Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Mining Austin for CFF
To catch you up, I did get a chance to see nine feature films and many shorts (only listed the two I liked below) in total out here. All really truly interesting in their own way. Our festival was promoted and many an idea for other films to bring to CFF was sprung with filmmakers. I will certainly write more analysis after digesting them all and reviewing with Doug and Tom what they saw at Sundance to try and complete a well-rounded offering, but Austin was a great place for making relationships that will last for us and finding unique films to show our town.
Cigarette Candy (short)—about soldier returning home from war with a burden to bear.
Kelp (short)—funny relationship comedy.
And Everything is Going Fine—the Spalding Gray story.
Helena from the Wedding—situational comedy ensemble piece.
Some Days Are Better—what is the meaning of life? X-generation funny.
A Different Path (doc)—unique discussion about urbanization and cars.
The Happy Poet—funny about success and morality. Possible?
Dance With the One—best drama for me. Two brothers try and make their way in life after being raised by hippies.
Tiny Furniture—mother/daughter/sister comedic drama also trying to find out who you are.
Lebanon, PA—every decision we make leads us a certain direction…sometimes home.
Barry Munday—comedy about a man who literally has to lose his “manhood” to learn to be a man. Has stars like Cybill Shepherd, Malcolm McDowell, Chloe Sevigny. If we can work it out with distributor, we could have this come to CFF. It was funny. My agent is their agent, but we must wait and see what distributor ends up on board.
Met or knew someone (thanks to great introductions from my Austin friends) so we can access these all pretty easily. Plus, six degrees from others…fingers crossed for good filmmakers to attend again.
Attended the Austin Chronicle Film Party (who sponsored the festival with others).
Attended the premier party for Dance With the One.
Have much follow-up with people met including some wonderful actors, writers, producers and others.
There are also a few films I missed but heard great things about that I will follow up with and get copies sent. I mean really, a couple of great looking films to chase down.
Also, heard that Ed Norton owns land (an island?) in our Easton area. True? His film Leaves of Grass was SXSW Friday night opening movie. Richard Dreyfuss also in it. He is also a fan of our area. Anyway, something for us to check into making a fundraiser event out of or something. He is an environmental activist and we could mix that into the fundraiser or something.
Will be at airport at 4 a.m. for my 5 p.m. departure. Thanks for the opportunity to represent CFF and bring back some gems. Great stuff all around!! And best of all was Amy’s House. (Thanks Amy and Pete!)
Goodnight.
Liza
Monday, March 15, 2010
And now from Austin...
Plotted my course for Sunday. Started with narrative shorts as they provide surprises and good panels with new talent. Liked one called Kelp.
I then met up with indie agent Deborah MacIntosh from William Morris Endeavor to see what might be possible for us to bring to CFF. They represent two great possibilities. First, Barry Munday and secondly Saturday Night, which has John Malkovich hosting a documentary about what it takes to make the Saturday Night Live show. Also funny and cool behind the scenes. So, she will stay in touch about those as well as send other ideas in case these films get caught up in distribution restrictions.
Then I met up with Suzanne Weinert, an indie writer/producer who used to run Julia Roberts company in NYC. Found out she is an advisory board member of SXSW. She had a film in SXSW last year that is a dark comedy that we could maybe showcase, though it will be in limited release by May. We spoke of others as she called people over to introduce me and hear of their films. It was great, plus, she was introducing the film And Everything Is Going to be Fine, the story of Spalding Gray directed by Steven Soderbergh. This film is not necessarily for CFF, but met good people to open more doors.
I then saw Helena From the Wedding, a narrative comedy but too much suburban whining and not clever enough. We'd seen these yuppies a million times. Finally off to bed and ready for Monday. Suzanne is taking me to the parties tonight, so hold onto your hats….
Liza
Friday, March 12, 2010
GOOD NEWS ALERT!
She has connections, insight and energy. While she's in Texas, she'll be screening, scouting and spreading the word about CFF. We're delighted she's there. Stay tuned!
