Cinema of the World - Directorate of Film Festivals
Transcription
Cinema of the World - Directorate of Film Festivals
HOMAGE: VANMALA DEVI IFFI-2007 Birth Centenaries 163 ³ÖÖ¸üÖ úÖ 38 ¾ÖÖÑ Ö¸üÖÔÂÒüßµÖ ×±ú»´Ö ÃÖ´ÖÖ¸üÖêÆü 2007 38th International Film Festival of India - 2007 ¯ÖÖÖß, ÖÖê¾ÖÖ, Ö¾Ö´²Ö¸ü 23 - פüÃÖ´²Ö¸ü 3, 2007 Panaji, Goa, November 23 - December 3, 2007 Directorate of Film Festivals Ministry of Information & Broadcasting Government of India i Director of the Festival : Neelam Kapur Editor Editorial Assistant : : Utpal Borpujari Kalyan Ray Coordinators : Srinivasa Santhanam, N.K. Saini, Gautam Singh Production : S. Roy, V.K. Meena, A.K. Gulati, Vilas Pagare Film Selection Committee Members : Mike Pandey, Dr. Savita Bhakhry, Rashmi Doraiswamy, Aziz qureshi, U Radhakrishnan, Maria Aurora Couto, Nandini Sardesai, Saroj Nagi, Anita Katyal, Renu Mittal We are grateful to the various film and festival publications, the extracts from which have helped enrich this brochure. The opinions expressed in this brochure are not necessarily those of the Directorate of Film Festivals or of the Editor. Published by the Director of Film Festivals Ministry of Information & Broadcasting Siri Fort Auditorium, August Kranti Marg, New Delhi - 110049 Produced by the Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity, Printed at M/s. Aravali Printers & Publishers Pvt Ltd., New Delhi-110020. ii iii iv v vi vii CHIEF MINISTER GOA MESSAGE Goa is privileged to host the 38th International Film Festival of India (IFFI) this year. This is the fourth successive year that we are hosting IFFI in Goa. For nearly 38 years, the International Film Festival of India has made cinema enthusiasts journey afar, providing them with wonderful moments of cinematic discoveries. IFFI has become a platform for the biggest screen legends, launching many dreams and new talent of national and international repute. In short, IFFI, has created a platform for true recognition of talent. The International Film Festival of India plays a unique role in the life of the cinema lover. As a showcase for masterpieces created the world over, it provides a culturally diverse rich selection of cinematic fare, reflecting the fabulous vitality and values of the film industry. With Goa having become the permanent venue for IFFI, we deem it our responsibility to not only sustain, but also add to its grandeur and help attract the best talent and best entertainment products in the world of cinema to Goa. It is our intention to ensure the State of Goa acts as a converging point of great creative ideas, cutting across linguistic and geographic barriers. Goa intends to utilize the opportunity of IFFI to build a stronger base of quality entertainment and cultural integration of music and arts, as it goes hand-in-hand with Goas repute as the tourism and hospitality destination of the country. On behalf of Goa and her hospitable people, the state Government would like to roll the red carpet to cine buffs of India and abroad, the jury, delegates, film personalities and media, who would be assembling in this tourist paradise for meaningful interactions to showcase the best cinema from across the globe. Dated : 19/10/2007 Digambar V. Kamat Chief Minister viii ix Contents Opening Film Romania 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days Cristian Mungiu Competition Section (Asia-Africa-Latin America) Jury 1 6-7 Films Argentina Bangladesh China Colombia India Israel Mexico Morocco Pakistan Georgia Sri Lanka Taiwan Thailand Cinema of the World Argentina Argentina France-Germany ArgentinaGermany Bahrain Brazil Canada Chile China Olga, Victoria Olga Time Without Time On the Wngs of Dreams The Postmodern Life of my Aunt A Ton of Luck Night Rain Tale of a River The Debt More than Anything in the World The Satanic Angels In The Name of God Svani Cruel Embrace The Wall Me Myself Mercedes Farriols Golam Rabanny Biplab Ann Hui Rodrigo Triana Lenin Rajendran Samir Chanda Assaf Bernstein Andres Leon Becker & Javier Solar Ahmed Boulane Shoaib Mansoor Soso & Badri Jachvliani Anuruddha Jayasinghe Lin Chih Ju Pongpat Wachirabunjong 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Hunabku The Other Pablo Cesar Ariel Rotter 25 26 Possible Lives Sandra Gugliotta 27 A Bahraini Tale Not By Chance Emotional Arithmetic Romeo & Juliette The Ring Pretending Cherries The Exam The Tokyo Trial Unfinished Girl Bassam Al Thawadi Philippe Barcinski Paolo Barzman Yves Desgagnes Anais Barbeau Lavalette Claudio Dabed Zhang Jiabei Pu Jian Qunshu Gao Cheng Er 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 x Cuba Denmark Finland France Jorge Luis Sanchez Fabian Wullenweber Aki Kourismaki Jan Kounen Emmanuel Mouret Christophe Honore Roberto Ando Florent Emilio Siri Alain Corneau Gérard Krawczyk Daniel Thomson Denis Decourt Alexander Buravsky Jan Bonny Vanessa Van Houten Felix Randau 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 GermanyGoodbye Bafana France-BelgiumSouth Africa-ItalyBelgium-Luxembourg Bille August 54 Greece-Italy Hungary Costas Kapakas Zoltan Kamondi Judit Elek Mohammad Nourizad Bijan Mirbagheri Dror Sabo Oded Davidoff Raphael Nadjari Mohsen Melliti Silvana Maja Cristiano Bortone Vincenzo Marra Paolo & Vittorio Taviani 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 Gianni Amelio 68 Masaki Hamamoto Koji Kawano Naomi Kawase Una Celma Shuhaimi Baba Guillermo del Toro Juan Pablo Villasenor 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 Russia Germany El Benny Cecilie Lights in the Dusk 99 Francs Changement d Adresse Love Songs Strange Crime The Intimate Enemy The Second Wind Taxi 4 Orchestra Seats Turning Pages Leningrad Counterparts Paperbird The Calling Game Uranya Dolina The Eighth Day of the Week Iran Iranian Prince The Day Looms Israel No Exit Someone to Run With Israel-France Tehilim Italy Me, The Other Ossidiana Red Like The Sky Rush Hour Italy-BulgariaThe Lark Farm Spain-France Italy-FranceThe Missing Star Switzerland Japan Beyond the Crimson Sky Love My Life Japan-France The Mourning Forest Latvia Don’t Talk About It Malaysia Heir to the Spiritual Tiger Mexico Pan’s Labyrinth Wait for Me in another World xi The Netherlands New Zealand Norway Poland-ItalyCanada Poland Portugal Romania Serbia South Africa South Korea Spain Spain-UK Sweden Sweden-GermanyFrance-DenmarkNorway SwitzerlandFinalnd-Germany Thailand Turkey UK USA Black Book Out of the blue Reprise Karol un Papa rimasto uomo Paul Verhoeven Robert Sarkies Joachim Trier Giacomo Battiato 76 77 78 79 Tricks Dot.Com 12:08 East of Bucharest Last Waltz in Sarajevo Tsotsi Psychopath Under the Stars Salvador Puig When Darkness Falls You, the living Andrzej Jakimowski Luis Galvao Teles Corneliu Porumboiu Nikole Stojanovica Gavin Hood Kim,Shin Hea Felix Viscarret Manuel Huerga Anders Nilsson Roy Andersson 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 Sonic Mirror Mika Kaurismaki 90 Mid Road Gang Pantham Thongsange & Somkait Vituranich Yavuz Turgul Dervis Zaim Michael Jaffer Danny Hiller Hesham Issawi Neil Mandt Kiran Merchant Gil Kofman Robin Swicord 91 Lovelorn Waiting for Heaven Full Circle Love Me Still American East Last Stop For Paul Quarter Life Crisis The Memory Thief The Jane Austen Book Club Film India Worldwide 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101-103 AIDS Jaago Amal The Pool Mira Nair Richie Mehta Chris Smith Retrospectives Ingmar Bergman Biography Films Autumn Sonata Fanny and Alexander The Seventh Seal The Virgin Spring Through a Glass Darkly 106-110 xii Shame Wild Strawberries Living together 111-113 Looking For Cheyenne Quand Tu Descendras Du Ciel Samia Voisins Voisines Wesh Wesh - qu’est ce qui se passe ? Zim And Co Flander’s Image Belgium Valerie Minetto Eric Guirado Philippe Faucon Malik Chibane Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche Pierre Jolivet 114-117 Gilles King of the World Love belongs to everyone The Intruder Jan Verheyen Guido Henderickx Hilde Van Mieghem Frank Van Mechelen Award Winning Films From PFF A Stranger of Mine Border Line Hole in the Sky Timeless Melody Yoshino’s Barber Shop 118-122 Volker Schlondorff 123-125 Circle of Deceit Legends of Rita The Voyager Country Focus Hungary 127-134 Black Brush Dealer Eastern Sugar Hukkle Temptations The Porcelain Doll Vagabond Roland Vranik Benedek Fliegauf Ferenc Török György Pálfi Zoltán Kamondi Peter Gardos György Szomjas IFFI Goa Film Treasures 135-142 Thomson Foundation for Film and TV Heritage, National Film Archive of India and Cinémathèque Française, with support of Film and Television Institute of India xiii Indian Retrospectives Tapan Sinha 144-146 Biography Kabuliwallah Sagina Mahato Adalt O Ekti Meye Aadmi Aur Aurat Vijay Anand 147-149 Biography Guide Tere Ghar Ke Samne Jewel Thief Nau Do Gyarah Navya Movement 150-151 Samskara Chomana Dudi Ghatashradha India@60 152-154 Biyalis (Bengali) Nam Iruva (Tamil) Shaheed (Hindi) Kala Pani - A Pilgrimage Gandhi An Emerging Reality India Wins Freedom Tribute 155 Aribam Syam Sharma Homage 157-162 K K Mahajan O P Nayar Vanmala Devi Birth Centenaries 163-166 Devika Rani Khemchand Prakash T R Sundaram Master Class 168 Adoor Gopalkrishnan Special Screening India Closing Film Portugal-Spain 169 Last Lear Rituparno Ghosh 171 Fados Carlos Saura Indian Panorama lists Feature Non-Feature 172-173 xiv Opening Film IFFI-2007 2 IFFI-2007 OPENING FILM Romania 4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days / 4 luni, 3 Saptamani 2 Zile 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 113 mins, Romanian Otilia and Gãbiþã share the same room in a student dormitory. They are colleagues at the University in this small town in Romania, during the last years of Communism. Otilia rents a room in a cheap hotel. In the afternoon, they are going to meet a certain Mr. Bebe. Gãbiþã is pregnant, abortion is illegal and neither of them have passed through something like this before. When the foul Bebe requests something far more precious than money for his services, the girls descend into a harrowing journey of the soul that is nothing short of shattering. Taking place over a single Saturday in 1987, the film holds an enormous emotional gravitas. It evolves into a profound exploration not only of sorority in harsh times but of choices and responsibility when options are few. This film belongs to a larger project called Tales from the Golden Age - a subjective history of Communism in Romania told through its urban legends. The project’s aim is to talk about that period with no direct reference to Communism but only through different stories focused on personal options in a time of misfortunes that people had to live like normal times. It is the first film of the series. Abortion was a crime in Romania from 1966 until 1989. Mungiu’s dark tale brilliantly captures the decrepit spaces of the dour Romanian 1980s. The dialogue is spare and authentic, music is nonexistent and each scene unfolds in a single take, shot with a steady camera that captures the characters’ tortured hearts. While there is little relief from desperation in Mungiu’s not-so-distant Romania, the note-perfect mastery of his filmmaking offers no small degree of transcendence. Cristian Mungiu was born in 1968 in Iasi, Romania. He studied English literature at the University of Iasi and Film directing at the University of Film in Bucharest. He worked as a teacher and a journalist for written press, radio and television until 1994. During his film studies, he worked as an assistant director for foreign productions shot in Romania. After his graduation, in 1998, he made several shorts. His first feature, Occident, was premiered in Director’s Fortnight in Cannes in 2002 and later won prizes at several festivals. He co-founded Mobra Films in 2003. Mungiu is the brother of political analyst Alina Mungiu-Pippidi. 3 Director Cristian Mungiu Screenplay Cristian Mungiu Cinematography Oleg Mutu Editor Dana Bunescu Cast Anamaria Marinca (Otilia), Vlad Ivanov (Bebe), Laura Vasiliu (Gabita), Alexandru Potoceanu (Adi) Art Mihaela Poenaru Sound Titi Fleancu, Dana Bunescu, Cristian Tarnoveþchi Costumes Dana Istrate Production Oleg Mutu, Cristian Mungiu Mobra Films 5, Intrarea Serdarului, Sector 1, 011377 Bucharest, Romania Tel/Fax: +40 21 666 48 27 email: info@mobrafilms.ro www.mobrafilms.ro; World Sales Wild Bunch 99 rue de la Verrerie, 75004 Paris, France. Tel: 33-1-5301-5030 Fax: 33-1-5301-5049 email: avicente@wildbunch.eu Festivals & Awards Cannes (Palm d’Or), Toronto Competition (Asia-Africa-Latin America) IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Márta Mészáros (Chairperson) Meltem Cumbul (Member) Pablo Cesar (Member) Márta Mészáros is considered one of Hungary’s best filmmakers and also one of most significant woman directors to emerge from central Europe. She began making films in 1970s drawing on the oppression of both state and gender. Her two sons, Nyika Jancsó and Miklós Jancsó Jr., have separately worked as director of photography on many of her films. Her critically acclaimed film Napló apámnak, anyámnak was produced in 1990. She directed a film about Imre Nagy in 2003-2004, titled The Unburied Dead.. Meszaros’ work has directly confronted issues of gender, society, politics and identity and have been acknowledged worldwide for its outspoken nature. Mészáros was born in Hungary, she in 1936 moved to Russia with her Hungarian parents, who had been lured there by Stalin’s openness to “fellow travellers” in his Socialist experiment. Once there, they were sent to the barren plains of Kyrgyzstan and forced to forge an existence for themselves. Stalin changed his mind about these foreigners, though, and a crackdown soon followed. Mészáros’s mother died in childbirth and her father vanished into a concentration camp following a trial. Although the awful truth of her father’s fate had long been suspected, it was not until after 1999 that Mészáros received confirmation from the authorities that he had been executed. These early traumatic experiences were to form the basis of her autobiographical series of “Diary” films during the 1980s, which broke new ground in Hungarian cinema in terms of what they showed politically as well as their being sensitive portrayals of the petulance of youthful rebellion and the processes of personal and historical memory. By the time she made the Diary films, though, Mészáros was already famous. Her under-production fillm is Hanna Wende, and earlier she has made films like A Temetetlen halott (The Unburied Man), Csodálatos mandarin (The Miraculous Manderin), Kisvilma - Az utolsó napló (Little Vilna: The Last Diary), A Szerencse lányai (Córy szczescia), Siódmy pokój (The Seventh Room), etc. Her films have won awards at prestigious festivals, including the ones in Cannes and Berlin. A noted actor from Turkey, Meltem Cumbul graduated with a major in drama when she was 21. She then worked as an actress for the Shakespeare Company in London. Taking on a career in television, she hosted the reality programme Aþaðý Yukarý and the game show Nereden Baºlasak. During this time, Meltem also played a number of supporting roles in movies, most notably Bay E and Böcek. In 1996, she starred in a Sahte Dünyalar, a popular soap opera. Meltem was given her own show The Meltem Cumbul Show, a year later. She did leading parts in the movies Karýþýk Pizza, Geboren in Absurdistan and the musical Anlat ªehrazat Anlat. Meltem acted in the popular TV series Biz size aþýk olduk, Beºik Kertmesi and Gurbet Kadýný. She also starred in the extremely popular Yilan Hikayesi, which is to date the highest-rated programme ever in the history of Turkish television. Meltem’s role in the movie Abdülhamit Düserken won her the Golden Orange Prize at the Antalya Film Festival. She has also acted in the award-winning and critically- acclaimed movies Gegen die Wand and Gönül Yarasý. Her latest films A Beautiful Life and The Alphabet Killer are getting ready for release soon. She has won the best actress award at Ankara International Film Festival in 2000 for the film Durusma , and the FIPRESCI prize for the best actress at the Palm Springs International Film Festival for Gönül yarasi in 2005. The 1962-born Pablo Cesar has made films like Blood, Aphrodite (the garden of the perfumes), Unicorn (the garden of the fruits), Grey Fire, Equinox and The Holy Family. He has also made a number of short films. His latest film Hunabku is being screened in the Cinema of the World section of this festival as an Asian Premiere. His earlier films have been widely screened in various international film festivals in India. Cesar has also made a large number of short films during his career, which has also seen him as a Professor in the University of Cinema of Buenos Aires. 6 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Robert Sarkies (Member) Shaji N Karun (Member) New Zealand director Robert Sarkies has had a passion for filmmaking since he first began making movies in his hometown of Dunedin as an eight-year-old. Combining his love of drama, technology and pyrotechnics, Rob’s commitment to being a filmmaker saw him save his lunch money at school and put it towards his student films. The sacrifice paid off: by his early 20s, his short Dream Makers had won him first prize at the Semana de Cine Experimental Festival in Madrid, and Signing Off picked up six international awards, including first prize at the Montreal International Film Festival. He chose a true-life story based on a tragedy for his second feature Out of the Blue, which is being shown in this festival in the Cinema of the World section . His debut feature Scarfies was a cult hit in New Zealand in 2000, and also won seven awards at the NZ Film Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. Born in Kerala in 1952, Shaji N Karun is one of India’s most-respected directors. Karun studied Cinema and Television at the Film & Television Institute of India at Pune, graduating to become the cinematographer of nearly 40 films and almost all films of G Aravindan. His work won him the Eastman Kodak Award for Excellence in 1990. His directorial debut was not until 1988 with Piravi (The Birth), which attracted tremendous acclaim. Selected in no less than 70 international film festivals, amongst them Cannes, it received 31 awards, including the prestigious Charlie Chaplin Award at Edinburgh, the Silver Leopard at Locarno, the Special Mention of Camera d’Or at Cannes, the Silver Hugo at Chicago and President of India’s Gold Medal Award for the best film in the year 1989. His second film Swaham was received with equal praise, as it was selected not only in the Official Competition at Cannes in 1994, but also invited to numerous international festivals gathering a large number of awards. Vanaprastham (The last dance), was his third film. It was also his third to be selected at Cannes Film Festival, an honour bestowed on only a handful of directors in the world. It was adjudged as the best film of the National film Festival of India in 1999 and won several national and international recognitions. Nishad, was a film by him in Hindi, unlike all his previous films in mother tongue Malayalam, and it was premiered at the Fukuoka International Film Festival in 2002 in Japan. As a short filmmaker, he has been awarded the gold medal from The President of India in 1996 and won many honours in international film festivals. For his achievements in cinema, the government of Kerala honoured him by granting a Civilian Award ‘Prathibha Pranamam’ in 2000. In the same year, he was decorated with the Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres by the Government of France. He has worked with reputed filmmakers like K G George and M T Vasudevan Nair as a cinematographer. His camera work, especially in the films of Aravindan from Kanchana Seeta to Chidambaram, for some defines the look of Kerala’s New Wave Cinema. He is right now making a film on the 19 th Century painter Raja Ravi Varma. 7 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Argentina Olga, Victoria Olga (Time Without Time) 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 89 mins, Spanish Director Mercedes Farriols Screenplay Mercedes Farriols Cinematography Ricardo De Angelis Editor Pablo Colafrancesco Music Federico Jusid Cast Juana Hidalgo, Mariana Levy, Pepe Novoa, Adriana Salonia, Beatriz Spelzini Art Santiago Elder Sound Fernando Soldevila Costume Marcela Vilarino Production Criacine Srl Aguilar 2356 PISO 22 F Tel: +541147814960 Festivals & Awards 2006: Trieste-Italy (Best Sound Track Award), Israel (Best Foreign Film) 2007: Shanghai, Eilat (Best Film), Lisbon Village Festival, Santiago Described as a poetic drama in which the histories of three women, three generations, interlace and overlap, this is a film with a history with iterations, with paths of life that repeat themselves again and again; with similar dreams, desires, hopes, frustrations… Barbara is overwhelmed. Overwhelmed by her parents’ relationship, by the existing contradiction between her longings and the society she has to live in, for the love, the lack of love, the misunderstandings… One dawn she turns from a party driving at nearly 100 km per hour with her boyfriend Federico, two friends and lots of alcohol. Last thing she sees before sinking into water is a suspension bridge; a bridge from which will arise, in the middle of death, impotence, incomprehension, the history of her grandmother, Olga. In the precise moment, with the exact wisdom. For the record, says the film’s makers, every 30 minutes one person dies in a car accident due to driving under the influence of alcohol. This is the main cause of death among teenagers, and a huge concern for many parents in Argentina. Mercedes Farriols is a writer, director, actress and teacher. Prolific authoress, she has written many texts in almost every genre: 17 theatre plays, novels, TV scripts, short stories, poetry, essays and articles; all of them traversed with the same commitment to non-violence, human rights and women rights. For this intense commitment, she has been acknowledged around Europe and Latin America. This is her first film. Farriols, who studied literature in the Universidad de Buenos Aires specialising in classic and modern languages, and in the Università degli Studi di Milano, has also been awarded a scholarship by the government of France to study the French language, literature and history. 8 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Bangladesh On the wings of Dreams / Swopnodanay 2007, 35mm, Colour, 88 mins,Bengali A gossamer fable with a steely core, it couches its real-world economics in pastoral beauty. Fazlu sells dubious medicines at local fairs, but can barely support his family. His daughter has a bad leg and needs special care, and his son, Ratan, is growing fast. So when Fazlu’s wife finds some money in a pair of second hand trousers bought for Ratan, the whole family is thrilled. It looks like they have got a fortune, but the money is in a foreign currency they’ve never seen before. How can they turn it into cash they can use? From this simple premise, the film builds a story that delves deep into the economic and emotional struggles of villagers in Bangladesh. The family hopes to find a bank in the city that will exchange the money, but that’s easier said than done. Fazlu enlists the help of his friend Siraj, a man who knows the ways of the world. Siraj agrees to assist but demands 50 per cent of the money. For Fazlu, this is only a minor inconvenience, as he expects to be a rich man very soon – so rich, in fact, that he starts courting a pretty younger woman in the village, imagining he will easily be able to afford a second wife. Fazlu’s growing hubris demands a fall, but it is in how events play out for him and his family that the film attains its grace and insight. Golam Rabbany Biplob makes his directorial debut with this film. Following the lead given by his countryman and Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, Biplob shows how broad economic forces affect the most modest of Bangladeshi villagers. Biplob, born in Naogaon, Bangladesh, in 1974, studied Bengali language and literature, philosophy and English. He is the secretary general of the International Federation of Film Societies and the founding director of the International Film Festival Bangladesh. 9 Director Golam Rabbany Biplob Screenplay Golam Rabbany Biplob, Anisul Huque Cinematography Mahfooz Ur Rahman Khan Editor Junaid Halim Music Bappa Mozumder Cast Mahmuduzzaman Babu (Fazlu Kabiraj), Rokeya Prachy (Kabiraj’s wife), Fazlur Rahman Babu (Shiraj Member), Momena Choudhury (Shiraj Member’s wife), Shamima Islam Tusty (Rehana), Ratan (Ratan) Art Shahid Ahmed Mitu Sound Anup Mukharjee, G.D.Babu Costumes Shomser Ali Production Impress Telefilm Ltd 62-A Siddeswari Road, 2nd Floor 1217 Dhaka Bangladesh Tel: +8828322168 Fax: +8828313665 email: frs@bdcom.com World Sales MDC International Gmbh Schillerstr. 7a, 10625 Berlin (Germany) Tel: +493026497900 Fax: +493026497910 email: info@mdc-int.de Festivals & Awards Shanghai (Best Director Asian New Talent Award), Rotterdam, Paramaribo (Surinam), Sofia, Festroia (Portugal), Durban, Toronto, Rio Di Janeiro, Hamburg, Chicago, Warsaw, Bangladesh’s official entry for the Foreign Language Oscar at the 80th Annual Academy Awards. IFFI-2007 COMPETITION China The Postmodern Life of My Aunt / Yi Ma de Hou Xian Dai Sheng Huo 2006, 35mm, Colour, 111 mins, Mandarin Chinese Director Ann Hui Screenplay Ann Hui, Qiang Li Cinematography Lu Lik-Wai, Kwan Pun-leung Editor Liao Ching-Song, Yang Hong Yu Music Joe Hisaishi Cast Siqin Gaowa (Ye Rutang), Chow Yun-fat (Pan Zhichang), Vicky Zhao Wei, Lisa Lu, Shi Ke, Guan Wenshuo (Kuankuan) Art Wu Lizhong Sound Tu Du-Chih Costumes Ma Yutao Production Cheerland Entertainment Organisation 1-2F, Building 1 Madianjingdian Jiayuan, No. 8 Qijiahuozi, Chaoyang District Beijing 100029 (China) Tel: +861082015522/6641 Fax: +861062018669 Email: houli@qixinran.com In this film, renowned director Ann Hui blends her humanist cinema with the spirit of Chinese opera. She has created both a humorous look at China today and a new genre of filmmaking: the post-Cultural Revolution satirical melodrama. Cool and articulate, the film has a generous heart, a sensitive soul and a clever mind. Featuring a first-class cast of China’s great actors, it is the story of oldfashioned Ye Rutang, a single woman in her 60s who struggles to maintain a dignified life amid the dangers of Shanghai, a city that seems to have become the receptacle for all kinds of con men. The first to pull a scam on Ye is her 12-yearold nephew Kuan-kuan. He moves to her old-fashioned apartment after breaking a leg in an accident, but when he cannot bear her stinginess, he runs away and pretends to have been kidnapped in order to get the ransom money. Then comes Pan Zhichang, an amateur opera singer, who tricks Ye into a relationship and steals most of her savings with a complicated swindle involving speculation in the price of cemetery plots. Focusing the film on the experience of women in her home country and around the world, Hui sketches a fine portrait of changing values. She situates her story in a precise cultural moment - a time where the past seems to carry meaning only in the stubborn memories of individuals. This charming social tale takes an original approach to issues including the atrophy of mores in a society that is no longer egalitarian; its freshness rests in its ironic yet compassionate look at its curious protagonists. Ann Hui was born in Anshan, China and moved to Hong Kong as a child. She studied at the University of Hong Kong and the London Film School, and worked as an assistant director before directing a series of shorts and television programmes. One of Hong Kong’s most prominent and innovative filmmakers, she has directed numerous features, including The Secret (1979), Woo Yuet’s Story (1981), Boat People (1982), Love in a Fallen City (1984), Song of the Exile (1990), Summer Snow (1994), The Stunt Woman (1996), Visible Secret (2001), July Rhapsody (2002) and Goddess of Mercy (2003). 10 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Colombia A Ton of Luck / Soñar no cuesta nada 2006, 35 mm, colour, 96 mins, Spanish This black comedy recounts the antics of a battalion of underpaid, overworked Columbian soldiers who come upon a cache of $40 million. When the 147 members of the anti-guerrilla patrol, on a rescue mission in the jungles of Caqueta, stumble on a staggering cache of drug money, the men face a tough moral dilemma: What to do with loot? For the testosterone-fuelled soldiers, the answer is to shirk their duty, divvy up the treasure, and — if they can — keep it secret. Based on a true story of military corruption that happened in May 2003, Triana’s morality tale takes a local incident and expands it into a smart, witty and sometimes heartbreaking look at the ravages of greed and the foolishness of easy opportunities. Flush with wealth, but stuck in the middle of nowhere, the grunts start paying each other through the nose for the smallest conveniences, such as hundreds for a roll of toilet paper or a radio. Some burn cash to make campfires. Poor, uneducated and victims of their own naïve youth, the men are even more careless when they return home from active duty. A smash hit at the domestic box office last summer, topping even “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest”, Triana’s deft mix of comedy, absurdity and tragedy tells its story through the eyes of four main characters, each of whom travel different routes in reconciling their dream-come-true chance at happiness with their ultimate misfortune. The result is a compelling look at human nature. Rodrigo Triana’s first feature film, Como el gato y el ratón (2002), won a number of awards in festivals around the world. This second feature film of his became the biggest box office hit in Colombian history, was nominated for a Goya Award, and was Colombia’s official submission for the Academy Awards’ Foreign Language film category. He is currently working on his next projects, Espérame en el Cielo and A Ton of Luck II. 11 Director Rodrigo Triana Screenplay Jorge Hiller, Clara Maria Ochoa Cinematography Sergio Garcia Editor Alberto Ponce Music Nicolás Uribe Cast Diego Cadavid (Lloreda), Juan Sebastian Arangón (Venegas), Manuel José Chavez (Buddies Porras), Carlos Manuel Vesga (Perlaza), Marlon Moreno Art Gabriela Monroy Sound Gonzalo Guerra, Rafael Umana Production Clara María Ochoa Dominguez Eva Carrillo Telesisteme Mejicaho SA de CV Balderas No 420 Mezanine Col Centro Historico 06070 Mexico DF World Sales CMO Producciones SA Festivals & Awards 2006: Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival 2007: Colombia’s entry for the Best Foreign Film Oscar, Palm Spring, Miami, Cartagena (Best actor to Marlon Moreno), Guadalajara, Chicago (Public Choice Award), Cannes IFFI-2007 COMPETITION India Night Rain / Rathri Mazha 2006, 35 mm, Colour, Malayalam Director Lenin Rajendran Screenplay Lenin Rajendran Cinematography Madhu Neelakantan Music Ramesh Narayan Cast Vineeth, Meera Jasmine, Manoj K Jayan, Biju Menon, Lalu Alex, Cochin Haneefa Two youngsters, Harikrishnan and Meera, come to know each other through a matrimonial advertisement on a web site. Through intermittent chat sessions they get drawn to each other. Though they have not met, love blossoms. But what they love is what each imagines the other person to be. When they eventually meet, however, the dreams are shattered. But their minds have been so bonded together, they decide to marry and make the best of it. It is now society that looks askance at the relationship. Starting out as director P A Backer's assistant, Lenin Rajendran made his directorial debut with Venal (1982). Lenin has been consistent with the quality of his films, by not surrendering to market forces even while using the form and stars of popular cinema. An active member of the Communist party, his Meenamasithile Sooryan (1985) was about the anti-feudal upheaval of the 1940s in Kerala from a Communist viewpoint. Swathi Thirunal (1987), a period film was a biographical work of a 19th century king of Travancore, better known as a musical composer, Daivathinte Vikrithikal (1992) was the cinematic adoption of M Mukandan's novel of the same name, Mazha (2001) was adopted from Madhavikutty's story, and Annyar (2003) deals with the hot topic of communal polarisation in Kerala. His other films are Chillu (1982), Prem Nazirine Kanmanilla (1983), Meenamasathile Sooryan (1985), Puravrutham (1988), and Vachanam (1992). 