Toronto Film Festival's 11 Busy Days

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Toronto Film Festival's 11 Busy Days Toronto Film Festival’s 11 Busy Days - NYTimes.com 19/09/2012 16:35 September 14, 2012 Movie Frenzy, but Still Comfy, Eh? By MANOHLA DARGIS TORONTO — The Toronto International Film Festival is where towering achievement meets buckets of blood, where the cinematic highbrow jostles alongside the middle and lower realms for 11 crammed, ecstatic, enervating days and nights. The essential industry event of the fall, now in its 37th year, it is the promised land for distributors looking for product, producers hunting for money and journalists looking for the next big films and faces. Despite the red carpet events and what feels like a tighter embrace of the mainstream, the festival continues to feel appreciably less glamorous than Cannes. It’s homier, more relaxed, which is why you may end up seated near David Geffen at dinner one night or find yourself waiting for vegetarian takeout alongside Paul Dano and Zoe Kazan. Indispensable, and overwhelming. One reason is its scale — this year the festival pulled together 289 features and 83 shorts from 72 countries — which has always made it difficult to get a firm handle on the event. And, unlike Cannes and Berlin, Toronto doesn’t have a competition (or an accompanying sales market), which effectively means that it lacks a recognizable center, a group of films designated as so essential that they’re eligible for the highest honor. Instead, the festival organizes its bounty into sections and under rubrics that seem both obvious (Contemporary World Cinema) and meaningless (Mavericks, Discovery, Vanguard). With so many choices and so little guidance, it can be hard to know which is the right movie to see until you’re sitting in the wrong one. Despite this embarrassment of riches, as well as its stargazing tendencies, Toronto remains a festival that makes room for gloriously, defiantly off-Hollywood work. Some of its consistently most exciting offerings, for instance, continue to be found in Wavelengths. Although this loyally attended section now includes fiction and documentary features, it largely remains the dominion of avant-garde filmmakers like Ernie Gehr, who introduced two short digital works in person: “Departure” (a witty, partly abstracted journey across a New York landscape from the vantage point of an elevated train) and “Auto-Collider XV” (a delve into pure abstraction that transforms passing vehicles into pulsing, zipping streaks of kaleidoscopic color). Mr. Gehr’s recent work will be featured, like a number of Toronto selections, in the New York Film Festival, which starts on Sept. 28. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/15/movies/toronto-film-festivals-11-busy-days.html?hpw&pagewanted=print Page 1 of 4 Toronto Film Festival’s 11 Busy Days - NYTimes.com 19/09/2012 16:35 Other Wavelengths attractions included several short videos, by turns haunting and playful, from the American artist Francesca Woodman, who committed suicide in 1981 at 22. In one video Ms. Woodman covers herself in a white liquid, lies down and, after a few beats, rises and walks off screen, leaving behind a silhouette that evokes the ghastly shadow images of atom bomb casualties. As the camera holds on the silhouette, you hear a painfully girlish voice exclaim her happiness with how it turned out. Another Wavelengths high point, “View From the Acropolis,” is a gorgeous black-and-white short film from the Dutch artists Lonnie van Brummelen and Siebren de Haan that, by juxtaposing ancient ruins with a modern city, becomes a meditation on the transitory. Toronto is a festival where audiences can find themselves oscillating between the sublime and the ridiculous, between selections like “The Master,” Paul Thomas Anderson’s supremely intelligent and controlled inquiry into the cult mind, and “Cloud Atlas,” a megabucks hash of time, space and cinema from the American siblings Andy and Lana Wachowski, and a German confederate, Tom Tykwer. Since “The Master” has opened in the United States, I’ll cut right to “Cloud Atlas,” which is based on the David Mitchell novel and weaves together multiple stories through a lot of airy cosmic convenience and a cavalcade of false noses. Most of these are worn by Tom Hanks, a man of a thousand honkers; some are worn by Halle Berry. Jim Broadbent appears to wear his own schnoz. Each of the stories, which stretch from the 19th century to the dystopian future, centers on a character who, through the familiar combination of self-actualization and community, transcends barriers