Sunday, November 20, 2011

The Painting Lesson/La Leccion de Pintura(International Competition film)



THE PAINTING LESSON

a film by Pablo Perelman
Release: 2010
Format: 35 mm
Genre: Drama histórico
Production: Jaleo Films, Tequila Gang (México), Woods Production (Chile) y Oasis PC (España)
Direction and Screenplay: Pablo Perelman
Cast: Daniel Giménez Cacho, Verónica Sánchez
Production Year: 2009











Plot

A boy from the countryside, the son of a teenage single mother, has shown himself to be a gifted painter in the eyes of the pharmacist of the small town for whom his mother works. Set in the years previous to the military coup of 1973.

The Colours of the Mountains/Los colores de la montaña (International Competition film)


The Colours of the Mountains/Los colores de la montaña


Director: Carlos César Arbeláez/ Colombia | Panama/90min/2011







Plot summary

Manuel, 9, has an old ball with which he plays football every day in the countryside. He dreams of becoming a great goalkeeper. His wishes seem set to come true when Ernest, his father, gives him a new ball. But an unexpected accident sends the ball flying into a minefield. Despite the danger, Manuel refuses to abandon his treasure... He convinces Julián and Poca Luz, his two friends, to rescue it with him. Amid the adventures and kids' games, the signs of armed conflict start to appear in the lives of the inhabitants of 'La Pradera


Review by: John Esther



Deep in the mountains of the U.S. client state Colombia, a young boy named Manuel (Hernán Mauricio Ocampo) just wants to go to school and play soccer with his friends. Thanks to the impoverished conditions and civil unrest in the community this is harder than it appears. Teachers never stay long, paramilitaries and guerrillas swarm the area, and Manuel's family is somewhat poor.

Shortly after receiving a brand new soccer ball and goalie gloves for his ninth birthday (putting "the drunken ball" to rest), Manuel loses the ball in a guerrilla minefield rigged for paramilitary helicopters. Although prohibited from retrieving the ball, Manuel and his buddies devise numerous schemes to get it back.

Meanwhile, the armed people of the community tug at its citizens for allegiance to the illegal rightist paramilitaries or the leftist guerrillas cause while most of the simple farmers just want to be left alone. But indifference is not an option in a country riddled with human rights abuses.

As the civil conflict intensifies in the area and people increasingly disappear, Manuel and his friends try to cope with the unraveling of their community through friendship and futbol, but there is no real escape from the horrors.

An endearing feature debut by writer-director Carlos César Arbeláez, which is, fortunately, nowhere near as heartwarming as the San Francisco International Film Festival 2011 program states, The Colors of the Mountain (Los colores de la montaña) is the kind of honest, direct film that illustrates the worth of film festivals. It is unlikely the film will receive a U.S. theatrical release.





Official Trailer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4A0WebZo7E&NR=1

The Cat Vanishes/ El gato desaparece (International Competition film)


