Mark Kermode's Best Films of 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Mark Kermode's Best Films of 2019 Mark Kermode’s best films of 2019 @KermodeMovie - The Guardian Sun 29 Dec 2019 06.00 GMTLast modified on Tue 31 Dec 2019 15.51 GMT 2019 was the year that Netflix movies came of age, and ageing actors were made young again. At the 91st Oscars in February, the bland Green Book beat the superior BlackKklansman to the best picture award, although Spike Leewon his first competitive Oscar in the adapted screenplay category. Rami Malik scooped best actor for his portrayal of Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody, but best actress Olivia Colman (The Favourite) stole the evening with one of the funniest and most self- deprecating acceptance speeches ever (complete with raspberry-blowing). More significantly, Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma won for cinematography, direction and best foreign language film, despite naysayers’ complaints that Netflix-backed movies were essentially made-for-TV films. That attitude is now history: in the forthcoming awards season, the platform has several contenders, including Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story and Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman. The Irishman marked a watershed moment for “digital de-ageing”, with innovative technology allowing Robert De Niro, Al Pacino and Joe Pesci to play characters much younger than themselves. We’ve seen de-aging elsewhere (from Captain Marvel to Gemini Man), but never this unobtrusively. Alongside the release of its first original animated feature, Sergio Pablos’s Klaus, Netflix also picked up distribution rights for I Lost My Body, which made history when it took the top prize in the Critics’ Week section at Cannes in May. More family-friendly releases – Frozen II, Toy Story 4 and a weirdly photorealist rehash of The Lion King – may have dominated the box office in 2019, but I Lost My Body was my favourite animated film of the year. Other Cannes firsts included Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite (which opens here in February) becoming the first Korean film to win the Palme d’Or; while French-Senegalese film-maker Mati Diop was the first black female film-maker to direct a Palme d’Or contender with the Grand Prix winner Atlantics. The Cannes best actor award went to Antonio Banderas for his career-best turn in Pedro Almodóvar’s semi-autobiographical Pain and Glory. A range of high-quality films from around the world graced UK cinemas in 2019. From Colombia we had Birds of Passage, an arresting tale of gangsters and spirits from the creators of Embrace of the Serpent. Writer-director Nadine Labakiearned an Oscar nomination with Capernaum, about a young boy’s struggles in Lebanon. Meanwhile, Icelandic actor Halldóra Geirharðsdóttir excelled in Woman at War, a jet-black eco- warrior comedy featuring onscreen musical accompaniment with drums, accordion and sousaphone. This year also saw a plethora of brilliant film scores. Standouts included Clint Mansell’s ethereal Out of Blue soundtrack; Anna Meredith’s mesmerising electronica accompaniment to Bo Burnham’s Eighth Grade; Alex Weston’s unexpectedly quirky music for The Farewell; and Mica Levi’s otherworldly score for Monos. My favourite score was by Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, who lent real depth to one of 2019’s most successful and controversial releases, Joker. 