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09
SEP
The Times BFI 53rd London Film Festival Press Launch
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The most significant two weeks in the British calendar for film are soon upon us, and it’s easy and indeed perfectly justified to begin feeling ridiculously excited now that the programme for The Times BFI 53rd London Film Festival has been announced.

At the press launch this morning in the Odeon Leicester Square we were treated to 30 minutes of choice footage from some of the most anticipated films in the line-up of this year’s festival, which runs from October 14 to 29, and from just this brief morsel of the cornucopia of features, shorts and animation included in the diverse selection, it’s already clear that there is definitely a lot to look forward to.

For the festival’s prestigious Opening Night, Wes Anderson’s very entertaining-looking Fantastic Mr. Fox will have its world premiere and the director and some cast members, including Meryl Streep, George Clooney, Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman and Helen McCrory, will all be in attendance. As the other bookend to the festival, Sam Taylor-Wood’s highly anticipated Nowhere Boy, which looks at the early life of John Lennon, will premiere at the Closing Night Gala.

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Also debuting on the London streets is the brilliant looking off-key comedy The Men Who Stare At Goats, which sees George Clooney as a supposed psychic soldier and part of an elite team that claims to be able to pass through solid walls and kill goats just by staring at them. Others that will hopefully tickle our funny bone will be The Informant!, for which director Steven Soderbergh will be in attendance, and the Coen Brothers’ A Serious Man, while John Hillcoat’s apocalyptic The Road and the Julianne Moore and Liam Neeson-starrer Chloe will give our brains a thought-provoking workout.

Of the number of representatives of French cinema that the festival is playing host to this year, just some of the many to look forward to are MICMACS, which looks characteristically whimsical from the Amelie helmer Jean-Pierre Jeunet, and Jacque Audiard’s A  Prophet, whose visceral intensity and prison-set crime drama gives it a sense of adrenalin a la this year’s Mesrine.

Also standing out from the crowd was Michael Haneke’s return to German language cinema in The White Ribbon, a black-and-white film looking at rural life in a German village preceding the First World War. Newcomer Malcolm Venville’s 44 Inch Chest offered up a memorable snippet of a prostrate Ray Winstone in a trashed apartment, while 30 seconds of Jim Jamusch’s The Limits Of Control was enough to garner interest in the director’s latest smart and bizarre work.

The list goes on. That summation only touches upon a handful of the treats in store in a festival line-up that ranges from the Nick Hornby-scripted drama An Education to the restoration of Anthony Asquith’s 1928 silent movie Underground via the story of poverty, obesity and abuse in the talk of Sundance, Precious.

To really get to grips with everything the hugely enthralling London Film Festival has to offer, a visit to the BFI website is definitely in order.

Georgine Waller

 

04
FEB
Who's taking home the Bear?

Kicking off the 59th Berlin Film Festival tomorrow night, Tom Tykwer's The International, starring Clive Owen and Naomi Watts sets the tone for the truly international, top-class programme the festival has come to be known for. The first of the year's major European film festivals, the Berlinale brings together 400 films from 120 countries, eighteen of which are choosen to compete for the festival's top Golden Bear prize.

Following last year’s somewhat surprise winner Elite Squad, hailed for its 'rank misogyny' and 'genuine fascist sensibility' amongst other things, predicting this year’s prize would take some talent. That said, the 2009 pickings present a handful of cut-above-the-rest features, which, even if they fail to nab the Bear, will no doubt be gaining big buzz in the upcoming months.

The first of the favorites comes courtesy of French director François Ozon, who wowed judges at the 2007 festival with his drama Angel. Ricky follows the story of a trailer-trash family whose bleak existence is given new meaning when a baby is born. Fellow Frenchman Bertrand Tavernier also opts for the U.S-set drama with "In The Electric Mist," starring Tommy Lee Jones and John Goodman. Demi Moore makes her big-screen comes back with Happy Tears., whilst The Messenger boasts perhaps the biggest all-star cast, including the likes of Woody Harrelson and Samantha Morton ..

The UK touts its own fair-share of hopefuls, led by Stephen Frears latest Cheri, a 1920s romantic comedy starring Michelle Pfeiffer, whilst the lesser-known Peter Strickland makes his directorial debut with Katalin Varga. Yet, the best of the British looks to be that of Rage, with Judi Dench joining a ‘dragged-out’ Judie Law and appearances from Steve Buscemi, Eddie Izzard and John Leguizamo, the judges will do well to find a more worthy winner.