of the mind, body and soul. Given Lana Wachowski’s transgendered identity (she was a co-director of “The Matrix” trilogy as Larry Wachowski), this invests “Cloud Atlas” with a touchingly personal undertow that skews a little uncomfortable when Hugo Weaving shows up as a woman who bears a resemblance to Ms. Wachowski. Elsewhere, a notary confronts his racial prejudice, a muckraking journalist speaks truth to power, a slave frees herself to unchain the world. Tonally unsteady, with moments of self-aware comedy and many more presumably unintentionally funny ones, the movie is as deeply sincere as it is dopey. It also, ahem, includes a scene of a novelist tossing a critic off a roof. If it didn’t clock in at a numbing 163 minutes, “Cloud Atlas” would, however, make a great double bill with one of the festival’s wackiest selections, the comparatively fleet North Korean fantasia “Comrade Kim Goes Flying.” Trumpeted as the first fiction film bankrolled by a Western company that was shot in North Korea, “Comrade Kim” tracks the fantastic travails and features the many smiles of a chipper young female coal miner, who, like a typical Disney animated princess, dreams a very special dream, in this case one of becoming an acrobat. Crammed with wildly smiling men and women and a lot of chatter about revolutionary spirit and the working class, the movie brings to mind one of those chilling cinematic curios from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/15/movies/toronto-film-festivals-11-busy-days.html?hpw&pagewanted=print Page 2 of 4 Toronto Film Festival’s 11 Busy Days - NYTimes.com 19/09/2012 16:35 China’s Cultural Revolution, which means that it’s both a kitsch hallucination and a disturbing freakout. “Comrade Kim Goes Flying” is precisely the kind of movie that makes Toronto such a crucial festival, though it’s also the sort of title that can become lost among the big-ticket attractions. Like a lot of my colleagues, I was anxious to see “The Master,” even though it would be open by the time I returned home. With practice, savvy festivalgoers learn how to strike a balance between high-profile selections and those that have little publicity and marketing muscle. Yet it’s hard not to wish that the festival did more to push under-the-radar titles like Jem Cohen‘s “Museum Hours” into the foreground. A delicate, quiet, sometimes gravely moving symphony of Vienna, the movie traces two strangers — an American visitor and an Austrian museum guard — who become acquaintances over many conversations and through long, lonely walks captured by this filmmaker’s gimlet eye. “Museum Hours” is sure to show up again either in other festivals or independent theaters. Among some of the other entries that are definitely headed to the New York Film Festival are two period pieces that meld the political with the profoundly personal: “Barbara,” from the German director Christian Petzold, and “Ginger and Rosa,” from the British filmmaker Sally Potter. Set in East Germany in the 1980s, “Barbara” stars Nina Hoss, at once reserved and emotionally transparent, as a doctor who’s forced to choose between her desire for freedom and the lives of others. Anchored by a sensational Elle Fanning, “Ginger and Rosa,” set in London in the early 1960s, weds a coming-of-age story with a larger generational tale about life in the shadow of a potential nuclear holocaust. For much of this year’s festival, many more eyes and much more chatter were focused on movies like Joe Wright’s “Anna Karenina,” a travesty with a miscast Keira Knightley that is tragic only in its conception and execution, and Terrence Malick’s “To the Wonder,” a wonderment of an unfortunate type that combines many images of young women running through sun-dappled rooms and fields amid musings about Jesus Christ. And then there’s “Silver Linings Playbook,” the latest family comedy from David O. Russell, which takes place on solid terra firma where people eat, drink, work, talk — and, this being a David O. Russell encounter session — yell at one another as they grapple with many of the same Big Questions as Mr. Malick’s twirling, skipping, running, whispering and endlessly posing avatars. MORE IN MOVIES (14 OF 54 ARTICLES) ArtsBeat | Video: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/15/movies/toronto-film-festivals-11-busy-days.html?hpw&pagewanted=print Page 3 of 4 Toronto Film Festival’s 11 Busy Days - NYTimes.com 19/09/2012 16:35 ArtsBeat | Video: Fundamentals From Mira Nair Read More » http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/15/movies/toronto-film-festivals-11-busy-days.html?hpw&pagewanted=print Page 4 of 4.