12 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION India Tale of a River / Ek Nadir Galpo 2007, 35mm, Colour, 127 mins, Bengali ‘Tale of a River’ celebrates the special relationship that fathers and daughters share. Darakeshwar is Anu’s hero and she is her father’s pride and joy. The bond that Darakeshwar and Anu share transcends time and even death. Darakeshwar’s mission is to rename the river Keleghai as Anjana in memory of his daughter who lost her life in the river. Is Darakeshwar right in wanting to rename the river?… Can the names of rivers be changed so easily?… Who will help Darakeshwar in his mission?… Will Darakeshwar ever manage to rename the river?… Samir Chanda is a professional film, commercials and television designer with almost 25 years of experience and across the wide range of both large and small projects. He has worked with some the best directors in Indian cinema – Mrinal Sen, Shyam Benegal, Govind Nihalani, Subhash Ghai, Mani Rathnam, Vishal Bhardwaj and many others. He has made a significant, indelible and influential contribution to the development of production design in the Indian film industry. Chanda has also been instrumental in developing the postgraduate diploma in art direction at the Film & Television institute of India, Pune. This is his directorial debut. 13 Direction Samir Chanda Cinematography Rajen Kothari Editor Sanjib Datta Music Nachiketa Cast Mithun Chakrabarty, Shweta Prasad, Nirmal Kumar, Anjan Srivastava, Krishna Kishore, Jishu Sengupta Production Leela Chanda, Sangeeta Ajay Agrawal World Sales Lissac Entertainment B 103, Uranus Apartments Sai Baba Galaxy, Link Road Goregaon (W), Mumbai 400004, India Tel: (+91) (22) 28792093 Fax:(+91) (22) 66994202 email: samirchandaone@gmail.com IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Israel The Debt / Ha’Chov 2007, 35mm Colour, 93 mins, Hebrew/German/Russian Director Assaf Bernstein Screenplay Assaf Bernstein, Ido Rosenblum Cinematography Giora Bejach Editor Einat Glazer-Zarhin Music Jonathan Ber Giora Cast Gila Almagor (Rachel Brener), Netta Garti (young Rachel Berner), Edgar Selge (Maximilian Reiner), Itay Tiran (young Zvi), Yehezkel Lazarov (young Ehud) Art Illya Isupov, Ido Dolev Sound Aviv Aldema Costumes Galina Otenko, Inbal Shuki Production Eitan Evan Evanstone Films 18 Beit Hillel Tel Aviv, Israel Tel: 972-3-5612045 Fax: 972-3-5612492 email: evanstone@bezeqint.net World Sales United King Films Cinema City Complex Zomet Glilot Ramat Hasharon 47100 Tel: +97236909994 Fax: +97236997022 The year: 1965, Rachel Brener is one of three young Mossad agents who capture the “Surgeon of Birkenau”, a monstrous Nazi war criminal. In their safe house, at the outskirts of Berlin, the three agents wait for their return to Israel in order to deliver “the Surgeon” for public trial. As they watch over their captive, a psychological duel commences between the Nazi doctor and the young agents. Matters rapidly deteriorate and “the Surgeon” manages to escape. Unable to face their horrible failure, Rachel and her friends decide to fabricate the Surgeon’s death and return to Israel as “national heroes”. In 1997, more than 30 years later, “the Surgeon” suddenly resurfaces in Ukraine, determined to confess to his crimes against humanity. Now, the three ex-Mossad agents need to protect their lie. The mission falls on Rachel who must terminate a man known to be dead and to redeem the debt against which she had built her life. Assaf Bernstein is an New York University Film School graduate and an awardwinning writer-director. His short films won awards in the international film festivals of Jerusalem, Chicago, San Francisco, Northampton and MannheimHidelberg. In 2001, Assaf won the Golden Trailer Award in the Best Trailer-No Movie category for the trailer he directed for his soon-to-be-produced feature film, a.k.a. The same year, Assaf completed Run, a crime drama shot on location in a trailer park in Israel. 14 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Mexico More than Anything in the World / Mas Que A Nada En El Mundo 2006, 35mm, Colour, 90 mins, Spanish The relationship between beautiful Emilia and her imaginative young daughter, Alicia, is tested in this understated Mexican drama. Disoriented after moving to a new apartment and left to herself when her mother starts bringing men home, Alicia takes refuge in dreams that soon become nightmares, especially after she begins to fear that her mom has become possessed by the vampirish man next door. With a keen eye for the rhythms and struggles of contemporary Mexican family life, this film illuminates the secret worlds of lonely children while never straying from its true subject: the uncommon love. Andres Leon Becker and Javier Solar are innovative storytellers with an extraordinary sense of humour and visual flare. Their debut film is dramatic and emotionally charged. Becker was born in Mexico City in 1970. He studied at the Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica (CCC), where he specialised in cinematography. Born in Puerto Rico in 1969, Solar also studied at the CCC, specialising in screenplays and directing. The two co-directed the shorts Mi último encuentro con Víctor (1995), UFO (1995), Cococobana (1997) and Cerebro (2001). This film marks their feature-length directorial debut. 15 Director Andres Leon Becker, Javier Solar Screenplay Andres Leon Becker, Javier Solar Cinematography Damian Garcia Editor Luciana Jauffred Gorostiza Cast Elizabeth Cervantes (Emilia), Juan Carlos Colombo (Hector), Julia Urbini (Alicia), Andrés Montiel (Mario), Daniel Martínez (Doctor), Silverio Palacios Art Barbara Enriquez, Alejandro Garcia Sound Pablo Tamez Sierra Costumes Fernanda Velez Production Ángeles Castro, Issa Guerra, Hugo Rodríguez C.C.C./IMCINE, FOPROCINE Mexican Film Institute Insurgentes Sur 674, 2nd Floor Del Valle 03100 Mexico City Mexico Festivals & Awards best first film at both the Guadalajara (best first film), and Montreal (best first film), Miami IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Morocco The Satanic Angels / Les Anges de Satan 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 84 mins, French-Arabic Director Ahmed Boulane Screenplay Ahmed Boulane Cinematography Serge Hannecart Editor Arbi Ben Ali Music Joel Pelligrini Cast Mansour Badri (Hakim), Younes Megri (Momo’s Father), Driss Roukhe (Kader), Rafik Boubker (Said), Amal Ayouch (Lawyer), Amal Chabli (Meriam), Salah Dizane (Police Chief) Art Amine Mohamed Soulaymani Sound Mohamed Bounouar Costumes Dana Shondelmeyer Production & World Sales Ahmed Boulane Boulane O’Bryne Production Bvd Yacoub El Mansour Résidence El Beida Imm H Appt 4 Casablanca, Morocco 20100 Tel: +212 61 298491 Fax: +212 22 230051 email: bobprod@wanadoo.net.ma www.lesangesdesatan.com Casablanca, Morocco, 2003. Fourteen young musicians are accused of shaking the foundations of Islam because they play hard rock. They are sentenced to prison for up to a year after a surrealistic trial. The civil society mobilizes to try to free them... Based on actual events. Ahmed Boulane was born in Sale, Morocco in 1956. He was expelled from school three times, and was only 15 when they threw him out for good. However, this did not stop him from learning to speak four languages fluently. During the past 30 years, he has worked on msore than 50 feature films and documentaries and more than 100 commercials, both Moroccan and international. During the mid1990s Boulane began to feel restless, and decided to add a nationality: he became an Irish citizen in 1995. And he decided he needed to direct his own projects. The result... in 1996 he created his production company, Boulane-O’Bryne Production (B’OB Prod), to produce Voyage dans le passé and Ali, Rabiaa et les autres, two films that earned him both critical acclaim and the respect of the public. 16 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Pakistan In the Name of God / Khuda Ke Liye 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 170 mins, Urdu It is the story of Mansoor who goes to the United States for higher education. During his study years, the tragic events of 9/11 take place, and somehow the young man gets arrested by the American authorities. Mansoor’s younger brother Sarmad is being motivated by his old extremist friend Sher Shah on the ‘path of God’ and to quit all musical activities in favour of the ‘straight path’. Meanwhile, his uncle arrives from the UK with his only cousin Maryam who wanted to marry her non-Muslim boyfriend back in the UK against her father’s wishes. He brings her to Pakistan where Sher Shah trucks them to their village in a tribal area near Afghanistan and leaves Maryam after forcibly getting her married to Sarmad. She tries to escape but Sher Shah and Sarmad follow her and brings her back to the village. Naseeruddin Shah plays the powerful cameo of a Muslim scholar who clarifies oft misunderstood and misinterpreted tenets of Islam during the course of a court case. The film is about the difficult situation in which the Pakistanis in particular and the Muslims in general are caught up since 9/11. Shoaib Mansoor is rated by critics as one of the most influential figures on the Pakistan showbiz scene. He has produced and directed TV shows like Alpha Bravo Charlie, Sunehre Din and Gulls & Guys for PTV, the national channel. He has also successfully dabbled with song writing and has penned the stories and screenplays for many of his drama productions that he also directed. Between 2001 and 2003, Shoaib directed the Supreme Ishq series of songs. He was the backbone of songs by Junaid Jamshed and produced most of the albums by the 1980s pop sensation Vital Signs. He wrote and composed a number of their hit numbers such as Dil Dil Pakistan and Aitebar. He has been awarded Pesidential Pride of Performance and Sitara-e-Imtiaz award by the Government of Pakistan. This is his first feature film. 17 Director Shoaib Mansoor Screenplay Shoaib Mansoor Cinematography Ali Mohammad, Neil Lisk, Ken Seng, David Lemay Editor Ali Javed, Aamir Khan Music Khawar Jawad, Rohail Hayat Cast Shaan (Mansoor), Fawad Afzal Khan (Sarmad), Iman Ali (Maryam), Naseeruddin Shah (Maulana Wali), Hameed Sheikh (Sher Shah), Austin Marie Sayre (Janie), Humayun Qazi (uncle) Art Jennifer Gerber, David Christopher Krause Costumes Ronald G Forsyth, Emma Potter, Kuba Zelazek Production Shoman Productions House No. 311, Block S DHA, Lahore (Pakistan) Tel: +9242572511 Fax: +92212215378 Mobile: +923018469495 World Sales Geo Films Printing House I.I.Chundrigar Road Karachi (Pakistan) Tel: +92212636961 Fax: +92212636066 Mobile: +923008489188, +923333536011 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Georgia Svani 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 97 mins, Georgian Director Soso & Badri Jachvliani Screenplay Soso & Badri Jachvliani, Amiran Chichinadze, Amiran Dolidze, Eka Jangveladze, Irma Pirtskhalaishvili Cinematography Evgeni Muzrukov Editor Paata Godziashvili, Temur Kotolashvili Music Tchabuka Amiranashvili Cast Badri Jachvliani (Jabeg), Darejan Kharshiladze (Martha), Elena Velikanova (Vika) Art Temur Arjevandze Sound Paata Godziashvili Costumes Ketino Palavandishvili Production & World Sales Studio Tetnuldi 21/95 G. Brtskinvale street Didi Digomi, 0131 Tbilisi, Georgia Tel/Fax: +(995 32) 253335 email: tetnuldi@caucasus.net Festivals Venice Svani is a legend about life, feud and love. All based on reality. In the highest populated place of Europe, high up in the Georgian part of the Caucasus mountains, resides an ancient Christian tribe of Georgians who still follow the traditions of blood revenge. They are called the Svanetians... Soso & Badri Jachvliani are well known directors from Georgia. 18 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Sri Lanka Cruel Embrace / Dhawala Duwili 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Sinhalese Yaso lives alone with her daughter after the death of her soldier husband Ratnaweera who fought in Sri Lanka’s civil war. Ratnaweera’s mother Hinnihami, who lives close by, is a typical hot-tempered but soft-hearted village woman. She looks after Yaso but is also very much in control of Yaso’s life. Hinnihami’s eldest son Amarasena does odd jobs in the capital city of Colombo. He is a drifter without drive and ambition. No one knows he lives in Colombo and his arrivals and departures are unpredictable. He returns home only after the traditional seventh day almsgiving for his dead brother. When he learns that Yaso is pregnant again, he starts to think about his brother’s unborn child, his niece Nayanakanthin and about Yaso. He is emotionally and physically drawn towards Yaso. Hinnihami notices this change in Amarasena. She believes that Ratnaweera died because of the bad luck brought on by Yaso and feels the same thing will happen to her eldest son as well. In this highly charged emotional climate, Yaso becomes depressed. She realises that if she is to own the land she lives on, she must marry Amarasena. If not, she will have to marry someone else and leave the house and property. But Hinnihami makes sure that neither of these happen. Amarasena is forced to agree to a marriage proposal negotiated by his mother in order to ease the highly tense situation, not because he wants to get married to another woman. But Yaso misunderstands him and breaks of their love affair to hurt him. Caught between Yaso’s rejection and his mother’s marriage plans for him, Amarasena disappears one day without telling anyone. Throughout the film, the many-faceted cruel results of armed conflict are brought into stark focus in the life-struggles of a war widow. Anuruddha Jayasinghe made his foray into the world of cinema in the late 1980s, as a schoolboy. Later, he worked with luminaries like Tissa Abeysekara, H D Premaratne and Sudath Rohana, before commencing his own directing career in television. Starting at Swarnawahini channel as a writer and producer of documentaries, dramas and music videos, Anuruddha became the programming director of Derana television, as it commenced operations in late 2005. Over the years, he has won best director awards in all the local television award presentations. His drama, such as Abi Samaya, Wiya Sidura, Dhawala Kanya and Maya Ranga, has established him as an integral part of the new wave directors. Sankranthi” was his first feature film. 19 Director Anuruddha Jayasinghe Screenplay Nimal Senanayake Cinematography Ruwan Costa Editor Ravindra Guruge Music Navaratne Gamage Cast Dhlhani Ekanayake, Mahendra Perera, Grace Ariyawimal, Sandali Welikanna, Rebeca Nirmali, Sampath Jayaweera, Dimuthu Chinthaka Art Welegedera Ranasinghe Sound Kalinga Gihan Perera Costumes Athula Suthanagoda Production & World Sales NS Productions No 16, 3/3, Falcon Court, Amarasekera Mawatha Colombo - 05 (Sri Lanka) Tel: +94773580451 Fax: +94114410911 Email: anuruddha@anuyaya.com www.anujaya.com IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Taiwan The Wall 2007, 35 mm, Colour, Mandarian-Japanese Director Lin Chih Ju Screenplay Wu Zhen Gang, Huang Shu Ling, Wu Luo Ying Cinematography Zeng Xian Zhong Editor Lin Chih Ju, Liao Ching Song Music Li Yi Cang Cast You An Shun, Huang Tsai Yi, Kage-Yama Yuki-Hiko Sound You Jia Shuo Costume Zhuang Hui Yi Production Fig Co. Ltd 7F, No. 11, Alley 20 Lane 61, Pusin St., Shenkeng Township Taipei County 222 (Taiwan) Tel: +886953378877 email: wening0612@yahoo.com.tw In the early 1950s, even the small villages in Taiwan were bathed in the atmosphere of White Terror. It was a difficult time for all. There was a beautiful young woman called A-zhen. She always felt that there was something weird in her house since she got married to her husband, A-yi, the village glassblower. A-zhen was very curious about the mystery surrounding the wall in her house. So, one day, she decided to investigate the real secret behind the wall. Apparantly, there was a Japanese man called Shouhei Kimura whom her husband respected as a master. Kimura came to Taiwan before the Pacific War to advocate the socialist revolution. Kimura enlightened A-yi, who had no idea about the world, the age and the class. A-yi followed Kimura whereever he went and worshipped him like a God. To prevent Kimura from being caught by the authorities, A-yi built a wall within his house and let Kimura stay to protect him. Kimura could only sense the changes around the outside world through the fissure of the wall. Lin Chih Ju is a prominent filmmaker from Taiwan. 20 IFFI-2007 COMPETITION Thailand Me Myself / Khaw Hai Rak Jong Jaroen 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 117 mins, Thai Tan suffers from amnesia, and he wants to know who he is. He lives with Oom, the girl who is the reason behind his amnesia. Oom is heart broken after breaking up from her boyfriend. She also has to look after her little nephew, the son of her dead sister. At first, it seems Tan and Oom cannot get along well, but their relationship is amazingly changed by Oom’s nephew who brings them together, and finally they fall in love. Later, Tan gradually recalls his memories and realises who he was. His past seems to be the big twist of his present life because it could hurt Oom’s feelings. Pongpat Wachirabunjong is a Thai singer, actor and director. He is well-known in Thailand for his role in the action films Heaven’s Seven and Seven Street Fighters. In addition, he has acted in many “lakorns” (Thai soap operas). This is his debut feature film. 21 Director Pongpat Wachirabunjong Screenplay Kongdej Jaturanrasamee Cinematography Sayombhu Mukdeeprom Editor Sunit Asvinikul Music Hualumpong Riddim Cast Ananda Everingham (Tan/Tanya), Chayanan Manomaisnatiphap (Oom), Monton Arunpabmard (Ohm), Puttachat Pongsuchat (Boss Oil), Piay Vimuktayou (Krit), Direk Amatayakul (Dr Kriangkrai), Maria Dissayanand (Dr Maria) Production Thanya Wachirabunjong, Piyalak Mahathanasap Mono Film 200, Jasmine International Tower, 31st Floor Mao 4 Chaengwattana Road\ Pakkred, Nonthaburi 11120 (Thailand) Festivals Bangkok Cinema of the World IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD 24 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD ASIAN PREMIERE Argentina Hunabku 2007, 35mm, Colour, 100 mins, Spanish At the very moment he begins to cross the line between childhood and adolescence, Lucas has to leave his home at Buenos Aires and move, along with his parents, Federico and Mabel, to the mysterious Patagonia, deep in the south of Argentina. Seduced by a promising work opportunity, the family tries to recreate their home in the isolated location. But Lucas quickly meets the immensity of the Glacier and starts wandering along the gigantic ice extension, looking for answers to its enigmas. Lucas believes something lies beneath the Glacier, something he cannot translate into language. A vibration. A secret. His parents are unable to listen to him. Federico is too busy pursuing his material goals while he digs into the land to build a vacation resort. Mabel cannot sleep at night, so during the day she is barely awake and stays in the house trying to fight her own daydreams. Soon, what looked like enjoying an adventure while rapidly becoming rich turns out to be a labyrinth of infinite directions where everyone has to look for his own way out. But the warm voice of the anthropologist Nicolás, a lonely scientist who has lived in Patagonia for many years, may help Lucas to find his road. He might also help the whole family by revealing that behind all the mysteries and secrets there lays a simple truth that many have chosen to forget. It is an agile and modern reflection on middle class people who are estranged from their own selves, and live in vicious circles of ambition and consumption. The 1962-born Pablo Cesar has made films like Blood, Aphrodite (the garden of the perfumes), Unicorn (the garden of the fruits), Grey Fire, Equinox and The Holy Family. He has also made a number of short films. 25 Director Pablo César Screenplay Jeronimo Toubes Cinematography Abel Peñalba Editor Liliana Nadal Music Héctor Magni Cast Raul Taibo (Federico), Florencia Raggi (Mabel), Boy Olmi (Nicolas), Tahiel Arevalo (Lucas). Mauro Cesar Mori (Mariano), Miwa Oshiro (Liu), Juan Martin Otegui (Marcelo) Art Cecilia Figueredo Sound Adriano Salgado, Rodrigo Sánchez Mariño Production Mike César, with the support of Instituto Nacional de Cine y Artes Audiovisuales (INCAA), Universidad del Cine Festivals & Awards Amiens, Cinemagic International Film Festival (Northern Ireland), Cairo IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Argentina-France-Germany The Other / El Otro 2007, 35mm, Colour, 83 mins, Spanish Director Ariel Rotter Screenplay Ariel Rotter Cinematography Marcelo Lavintman Editor Eliane Katz Cast Julio Chavez (Juan Desouza), Ines Molina, Maria Ucedo, Arturo Goetz Art Aili Chen Sound Martín Litmanovich Costumes Roberta Pesci Production Aquafilms Cabello 3644 C1425APN Buenos Aires, Argentina Tel: +54 (11) 4802-4218 Tel/Fax: +54 (11) 4809-3698 email: produccion@aquafilms.com; AireCine (Argentina), Celluloid Dreams (France), Selavy Productions (Germany) Festivals & Awards Berlin (Grand Jury Prize, Silver Bear for Best Actor), Fribourg (Audience Award, Special Mention IFFS Jury - Don Quijote Award), Alba-Italy (SIGNIS Award) A run of the mill, one-day business trip to the country becomes another journey. On reaching his destination, Juan Desouza - a lawyer in his late 40s, who’s happily married and his wife is expecting a child – discovers that the man travelling at his side is not sleeping. He is dead. Secretly, almost like a game, he decides to adopt the dead man’s identity, inventing a profession for himself, finding a place to stay: the possibility of not returning. Desouza undertakes an adventure into nature, into the rediscovery of his tastes and his basic instincts. He tries to grasp the idea that the life dealt out for him, and which he chose to live, is not the only one possible. He eventually goes back home, stronger from the spiritual experience. Born 1973 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Ariel Rotter is a film director and screenplay writer. His earlier film is Sólo por hoy (2001). 26 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Argentina-Germany Possible Lives / Las Vidas Posibles 2007, 35mm, Colour, 80 mins, Spanish Luciano undertakes one of his regular business trips to the Patagonia. After days when Carla receives no news of her husband, she begins to search for information about his whereabouts. Increasingly desperate, she decides to travel to where he should have gone. There, she is totally disconcerted to find someone like Luciano, who leads another life and is married to another woman. From that moment Carla develops a set of strategies for achieving be close to that man, to possess and return him to his previous life. Sandra Gugliotta, whose latest film Tercera invasión (Third invasion) in under production, has earlier made films like Un día de suerte (One lucky day) (2002) and Noches áticas (Arctic Nights) (Short-1994). 27 Director Sandra Gugliotta Screenplay Sandra Gugliotta, Pablo Fendrik Cinematography Lucio Bonelli Editor Juan Pablo Di Bitonto, Víctor Cruz Music Sebastian Escofet Cast German Palacios (Luis / Luciano), Ana Celentano (Carla), Marina Glezer (Helena), Guillermo Arengo (Gutierrez), Natalia Oreiro (Marcia), Osmar Nunez (Caretaker) Art Fabiana Piotti Sound Vincent D’Elia Costumes Mariela Fondevielle Production El Angel Films Serrano 820 3-D (1414) Buenos Aires Argentina Tel: +54 11 4775 4377 email: production@elangelfilms.com.ar; Fieber Film, Grünwald Festivals & Awards Berlin (First Prize of the World Cinema Fund) IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Bahrain A Bahraini Tale / Hekaya Bahrainya 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 96 mins, Arabic Director Bassam Al Thawadi Screenplay Fareed Ramadan Cinematography Shamdat Saimudeen Editor Osama Al-Saif Music Mohammed Haddad Cast Maryam Zaiman, Mubarak Khamis, Jaman Alrowayai, Fatima Abdulrahim, Yousif Buhalol, Nadeem Zaiman, Saad Abdullah, Hassan Almajed Sound Giles Khan Production Bahrain Cinema Production Company 610, Building 203, Govt. Avenue Manama 304, Bahrain P.O.Box No. 33223 Isa Town, Bahrain Tel: +97339721321 Fax: +97317224004 Mobile: +97339666466 email: bcpc.bcpc@gmail.com; bassam.althawadi@gmail.com Festivals & Awards 2006: Dubai, Alwan Film Festival (New York), 2007: Terra Di Siena (Italy), Emirates Film Competition (Abu Dhabi), Arab Film Festival (Rotterdam), International Arab Film Festival (Algeria), International Festival of Muslim Cinema (Kazan), International Euro-Arab Film Festival (Amal, 2007), Osian’s Cinefan (New Delhi) Set during the Arab-Israeli war of 1967, this epic drama is both the personal story of a middle-class Bahraini family and an account of the hopes and faith the Arab world had in Jamal Abdul Nasser as its leader. Intimately told, it skillfully interweaves the personal and the general to reveal a society built on male domination and female sacrifice, as women attempt to enjoy freedom of choice. This is the third feature film from Bahrain, all directed by Al-Thawadi, who shows flexibility in both style and subject, always demonstrating a deep sense of reality and romanticism. The social concerns here are clear and the storytelling simple, yet help the film explore areas of Arab collective memory more powerfully than any other film has done in a long time. Bassam Mohammed Al Thawadi was born in Bahrain on December 13, 1960. From 1974 to 1978 he made his own series of short films on 8mm - in 1979 he went to Cairo to study film directing and graduated from the Higher Institute of Cinema (Cairo) in 1982. In 1990, he produced and directed Al-Hajiz (The Barrier), the first feature film ever produced in Bahrain. Fourteen years later, he directed and co-produced Visitor (2004), considered the first Dolby sound system production in the Gulf. Between those two films he directed many documentaries. 28 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Brazil Not By Chance / Não Por Acaso 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 95 mins, Portuguese It is a contemporary story about love, loneliness and the desire to control the uncontrollable with Sao Paulo as one of its characters. Two men have never met, but they have a common lifestyle based on precision, control and method, until an unpredictable accident involving two women forever changes the course of their lives. Ênio and Pedro are about to find that an unpredictable world can rob them of something precious — then repay them with something else. In this drama of love and loss, Barcinski films São Paulo with the intimacy of a lover — showing its built-up streets in sweeping overhead shots during the clean, crisp daylight, then returning after dark to show its city lights in wooly soft focus. The film received the Alfred P. Sloan Grant at the Sundance Screenwriters Lab. The 1972-born Philippe Barcinski studied physics at the University of Rio de Janeiro before assisting director Luis Carlos Lacerda. In 1992, he decided to study Film Production as a student of Jean Bernardet. At the University in 1996, he directed his first short films: The Stairs and The Cage,The Cage a gagne le prix du Festival de Brasilia, et le Prix spécial du Jury a Gramado. the latter winning the prize of the Festival of Brasilia, and the Special Jury Prize at Gramado. During 1998 – 2003, he received numerous awards for his short films The White Postcard, Palindrome and The Open Window, at the film festivals of San Francisco, Mexico and Odense. He also participated in the festivals in Berlin, London and ClermontFerrand. 29 Director Philippe Barcinski Screenplay Fabiana Werneck Barcinski, Philippe Barcinski, Eugenio Puppo Cinematography Pedro Farkas Editor Marcio Canella Music Ed Cortes Cast Rodrigo Santoro (Pedro), Leonardo Medeiros (Ênio), Letícia Sabatella (Lúcia), Branca Messina (Teresa), Rita Batata (Bia), Graziela Moretto (Mônica) Sound Ana Chiarini Costumes Vero Julian Production 02 Films World Sales Ondamax Films (Eric Mathis/Donald Ranvaud) 1360, Monad Terrace Suit 1, Miami Beach FL 33139 (USA) Tel: +13055353577, +13052152221 email: eric@mediamaxgroup.com www.ondamaxfilms.com Festivals & Awards Middle East, Chicago IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Canada Emotional Arithmetic 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 100 mins, English Director Paolo Barzman Screenplay Jefferson Lewis, based on the novel by Matt Cohen Cinematography Luc Montpellier Editor Arthur Tarnowski Music Normand Corbeil Cast Susan Sarandon (Melanie Lansing Winters), Gabriel Byrne (Christopher Lewis), Max von Sydow (Jakob Bronski), Christopher Plummer (David Winters), Roy Dupuis (Benjiman Winters) Art Jean-François Campeau Sound Dimitri Ménard Production BBR Productions inc. 3430, rue Saint-Denis Bureau 300 Montreal, Quebec H2X 3L3 Tel: (514) 288-0080, (514) 288-0081 email: info@bbrprod.com www.bbrprod.com Triptych Media Inc. 788 King St. W. 2nd Floor Toronto, Ontario M5V 1N6 Tel: (416) 703-8866, (416) 703-8867 Email: info@triptychmedia.ca www.triptychmedia.ca World Sales Celluloïd Dreams 2, rue Turgot Paris, France - 75009 Tel: 33 1 49 70 03 70 Fax: 33 1 49 70 03 71 email: info@celluloid-dreams.com www.celluloid-dreams.com Festivals & Awards Toronto, Atlanta, San Sebastian A summer day, a lake, a house, a dinner table set outside, the promise of an upcoming celebration. Melanie has fulfilled her life’s dream of reuniting Jakob and Christopher. She hasn’t seen them in more than 40 years since the three of them were freed in 1943 from a transit camp for those who were to be sent to the death camps. Jakob was caught in the grips of history; having survived Auschwitz and Soviet mental institutions, he has now become a poet. Christopher cut himself off from the world; he studies insects and has buried deep down his untold love for Melanie. Melanie married David and has survived endless depressions. In her old age, she has become a lively, crazy nomad in her own story. Can we let past suffering suffocate our present? And what about love in all of this? Paolo Barzman began his creative career in painting and graphic arts at the Académie Jullian in Paris and at the University of California in Los Angeles. At 19, he was hired by director Jean Renoir as his secretary in Los Angeles. Paolo’s debut as a writer/director was with the feature film Time is Money starring Max von Sydow, Charlotte Rampling and Martin Landau. A successful television director in North America and Europe, he has made All Around Town, starring Nastassja Kinski, and You Belong to Me, starring Lesley Anne Down. Other credits include Adventure Inc., Highlander, Largo Winch, Relic Hunter, Lonesome Dove, and 15/Love. 30 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Canada Romeo & Juliette 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 105 mins, English Juliette, 15, is the only child of an eminent judge and has had the best of education in the best of schools. Her father is in the limelight because he’s been chosen to preside over one of the most important trials of the past 10 years: the case of Réal Lamontagne, a notorious criminal accused of killing a child. Roméo, 17, is the son of the accused. Even though they come from diametrically opposed universes, Juliette and Roméo fall for each other. With the charm of Montreal adding a tragic dimension to the story, love and hate, those polar opposites, find each other in an ambience of rivalry and social incompatibility. Yves Desgagnés, is one of Quebec’s most appreciated artistes. In his 30 years in front of and behind the camera, Desgagnés has acted in more than 50 plays and shows, in many television series and has acquired a solid reputation as a director. In cinema, he has acted in such films as Yves Simoneau’s Pouvoir intime, JeanClaude Labrecque’s Les Années de rêves, and Denys Arcand’s Les invasions barbares. In 2005, he directed his first feature film, Idole instantanée. 