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Sun is down, dance is done
Courage at the Close. My final day began with two of the highlight films of the festival for me. Freedom Riders and Restrepo, both of which detail people calling upon unimaginable courage - albeit at different times, for very different reasons.
We saw Freedom Riders, which I blogged about before, first thing in the morning, and followed that by Restrepo, a film about the deployment of a platoon of soldiers in the Korengal Valley, the most remote and dangerous place in Afghanistan. Vanity Fair contributors Sebastian Junger and Tim Heatherington each took five one-month trips there and spent the time living with and photographing these soldiers. The result is probably the most intimate document of either the
The Sundance Jury agreed as the film later won the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary filmmaking. The complete results of the awards can be found here.
Thankfully Tom and I were able to see almost all of the award-winning films. Winter's Bones, which we both liked, won two awards. Well, plane is boarding, must go....
Saturday, January 30, 2010
A window into history
Impressive as a window into history, but also as a testament to human courage in the face of almost certain violence. A keeper.
Down to the last dance
I can feel the festival simmering down. I will still have about five films on Saturday, but the energy of the town is bubbling down. Now that all of the films have been played at least twice, a lot of the deals have been done. So the dog and pony show of celebrities is pretty much over. But the one thing remaining is the awards.
There are some favorites that we hope will win, but we also hope that it is a film we haven’t seen. This is just another example of the festival coming to an end.
I saw a film that troubled me so deeply that I held my gut as I left the theater. It is called Shock Doctrine. It argues that the ideas of economist Milton Friedman have led to capitalism profiting off of disaster. Disaster comes in many guises--hurricanes, coup d’etats, and wars. The film purports that the leaders who rise out of these crisis moments are people like Donald Rumsfeld, Augusto Pinochet, Boris Yeltsin, Margaret Thatcher, the Russian oligarchs, and Paul Bremmer during the shock-and-awe period. It is a heady, compelling, and shocking film. If you want to know more, check it out here.
Sundance is just the start of a nine-month process that actually gets filmmakers and their films to come to our community. Even though I have another scintillating day ahead of me, I can feel the magic and mirth of Sundance coming down a notch. The race is coming to an end. We have been on fire. Entranced in the sorcery known as cinema.
Tom
Friday, January 29, 2010
Sundance: not just movies
Swimmers at Sundance (again)
Yesterday I stopped by the Sundance Filmmakers Lodge--a sort of quiet resting place for filmmakers to get coffee and check email--and lo and behold Swimmers was playing on the Sundance Channel. Strange.
Doug(Note: Doug wrote and directed Swimmers, which was nominated for a Humanitas Prize at Sundance and nabbed a New American Cinema Award in 2005.)
Guerilla art strikes Sundance
Graffitti purportedly by well-known reclusive artist Banksy, who has a surprise film here called Exit Through The Gift Shop, appeared throughout
Apparently
One of my favorites
This is Doug swapping cards with the director (left) Adriana Maggs and star, Tatiana Maslany, of Grown Up Movie Star.
This film is in my top three of the whole festival and I hope we can get it. A coming of age dramedy from
Crazy film head
I love going to the movies. LOVE IT! So I have been taking in a few shows. Like five a day. I kid you not. Five freakin’ movies a day.
Tom
3D comes to Sundance
I saw a 3D movie. Yep, we had the goggles and looking behind me felt like a strange flash back to the ‘50s. But this was no regular 3D film, this was Cane Toad or what the filmmaker called “Avatoad.”
This was a very funny and trippy account of the species invasion of Cane Toads in
Tom
Sundance & climate change
Sundance is concerned with climate change. I have seen more than a couple of documentaries this year that grapple with climate change. The base line seems to be, “Wow, we are all going to perish as a species in about 100 years.” Some films say it is a man-made phenomenon and can be reversed with drastic and immediate actions. Is it just a cycle in the earth’s cycle? One film, Climate Refugees, tries to put a human face on climate change and is predicting mass migrations of hundreds of millions of people from heightened water levels. They see
Tom
Sundance rebels?