Recommended publications
  • Bigelow Masculinity
    Networking Knowledge: Journal of the MeCCSA Postgraduate Network, Vol. 4, No. 1 (2011) Article TOUGH GUY IN DRAG? HOW THE EXTERNAL, CRITICAL DISCOURSES SURROUNDING KATHRYN BIGELOW DEMONSTRATE THE WIDER PROBLEMS OF THE GENDER QUESTION. RONA MURRAY, De Montford University ABSTRACT This article argues that the various approaches adopted towards Kathryn Bigelow’s work, and their tendency to focus on a gendered discourse, obscures the wider political discourses these texts contain. In particular, by analysing the representation of masculinity across the films, it is possible to see how the work of this director and her collaborators is equally representative of its cultural context and how it uses the trope of the male body as a site for a dialectical study of the uses and status of male strength within an imperialistically-minded western society. KEYWORDS Counter-cultural, feminism, feminist, gender, masculinity, western. ISSN 1755-9944 1 Networking Knowledge: Journal of the MeCCSA Postgraduate Network, Vol. 4, No. 1 (2011) Whether the director Kathryn Bigelow likes it or not, gender has been made to lie at the heart of her work, not simply as it figures in her texts but also as it is used to initiate discussion about her own function/place as an auteur? Her career illustrates how the personal becomes the political not via individual agency but in the way she has come to stand as a particular cultural symbol – as a woman directing men in male-orientated action genres. As this persona has become increasingly loaded with various significances, it has begun to alter the interpretations of her films.
    [Show full text]
  • Female Director Takes Hollywood by Storm: Is She a Beauty Or a Visionary?
    Western Oregon University Digital Commons@WOU Honors Senior Theses/Projects Student Scholarship 6-1-2016 Female Director Takes Hollywood by Storm: Is She a Beauty or a Visionary? Courtney Richardson Western Oregon University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/honors_theses Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons Recommended Citation Richardson, Courtney, "Female Director Takes Hollywood by Storm: Is She a Beauty or a Visionary?" (2016). Honors Senior Theses/Projects. 107. https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/honors_theses/107 This Undergraduate Honors Thesis/Project is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Scholarship at Digital Commons@WOU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Senior Theses/Projects by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@WOU. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]. Female Director Takes Hollywood by Storm: Is She a Beauty or a Visionary? By Courtney Richardson An Honors Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation from the Western Oregon University Honors Program Dr. Shaun Huston, Thesis Advisor Dr. Gavin Keulks, Honors Program Director Western Oregon University June 2016 2 Acknowledgements First I would like to say a big thank you to my advisor Dr. Shaun Huston. He agreed to step in when my original advisor backed out suddenly and without telling me and really saved the day. Honestly, that was the most stressful part of the entire process and knowing that he was available if I needed his help was a great relief. Second, a thank you to my Honors advisor Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Creative Industries: Behind the Scenes Inequalities
    Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Sociology Theses Department of Sociology Fall 12-17-2019 CREATIVE INDUSTRIES: BEHIND THE SCENES INEQUALITIES Sierra C. Nicely Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/sociology_theses Recommended Citation Nicely, Sierra C., "CREATIVE INDUSTRIES: BEHIND THE SCENES INEQUALITIES." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2019. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/sociology_theses/86 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Sociology at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Sociology Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CREATIVE INDUSTRIES: BEHIND THE SCENES INEQUALITIES by SIERRA NICELY Under the Direction of Wendy Simonds, PhD ABSTRACT Film has been a major influence since its creation in the early 20th century. Women have always been involved in the creation of film as a cultural product. However, they have rarely been given positions of power in major film productions. Using qualitative approaches, I examine the different ways in which men and women directors approach creating film. I examine 20 films, half were directed by men and half by women. I selected the twenty films out of two movie genres: Action and Romantic Comedy. These genres were chosen because of their very gendered marketing. My focus was on the different ways in which gender was shown on screen and the differences in approach by men and women directors. The research showed differences in approach of gender but also different approaches in race and sexuality. Future studies should include more analysis on differences by race and sexuality.