31 Director Yves Desgagnes Screenplay Normand Chaurette Cinematography Pierre Mignot Editor Michel Arcand Cast Jeanne Moreau, Thomas Lalonde, Charlotte Aubin, Pierre Curzi, Gilles Renaud Sound Marie-Claude Gagné Production Cinémaginaire inc. 5144, boul. Saint-Laurent Montreal, Quebec H2T 1R8 Tel: (514) 272-5505 Fax: (514) 272-9841 email: info@cinemaginaire.com World Sales Fun Film 5146 Boul St-Laurent Montreal Quebec H2T 1RB Canada IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Canada The Ring / Le Ring 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, French Director Anais Barbeau-Lavalette Screenplay Renée Beaulieu Cinematography Philippe Lavalette Editor Carina Baccanale Cast Maxime Desjardins-Tremblay, Julianne Côté, Maxime Dumontier, Jason Roy-Léveillée, Stéphane Demers, Suzanne Lemoine, Jean-François Casabonne Sound Olivier Léger Production Inis Relève inc. 301, rue de Maisonneuve Est Montreal, Quebec H2X 1K1 Tel: (514) 285-1840, 285-1953 email: info@inis.qc.ca www.inis.qc.ca World Sales Christal Films Distribution inc. 376, av. Victoria Bureau 300 Westmount, Quebec H3Z 1C3 Tel: (514) 336-9696, 336-0607 email: info@christalfilms.com www.christalfilms.com Festivals & Awards Berlin, Montreal, Pusan Jessy, age 11, dreams of becoming a wrestler. Already, life is a daily fight; home is chaotic and his innocence is quickly disappearing. Reality hits hard in Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, a poor area of Montreal, but it cannot compete with the Friday night wrestling that gives Jessy the courage to escape his destiny. Le Ring tells the story of a little fighter determined to make his own way. In 2000, while studying at Quebec’s Institut national de l’image et du son (INIS), Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette made her first two documentary films, Sorcières comme les autres and Les Mots bleus. She then made the documentary Buenos Aires, no llores. In 2002, she represented Canada at the United Nation’s Volunteers’ Odyssey where seven teams of young reporters had the opportunity to film nearly 50 volunteer sites in the world. Barbeau-Lavalette made 15 short documentaries. Later, in Si j’avais un chapeau, she had poor children from Quebec, India, Tanzania and Palestine create and film their own stories; in Les mains du monde, she presented six people in their quest to overcome solitiude. Le Ring is BarbeauLavalette’s first fiction feature film. 32 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Chile Pretending / Pretendiendo 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 109 mins, Spanish When the beautiful Amanda is humiliated by her lover and fired from her job, she decides to move to a new town and start over – this time, though, she makes herself into an ugly woman to be taken seriously. When she meets Marcelo, a cocky new coworker and quintessential ‘player,’ she decides to go one step further and test him by playing both her ugly persona and her real one (whom she now calls Helena) against him. But juggling a double life proves harder than she’d imagined, and when real feelings begin to develop between both Marcelo and Helena, as well as between Marcelo and Amanda, she finds her comedy of errors has turned into an odd and sexy love triangle. It is Claudio Dabed first feature film, and apart from directing it, he has also done the art direction and produced the film. Dabed studied at UNIACC Film School in Chile, and after graduating, he worked in advertising films for a short period. He won the first prize in the Sony Video Art festival. When, during dictator Pinochet’s period cinema was non-existent in Chile and advertising was the only visual media produced, he at 24 moved to Bali, Indonesia, where he lived for 11 years designing clothes and furniture. After gathering experiences and releasing creativity through other channels, he was inspired to return to his passion and wrote, produced and directed his first feature film. Dabed lives in Los Angeles and is developing of his second feature. 33 Director Claudio Dabed Screenplay Claudio Dabed, Franklin McDonald Cinematography Masanobu Takayanagi Editor Danielle Fillios Music Justin Stanley Cast Barbara Mori, Marcelo Mazzarello, Amaya Forch, Gonzalo Robles, Rodrigo Munoz, Jaime Azócar Art Claudio Dabed Sound Marcos De Aguirre Costumes Carol Raddatz Production & World Sales Cada Films Avda, Jose Pedro Aleasandri 1880 Nunea, Santiago (Chile) www.pretendicndo.com Festivals & Awards Miami, New York Latino IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD China Cherries / Ying Tao 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 106min, Chinese Director Zhang Jiabei Screenplay Bao Shi Cinematography Maruike Osa Me Editor Chen Xiao Hong Music Yasuda Fu Mio Cast Miao Pu, Tuo Guoquan, Long Li Art Lou Zhongguo Sound Wu Hao, Zhan Xi Production Shanghai Film Group Corporation No. 25, Sinwai St. Beijing 100082 (China) Tel: +861062261485 Fax: +861062264100 Festivals & Awards Tokyo, Montreal Maternal love is the most common and yet the greatest affection one can experience in the world. It defines sublimity with platitude. This is a story that happened in Southern China in the early 1980s. It’s about an intellectually delinquent young woman and a deserted girl’s deep affection… In a small village on a mountain in Southern China, there was Cherrie, who was married to Ge Wang, slim and crippled. He couldn’t walk straight. Because of her mental state, Cherrie was unable to find a proper job except walking the hogs and feeding the chicken. Ge Wang alone was hence responsible for feeding the entire family. Making the ends meet wasn’t easy. Tough living hadn’t diminished Cherrie’s maternal nature. She adored children. On the night of this very day, Cherrie found a deserted baby girl lying right next to her…Cherrie stopped making love to Ge Wang him right after Hong Hong joined the family. Cherrie would carry Hong Hong with her around the house, eating or sleeping. One day, Ge Wang took the baby in Cherrie’s sound sleep and passed it to a city couple with a red car. After going through all the hardships looking for the baby, Hong Hong finally came back to Cherrie. Hong Hong had grown into a smart and lovely girl and also felt embarrassed for her mother who was intellectually delinquent. One day, to pick the wild cherries for Hong Hong, something happened to Cherrie who was later declared missing. Zhang Jiabei has earlier made Clay Fear in 2006. 34 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD China The Exam / Kao Shi 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 104 mins, Chinese Ms Qu, the only teacher of Zhaokaitun Primary School, has been working in the class-mixed school in the lonely island for 20 years. The director general of the District Education Bureau promised her that she would be transferred to work in the city as long as her students would have got the first place in straight 10 years after this examination. Ms Qu treasured the chance greatly as both of her daughters worked and studied in the city. However, when the exam was finished, Qu found that, totally not as usual, the students did a very bad job in the papers. After the investigation, Qu realized the fact that the head of the village had told the students, if they got the first place, Ms Qu would leave the island. All the kids didn’t want their dear teacher to leave them, so they wrote the poor papers on the purpose. Qu was deeply moved and made the final decision to stay on the island. It is based on a true incident. None of the actors in the film are professionals. All of them are people from the place where the incident happened and most of them portray themselves in the movie. Because of the low budget, the movie has not received substantial promotion and has not yet been released theatrically. Pu Jian is an assistant professor at the School of Cinema and Television, Communication University of China. Born in Guizhou Province of China in June, 1968, he received primary and middle school education there. In 1990, he graduated from the Law Department of Wuhan University and in 1996 did his MA from Beijing Film Academy. Though he has made several TV films earlier, this is his first feature film. 35 Director Pu Jian Screenplay Chen Bei-ni, Pu Jian Cinematography Ma Yong-cheng Editor Pu Jian Music Jiang An-qing Cast Qu Feng-qin (Ms Qu), Zhou Hai-chun (village head), Xu Bo, Liu Laifu, Yang Xinyu, Xu Jiawen, Xu He, Xu Qiang, Xu Mingliang, Xu Haoyue Art Tan Ze-en Sound Wang Jue Costumes Liu Yan-yan Production Communication University of China No.1, East St., Dingfuzhuang Chaoyang District, Beijing Tele/Fax: +86-10-6578-3316; Nanjing Film Studio No.8, Suojincun, Taipingmenwai, Nanjing Tel/Fax: +86-25-8541-1477 Festivals Tokyo, Barcelona Asian Film Fest, Fribourg IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD China The Tokyo Trial / Dong Jing Shen Par 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 119 mins, English-Japanese-Chinese Director Gao Qunshu Cast Liu Songren, Zhu Xiatian, Lin Xilei, Ying Da, Zeng Zhiwei Production Shanghai Film Group Corporation No. 25, Sinwai St. Beijing 100082 (China) Tel: +861062261485 Fax: +861062264100 The Tokyo Trial took place after World War II ended. It lasted two-and-a-half years, from May, 1946 to November, 1948, about half a year after the start of the Nuremberg Trials in Europe. All Japanese Class-A war criminals were tried by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Tokyo. The prosecution team was made up of justices from 11 Allied nations. Seven of the war criminals were hanged after the trial, including Hideki Tojo, the prime minister of Japan during the attack on Pearl Harbour in Hawaii in 1941. Gao Qunshu did a lot of research of firsthand footage of the trial, including varied video versions shot by the Japanese and Dutch press, to authentically portray the historical scenes. He found a valuable trial diary in Japan, which recounts its heated debates. As a result, in the movie, even the details of the actors’ costumes and gestures at the tribunal strictly follow historical evidence. Ninety per cent of the movie was shot in English and Japanese as it was in the trial. According to Gao, the film shows how a Chinese judge involved in the case managed to sway the opinion of an international panel of 11 judges to “narrowly avert a miscarriage 36 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD China Unfinished Girl 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Mandarin Chinese The film showcases the solicitude for truth. It is the story of a young girl who falls in love with self brother-in-law secretly, leading to repercussions. Cheng Er is a noted film director from China. 37 Director Cheng Er Screenplay Cheng Er Cinematography Xu Wei Editor Yang Hongyu Music Lin Hai Cast Gao Yuanyuan, Xu Zheng, Yan Po, Tao Hong Sound Wang Danrong Production Cheerland Entertainment Organisation 1-2F, Building 1 Madianjingdian Jiayuan, No. 8 Qijiahuozi, Chaoyang District Beijing (China) Tel: +861082015522/5511 Fax: +861062018669 email: hm124zh@hotmail.com, DirtythreeD3@gmail.com IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Cuba El Benny 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 132 mins, Spanish Director Jorge Luis Sánchez Screenplay Jorge Luis Sánchez, Abrahan Rodríguez Cinematography José Manuel Riera Editor Manuel Iglesias Music Juan Manuel Ceruto Cast Renny Arozarena (Benny More), Enrique Molina (Olimpio), Mario Guerra (Monchy), Carlos Ever Fonseca (Angeluis), Limara Meneses (Aida) Art Erik Grass Sound Osmani Olivare, Ricardo Iztueta Costumes Nanette Peña Production Iohamil Navarro Cuesta CORAL CAPITAL ENTERTAINMENT, Ltd Calle 23 No. 1111 e/ 8 y 10 , Vedado Ciudad de La Habana, CUBA Tel/Fax: : 00537 833-4826 /00537 833-3281 World Sales ICAIC International Producter Street 23 % 10 and 12 Vedado Havana City Cuba Historico 06070 Mexico DF TelFax: (5-37) 8383128/(5-37) 3833707 Festivals & Awards Miami, Palm Springs, Locarno (Boccalino prize for best performance to Arozarena) It is the life story of Benny Moré, the greatest Cuban musician of all time, who died far too young yet profoundly changed the course of Latin music forever. More famous during his lifetime in Venezuela and Mexico than in his own home country of Cuba, he was asked in 1957, not long before he died, to play at the Oscars in Los Angeles. Never having formally studied music, he arranged big band orchestras and combos from the music he heard in his head and felt in his soul without being able to read or write music. A true musical genius, Benny was a man of supreme charisma and passion, but his attraction to the night, the women and the partying excesses led to his untimely death. His legacy is still felt today in most contemporary Latin music. Jorge Luis Sánchez, born in Havana in 1960, was a founder of the Federación Nacional de Cine Clubes de Cuba - the National Federation of Cine Clubs of Cuba.He started to work in ICAIC in 1981 as camera assistant, and later as assistant director. This is his debut feature. 38 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Denmark Cecilie 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 93 mins, Danish Cecilie sees and hears things no one else does; places suddenly change appearance, people aren’t really there. One night she experiences a rape, but no traces are to be found. Her husband Mads commits her to a psychiatric hospital. With the help of a psychiatrist, Per, she begins to see a frightening connection between her condition and a brutal murder that happened more than 30 years before. Born 1967 in Denmark, Hans Fabian Wullenweber graduated in direction from the National Film School of Denmark, 1997. He then went to England for further study. He wrote and directed the short film Udenfor/Still Around (2000), which was awarded at the international short film festival in Montecatini. Klatretøsen/ Catch that Girl (2002), his feature film debut, was a hit at the domestic box office and won awards at Berlin, Chicago and Amsterdam festivals. After that he made Tvilling / Gemini. 39 Director Hans Fabian Wullenweber Screenplay Nikolaj Arcel, Rasmus Heisterberg Cinematography Jacob Kusk Editor Kasper Leick Music Trond Bjerknaes Cast Sonja Richter, Anders W Berthelsen, Claus Riis Ostergaard Art Christian Svans Kolding Sound Bjørn Vidø Production Nimbus Film Productions Aps World Sales Danish Film Institute 55, Gothersgade DK 1123 Copenhagen K Denmark; Trust Film Sales Aps Filmbyen 12 DK-2650 Hvidovre Email: post@trust-film.dk www.trust-film.dk Festivals & Awards Palm Springs IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Finland Lights in the Dusk / Laitakaupungin valot 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 78 mins, Finnish Director Aki Kaurismäki Screenplay Aki Kaurismäki Cinematography Timo Salminen Editor Aki Kaurismäki Cast Janne Hyytiäinen, Maria Järvenhelmi, Ilkka Koivula, Maria Heiskanen Art Markku Pätilä Sound Jouko Lumme, Tero Malmberg Costumes Outi Harjupatana Production Sputnik Oy (with support from The Finnish Film Foundation) Museokatu 13 A 00100 Helsinki Finland Tel: +358 9 6877 100 Fax: +358 9 6877 1010 email: sputnik@sputnik.fi World Sales The Match Factory GmbH Michael Weber email: info@matchfactory.de www.the-match-factory.com Festivals & Awards 2006: Cannes, Karlovy Vary, Pula (Croatia), Toronto, Vancouver, Rio de Janeiro, Reykjavik, Haifa, Pusan, London, Kiev, Bratislava, Jakarta, Istanbul, Jerusalem 2007: Adelaide, Hong Kong, Troia, Melbourne, Brisbane, Buenos Aires Lights in the Dusk concludes the trilogy that started with Drifting Clouds (Kauas pilvet karkaavat, 1996) and continued with The Man Without a Past (Mies vailla menneisyyttä, 2002). Where the trilogy’s first film was about unemployment and the second about homelessness, the theme of Lights in the Dusk is loneliness. Like Chaplin’s little tramp, the protagonist, a man named Koistinen, searches the hard world for a small crack through which he could crawl in, but both his fellow beings and the faceless apparatus of the society see it their business to crush his modest hopes, one after another. Criminal elements exploit his longing for love and his position as a night watchman in a robbery they pull off, leaving Koistinen to face the consequences. This is done with the help of the most callous woman in the history of cinema since Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s All About Eve (1950). As a result Koistinen loses his job, his freedom and his dreams. Luckily for our protagonist, the author of the film has a reputation of being a soft-hearted old man, so we can assume there is a spark of hope illuminating the final scene. The 1957-born Aki Kaurismäki has been directing films since early 1980s. His filmography includes over 15 features and several short films. Among his films are The Saimaa Gesture (Saimaa-ilmiö) done with his brother Mika Kaurismäki, Crime and Punishment (Rikos ja rangaistus), Calamari Union, Shadows in Paradise (Varjoja paratiisissa), Hamlet Goes Business (Hamlet liikemaailmassa), Ariel and Leningrad Cowboys Go America. 40 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France 99 Francs 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 100 mins, French Octave is the master of the universe. He is in the profession of copywriting. He decides today what you will want tomorrow. For him, “man is a product like everything else”. Octave works for the world’s largest advertising agency, Ross & Witchcraft, nicknamed “The Ross”. He’s swimming in money, girls and coke. Even so, he has his doubts. Two events will turn Octave’s life on its head: his love affair with Sophie, the agency’s most beautiful employee, and a meeting at Madone to sell an advertisement to this major company in the diary sector. Gifted Octave loses the plot and decides to rebel against the system that created him, by botching his greatest publicity campaign. From Paris, where agency bosses negotiate deals, to Miami, where advertisements get shot while gulping anti-depressants, from Saint-Germain-de-Près to an isolated island in Central America, will Octave manage to escape his golden prison? Jan Kounen was born in Utrecht, the Netherlands, in 1964 and first made a name for himself by directing around 30 advertising films and music videos, mainly in Great Britain. In 1989, he directed his first short film, Gisèle Kérosène, that won the top prize for a short film at the following year’s Avoriaz Festival. In 1990, he directed L’âge de plastic, a musical with the group Elmer Food Beat. In 1993, Vibroboy, a “trash fantasy comedy” was awarded the Innovation Prize by the jury at the Clermont-Ferrand Festival. In1996, he filmed Emmanuelle Béart in the tale of The Last Red Riding Hood, another musical, with choreography by Philippe Decouflé. Dobermann was his first feature film. He has since made films like Blueberry, Darshan, a journey in India, and D’Autres mondes. 41 Director Jan Kounen Screenplay Jan Kounen, Nicolas, Bruno Cinematography David Ungaro Editor Anny Danche Cast Jean Dujardin (Octave), Jocelyn Quivrin (Charlie), Patrick Mille (Jeff), Vahina Giocante (Sophie), Elisa Tovati (Tamara), Nicolas Marié (Dujer), Dominique Bettenfeld (Jean-Christian Gagnant), Antoine Basler (Marc Maronnier), Fosco Perinti (Giovanni) Art Michel Barthélémy Costumes Chattoune Production Equinoxe Films IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France Changement d Adresse 2006, 35mm, Colour, 85 mins, French Director Emmanuel Mouret Screenplay Emmanuel Mouret Cinematography Laurent Desmet Editor Martial Salomon Music Franck Sforza Cast Fanny Valette, Frédérique Bel, Dany Brillant, Emmanuel Mouret, Ariane Ascaride Art David Faivre Sound Maxime Gavaudan Production Moby Dick Films, Les Films Pelléas, Shellac , Velvet Films World Sales Shellac David, a shy, awkward musician who has just moved to Paris, falls madly in love with his young student, Julia. He tries everything to win her heart. His roommate, Anne, provides encouragement, advice and consolation... passionately! A film of great passion, the characters are endearing in their naivety. A native of Marseille, Emmanuel Mouret directed his first short film when he was 19, before heading for Paris. He started working in cinema as production and directing assistant on various commercials, while also taking classes at the Drama School in Paris’s 10th arrondissement. With writing manuals as a guide, he threw himself into writing and entered the FEMIS, from which he graduated from the Directing section in 1998. The same year, he directed the short film Promène toi donc tout nu. Laissons Lucie faire was his first feature film. He has made films like Un baiser s’il vous plait (2006), Venus & Fleur (2003), Laissons Lucie faire! (2000), Caresse (1999), Il n’y a pas de mal (1997). 42 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France Love Songs / Les Chansons D’Amour 2007, 35mm, Colour, France Every love song tells the same story: “Too many people love you”... “I could never live without you”... “Sorry Angel”. This film tells that story too. French director Christophe Honore was born on April 10, 1970 in Brittany. His past three films were Seventeen Times Cecile Cassard (Dix-Sept Fois Cecile Cassard) in 2002, My Mother (Ma Mere) in 2004 and Inside Paris (Dans Paris) in 2006. 43 Director Christophe Honore Screenplay Christophe Honore Cinematography Rémy Chevrin Editor Chantal Hymans Music Alex Beaupin Cast ActorsLouis Garrel (Ismael), Ludivine Sagnier (Julie), Chiara MAstroianni (Jeanne), Clotilde Hesme (Alice) Art Samuel Deshors Sound Guillaume Le Braz Costume Pierre Canitrot Production Alma Films 176 rue du Temple 75003 Paris - France Tel: +33 (0)1 42 01 07 05 email: almafilms@orange.fr World Sales Alma Films Paulo Branco Tel: +33 (0)6 72 97 31 90 Email: pbranco.almafilms@orange.fr Festivals & Awards Cannes, Toronto IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France Strange Crime / Le Prix du Desir 2007, 35 mm, Colour, French Director Roberto Ando Screenplay Roberto Ando Cinematography Salvatore Marcarelli, Maurizio Calvesi Editor Claudio Di Mauro Music Ludovico Einaudi Cast Daniel Auteuil (Daniel), Greta Scacchi (Nicoletta), Anna Mouglalis (Mila), Giorgio Lupano (Fabrizio), Magda Mielcarz (Ewa), Serge Merlin (Père de Daniel), Art Andrea Crisanti Sound Luc Yersin Production Vision International Massimo SAIDEL cel : 06 20 82 73 05 email : massimo_saidel@yahoo.com Juliette PHAM Tel : 06 70 79 51 20 email : juliettepham@hotmail.com Gilles SOUSA Tel : 06 32 51 00 25; Canal +, Titti Film, Medusa Film, Agi.di – Italie, Vega Films Switzerland World Sales Vision Distribution Sylvie GROSPERRIN Tel : 06 19 68 21 64 email : s.grosperrin@visiongroupe.com Festivals & Awards Venice (Best Script Pasinetti award & Youth Golden Lion (jury of children); Nominated at Golden Globes (Best foreign picture); Brussels (Golden Iris) Famous for his best seller A Journey in Winter, Daniel Boltanski lives with his wife Nicoletta and her son Fabrizio, to be married in Capri. Daniel has lived secluded, in his luxurious house on the Lake of Geneva, overprotected by his agent David Grinsberg. On the boat to Capri, Daniel meets a beautiful younger girl, Mila and spends the night with her on the island. The next day, at the wedding, he is surprised to discover that she is Fabrizio’s bride to be. She becomes his obsession. Shortly thereafter, faced with mysterious blackmail, Daniel must confront the multiple layers of his “double” life and sexual obsession. Roberto Ando was born in Palermo in 1959. After studying philosophy, he became Francesco Rosi and Federico Fellini’s young assistant, before working with Michael Cimino and Francis Ford Coppola. During his training, he met the great Sicilian writer Leonardo Scacia, who remained a close friend of him during all his life. Since 1980, he alternates stage directions – which made him famous both in Italy and abroad – and his movie projects. In 1994, he signed, with Daniele Abado and Nicola Sani, the multimedia opera Piece of Apocalypse, with Moni Ovadia, at the Roma Europa Festival. Between 1994 and 1996, he also directed Robert Wilson‘s videos Memory Lost. In 1999, he directed his first feature for the big screen, The Prince’s manuscript, in French, with Michel Bouquet, Jeanne Moreau, Leopoldo Trieste and Paolo Briguglia. In 2001, he directed, in Palermo, Harold Pinter’s The room -The birthday party, and Old Times with Greta Scacchi, Umberto Orsini and Valentina Sperli. This is his second movie as writer-director. 44 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France The Intimate Enemy/ L’ Ennemi intime 2007. 35mm, Colour, 108 mins, French Algeria, 1959. Military operations intensify. High in the mountains of Kabylia, Terrien, an idealistic lieutenant takes command of a section of the French army. Among the troops, he meets Sergeant Dougnac, a cynical soldier. Their differences and the harsh reality of warfare quickly put both men to the test. Lost in a war with no name, they discover that they have no worse enemy than themselves. Florent Emilio Siri has directed around ten music videos, including the latest two clips for the group IAM. In addition to Une minute de silence, his first feature (winner of the Cyril Collard award), he also directed a documentary, La Mort douce (1992), both of which explore the theme of miners in France’s Lorraine region. In 1997, he wrote the screenplay for another feature film, Tour de cité. 45 Director Florent Emilio Siri Screenplay Patrick Rotman, Florent Emilio Siri Cinematography Giovanni Fiore Coltellacci Editor Olivier Gajan Music Alexandre Desplat Cast Benoît Magimel, Albert Dupontel, Aurélien Recoing, Marc Barbé, Éric Savin, Fellag, Vincent Rottiers, Lounes Tazaïrt, Abdelhafid Metalsi Art Dominique Carrara Sound Antoine Deflandre Costumes Mimi Lempicka Production Les Films du Kiosque, France 2 Cinéma, SND, Canal +, CinéCinémas, Agora Films Agora Films World Sales SND , France IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France The Second Wind / Le Deuxieme Souffle 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 156 mins, French Director Alain Corneau Screenplay Alain Corneau, based on the novel by José Giovanni Cinematography Yves Angelo Editor Marie-Josèphe Yoyotte Music Bruno Coulais Cast Daniel Auteuil, Monica Bellucci, Michel Blanc, Jacques Dutronc, Eric Cantona Art Thierry Flamand Sound Pierre Gamet, Laurent Quaglio, Gérard Lamps Production ARP Sélection/TF1 Films Production 13 rue Jean Mermoz, 75008 Paris, France World Sales Wild Bunch 99 rue de la Verrerie - 75004 Paris - France Tel: +33 1 53 01 50 20 Fax: +33 1 53 01 50 49 Festivals & Awards Rome, Toronto It is the end of the 1950s. Gu is a vicious, infamous gangster who has just broken out of jail, where he was serving a life sentence. He needs to do one last job to secure enough money to leave the country with his girl, Manouche, whom he wants to protect from harm at all costs. Despite every police officer in France working at full-throttle to recapture him, Gu has the skills and the know-how of a hardened criminal: he carries off the hold up perfectly. However, the police – led by the steely Inspector Blot – have played dirty tricks behind the scenes, arranging things in such a way so that Gu’s gang believe him to be an informer. Labelled a traitor, Gu finds his gang’s loyalty evaporating. Luckily, Manouche reveals her nerves of steel. She is willing to go to great lengths to defend her man, and so she sets to work to save Gu and clear his name, whatever the cost. Alain Corneau was born in Orleans, France, and studied at L’Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC). His feature directorial debut was France société anonyme (1974). His other features are Police Python 357, La Menace, Série noire, Le Choix des armes, Fort Saganne, Le Môme, Nocturne indien, Tous les matins du monde, Le Nouveau monde, Les Enfants de Lumière, Le Cousin, Le Prince du Pacifique, Stupeur et tremblements and Les Mots bleus. 46 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France TAXI 4 2007, 35mm, Colour, 87 mins, French Before being extradited to Africa to stand trial, a notorious Belgian criminal is entrusted to the Marseilles police department for less than 24 hours. But the wily crook convinces bumbling policeman Emilien he’s a lowly Belgian embassy employee who got railroaded by the brilliant master criminal. After graduating from the I.D.H.E.C. film school, Gérard Krawczyk directed three short films between 1981 and 1984, all nominated for Cesar awards. The first, The Subtle Concept, won him eight international prizes including the Grand Prix at the Montreal World Film Festival. His second short film, Toro Moreno, was awarded the Grand Prix for a Comedy at the Chamrousse Festival, and his third short, Homicide by Night, took out the Grand Prix at the Rennes Fantasy Film Festival in 1984. He made his feature film debut in 1986 with I Hate Actors, starring Jean Poiret, Michel Blanc and Bertrand Blier. This film was nominated for a Cesar and won the Michel Audiard Prize. L ‘Eté en pente douce, which he directed in 1987, features Jean-Pierre Bacri, Jacques Villeret, Pauline Laffont and Guy Marchand. Since 1988 he has directed some 50 commercials and corporate films, and in 1992 he won the Bronze Lion Award at the International Cannes Advertising Film Festival. From 1990 to 1994, Krawczyk cowrote numerous screenplays. 47 Director Gérard Krawczyk Screenplay Luc Besson Cinematography Pierre Morel Editor Frederic Thoraval Music Simplet Tefane, Weallstar-Da-Octopusss Cast Damiens, Mourade Zeguendi, Édouard Montoute, Sidney Zaoui, Henri Cohen Art Hugues Tissandier Sound Francois-Joseph Hors Costumes Fabienne Josserand Production EuropaCorp, ARP, TF1 Films Productions, Apipoulai World Sales EuropaCorp IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France Orchestra seats / Fauteuils d'orchestre 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 101 mins, French Director Danièle Thompson Screenplay Danièle Thompson, Christopher Thompson Cast Cécileé De France, Valérie Lemercier, Sydney Pollack, Albert Dupontel A young woman arrives in Paris where she finds a job as a waitress in bar next to a theatre. She will meet a pianist, a famous actress and a great art collector, and begin to have her own dreams of fame... Danièle Thompson is a French film director and screenwriter. She is the daughter of film director Gérard Oury and actress Jacqueline Roma. Thompson has written the screenplay for a number of highly-successful films including Cousin, cousine, La Boum, Belphégor - Le fantôme du Louvre, La Reine Margot and Jet Lag which she also directed. She was nominated for the 1976 Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay for Cousin, cousine. Her 2006 film Fauteuils d'orchestre was France's entrant for the 2006 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. 