Tom
The scuttlebutt on the shuttle bus
Probably a quarter of my time at the Sundance Film Festival is spent on the shuttles. In a way they are wonderful because you can chat with other film fanatics. All you have to say is, “Have you seen anything you liked?” You have an instant passionate 20-minute discussion on your hands. It is SO fun.
Greek tragedy from the Ozarks
Tom
Sundance fashion report
I ran into a local woman. I asked her about the infestation of her town of this phenomenon known as Sundance. Around 20,000 people descend on this small ski town. The traffic goes through the roof, restaurants are booked, and all these groovy people are completely lost and asking directions.
Here's a shot of Doug de rigueur.
Tom
Bright snow, dark world
As I slogged through the snow after my last film last night, I overheard a conversation about the bleak subject matter of Sundance documentaries: "So our government is full of corrupt liars, we're all on the verge of massive environmental devastation, refugees will soon overwhelm vast parts of the world and if that doesn't kill us, we're going to get nuked."
It's true. Documentaries at Sundance offer a tour of intractable global problems and this year is no different.
Last night it was Countdown to Zero, a film which makes a strong case for the increased probability of nuclear disaster given hair-trigger launch systems and poorly guarded enriched uranium, particularly in the former
Fortunately, this morning I was treated to a tonic of sorts. Bilal's Stand is a remarkable and touching community-built film about the dreams of a young man who is part of a family taxi-cab company in
I followed that up with His & Hers, an Irish film which details women's experiences with the men in their lives--fathers, boyfriends, husbands and sons--in a most elegant and understated way. Hard to describe but wonderful.
And then there was GASLAND, a great call to action about the impact of free-for-all natural gas exploration and its devastating impact on watersheds and drinking water across the country. Told with humor (and great banjo playing), it's a powerful unmasking of the downsides of natural gas--the pollution and water contamination caused by hydraulic fracking (ingesting millions of gallons of toxic chemicals and water into the ground). Not to give anything away, but the chemicals tend to seep into water and cause major health and environmental calamities.
I'm now taking a break from the world's troubles to stare at the snow out the window. Tomorrow I face down a documentary on Jack Abramoff. Tonight (if I can rally) is the story of Islamic youth who just want to dig into punk rock.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Pals reunite at Sundance
Maryland Film Festival Director and CFF Film Advisory Board Member Jed Dietz reunited with old friend Joan Rivers.
It turns out Jed was an NBC page for the “Tonight Show with Johnny Carson” and was able to get together with his sometime boss Joan Rivers at Sundance after the screening of the documentary Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. Jed thought the film was amazing, incredibly honest. I'm still trying to see it. By the way, Jed is blogging the festival, too, so if you want more about Sundance, check out the Maryland Film Festival blog here.
Doug
Films, parties, snow, little sleep
This morning at
So where are we here at Sundance? About the mid-point, I guess. And whether it's the fact that the pace has picked up or we've found our film going rhythm or that Tom's big blog update was lost, it seems like there's a lot to update. A few parties, Ricki Lake, Elton John rumors, Maryland Film Festival Director Jed Dietz, Joan Rivers, and, oh, films!
Tom and I've seen two particularly good ones together - Grown Up Movie Star and Winter's Bone. Interestingly enough, they shared some common traits. In particular, a specific connection with the place where they were filmed, always a unique and remarkable thing in film. When it works, the experience of a film can move beyond being set in a generic "city" or "small town" and become a true geographical as well as an emotional journey. In this case, both films also featured casts that were made up largely of actors from the same region, giving them an even stronger sense of place.