    [Show full text]
  • A Look at Race-Based Casting and How It Legalizes Racism, Despite Title VII Laws Latonja Sinckler
    Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law Volume 22 | Issue 4 Article 3 2014 And the Oscar Goes to; Well, It Can't Be You, Can It: A Look at Race-Based Casting and How It Legalizes Racism, Despite Title VII Laws Latonja Sinckler Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/jgspl Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Sinckler, Latonja. "And the Oscar Goes to; Well, It Can't Be You, Can It: A Look at Race-Based Casting and How It Legalizes Racism, Despite Title VII Laws." American University Journal of Gender Social Policy and Law 22, no. 4 (2014): 857-891. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Washington College of Law Journals & Law Reviews at Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Gender, Social Policy & the Law by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ American University Washington College of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Sinckler: And the Oscar Goes to; Well, It Can't Be You, Can It: A Look at R AND THE OSCAR GOES TO . WELL, IT CAN’T BE YOU, CAN IT?: A LOOK AT RACE-BASED CASTING AND HOW IT LEGALIZES RACISM, DESPITE TITLE VII LAWS LATONJA SINCKLER I. Introduction ............................................................................................ 858 II. Background ........................................................................................... 862 A. Justifications for Race-Based Casting........................................ 862 1. Authenticity ......................................................................... 862 2. Marketability ....................................................................... 869 B. Stereotyping and Supporting Roles for Minorities .................... 876 III. Analysis ............................................................................................... 878 A. Title VII and the BFOQ Exception ............................................ 878 B.
    [Show full text]
  • INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE on PHILOSOPHY and FILM Thinking Reality and Time Through Film
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHILOSOPHY AND FILM Thinking Reality and Time through Film ………………………………………………………………………….………….. …………………………………………………………………………….………….. 1 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHILOSOPHY AND FILM Thinking Reality and Time through Film ………………………………………………………………………….………….. Thinking Reality and Time through Film Proceedings of the International Lisbon Conference on Philosophy and Film: PROGRAMME OVERVIEWS ABSTRACTS CV’S CONTACTS Edited by Susana Viegas …………………………………………………………………………….………….. 2 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHILOSOPHY AND FILM Thinking Reality and Time through Film ………………………………………………………………………….………….. Thinking Reality and Time through Film Proceedings of the International Lisbon Conference on Philosophy and Film - 6-10 May of 2014 Conference Directors Christine Reeh José Manuel Martins Pedro Calafate Scientific Committee Christine Reeh Claudio Rozzoni José Manuel Martins Maria Teresa Teixeira Susana Viegas Toni Hildebrandt Organizing Comittee Ângela Marques Carla Simões Filipa Afonso Filipa Seabra Filipe Pinto Isabel Machado Joana Ferreira Held at the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon, National Library, Portuguese Film Museum and the Goethe-Institut Lissabon. Organized by the Centro de Filosofia da Universidade de Lisboa in collaboration with C.R.I.M. Productions, and the Goethe Institut Lissabon. Sponsored by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. …………………………………………………………………………….………….. 3 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHILOSOPHY AND FILM Thinking Reality and Time through Film ………………………………………………………………………….………….