48 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD France Turning Pages / Tourneuse de pages, La 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 88 mins, French Director Denis Dercourt Screenplay Denis Dercourt, Jacques Sotty Cast Deborah Francois, Catherine Frot, Pascal Greggory and Julie Richalet Production Michel Saint-Jean A small-town butcher daughter, Melanie (Deborah Francois) has a special gift for playing the piano. She takes the Conservatory entrance exam, but fails after being distracted by the thoughtless behaviour of the chairwoman of the jury, a well known concert pianist. Bitterly disappointed, Melanie gives up her musical dream. Some ten years later, while working as an intern with a law firm, Melanie meets Monsieur Fouchecourt, the husband of the chairwoman who changed her life. Melanie efficiency and devotion are quickly noticed and Monsieur Fouchecourt invites her into his home to look after his young son. His wife, Madame Fouchecourt (Catherine Frot) soon warms to Melanie when her musical sensitivity shows through, and the young woman becomes the former chaiwoman page turner, waiting patiently for her revenged... An outstanding filmmaker in French cinema, Denis Dercourt also moonlights as a conservatory teacher. This is his first large-scale production. 49 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Russia Leningrad 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 117 mins, Russian Director Alexander Buravsky Screenplay Alexander Buravsky Cinematography Vladimir Klimov Editor M.Scott Smith Music Yuri Poteyenko Cast Gabriel Byrne (Phillip Parker), Mira Sorvino (Kate Davis), Aleksandr Abdulov, Vladimir Ilyin, Yuliya Rutberg, Mikhail Yefremov, Mikhail Trukhin Art Alexander Boim, Alim Matvejchuk, Vera Zelinskaya Sound Rostislav Alimov, Alexander Kopeikin Production Aleksandr Buravsky, Peter Doyle It is 1941, and World War II rages on; the German army has succeeded in taking over half of Europe and is charging forward into Russia. The superiorlyequipped Germans are able to push back the Russian defences until they reach Leningrad and Moscow. Facing a long and protracted struggle on the battlefield, Hitler decides that he will disperse part of his armoured units from Leningrad to Moscow, and, instead of taking Leningrad by force, he will surround the city and starve three million people to death. In the midst of this horrific siege, a young English journalist named Kate Davis finds herself isolated within the famished city of Leningrad. “Leningrad” actually ended up in two different versions: a four-hour television mini series and a two-hour feature film. Although that’s a common practice in the local film industry, in this case the two resulting works could hardly be more different in subject and tone. In an interview, Buravsky has said they shared only about 10 per cent of their material. “When I wrote the original script, it was as a feature film.When I took it to the producers, their response was: You wrote ‘Schindler’s List,’ now add ‘Indiana Jones.’ So I wrote around the original, and that was pretty difficult,” is what he has been quoted as saying. Buravsky’s script blends the lives of ordinary Russians caught in the siege with the story of two foreign journalists, the British Kate Davis and the American Philip Parker. Alexander Buravsky, a prominent Russian director, depended for his research for the film on The Blockade Book, a 1981 compilation by the Soviet writers Daniil Granin and Ales Adamovich, and The 900 Days, an earlier work by British journalist Harrison Salisbury, the Moscow correspondent for The New York Times during much of World War II. A third source was historian Nikita Lomagin’s The Unknown Blockade from 2004. 50 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Germany Counterparts / Gegenüber 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 96 mins, German Police officer George is very popular amongst his colleagues for always being calm and cool-hearted. His partner Michael also admires him for his apparently harmonic marriage with Anne, an attractive primary school teacher. When a promotion is announced to George, he begins to lose control over the carefully maintained façade of his ‘intact’ family. During Christmas season, the conflicts that have been dominating the couple’s life for years, start to surface: Anne’s struggle for recognition, the patronising of her parents, George’s attempt to always suit everybody, their children that helplessly look away - while the traces of domestic violence can no longer be hidden. Under the Christmas tree tragedy unfolds - “It ain’t no drama, Anne!“ – Well, yes, it is. The director developed the idea from a newspaper article on a study on domestic violence. Born in Düsseldorf in April 1979, Jan Bonny has lived and worked in the United States, the Netherlands and Germany. He received his degree in media arts from the Kunst-hochschule für Medien Köln and has directed the short film 2nd and A as well as numerous commercials. This is his first feature. 51 Director Jan Bonny Screenplay Jan Bonny, Christina Ebelt Cinematography Bernhard Keller Editor Stefan Stabenow Cast Matthias Brandt, Victoria Trauttmansdorff, Wotan Wilke Mohring, Susanne Bormann, Anna Brass, Pablo Ben-Yakov Art Tim Pannen Sound Martin Witte Costumes Frauke Firl Production Heimatfilm Lichtstr. 50 D-50825 Köln Germany Tel: +49 221 97 77 99 Fax: +49 221 97 77 99 email: post@heimatfilm.biz World Sales Wide Management 40 Rue Sainte Anne 75002 Paris France Festivals & Awards Cannes (Special Mention “Art et Essai - CICAE” - Director’s Fortnight), Munich, Pusan, Copenhagen IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Germany Paperbird 2007, Digi Beta, Colour, 101 mins, English Director Vanessa van Houten Screenplay Vanessa van Houten, Korbinian Greiner, Natalie Lambsdorff Cinematography Philipp Kirsamer Editor Susanne Hartmann Cast Thomas Fränzel (Nic), Tschagsalmaa Borchuu (Coco), Lars Rudolph (Charlie) Art Andrew Perry Production Dor Film-West, Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR), Hochschule für Fernsehen und Film (HFF), Munich, ARRI, Schesch Filmproduktion World Sales Atrix Films GmbH Postfach 900702 81545 München, Germany Beatrix Wesle Tel: +49 8964282611 Fax: + 49 89 649 57 349 email: info@atrix-films.com It is a story about love, lost childhood and the search for your own way. Nic, an eclectic 23-year old young man is waiting in Bangkok for his lost luggage. Whilst searching for necessities of daily life, he is pulled into Bangkok. Like Alice in Wonderland, he stumbles with curiosity through a world unknown to him. When Nic meets Coco her spirit reminds him of a person he once knew in his childhood. He starts to remember his almost forgotten past und begins his journey to look for his House of Wishes. Nic is mesmerized by Coco and a love story begins… Vanessa van Houten was born in San Rafael, California in 1971. She grew up in the Bahamas, Berlin and Augsburg, Germany. After completing studies of Photography and Photo Design at Polytechnic University in Dortmund, Vanessa van Houten relocated to New York to study Anthology Film Archives in NYC. During 1997–2007 she studied at Hochschule für Fernsehen und Film, Munich, in the Department of Feature Films and Telemovies. This is her first feature film and final graduation film from Film School Munich. She works as a Photographer and Filmmaker and lives in Melbourne, Australia. She has earlier made Karma Cowboy (2001), a docu-fiction, and numerous short films. 52 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Germany The Calling Game / Die Anruferin 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 80 mins, German “Please, can you tell me another story? No, not a bedtime story. A really exciting one…,” the voice of a lonely child begs somebody on the telephone. Craving for warmth and compassion, it is Irm, a woman in her early 30s. She calls strangers and, imitating a child´s voice, pretends she is a young cancer patient. In heartrending conversations, she establishes relationships that she abruptly ends when they threaten to become too close. This is Irm’s way of reaching out from her life, a life in which she jobs in a laundrette and looks after her bed-ridden mother. Though no longer able to talk, her mother still makes it clear that her favourite was always Irm´s sister Margit. But now Irm has the upper hand and lets her know it. When she meets the self-assured but emotionally vulnerable Sina, she comes up against a woman who is in great need of a friend and thinks she´s found her in Irm. Caught between the pull of her mother´s imminent death and her manipulative play-acting, Irm is increasingly drawn to the strong, life-loving woman who offers her friendship. She knows that Sina must learn the truth some day and is afraid of losing her. But Sina is more tenacious than she thinks - and believes in Irm more than she does herself... Felix Randau was born in 1974 in Emden. After studies in German Literature and Ethnology in Bonn, he enrolled in the directing programme at the German Academy of Film & Television (dffb) in Berlin. He made several short films before making his feature film debut with Northern Star (2003). 53 Director Felix Randau Screenplay Vera Kissel Cinematography Jutta Pohlmann Editor Gergana Voigt Music Thies Mynther Cast Valerie Koch (Irm Krischka), Esther Schweins (Sina Lehmann), Franziska Ponitz (The Mother) Costumes Sandra Fuhr Production Wuste Film West in co-production with ZDF | ARTE World Sales Bavaria Film International Bavariafilmplatz 8 D-82031 Geiselgasteig Tel: +49-89-6499-2686 Fax: +49-89-6499-3720 email: international@bavaria-film.de www.bavaria-film-international.com Festivals & Awards Munich (best actress), San Sebastian IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Germany-France-Belgium-South AfricaItaly-UK-Luxembourg Goodbye Bafana 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 140 mins, English & Xhosa Director Bille August Screenplay Greg Latter & Bille August Cinematography Robert Fraisse Editor Hervé Schneid Music Dario Marianelli Cast Joseph Fiennes (James Gregory), Dennis Haysbert (Nelson Mandela), Diane Kruger (Gloria Gregory), Shioh Henderson (Brent Gregory), Megan Smith (Natasha Gregory), Faith Ndukwana (Winnie Mandela), Lesley Mongezi (Walter Sisulu) Art Tom Hannam Costumes Diana Cilliers Production Jean-Luc Van Damme, Ilann Gorard, Andro Steinborn South Africa – 1968. Twenty-five million Blacks are ruled by a minority of four million Whites under the brutal Apartheid regime of the Nationalist Party Government. Black people have no vote, no land rights, no rights to freedom of movement, to own a business, to housing or education. Determined to retain power, Whites ban all Black opposition organisations, forcing their leaders into exile or imprisoning them for life on Robben Island. James Gregory, a typical White Afrikaner, regards Blacks as sub-human. Having grown up on a farm in the Transkei, he learned to speak Xhosa at an early age. This makes him an ideal choice to become the warder in charge of Mandela and his comrades on Robben Island. After all, Gregory speaks their language and can spy on them. However, the plan backfires. Through Mandela’s influence, Gregory’s allegiance gradually shifts from the racist government to the struggle for a free South Africa. Goodbye Bafana tracks the unlikely but profound relationship between these two men. Through their unique friendship, we witness not only Gregory’s growing awareness of man’s inhumanity to man, but South Africa’s evolution from Apartheid to a vibrant democracy. The story, which documents how Mandela became the most inspirational political figure of the modern world, poses the questions: Who is the prisoner? And who sets whom free? Bille August was born in Denmark in 1948. In the late 1960s he attended Christer Strömholm’s School of Photography in Stockholm and then went to the Danish Film School in the early 1970s. He worked as a cinematographer on 14 movies and TV-features, mainly in Sweden, before starting his directing career with films like In My Life (1979), Zappa (1982) and Twist & Shout (1985). It was Pelle the Conqueror (1987) which put Bille August firmly on the map of the international movie world. In 1988, it was awarded the Palme d’Or in Cannes and in 1989 it won the Academy Award and the Golden Globe as Best Foreign Language Film. The legendary Swedish director Ingmar Bergman chose August to direct his script about his parents, The Best Intentions, which won Bille a second Palme d’Or in 1992. August also directed two episodes in George Lucas’ TV-production The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles. He has made films like The House of the Spirits (1993), Jerusalem (1995), Smilla’s Sense of Snow (1996), Les Misérables (1997), A Song for Martin (2001) and Return to Sender (2004). He has been honoured for his work as a film director with both the Danish and the Swedish Royal Order of Chivalry and the French order Chevalier dans l’ordre des Arts et Lettres. 54 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Greece-Italy Uranya 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 98 mins, Greek Five teenagers struggle to discover love but also the whole world. In a small village, a group of young people are growing up on dreams, prejudices, secrets and lies. And passions – both political and “family”. The summer of 1969 will leave its mark on their dreams… Uranya is a very beautiful woman who lives on the outskirts of the village, near the sea. The entire male population of the village passes through her house. The children watch her, drool over her, dream about her. They are bound by a common oath they have sworn in secret: to save money so they can pay Uranya a visit and she can finally initiate them in the secrets of love. Achilleas, a smart and sensitive boy, dreams more than the others. His dreams to reach the moon: he wants to fly, he wants to see the man who set foot on the moon, he wants to taste love with Uranya. When the kids are faced by the major dilemma of whether to buy the first black-and-white television so they can watch the moon landing or use the money to pay Uranya a visit, opinions differ and Achilleas is left alone. Will they go back on the oath they gave for Uranya? But dreams and fantasy prove more powerful. And the deus-ex-machina knows how to do a good job... Uranya was the brand name of the first television sets in Greece at the end of the 1960s as well as the name of the film’s lead female character, and therefore, as Kapakas admits, “the movie title came only naturally”. Born in 1953 in Rhodes, Costas Kapakas studied and worked in Berlin till 1983. His first work in film was in animation. He has made several short films that have won several international awards. He made his first feature film in 1999, called Peppermint, which won a host of awards. 55 Director Costas Kapakas Screenplay Costas Kapakas Cinematography Stefano Falivene Editor Giorgos Mavropsaridis Music Panayotis Kalantzopoulos Cast Maria Grazia Cucinotta (Uranya), Aria Tsapis, Andreas Kyriakakis, Nikos Vassilikiotis,Yorgos Liatis Art Olga Leontiadou Sound Marinos Athanassopoulos Costumes Eva Nathena Production Cinegram S.A. 43, Gounari Street 153, 43, Ag. Paraskevi Athens (Greece) Tel: +302106078700 Fax: +302106391318 email: cinegram@cinegram.gr www.cinegram.gr World Sales FilmSharks Intl 43 Gounari Street 153 43 Ag. Paraskevi Athens-Greece Tel: +302106078700 Fax: +302106391318 email: alpha@filmsharks.com www.filmsharks.com Festivals & Awards Houston IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Hungary Dolina 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 122 mins, Hungarian & Romanian Director Zoltán Kamondi Screenplay Ádám Bodor, Zoltán Kamondi Cinematography Gábor Medvigy Editor Zsuzsa Pósán Music László Melis Cast Adriano Giannini, Piroska Molnár, Stefania Rivi, János Derzsi, Ioana Abur, Milán Vajda, János Bán, Zsolt Trill, Mari Törõcsik, Coca Bloos, Gábor Kocsó, Erika Molnár Art György Árvai Sound György Kovács Costumes János Breckl, Edit Szûcs Production Honeymood Ltd. Festivals & Awards 2007: Bitola, Budapest, Karlovy Vary, London Raindance, Warsaw Bogdanski Dolina is a rundown town in a remote corner of the Earth that has been overtaken by terror. At one time Dolina was a flourishing little place, but now everything shows the signs of destruction and poverty, even though the inhabitants are doing their best to smarten things up a bit for the arrival of a highranking guest in the person of the Archbishop. Instead of the Archbishop, however, a certain Gabriel Ventuza arrives. On instructions from his brother, Gabriel has left behind Western civilization and his medicinal plants, to take the long journey to Dolina with the aim of exhuming their father Viktor Ventuza, the famous people smuggler, and bringing back his earthly remains. Those in power of the strange ecclesiastical unit, the Vicarage, don’t look favourably on the stranger’s arrival. But Colentina Dunka, the head of one of the most important establishments in Dolina, the hairdressing salon, takes Gabriel under her wing – at which her combing ladies promptly fall in love for him. Even so Gabriel’s task is not easy. It is very costly, and Petrus, Colentina’s jealous foster son, soon turns up on the scene and does everything in his power to thwart Gabriel’s plans...Based on Ádám Bodor’s The Archbishop’s Visit. Zoltán Kamondi was born in 1960 in Budapest. After finishing his studies at the Faculty of Art, he went on to get a degree in film directing at the Academy of Theatre and Film Art Budapest, where he graduated in 1988. His examination film Kiki and the Males won the Best Direction Award at the West-Berlin Short Film Festival in 1985. In 1990, he made his first feature film Path of Death and Angels which was screened in the Un Certain Regard section of Cannes. In 1992, he started to work in theatre and became a highly acclaimed theatre director in Hungary. In 1997, he began shooting The Hungarian Speckled Variety, a documentary series, considered by critics as one of the most important documents of the years after the political changes in Hungary. In 1996, his video film The Golden Deck Chair won the Best Direction Award at the 27th Hungarian Film Week. In 1999, his second feature film The Alchemist and the Virgin won the Best Independent Feature Award at the Manchester International Film Festival. 56 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Hungary The Eighth Day of the Week / A hét nyolcadik napja 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 103 mins, Hungarian After her husband’s death, Hanna Szendrõy, the former prima donna, is caught in the claws of the real estate mafia. She loses her lavish home and ends up homeless at the Keleti train station. When she returns to her house, now full of homeless people moved in by the real estate mafia, an unexpected relationship brings hope into her life again. It is a tragicomedy that tells its story through the fate of the protagonist; sometimes it is through the darkest hardships that the possibility of a cleaner and more truthful life arises, and, that the miracle of love is ageless. The film focuses on today’s familiar form of helplessness, the problem of the homeless. Judit Elek graduated from the Academy of Theatre and Film Art - Budapest in 1961. At the beginning, Elek worked as an assistant director, made several adaptations and newsreels in Mafilm. Elek is a founding member of Studio Béla Balázs. Among the films Elek made are La Dame de Constantinople / The Lady of Constantinople (1969). Peut-être demain / Maybe Tomorrow (1978), La fête de Maria / Maria’s Day (1983), and Mémoires d’un fleuve / Memories of a River (1989). 57 Director Judit Elek Screenplay Judit Elek Cinematography László Berger Editor Judit Elek Music László Melis Cast Maja Komorowska (Hanna Szendrõy), Gyula Bodrogi, Franciszek Pieczka, Judit Pogány, Sándor Zsótér, Eszter Csákányi, Ádám Rajhona, Márta Martin Art Tamás Banovich Sound István Sipos Costumes Györgyi Szakács, János Breckl Production Dánielfilm Stúdió Festivals & Awards 2006: Cairo 2007: Budapest, Lagow, Paris, Vienna IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Iran Iranian Prince 2005, 35 mm, Colour, 101 mins, Persian Director Mokammad Nourizad Screenplay Mohammad Nourizad Cinematography Hosein Maleki Mohammad Editor Bahman Dadashi Music Mohammad Freshteh Nejad Art Iraj Raminfar Cast Dariush Arjmand, Yousef Moradian, Asghar Hemmat, Parvanneh Ma’asoumi, Sorayya Ghasemi, Sirus Sabe Production Avini Cultural Institute Old Golestan Market Iran Zamin Ave. Sanat Square Tehran 1465845375 (Iran) Tel: +982188572134 Fax: +982188572142 Festivals Fajr (Iran) Tender friendship - he convinces the small group of boys to sneak out of school and go to the cinema down the street. For all of them, the experience is exhilarating. But the consequences are grim. Mirco is expelled. In the meantime, a broader struggle goes on. Once upon a time, an Iranian prince was assigned to arrest a champion and take him to the capital . If he could do that, he would add to the change in society that is taking place outside. The 1970s political protests are erupting. Students are taking to the streets. From of his earlier escapades, Mirco had made friends with Ettore, a blind university student with strong political awareness. Hearing that Mirco has been expelled, Ettore pushes the whole city to mobilize. Students and workers protest in front of the Cassone Institute, threatening to shut down the city’s blast furnace if Mirco is not re-admitted. As a consequence, the head of the institute is put under investigation. Mirco is finally re-admitted and granted special permission: to change the year-end show. Instead of reciting the usual religious poems, the children put on a performance of their “fairy tale in sound”, before an audience of blind-folded, spellbound parents. Mokammad Nourizad is a filmmaker who is taking forward Iran’s rich moviemaking traditions. 58 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Iran A young couple makes a trip to a calm place to rest for few days. On the very first night, however, an uninvited guest disturbs everything. It turns out that the guest is not a stranger. The ensuing narrative opens a Pandora’s box, where the weight of guilt and memory and the oppressions of the past bring each character into confrontation with the other. A tense and at times a terrifying film, it is an adaptation of the Ariel Dorfman’s Death and the Maiden to an Iranian context. The 1968-born Bijan Mirbagheri has an Art diploma in sculpture and a photography bachelor’s degree from The Art University. Since 1985, he has been as a painting instructor in the Center of Artistic Creativity (related to the Children and Adolescents Intellectual Development Center - CAIDC). He has been an animator in Noghli and the Snow Flecks, and an assistant puppet-maker in The Playmate directed by Mohammad-Reza Aabedi. 59 The Day Looms / Rooz Bar Miayad 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Persian Director Bijan Mirbagheri Screenplay Saeed Shahsavari, Bijan Mirbagheri Cinematography Mehdi Jafari Editor Saeed Shahsavari Music Keyvan Jahanshahi Cast Dariush Farhang, Amir Aghaee, Yekta Naser, Mehran Rajabi Sound Arash Boroumand Production IRIB, Channel 3 World Sales Cima Media International 64 Hedayat St. Yakhchal Ave. Tehran 19497 (Iran) www.cmi.ir IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Israel No Exit 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Hebrew Director Dror Sabo Screenplay Amit Leor, Barak Salonim & Dror Sabo Cinematography Dror Lebendiger Editor Ayelet Gil Music Ran Bagno Cast Gal Zaid, Ofer Shechter, Noa Barkai, Amnon Wolf, Mali LeviGershon, Michael Moshonov, Yaron Motolla, Eran Sarel, Amit Leor, Shiri Maimon Art Lee Levi Sound Michael Emet Costumes Maya Mor Production Ori Dickstein & Michal Dvash Shamaim Content & Productions, Ltd 12 Hakeshem St, Herzeliya, 46100, Israel Mobile: 972 54 522 55 43 email: dvash.michal@gmail.com, ori@shamaim.tv, dvash.michal@gmail.com World Sales Noa - International Film Marketing 146/10, Arlozorov St. Tel Aviv, 62098 (Israel) Tel: +97235233678 Mobile: +972523603660 email: noaroll@bezeqint.net Festivals & Awards Jerusalem (Best Film, Best Actor), Melbourne, Shanghai It’s the middle of summer, and Zacky Reibenbach, the creator of the reality-show Choice of Heart, knows that without an excellent gimmick, there is no chance he will repeat the success of the previous two seasons. He recalls his film student from university –Yehuda, who has documented the rehabilitation of his friend Ethan for the past three years. Ethan became blind under strange circumstances during his military service. His exceptional rehabilitation process was developed by Yael, Ethan’s personal trainer and Yehuda’s girlfriend. Yael is Ethan’s eyes, and with her he is a true phenomenon, which is exactly what Reibenbach is searching for. Hence, in this season, ten beautiful women will compete to gain Ethan’s affection, but none of them knows that he is blind… Dror Sabo graduated with honors from the Sam Spiegel School of Cinema, Jerusalem. His graduate film Ancestral Desire represented the school in a retrospective held in the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York in 1996, and was screened at many film festivals worldwide and received several international awards. In the last eight years, he has developed and directed documentary features and TV series that were acclaimed in Israel. In 2004, he directed one of Israel’s first reality programmes, Project Y . Since 2006, he has been the head of Channel 10 Documentary Department. This is his first fiction feature. 60 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Israel Someone to Run With / Mishehu Larutz Ito 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 118 mins, Hebrew Two parallel stories drive this exhilarating coming-of-age tale set in a vibrant, at times frightening, Jerusalem. Assaf is in search of the owner of a lost dog; Tamar is in search of her missing brother. As their stories converge, the two discover themselves and first love. The film is based on the bestselling novel by David Grossman. The director spins the tale with two parallel story lines — one representing Assaf’s journey in present day and the other of Tamar’s journey unfolding from the past, starting two months before her disappearance. This device is extremely effective in creating not only a context for the story, but also gives the characters a depth that makes them come alive. The complexity of the story complements the diversity of the characters in the film and the director succeeds in defining the characters in his film as human, multi-faceted and real. Oded Davidoff grew up in Jerusalem and graduated from the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School. He has directed a number of television commercials for many of Israel’s leading companies. His first feature film, the award-winning Clean Sweep, was hailed as an instant cult classic. Oded and screenwriter Noah Stollman have several new projects in development, including an adaptation of a story by IB Singer. 61 Director Oded Davidoff Screenplay Noah Stollman, based on a novel by David Grossman Cinematography Yaron Scharf Editor Ron Omer Music Ran Shem-Tov Cast Bar Belfer (Tamar), Yonatan Bar-Or (Asaf), Yuval Mendelson (Shai), Rinat Matatov (Shelly), Tzahi Grad (Pesach), Danny Steg (Tzahi) Art Shahar Bar-Adon Sound Aviv Aldema Production B&K Productions 18 Levontin Street Tel Aviv, Israel Tel/Fax: +972-3-5664129 World Sales Cinephil 18 Levontin Street Tel Aviv, Israel Tel/Fax: +972-3-5664129 Festivals & Awards Miami (Special Grand Jury Mention), Calgary, Atlantic, Jerusalem, Melbourne, Warsaw, Atlantic, Chicago IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Israel-France Tehilim 2007, 35mm, Colour Director Raphael Nadjari Screenplay Raphaël Nadjari, Vincent Poymiro Cinematography Laurent Brunet Editor Sean Foley Music Nathaniel Mechaly Cast Michael Moshonov (Menahem), Limor Goldstein (Alma), Reut Lev (Dvora), Yonathan Alster (David) Art Dror Sarogati, Benny Afar Production Shilo Films 113, rue Vieille du Temple 75003 Paris France Tel: +33 (0)1 48 78 98 36 Email: shilo@shilofilms.com www.shilofilms.com ; Transfax Film 3 Yagia Kapayim 67778 Tel Aviv - Israël Tel: +972 3 688 5210 Email: production@transfax.co.il www.transfax.co.il World Sales: Films Distribution Tel: +33 (0)1 53 10 33 99 email: info@filmsdistribution.com www.filmsdistribution.com Festivals & Awards Cannes In today’s Jerusalem, a Jewish family leads an ordinary life. But following a car accident, the father mysteriously disappears. They all deal with his absence and the difficulties of everyday life as best they can. While the adults take refuge in silence or traditions, the two children, Menachem and David, try in their own way to find their father. Writer and director Raphael Nadjari was born in 1971 in Marseille. In 1993, Nadjari started working for French television and in 1997, he wrote the television screenplay for TV drama Le P’tit Bleu. The same year he wrote and directed his first US feature, The Shade which was released in 1999. At the end of 1999, Raphael directed his second feature, I Am Josh Polonski’s Brother (2001). In 2004, Nadjari shot Avanim in Tel Aviv. 62 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Italy Me, The Other / Io, L’ Altro 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Italian When Yousef arrived from the Tunisia on exile, he began to work as fisherman, and met who would become his best friend: Giuseppe. The two friends decide to buy a small fishing boat, but after the 9/11 incident in the United States, the world seems to have totally changed. Every dimension of the life is decided by this factor of persisting war. Distant from the land, in the middle of the sea, the culture of suspicion easily reaches the two friends who in 24 hours will become the two new “collateral victims” of the so-called war of civility. Mohsen Melliti was born in Tunisia in 1967 but moved to Rome in 1989. In 1991, he wrote the novel Pantanella hand along the street. This is his debut as a screenwriter and director. 