The Cat Vanishes
TIFF 2011 Review

[Guacamole Films; 2011] 
Director: Carlos Sorin
Runtime: 89 minutes

A psychotic break has fractured Luis (Luis Luque) and Beatriz’s (Beatriz Spelzini) marriage in El gato desaparece [The Cat Vanishes], playing at the Toronto International Film Festival. Proud parents of two, successful in life as a professor and translator respectively, and completely in love, they still prove ill equipped to handle mental instability. Brought on by the ceaseless toiling to validate his research and publish his magnum opus, paranoia sets in as ideas of sabotage begin to manifest. Accusations against his assistant at the university, Fourcade (Javier Niklison), are made while aggression takes hold. He beats his friend up in unjustified anger and then turns his violence onto Beatriz when the idea that she has been helping the traitor misguidedly appears logical. It is the sort of event that ruins lives, but Luis is lucky to find a second chance through psychiatric help, drugs, and compassion from those he wronged. The memory of unchecked and unprovoked chaos, however, is never easy to forget.
Argentinean writer/director Carlos Sorin never shows us these events, deciding instead to allow Luis’ doctors explain what happened as they make a case to release him back into the world. We hear a detailed and thorough account of the horrors in question while the director in control of discharging patients doodles in his notebook, making us believe they’ve seen worse. Brain and blood scans all come back negative as Luis shows remorse—everything pointing towards the conclusion he had a brief loss of control and it wouldn’t happen again. We don’t know how long he was in their care, but the nervous tension of Beatriz picking him up shows it was lengthy enough for her to become accustomed to an empty house. That’s not to say she isn’t excited to have him back, but there is a sense of dreadful caution behind her movements and constant offering of assistance. Where Luis seems ready to put it all behind him, his return only helps Beatriz remember what happened.
The majority of the film is shot in close-up so that we can see into the eyes of these characters. Like all good thrillers, it is our understanding of motivations that help invest us into the puzzle at play. We feel for Beatriz’s insecurity as she apologetically describes the changes she’s made to the house while he was gone, forgive her crippling fear from nightmares recalling the night her husband chopped through their bedroom door screaming to be let in, and understand her hesitance to blindly accept this is the man she loves. And on the flip side of the coin, we can’t help but see how tentative Luis is upon his return. He remembers what he did with full clarity and knows things need to take time before they can get back to normal. It’s an adjustment that renders sleep difficult, but with a wife who rightfully isn’t ready to rekindle a romantic relationship yet, all he has to keep him company during the night are his own thoughts.
There is something noticeably amiss during the drive home and things only get more uncomfortable as the story progresses. The look on Beatriz’s face when Luis leans out the car window to give a hypnotically talented mime money is unmistakable. It wasn’t something he’d normally do, sentiments corroborated later by a visiting student who admits this new man is more relaxed and less sarcastic than the professor be who taught him. Perhaps it’s all an act, overcompensating for his transgression as even the cat, Donatello, can feel something amiss. Hissing and clawing at his old master as though he were a stranger, it really seems as though Luis no longer exists—the world kept moving as time stood still in the confines of his hospital room. So he carries on and adjusts with the present, clearing away the clutter in his life and planning a retreat to Brazil with his wife. He’s making a concerted effort to rebuild, but once the cat is found missing, Beatriz can’t help but fear the worse.
Cat Vanishes 2
She saw the anger in Luis’ face and heard the threats made when Donatello bounded out of the kitchen with his master’s flesh in his claws. The disappearance drives her mad as the nightmares amplify at the exact rate of her husband’s newfound calm. She begins to spy on her husband, fearing he did something to their pet and working herself up to the point his calling her name in the night causes her to run out of the house at four in the morning to find safety with their daughter. It’s as though Poe’s Tell-Tale Heart is pounding in her ears, the paranoia in wondering whether he was truly cured or not too hard to bear. And it all culminates into a frightening sequence as she wanders the house, following the squeals of a rat and the meows of her cat waging battle in the air ducts. The sound is so real and her fright so pronounced that it’s easy to think the fantasy holds deeper meaning than appears on the surface.
The Cat Vanishes is definitely a mood piece full of anxious suspense. Subverting the characters by making the crazy one’s sanity push the sane one’s psyche to the brink is a superb device and both Luque and Spelzini excel in giving the necessary nuance for such a reversal. We do meet Fourcade and listen to his genuine concern, believing his innocence; we see Luis’ look of love watching his son’s family brave the wild of Montana on tape, all rage suppressed by a combination of desire and pills; and we experience Beatriz’s slow descent into her own overactive imagination, risking make her forever fear the man she cares for most. Sorin gets us to believe a vacation is just what they need, dangling that carrot of happily ever after as the tension rises higher. And while the crescendo eventually ends in a whimper, the fitting revelation makes up for its rushed depiction. At first I felt cheated and misled as the credits rolled, but after more thought acknowledged the bittersweet parting shot to be a tonally perfect finish to a methodical, intelligent thriller.

