaborative and Women in Film & Video for making it all possible.



    The Cinema Lounge

    The Cinema Lounge meets Monday, April 16, 2018 at 7:00pm. Our topic is Sacred Cows. The movie won several Oscars, but you can't stand it. The director is highly acclaimed but you avoid his films like the plague. The star is box office gold, but you cringe every time she's on-screen. Come join the Cinema Lounge, the DC Film Society's monthly film discussion group, as we ask about Sacred Cows that maybe you're supposed to love but you truly hate.

    The Cinema Lounge, a film discussion group, meets the third Monday of every month (unless otherwise noted) at 7:00pm at
    Teaism in Penn Quarter, 400 8th St., NW in Washington, DC (closest Metro stop is Archives, also near Metro Center and Gallery Place). NOTE: We will meet in the downstairs area. You do not need to be a member of the Washington DC Film Society to attend. Cinema Lounge is moderated by Adam Spector, author of the DC Film Society's Adam's Rib column.



    Adam's Rib: Lessons From High Noon

    By Adam Spector, DC Film Society Member

    Last month Glenn Frankel spoke at the Cinema Lounge discussion group about his book High Noon: The Hollywood Blacklist and the Making of an American Classic. He addressed some of the reasons why High Noon still resonates more than 65 years after its release. In both the film and the story behind it cherished institutions fail when they are needed most. How does that speak to our time? Answering that question proves difficult, but I give it a try
    in my new Adam’s Rib column.



    The Death of Stalin: Q&A with Director Armando Iannucci

    By Annette Graham, DC Film Society Member

    An advance screening of The Death of Stalin was held March 15 at Landmark's E Street Cinema. Director Armando Iannucci was present to answer questions and the discussion was moderated by Michael Bishop, director of the National Churchill Library and Center in DC and executive director of the International Churchill Society. The Death of Stalin is a comedy/satire about Stalin's death and the subsequent power grab by the members of the Council of Ministers. It stars Steve Buscemi, Jeffrey Tambor, Simon Russell Beale, Michael Palin and others. This Q&A has been condensed and edited.

    Michael Bishop: It's a privileged to talk to the director of this film and creator of In the Loop, The Thick of It and Veep. Congratulations, Armando. Let's set the scene where in 1953 Winston Churchill is back in 10 Downing Street, Eisenhower has just become president of the US and Stalin has just keeled over.
    Armando Iannucci: What could possibly go wrong?
    Michael Bishop: Exactly. A perfect combination. What was it that drew you to this pivotal time, the death of Stalin in 1953?
    Armando Iannucci: It's not a period that is covered a lot in western cinema. The Nazis are big box office and if you're looking at Russia, maybe espionage and spying in the Cold War. But that Stalinist period in the early 50s is slightly... But the real reason is that I was thinking about doing something about a fictional, contemporary dictator. That was going to be my next comedy or drama. I hadn't decided if it was an American dictator, a British dictator, whatever. Things have been happening in democracies all around the world. These strange strong leaders have been emerging, the Berlusconis, and the Putins, the Erdogans and people who change the constitution so that they can never be removed from office. Then I was sent the French graphic novel The Death of Stalin which had all this of what you've seen in the film laid out in front of me--the concert at the beginning which was true, Stalin falling over and the guards not knocking on the door because they were too scared so him being left there for a day, which was true, everyone arguing about whether to get a doctor and what doctor to get because Stalin had put them on a list which was true and so on. And I thought, why come up with a fiction, because here are the themes I want to talk about. And it's true, it's horrifying, it's absurd, it's comic in a strange kind of nervous way. And it's true. The moment I read it, I thought, this is the film I want to make.