63 Director Mohsen Melliti Screenplay Mohsen Melliti Cinematography Maurizio Calvesi Editor Marco Spoletini Music Louis Siciliano Cast Raoul Bova, Giovanni Martorana, Mario Pupella, Samia Zibidi, Lina Besrat Assefa, Mohammed Alì Sound Gilberto Martinelli Costumes Carolina Olcese Production Trees Pictures, Sanmarco Film World Sales Ondamax Films (Eric Mathis/Donald Ranvaud) 1360, Monad Terrace Suit 1, Miami Beach FL 33139 (USA) Tel: +13055353577, +13052152221 email: eric@mediamaxgroup.com www.ondamaxfilms.com Festivals & Awards Annecy-Italy (Special Jury Prize; Dauphiné Libéré Award), Durban, Haifa, Rome IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Italy Ossidiana 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 97 mins, Italian Director Silvana Maja Screenplay Silvana Maja, Rolando Stefanelli Cinematography Roberta Allegrini Editor Giogio Franchini Music Davide Massropaow, Leandno Sorrentino Cast Teresa Saponangelo (Maria Palliggiano), Renato Carpentieri (Emilio Notte), Andrea Renzi (Victor), Vincenza Modica (Madre), Tina Femiano (Clelia), Marco Manchisi (Mario Persico), Stefania de Francesco (Anna) Art Giancarlo Savino Sound Lilio Rosato Costumes Anna Facchino Production & World Sales Artimagiche / Thule Film Via Loffredi, No. 7 80138, Napoli (Italy) Tel: +39814421403/610 Fax: +39815571724 email: thulefilm@virgilio.it Naples 1957 – 1969. Maria is a young Neapolitan painter, caught up in the wave of experimentation of the 1960s arts scene. She is a woman who lives her life enthusiastically embracing the ideals of love and exploration, which for her are also the most important guiding principles for an artist. She marries Emilio Notte, director of the Naples Academy of Fine Arts and a leading light in the arts avantgarde. They have already had a son, Riccardo. During these years Maria tries to reconcile the demands of being a mother, wife and artist, attempting to transform her life in order to raise it beyond the crude facts of existence. However, the withering grip of prejudice, the pressure to conform to what she considers to be unacceptable mores eventually takes its toll, inflicting psychological anguish. What for others is anxiety, is for her the desire to pursue that tantalising Utopia of perfection, rigour and youth. During her brief time, Maria Palliggiano strived to be that person who deep inside herself yearned to flourish. She committed suicide in 1969. Silvana Maja was born and raised in Naples, where she also studied law and sociology of communication. She also trained as a writer and journalist. She had written her first novel by the age of 18 and began working as a photo reporter, initially documenting events from the class conflict, and in later years, the working conditions of women in Southern Italy, India and South East Asia. By the end of the 1980s, her photo journalism work had shifted its focus to mental illness in women. At the same time, she wrote constantly, concentrating on themes related to psychology and relationships. This line of research led her in the following decade to take a comparative approach to her work, cross-fertilised with input from painters, photographers and theatre artists, and marking the start of a course of aesthetic development that would change her perception of her life. In 1997, she moved to Rome where she now lives and works. The screenplay of Ossidiana has been adapted from her eponymous novel, published at the end of 1999. 64 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Italy Red Like The Sky / Rosso Come Il Cielo 2005, 35 mm, Colour, 96 mins, Italian Inspired by the true story of Mirco Mencacci, one of the most gifted Italian sound editors working today, who happens to be blind. A small village in Tuscany, 1971. Mirco is a bright, lively 10-year-old, crazy about the movies - especially Westerns and adventure films. His father, an incurable idealist, is a truck driver. One day, while Mirco is playing with an old rifle, the gun accidentally goes off; the boy is shot in the head. He survives, but loses his sight. At that time, Italian law considered blind people hopelessly handicapped, and did not permit them to attend public school. Hence, young Mirco’s parents are forced to shut their son up in a “special school for the blind”: the David Chiossone Institute in Genoa. In the beginning, Mirco does not accept his new condition. But he is feisty and determined. When he finds an old tape recorder and a few used reels and discovers that by cutting and splicing tape he can create little fairy tales made only of sounds, a brand-new world opens up to him. His new adventure is opposed by the religious authorities that run the boarding school, who are convinced that a blind boy is a disabled person who must not be allowed to harbour illusions. But Mirco will not give up. He continues to fight in every way possible, and he slowly involves his classmates, leading them to rediscover their dreams and capacities. Cristiano Bortone graduated in film and television from New York University after attending the University of Southern California. In 1991, he formed the independent production company Orisa Produzioni. Over the years, Bortone has been involved in a number of professional endeavors as a visual artist and writer. His work as a director, screenwriter and producer includes features, documentaries and television programmes for major Italian networks. 65 Director Cristiano Bortone Screenplay Cristiano Bortone, Monica Zapelli, Paolo Sassanelli Cinematography Vladan Fadovic Editor Carla Simoncelli Music Ezio Bosso Cast Luca Capriotti, Paolo Sassanelli, Marco Cocci, Simone Colombari, Rosanna Gentili Art Davide Bassan Costumes Monica Simeone Production Orisa Produzioni (Daniele Mazzocca, Cristiano Bortone) Via Marsilio Ficino 5 00136 Rome (Italy) Tel: +390639750996-64 Fax: +390639889715 email: info@orisa.it www.orisa.it World Sales Adriana Chiesa Enterprises Srl Via Barnaba Oriani 24/a - 00197 Roma (Italy) Tel: +39068086052 Fax: 0390680687855 email: info@adrianachiesaenterprises.com IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Itlay Rush Hour / L’ora di punta 2007, 35mm, Colour, 95 mins, Italian Director Vincenzo Marra Screenplay Vincenzo Marra Cinematography Luca Bigazzi Editor Luca Benedetti Cast Fanny Ardant (Caterina), Michele Lastella (Filippo), Giulia Bevilacqua (Francesca), Augusto Zucchi (Captain Salvi), Atonio Gerardi (Donati), Barba Valmorin (Anna) Art Beatrice Scarpato Sound Sandro Peticca, Remo Ugolinelli Costumes Daniella Ciancio Production R&C Prods., The French Connection, RAI Cinema World Sales Films Distribution 34 rue du Louvre, 75001 Paris, France. T: (33-1) 5310-3399 F: (33-1) 5310-3398 info@filmsdistribution.com Festivals & Awards Venice, Toronto Vincenzo Marra’s new film covers vast territory in the life of one man. With often breathtaking, and unsettling, narrative leaps, it follows the singular path of a protagonist who ultimately remains an enigma but whose choices profoundly affect the lives of others. The film feels like an epic because of the ground we travel, but the scale is intimate and small, intently focused on the central character. Filippo has been commissioned into the Guardia di Finanza, an Italian military police force under the authority of the Ministry of Economy and Finance. Stiff, alert, attentive, Filippo – who is proud to be following in the footsteps of his father – has already caught the eye of his superior. Sent out to audit a company, he immediately uncovers false invoices and illegal workers, and levies a significant fine. When the owner approaches him with a bribe, Filippo makes his first key decision. It is not long before he is a man on the move, confidently navigating the shoals of Roman society, the only fly in the ointment being a messy split with his girlfriend whom he is unable to forget. Soon, however, he meets the svelte, charming, attractive – and older – owner of a gallery while conducting another investigation. Caterina is well-connected, and before long Filippo is mingling in society, rubbing shoulders with the high and mighty. Her many acquaintances lead him to new heights and new aspirations. Will his reach exceed his grasp? Marra’s previous films contained a subtle critique of Italian society, and this is no different. Vincenzo Marra was born in Naples. He has directed the short films Una Rosa prego (1998) and La Vestizione (1998), and the documentaries Outsiders of the Crowd (2001) and The Session Is Open (2006). His other feature films are Sailing Home (2001), which won several awards at the Venice International Film Festival in 2001, and Vento di terra (2004). 66 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Italy-Bulgaria-Spain-France The Lark Farm / La Messeria Delle Allodole 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 122 mins, Italian The Avakians are a rich Armenian family. Two family members are Aram, a landowner living in a small town in Turkey, and Assadour, a successful doctor from Venice. The brothers have not seen each other for a long time and decide to meet in Armenia. While Assadour prepares himself for his trip to his native land, Aram began preparing the old family seat. Meanwhile, the political situation has grown more acute as the times are volatile. Since coming to power in 1913, the government of Young Turks has made it their goal to create one vast Turkish empire. In 1915, Italy and France enter into an alliance against Turkey and Austria. Assadour is hoping to be able to travel from Italy to his homeland when all hell breaks loose in Armenia. The Young Turks order the massacre of the Armenians. The two brothers never meet as they get caught in the genocide. Vittorio Taviani (born 20.9.1929) and his brother Paolo (born 8.11.1931) were both born in San Miniato, Italy. Vittorio studied law in Pisa and his brother, art. Developing an interest in film, in 1954, the brothers made their first short film, San Miniato Lugilo ‘ 44, about their own village. They made names for themselves abroad with the 1977 work, Padre Padrone. In their long career, they have made films like L’Italia Non E Un Paese Povero (1960), Un Uomo Da Bruciare (1962), Il Prato (1979), La Notte Di San Lorenzo (1982), Kaos (1984), Good Morning Babylon (1987). 67 Director Paolo & Vittorio Taviani Screenplay Paolo Taviani & Vittorio Taviani, based on a book by Antonia Arslan Cinematography Beppe Lanci Editor Roberto Perpignani Music Giuliano Taviani Cast Paz Vega, Moritz Bleibtreu, Angela Molina, Alessandro Preziosi, Mohamed Bakri Art Andrea Crisanti Sound Daniel Fontrodona Costume Lina Nerli Taviani Production Ager 3, supported by MiBAC in collaboration with Rai Cinema, Eagle Pictures co-production with Nimar Studios, Sagrera TV TVE (Madrid); Flach Film, France 2 Cinema, Canal+, 27 Films Production, Ard Degeto (Paris); supported by Euroimages World Sales 01Distribution Festivals & Awards Berlin, Copenhagen, Jerusalem, Montreal IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Italy-France-Switzerland The Missing Star / La Stella Che Non C’E‘ 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 103 mins, Italian Director Gianni Amelio Screenplay Gianni Amelio, Umberto Contarello Cinematography Luca Bigazzi Editor Simona Paggi Music Franco Piersanti Cast Sergio Castellitto, Tai Ling, Hiu Sun Ha, Wang Biao Art Attilio Viti Sound Remo Ugolinelli Costumes Cristina Fracioni Production Cattleya, Rai Cinema, Babe Films, CaracFilm, RTSI Swiis Television Festivals & Awards Copenhagen, Vancouver, Istanbul, Palm Springs, Seattle, Rio, Stockholm, London, Toronto Vincenzo, the maintenance manager of a steel mill in Bagnoli, is charged with the responsibility of shutting down the plant and selling the molten metal to the Chinese. When things are just wrapping up, Vincenzo realises that the Chinese were sold a defective machine, which years earlier had caused the death of a worker. Having discovered a way to fix to machine, Vincenzo leaves for China where accompanied by an interpreter, Liu Hua, he will try to track down the plant and fix the machine. As Vincenzo’s journey carries him deeper and deeper into the country, Amelio gently teases out the lessons of the tale’s developing metaphorical dimension. It is a story that serves to illuminate the cultural difference between West and East. The movie is based on the novel La Dismissione by Ermanno Rea. Gianni Amelio was born in San Pietro Magisano, Italy. He has won many international awards, including the Grand Prix du Jury at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival for Stolen Children. Five of his features have screened at the Cannes Festival: A Blow to the Heart (1982), Open Doors (1990), Lamerica (1994), The Way We Laughed (1998) and The House Keys (2004). 68 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Japan Beyond the Crimson Sky / Akanezora 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 120 mins, Japanese Set in Edo (present-day Tokyo) in mid-18th century, it is a story of a way of life, the subtleties of human nature, and intrigue. Based on an award-winning novel, it is above all a story about family — the ties that bind husbands and wives, parents and children, brother and sisters, and the quirks of fate that threaten to pull them apart. The film opens on a crowded bridge where a little boy is separated from his parents, and seems to disappear into thin air. He is the sole heir to a long-established tofu shop. Twenty years later, a young man named Eikichi comes from Kyoto to open a tofu shop in a friendly neighbourhood. He meets a feisty local girl Ofumi, who befriends him as he sets up his shop. Kyo-ya, Eikichi immediately encounters difficulties stemming from cultural differences between the two ancient capitals — including the favoured taste of the tofu itself. Not easily deterred, Ofumi keeps a positive attitude while Eikichi maintains his craftsman’s pride by continuing to make tofu and do business the Kyoto way. Eventually, Eikichi and Ofumi marry. They have become owners of the tofu shop on a more respectable street. Their firstborn son, Eitaro beas the burn of other tofu shops’ animosity toward Kyoya’s refusal to comply with Edo’s way of running business. He starts to frequent a gambling hall run by the mysterious ‘Boss’. Masaki Hamamoto, born in 1963, earlier made Ekiden in 2000. he built his career as an assistant director before making his directorial debut. He has previously worked under Masahiro Shinoda, co-writer of Akanezora, in the renowed director’s Owls’ Castle and Spy Sorge, and is regarded as one of the most promising directors today. 69 Director Masaki Hamamoto Screenplay Masaki Hamamoto, Masahiro Shinoda Cinematography Tatsuo Suzuki Editor Naoji Kawaguchi Music Taro Iwashiro Cast Masaaki Uchino, Miki Nakatani, Renji Ishibashi, Shima Iwashita Art Naoji Kawaguchi Production Akanezora LLP OLC Rights Entertainment (Japan) Inc Kyobashi Mitsubishi Building, 8th Floor 1-7-3, Ginza Chou-ku Tokyo 104-0061 (Japan) Tel: +81351595050 Fax: +81351595051 World Sales Open Sesame Co Ltd Ritsuko Abe/Kaho Nakane 14-6, Ginza, Chuo-ku Tokyo 104-6262 (Japan) Tel: +81351590871 Fax: +81335616262 Email: ritsuko@open-sesame.jp Festivals & Awards Taoramina IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Japan Love My Life 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 97 mins, Japanese Director Koji Kawano Screenplay Hiroko Kanasugi Cinematography Jun Fukumoto Editor Hiroaki Morishita Music Noodles Cast Rei Yoshii, Asami Imajuku, Naomi Akimoto, Miyoko Asada, Kami Hiraiwa, Hiroyuki Ikeuchi Sound Koji Yamada Production & World Sales Open Sesame Co Ltd Ritsuko Abe/Kaho Nakane 14-6, Ginza, Chuo-ku Tokyo 104-6262 (Japan) Tel: +81351590871 Fax: +81335616262 email: ritsuko@open-sesame.jp Festivals & Awards Atlantic (Nova Scotia), Pusan Ichiko Lzumiya, 18, goes to language school and works at a CD shop. She lives with her translator father after her mother passed away. One day, she falls in love with someone who is very smart, and shows her various worlds. The person’s name is Ellie. Yes, she is a girl. When Ichiko introduced Ellie to her father, he is surprised but he understood them at the same time. ‘Thank you Dad! I knew you’d understand us’, thinks Ichiko. However, she did not know that he would confess some secrets to her as well. ‘Ichiko, I am gay. And your mother was lesbian’. She did not see this was coming. What is love? What is usual? What is myself? Those questions never stops coming to her head, but no one gives her answers. Is it so hard to live just as oneself? Adapted from the Yuri Manga comic of the same name by popular female writer Ebine Yamaji. Koji Kawano was born in Fukuoka in 1972. After graduating from Visual Arts School, he worked at a film production company where he was involved in the films of Toshiaki Toyoda, Naoto Takenaka and Edward Yang. This is his feature directorial debut. 70 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Japan-France The Mourning Forest / Mogari No Mori 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 97 mins, Japanese Old Shigeki, suffering from senile dementia, lives in a small retirement home filled with light and tranquility that sits on the edge of a mighty forest. He holds on to a special relationship with his dead wife, Mako, his long letters to her the silent testimony of his undying love. But now the 33 rd anniversary of Mako’s death is approaching and, according to Japanese Buddhist beliefs, this means the departed must travel to the land of Buddha. The time has come for the couple to part forever. Harbinger of this ritual separation is Machiko, a young nurse at the home who seems to devote special attention to Shigeki, even though she is still shakily coping with the recent death of her son. Only one syllable separates Machiko’s name from Mako’s, causing it to echo in Shigeki’s confused mind. One day, disoriented in the woods, the young woman and the old man lose their identities, then regain and redefine them. The weaker becomes the stronger, the caregiver becomes the cared for. The film is set in the breathtaking mountainous region of Tawara in western Japan, where villagers still perform archaic funerary rites, and where a spirit of bereavement seems to dwell in the mystical, verdant forest. Though grounded in the effortless performance of non-professional actor Uda, the film refuses to rely on a purely anthropocentric narrative. Kawase’s naturalistic touch creates an inner geography of emotion, gracefully linking it to the region’s awe-inspiring topography in a way that recalls Japan’s long tradition of landscape painting. It spotlights Kawase’s harmonious style of filmmaking, giving us a modern reflection on ageing that also lyrically exalts nature’s primeval majesty Naomi Kawase was born in Nara, Japan, and graduated from the Osaka School of Photography. She made her directorial debut with the short documentary Embracing (1992), which received a FIPRESCI Special Mention Prize at the Yamagata International Film Festival, and followed it with her first fiction film, White Moon (1993). Her first fiction feature was Suzaku (1997), which won multiple awards including the Caméra d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Her other films include This World (co-director, 1995), The Weald (1997), Kaleidoscope (1999), Hotaru (2000), Shara (2003) and birth/mother (2006). 71 Director Naomi Kawase Screenplay Naomi Kawase Cinematography Hideyo Nakano Editor Yuji Oshige, Tina Baz Music Masamichi Shigeno Cast Shigeki Uda (Shigeki), Machiko Ono (Machiko), Makiko Watanabe ( Wakako), Kanako Masuda (Shigeki’s wife), Yohichiro Saito (Machiko’s husband) Art Toshihiro Isomi Sound David Vranken, Vincent Maduit, Shigetake Ao Production Kumie Inc./ Celluloid Dreams Productions/ Visual Arts College Osaka 1026-2 Horen-cho, Nara-shi, Nara 630-8113 Japan. Tel: (81-7) 4227-2216 Fax: (81-7) 4226-1830 email: noirmam@sepia.ocn.ne.jp World Sales Dreammachine Tel: +33 (0)1 49 70 03 70 email: info@celluloid-dreams.com www.celluloid-dreams.com Festivals & Awards Cannes (Grand Prix), Toronto, Karlovy Vary, Melbourne, London IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Latvia Don’t Talk About It / Par to nerunâ 2007, 35 mm, Colour, Latvian Director Una Celma Screenplay Dace Ruksane Cinematography Fanis Eclitis Editor Gunta Ikere Music Brauns Martins Cast Rçzija Kalniòa (Beatrise), Sandra Zvîgule, Ìirts Íesteris, Juris Þagars, Harijs Spanovskis, Lenarda Íestere, Lâsma Buðmane Art Kaspars Karklins Sound A Krenbergi Costumes Roberts Kraule Production Latsfilma Caka 33-43 Riga, Latvia Tel: +371 7280111 World Sales Screen Vision Beatrise is in her thirties, drifting in her life. She has never made independent decisions but based her life on unsuccessful relationships collapsing one after another like sand castles. Forced to re-evaluate her life she realises that the only way to reach harmony is to start making decisions by herself not relaying to circumstances, illusory feelings and beautiful words. Una Celma studied at the University of Latvia Faculty of Law, and at the Russian State Institute of Cinematography (VGIK) in the Film Directing department. She has worked at the Riga Film Studio, freelanced for the TV channels NTV-5, Swedish TV and BBC World Service, and as an audiovisual author’s rights consultant for the AKKA/LAA (Latvian Copyright Association). As a director she has made ten films, working in both the documentary and the feature film fields. The biggest audience and critical response to date has been for her documentary film, 1960.gada meitenes (The Girls of 1960, 1994) – a biting story about her female classmates and their fates. Her feature film, Seko man (Follow me, 1999), a Latvian-Swedish co-production – an ironically-toned domestic comedy about a Latvian girl’s search for the perfect man in Sweden – provided her with co-production experience. Olu kundze (Egg Lady, 2000), became an international film festival bestseller, tugging at heartstrings with its charming main character, its kind-hearted tone, and its ability to artistically utilise Soviet Era newsreel material. Sauja lo•u (Handful of Bullets, 2003) was another LatvianSwedish co-production. Un tad es atgriezîðos pa îstam (And Then I’ll Be Back For Good, 2003), is Una Celma’s documentary research on the Latvian guest workers in Ireland who have been forced to go abroad to earn a subsistence for their families. Work on the documentary film about the dreams and real lives of Swedish women, A Holiday in the Sun (2004), has been completed. 72 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Malaysia Heir to the Spiritual Tiger / Waris Jari Hantu 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 110 mins, Malay Tok Wan Rimau, the custodian of the spiritual tiger, is searching for a female heir to inherit her powers. Tina and Ari are the relatives of Tok Wan. They are also best friends. Tok Wan’s spiritual tiger protects her family and their village from harm. Tina, who is in love with Ari, nurtures her secret dream of marrying him even though the villagers often ridicule the effeminate Ari as a sissy. Deeply traumatised by these insults, Ari continues to hide behind his close relationship with Tina. Despite parental objections, Tina seems destined to be the next in line as custodian of the mystical tiger. But Ari steps in, offering himself instead... Based on local folkfore of “Rimau Datuk” (a guardian spirit in the form of tiger). Shuhaimi Baba has made several feature films till date. 73 Director Shuhaimi Baba Screenplay Shuhaimi Baba, Halina Abd Samad Cinematography Mohd Filus Ghazali Editor Kamaruddin Abu Music Shamsul Cairel Abdul Karim Cast Maya Karin Roelcke (Tina), Rusdi Ramli (Ari), Azean Irdawaty, Kavita Sidhu, Nanu Baharudin Sound Ashley Ronald Grenville, Ibrahim Elias Art Aida Buyong, Kamarul Nizam Costumes Hasnan Yaccob Production Pesona Pictures Sdn Bhd 29, Lorong Datuk Sulaiman 7, Tmn Tun Dr Ismail 60000 Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) Tel: +60377282427, +60377282316 Fax: +60377291586, +60377281446 email: admin@pesonapictures.com.my www.warisjarihantu.com IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Mexico Pan’s Labyrinth / El Laberinto del fauno 2006, 35mm, Colour, 112 mins, Spanish Director Guillermo del Toro Screenplay Guillermo del Toro Cinematography Guillermo Navarro Editor Bernat Vilaplana Music Javier Navarrete Cast Ivana Baquero (Ofelia), Sergi López (Capitán Vidal), Maribel Verdú (Mercedes), Doug Jones (Pan / Pale Man), Ariadna Gil (Carmen Vidal), Álex Angulo (Dr. Ferreiro), Manolo Solo (Garcés) Art Eugenio Caballero Costumes Lala Huete, Rocío Redondo Production Alfonso Cuarón, Guillermo del Toro, Bertha Navarro, Frida Torresblanco, Alvaro Augustin Festivals & Awards Oscar (Best Cinematography, Best Art, Best Make-up), Cannes, BAFTA Awards (Best Foreign Language Film, Costume, Make-up and Hair) Spain, 1944. Officially, the Civil War has been over for five years, but a small group of rebels fights on unbroken in the northern mountains of Navarra. Dreamy 10-year-old Ofelia moves to Navarra with her delicate, pregnant mother Carmen, to become acquainted with her new stepfather, Captain Vidal, a Fascist officer under orders to rid the territory of rebels. Ofelia, who is fascinated by fairy tales, discovers an overgrown, tumbledown labyrinth behind the mill. In the heart of the labyrinth she meets Pan, an ancient satyr who claims to know her true identity and her secret destiny. But first, she must complete three tasks before the moon grows full. And no one must know: not her ailing mother, or her new friend, Mercedes. Time is running out, for Ofelia and for the rebels. Both will have to battle hardship and cruelty in order to gain their freedom. But, who can be trusted in a time of lies and danger? Is Pan telling the truth...? And if not, who is? Set against the backdrop of fascist Spain in 1944, Pan’s Labyrinth is a dark fairy tale that distils his distinctive mix of fact and fantasy, poetry and politics, pain and pleasure. It’s an epic, poetic vision in which the grim realities of war are matched and mirrored by a descent into an underworld populated by fearsomely beautiful monsters - a transformative, life-affirming Guillermo del Toro Gómez, born in 1964 in Guadalajara, Mexico, is an Academy Award-nominated film director. Del Toro studied in the Instituto de Ciencias, and was raised by his Catholic grandmother. Del Toro first got involved with filmmaking when he was about eight years old. He executive produced his first feature in 1986 , at the age of 21. Before that he spent nearly 10 years as a makeup designer, and formed his own company, Necropia, in the early 1980s. He also co-founded the Guadalajara-based Mexican film festival. Later on in his directing career, he formed his own production company, the Tequila Gang. In 1998, his father was kidnapped in Mexico, which prompted del Toro to move abroad to live as an expatriate. Del Toro currently lives in Westlake Village, a bedroom community in Los Angeles. He has directed a wide variety of films, from comic book adaptations (Hellboy and Blade II) to historical fantasy and horror films, two of which are set in Spain during or in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War under the authoritarian rule of Francisco Franco. These two films, El espinazo del diablo (The Devil’s Backbone) and El laberinto del fauno (Pan’s Labyrinth), are among his most critically-acclaimed works. They also share similar settings, young children as protagonists, and themes . Del Toro, said in an interview about lists several fascinations that have become regular features in his films: “I have a sort of a fetish for insects, clockwork, monsters, dark places, and unborn things.” 74 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Mexico Wait for Me in another World / Esperame En Otro Mundo 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Spanish Marcela lives in Mexico City and earns a living as a dance teacher. Her small world seems to be going fine; there is a prospect of opening to her own academy and there are love plans ahead. However, she finds out that something is not right in her parents’ house: an underground discomfort that grows week by week. Her mother Gloria has started to withdraw, talk about strange things out of the house’ everyday activities and memory drifts. At the same, her father Nacho loses his job and with it his self-esteem. Marcela tries to do the impossible to save to her family but how? Juan Pablo Villasenor was born in Morelia, Michoacán, where he studied Philosophy and Medicine. In 1982, he joined the Center of Cinematographic Qualification, from where he graduated with the short film and I who I want so much to it, winning an Ariel prize. His first film In case I do not return to see you, won 30 prizes, among them the Ariel de Oro to the Best Mexican film, in 1997, and several international awards. He is also a writer, and by all means a scriptwriter. He has written three story books: The shipwrecks of the coffer of Noah, Brothers and Hearts of smoke. 75 Director Juan Pablo Villasenor Screenplay Juan Pablo Villasenor Cinematography Martin Boege Editor Miguel Lavandeira Music Jimena Jiménez Piece Cast Natalia Esperón (Marcela), Margarita Sanz (Gloria), Calf Fernando (Nacho), Jorge Galván (Dr Zavala), Luis Rábago (Dr Parra), Zaide Silvia Gutiérrez (Dra. Luengo), Carmen Huete (Tere) Art Claudius Contreras Sound Antonio Diego, Ernesto Gaytán Costumes Alexander Gastélum Production Mexican Film Institute Insurgentes Sur 674 2nd Floor Del Valle 03100 Mexico City, Mexico Festivals & Awards Guadalajara IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD The Netherlands Black Book 2006, 35mm, Colour, 145 mins, Dutch-German-English-Hebrew Director Paul Verhoeven Screenplay Gerard Soeteman, Paul Verhoeven Cinematography Karl Walter Lindenlaub Editor Job ter Burg, James Herbert Music Anne Dudley Cast Carice van Houten (Rachel/Ellis), Sebastian Koch (Ludwig Müntze), Thom Hoffman (Hans Akkermans), Halina Reijn (Ronnie), Waldemar Kobus (Günther Franken), Derek de Lint (Gerben Kuipers), Christian Berkel (General Käutner), Dolf de Vries (Notary Smaal) Art Wilbert Van Dorp, Maarten Piersma, Wilbert Van Dorp Sound Georges Bossaers Costumes Yan Tax Production Fu Works Productions, Hector, Motel Films, Clockwork Pictures, Egoli Tossell Film World Sales Sony Pictures Classics Carmelo Pirrone 550 Madison Ave New York, NY 10022, USA Tel: 212-833-8833 Fax: 212-833-8844 Festivals & Awards Venice, Palm Springs, Toronto, Miami Director Paul Verhoeven returns to Holland to direct this World War II thriller. Rachel, a celebrated Jewish singer who joins the Dutch resistance to track down the Nazis who killed her family, is caught in a web of seduction, betrayal, and revenge. In this complex moral drama, no one is who they appear to be. Paul Verhoeven directed his first film Een Hagedis Teveel in 1960, followed by the TV series Floris and the box office hit Turks Fruit (Turkish Delight) starring Monique van der Ven and Rutger Hauer. His next exploits were Keetje Tippel (Katie Tippel), Soldier of Orange, Spetters and De Vierde Man (The Fourth Man). In 1999 Turks Fruit (Turkish Delight) was honoured as the Best Dutch Film of the Century; it was also nominated for the Oscar for Best Foreign Film. Verhoeven’s international breakthrough came with RoboCop, followed by the box office hits Total Recall and the trailblazing Basic Instinct. In 1997 he made Starship Troopers, an indictment of the establishment. In 2000, he made Hollow Man. 76 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD New Zealand Out of the Blue 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 102 mins, English Ordinary people find extraordinary courage in the face of madness. On 13-14 November 1990 that madness came to Aramoana, a small New Zealand seaside village. It came in the form of a lone gunman with a high-powered automatic rifle. As he stalked his victims the terrified and confused residents were trapped in the village for 24 hours while a handful of under-resourced and under-armed local policeman risked their lives trying to find him and save the survivors. It remains the worst mass murder in New Zealand’s history. Terrified and confused residents were trapped in their homes for 24 hours, not knowing where David Gray was – or if they would become his next victim. There were great feats of bravery on that terrible day – from ordinary people in the most extraordinary of situations. New Zealand director Robert Sarkies chose a true-life story based on a tragedy for his second feature. His debut feature Scarfies was a cult hit in New Zealand in 2000, and also won seven awards at the NZ Film Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. Sarkies has had a passion for filmmaking since he first began making movies in his hometown of Dunedin as an eight-year-old. Combining his love of drama, technology and pyrotechnics, Rob’s commitment to being a filmmaker saw him save his lunch money at school and put it towards his student films. The sacrifice paid off: by his early 20s, his short Dream Makers had won him first prize at the Semana de Cine Experimental Festival in Madrid, and Signing Off picked up six international awards, including first prize at the Montreal International Film Festival. 