    [Show full text]
  • Public Advocacy by the Roman Catholic Church and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in the Twenty-First Century
    UNLV Retrospective Theses & Dissertations 1-1-2008 Public advocacy by the Roman Catholic Church and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in the twenty-first century Michele L Cannella University of Nevada, Las Vegas Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/rtds Repository Citation Cannella, Michele L, "Public advocacy by the Roman Catholic Church and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in the twenty-first century" (2008). UNLV Retrospective Theses & Dissertations. 2341. http://dx.doi.org/10.25669/mfyp-xhrn This Thesis is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Thesis in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/ or on the work itself. This Thesis has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Retrospective Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PUBLIC ADVOCACY BY THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH AND THE UNITED STATES CONFERENCE OF CATHOLIC BISHOPS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY by Michele L. Cannella Bachelor of Arts University of Nevada, Reno 2005 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Master of Arts Degree in Communication Studies Department of Communication Studies Greenspun College of Urban Affairs Graduate College University of Nevada, Las Vegas August 2008 UMI Number: 1460461 INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted.
    [Show full text]
  • Postclassical Hollywood/Postmodern Subjectivity Representation In
    Postclassical Hollywood/Postmodern Subjectivity Representation in Some ‘Indie/Alternative’ Indiewood Films Jessica Murrell Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Discipline of English Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Adelaide August 2010 Contents Abstract .................................................................................................................. iii Declaration ............................................................................................................. iv Acknowledgements.................................................................................................. v Introduction ........................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1. Critical Concepts/Critical Contexts: Postmodernism, Hollywood, Indiewood, Subjectivity ........................................................................................12 Defining the Postmodern.....................................................................................13 Postmodernism, Cinema, Hollywood. .................................................................22 Defining Indiewood. ...........................................................................................44 Subjectivity and the Classical Hollywood Cinema...............................................52 Chapter 2. Depthlessness in American Psycho and Being John Malkovich.........61 Depthlessness, Hermeneutics, Subjectivity..........................................................63
    [Show full text]
  • The Loft Cinema Film Guide
    loftcinema.org THE LOFT CINEMA Showtimes: FILM GUIDE 520-795-7777 JANUARY 2020 WWW.LOFTCINEMA.ORG See what films are playing next, buy tickets, look up showtimes & much more! ENJOY BEER & WINE AT THE LOFT CINEMA! We also offer Fresco Pizza*, Tamales from Tucson Tamale Company, Burritos from Tumerico, and Ethiopian Wraps JANUARY 2020 from Cafe Desta, along with organic popcorn, craft chocolate bars, vegan cookies and more! LOFT MEMBERSHIPS 5 *Pizza served after 5pm daily. NEW FILMS 6-15 35MM SCREENINGS 6 REEL READS SELECTION 12 BEER OF THE MONTH: 70MM SCREENINGS 26, 28 40 HOPPY ANNIVERSARY ALE OSCAR SHORTS 20 SIERRA NEVADA BREWING CO. RED CARPET EVENING 21 ONLY $3.50 WHILE SUPPLIES LAST! SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS 22-30 LOFT JR. 24 CLOSED CAPTIONS & AUDIO DESCRIPTIONS! ESSENTIAL CINEMA 25 The Loft Cinema offers Closed Captions and Audio LOFT STAFF SELECTS 29 Descriptions for films whenever they are available. Check our COMMUNITY RENTALS 31-33 website to see which films offer this technology. MONDO MONDAYS 38 CULT CLASSICS 39 FILM GUIDES ARE AVAILABLE AT: FREE MEMBERS SCREENING • 1702 Craft Beer & • Epic Cafe • R-Galaxy Pizza 63 UP • Ermanos • Raging Sage (SEE PAGE 8) • aLoft Hotel • Fantasy Comics • Rocco’s Little FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, AT 7:00PM • Antigone Books • First American Title Chicago • Aqua Vita • Frominos • SW University of • Black Crown Visual Arts REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES • Heroes & Villains Coffee • Shot in the Dark $9.75 - Adult | $7.25 - Matinee* • Hotel Congress $8.00 - Student, Teacher, Military • Black Rose Tattoo Cafe • Humanities $6.75 - Senior (65+) or Child (12 & under) • Southern AZ AIDS $6.00 - Loft Members • Bookman’s Seminars Foundation *MATINEE: ANY SCREENING BEFORE 4:00PM • Bookstop • Jewish Community • The Historic Y Tickets are available to purchase online at: • Borderlands Center • Time Market loftcinema.org/showtimes Brewery • KXCI or by calling: 520-795-0844 • Tucson Hop Shop • Brooklyn Pizza • La Indita • UA Media Arts Phone & Web orders are subject to a • Cafe Luce • Maynard’s Market $1 surcharge.