    Michael Bishop: So a lot of it is unbelievably is true but it takes a certain kind of imagination to look at the death of the most murderous tyrant of the 20th century and say that's comedy.
    Armando Iannucci: Comedy = tragedy plus time. I think there is something about events like this that are so crazy that the only way you can respond to them is through comedy. They circulated joke books under Stalin, jokes about Stalin, Beria and torture, and gulags. You could be shot if you had one of these on you. And yet people felt the need to come up with jokes. As if to say, "You can take my livelihood away, you can take me away but I can make fun of you. You haven't got me here." And it's interesting. I knew that there were two elements to the film, one was the comedy and one was the horror as well, and they were going to run alongside each other. I thought the only way to make them work and earn their right to be with each other was if they all were derived from the same thing which is true events. So after reading the book I went out to Moscow and did more research and found more to put into the film. Because I thought that was going to be the template for what we work with. Now it's our dialogue and I changed the timeline here and there, and we've had a bit of playing with. But fundamentally, I wanted to get the look of it right and to recreate as convincingly as possible in the audience--and you can tell if this has been achieved--a sense of anxiety, a low level of anxiety all the way through. Because that must have been what it felt like, on a daily basis, to just not know how you were going to get through the night, if you or a member of your family were going to get hauled away.

    Michael Bishop: You did a lot of extra research as you say; it wasn't just the graphic novel. Is there one thing that you learned that you said you just had to put in the film?
    Armando Iannucci: Vasily, Stalin's son did lose the entire ice hockey team in a plane crash. He had been advised not to put them on the plane and he tried to cover up because he was too scared to tell his father. So he rounded up friends of friends. The concert at the beginning, in reality went through three conductors, not two. The first one fell, the second one they hauled in was drunk so they had to get a third one. Beria loved putting a tomato in people's pockets. Svetlana writes about him poking Stalin's body, just to make sure he was dead. And then Stalin recovered and pointed to the picture. And Beria was mortified and fell to his knees crying as if he's back. And then when Stalin finally died, he was jumping up and down like a child. Stalin would make everyone eat a huge meal late at night, get them drunk. He would instruct his own staff to only give him water, not vodka. But he wanted to get everyone else drunk, just to see what they said. And then when they were ready to leave he would say let's have a movie. He loved cowboy films, he loved these 1930s westerns, which they got over from here. They weren't translated into Russian; they were in English. He would hire a translator to translate live. And these tranlsators were petrified. One of them couldn't speak English, but didn't want to say, so he learned the dialogue in advance and memorized it and just hoped he was saying the right lines. And another one was so petrified and to get everything, he described what was happening in the film as well. "And now John Wayne is shooting from his gun." They would say, "We know this, we can see it." They were just so petrified. So all these incidents we found and there is possibly another film in what we couldn't fit in.

    Michael Bishop: Everyone knows you are a filmmaker, but in films as in politics, timing is everything. You've managed to release this film in the US, just as UK-Russian relations are at their lowest point in decades. You've got people dying on park benches and other catastrophes. Tell us about the Russian reception of the film.
    Armando Iannucci: Well, it's been mixed (everyone laughs). The audiences that have seen the film have said two things. It's funny and they've been emotional about it and say, "Thank you for making this film." And I've been very careful as we made the film. The first thing I said to the crew is that we have to be very respectful about what happened to the people. There's no comedy there; we want to show that absolutely as it happened. The comedy is in the Kremlin, in the politicians. Someone in the Ministry of Culture withdrew the license for the film. So it was banned from the cinema two days before it was due to get released. The press had seen it; I had done all my interviews. They dubbed it into Russian and I was having a great response. Can you actually ban a film in this day and age? Russians, of any country in the world, are very good at going online, hack into any website that has this film. (everyone laughs) How are they going to ban this film? All they've done is increased its profile so the Moscow Times ran a report saying that 60% of the people in Russian now want to see this film, just because it's been banned. I know they were worried about the upcoming Presidential election and we know that Putin is a stickler for no country interfering or affecting the election (everyone laughs). That's an absolute red line that he will not cross. So maybe that's what's happened and once that's out of the way, if Putin wins [subsequently he did win], then maybe we can get the film back.