77 Director Robert Sarkies Screenplay Robert Sarkies, Graeme Tetley Cinematography Greig Fraser Editor Annie Collins Music Victoria Kelly Cast Karl Urban (Harvey), Matthew Sunderland (David Gray), Lois Lawn (Helen Dickson), Simon Ferry (Garry Holden), Tandi Wright (Julie Ann Bryson), Paul Glover (Paul Knox) Art David Kolff, Ken Turner Sound Dave Whitehead Costumes Lesley Burkes-Harding Production Southern Light Films & Desert Road Films Production World Sales NZ FILM Kathleen Drumm Level 3, The Film centre 119 Ghuznee Street, Wellington 6011 New Zealand Tel: +64 4 382 7680 Fax: +64 4 384 9719 email: kathleen@nzfilm.co.nz www.nzfilm.co.nz Festivals & Awards Toronto, Goteborg, Dublin, Hong Kong, Natfilm Festival (Denmark), Singapore, Sydney, Shanghai, Fantasy Film Festival (Germany), Saint-Tropez Antipodes Film Festival (France) IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Norway Reprise / Auf Anfang 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 106 mins, Nordik Director Joachim Trier Screenplay Eskil Vogt and Joachim Trier Cinematography Jakob Ihre Editor Olivier Bugge Couté Music Ola Fløttum and Knut Schreiner Cast Espen Klouman Høiner (Erik), Anders Danielsen Lie (Phillip), Christian Rubeck (Lars), Odd Magnus Williamson (Morten), Pål Stokka (Geir), Viktoria Winge (Kari), Silje Hagen (Lillian), Henrik Elvestad (Henning), Thorbjørn Harr (Mathis Wergeland), Sigmund Sæverud (Sten Egil Dahl), Elisabeth Sand (Hanne, Erik’s mother), Tone Danielsen (Inger, Phillip’s mother) Art Roger Rosenberg Sound Morten Solum Costumes Maria Bohlin Production 4 1/2 AS St. Olavsgt. 21C N-0165 Oslo, Norway Tel: +47 22 94 24 94 Fax: +47 22 94 24 99 email: karin@fourandahalf.no World Sales Nordisk Film International Sales Mosedalsvej 14, DK-2500 Valby Tel: +45 36 18 82 00 Fax: +45 36 18 95 50 email: contact@nordiskfilm.com www.sales.nordiskfilm.com Festivals & Awards 2006: Karlovy Vary (Crystal Globe for Best Director, Don Quijote Award from FICC (International Federation of Film Societies), Norwegian International Film Festival (Haugesund), Toronto (Diesel Discovery Award), London, Sundance 2007: Rotterdam (Young People’s Jury Award), Göteborg, Cleveland, Stockholm, Istanbul (Grand Prize “Golden Tulip”), Buenos Aires, Minneapolis, Linz, Jeonju (South Korea), San Francisco, Seattle, Festroia (Portugal), Transilvania, Melbourne, Milan (Best Film), Umeå (Sweden), Helsinki, Haifa, Seville, Athens, Riga (Latvia) It is a playful film about friendship, madness and creativity, about love and sorrow, great ambitions and the often unpleasant clash between youthful presumptions and reality. With its somewhat un-Norwegian structure, Reprise has a distinct style and narrative technique which moves the story forward in a rich and enthusiastic manner. Erik and Phillip are trying to make it as writers. Erik is rejected by publishers as lacking in talent, while Phillip’s manuscript is accepted and the young man becomes a major name on the Norwegian cultural scene practically overnight. Six months later, Erik and his friends come to visit Phillip at a psychiatric hospital to bring him home after long-term treatment. Writing is the last thing on Phillip’s mind, but Erik is continuing his literary attempts and tries to convince his friend to go back to writing. This film could be seen as a subtle reflection on youth as a time of promise, plans and hopes which gradually dissolve under the impact of life experiences. If the style of the narration is reminiscent of the poetic works of the French New Wave, it’s no coincidence: the director admits to the influence of François Truffaut, in particular, the latter’s Jules and Jim, in which fundamental themes are treated with an enchantingly light touch. Norwegian-Danish director Joachim Trier makes his feature film debut with Reprise. Trier, born in 1974, is a graduate of the National Film and Television School in England. He has already made a string of celebrated short films. Three of them, Procter (2002), Pietà (2000) and Still (2000), have been screened at more than 30 international film festivals and won many awards. The most important accolades include the Prix UIP and the Kodak Short Film Bureau Award for Best British and Best European Film, which Procter garnered at the Edinburgh Festival in 2002. Trier also directed commercials in England and Norway for the company Moland Film AS. Joachim has twice been the National Skateboard Champion in Norway. 78 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Poland-Italy-Canada Karol - The Pope, the Man / Karol un Papa rimasto uomo 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 200 mins, Polish The sequel to Karol-a Man who Became Pope was long awaited among many viewers since the director used his best endeavors to make the biopic of John Paul II most accurate and touching. While the first part dealt with the 1939-1978 period and the early life of Karol Wojtyla, the sequel deals with his long, fruitful 1978-2005 pontiff. The director dynamically presents the Pontiff. The movie is filled with wonderful symbolic moments. Giacomo Battiato, born in 1943, is an Italian film director and writer. Born in Verona, he started his career in 1973 on Italian Rai TV, Ten years later, he made his debut in cinema with I paladini. He directed two fiction dedicated at Pope John Paul II, Karol: A Man Who Became Pope (Karol, un uomo diventato Papa, 2005) and Karol: The Pope, The Man (Karol, un papa rimasto uomo, 2006). 79 Director Giacomo Battiato Screenplay Giacomo Battiato, Gianfranco Svidercoschi Cinematography Giovanni Mammolotti Editor Alessandro Heffler Music Ennio Morricone Cast Piotr Adamczyk (Pope John Paul II), Dariusz Kwasnik (Stanislaw Dziwisz), Michele Placido (Dr. Renato Buzzonetti), Alberto Cracco (Agostino Casaroli), Adriana Asti (Mother Theresa), Raoul Bova (Father Thomas), Leslie Hope (Julia Ritter) Art Lorenzo D’Ambrosio Sound Dave Tinsley Production Pietro Valsecchi World Sales Jasna 10/120, 00-013 Warszawa Poland IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Poland Tricks / Sztuczki 2007, 35 mm, Colour, Polish Director Andrzej Jakimowski Screenplay Andrzej Jakimowski Cinematography Adam Bajerski Cast Damian Ul, Ewelina Walendziak, Rafa³ Gu¿niczak, Tomasz Sapryk Production Zjednoczenie Artystów i Rzemieœlników Sp. z o.o., Wytwórnia Filmów Dokumentalnych i Fabularnych, Telewizja Polska S.A., Canal+ Cyfrowy, Opus Film World Sales Kino Œwiat Belwederska Str 20/22 00762 Warsaw, Poland Tel: +48 22 840 68 01 Fax: +48 22 840 68 06 Email: kinoswiat@kinoswiat.pl http://www.kinoswiat.pl/ Festivals & Awards Venice (Best Film) Six-year-old Stefek challenges fate. He believes that the chain of events he sets in motion will help him get closer to his father who abandoned his mother. His sister Elka, 17, helps him learn how to “bribe” fate with small sacrifices. Tricks and coincidences eventually bring the father to the mother’s doorstep but things go wrong. In despair Stefek tries his good luck with the most risky of his tricks. Andrzej Jakimowski, born 1963 in Warsaw, is director and screenwriter. He studied philosophy at the Warsaw University and film directing at the Krzysztof Kieœlowski Faculty of Radio and Television of the Silesian University in Katowice. His debut feature Zmró¿ oczy (Squint Your Eyes) won numerous awards, among others the Main SKYY Prize at San Francisco IFF 2004, Main Prize “White Rose” at IFF Kinotavr in Sochi 2004, FIPRESCI Special Mention at MannheimHeidelberg IFF 2002, five awards at the Polish Feature Films Festival in Gdynia 2003: Special Jury Prize, Best Debut, Best Cinematography, Best Set Design, Best Costumes, four Polish Academy Awards – Golden Eagles 2004: for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Actor. This is his second feature. 80 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Portugal Dot.Com 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 103 mins, Portuguese If Jesus were alive today, he would have his own website. Pedro, an engineer posted in a village in the North of Portugal, waits desperately to be transferred back to Lisbon. Ever since his road project was cancelled, has had nothing to do except work in the village website he created. Just when a transfer seems imminent, Pedro receives a letter from a large multinational. They summon Pedro to close the site, citing domain name infringement. Failure to do so will result in a 5,00,000/ - Euro lawsuit. But only the village association can close the site. And the villagers refuse. Their logic: if the site is worth 5,00,000 Euros in damages, then it’s worth 5,00,000 Euros. The situation spins out of control when the Press gets wind of the story and the villagers plight becomes a cause celebre from New York to Hong Kong. But as interest rises, so does dissension in the village. Under the media spotlight, the villagers start to change… The film reflects upon the effect of new technologies on the lives of people Luís Galvão Teles was born in Lisbon in 1945, and graduated from law school before studying film in Paris. He made his first feature film, A Confederação, in 1978 and subsequently directed A Vida é Bela? (1982), Retrato de Família (1992), Elas (1997) and Tudo Isto é Fado (2003). 81 Director Luis Galvao Teles Screenplay Suzanne Nagle Cinematography Miguel Sales Lopes Editor Carlos Domeque Music Guy Farley Cast Joao Tempera, Maria Adanez, Isabel Abreu, Marco Delgado, Jose Eduardo, Margarida Caprinteiro, Lia Gama Art Luis Costa Sound Eladio Reguero Costumes Cristina Camargo Production Fado Films Rua Goncalves Zarco N 18-5, Dto 1400-191 Lisbon (Portugal) Tel: +351213021032 Fax: +351213021042; Zanzibar Films World Sales Rua Dr. Archer de Lima 32, 1495-682 Cruz Quebrada Dafundo (Portugal) Tel: +351213021032 Fax: +351213021042 igteles@mail.telepac.pt Festivals & Awards Rio de Janeiro IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Romania 12:08 East of Bucharest / A fost sau n-a fost? 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 89 min, Romanian Direction Corneliu Porumboiu Screenplay Corneliu Porumboiu Cinematography Marius Panduru Editing Roxana Szel Music Rotaria Group Cast Mircea Andreescu (Emanoil Piscosi), Teodor Corban (Virgil Jderescu), Ion Sapdaru (Tiberiu Manescu) Art Daniel Raduta Sound Alexandru Dragomir, Sebastian Zsemlye Costums Monica Raduta Production 42 km films 15, Costache Marinescu Street Code 011285, District 1 Bucharest, ROMANIA Tel/Fax:+4031-1006837 Mobile: +40740 011166 email:office@42kmfilm.ro World Sales The Coproduction Office 24, rue Lamartine 75009 Paris Tel: +33 1 560 260 00 Fax: +33 1 560 260 01 Email: info@thecopro.de Web: www.thecopro.de Festivals & Awards Cannes (Golden Camera & Europa Cinémas Award), Toronto, Transilvania (Best Film, Audience Award & Romanian Days Award for Best Romanian Feature) At 12:08 p.m. on December 22, 1989, Romanians were glued onto their TV sets watching Nicolae Ceausescu flee in a helicopter from his presidential palace. Now it’s December 22 again. It’s been 16 years since the Revolution and Christmas is approaching. Pisconi, an old retiree, is preparing to spend another lonely Christmas. Manescu, a history teacher, does not want to lose his entire salary to pay his debts. Jderescu, the owner of the local TV station, doesn’t seem very interested in vacation. With Piscoci and Manescu’s help, he wants to find an answer to a 16-year-old question: “Did a Revolution really take place in their city”? Corneliu Porumboiu was born in 1975 in Vaslui (north-east from Bucharest, in eastern Romania). A well-known film director and script writer, he has made other films like Liviu’s Dream in 2004 and Trip to the City in 2003. In 2004, he won the second prize at the Cinéfondation section with his student short film Trip to the City and was selected in 2005 for the Résidence du Festival, a cinematographic project development programme that brought him almost a halfyear stay in France. His last film, Liviu’s Dream, was based on a young man’s recurrent nightmare about his unborn brother, aborted by his mother in the Ceauºescu era. 82 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Serbia Last Waltz In Sarajevo / Belle Epoque 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 135 mins, Serbian-Bosnian-French-Italian-German This is a story about the last days of the period known in Europe as “La Belle Epoque”, the period of tumultuous events on the Balkans, between the years 1910 and 1914. This very important theme is seen from the point of view of the first Bosnian motion picture cameraman Anton Walitz, who made several significant film stories and an authentic documentary about the Sarajevo assassination. The chief historical facts are primarily used as a pretext for the fanciful shaping of a “dramatic comedy” about the epoch at the beginning of the last century, the epoch which is, in its variety of aspects, an inverted picture of our epoch at the end of the century. The cabaret numbers should offer a full range of information about the setting to the uninformed spectator, utilising first class entertaiment, an erotic atmosphere and sarcastic humour. This abundant and humorously flavoured picture about an unusual age, bizarre ambient and dramatic events, combined with romantic elements of melodrama, should offer excitement, joy and pure cinematic amusement. Born in 1942, Nikola Stojanoviæ is a film director and screenwriter, historian and theorist of cinema, and founder-editor of the highly-esteemed film periodical Sineast. He has wrote and directed seven features and many short films and won a lot of awards at the local and international festivals. Short and documentary films include In the Kitchen (1969), The Act (1980), Triptych (1982), The Alternative (1987), Quo Vadis? (1993), The End of Millennium (1995), Act Five (2002). Feature films include Dear Irena (1970), Pollen Dust (1974), Autograph (TV, 1977), Glimpse into the Night (1978), Great Talent (TV, 1984), Apple from Gold (1986), Belle Epoque / Last Waltz in Sarajevo (l990-2004). 83 Director Nikola Stojanoviæ Screenplay Nikola Stojanoviæ Cinematography Radoslav Vladiæ Editor Petar Putnikoviæ Music Arsen Dediæ Cast Davor Janjiæ, Radmila •ivkoviæ, Vita Mavriè, Petar Bo•oviæ, Boro Stjepanoviæ, Nebojša Kundaèina, Alain Noury Art Miodrag Nikoliæ Sound Velibor Hajdukovic, Nebojsa Zoric Costumes Emilija Kovaèeviæ Production Bosna film d.d.,Sarajevo, Maja film,U•ice World Sales Maja film Bosanska 49 31000 U•ice, Srbija Tel: +381 31 552 392 Fax: + 381 31 513 493 Email: majafilmue@yahoo.com IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD South Africa Tsotsi 2005, 35 mm, Color, 90 mins, Tsotsitaal/English Direction Gavin Hood Screenplay Gavin Hood, based on the novel Tsotsi by Athol Fugard Cinematography Lance Gewer Editor Megan Gill Music Mark Kilian, Paul Hepker Cast Presley Chweneyagae, Terry Pheto, Kenneth Nkosi, Mothusi Magano, Zenzo Ngqobe Art Mark Walker Sound Shaun Murdoch Costumes Nadia Kruger, Pierre Vienings Production The UK Film & TV Production Company Plc 3, Colville Place London W1T 2BH (UK) Tel: +442074191060 World Sales The Little Film Company 12930, Ventura Boulevard #822 South City, CA 19604 Tel: +18087626999 Robbie Little email: robbie@thelittlefilmcompany.com Festivals & Awards 2005: Toronto (People’s Choice Award), Edinburgh (The Michael Powell Award For Best New British Feature Film, Standard Life Audience Award), Thessaloniki (Greek Parliament’s Human Values Award), Denver (Audience Award), Cape Town (Critics Jury Award), St Louis (Audience Award) 2006: Best Foreign Language Oscar, BAFTA Nomination, Jury Prize for Best Feature, Pan African Film and Arts Festival (Jury Prize for Best Feature), Santa Barbara (Audience Award) Set amidst the sprawling Johannesburg township of Soweto - where survival is the primary objective – Tsotsi traces six days in the life of a ruthless young gang leader who ends up caring for a baby accidentally kidnapped during a car-jacking. It is a gritty and moving portrait of an angry young man living in a state of extreme urban deprivation. His world pumps with the raw energy of “Kwaito music” - the modern beat of the ghetto that reflects his troubled state of mind. The film is a psychological thriller in which the protagonist is compelled to confront his own brutal nature and face the consequences of his actions. It puts a human face on both the victims and the perpetrators of violent crime and is ultimately a story of hope and a triumph of love over rage. After graduating with a degree in law in South Africa, Gavin Hood worked briefly as an actor before heading to the US to study screenwriting and directing at the University of California in LA. After completing his studies, he returned to South Africa. In 1998 Gavin made his 35mm film directing debut with a 22-minute short called The Storekeeper. His maiden feature, A Reasonable Man, starred Sir Nigel Hawthorne. 84 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD South Korea Psychopath 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 79 mins, Korean Following the modus operandi of two serial rapists’ crimes, this film examines the rapists’ psychology, the way they justify their crimes, and their manner of selecting their next victim. Also, the film studies the viewpoint and psychology of the women who became their victims. The film also questions the appropriateness of the statutory limitations for sexual criminals. Shin Hea Kim is among South Korea’s new filmmaking names. 85 Director Shin Hea Kim Screenplay Shin Hea Kim Cinematography Sang Hoon Lee, Hak Jin Jeong Editor Mi Yeong Kim, Chang Rok Pak, In Yeong Kwon Music Wok Hyen Lee Cast Wuk Hyun Lee, Won Jo Jeong, Hee Yung Kim, Chol Min Lee, Hyeon Jin Sa, Ju Na Lee, Lee Seel Lee, Sun Aa Jeong Art Jan Di Kim Sound Yong Hee Chen, Chang Ju Ji Production & World Sales Shin Hea Kim E-1210, Sanho Apt 118-16, Wonhyoro 4ga Yong Sangu Seoul (South Korea) Tel: +82112494880 Fax: +8227490754 email: kimdrama@hanmail.net IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Spain-UK Salvador Puig 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 134 mins, Catalan-Spanish-French Director Manuel Huerga Screenplay Lluis Arcarazo Cinematography David Omedes Editor Aixala, Santi Borricon Music Lluis Llach Cast Daniel Bruhl, Tristan Ulloa, Leonardo Sbaraglia, Joel Joan, Celso Bugallo Art Antxón Gómez Sound Alastair Widgery and James Muñoz Costume Maria Gil Production Eva Carrillo Telesisteme Mejicaho SA de CV Balderas No. 420 Mezanine Col Centro Historico 06070 Mexico DF World Sales Beta Cinema Isabelle Griessbach Gruenwalder Weg 28d Oberhaching, 82041 Germany Tel: 49-89-6734-6980 Fax: 49-89-6734-6988 email: beta@betacinema.com www.betacinema.com Festivals and awards Seattle, Palm Springs On March 2, 1974, the young militant of the Movimiento Ibérico de Liberación (Iberian Liberation Movement), Salvador Puig Antich, became the last political prisoner to be executed in Spain under the dictatorship of Francisco Franco. This is his story and that of the desperate attempts of his family, colleagues and lawyers to avoid his execution. The film is based on the Francesc Escribano book Cuenta atrás. La historia de Salvador Puig Antich, which describes the execution of Antich. Manuel Huerga was born in Barcelona on October 20, 1957. A filmmaker from an early age, his is a popular name in experimental and avant-garde circuits. Among his films are Gaudí, which won the critics’ award at the Barcelona International Film Festival and the documentary Les Variacions Gould. In 1992, he directed the opening and closing ceremonies of the Barcelona Olympics. His other film Antartida was released in 1995. 86 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Spain Under the Stars / Bajo las Estrellas 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 107 mins, Spanish When Benito Lacunza, a shiftless waiter cum aspiring jazz musician, returns to his hometown Estella for a few days, he is surprised to learn that his cheerful brother Lalo - who makes sculptures out of scrap metal - is about to marry. Benito remembers the bride all too well from his adolescence days. She is Nines, a single mom who’s seen her share of hard times. Benito decides to prevent the marriage for his brother’s benefit. But unexpectedly he finds himself up against a formidable foe in Nine’s daughter, Ainara. Benito ends up forging a one-of-a-kind friendship with her despite her rebellious nature. When things take a turn for the worst in this peculiar family, Benito decides for the first time in his life to take control and offer his assistance - albeit, in his own way - to all those persons that he genuinely cares for. Félix Viscarret is one of the known Spanish directors who has made a name for himself in short-feature length films. This is his first full length feature film. Born at Pamplona in Spain in 1975, Felix studied on films in the United States. 87 Director Félix Viscarret Screenplay Félix Viscarret Cinematography Álvaro Gutiérrez Editor Ángel Hernández Zoido Music Mikel Salas Cast Alberto San Juan, Emma Suárez, Julián Villagrán, Violeta Rodríguez Art Gustavo G Ramirez Sound Licio Marcos DeOliveira Costume Laura Renau Production & World Sales Notro Films Lincoln, 11-3-4 08006 Barcelona (Spain) Tel: (+34) 93 567 05 05 Fax: (+34) 93 567 05 04 email: marisa@notrofilms.com www.notrofilms.com Festivals & Awards Malaga (Best Film, Best Director, Best Actor), IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Sweden When Darkness Falls / Nar Morkret Faller 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 131 mins, Swedish Director Anders Nilsson Screenplay Anders Nilsson, Joakim Hansson Cinematography P A Svensson Editor Darek Hodor Music Bengt Nilsson Cast Lia Boysen, Reuben Sallmander, Per Graffman, Peter Engman, Anja Lundqvist Sound Niklas Skarp Costume Marie Flyckt Production Swedish Film Institute (P.O. Box 27126 / Borgvägen 1-5 SE-102 52 Stockholm, Sweden); TV3; PAN Vision (SE); Multimedia Film und Fernseh; Film Förderung Hamburg (DE); Sonet Film World Sales Sonet Film Box 20105 161 02 BROMMA Tel: +46 8 555 248 00 Fax: +46 8 28 58 34 Festivals & Awards Berlin (Amnesty International Film Award), Mill Valley (USA) Two young sisters act against their family’s “code of honour” and their lives become a deadly nightmare. Two bouncers at a popular club are attacked by criminals igniting total war. An award-winning journalist presses charges of spousal abuse against her husband only to become a hated pariah amongst their common colleagues. But what none of their aggressors could have foreseen is the enormous will to fight and prevail that is awake in the hearts of those threatened one time too many. It is a gripping and intense thriller about honour, loyalty, and the courage to fight for what you believe. It is the last of a trilogy, after Zero Tolerance and Executive Protection. Anders Nilsson is one of Sweden’s most-distinguished directors. Both critics and audiences consider him to be Sweden’s number one director of action-thrillers. His personal style and use of non-American crime themes has made his films enormously successful and possibly spawned a new genre. Nilsson was born in Kil, Sweden, in 1963. At the age of 19 Nilsson began as a camera assistant and sound editor, but soon worked his way up to the studio’s chief film editor, cinematographer, and second unit director. Before 30, he had racked up over 100 film credits. While these films where all low-budget action adventures, thrillers, and comedies, the studio provided Nilsson with freedom to experiment with his craft and his art, which allowed him to develop his unique personal style. Currently, Nilsson is writing another trilogy: a historical epic about the ongoing birth of democracy. 88 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Sweden-Germany-France-DenmarkNorway You, The Living / Du Levande 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 94 mins, Swedish You, the Living is about the human being, about her greatness and her ‘miserableness’, her joy and sorrow, her self-confidence and anxiety. A being at whom we want to laugh and also cry for. It is simply a tragic comedy or a comic tragedy about us. Roy Andersson was born in Gothenburg, Sweden in 1943. His first feature A Swedish Love Story won the main prize at the Berlin in 1970. Giliap, his second film, was presented at the Directors’ Fortnight in Cannes 1976. In 1975 he started making unusual and very successful commercials, which won a total of eight Golden Lions at Cannes. In 1981, he founded Studio 24 in order to produce and make his films in total freedom. After Something Happened (1987) and World of Glory (1991), two shorts that returned with the most prestigious awards, he shot Songs From The Second Floor in his studio (March 1996-May 2000) and won the Special Jury Prize in Cannes 2000. You, the Living is his fourth feature film. 89 Director Roy Andersson Screenplay Roy Andersson Editor Anna Märta Waern Music Robert Hefter Cast Jessica Lundberg, Elisabet Helander, Björn Englund, Leif Larsson, Ollie Olson, Kemal Sener, Håkan Angser, Birgitta Persson, Gunnar Ivarsson Sound Jan Alvermark, Robert Sörling Costumes Sophia Frykstam Production Roy Andersson Filmproduktion AB Sibyllegatan 24 114 42 Stockholm Tél. +46 8662 5700 Fax +46 8662 9240 www.royandersson.com World Sales Coproduction Office 24, rue Lamartine 75009 Paris, France Tél. +331 5602 6000 Fax +331 5602 6001 Email info@coproductionoffice.eu A Cannes Riviera L6 Tél. +334 9299 3316 Festivals & Awards Cannes IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Switzerland-Finland-Germany Sonic Mirror 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 80 mins, Portuguese-German-English Director Mika Kaurismaki Screenplay Uwe Dresch, Marco Forster, Mika Kaurismaki Cinematography Jacques Cheuiche Editor Oli Weiss, Christian Krämer Music Billy Cobham, Male Debale Brazil, Okuta Percussion Nigeria, Tunji Beier/Espoo Big Band Finland, Swiss Mix Switzerland Cast Bill Cobham, Randy Brecker Sound Uwe Dresch Production Marco Forster Productions, Vevey/CH - Marianna Films Oy, Helsinki/Fi - Uwe Dresch Films Ltd., Köln/D - Doc Productions GmbH, Zürich/CH World Sales WIDE Management 40, rue Sainte-Anne - 75002 Paris France Tel: +33 1 53 95 04 64 Fax: +33 1 53 95 04 65 email: wide@widemanagement.com Festivals & Awards Nyon, Munich For most people music is a marvellous experience and part of their life whether or not they play an instrument themselves. They understand music and rhythm as a fundamental communication tool of mankind. Sonic Mirror is an emotional dive into the world of rhythm - an extraordinary trip to discover the magic relationship between Life and Rhythm. Drum legend Billy Cobham takes us from the bandstands of the Western world to the primal music of African origin with kids in a Brazilian community and on to the completely secluded world of musical experiences of artistes. These different worlds are connected in a mystical and secret way. Mika Kaurismäki studied cinema in Munich, Germany, and made his diploma film The Liar in 1980 in Finland. His younger brother Aki Kaurismäki, a journalism student, played the main role and co-wrote the screenplay. After the success of The Liar, Mika Kaurismäki decided to stay in Finland and together with his brother and friends he founded the production company Villealfa Filmproductions that became a home of vital low- or no-budget film making. During the active Villealfa years, Mika co-founded the legendary Midnight Sun Film Festival (1986) and the distribution company Senso Films (1987) with Andorra cinemas (and some bars) in Helsinki. In the 1990s, Mika started to produce through his company Marianna Films. He also established his base and second home in Rio de Janeiro and concentrated in international co-productions. Mika has just finished his last film Honey Baby, a road movie in the Baltic and Russia. 90 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Thailand Mid Road Gang / Ma Mha 4 Khaa Khrap 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, Thai The age-old tale of a hero or heroine overcoming humble beginnings to find a successful and fulfilling future has inspired many a cinema and literary classic. In the case of this delightfully antic story from Thailand, the hero who pulls himself up by his bootstraps is a seventy-pound muscular russet mutt named Makham. Makham becomes the involuntary leader of six stray dogs of various ages and genetic cocktails: Uncle Kafe, Keng, Piak, Pikul and Sexy, the miniature French poodle. The dogs are a pretty tight team, scratching out a living on the mean streets of Bangkok. Catastrophe strikes, however, when the slum they call home is razed to make way for a supermarket. Homeless, drifting and hungry, the friends are hounded all over town by the dreaded dog catchers. After Uncle Kafe is hurt by a speeding motorcycle, Makham realizes his canine family needs to find a permanent safe harbour. Makham has heard a rumour he wants to believe is true – that there exists a haven for canines, where every pooch and puppy has a bed and never goes hungry; a place that some call “Dogtopia”. There’s only one problem: this refuge lies on the other side of a busy ten-lane superhighway. How Makham and his ragamuffin pack of friends navigate this treacherous road to find sanctuary is a gripping adventure story laced with both wit and slapstick. Pantham Thongsang was born in Bangkok and has a BA in film from Chulalongkorn University. He has worked as a producer on several films, including Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s Tropical Malady. His feature filmography includes Judgment and Mid Road Gang. Somkiat Vithuranich was born in Bangkok and has a B.F.A. in film and video from the University of Regina in Saskatchewan. He began his career working as an assistant director and producer. 91 Director Pantham Thongsange, Somkait Vituranich Screenplay Somkait Vituranich Cinematography Wardhana Vunchuplou Editor Margenta Chumpol Porkar Karun Kumanuwong Cast Nitipaisalkul Pichaya, Maneerat Kham-uan, Channarong Khuntee-tao, Pitchaya Nitipaisankul, Pavarisa Phenjati, Panissara Phimpru Art Karanyapas Khamsin Sound Nakorn Kositpaisain Production & World Sales NGR Co. Ltd. 1 Soi Sannibattesabal Ratchadapisek Road Chankasem Chatuchak, Bangkok 10900 Thailand Tel: (66-2) 513 -2644 Fax: (66-2) 512-5535 email: pantham2006@yahoo.com Festivals & Awards Toronto, Bangkok, Giffony-Italy (Golden Gryphon best film award) IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Turkey Lovelorn / Gonul Yarasi 2005, 35mm, Colour, 139 mins, Turkish Director Yavuz Turgul Screenplay Yavuz Turgul Cinematography Soykut Turan Editor Soykut Turan Music Tamer Çiray Cast Sener Sen, Meltem Cumbul, Timuçin Esen, Güven Kiraç, Devin Özgün Çinar World Sales Filma-Cass Film Yapim ve Pazarlama A.S. Festivals & Awards Boston Turkish Film Fest, Turkey’s Official Entry to the 2006 Academy Awards, Palm Springs (FIPRESCI Award for Best Actress) Idealist elementary school teacher Nazim (named after the great Turkish poet Nazim Hikmet) retires and returns home to Istanbul after 15 years of teaching in a poor, remote Kurdish village in Eastern Turkey. Politely ignored by his own children who secretly despise him for having chosen his ideals over his family, he begins a new life as a taxi driver. One night, he meets Dunya, a down-on-her-luck divorcee who works as a “singer” in a sleazy nightclub. Before he knows it, Nazim takes Dunya and her daughter in to protect them from Dunya’s stalker ex-husband Halil. Born in 1946 in Istanbul, Yavuz Turgul graduated from the Institute of Journalism in Istanbul University. After working for six years as a journalist for six years, he began writing scripts, many of which have won accolades. He directed his first film in 1984. He directed The Bandit (Eskiya) in 1996 which was a great commercial success in Turkey. Turgul returns after a nine-year absence with Lovelorn. His other films include Golge Oyunu (1992), Ask Filmlerinin Unutulmaz Yonetmeni (1990), Muhsin Bey (1987) and Fahriye Abla (1984). 