Written by , September 9, 2011

Trailer

September Rain/ Matar Ayloul (International Competition film)





Syria/2010/Arabic dialouge with English subtitles /Colour/35 mm/87 mins

Genre: Musical, Experimental, Animation
Cast & Credits
Director: Abdullatif Abdelhamid
Producer: Haitham Hakki
Scriptwriter: Abdullatif Abdelhamid
Cinematographer: Joud Gourani
Editor: Rauf Zaza
Composer: Essam Rafea
Cast (in alphabetical order): Ayman Zidan, Kassim Milho, Samar Sami

Synopsis

Legendary actor-director Abdullatif Abdulhamid opens his latest feature in 1940s Damascus, where a young man is listening to a broadcast of the songs of the buzuq player, Muhammad Abdul Karim. Flipping to the present day, the young man is now a father with a fruit-selling business, bringing up his large, musical family alone, following the death of his beloved wife, and surviving in a world of corrupt officialdom and class divides. Abdullatif Abdulhamid evokes the family and community dramas of both generations brilliantly in this witty, affectionate yet devastating portrayal of life in the Syrian capital. Anything but a traditional film, the veteran director employs surreal touches and visual metaphors but with such a lightness of touch that they blend into the compelling narrative. This is a beautifully composed and shot tour de force. 

Abdullatif Abdelhamid was born in Syria in 1954. He obtained his diploma from High Film School of Moscow. Abdulhamid worked for the Syrian National Film Organization. He directed nine feature films, including ‘Jackal Nights’, ‘Verbal Messages’,’ Rising Rain’, ‘Breeze of the Soul’, ‘Two Moons and Olives Tree’ , ‘Listeners Choice’,’ Out of Coverage’. He was last at DIFF with ’Days of Boredom’ in 2008.


September Rain Trailer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nm2R00fKHB4




Palawan Fate/Busong (International Competition film)



BUSONG (PALAWAN FATE)

BY AURAEUS SOLITO


Synopsis:

Punay was born with wounds in her feet so that she cannot step on the earth. Her brother, Angkarang, carries her through a hammock, as he searches the changing landscape of Palawan in hoping to find a healer who can cure Punay. Different people help him carry his sister along the way- a woman looking for her husband, a fisherman who lost his boat and a young man who is searching for himself- and each one meets their fate. 

Filmmaker’s Profile

Auraeus Solito was recently chosen in Take 100, The Future of Film which presents an emerging generation of the most talented filmmakers around the world. This book published by Phaidon Press, New York is an unparalleled survey featuring 100 of the most exceptional emerging film directors from around the world selected by 10 internationally prominent film festival directors. His first feature film "Ang Pagdadalaga ni Maximo Oliveros (The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros)” won 15 international awards including 3 awards at the Berlinale (The Teddy award, International Jury Prize at the Kinderfest and Special Mention from the Children's Jury of the Kinderfest). It is also the first Philippine film nominated for Best Foreign film at the Independents' Spirit Awards in the US. It has been shown in more than 50 film festivals around the world.“Tuli (Circumcision)”, his second feature film wonBest Picture and Best Director at the Digital Competition at the 2005 CineManila Film Festival ; won the NETPAC Jury Prize at the the Berlinale, International Forum for New Cinema and the Best International feature Film at Outfest in Los Angeles. He is the first Filipino to make it to the premiere independent film festival in the world, the SUNDANCE Film Festival in Park City, Utah, USA; two years in a row for both “The Blossoming of Maximo Oliveros” and “Tuli”. His films have been screened in major festivals around the world including Berlin, Sundance, Montreal, Pusan, Toronto and Rotterdam. He recently finished a screenplay development program at the Binger Film Lab in Amsterdam where he wrote “Deluge”.