    Michael Bishop: You have an absolutely remarkable cast. Jeffrey Tambor is so funny. I was completely overwhelmed by Simon Russell Beale, a brilliant Shakespearean actor, as an evil horrible human being.
    Armando Iannucci: Simon is actually an evil person (everyone laughs). No. I've seen him play Iago and King Lear and Macbeth. He can do a good villain. What I like about him is that he is very human. In the West we don't know who Beria is, we don't have an image in our head of Beria. And as a cinema going audience we don't know who Simon Russell Beale is. I like the fact that Beria is coming to you absolutely as he is in the film rather than the audience speculating on what other films he was in. Simon was the first person I cast. Opposite Simon we have Steve Buscemi. Beria is very quiet and contained and Khruschev is loud and speaks with his arms and Steve Buscemi was able to play the clown in pajamas at the beginning to the next dictator at the end who is getting people shot.

    Michael Bishop: I want to pivot to some of your earlier work. Everyone here knows about Veep. You did The Thick of It with the great Malcolm Tucker. Those of us who know The Thick Of It have probably spent time wondering what Malcom Tucker would make of all this. I don't know what to point to but let's just say the firing of Rex Tillerson by tweet the other day.
    Armando Iannucci: Where do you start with something like that? So Rex Tillerson got fired and the person who tried to announce how we was fired got it wrong so he was fired. Now I'm reading today that the deputy head of the FBI might be fired by Jeff Sessions. And once that's done, Jeff Sessions is going to be fired so he can be replaced by someone who then will then fire Mueller. What is going on? I don't understand. Is there going to be anyone left?

    Michael Bishop: I'm beginning to understand why you went back to 1953.
    Armando Iannucci: I'm running away from the present...
    Michael Bishop: ... when things were quiet and peaceful. In your next film you are going even further back into the 19th century. Tell us about that.
    Armando Iannucci: I'm doing Charles Dickens, David Copperfield. So that's 1840.
    Michael Bishop: Who is going to play David Copperfield?
    Armando Iannucci: Dev Patel.

    Audience Question: This is getting back to Veep. You don't see the President under whom Selena Meyer is Vice President. Why did you decide to never show the President? In The Death of Stalin the early part of the film is dominated by the actual person of Stalin who takes up a fair amount of screen time.
    Armando Iannucci: Well, he is going to die in the first 10 minutes. Well not die, but just have a stroke and poor Adrian [McLoughlin] who was playing Stalin spent weeks lying on the floor in a puddle of manufactured urine. With Veep, I always thought they were so close and yet so far. I remember reading about Lyndon Johnson, master of the Senate, one of the most successful Majority Leaders, the most powerful, influential Majority Leader ever, then becoming Vice President and literally drumming his fingers on a table in his office, wondering if the President would call. He accepted the Vice Presidency because he made the calculation that one in four Vice Presidents become President. That was his best chance. People are respectful to Vice Presidents because they might become President. So I thought it would spoil that dynamic to see the president. With this, I wanted Stalin to be seen in contrast to the image you get of the big tall strong man. In fact he was short, he was in his 70s, he was shaking. He was an old man. I wanted to get that contrast between the image of the great leader and the actuality. So when he dies, they are still struggling with the image. That's what they have to deal with. What would Stalin do, what would Stalin say, how did I wrong Stalin. People in the gulags actually cried when they heard Stalin died, even though Stalin put them there. They couldn't believe he put them there. It must have been someone else; it must have been a mistake. It must have been someone lower down with a grudge. It was the cult of personality, the cult leader.

    Audience Question: Looking at a poster on screen, a female character has been inserted and Jeffrey Tambor is taken out [because of sexual harrassmnt allegations]. When you first saw that did you think that will be an easy target for people writing headlines? Given that Stalin is in the title and someone was erased from the poster.
    Armando Iannucci: Yes. I saw that. There are ten key members of the cast and we've done about three different posters showing three different combinations. Also Michael Palin was erased--it's airbrushing people out of history.

    Audience Question: Since Peter [Capaldi] is done with Dr. Who do you have hopes to work with him again?
    Armando Iannucci: [in a mysterious sotto voce] I am working with him.

    The Death of Stalin opened in area theaters March 23.