1 Great scores weren’t confined to drama: Nainita Desai provided excellent understated accompaniment to For Sama, an astonishing documentary about life under siege in Aleppo, filmed by Syrian citizen-journalist Waad al-Kateab. Matt Morton’s music took audiences into space in Apollo 11, a documentary released on the 50th anniversary of the first moon landing. More down to earth (although no less ecstatic) was Amazing Grace, the long-delayed film of Aretha Franklin’s two-night performance at the New Temple Missionary Baptist church in Los Angeles in 1972. This year also proved to be remarkable for talent grown closer to home. In April, Irish actor and singer Jessie Buckley shone in Tom Harper’s Wild Rose, about a single mother living in Glasgow but dreaming of country music stardom in Nashville. In May, Dexter Fletcher’s Rocketman channelled the spirit of Ken Russell as it turned Elton John’s life into a rip-roaring pop fantasia. June saw the release of Dirty God, boasting a star-making turn from feature first-timer Vicky Knight. And in July, Only You was an extraordinary feature debut from writer-director Harry Wootliff. As summer turned to autumn, Joanna Hogg gave us The Souvenir, in which Honor Swinton Byrne and Tom Burke excelled in a close-to-life story of a relationship built upon deceit. From writer-director Shola Amoo came another autobiographically inspired work, The Last Tree, about a British-Nigerian boy being uprooted from an idyllic rural childhood to face life on the mean streets of London. My favourite film of 2019 was Bait, the breakthrough feature from Cornish film- maker Mark Jenkin. An authentic portrait of tensions between locals and tourists in a once-thriving fishing village, it was shot with clockwork cameras on grainy 16mm stock, which Jenkin hand-processed in his studio in Newlyn. I hope Bait gets the recognition it deserves at the Baftas, alongside films like Ordinary Love, in which Lesley Manville and Liam Neeson play a couple facing her diagnosis of breast cancer. As for the Oscars, it would be good to see nominations for Rian Johnson’s whodunnit Knives Out, Jordan Peele’s chiller Us, and Greta Gerwig’s literary adaptation Little Women, all of which injected new life into die-hard cinematic genres. The top 10 films of 2019 1. Bait Mark Jenkin’s masterpiece is one of the defining British films of the decade. 2. Monos An extraordinary fable of child soldiery from Colombian-Ecuadorian film-maker Alejandro Landes. Advertisement 3. Ordinary Love Co-directors Glenn Leyburn and Lisa Barros D’Sa work wonders with Owen McCafferty’s superb sceenwriting debut. 2 4. Rocketman A full-blooded rock-musical fantasia with a standout turn by Taron Egerton. 5. Only You Josh O’Connor and Laia Costa shine in this perfectly realised tale of love and longing. 6. If Beale Street Could Talk Regina King earned a best supporting actress Oscar for Barry Jenkins’s gem, which opened here in February. 7. For Sama A searing portrait of life during wartime from Waad al-Kateab and Edward Watts. 8. Us Jordan Peele uncovers America’s hidden underclass in this scissor-sharp chiller. 9. Out of Blue Carol Morley sets out to “rescue the characters from the pages” of Martin Amis’s source novel. 10. The Souvenir Joanna Hogg’s most personal film to date, part two of which is due in 2020. Turkey Mektoub My Love: Canto Uno Abdellatif Kechiche’s leering arthouse indulgence should have been called Mektoub My Arse. 3 .
Recommended publications
  • (POST)COLONIAL AFRICA by Katherine Lynn Coverdale the F
    ABSTRACT AN EXPLORATION OF IDENTITY IN CLAIRE DENIS’ AND MATI DIOP’S (POST)COLONIAL AFRICA by Katherine Lynn Coverdale The focus of this thesis is aimed at two female French directors: Claire Denis and Mati Diop. Both auteurs utilize framing to create and subsequently break down ideological boundaries of class and race. Denis’ films Chocolat and White Material show the impossibility of a distinct identity in a racialized post-colonial society for someone who is Other. With the help of Laura Mulvey and Richard Dyer, the first chapter of this work on Claire Denis offers a case study of the relationship between the camera and race seen through a deep analysis of several sequences of those two films. Both films provide an opportunity to analyze how the protagonists’ bodies are perceived on screen as a representation of a racial bias held in reality, as seen in the juxtaposition of light and dark skin tones. The second chapter analyzes themes of migration and the symbolism of the ocean in Diop’s film Atlantique. I argue that these motifs serve to demonstrate how to break out of the