Major Credits:  Cast:

Alessandra de Rossi, Dax Alejandro, Clifford Banagale 

Production:  

 Cinematography-Louie Quirino, Editing-Chuck Gutierrez, Production Design-Hai Balbuena, Music and Sound-Diwa de Leon, Executive Producer-Jong de Castro, Screenplay-Kanakan-Balintagos and Henry Burgos, Script Consultant-Armando Y. Lao, Produced by-Auraeus Solito, Hai Balbuena, Baby Ruth Villarama, Chuck Gutierrez and Alfred Vargas, Director-Auraeus Solito


Trailer

Busong (Palawan Fate) Official Website




Ndoto za Elibidi (International Competition film)




Director: Kamau Wa Ndung'u|Nick Reding/Kenia/72min/2010



An improbable duo, a British actor turned charity founder and a Kenyan art director, came together and shot a movie on HIV/AIDS. The result was Ndoto za Elibidi (The dreams of the Elibidis) which was presented at the Zanzibar Film Festival last summer, winning the award assigned by the Italian Cinema Africano di Verona. Nick Reding is an actor from the UK with a long background in film television and theatre. In 2002 he founded Sponsored Arts For Education (S.A.F.E.), a charity working with slum dwellers in Nairobi and other locations in Kenya. SAFE works with young Kenyan artists, producing theatre and films, to challenge stigma and discrimination with a message of compassion solidarity and hope. Kamau Wa Ndung’u grew up in Mathare slum in Nairobi. He has worked as an actor and director in theatre for many years. Kamau has been the creative director for SAFE for the last five years. Ndoto za Elibidi is their first film. The story was devised originally as a stage play with actors from the Nairobi slums. The plot pivots around the theme of acceptance and love as the protagonists – parents, four daughters and their lovers – come to terms with HIV and ghetto life. Cutting back and forth from fiction to documentary, from the original stage play to actual locations, the film takes viewers on two parallel journeys: we watch the story, but we are also watching it through the eyes of the ghetto audience. Southworld has met the two film directors in Verona, where they presented their film at the local Festival of African cinema.
“This movie comes from a theatrical opera, says Kamau, after we performed the play in slums, schools or near a health centre, many asked us to have a DVD, they wanted to watch it again and again. We thought to shoot the theatrical performance and put it on a DVD. Then we thought, why not shooting it in a better way. This is how we developed the idea of this movie”. “The cast of the original play was chosen through an open audition in Nairobi, adds Nick. We wanted to look at a series of issues facing the people in the slum. The play was devised over a six months period and has been performed for over five years in the slums. I think there is quite a lot of information in the movie that usually Europeans are not clear with. Actually, many young people in Europe are confused. They believe that drugs are available and there is a cure. Also the treatment of rape victims, another underlying theme in the movie, is important. So there is information there, and Europeans should not get too complacent and believe they know it all”.

NDOTO ZA ELIBIDI TRAILER

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDXlSkwfYMI




Flamingo No.13/Flamingo Shomareh 13 (International Competition film)


Flamingo No. 13 (Flamingo Shomare 13)



Hamid Reza Aligholian
Iran | 2010 | 82mins | Beta | Colour
Producer Houman Ahmadi Tofighi 

In a community of exiles located in a remote area of Iran, Soliman spends his days hunting flamingo. While frowned upon by the authorities, the brooding hunter will not be deterred, and even his marriage to the village beauty Tamay does little to deflect him from his restless quest. When Soliman apparently disappears, Tamay believes he will return, but jealous rival Davood seizes his chance to take what he believes is rightfully his. Making full use of the majestic snow covered landscape, Flamingo No. 13 has a stark mythic power and can be viewed as an allegory on the role of the artist in an unforgiving climate.