    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, Karlovy Vary Film Festival, London Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Austin Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Palm Springs Film Festival, the Reykjavik Film Festival, the Munich Film Festival, and the Locarno 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? Taken notes at a Q&A? 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
    "Best of Bollywood" (April 7-15) is a series of new films from India, all from 2017 and 2018. Titles are Bareilly Ki Barfi, Newton, Secret Superstar, Ittefaq, Toilet, Pad Man, Mukkabaaz and Shubh Mangal Saavdhan.

    "Wes World: The Films of Wes Anderson" is a retrospective of Wes Anderson's films including the new Isle of Dogs. Titles in April are The Royal Tenenbaums, The Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Darjeeling Limited, Moonrise Kingdom and The Grand Budapest Hotel.

    "Recent Restorations" (March 19-April 26) includes The Old Dark House, King of Hearts, Women in Love, Port of Shadows, La Grande Bouffe, That Most Important Thing: Love, Stairway to Heaven, Il Boom, The Crime of Monsieur Lange Hangmen Also Die.

    "Wayne and Ford" concludes in April with She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Stagecoach and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.

    Special events in April are Donnie Darko (theatrical cut), Talk to Me, The Rape of Recy Taylor, Little Old New York, Blade Runner (final cut), Blade Runner 2049 and The Color Purple with Q&A.

    Freer Gallery of Art
    A new series of Japanese classic films is beginning at the Freer. On April 4 at 2:00pm is Lady Snowblood (Toshiya Fujita, 1973), a revenge story set in late 19th century Japan and a major inspiration of Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill saga.

    To celebrate the 2018 National Cherry Blossom Festival is a film screening with a live jazz performance by Tomohiro Mori. On April 6 at 7:30pm The Stormy Man (Umetsugu Inoue, 1957), a classic film about dueling jazz drummers, kicks off the new retrospective of films by Japanese director Umetsugu Inoue. Arrive at 5:30pm for a live jazz performance, Q&A with artists and curator tours of Japanese art exhibitions, food and cash bar.

    More films in the Umetsugu Inoue are The Winner (1957) on April 8 at 2:00pm, featuring a ballet solo and a climactic fight scene and preceded by a short film And So We Put the Goldfish in the Pool (Makoto Nagahisa, 2016); The Eagle and the Hawk (1957) on April 13 at 7:00pm, a followup to The Winner and shot on a real WWII cargo ship; The Green Music Box (1955) on April 15 at 2:00pm shown in 35mm; Hong Kong Nocturne (1967) on April 20 at 7:00pm; King Drummer (1967) on April 22 at 2:00pm, a remake of The Stormy Man.

    National Gallery of Art
    "Avant-Garde to Underground: Outliers and Film, Part II" (April 7-May 13) features documentary portraits of outlier artists and works by experimental filmmakers. On April 7 at 2:00pm is The Watermelon Woman (Cheryl Dunye, 1996) with an introduction by Alexandra Juhasz. On April 8 at 4:00pm is Who Is Bozo Texino? (Bill Daniel, 2005), an experimental documentary preceded by Richart (Vanessa Renwick and Dawn Smallman, 2001) with an introduction by Vanessa Renwick. On April 14 at 2:30pm is Seraphine (Martin Provost, 2008), about the French painter Seraphine Louis. On April 21 at 2:00pm is Sonic Outlaws (Craig Baldwin, 1995); on April 22 at 4:00pm is Spectres of the Spectrum (Craig Baldwin, 1999), both with an introduction by Craig Baldwin. On April 28 at 1:00pm is Swimming in Nebraska (Jon Jost, 2010), an experimental documentary; on April 28 at 3:00pm is American Dreams (lost and found) (James Benning, 1984) with the filmmaker in person; on April 28 at 4:45pm is Coming to Terms (Jon Jost, 2013); and on April 29 at 4:00pm is measuring change (James Benning, 2016) preceded by a conversation with James Benning and Lynne Cooke. More in May.

    Special events in April include a series of three films about Francis of Assisi in conjunction with the exhibition "Heavenly Earth: Images of Saint Francis". On April 1 at noon is Francesco d'Assisi (Liliana Cavani, 1966); on April 1 at 2:30pm is The Flowers of Saint Francis (Roberto Rossellini, 1950); and on April 1 at 4:30pm is Hawks and Sparrows (Pier Paolo Pasolini, 1966).