identity assigned by society in this more modern post-colonial temporality. All three films are an example of the lasting violence due to colonization and its seemingly inescapable ramifications, specifically as associated with identity. AN EXPLORATION OF IDENTITY IN CLAIRE DENIS’ AND MATI DIOP’S (POST)COLONIAL AFRICA A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Miami University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts by Katherine Lynn Coverdale Miami University Oxford, Ohio 2020 Advisor: Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Blade Runner: the Final Cut Review – a Timeless Sci-Fi Classic | Film | the Guardian 22/01/2018 15:48
    Blade Runner: The Final Cut review – a timeless sci-fi classic | Film | The Guardian 22/01/2018 15:48 Blade Runner: The Final Cut review 6 a Mark Kermode, Observertimeless film sci:fi classic critic RidleySun 5 Apr 2015 Scott’s 07.59 1982BST masterpiece, back on the big screen in this definitive version, is an overwhelming experience ’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe…” When making the 2000 documentary On the Edge of Blade Runner, I asked Rutger Hauer why he thought Harrison Ford was so reluctant to talk about what is now considered a timeless sci-fi classic. “He’s such a dumb character,” Hauer replied “I mischievously of Ford’s android-hunter Deckard. “He gets a gun put to his head and then he fucks a dish-washer!” Ford, with his Star Wars cachet, was Blade Runner’s top-line draw, but it’s Hauer’s movie all the way, his shimmering “replicant” providing the tonal touchstone for Ridley Scott’s severally reworked masterpiece. The Dutch actor even contributed his own infinitely quotable couplet to the film’s epochal “tears in rain” scene, a moment as iconic as Casablanca’s “Here’s looking at you, kid”. As for Deckard, the stooge who falls for Sean https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/apr/05/blade-runner-final-cut-timeless-sci-fi-classic-review Page 1 of 2 Blade Runner: The Final Cut review – a timeless sci-fi classic | Film | The Guardian 22/01/2018 15:48 Young’s artificial charms in rain-drenched 2019 LA, Scott had his own way of explaining Ford’s robotic performance, a unicorn-themed conceit drawn not from Philip K Dick’s source but born out of a simple miscommunication between screenwriters Hampton Fancher and David Peoples.
    [Show full text]
  • Television Academy Awards
    2021 Primetime Emmy® Awards Ballot Outstanding Music Composition For A Series (Original Dramatic Score) The Alienist: Angel Of Darkness Belly Of The Beast After the horrific murder of a Lying-In Hospital employee, the team are now hot on the heels of the murderer. Sara enlists the help of Joanna to tail their prime suspect. Sara, Kreizler and Moore try and put the pieces together. Bobby Krlic, Composer All Creatures Great And Small (MASTERPIECE) Episode 1 James Herriot interviews for a job with harried Yorkshire veterinarian Siegfried Farnon. His first day is full of surprises. Alexandra Harwood, Composer American Dad! 300 It’s the 300th episode of American Dad! The Smiths reminisce about the funniest thing that has ever happened to them in order to complete the application for a TV gameshow. Walter Murphy, Composer American Dad! The Last Ride Of The Dodge City Rambler The Smiths take the Dodge City Rambler train to visit Francine’s Aunt Karen in Dodge City, Kansas. Joel McNeely, Composer American Gods Conscience Of The King Despite his past following him to Lakeside, Shadow makes himself at home and builds relationships with the town’s residents. Laura and Salim continue to hunt for Wednesday, who attempts one final gambit to win over Demeter. Andrew Lockington, Composer Archer Best Friends Archer is head over heels for his new valet, Aleister. Will Archer do Aleister’s recommended rehabilitation exercises or just eat himself to death? JG Thirwell, Composer Away Go As the mission launches, Emma finds her mettle as commander tested by an onboard accident, a divided crew and a family emergency back on Earth.