    [Show full text]
  • At Chautauqua Institution 2007 FESTIVAL from HERE to ETERNITY for the BIBLE TELLS ME SO AMAZING GRACE
    2007 FESTIVAL READ CAREFULLY Schedule format has changed. 2 716-357-2352 Program #2 (out of 4) At Chautauqua Institution July 6 - July 26 www.uniplexcinemas.com (Regular "Gate Fee" Not Charged Cinema Patrons from the Surrounding Area) Writer, director and co-star Adrienne Shelly (sadly murdered last fall in New York before her film's rousing Sundance Fri. 7/6 - 7:10 9:40 debut) has served up a tart, smart, and sassy romantic comedy about Jenna (Keri Russell) a pregnant small town waitress emotionally caught between a selfish husband and her caring doctor. "Finds a perfect, difficult-to-achieve Sat. 7/7 - 7:10 9:40 balance of enchantment and plausibility." - A.O. Scott, NY Times. "Draws us in with its wit, warmth and quirkily - 2:15 4:30 appealing characters." - Claudia Puig, USA Today. (PG-13, 104 min) Sun. 7/8 7:10 9:40 Oscar Winner - Best Foreign Film. Set in 1984 prior to the collapse of the GDR, writer/director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's engrossing and intelligent film traces the gradual disillusionment of Captain Gerd Wiesler - (Ulrich Muhe), a highly skilled officer who works for the Stasi, East Germany’s all-powerful secret police. His mission Mon. 7/9 6:45 9:40 is to spy on a celebrated writer and actress couple (Sebastian Koch and Martina Gedeck). "A deft cautionary tale." - 1:00 3:45 - Desson Thomson, Washington Post. "Wiesler’s evolution from lowly bureaucratic beetle to humanist is staggering." Tue. 7/10 6:45 9:40 - Carrie Rickey, Philadelphia Inquirer (R some sexuality, 137 min., in German with Eng.
    [Show full text]
  • Middle of Nowhere
    MIDDLE OF NOWHERE Written and Directed by Ava DuVernay WINNER! BEST DIRECTOR AWARD SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL 2012 PRESS CONTACT: Tilane Jones | AFFRM | 818.995.0050 | [email protected] PRESS QUOTES NEW YORK TIMES January 27, 2012 | "Amazing Child, Typical Grown-Ups" by Manohla Dargis "Further under the radar though far more successful is "Middle of Nowhere," a heartfelt, slow to build, slow to burn drama from Ava DuVernay about a young married woman, Ruby (Emayatzy Corinealdi), keeping body and soul together while her husband, Derek (Omari Hardwick), serves out his sentence in a California prison. Working with the terrific cinematographer Bradford Young, Ms. DuVernay fills her movie with long shots and meticulously framed images of casual beauty that reflect the quietly evolving inner life of her heroine." LOS ANGELES TIMES January 30, 2012 | "Sundance Film Festival: From 'Beasts' to 'Ice,' wonder wins out" by Kenny Turan "…At the other end of the spectrum is "Middle of Nowhere," winner of the U.S. drama directing prize for Ava DuVernay. This is classic filmmaking of a completely different sort…" THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER January 20, 2012 | Review by John DeFore "Strong performances and a restrained script sell drama about a couple separated by prison walls. Solidly crafted by budding writer-director Ava DuVernay, it should find a warm reception at fests and in a niche theatrical run." LOS ANGELES TIMES January 20, 2012 | "Meaty Roles for Black Actors in MIDDLE OF NOWHERE" "It's a real challenge to find African American characters with depth," Oyelowo said at a post-screening Q&A, "But when I read this, it was just like 'Do the Right Thing,' or 'She's Gotta Have It,' the characters just lept off the page...