Delhi in a Day (International Competition film)





Delhi in a Day


Dir: Prashanth Nair
/Hindi|English/88min/2011

MORE ABOUT CAST AND CREW

Genre :


Comedy
Drama

Artists (Cast) :
Lee Williams
Lillete Dubey
Victor Banerjee
Kulbhushan Kharbanda

Producer :
Prashant Nair
Chintu B. Mohapatra

Director :
Prashant Nair

Production Company(s) :
Nomad Productions PLC

Story Writer :
Prashant Nair

Cinematographer :
Eun-Ah Lee

Executive Producer :
Kumar C Dev

Casting Director :
Andrea Clark

Plot Summary:
The staff of a Delhi household are given one day to return a British traveler's stolen money


Review
by Margaret Julian Alexander

This film is about a typical, rich Delhi household which includes six domestic helpers, and how the arrival of a ‘foreign’ guest brings out the real human beings in this happy-go-lucky bunch. It is also about stereotypes and prejudices, not only in India but also about India.
You find the gang amusing although it is difficult to connect with them on a personal level as there are so many characters. But you definitely fall in love with some of them, like Rohini, the vivacious maid, the wise and witty grandfather, and Jasper, the foreign visitor.
Though this is not a nonsensical comedy, its punches are amusing. Contrary to perception, Delhi In A Day is not a dark comedy but it does have a message: Who says you have to make cheesy films to make people laugh?
Its original music score by the brilliant Mathias Duplessy sets the mood just right. This film offers some beautiful shots and neat cinematography. And, finally, Prashant Nair has roped in some amazing talent from the National School of Drama and the performances are not disappointing.

Delhi In A Day - Official Trailer



Some news


Body/Vucut (International Competition film)





More about film

Review by edgarchaput



What your body means to you and what it means to those around you may be entirely different ideas. Each party will influence one another to a degree, but whose influence shall carry over more, yours, or that of the public? Beware if the pressure of the latter group gains the upper hand, for suddenly your life may be lived not under the conditions you want, but under societal pressures. But where exactly are the boundaries of this pressure and how can one overcome it? It is even possible? The more important question remains: do you respect yourself enough just the way you are? Turkish director Mustafa Nuri unabashedly dives into the delicate, sensitive issue of self image in some provocative ways for his directorial debut, Vucut, which played at the FFM in Montréal.


The drama begins immediately in Vücut, as in the very first scene Leyla (Hatice Aslan), and aging porn star, is desperately knocking (read: slamming) on the door to her former business partner and producer’s apartment. Dressed like a hooker but behaving like a women pleading for her life, Leyla simply wants in. Evidently something has happened between the two, but Yilmaz (Cengiz Bozkurt), the producer, is not answering. At the sound of police sirens, Leyla flees. Shortly after, Yilmaz arrives at Leyla’s home, finds his prized but bruised actress in her room and attempts to make up for earlier by proposing that they make one final film together. He’ll find a great young chap to co-star, she will earn some more money with a new bank account and retire rather comfortably. She agrees. Enter Izzat (Hakan Kurtas), a 20 year old, very handsome young man living with his obese mother (Seyla Halis) and younger sister in a small apartment. While Izzat may look attractive, he is not much of a gentleman, easily flustered, very temperamental and lazy. His mother insists that he get a job, even going so far as to locating job interviews for him, ungrateful as he may be. One thing leads to another and Izzet finds himself on the shooting set of Yilmaz’s latest porn show, which is essentially a tiny kitchen room. The scene goes through terribly, so much so that Yilmaz is enraged by Izzet’s incompetence and fires him on the spot, but the youth is captivated by Leyla. Following this tumultuous event, he does everything he can to be a part of her world...

Vücut is a stunningly multilayered film, involving several subplots, each relating to the overall theme of body image. Virtually every character in the film, be they one of the principal starts of the show or merely supporting members who appear for precious few minutes, brings a different dimension to the discussion. There are so many large and small threads Vücut juggles with that it almost becomes difficult to remember them all, but suffice to say that all earn their place in the story and help drive home the movie’s ideas, which are in fact more like challenges than any genuine attempts in talking down to the audience about how people should be respectful of everyone regardless of body types. People should know that anyhow, so why would the film spend time reiterating the obvious? Rather, Mustafa Nuri’s calculated choice to make each character three dimensional, complex and fully realized as possible, which includes a long line of strengths and weaknesses for each, means that the audience gets to see ‘life’ at work. The social setting itself, lower middle class, is equally important in dictating some of the dynamics that erupt as the story moves along. None of the characters featured in the movie are multimillionaires, each has some important things to think about with regards to their future.