Grown Up Movie Star is the story of a family in upheaval set in Newfoundland Canada, anchored by a remarkable performance from Tatiana Maslany (you'll be hearing more from her). A very real and visceral journey through the arc of a teenage girl’s "rough period" when sexual awakening and rebellion become the order of the day. The brutal, windswept landscape lent a certain desperation and isolation to the characters, sharpening their hunger for the far-off, unreachable Disney World feel, sharp and poignant. We spoke with both the star and the writer-director, Adrianna Maggs, after the film, so who knows? Perhaps we'll be able to secure the film for CFF.
Winter's Bone was the next morning. The story of 17-year-old Rhee's desperate journey through family loyalties and secrets in backwoods Missouri mountain country...filled with startlingly strong performances, particularly from Jennifer Lawrence (Rhee) and John Hawkes (Dead Wood, etc.) as her dangerous, loyal uncle. Some friends and acquaintances on the team--editor Affonso Goncalves, actor John Hawkes, production designer Mark White, so it was great to see such strong work from them all.
Other films include Skateland, a charmer about a group of high school friends coming of age in the 80s. Very well received, great music. I'm guessing you'll be hearing more about this one. Last night, Tom saw Cane Toads, a documentary about (what else?) toads. In 3-D no less!
At the Sundance Channel party, I spent some time with Maryland Film Festival Director Jed Dietz, learned about his connection to Joan Rivers (more about that--with photo--later), and had a nice chat with the head of the Sundance Institute Feature Filmmaking Program, Michelle Satter, as well as with Christian Vesper of the Sundance Channel. Heard that Elton John was at the party (didn't see him) and bumped into
Today Tom saw a documentary on Pat Tillman, and I tried, but was unable to get into Restrepo, a documentary about a year in the life of the 2nd Platoon in
And so it goes. Thus far, we've only had one moment where we realized we were in for a long ride. During one film in particular, I predicted to Tom that it was going to take forever to end the film. Sure enough, all major points of the film were summarized once more. At the time, I guessed it would have three endings, but it actually managed four. As for the dark two-hour black and white film I started today with, it was actually pretty remarkable. Stunning images--unlike anything I've seen, a reminder of film's broadly expressive potential beyond straight narrative.
Enough from me. I know Tom has seen all sorts of others and has many thoughts and some photos to share, so I'll encourage him to jump back on here ASAP.
Sure is quiet out there...
Pity Tom McCall. He spent a solid hour yesterday writing a detailed blog of our activities and the whole Sundance scene--including a survey of current Sundance fashion (boots and short skirts), "People in Black," and all the trapping of the hipster set (the definition of which he stretched to include even us)--not to mention an overview of the last two days of films.
More soon!
Monday, January 25, 2010
Trash=art=great film
Hello from Sundance!
I just saw Waste Land, an amazing film about an artist named Vik Muniz
Here's a link to the film.
On the mend
Just wanted to thank everyone for their concern about my illness. Thankfully, it was short-lived. I'm feeling mostly human and back on track at Sundance. Just finished lunch with my old friend and editor, Affonso Goncalves, who has two films in dramatic competition in the festival (Winter's Bone and Night Catches Us).
The photos show proof of my recovery.
After a slow morning and some chicken soup, I'm now off to see my first film. Tom is somewhere about
Sunday, January 24, 2010
First star sighting!
After waking in the five o'clock hour, we made it to BWI on time. Poor Doug is really sick. Like get-out-the-barf-bag sick. The poor guy looks grey. There can't be too many fluids left. I have been anointing myself with hand sanitizer like somebody with OCD. Can't get sick at Sundance. This is the big dance!
I went to pick up tickets at the booth. I could make necklaces out of all the movies we are going to see this week. Hard hitting docs, dramas, Philip Seymour Hoffman's new directorial debut, and even an experimental film about consciousness and the state of the world.
I am like a kid in a candy shop. I can feel the buzz when I walk around the snow-covered streets. Pretty women with clipboards manage parties and who gets in. I crane my neck discreetly looking for which stars are being trotted out just beyond my eyes. What's all the buzz about?
So here are a couple of shots from day one. Doug started out sleepy and it went downhill from there. We have movies to watch tomorrow, so we both agree there is…
…no time to be ill.