    National Museum of Women in the Arts
    On April 15 at 3:00pm is Little Stones (Sophia Kruz, 2017), an award-winning documentary about women artists creating change around the world. After the film Sophia Kruz will speak with local women documentary filmmakers, followed by a reception.

    Goethe Institute
    On April 11 at 6:30pm is When Paul Came Over the Sea (Jakob Preuss, 2017), a documentary about a migrant from Cameroon who has made his way to Morocco and is trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea to Spain. After the film there will be a discussion with the director.

    "Cinemarx" (April 26-May 17) is a series of films about Karl Marx from the GDR to the present, held at various locations. On April 26 at 6:30pm is Marx Reloaded (Jason Barker, 2011), a cultural-economic documentary examining Marx's ideas and their relevance in understanding the global economic and financial crisis of 2008-2009. More in May.

    On April 27 at 6:30pm is Home from Home (Edgar Reitz, 2014), set in the mid 19th century when famine, poverty and despotism oppressed the people of Europe.

    French Embassy
    A new film series "Revolution in the Air" commemorates the events of 1968. On April 10 at 7:00pm is A Grin Without a Cat (Chris Market, 1977), a documentary about revolutionary hot spots on four continents, juxtaposing iconic leaders (Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Mao Zedong) with dimly remembered agitators and radicals. More in May.

    The Japan Information and Culture Center
    On April 12 at 6:30pm is the animated film The Red Turtle (Michael Dudok de Wit, 2016). On April 19 at 6:30pm is Foujita (Kohei Oguri, 2015), about an artist in 1920s Paris whose life changes when WWII breaks out and he returns to Japan.

    The Textile Museum at GWU
    On April 2 at noon is Through Chinatown Eyes: April 1968 (Ted Gong), about the civil disorder in DC's Chinatown after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

    National Archives
    On April 6 at noon is Betty Ford: The Real Deal (2009), a PBS documentary about Betty Ford, her time in the White House, her advocacy for equal rights and the founding of the Betty Ford Center in California.

    Bethesda Row
    "Cinema Arts Bethesda" is a monthly Sunday morning film discussion series. On April 8 at 10:00am is the award-winning film Julieta (Pedro Almodovar, 2016) from Spain, about a mother and daughter coping with their grief over the death of their husband/father. On April 29 at 10:00am is The Teacher (Jan Hrebejk, 2016), set in Bratislava in 1983. Breakfast is at 9:30am, the film is at 10:00am and discussion follows, moderated by Adam Spector, host of the DC Film Society's Cinema Lounge and author of the column "Adam's Rib." A season pass is available.

    National Museum of Natural History
    On April 13 at 2:30pm is the documentary Elephant's Dream (Kristof Bilsen, 2014), a portrait of three state-owned institutions (post office, railway station, fire station) in Kinshasa and their workers. On April 20 at 2:30pm is the documentary Carnaval de Pueblo (Jerome R. Mintz, 1987), about the carnival in Casa Viejas Pueblo in Andalusia, Spain. On April 27 at 2:30pm is the documentary Stori Tumbuna: Ancestors' Tales (Paul Wolffram, 2011), about the Lak people of New Ireland in Papua New Guinea. All three films are part of the Ethnographic Film Series.

    The Avalon
    On April 4 at 8:00pm is The Final Year (Greg Barker, 2017), about the inner workings of the Obama administration. Part of "Avalon Docs."

    "Czech that Film" is a short series of Czech films April 11-12. On April 11 at 8:00pm is Ice Mother (Bohdan Slama, 2017), about a mother and her two grown sons finding romance while ice swimming. On April 12 at 5:15pm is The Quartette (Miroslav Krobot, 2017) about members of a string quartet; and on April 12 at 8:00pm is Barefoot (Jan Sverak, 2017), set during WWII, with the filmmaker in person for Q&A. All three films have received numerous nominations and awards.