    [Show full text]
  • Editorial Standards Committee Bulletin
    Editorial Standards Findings Appeals to the Trust and other editorial issues considered by the Editorial Standards Committee February 2016, issued March 2016 Getting the best out of the BBC for licence fee payers Contents Contents 1 Remit of the Editorial Standards Committee 2 Summary of findings 4 Appeal Findings 7 Panorama: GM Food - Cultivating Fe a r, BBC One, 8 June 2015 7 The Stephen Nolan Show, BBC Radio 5 Live, 3 April 2015, and more generally 25 Requests to review the Trust Unit’s decisions on appeals 31 Scotland 2015, BBC Two Scotland, 7 September 2015 31 Breakfast Show with Nick Grimshaw, BBC Radio 1, 6 August 2015 36 Appeals against the decisions of BBC Audience Services and BBC News not to correspond further with the complainant 39 Decision of BBC Audience Services not to respond further to a complaint about Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu's 44-second UN silence, BBC News online 40 Decision of BBC Audience Services not to respond further to a complaint about Kermode and Mayo’s Film Review, BBC Radio 5 live, 16 October 2015 44 Decision of BBC Audience Services not to respond further to a complaint about Inside Out (Yorkshire, East Yorkshire & Lincolnshire) 12 October 2015 47 Decision of BBC Audience Services not to respond further to a complaint about Today, Radio 4, 12 August 2015 52 Decision of BBC Audience Services not to respond further to a complaint about Today, BBC Radio 4, 6 October 2015 55 Admissibility decisions 58 Newsnight, BBC Two, 17 March 2015 59 Match of the Day 2, BBC One, 13 September 2015 61 In order to provide clarity for the BBC and licence fee payers it is the Trust’s policy to describe fully the content that is subject to complaints and appeals.
    [Show full text]
  • Blackbourn Veronica a 20101
    The Beloved and Other Monsters: Biopolitics and the Rhetoric of Reconciliation in Post-1994 South African Literature by Veronica A. Blackbourn A thesis submitted to the Department of English Language and Literature In conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen‘s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada (December, 2010) Copyright © Veronica A. Blackbourn, 2010 Abstract This dissertation examines the use of inter-racial relationships as emblems of political reconciliation in South African fiction from and about the transition from apartheid to democracy. Positive representations of the relationships that apartheid prohibited would seem to constitute a rejection of apartheid itself, but through an analysis of novels by Lewis DeSoto, Elleke Boehmer, Zoë Wicomb, Marlene van Niekerk, Ivan Vladislavić, and J.M. Coetzee, I argue that the trope of the redemptive inter-racial relationship in fact reinscribes what Foucault would designate a biopolitical obsession with race as a foundational construct of the nation. Chapter 2 examines an attempt to write against the legacy of apartheid by repurposing the quintessentially South African genre of the plaasroman, but Lewis DeSoto‘s A Blade of Grass (2003) fails to reverse the narrative effects created by the plaasroman structure, implicated as the plaasroman is and has been in a biopolitical framework. Chapter 3 examines Elleke Boehmer‘s rewriting of South African history to insist on the genealogical ―truth‖ of the racial mixing of the country and its inhabitants, but Bloodlines (2000) yet retains the obsession with racial constructs that it seeks to dispute. Zoë Wicomb‘s Playing in the Light (2006), meanwhile, invokes genealogical ―truth‖ as a corrective to apartheid constructions of race, but ultimately disallows the possibility of genealogical and historical narratives as correctives rather than continuations of apartheid.
    [Show full text]
  • BBC Four Programme Information
    SOUND OF CINEMA: THE MUSIC THAT MADE THE MOVIES BBC Four Programme Information Neil Brand presenter and composer said, “It's so fantastic that the BBC, the biggest producer of music content, is showing how music works for films this autumn with Sound of Cinema. Film scores demand an extraordinary degree of both musicianship and dramatic understanding on the part of their composers. Whilst creating potent, original music to synchronise exactly with the images, composers are also making that music as discreet, accessible and communicative as possible, so that it can speak to each and every one of us. Film music demands the highest standards of its composers, the insight to 'see' what is needed and come up with something new and original. With my series and the other content across the BBC’s Sound of Cinema season I hope that people will hear more in their movies than they ever thought possible.” Part 1: The Big Score In the first episode of a new series celebrating film music for BBC Four as part of a wider Sound of Cinema Season on the BBC, Neil Brand explores how the classic orchestral film score emerged and why it’s still going strong today. Neil begins by analysing John Barry's title music for the 1965 thriller The Ipcress File. Demonstrating how Barry incorporated the sounds of east European instruments and even a coffee grinder to capture a down at heel Cold War feel, Neil highlights how a great composer can add a whole new dimension to film. Music has been inextricably linked with cinema even since the days of the "silent era", when movie houses employed accompanists ranging from pianists to small orchestras.