Charlotte Balnave

21
JAN
Keep Your Eyes On The Prize...

With a big bunch of Golden Globes freshly distributed and a job-lot of Baftas and Oscars gearing up to be handed out to the great and the good, I got to thinking about what, once you've taken the fame, wealth and peer adulation out of the equation, the recipients of these plaudits actually get. Well, aside from a rather fetching door-stopper and a goodie bag worth more than my annual income, not a lot really.

Which is a shame given that, once the parties have died down and the media reports are wrapping tomorrow's chips, there's little to console the actors and film-makers who spend their lives trying to recapture that one perfect moment when their name is called out and they get to blow a metaphorical raspberry to all those school careers advisors who didn't believe they would make anything of themselves.

There are some awards ceremonies, however, that may lack the kudos of the big hitters but have invested time, thought and invention into their prize-giving. You can keep your golden baldies Mr Academy Man, we want one of these...

The Golden Beggar Awards (no, we're not sure why they're called that either) are held annually June in Kosice, Slovakia, and they celebrate all that is great and good about local TV broadcasters. The prize everybody wants to get their deserving mitts on is none other than, yep you guessed it, a golden statue of a beggar. If nothing else, they'd make a brilliant conversation piece.

The Carthage Film Festival, held every few years in Tunisia, offers a very tasty offering named the Tanit d'or, or Golden Tanit, which is named after the lunar goddess of ancient Carthage. A very chi-chi piece, the award is crafted in the goddess' symbol - a trapezium decorated with a horizontal line and a circle - you won't find an artier gong anywhere else on the face of the planet.

Cash and bling combine in the most tasteful way possible at the annual International Film Festival Of India. The festival's top prize? A fetching Golden Peacock, plus a cash prize of a million rupees. That's a statue of a pretty bird made out of gold and just over £14,500 in cold, hard cash - sounds good to us. The most promising director also gets a (rather less valuable) Silver Peacock and half-a-million rupees (about £7,250).

If fleeting fame is your bag I'd recommend entering The Nicktoons Film Festival, which rewards winning young animators with a broadcast showing of their hard work. Alternatively, if that's all a bit juvenile, Indianapolis' Heartland Film Festival awards socially conscious film-makers ("whose work explores the human journey by artistically expressing hope and respect for the positive values of life") a cash reward of $200,000 - which is equivalent to, well, about £150,000 given today's shocking exchange rates.

For my money, though, the best award handed out anywhere in the world as a reward for excellence in film-making is none other than the San Antonio Film Festival. Forget cash, forget statues, these guys give away a low-rider bike as their grand prize. A low-rider! Now that's the gift that just keeps on giving.

What do you guys think? Are the big prizes over-rated? Leave your comments below...

Glen Ferris

14
JAN
Sundance Heats Up

 

With just one day to go, the countdown to this year’s Sundance Film Festival is well underway, although you wouldn’t necessary know it. Creeping up on us quieter than its pilmsole-wearing indie fan counterpart, this year’s festival has failed to drum up its usual esteemed buzz, overshadowed by both growing criticism that it’s losing its 'indie edge' and as ever, the Golden Globes stealing the January limelight. But make no mistake, there’s as much to buzz about as ever.

 

Despite 2008’s pickings failing to rival the Little Miss Sunshine / Napoleon Dynamite-shaped successes of previous years, it certainly still came up with the goods, Frozen River, Man On Wire, Trouble the Water and The Wackness to name but a few. This year promises yet more top-quality indie treats from the 150 films set to screen over the ten day period.

 

Kick-starting the festival on Thursday night, the first treat comes in the form of Australian clay animation Mary and Max, a five-year labour of love from Oscar-award winning director Adam Elliot. Featuring the voices of Philip Seymour Hoffman, Toni Collette and Barry Humphries, Elliot’s feature debut tells the story of an unlikely friendship between eight-year-old Mary and the 'severely obese' forty-four-year old Max.

 

Perhaps the movie gaining the most hype ahead of this year’s festival is that of Adventureland. Written and directed by Superbad’s Greg Mottola, with performances from Bill Hader, Martin Starr and Ryan Reynolds, it’s easy to see why. Sure to gain a equally formidible following, Big Fan touts The Wrestler-writer Robert Siegel and stars Patton Oswalt as a hardcore New York Giants fan, whose dream comes true when he bumps into the team’s top player at a strip-club. Mickey The Wrestler Rourke will himself be making an appearance, starring alongside Billy Bob Thornton, Kim Basinger, Winona Ryder in Gregor Jordan’s The Informers.