Director Nuri is unafraid in his storytelling, demonstrating full capabilities in developing a theme through pure character interactions. The exploration of these individuals, from Izzet, to his mother, to Leyla, to Leyla’s sister, to Izzet’s bodybuilding friend, to Yilmaz, to Yilmaz’s attractive but sexual interested wife, all of it adds fascinating layers to the discussion of body image and the prejudices which can easily arise to cause friction, embarrassment, rage, depression, overconfidence, exclusion, inclusion, etc. Despite offering a few humorous scenes, mostly during the horrendous porn movie shoot, Vucut plays things as straight as possible. Since most of the people involved are coming from dark places, whether by circumstances, as in Leyla’s case, or by their own creation, as in Izzet’s case, the film is a rather tough drama. What its story does incredibly well is have the viewer understand the consequences of prejudice. How those subjected to it react as how do its perpetrators behave. It is not as though audiences are oblivious to the topic, we make up ideas of people based on how they look almost all the time. Vücut confronts this practice head on and does not let up until the bitter end. The mere fact that it features a group of leading characters like a good looking young man, an porn star in her late forties, a fat woman and a fat little girl is indicative enough of the sort of cinematic territory the film is willing to venture into. Those brief descriptions alone conjure up thoughts in people’s heads, not just with regards to how those people might look, but also about why they might look that way, which in turn prompts people to start guessing, for good or ill, about their lifestyles and who they are.Vücut challenges that practice in an unforgiving manner.



Punctuated by the study of prejudice are the very real, very emotional ties between all the people we are seeing on screen. At the forefront of these relationships is that sought after by the young Izzet, played wonderfully by Hakan Kurtas, who stars in a movie for the very first time (just like his character in the film itself). He and Leyla form an odd couple, At first, Leyla wants very little to do with this brash little boy. She is already wrestling with the very thought that her life has gone to waste. As her sister puts it, Yilmaz used her up during the best years of her life. Those years have now passed and Leyla is left with the notions of what could have been. Izzet is smitten by her, which is immediately comes as something of a shock. Not that actress Hatice Aslan is unattractive, but that he could go for so many girls of his age. Yet, his devotion to Leyla functions as the lone attempt in the film to destroy a prejudice. Leyla is a washed up porn star is slowly losing her looks, but Izzet wants nothing more than to be with her. The irony of the entire situation is that by inadvertently trying to go beyond a boundary set by a prejudice (or several prejudices, one other being the odd sight of a young, twentysomething going out with another person in her late forties), their time together creates as much tension as existed in their lives before. Leyla is fighting depression, thus causing a slavish devotion to a collection of pills, Izzet is still the easily irritable fellow he was before, and so when Leyla is not the mood to do what he likes, well, things don’t go so well. It certainly makes for an interesting way to this plot thread to develop seeing how things to do not go as happily as one might like. Then again, both are from worlds so far apart, because of culture and age, that one must stop and think that has to be a better way to break down a boundary. Maybe. Then again, maybe not. Special mention should go to Hatice Aslan, who is spellbinding in Vücut. Her vulnerability is infinitely watchable. The scenes in which her sister comes to visit are fantastic in how they award her some happy moments and we get to see Aslan offer beautiful smiles. Those smiles leaves a lasting impression since they are the few we have privy to in the picture. A haunting performance, one that perfectly captures the story of a broken soul.

Vücut is easily one of the more powerful films to come out in 2011. Turkish films do not make it out to North America very much, thus doubling the privilege felt by having seen Mustafa Nuri’s terrific drama.

Vucut trailer


HELPFUL LINKS
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_of_Turkey