    On April 18 at 8:00pm is This Is Our Land (Lucas Belvaux, 2017), about a working class single mother who naively runs for mayor, this month's pick for "French Cinematheque."

    Italian Cultural Institute
    On April 19 at 6:00pm is Sworn Virgin (Laura Bispuri, 2015). The director, award winning actress Alba Rohrwacher, and journalist Laura Delli Colli will meet the audience for a conversation and Q&A.

    Library of Congress
    The Mary Pickford Theater at the Library of Congress starts a new series of films showcasing the Library's collection and including newly preserved films. On April 19 at 7:00pm is In Caliente (Lloyd Bacon, 1935) starring Pat O'Brien as a New York theater critic who falls in love with a Mexican dancer played by Dolores Del Rio. Preceded by the short film Check Your Sombrero (Roy Mack, 1935).

    Anacostia Community Museum
    On April 21 at 1:30pm is The New Thing (Michael Bortman, 1970), a short film screening as part of a panel discussion about the DC institution The New Thing Art and Architecture Center.

    "Capital Classics" at Landmark's West End Cinema
    Classic films are shown at the West End Cinema on Wednesdays at 1:30pm, 4:30pm and 7:30pm. On April 4 is McCabe and Mrs. Miller (Robert Altman, 1971); on March 11 is Bringing Up Baby (Howard Hawks, 1938); and on April 18 is A Star Is Born (George Cukor, 1954).

    Embassy of Austria
    On April 12 at 7:00pm is "Women's Suffrage and the Early Age of Filmmaking," a program of silent film and music commemorating women's suffrage which began in Austria in 1910. On piano, Gerhard Gruber accompanies a selection of silent films from vaults of international archives.

    Atlas Performing Arts Silent Film Series
    On April 22 at 4:00pm is It (Clarence Badger, 1927) starring Clara Bow, the "It Girl." Piano accompaniment is by Andrew Simpson.

    Alden Theater
    On April 6 at 7:00pm is Despicable Me 3 (Kyle Balda, 2017). Shown at the Old Firehouse, 1440 Chain Bridge Rd.

    Smithsonian Associates
    On April 3 at 6:00pm is 2001 at 50: An Anniversary Odyssey, a film screening and book signing. See the ground-breaking film 2001: A Space Odyssey (Stanley Kubrick, 1968) and join Michael Benson, author of the book Space Odyssey: Stanley Kubrick, Arthur C. Clarke, and the Making of a Masterpiece. Benson explains how the film was made, the people most responsible for the film and its legacy.

    Reel Affirmations XTra
    On April 20 at 7:00pm is A Moment in the Reeds (Mikko Makela, 2017) from Finland.

    Busboys and Poets
    On April 22 at 5:00pm is Wendell Berry's Kentucky presented by ITVS and WHUT Indie Lens Pop-Up. At the 14th and V location.

    On April 8 at 5:00pm is "Soul 4 Reel," short films created by new and established filmmakers dealing with "the soul of relationships."

    Alliance Francais
    On April 24 at 6:30pm is Un Amour de Jeunesse (Mia Hansen-Love, 2011) introduced by Nicholas Elliot, US correspondent of Les Cahiers du Cinema who will also lead a discussion on the film and moderate a Q&A.

    George Mason University
    On April 4 at 7:30pm as part of the "GMU Visiting Filmmakers" series is In Lorton's Darkroom (Karen Ruckman), a documentary about inmates in the Lorton Correctional Facility who participated in a photography program. A Q&A with the filmmaker and others follows the screening.



    FILM FESTIVALS

    The Washington DC International Film Festival
    The 32nd Annual Washington DC International Film Festival takes place April 19-29. See above.