 

Brief Interviews With Hideous Men, the directorial debut from John Krasinski (better known as Jim Halpert from The Office) is sure to get the juries’ juices flowing. Past jury-favorites, The Polish Brothers Mark and Michael, return with Manure, rivaling Push: Based on the novel by Sapphire for Best Name and both serious competitors for Best Film.

 

Others to look out for include In the Loop, a political comedy from British filmmaker Armando Iannucci and Paper Hearts, which reunites Knocked Up starlets Michael Cera and Charlyne Yi. The Yes Men Fix the World promises the highest comedy value of the documentaries, however it is Afghan Star, a film exploring the complex politics behind the Afghani version of “American Idol;” that will no doubt get the World Documentary vote.

 

Sundance kicks off at 6pm on Thursday, but you’ll have to wait until next Saturday for the Awards Ceremony low-down, watch this space…

31
OCT
That Was The Fest That Was

And now the end is here and so we face the final cinema curtain… That’s right ladies, gentlemen and cinephiles, after hundreds of films, a galaxy of stars and numerous night stood outside in the freezing cold, The Times BFI 52nd London Film Festival has come to a close and we’ve survived with our dignity and sanity intact (well, almost).

Following on from the excellent first week of programming, which you can read about here, the second half of the annual cinematic shindig saw more galas, premieres and exclusives than you can shake a foot-long hotdog at - and thankfully killer very much won over filler.

The programme’s big guns particularly did not disappoint…

Steven Soderbergh and Benicio Del Toro popped into the capital to plug their bum-numbing but brilliant four-and-a-half-hour epic Che (Part 1 and Part 2), an engrossing evocation of the man and his motives which charts his journey from Cuban rebel to Bolivian insurgent in vivid detail.

Rian Johnson follows up his brilliant debut, Brick, with another tale that subverts a well-worn genre, The Brothers Bloom. A warm-hearted and knowingly kooky take on the con man movie, it plays like Ocean’s Eleven directed by Wes Anderson and features a raft of likeable performances from the likes of Rachel Weisz, Adrien Brody and Mark Ruffalo.

It wouldn’t have been the LFF without some old-school Englishness and Aussie director Stephan Elliot’s Easy Virtue didn’t disappoint. Starring the lovely Jessica Biel as a bohemian American who launches herself into the lives of Ben Barnes’ young aristo and his stiff-upper-lipped parents, played by Colin Firth and Kristen Scott Thomas, this slice of 20s culture clash based on Noel Coward's caustic play manages to balance fun performances with a deceptively dark denouement and an anachronistic soundtrack (brilliantly, Billy Ocean’s When The Going Gets Tough is given a jazz-age arrangement).

This year’s surprise screening was a gift indeed. Darren Aronofsky’s The Wrestler is a hugely impressive achievement and we got the chance to tell the director and his star Mickey Rourke just that when they came to town to introduce the Oscar-tipped movie. A story about an aging grappler and his attempts to make amends with his estranged daughter while battling his own (numerous) demons, it’s a funny, thrilling, devastating film and we can’t recommend it highly enough.

Oliver Stone’s none-more-timely Bush-burning biopic, W., gave us a little bit of politics when it rolled into the city for The Times Gala. Stone and his cast, including Josh Brolin, Thandie Newton, Toby Jones and the lovely Elizabeth Banks, were present to answer questions about a movie which, given the director’s much-publicised rants about America’s incumbent president, gives its subject a surprisingly easy ride. An unexpectedly humanistic take on a deeply flawed individual, it’s not as shallow a film as you might have expected.

The biggest night of the entire festival, however, was reserved for the Royal World Premiere of Quantum Of Solace. A big-budget, gadget-rich, star-studded affair, it featured Bond affiliates old and new and, despite the chilly conditions, set the penultimate evening off with a bang. You can read more about 007’s big night out here.

And rounding it all off at the Closing Gala was Danny Boyle’s critically lauded Slumdog Millionaire. Perhaps not the starriest choice to mark the LFF’s final night, it’s nevertheless a fascinating story about a young man from the Mumbai slums who wins big on India's Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, get arrested for cheating and is then forced to tell his life story in flashback. We’re telling you now, this is going to be a critical darling when the 2009 awards season kicks off.

Join us next year for more films, stars and celebrations… The LFF’s organizers better get planning right away, 2008 is going to be a tough act to beat.

Glen Ferris

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