    [Show full text]
  • The Performance and Materiality of the Processes, Spaces and Labor of VFX Production
    Sarah Atkinson Interactive ‘making-of’ machines: The performance and materiality of the processes, spaces and labor of VFX production Abstract This article analyzes and interrogates two interactive museum installations designed to reveal behind-the-scenes visual effects (VFX) materials from Inception (2010) and Gravity (2013). The multi-screen, interactive, and immersive installations were both created in direct collaboration with the VFX supervisors who were responsible for pioneering the new and innovative creative solutions in each of the films. The installations translate these processes for a wider audience and as such they not only provide rich sites for textual analysis as new ancillary forms of paratextual access, but they also provide insights into the way that VFX sector presents itself, situated within the wider context of the current global VFX industry. The article draws together critical production studies, textual analysis, and reflections from the industry which, combined, provide new understandings of these interactive forms of ancillary film “making-of ” content, their performative dimensions, and the labor processes that they reveal. Context their conception and presentation within the wider context of the current global VFX industry. This article analyzes and interrogates two interactive The decadent displays of VFX excess and access museum installations that were designed to reveal presented in both installations are representative of behind-the-scenes materials from Inception (2010) the currently flourishing VFX industry within the and Gravity (2013) in order to showcase the UK which has been boosted in recent years, by a acclaimed, breakthrough visual effects (VFX) of system of tax incentives which have been in place 3 each of the films.
    [Show full text]
  • The Commutation Test and Chris Bacon's Score for Source Code As
    The Commutation Test and Chris Bacon’s Score for Source Code as a Framework for Film Music Pedagogy Aaron Ziegel, Towson University he cinema, whether experienced at the neighborhood multiplex or streamed at home, is arguably the medium through which today’s col- lege-age Americans are most likely to encounter newly composed sym- Tphonic music. Given the ubiquity of the film-viewing experience, students are often eager to learn the tools and methodologies that can equip them to criti- cally assess and more fully comprehend the function of music in movies. The filmSource Code (2011), directed by Duncan Jones and scored by Chris Bacon, provides a particularly effective starting point through which this process can begin.1 This article will discuss the pedagogical potential found in the film’s main titles and the impact of applying a commutation test to this sequence. Although here I address one specific example, the methodology of the commu- tation test is easily adaptable to other circumstances, as the theoretical foun- dation will make clear. While variations on the commutation test are a regular occurrence in many film music classrooms, this essay aims to present an intro- ductory primer that may be of use to instructors interested in an entry point for incorporating film music studies into their teaching. With that in mind, the appendix presents one suggestion for how to create film clips for classroom use. The value of this classroom activity extends beyond providing students with an engaging and memorable learning experience. By situating this analysis I wish to express my gratitude to the many students at Towson University whose feedback and enthusiastic classroom participation, along with suggestions from the anonymous reviewers, helped me to refine the pedagogical approach described in this essay.