    [Show full text]
  • From Lois Weber to Kathryn Bigelow, and the “Chick- Flick” Reputation
    Where are All the Women? From Lois Weber to Kathryn Bigelow, and the “Chick- Flick” Reputation Cathy Kostova, 9 March 2015 I. Intro Manohla Dargis argues[1] that Kathryn Bigelow’s two-fisted win at the Academy Awards, in 2009, for best director and best film, for “The Hurt Locker”, has helped dismantle stereotypes about what types of films women can and should direct. As much as I agree with her that this was a historic and exhilarating moment for women filmmakers all around the world, I find the fact that the Oscar was granted to a movie with no female point of view whatsoever and to a director who tries her best not to be identified as female when it comes to her job, proves that films with strong female characters, and women directors who create such characters, remain very rarely recognized. 1. The Academy Statistics There have been only 4 women nominated for best director, out of the 424 nominations in the history of the Oscars: 1976: Lina Wertmüller for “Seven Beauties” (1975), 1993: Jane Campion for “The Piano” (1993), 2003: Sofia Coppola for “Lost in Translation” (2003), and 2009: Kathryn Bigelow for “The Hurt Locker” (2008) A 2012 survey conducted by the Los Angeles Times found that overall, academy members are 94 percent white and 77 percent male, and that their median age is 62. Cathy Kostova 1 WHERE ARE ALL THE WOMEN? From Lois Weber To Kathryn Bigelow, and the “Chick-Flick” Reputation, 9 March 2015 Women make up 19 percent of the academy’s screenwriting branch and 18 percent of its producers branch, but only 9 percent of its directors branch.
    [Show full text]
  • Stony Brook University
    SSStttooonnnyyy BBBrrrooooookkk UUUnnniiivvveeerrrsssiiitttyyy The official electronic file of this thesis or dissertation is maintained by the University Libraries on behalf of The Graduate School at Stony Brook University. ©©© AAAllllll RRRiiiggghhhtttsss RRReeessseeerrrvvveeeddd bbbyyy AAAuuuttthhhooorrr... Transnational Images in a Global Frame: Film Festivals and Taiwan Cinema through the Lens of Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang A Dissertation Presented by Peijen Beth Tsai to The Graduate School in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Cultural Studies Stony Brook University August 2017 Stony Brook University The Graduate School Peijen Beth Tsai We, the dissertation committee for the above candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree, hereby recommend acceptance of this dissertation. E.K. Tan – Dissertation Advisor Associate Professor, Cultural Studies & Comparative Literature Krin Gabbard – Chairperson of Defense Professor Emeritus, Cultural Studies & Comparative Literature Liz Montegary – Committee Member Assistant Professor, Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Jacqueline Reich – Committee Member Professor and Chair, Communication & Media Studies, Fordham University Guo-Juin Hong – Outside Member Associate Professor, Asian & Middle Eastern Studies, Duke University This dissertation is accepted by the Graduate School Charles Taber Dean of the Graduate School ii Abstract of the Dissertation Transnational Images in a Global Frame: Film Festivals and Taiwan Cinema through the Lens of Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang by Peijen Beth Tsai Doctor of Philosophy in Cultural Studies Stony Brook University 2017 This dissertation examines the geopolitical and cultural dynamics between European and Taiwan cinema. I explore how art house cinema were circulated and received at major European festivals—Berlin, Cannes, and Venice—to question the role that film festivals play in influencing new cinematic styles for local, regional, and global consumption.
    [Show full text]