    Studio Ghibli Film Series
    Films are shown at Landmark's E Street Cinema, West End Cinema and Bethesda Row Cinema Saturdays at 10:30am in English and Sundays at 10:30am with subtitles. At E Street: My Neighbor Totoro on April 1; Castle in the Sky on April 7 and 8; Howl's Moving Castle on April 14 and 15; Kiki's Delivery Service on April 21 and 22; Princess Mononoke on April 28 and 29. More in May. At West End: Spirited Away on April 1; Nausicaa on April 7 and 8; My Neighbor Totoro on April 14 and 15; Castle in the Sky on April 21 and 22; and Howl's Moving Castle on April 28 and 29. More in May.. At Bethesda Row: Princess Mononoke on April 1; The Wind Rises on April 7 and 8; Spirited Away on April 14 and 15; Nausicaa on April 21 and 22; and My Neighbor Totoro on April 28 and 29. More in May.

    The Northern Virginia Film Festival
    This festival, now in its fourth year runs from April 1-14. Films are shown at Angelika Mosaic. A few titles: Trouble Is My Business, Daily Bread, Expedition Congo, #take me anywhere, 1-2-3 (Gasping for Air), The 5 Year and Daddy Issues. Shorts, documentaries and feature films are shown along with other activities--seminars, panels, parties, receptions and an Oscar-style awards ceremony. See the website for titles and tickets.

    The Baltimore Jewish Film Festival
    The 30th Baltimore Jewish Film Festival runs April 10-May 3. Titles in April include Ben Gurion, Epilogue, 1945, An Israeli Love Story, Sammy Davis Jr.: I've Gotta Be Me, The Cakemaker, Between Worlds, Bye Bye Germany, Shelter and Keep the Change. More in May. See the website for tickets, passes and other information.

    Cinematsuri
    Films from Japan are shown March 18-April 3 at Landmark's E Street Cinema. Titles are TEIICHI-Battle of Supreme High, Life is Fruity, Dear Etranger, Love and Goodbye and Hawaii plus a program of short films. See the website for more information.

    Bethesda Film Festival
    The sixth annual Bethesda Film Festival features five documentaries made by local filmmakers. Screenings are April 6 at 7:00pm and April 7 at 6:00pm and 8:30pm. Titles are Aiven (Enrique Huaiquil; Mama Rwanda (Laura Waters Hinson); Pot of Gold: The Origin of Japanese Bidet (Daiei Onoguchi); Sisterly (Nina Vallado); and Two Steps Back (R. Kayeen Thomas). Discussion with filmmakers follows each film. Films are shown at Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Avenue, Bethesda. See the website for more information.



    FILM-RELATED EXHIBITS

    Goethe Institute
    March 1-April 30. Posters from famous as well as rarely seen or lost Berlin UFA films from the 1920s and 30s portray women as heroines or seductresses, debutantes or harlots. From Sumurun to Metropolis, women are vying for power in male-dominated films. Universum Film AG (UFA), founded in 1917 near Berlin, accompanied film releases in its early decades with elaborate advertising campaigns. In Berlin and Vienna, the two German-language cinema capitals, exclusive movie premiere posters were commissioned by UFA and presented on advertising pillars, walls, and billboards weeks before the release. The posters were designed by the best graphic designers of their time; artists such as Robert L. Leonard, Theo Matejko, Josef Fenneker, Werner Graul, Heinz Schulz-Neudamm, and Peter Pewas. Their works, like the films they promote, were influenced by the contemporary 1920s styles of Expressionism and Neue Sachlichkeit.



    FILM-RELATED MUSIC

    Maryland Theater
    "Disney in Concert: Tale as Old as Time" is on April 7 at 7:00pm and April 8 at 3:00pm. The Maryland Symphony Orchestra and four Broadway-caliber singers accompany animated feature film sequences from Disney films including Frozen, Beauty and the Best, Cinderella, The Little Mermaid, Tangled, The Lion King and more. At the Maryland Theater, 21-27 South Potomac Street, Hagerstown, Maryland.



    FILM-RELATED THEATER

    Kennedy Center
    On April 19, 20 and 21 at 8:00pm and April 22 at 2:00pm is Bergman Films Come To Stage, a theatrical double feature of Ingmar Bergman's Persona and After the Rehearsal, both of which are about theater artists. In Dutch with projected titles, directed by Ivo van Hove. Part of the Bergman 100 Celebration.



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