    [Show full text]
  • Reminder List of Productions Eligible for the 90Th Academy Awards Alien
    REMINDER LIST OF PRODUCTIONS ELIGIBLE FOR THE 90TH ACADEMY AWARDS ALIEN: COVENANT Actors: Michael Fassbender. Billy Crudup. Danny McBride. Demian Bichir. Jussie Smollett. Nathaniel Dean. Alexander England. Benjamin Rigby. Uli Latukefu. Goran D. Kleut. Actresses: Katherine Waterston. Carmen Ejogo. Callie Hernandez. Amy Seimetz. Tess Haubrich. Lorelei King. ALL I SEE IS YOU Actors: Jason Clarke. Wes Chatham. Danny Huston. Actresses: Blake Lively. Ahna O'Reilly. Yvonne Strahovski. ALL THE MONEY IN THE WORLD Actors: Christopher Plummer. Mark Wahlberg. Romain Duris. Timothy Hutton. Charlie Plummer. Charlie Shotwell. Andrew Buchan. Marco Leonardi. Giuseppe Bonifati. Nicolas Vaporidis. Actresses: Michelle Williams. ALL THESE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS AMERICAN ASSASSIN Actors: Dylan O'Brien. Michael Keaton. David Suchet. Navid Negahban. Scott Adkins. Taylor Kitsch. Actresses: Sanaa Lathan. Shiva Negar. AMERICAN MADE Actors: Tom Cruise. Domhnall Gleeson. Actresses: Sarah Wright. AND THE WINNER ISN'T ANNABELLE: CREATION Actors: Anthony LaPaglia. Brad Greenquist. Mark Bramhall. Joseph Bishara. Adam Bartley. Brian Howe. Ward Horton. Fred Tatasciore. Actresses: Stephanie Sigman. Talitha Bateman. Lulu Wilson. Miranda Otto. Grace Fulton. Philippa Coulthard. Samara Lee. Tayler Buck. Lou Lou Safran. Alicia Vela-Bailey. ARCHITECTS OF DENIAL ATOMIC BLONDE Actors: James McAvoy. John Goodman. Til Schweiger. Eddie Marsan. Toby Jones. Actresses: Charlize Theron. Sofia Boutella. 90th Academy Awards Page 1 of 34 AZIMUTH Actors: Sammy Sheik. Yiftach Klein. Actresses: Naama Preis. Samar Qupty. BPM (BEATS PER MINUTE) Actors: 1DKXHO 3«UH] %LVFD\DUW $UQDXG 9DORLV $QWRLQH 5HLQDUW] )«OL[ 0DULWDXG 0«GKL 7RXU« Actresses: $GªOH +DHQHO THE B-SIDE: ELSA DORFMAN'S PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY BABY DRIVER Actors: Ansel Elgort. Kevin Spacey. Jon Bernthal. Jon Hamm. Jamie Foxx.
    [Show full text]
  • Download a PDF Version of the Official
    “To Open Minds, To Educate Intelligence, To Inform Decisions” The International Academic Forum provides new perspectives to the thought-leaders and decision-makers of today and tomorrow by offering constructive environments for dialogue and interchange at the intersections of nation, culture, and discipline. Headquartered in Nagoya, Japan, and registered as a Non-Profit Organization 一般社( 団法人) , IAFOR is an independent think tank committed to the deeper understanding of contemporary geo-political transformation, particularly in the Asia Pacific Region. INTERNATIONAL INTERCULTURAL INTERDISCIPLINARY iafor The Executive Council of the International Advisory Board Mr Mitsumasa Aoyama Professor June Henton Professor Baden Offord Director, The Yufuku Gallery, Tokyo, Japan Dean, College of Human Sciences, Auburn University, Professor of Cultural Studies and Human Rights & Co- USA Director of the Centre for Peace and Social Justice Southern Cross University, Australia Lord Charles Bruce Professor Michael Hudson Lord Lieutenant of Fife President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term Professor Frank S. Ravitch Chairman of the Patrons of the National Galleries of Economic Trends (ISLET) Professor of Law & Walter H. Stowers Chair in Law Scotland Distinguished Research Professor of Economics, The and Religion, Michigan State University College of Law Trustee of the Historic Scotland Foundation, UK University of Missouri, Kansas City Professor Richard Roth Professor Donald E. Hall Professor Koichi Iwabuchi Senior Associate Dean, Medill School of Journalism, Herbert J. and Ann L. Siegel Dean Professor of Media and Cultural Studies & Director of Northwestern University, Qatar Lehigh University, USA the Monash Asia Institute, Monash University, Australia Former Jackson Distinguished Professor of English Professor Monty P.