Wish us well.
Tom
The adventure begins
Saturday, January 23, 2010
"I needed a mission...."
I am in a full lather. What to pack? Do I have my CFF business cards? Should I bother getting a hair cut? Any last minute contacts to make before heading out there?
I just got Hurt Locker from Netflix. Now I can watch that on the plane going across
I will just be happy when we are in the car tomorrow morning at
I feel so blessed to be going as a film attaché for our little town. Bring back the goods, young man! That is my mission, to bring back the smartest, coolest, funniest films of 2010. What a mission! I feel like Martin Sheen in Apocalypse Now. "I needed a mission and for all my sins they give me one."
Must get back to packing. Energy bars?
Friday, January 22, 2010
Some thoughts about Sundance
There is so much bull in the film business. It is an awful Darwinian business. Everyone says, "Yes, of course, love to do it." The translation of that is "No way, not interested." When we make connections after screenings at Sundance, we aren't offering any fiscal payoff. We are offering a smart community that loves film and will fill the seats. Our community will roll out into the streets and talk about the films, not the hair styles or box office takes.
So I go with a renewed sense of purpose to find great stories.
Tom McCall
Friday, January 15, 2010
Trailer for GASLAND
Thursday, January 14, 2010
What's not in a name?
Climate Refugees
Winter's Bone
Obselidia
Imperialists Are Still Alive!
Splice
Sympathy for Delicious
Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radi
Douchebag
Smash His Camera
Contracorriente
GASLAND
Secrets of the Tribe
Holy Rollers
Shock Doctrine
Seat cushions & long lines
“There is the almighty tickets chain that is like a link of sausages. Also, for most of the films, there is a wait and being treated like cattle is not unheard of, unless you are a VIP and then you are swept magically past hoi polloi. A typical night scene on the main strip in Park City will feature fine dining, drunk kids, and great films. They all seem to go together. One constant is the scheduling dilemma--go to two mediocre films or catch that one great one that makes the day. That is a no brainer for CFF--always go for quality. Pictured is the famous and funky Egyptian Theater. You can feel the Indie good vibes emanating from every worn seat cushion. Oh yeah, baby, you're at Sundance now.”
A 20-minute frenzy
Sundance has a way of pumping the adrenaline, even before you put a foot in
“I am in a sweaty lather after having completed my ticket purchase at Sundance. Out of 200 films you get 20 picks in 20 minutes. Of course, there were technical problems as movie after movie is selling out. I get a very nice young woman on the phone who is helpful. We stack up 19 films and she says, ‘Run it or they will sell out!’ A decision must be made quickly. Run it!
"I am pleased. We got some keepers. Art, sports, anthropology, dramas and docs. A good spread to keep us busy.
"After a full day of preparation, the die is cast. It is never what you think it will be, but at least we have a whole bunch of films to see.”
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Saddling up for Sundance
Chesapeake Film Festival 2010's Board members and visionary factotums Tom McCall and Doug Sadler are preparing to join the throngs at the annual Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, later this month. They'll be sending daily feeds about who and what they see, their impressions of the films, and their takes on the premier showcase for new films by many of the world's best indie filmmakers. They'll be keeping an eye out for movies to feature at this year's Chesapeake Film Festival, set for Sept. 24-26.
An early report from Tom, who is still in Talbot County gearing up for the trip:
"Hello Film Lovers!
I am frantically going through lists and lists of films that I would love to see at Sundance. Hard-hitting international docs to romantic comedies to cheesy post modern horror. It's all there. But much to my horror, it is hard to get tickets. Even though I registered in the ticket lottery a month ago, all the hot tix are taken. So here comes the creative part...how to still see some good films that I didn't initially pick? 8:30 am screenings are less popular with the party crowd. Midnight screeners are also less popular. I can piece this together!
There is also a vibrant black market outside of every screening. So to the bold go the spoils.
Wish me luck!
Tom"