    [Show full text]
  • May 2019 Digital
    MAY 2019 80 YEARS OF CINEMA MAY 2019 MAY GLASGOWFILM.ORG | 0141 332 6535 CINEMASTERS: HIROKAZU KORE-EDA | ITALIAN FILM FESTIVAL | HIGH LIFE 12 ROSE STREET, GLASGOW, G3 6RB WOMAN AT WAR | TOLKIEN | VOX LUX | FINAL ASCENT | AMAZING GRACE CONTENTS Access Film Club: Eighth Grade 20 Nobody Knows 9 The Straight Story - 35mm 8 Amazing Grace 13 Shoplifters 10 MOVIE MEMORIES Arctic 14 Still Walking 9 Rebecca 19 Ash Is Purest White 15 CINEMASTERS: Rebel Without a Cause 19 Beats 14 STANLEY KUBRICK SCOTTISH MENTAL HEALTH Birds of Passage 14 2001: A Space Odyssey 10 ARTS FESTIVAL Dead Good 5 Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to 10 Evelyn + Skype Q&A 8 Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb Donbass 15 Irene’s Ghost + Q&A 8 13 Full Metal Jacket 10 Eighth Grade SPECIAL EVENTS Final Ascent 13 EVENT CINEMA Asbury Park: 6 Have You Seen My Movie? 13 Bolshoi Ballet: Carmen Suite/Petrushka 18 Riot, Redemption, Rock ‘n’ Roll High Life 14 Margaret Atwood: Live in Cinemas 18 Cléo from 5 to 7 6 The Keeper 15 NT Live: All My Sons 18 Crossing the Line: Al Ghorba: 6 Madeline’s Madeline 14 NT Live Encore: One Man, Two Guvnors 18 Be:Longing in Britain The Thing 14 NT Live: The Lehman Trilogy 18 Dead Good + Q&A 5 Tolkien 15 NT Live: Small Island 18 Inquiring Nuns + Skype Q&A 7 Neither Wolf Nor Dog + Q&A 7 @glasgowfilm Too Late to Die Young 15 ITALIAN FILM FESTIVAL Visible Cinema: Edie 20 Capri-Revolution 11 Preview: Freedom Fields + Q&A 6 Vox Lux 13 The Conformist 11 Preview: In Fabric + Q&A 7 Woman at War 13 Daughter of Mine 12 Preview: Sunset - 35mm + Q&A 5 XY Chelsea 15
    [Show full text]
  • View the 2021 Project Dossier
    www.durbanfilmmart.com Project Dossier Contents Message from the Chair 3 Combat de Nègre et de Chiens (Black Battle with Dogs) 50 introduction and Come Sunrise, We Shall Rule 52 welcome 4 Conversations with my Mother 54 Drummies 56 Partners and Sponsors 6 Forget Me Not 58 MENTORS 8 Frontier Mistress 60 Hamlet from the Slums 62 DFM Mentors 8 Professional Mourners 64 Talents Durban Mentors 10 Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro 66 Jumpstart Mentors 13 Sakan Lelmoghtrebat (A House For Expats) 68 OFFICAL DFM PROJECTS The Day and Night of Brahma 70 Documentaries 14 The Killing of A Beast 72 Defying Ashes 15 The Mailman, The Mantis, and The Moon 74 Doxandem, les chasseurs de rêves Pretty Hustle 76 (Dream Chasers) 17 Dusty & Stones 19 DFM Access 78 Eat Bitter 21 DFM Access Mentors 79 Ethel 23 PARTNER PROJECTS IN My Plastic Hair 25 FINANCE FORUM 80 Nzonzing 27 Hot Docs-Blue Ice Docs Part of the Pack 29 Fund Fellows 81 The Possessed Painter: In the Footsteps The Mother of All Lies 82 of Abbès Saladi 31 The Wall of Death 84 The Woman Who Poked The Leopard 33 What’s Eating My Mind 86 Time of Pandemics 35 Unfinished Journey 37 Talents Durban 88 Untitled: Miss Africa South 39 Feature Fiction: Bosryer (Bushrider) 89 Wataalat Loughatou él Kalami (Such a Silent Cry) 41 Rosa Baila! (Dance Rosa) 90 Windward 43 Kinafo 91 L’Aurore Boréale (The Northern Lights) 92 Fiction 45 The Path of Ruganzu Part 2 93 2065 46 Yvette 94 Akashinga 48 DURBAN FILMMART 1 PROJECT DOSSIER 2021 CONTENTS Short Fiction: Bedrock 129 Crisis 95 God’s Work 131 Mob Passion 96 Soweto on Fire 133
    [Show full text]