92 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD Turkey Waiting for Heaven / Cenneti Beklerken 2006, 35 mm. Colour, 107 mins, Turkish Eflatun is a master miniature artist who is living in 17th century Istanbul. One day, he is taken to the vizier’s mansion by force. There he learns that Danyal, one of the Ottoman princes who has ignited an insurrection, has been arrested in a far-off state and is to be executed soon. Eflatun is ordered to make a portrait of the rebel prince who has been condemned to death in a Western manner to help the authorities be certain on the identity of him. Acting upon the order, Eflatun sets off for an arduous journey to Anatolia. He picks up a girl named Leyla en route. Together, they find themselves in a great adventure fraught with dangers. Derviº Zaim was born in 1964 in Famagusta, Cyprus. He graduated from Warwick University in England. He attended a course in independent film production in London, organised by the Hollywood Film Institute. In 1995, his first novel won the prestigious Yunus Nadi literary prize in Turkey. Released in 1996, Tabutta Rövaºata (Somersault in a Coffin) was his debut film as director and screenwriter. 93 Director Derviº Zaim Screenplay Derviº Zaim Cinematography Mustafa Kuºçu Editor Ulaº Cihan ªimºek Music Rahman Altýn Cast Serhat Tutumluer (Eflatun), Melisa Sözen (Leila), Mesut Akusta, Nihat Ýleri, Mehmet Ali Nuroðlu Art Elif Tasçioglu, Serdar Yilmaz Sound Sándor Balla, Murat Celikkol Costume Nadide Argun Production Hermes Film, Maraton Filmcilik Festivals & Awards Anatalya IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD UK Full Circle 2007, 35mm, Colour, 115 mins, English Direction Michael Jaffer Screenplay Michael Jaffer and Tim Mills Cinematography Franz Pagot Editor Raimondo Aiello Music Roberto Martinelli Cast David Mazzeo (Paul Scott), Michael Howe (Philip Brockenhurst), Irene Scaturro (Anna), Patrick Kelly (Max) Sound Jean-Raphael Dedieu Production & World Sales Simon Kay Producer c/o Sugarfree Films Ltd Churchill House, 137 Brent Street London NW4 4DJ, UK Tel:+44-20-8349-1083 Fax:+44-20-8343-2185 www.sugarfreefilms.com 1978. The Wimbledon Tennis Championships. An unknown American qualifier has the world at his feet as he serves at match point to beat the defending champion for a place in the semi-finals. He goes on to win the match and the tournament. The champion, Paul Scott, is now 48 and lives alone. He owes money to Mafioso bookmaker and with payment due and not a cent to his name. Only a miracle can save him. A knock at the door brings a visit from a private investigator with some unexpected news: unbeknown to PAUL, 25 years ago whilst in Italy, he may have fathered the child of an old flame; the recently-deceased Monica Sersale. Monica has left him half a million dollars in her will. He travels first class to Rome to meet with her lawyer. The lawyer introduces Paul to Philip Brockenhurst, an English aristocrat and explains that as Monica was having affairs with both of them at the same time her daughter was conceived and had no way of establishing exactly who the real father was, she included them both in the will. Two men return to Italy after a 25-year-absence to search for the daughter one of them may have fathered. What starts as two lonely, bitter, middle-aged men’s race against time in quest of selfish desire, becomes a journey of self-discovery and enlightenment when they are forced to confront their past. British filmmaker Michael Jaffer made his first film, Part Time Lover, in 1993, primarily as an exercise in film making. He relocated himself to Paris in 1994, to make his second film, L’Autre Femme (The Other Woman). Jaffer remained in Paris for his next film, Une Journée Tranquille (A Quiet Day). Between 2000 and 2003, he directed a number of international television commercials. 94 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD UK Love Me Still 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 96 mins, English Mickey Ronson is released from prison after serving an eight-year sentence for armed robbery. On his release he finds that his life has been blown apart. His wife Gemma and his little girl Lucy have gone missing. They have been kidnapped by his elder brother Bobby. The untimely death of Lenny, his grandfather, brings the family back together. This gives Mickey an opportunity to take revenge against his brother Bobby, who is shot dead. Mickey finds himself back behind bars once again because it was Gemma who actually shoots Bobby but Mickey protects her and takes the rap. As a BBC trained director, Danny Hiller directed the BBC feature-length television drama Trip Trap, a story of domestic and sexual violence in the context of a respectable middle-class household. Attracting an audience of 10 million viewers, this programme received a BAFTA nomination for best film. In 2000, Hiller directed the psychological drama Pretending to be Judith, a feature-length film screened on ITV. He later worked as a development producer for the BBC, commissioning, writing and producing for BBC Drama. 95 Director Danny Hiller Screenplay Paul Munns Cinematography Shane Daley Editor Dei Reynolds Music Stewart Copeland Cast Andrew Howard (Mickey), Alex Reid (Gemma), Jeffery Bell (Bobby), Camille Coduri (Maggie) Art Nick Somerville Production & World Sales Defiant Films Danny Hiller Tel: 07747 610 770 email: dannythehill@hotmail.com Festivals & Awards Shanghai IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD USA American East 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 110 mins, English Director Hesham Issawi Screenplay Hesham Issaw, Sayed Badreya, Brian Cox Cinematography Michael G Wojciechowski Editor Chris Wright Music Tony Humecke Cast Sayed Badreya (Mustafa Marzoke), Sarah Shahi (Salwah Marzoke), Tony Shalhoub (Sam), Anthony Azizi (Murad), Kais Nashif (Omar) Art Frank Bolllinger Costumes Swinda Reichelt Production Anant Singh, Brian Cox, Ahmad Zahra It is a poignant drama about Arab-Americans living in post-9/11 Los Angeles. The story examines long-held misunderstandings about Arabic and Islamic culture, and puts a human face on a segment of the US population whom most Americans know nothing about, but who today are of particular interest to them, either from curiosity or suspicion. The story highlights the pressures under which many Arab-Americans now live by focusing on the points-of-view of three main characters. Mustafa is a widowed Egyptian immigrant and the owner of Habibe’s Café, a popular hang-out for people in Los Angeles with Middle-Eastern backgrounds. He is devoted to providing his children with a moral upbringing despite the pressures of contemporary American urban life. He also finds himself cast in the role of protector to his unwed sister Salweh, for whom, by family and tribal custom, he is responsible for finding a traditional suitor. But his respect for tradition comes up against his own aspirations to adapt to the American Dream when he decides to open a new restaurant with a Jewish partner – his friend Sam. This “unholy alliance” is unpopular amongst the habitués of his café and the insular Arab community in which Mustafa resides. It is one of several personal points of tension that gradually build against the backdrop of larger, national events affecting the ArabAmerican community and lead to the explosive denouement of the story. It is also the story of Mustafa’s friend Omar (Kais Nashif) is a struggling actor and Habibi’s Cafe regular, a young Egyptian man who supports his dream of becoming a movie star by working as a part-time cab driver for Mustafa’s ragged, one-car taxi company. Because of his Middle Eastern looks and accent, however, he is constantly cast in the role of a terrorist in American TV shows that portray only a shallow understanding of Arabs and their culture. When an opportunity for a non-racially designated role arrives, Omar feels his chance for success - to be seen as an actor first and not a Muslim - has finally arrived. It is the break he has been waiting for on many levels: a chance at the financial freedom necessary to marry and support his pregnant American girlfriend Kate, and a chance for him, and his future child, to be embraced as an American, in the same way that he has embraced America. But misunderstandings and prejudices related to his Arabic background conspire against him and his opportunity is lost, pushing Omar to make a drastic, unreasoned decision that sets off a chain of events leading to a violent conclusion that affects the lives of all the other characters. Will their American Dreams be shattered by a climate of distrust and suspicion, or will their hopes and aspirations be embraced by their fellow Americans? Hesham Issawi was born in Egypt where he grew up with an insatiable appetite for American movies. He moved to the US in 1990 to study anthropology, but after taking classes in photography he changed his major in order to study filmmaking. He attended film school at Columbia College, Chicago, where he graduated from in 1996, and began his career working at a local TV station. His initial forays into independent filmmaking were in the documentary world where he eventually directed a few short subjects of his own. In 1997, he co-produced the documentary, Saving the Sphinx, for the Learning Channel. Hesham Issawi’s love of film noir was the inspiration for his first short fictional film, The Interrogation, which he wrote and directed in 2002. It won Best Creative Short Film at New York Film Festival. In 2003, he co-wrote and directed the short film, T For Terrorist, which was the winner of the Best Short Film awards at both the Boston and San Francisco film festivals. This is his feature debut. 96 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD USA Last Stop For Paul 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 80 mins, English The greatest travel adventure movie of all time! Seriously! Cliff and Charlie live boring lives in LA. In an effort to spice up their existence, Charlie suggests they go to the famous Full Moon Party in Thailand. Cliff agrees with the condition that in order to go they purchase around the world tickets and see the globe first. Short on cash, the only way they can afford to pull of the trip is by posing as travel writers for Frommers books so they can get free food and hotel rooms. Together they embark on a trip of a lifetime as they travel to the Caribbean, South America, Europe and Asia. Shot in over 20 countries, Cliff and Charlie have unbelievable adventures in every location and their lives are changed for ever. Filmed at locations all over the world and using a cast of real people in not so real-life situations, Neil Mandt began his career as a journalist winning the National College Emmy during his junior year at the University of Detroit. After that he went on to be a reporter for Nickelodeon and ESPN and later focused on Producing and Directing. Eventually Neil decided filmmaking was what he wanted to do so in September of 1995 he wrote, produced and directed the critically-acclaimed indie flick Hijacking Hollywood (1997). Neil has continued directing feature films and short films for the cinema and television. Over the years Neil has won a variety of awards including the Audience Award for Best Picture at the 1997 Austin Film Festival and an Emmy award for his Producing efforts with NBC at the 2000 summer Olympics in Australia. 97 Director Neil Mandt Screenplay Neil Mandt Cinematography Marc Carter Editor Nick Scown, Eric Wing Music Douglas Spicka Cast Neil Mandt (Charlie), Marc Carter (Cliff), Gregory Poppen (Will), Eric Wing (Craig), Heather Petrone (Amy), Ron Carlson (Art) Production Neil Mandt Festivals & Awards Rome, Monaco, Edmonton IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD USA Quarter Life Crisis 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, English Dir ector Director Kiran Merchant Scr eenpla y Screenpla eenplay Rehana Mirza, Kiran Merchant Cinema to g ra ph y Cinemato tog phy Kiran Deohans, Matthew Wachsman Editor Keith Croket Music Tim Bright Cast Maulik Pancholy (Neil), Lisa Ray (Angel), Russell Peters, Manu Narayan (Jonathan) Art Steven Hall, Arati Nath Sound Andrew Halasz Costume Nikia Nelson Pr oduction Production Signs of Love Productions Festi vals & Awar ds estiv ards Atlanta Indo-American Film Festival, Dominican International Film Festival Dumped on his 27th birthday by his college sweetheart Angel for being indecisive, Neil makes a silly bet that takes him on a wild ride through New York’s singles scene, accompanied by four testosterone-packed imbecile buddies and one crazy scheming New York taxi driver. On these madcap adventures Neil journeys from life choice paralysis to real life manhood Kiran Merchant, an architect in New Jersey, raised half a million dollars for this first film of his, from several investors who are professionals like him. Merchant has made an appearance in this film as an actor, as well as in films like Trust the Man (2005), Fillum Star: The Peter Patel Story (2004) and 200 Cigarettes (1999). He has also acted on TV. 98 IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD USA The Jane Austen Book Club 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 105 mins, English As five women and one enigmatic man meet to discuss the works of Jane Austen, they find their love lives playing out in a 21st century version of her novels. Sylvia is shocked when her husband Daniel, leaves her after 20 plus years and three children. Jocelyn, her unmarried best friend, distracts herself from her unacknowledged loneliness by breeding dogs. Prudie is a young French teacher, in possession of a worthy husband yet distracted by persistent fantasies about sex with another man. The many times married Bernadette develops a yearning for one more chance at happiness. Beautiful, risk-taking Allegra, Sylvia and Daniel’s lesbian daughter, has quit talking to her lover. And Grigg, a young science fiction fan and computer whiz, seems horribly both out of place and obliviously at ease as the only man to be invited into the book circle. Robin Swicord was born in South Carolina and raised in rural Florida and Georgia. She studied at Florida State University. She has written for both stage and screen and is known for her screenplay adaptations of Little Women, Matilda, Practical Magic and Memoirs of a Geisha among others. She directed her first short, The Red Coat, in 1993. The Jane Austen Book Club, which she also wrote, is her first feature film as director. 99 Director Robin Swicord Screenplay Robin Swicord, based on the novel by Karen Joy Fowler Cinematography John Toon Editor Maryann Brandon Music Aaron Zigman Cast Kathy Baker, Maria Bello, Marc Blucas, Emily Blunt, Amy Brenneman, Hugh Dancy Art Rusty Smith Sound Michael J. Benavente Production A John Calley/Robin Swicord Production & Mockingbird Pictures Festivals and Awards Toronto IFFI-2007 CINEMA OF THE WORLD USA The Memory Thief 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 94 mins, English Director Gil Kofman Screenplay Gil Kofman Cinematography Richard Rutkowski Editor Curtiss Clayton Music Ted Reichman Cast Mark Webber, Rachel Miner, Jerry Adler, Patrick Bauchau, Kevin Breznahan Art Francesco Luparello Costumes Kiki Van Adelsburg Production Stark Raving Films and Jane Doe Films 11922 Saltair Terrace Los Angeles, Ca 90049 (USA) Tel: +3109680277 email: gilkofman@yahoo.com Festivals & Awards Philadelphia, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Seattle, Calgary , Sydney Underground Film Festival, Edmonton, Tallgrass , St. Louis Int’l Film Festival (upcoming), Denver, Atlanta It is the story of Lukas - an aimless, young man in contemporary L.A. who buries thoughts of his own past in the humdrum routine of a tollbooth clerk. A chance encounter with a Holocaust survivor suddenly brings into focus a world and an identity he embraces with frightening intensity - the victimised Jews of World War II. As he begins to enthusiastically act out his newfound obsession, Lukas discovers that survivor’s guilt isn’t just for the Jews anymore. This is the first feature film by Gil Kofman. His connection with the Holocaust was through his father-in-law, himself a survivor. In writing the script, he strove to honour those who did and did not survive the Holocaust by actively avoiding sentimentality and emotional manipulation of the audience. 100 Film India Worldwide IFFI-2007 FILM INDIA WORLDWIDE AIDS JAAGO A Mirabai Films production In Association with AVAHAN The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Executive Producer: Mira Nair Under the auspices of Mirabai Films and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the AIDS ‘JaaGO’ Project presents four short dramatic films by cutting-edge Indian directors Mira Nair, Vishal Bhardwaj, Santosh Sivan and Farhan Akhtar that aim to dismantle myths and misconceptions about HIV/AIDS. Each film uses wellknown Indian movie stars to maximize the exposure of the films to audiences throughout India. Actors like Prabhu Deva, Irrfan Khan, Shabana Azmi, Shiney Ahuja, Ayesha Takia, Boman Irani, Raima Sen, Siddarth and Sameera Reddy have joined a host of other known actors in the collective cast of the film. This project was the brainchild of Mira Nair and is produced by her company, Mirabai Films. The four AIDS JAAGO films come from different parts of India - each in its own genre, and each with a different point about HIV/AIDS. AIDS JaaGo literally means “AIDS Awake”. Though this is not the first time that a film has been made in India with HIV/AIDS as the backdrop, this project is unique because it brings together four highly-talented storytellers on the big screen together, to tell a story that depicts the impact of HIV/AIDS on the common India, in their own, inimitable way. While Nair herself has directed Migration, she enlisted ace cinematographer-director Santosh Sivan who has come up with Prarambha, director-music composer Vishal Bharadwaj who has contributed to the project with Blood Brothers and young Indian cinema’s mascot Farhan Akhtar who has taken a Positive look at the subject. In Migration, Shiney Ahuja plays a rural labourer who leaves his wife (Raima Sen) for work in Mumbai, where he enters into a forbidden game with a frustrated woman, played by Sameera Reddy, and her closeted husband, played by Irfan Khan. In Prarambha, ace choreographer Prabhu Deva, who is also an actor and director, plays a a truck driver who helps a boy on a journey to find his HIV-positive mother. Blood Brothers, on the other hand, is a thriller about a man played by Siddharth reacting to his HIV diagnosis, even as Positive deals with the tale of a young boy and his parents, played by Arjun Mathur, Boman Irani and Shabana Azmi coping with the impact of AIDS. Each of these four short films are planned to be screened before the main movie starts in cinema theatres in India, while all of them would be packaged together for broadcast on national television. About the directors: Mira Nair: Director/Writer/Producer Mira Nair virtually needs no introduction, as her highly-acclaimed body of work itself is her identity. Born in Bhubaneswar in 1957 and educated at Delhi University and Harvard University, Nair began her artistic career as an actor before turning her attention to film. She found early success as a documentary filmmaker, winning awards for So Far From India and India Cabaret. In 1988, Nair’s debut feature, Salaam Bombay!, was nominated for an Academy Award, Golden Globe, and BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It also won the Camera D’Or (for best first feature) and the Prix du Publique (for most popular entry) at the Cannes Film Festival as well as 25 other international awards. Each of her subsequent films - Mississippi Masala, The Perez Family, Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love, The Laughing Club of India, Monsoon Wedding, Hysterical Blindness, Vanity Fair and The Namesake, have been landmark films in more ways than one. Nair also joined a group of 11 renowned filmmakers, each commissioned to direct a film that was 11 minutes, 9 seconds and one frame long, following the infamous 9/11 attacks on the US. Nair’s film is a retelling of real events in the life of the Hamdani family in Queens, whose eldest son was missing after September 11, and was then accused by the media of being a terrorist. Nair has been a mentor in film of the prestigious Rolex Protégé Arts Initiative, to help guide young artists in critical stages of their development. Now preparing for her next film Shantaram with Warner Brothers, starring Johnny Depp and Amitabh Bachchan, Nair has also established an annual filmmaker’s laboratory, Maisha, dedicated to the support of visionary screenwriters and directors in East Africa and South Asia. © Antonio Martinelli Santosh Sivan: Santosh Sivan is from Kerala and is a renowned cinematographer, having shot a large number of acclaimed films – about 45 features and 41 documentaries. A five times National Award winner for cinematography and a couple more for direction, his The Terrorist was internationally acclaimed. His latest film, Before the Rains, had its world premiere at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival. He has directed films like Halo, Asoka, Malli, Navarasa and Anandabhadram. Vishal Bhardwaj: Bhardwaj, a cricketer who took up music as his profession, turned a director with Makdee, a children’s film. He received critical and commercial success from, Omkara, adapted from Shakespeare’s Othello. Arguably one of India’s most recognized young directors, he has earlier adapted Macbeth to make Maqbool, and has also made Blue Umbrella, based on a Ruskin Bond story. Farhan Akhtar: The son of lyricist Javed Akhtar, Farhan Akhtar burst onto the Indian cinema scene with Dil Chahta Hai, a film that almost became the emblem for the urban India youth. He made a not-so-successful war movie Lakshya before recently giving a remake twist to Amitabh Bachchan starrer Don with Shah Rukh Khan in the lead role. 102 © Antonio Martinelli IFFI-2007 FILM INDIA WORLDWIDE Canada-India Amal 2007, 35 mm, Colour, 71 mins, Hindi/Kannada Richie Mehta’s debut film is an emotionally-evocative story about an auto-rickshaw driver, Amal, living in New Delhi , who is content with his small, but vital role in life. His regular client, the lovely Pooja, has her bag stolen by a little street girl, who gets hit by a car. Amal takes her to hospital determined to care for her. He drives an eccentric billionaire, G K Jayaram, disguised as a vagabond. The despairing and irascible old man is in search of a person who displays a true humanity to whom he can bequeath his wealth. His own progeny though are chasing his money. Amal unknowingly gets involved in this family intrigue. Filmed on location in New Delhi, this modern day fable asks the important question of what success means to each individual and ultimately reveals to audiences that the poorest of men are sometimes the richest. Director Richie Mehta Screenplay Richie Mehta, Shaun Mehta Cinematography Mitch Ness Editor Stuart Mcintyre Music Dr. Shiva Sound Sanjay Mehta Cast Rupinder Nagra (Amal), Koel Purie (Pooja), Naseeruddin Shah (G K Jayaram), Seema Biswas (Sapna Agarawal), Vik Sahay (Vivek Jayaram), Roshan Seth (Suresh) Production Poor Man’s Productions Ltd 1376 Daniel Creek Road Mississauga ON L5V 1V3 Canada www.poormansproductions.com World Sales Harish Vanjani P.O.Box 2442 Springfield, Virginia 22152 Tel: 001 703-569-6967 Fax: 001 703-569-7775 Mobile: 001 703-395-6444(cell) email: hvanjani@aol.com Festivals Toronto Richie Mehta was born in Toronto and has studied painting, sculpting and directing. He has directed several short films that have screened internationally, including System of Units (2004) and Amal (2004). He has adapted the latter into his first feature film of the same name. The concept of Amal was the winner of the Telefilm ‘Pitch This” Competition at the Toronto 2005 film festival. 103 IFFI-2007 FILM INDIA WORLDWIDE ASIA PREMIERE USA The Pool 2007, HD-Cam, Colour, 95 mins, Hindi Director Chris Smith Screenplay Chris Smith, Randy Russell Cinematography Chris Smith Editor Barry Poltermann Music Didier Leplae, Joe Wong Cast Jahangir Badshah (Jahangir), Venkatesh Chavan (Venkatesh), Ayesha Mohan (Ayesha), Nana Patekar Sound Didier Leplae World Sales The Pool Film, LLC 220 East Buffalo St #400 Milwaukee WI 53202, USA email: Chris2@bluemarkfilms.com Festivals & and Awards Sundance (Special Jury Award), Vienna This American film has been shot entirely in Panaji, Goa by 36year-old Chris Smith, and is made in Hindi, a language the director does not know. Its story follows Venkatesh, who works as a hotel houseboy alongside his staunch buddy, Jahangir. The two make extra money selling plastic bags to pedestrians. Venkatesh is mesmerized by the aquamarine glow of a backyard swimming pool, which he gazes from a mango tree. He gets to know the owners, a wealthy man (Nana Patekar) originally from Mumbai and his edgy daughter Ayesha, who take to him in their separate ways. This encounter changes the lives of the two boys, aspiring to better themselves without the benefit of any education or skills. The film’s leisured pace and seemingly effortless telling captures the essential spirit of Goan living, from its mansions, its music, its street life and its work-force. Director Smith is known for his searching, introspective documentaries and their natural setting and universality of theme – attributes that he brings with gentle understanding to his film, The Pool. Chris Smith, based in Milwaukee, Philadelphia, is an accomplished filmmaker whose previous films include his debut feature American Job (1996), and his documentaries American Movie (1999, Grand Jury Prize-Sundance Film Festival), Home Movie (2001) and The Yes Men (2004). The Pool is his second feature film. 104 Retrospectives Ingmar Bergman Living Together / Vivre Ensemble! Flander’s Image Award Winning Films From PFF Volker Schlondorff IFFI-2007 INGMAR BERGMAN One of the greatest artists on celluloid since the invention of motion picture, Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala, to Erik Bergman and Karin on July 14, 1918. His father was a conservative parish minister and a strict father who used to lock up the young Bergman in dark closets for hours for infractions such as wetting the bed. Those childhood impressions remained with Bergman for life and influenced his films. In school Bergman traded a set of tin soldiers for a battered magic lantern, a possession that altered his life. By playing with this toy he had created a private world of shadows and images in which he felt completely at home. As a teenager, he was also influenced by Adolf Hitler for many years. He wrote in his biography Laterna Magica that “for many years, I was on Hitler’s side, delighted by his success and saddened by his defeats”. In 1937, Bergman entered Stockholm University College to study art and literature, but spent his time in student theatre and movie halls. Although he did not graduate, he wrote a number of plays, as well as an opera and became an assistant director at a theatre. Working in films began in 1941 through script rewriting. The first breakthrough came in 1944 when he wrote the screenplay for Torment and assisted the director. The film’s success led to Bergman’s first opportunity to direct next year. The first major success came with Smiles of a Summer Night in 1955. This was followed two years later with two of Bergman’s most well known films, The Seventh Seal and Wild Strawberries. In the next 20 years, he created many classics including Cries and Whispers and Persona. In the early 1960s, he directed a trilogy – Through a Glass Darkly, Winter Light and The Silence – that explored the theme of faith and doubt in God. Other notable films of the period include The Virgin Spring, Hour of the Wolf, Shame and A Passion/The Passion of Anna. Known for his emotionallycharged films, Bergman probed the darker territories of the human soul. His films portrayed explicit pain and suffering, and examined the fragility of both life and faith. Berman films are memorable for posing existential questions on mortality, loneliness, and faith. After his muchpublicised arrest in 1976 for tax evasion, Bergman swore he would never again make films in his native country. He shut down his film studio on the island of Faro and went into exile. His next film, The Serpent’s Egg, was his first and only English language film. It was followed a year later with another of his finest works, Autumn Sonata. Another film he directed was From the Life of the Marionettes. In 1982, he temporarily returned to his homeland to direct Fanny and Alexander, a film that was aimed at a broader audience but was also criticised for its commercial nature. In the last part of his life he was more involved with TV and theatre. The celebrated director passed away on July 30, 2007 at the age of 89. His repertoire of over 50 films in many ways set the standard for future filmmakers. 106 IFFI-2007 INGMAR BERGMAN Autumn Sonata / Höstsonaten 1978, 35 mm, Colour, 93 mins, Swedish Autumn Sonata tells the story of a famous pianist who is confronted by her neglected daughter. Eva, a timid and reserved wife of a countryman, invites her mother, Charlotte, to stay with her after a seven-year separation. Charlotte is a concert pianist, whose career has dictated prolonged separations from her family. Having recently experienced the death of her husband, Charlotte is eager to rekindle her relationship with her daughter. However, their congenial reunion is short-lived, as Eva begins to confront her mother’s alienated affection. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Katinka Faragó, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Cast: Ingrid Bergman, Liv Ullmann, Lena Nyman, Halvar Björk, Music: Excerpts from Chopin’s Preludium no. 2 in A minor, played by Käbi Laretei; Bach’s Suite no. 4 in E flat major, performed by Claude Genetay; and Handel’s Sonata in F major, Opus 1, performed by F. Bruggen, G. Leonhardt, Anne Bylsmå, Cinematography: Sven Nykvist, Editor: Sylvia Ingemarsson Fanny and Alexander / Fanny och Alexander 1982, 35 mm, Colour, 188 mins, Swedish The story is set in the early 20th century in Sweden and deals with a young boy named Alexander, his sister Fanny, and their well-to-do family the Ekdahls. Fanny and Alexander’s parents are involved in theatre and are happily married until the father’s sudden death. Shortly thereafter, the mother, Emilie, finds a new suitor in the local bishop, a handsome widower, and accepts his proposal of marriage, moving into his ascetic home and putting the children under his stern and unforgiving rule. He is particularly hard on Alexander, trying to break his will by every means. The children and their mother live as virtual prisoners in the bishop’s house until finally the Ekdahl family intervenes. With help from an old friend, a Jewish antiques dealer, as well as some magic, the children are smuggled out of the house, but the Ekdahls’ attempts to bribe or threaten the bishop into divorce fail. Emilie, by now pregnant, slips her husband a sedative and flees as he sleeps, after which a fire breaks out and the bishop is burnt to death. In the meantime, Alexander has met the Jewish merchant’s mysterious son and fantasized about his stepfather’s death – it is as if Alexander’s fantasy comes true as he dreams it. The story ends on a mainly happy, life-affirming note, with the christening of Emilie’s and the late bishop’s daughter and the illegitimate daughter of one of the Ekdahl men, but Alexander encounters the bishop’s ghost, signalling that he will never be completely free of him. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Jörn Donner, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Music: Daniel Bell, Cinematography: Sven Nykvist, Cast: Pernilla Allwin, Bertil Guve, Börje Ahlstedt, Editing: Sylvia Ingemarsson 107 IFFI-2007 INGMAR BERGMAN The Seventh Seal / Det sjunde inseglet 1957, 35mm, B&W, 96 mins; Swedish Antonius Block, a knight, returns with his squire Jöns from the Crusades and finds that his home country is ravaged by the plague. To his dismay, he discovers that Death has come for him too. In order to buy time he challenges Death to a chess match, which allows him to reach his home and be reunited with his wife after ten years away. Around him religion is becoming fanatical and society is collapsing. A witch is burned, but not before he questions her. He takes under his protection his squire, a troupe of travelling players and a deaf and dumb girl. Death takes his toll one by one, but Block manages to stall him long enough that a young family of players that reflects the Holy Family may get to safety. Then Death leads his prisoners away doing their dance of death. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Allan Ekelund, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Cast: Max von Sydow, Gunnar Björnstrand, Bengt Ekerot, Nils Poppe, Cinematography: Gunnar Fischer, Editing: Lennart Wallén The Virgin Spring / Jungfrukällan 1960, 35 mm, B&W, 89 mins, Swedish Set in medieval Sweden, the Virgin Spring tells the story of a prosperous Christian whose daughter, Karin (the “light” child) is appointed to bring candles to the church. She is accompanied by her foster sister, Ingeri (the dark child), who secretly worships the ancient Norse deity Odin. Along the way the two part ways and Karin sets out on her own. She meets three herdsmen, and invites them to eat her snack with her. Two older herdsmen (but not the younger one) rape and murder Karin and leave with her cloths. The herders then, unknowingly, seek shelter at the home of the murdered girl. Her parents, discover that it was the goatherds who killed their daughter when they try to sell the mother some of her daughter’s clothes. Locking them in their chamber, the father then kills the two murderers, along with the innocent younger brother. The next day, the parents set out to find their daughter’s body. Her father vows that, although he cannot understand God, he will build a church at the site of his daughter’s death. As her parents lift her head from the ground, a spring begins to flow from where she was lying. Ingeri now wishes to wash herself with the water. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Ingmar Bergman, Allan Ekelund, Writer: Ulla Isaksson, Cast: Max von Sydow, Birgitta Valberg, Gunnel Lindblom, Birgitta Pettersson, Music: Erik Nordgren, Cinematography: Sven Nykvist, Editing: Oscar Rosander 108 IFFI-2007 INGMAR BERGMAN Through a Glass Darkly / Såsom i en spegel 1961, 35mm, B&W, 89 mins, Swedish Four family members are vacationing on a remote island, shortly after one of them, Karin, was released from an asylum. Karin’s brother, an adolescent playwright named Minus, exhibits faint symptoms of the disease as well and their father David, a writer, appears to take a perverse pleasure in observing the decline of his daughter, who, it is hinted, may provide the material for David’s upcoming magnum opus. Although sane, David is shown as severely alienated from his own family; the final scene shows Minus shedding tears of joy because his father spoke to him briefly. Karin’s illness leads her to have visions, which she believes will culminate in her seeing God, but she is terrified when “God” turns out to be a giant spider. The title derives from a Biblical passage in which seeing through a glass darkly refers to human understanding of God when alive; the view clears only after death. The film is often considered the first part of a trilogy focused on spiritual issues together with Winter Light and The Silence. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Allan Ekelund, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Cast: Harriet Andersson, Gunnar Björnstrand, Max von Sydow, Lars Passgård, Music: Erik Nordgren. Johann Sebastian Bach, Cinematography: Sven Nykvist, Editing: Ulla Ryghe Shame / Skammen 1968, 35 mm, B&W, 103 mins, Swedish The film is about follows two musicians, who, as a result of civil war, have moved away from society to a farm on a rural island. They are apolitical and indifferent to the war. A neighbour sometimes gives them a fish but wine is a luxury. They love each other, but there are problems. The war upsets the sensitive Jan who cries frequently. Eva wants children, he does not. The war suddenly arrives and the rebels attack. The neighbours die. Jan and Eva are arrested as collaborators. After frightening and roughing them up, the local colonel releases them. But the army man tries to become cosy with Eva. Jan becomes violent and murderous and they flee. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Lars-Owe Carlberg, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Cast: Liv Ullmann, Max von Sydow, Sigge Fürst, Gunnar Björnstrand, Ulf Johansson, Editing: Ulla Ryghe, Music: Johann Sebastian Bach, Ingmar Bergman, Cinematography: Sven Nykvist 109 IFFI-2007 INGMAR BERGMAN Wild Strawberries / Smultronstället 1957, 35mm, B&W, 91 mins, Swedish Isak Borg is a medical doctor and professor who drives with his daughter-in-law Marianne from Stockholm to Lund to receive an honorary degree from Lund University. On the 400-mile car journey the old man remembers his past - the girl he loved who married his brother instead, and his own bitterly unsuccessful marriage. Despite his benevolent exterior, to which everyone pays tribute, he recognises in himself something arid and distant. During this trip, he is forced by nightmares, daydreams, his old age, and his impending death to re-evaluate his life. He meets a variety of people on the road, from Sara, a female hitcher travelling with her fiance and escort, to a quarrelling married couple who remind Isak of his own life and marriage. Direction: Ingmar Bergman, Producer: Allan Ekelund, Writer: Ingmar Bergman, Cast: Victor Sjöström, Bibi Andersson, Ingrid Thulin, Gunnar Björnstrand, Music: Erik Nordgren,Göte Lovén, Johann Sebastian Bach, Wilhelm Harteveld, Carl Axel Lundvall, Alwin Müller, Herman Palm, Cinematography: Gunnar Fischer, Editing: Oscar Rosander 110 IFFI-2007 LIVING TOGETHER / VIVRE ENSEMBLE! Looking For Cheyenne / Oublier Cheyenne 2006, 35 mm, Colour, 90 mins, French Sonia, a dedicated high school science teacher still hurting from a bad break-up, spends the occasional night with other companions but is always scanning the horizon for Cheyenne. She hooks up with Pierre, a cute young anarchist who declares his love and Beatrice, a cool dyke with bad intentions whom she meets in a lesbian bar. But Cheyenne is ever-present in her thoughts. A year after being laid off her job as a journalist and with unemployment at an all-time high, Cheyenne still hasn’t found a job. Unable to pay her heat or electric bill, she becomes disillusioned with “the system” and decides to live independent from “the machine.” She packs all her possessions into bags, secures them on her bike and starts peddling towards the country, sleeping alongside the road on the way. It is a story of love and longing and the difficulty of compromise, even in order to hold on to love. But it is also a clever critique of the runaway unemployment situation in France and the resulting disillusionment and despair of the French unemployed. Director: Valerie Minetto, Screenplay: Valérie Minetto, Cécile Vargaftig, Cinematography: Stephan Massis, Editing: Tina Baz, Music: Christophe Chevalier, Cast: Aurelia Petit (Sonia), Mila Dekker (Cheyenne), Malik Zidi (Pierre), Guilaine Londez (Beatrice), Art: Irène Galitzine, Michel Modaï, Costumes: Caroline Tavernier Born in 1965 in Forcalquier, Alpes de Haute Provence, Valerie Minetto is a graduate of the Ecole des Arts Decoratifs de Nice (Villa Arson) and the Fémis. She has produced two documentaries on contemporary young dancers in Moscow, Beau Geste in Moscow (1997) and Moscow between Heaven and Earth (2003), a short film, Head Angel (1994), and a film, Teens (1998) Quand Tu Descendras Du Ciel 2003, 35mm, Colour, 100 mins, French Jerome and his mother struggle to keep their dairy farm running. One morning, he heads for the town to look for work for a couple of months. Jerome strikes up a friendship with La Chignole, a boisterous tramp, and gets hired by the local mayor to assist another worker, Lucien, to decorate the town’s Christmas trees. But it is not long before an unexpected and less pleasant aspect of his job is revealed when the City Hall applies anti-begging laws to ‘clean out’ the town centre of its homeless people and tramps during the Christmas period. Lucien puts pressure and Jerome, fighting his conscience, reluctantly carries out his job. That is until the day he discovers that La Chignole is one of the homeless. Director: Eric Guirado, Cast: Benoit Giros, Serge Riaboukine, Jean-Francois Gallotte, Anne Coesens Eric Guirado is an actor, dialogue writer, director, scriptwriter. He has made films like Le Fils de l’épicier (2006), From Heaven (2002), Un petit air de fête (1999), Joyeux anniversaire mamie (1999), and Les Beaux Jours (1997). 111 IFFI-2007 LIVING TOGETHER / VIVRE ENSEMBLE! Samia 2001, 35mm, Colour, 73 mins, French Fifteen-year-old Samia lives in Marseille’s periphery. Sixth in a family of eight children of Algerian descent, she suffocates in the moralistic atmosphere made oppressive by beliefs and rules she respects but no longer shares… Yacine, her unemployed older brother, justifies himself by upholding family and religious traditions. Older sister Amel has excluded herself from family life by her involvement with a boy from a different cultural background. Samia’s other sisters are completely focused on academic achievement. And Samia, a series of school failures in her wake, forced to take up technical studies that do not suit her, obliged to keep her first romance secret, becomes aware that it is absolutely necessary that she alone decides just what to do with her life. Based on the novel Ils disent que je suis une beurette by Soraya Nini. Director: Philippe Faucon, Cast: Lynda Benahouda, Mohamed Chaouch, Kheira Oualhaci, Nadia Koutel El Philippe Faucon was born in Morocco. He sat his masters in arts at Aix-en-Provence university. He started out in film in the production department. In 1989 he directed several episodes of the Portraits de Français series, co-produced by TV FNAC. In 1992, he made Sabine for Arte, and then Muriel Parents Have Had It Up to Here, which was selected for the Cinéastes du Présents section at the 1995 Locarno Film Festival. He went on to make All Is Not Black as part of a series about the prevention of AIDS in 1996. Voisins Voisines 2005, 35mm, Colour, 90 mins, French In the suburbs of Paris, the residents of the Mozart Estate, a privatised former public housing estate, get a new caretaker, Paco, and a new neighbour, a rap musician. The rapper, lacking inspiration, only has three days to write his lyrics. Otherwise, he can say goodbye to the advance he received from the record company. Ideas? Lyrics? Music? But what if his inspiration were right there on the doorstep? The rap musician observes, composes, writes and sings. The Mozart Estate becomes the stage for a hip hop fable as the rapper turns into the good genie of his neighbours’ destiny. Director: Malik Chibane, Cast: Anemone, Jackie Berroyer, Frederic Diefenthal, Mohamed Fellag Malik Chibane is a dialogue writer, director and scriptwriter who has made films like Le bagagiste de Roissy (2008), Nés quelque part (1997), Douce France (1995) and Tale of the Suburbs (1993). 112 IFFI-2007 LIVING TOGETHER / VIVRE ENSEMBLE! Wesh Wesh - qu’est ce qui se passe? 2002, 35mm, Colour, 83 mins, French-Arabic Cite Des Bosquets, a council estate in the Parisian suburbs. The life of a group of young adults confronted with the social decomposition of their neighbourhood, seen through the eyes of Kamel, a young man back in the estate after having been expelled. Halfway between documentary and fiction, ‘Wesh wesh’ is a take on the everyday life of an immigrant family which is struggling to integrate into France or, rather into the ‘Cite des Bosquets’. Moving and touching, this movie does not try to be an impressive fictional tale about the ghettos, but gives an exact testimony of the lives of society’s left behind who survive through solidarity. Director: Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche, Cast: Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche, Ahmed Hammoudi, Brahim Ameur-Zaimeche, Farida Mouffok, Ali Mouffok Rabah Ameur-Zaïmèche is an actor, director and scriptwriter who has made films like Bled Number One (2006). Zim And Co 2005, 35mm, Colour, 90 mins, French After a banal motorbike accident, 20-year-old Zim must find a proper job if he wants to avoid prison. Zim is not a lazy guy and he scans newspaper ads looking for a job. But the only one he finds, starting in ten days and that he must absolutely get, requires a car – and a driver’s licence. Of course, he does not have either. Fortunately, Zim is good at inventing schemes, even better, he has got a gang of great buddies – Cheb, Arthur and Safia – who are ready to do anything, or almost, to keep him out of jail. Director: Pierre Jolivet, Cast: Adrien Jolivet, Mhamed Arezki, Yannick Nasso, Naidra Ayadi Pierre Jolivet started out in cabaret with his brother Marc. For ten years, they worked the vaudeville, movie, radio and TV circuits together as a team. Pierre split off in 1983 to co-produce, co-write and perform in Luc Besson’s The Final Combat, which won the Jury’s Special Prize at the Avoriaz Festival. In 1984, he wrote, directed and produced Strictly Personal with Pierre Arditi (nominated for the Cesar for Best First Film) and teamed up again with Luc Besson to co-write Subway. Thereafter, he wrote and directed Le Complexe du kangourou in 1986, Uncontrollable Circumstances in 1987, Simple mortel in 1991, When the Jungle Cats Go to Drink in 1992 (together again with Marc), and Fred, with Vincent Lindon and Clotilde Courau in 1996, which was widely acclaimed by the critics. In All Innocence followed in 1998. My Little Business, Jolivet’s eighth feature, has been a popular hit and François Berléand won a Cesar for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in it. 113 IFFI-2007 FLANDER’S IMAGE Belgium Gilles / Buitenspe 2005, 35mm, Colour, 91 mins, Dutch Director Jan Verheyen Screenplay Ed Vanderweyden Cinematography Danny Elsen Editor Philippe Ravoet Music Jan Leyers Cast Ilya Van Malderghem, Filip Peeters, Joke Devynck, Peter Bulckaen, Kris Piekaerts Sound Pedro Van der Eecken Production Flanders Image Handelskaai 18/3 1000 Brussel Tel: +3222260630 Fax: +3222191936 email: flandersimage@vaf.be www.flandersimage.com World Sales Sola Media GmbH Osumstr. 17 70599 Stuttgart Germany Tel: + 497114793666 Fax: + 497114792658 email: solveiglangeland@aol.com www.sola-media.net Festivals & Awards International film festival for children and young audience “Schlingel” in 2006, Netherlands Film Festival An offside ruling in soccer can be complicated and subjective, and for 12-yearold Gilles it’s more than a game penalty. Gilles is a talented soccer player whose father Bert’s passionate support and coaching feed their dream that Gilles will make the Red Devils pro team. When Bert’s enthusiasm causes a heart attack, a grieving Gilles finds a way to bring his father back to life so that he (but no one else) sees his dad everywhere, especially when playing soccer. But there’s a downside to Bert’s continuing presence: When Gilles learns that soccer might jeopardize his future, Bert still pushes Gilles to keep playing. Is this Gilles’ desire too, or only his father’s? While his mother urges him to quit and his friends offer encouragement, in the end Gilles must rule a buitenspel (“offside” in Dutch), either as his penalty or his father’s trap. Jan Verheyen started his career as a festival organizer, film critic and distributor. He made his feature film debut with Boys (1991). In 1995, he directed the erotic thriller The Little Death in the US. Back in Belgium, he directed Everything Must Go (Alles moet weg), Team Spirit, the thriller Alias and Team Spirit II. Gilles (Buitenspel) is his seventh feature. 114 IFFI-2007 FLANDER’S IMAGE Belgium King of the World / Koning Van De Wereld 2006, 16 mm, Colour, Dutch The rise and fall of a young boxing champ, who, in the fag end of the World War II, boxes his way to become the European champion. Will his shoulders be strong enough to bear the weight of success? Guido Henderickx was born in Antwerp in 1942. 115 Director Guido Henderickx Screenplay Marc Didden, Frank Van Passel, Guido Henderickx Cinematography Jan Vancaillie Editor Karin Vaerenberg Music Hans Helewaut Cast Kevin Janssens, Koen de Bouw, Jan Decleir, Josse De Pauw, Katelijne Damen Sound Griet Van Reeth Production Caviar Arielle Sleutel Havenlaan 75 B-1000 Brussel Belgium Tel: +3224232101 email: arielle@caviar.be World Sales High Point & Television Elizabeth Mews 25 NW3 4UH London United Kingdom Tel: +442075863686 Fax: +442075863117 email: info@highpointfilms.co.uk highpointfilms.co.uk IFFI-2007 FLANDER’S IMAGE Belgium Love Belongs to Everyone / Dennis Van Rita 2006, 16 mm, Colour, 80 mins, Dutch Director Hilde Van Mieghem Screenplay Hugo Van Laere Cinematography Jan Vancaille Editor Philippe Ravoet Music Helmut Lotti, Bert Joris Cast Els Dottermans, Matthias Schoenaerts, Veerle Baetens, Damiaan De Schrijver Sound Gert Janssen Production Caviar Arielle Sleutel Havenlaan 75 B-1000 Brussel Belgium Tel: +3224232101 email: arielle@caviar.be Festivals & Awards Cairo, Emden, Montreal, Shanghai (Best Director, Best Actress) Rita is filled with joy when news breaks that her 26-year-old son Dennis will be released. Having learning difficulties, Dennis has been serving a prison sentence for the alleged rape of a minor girl. The neighbourhood, however, is all but happy with Dennis’ homecoming. Barbara, the victim’s sister and mother of an eightyear-old girl, is her most combative opponent. But Rita fights like a lioness for her son’s rehabilitation. Finally she will succeed in countering the community’s fury into a united struggle for a humane future of her beloved son. Hilde Van Mieghem was born in Antwerp in 1959. She is an accomplished Flemish actress-producer-writer. 116 IFFI-2007 FLANDER’S IMAGE Belgium The Intruder / De Indringer 2004, 35 mm, Colour, 110 mins, Dutch Tom Vansant, a 40-year-old doctor in Brussels, is desperately searching for traces of his daughter Louise who disappeared 18 months ago. During his search, he comes across another 16-year-old runaway who left her hometown in the Ardennes at about the same time as Louise disappeared. Although the girl refuses to talk about her past, Tom is convinced that she knows more about his daughter. He follows the girl to the Ardennes and lands in an unknown and dangerous environment where things are not what they seem and where hostile villagers don’t really care for strangers. This is the cinematic debut of TV director Frank van Mechelen. 117 Director Frank Van Mechelen Screenplay Ward Hulselmans Cinematography Lou Bergmans Editor Joris Brouwers Music Steve Willaert Cast Koen De Bouw, Filip Peeters, Els Dottermans, Axel Daeseleire, Maaike Neuville Sound Geert Engels Production & World Sales Skyline Entertainment De Limburg Stirumlaan 243 1 B-1780 Wemmel Belgium Tel: +32 2 240 77 77 Fax: +32 2 242 26 68 email: info@tvskyline.com www.tvskyline.com Festivals & Awards Netherlands, Hamburg, Montreal, Bangkok IFFI-2007 AWARD WINNING FILMS FROM PFF A Stranger of Mine / Unmei janai hito 2004, 35 mm, Colour, 98 mins, Japanese Director Kenji Uchida Screenplay Kenji Uchida Cinematography Keiichiro Inoue Editor Shinichi Fushima Music Mitsuharu Ishibashi Cast Yasuhi Nakamura, Reika Kirishima, Sô Yamanaka, Yuka Itaya Production Mayumi Amano, Masaya Nakamura PIA CORPORATION PFF Headquarters 5-19, Sanban-cho, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo, Japan 102-0075 Tel: 81-3-3265-1425 Fax: 81-3-3265-5659 email: international@pff.jp It all started one Friday night when broken hearted and lacklustre businessman Miyata returned home after losing the love of his life, only to be called out again by his private investigator friend. The two meet at a restaurant, where Miyata runs into a woman and falls in love, but in the shadows something unbelievable awaits them all... Three episodes as seen from the viewpoints of five people - a devastated Miyata, a detective who is tired of his job, a yakuza boss having trouble running his organization, a woman thrown into despair by a two-timing fiance, and a con woman who twists men around her finger - are sandwiched between a short prologue and epilogue. The relationships between seemingly simple and isolated episodes begin to surface one after the other as the story progresses, bringing friendships to light and exposing the complicated nature of human beings. While Miyata remains oblivious to the events happening around him, surely his kindness and bravery will encourage broken hearted guys everywhere to keep trying. Born in 1972 and an aspiring director since his high school years, Kenji Uchida enrolled in the undergraduate program in cinema at San Francisco State University in 1992, affording him the opportunity to learn script writing and film production techniques in everything from 8mm to 35mm. After graduating in 1998, Uchida returned to Japan and completed his independent film Weekend Blues - recipient of both the TBS “Planning Award” and the Nikkatsu “Brilliant Award”at the 24th annual Pia Film Festival. Uchida then went on to receive the 14th PFF Scholarship in 2004 to create his first feature A Stranger of Mine. 118 IFFI-2007 AWARD WINNING FILMS FROM PFF Border Line 2002, 35 mm, Colour, 118 mins, Japanese Kurosawa Daigo, an unmotivated taxi driver on the job, runs over Matsuda Shuji, who comes speeding by on his bicycle. Although the accident is not serious, Shuji insists on heading north to Hokkaido with a shadowed look about him. Daigo becomes worried and decides to go along. Miyaji Daizuke, in his mid-40s, still leads a life of a good-for-nothing punk. Because of the betrayal of his follower, he ends up being pursued by a yakuza (gangster) leader. What crosses his mind when he realises that he has no future is his daughter that he deserted when she was in junior high. For Aikawa Misa, a house of her own is the symbol of a happy family. But her son is being beaten up at school, her husband has been laid off, and the family ties no longer exist. To protect the image of her family that is now only illusion, Misa’s life begins to fall out of gear. Uehara Haruka, who has many friends, appears to be ordinary high school girl. But she lives alone in an apartment and has a secret that she never shares her friends. People who have wounds in their relationship which their families meet for a fleeting moment, show sings of making contacts, but then part away. The story of each character repeats the pain of separation and becomes entangled with each other, and eventually discovers something in the end. Born in 1974, Lee Sang-Il studied at a Korean high school in Yokohama. Blue chong, his graduation project for Japanese Academy of Moving Images, won four prizes, including the Grand prize, at PFF Award 2000, from among 730 entrants. The film was subsequently shown at a commercial film theatre, where it became a long-running hit. 119 Director Lee Sang-Il Screenplay Lee Sang-Il & Matsuura Hajime Cinematography Hayasaka Shin Editor Aoyama Masafumi Music Ayuo Cast Sawaki Tetsu, Maeda Ayaka, Asou Yumi, Mitsuishi Ken, Murakami Jun, Fukaura Kanako, Morishita Yoshiyuki, Tanaka Yohji, Chiba Tetsuya, Sugiyama Tokuko, Miyako Harumi Art Kikuchi Akio Sound Kubota Yukio Costume Miyamoto Masae Production PFF Partners PIA, Tokyo Broadcasting System, Rentrak Japan, Tokyo FM Broadcasting, Nikkatsu, Imagica IFFI-2007 AWARD WINNING FILMS FROM PFF Hole in the Sky / Sora No Ana 2001, 35 mm, Colour, 127 mins, Japanese Director Kazuyoshi Kumakiri Cast Susumu Terajima, Yuriko Kikuchi, Bunmei Tobayama, Shunsuke Sawada, Shunsuke Gondo Set in Hokkaido, this is the story of Tae, out on a road trip with her boyfriend. They stop at an isolated roadside restaurant for a bathroom break, but when Tae re-emerges, she finds in a none-too-subtle manner that she has been dumped; her boyfriend has taken off, leaving only her luggage behind. Stranded in this desolate landscape with no money, she goes into the restaurant and runs off without paying for her meal. But with nowhere to go, she has no option but to spend the night in the restaurant’s shed. The next night, trying to light a fire to keep herself warm, she sets the whole shed ablaze. Ichio, who runs the restaurant with his temporarily absent father, takes pity on her and allows her to stay in his house, on the condition that she will work in the restaurant to settle the bill for the meal she never paid. Having a woman around the house is new to Ichio, who has only ever lived with his father and late mother. With Tae in emotional shambles, something develops between them which slowly starts to resemble a relationship. The low budget but ultra violent Kichiku (Kichiku Dai Enkai) introduced filmmaker Kazuyoshi Kumakiri to an unsuspecting world in 1997. It was unflinchingly graphic and offended as many souls as it mesmerized on its extended run around the international festival circuit. Four years later, Kumakiri finally gives us his second film with Hole in the Sky (Sora No Ana). And it’s a different exercise indeed. 120 IFFI-2007 AWARD WINNING FILMS FROM PFF Timeless Melody 1999, 35 mm, Colour, 95 mins, Japanese Director Okuhara Hiroshi Screenplay Okuhara Hiroshi, Cinematography: Fukumoto Jun Editor Okuhara Hiroshi, Sento Takenori Music Aoyagi Takuji Cast Aoyagi Takuji, Ichikawa Mikako, Kondo Taro, Kimiko Yo, Wakamatsu Takeshi Sound Nishioka Masami, Fukuda Shin World Sales PIA Film Festival Improvised music is a metaphor for variety in the uncertain existence of several regular visitors to a pool hall and rehearsal space. Meditative and visual portrait of their lives focusing on the moments when nothing apparently happens. It is a film that could only have been made at this time. Filled with puzzles and uncertainties, the film makes elegant use of improvised music as a metaphor for the way in which story and characters can introduce their own variation in rhythm. The film is in the opulent tradition of the meditative, visual cinema that has fed Japanese film, from Ozu to Kore-Eda. The young Kawamoto spends most of his time in a pool hall and rehearsal space where people play pool and music. It has become his home, at night he sleeps on one of the pool tables. Other regulars are a girl who doesn’t go to school any more and predicts the future with cards, and a man who lives on a boat. The girl works as waitress; she only has superficial contact with her mother who lives in Los Angeles. The man turns out not to exist officially any more; years ago he was lost at sea and assumed dead. In the street, the underworld keeps an eye on him. It’s as if none of the characters in this film has a real life: they are left to their fate, without a home. Okuhara Hiroshi, born in 1968 in Japan, studied at the International Christian University in Tokyo and first wanted to become a musician. His first short, Picnic, won the audience award at the Japanese Pia Film Festival in 1993. His feature début Timeless Melody was selected in 2000 for the Tiger Awards Competition. His second feature Nami/Wave won the Netpac Award in Rotterdam in 2002. He has made films like Picnic (1993, short), Kazhakh (1994, short), Nami/Wave (2001), Aoi Kuruma/A Blue Automobile (2004) 121 IFFI-2007 AWARD WINNING FILMS FROM PFF Yoshino’s Barber Shop 2003, 35 mm, Colour, 96 mins, Japanese Director Naoko Ogigami Cast Masako Motaii, Ryo Yoneda, Kazuyuki Asano, Senri Sakurai In a small town on the countryside, where everyone knows everyone, all the children pay their respect to the middle-aged woman who runs “Barber Yoshino”. An old tradition is rooted in this town. Every young boy is forced to have the same ridiculous hairstyle to have their bangs cut straight, known as the “Yoshinogari” hairstyle. Of course they all get their hair done at the only barbershop in town, “Barber Yoshino”. Then one day, a drastic change occurs when a transfer student with bleached hair comes from Tokyo... Born 1972 in Chiba Prefecture, Japan, Ogigami Naoko Graduated from Chiba University’s Image Science programme. After graduation, she went to the United States in 1994 to study film at the University of Southern California. During this period, she worked as an assistant for TV commercials, promotional videos, and films, and also created short films of her own. She returned to Japan in January, 2000. This is her feature length film debut. 122 IFFI-2007 VOLKER SCHLONDORFF Volker Schlöndorff , born in Wiesbaden, Germany on March 31, 1939, is a Berlin-based filmmaker. He won an Oscar as well as the Palme d’or at the Cannes Film Festival for The Tin Drum (1979), the classic film version of the novel by Nobel Prize-winning author Günter Grass. Schlöndorff has adapted many literary works for his movies, including some critically well-received US productions, but he is also engaged in post-war German politics. He served as the chief executive for the UFA studio in Babelsberg, and also teaches film and literature at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee, Switzerland, where he conducts an Intensive Summer Seminar. Born the son of a doctor in Wiesbaden, Schlöndorff left home in 1956 to study in a Jesuit boarding school in Brittany. After graduation, he went to study political science in Paris where, in 1959, he formed a close relationship with the filmmakers of the French nouvelle vague such as Louis Malle, Alain Resnais and Jean-Pierre Melville. During this time he was writing the screenplay to his first feature, Der junge Toerless which became the first international success of the New German Cinema and won the International Film Critics Prize in Cannes in 1996. With The Lost Honor Of Katharina Blum (1975) based on the novel by Heinrich Boell (co-directed with his wife at the time, Margarethe von Tratta) Schlondorff made his breakthrough into the German box office. Because of this film and because of his political engagement in general, he was attacked as a Communist sympathizer. In 1983, he made the French/German coproduction, Swann In Love based on the novel by Marcel Proust. In 1984, he went to New York to make the film version of Arthur Miller’s play Death of a Salesman with Dustin Hoffman and John Malkovich. Schlondorff remained in the US for some years after this where he made the TV movie Murder on the Bayou (1985) with Holly Hunter and The Handmaid’s Tale (1990) from the Harold Pinter play. The fall of the Berlin Wall brought Schlondorff back to Germany where he made Voyager in 1991. The Ogre (1996), based on the Michael Tournier novel, was Schlondorff ’s first film since 1991 and brought him back together with John Malkovich. The film caused a controversy in Germany, but received enthusiastic reviews in America, where Schlondorff returned to make the 1998 crime drama, Palmetto. 123 IFFI-2007 VOLKER SCHLONDORFF Circle of Deceit / Die Faelschung 1981, 35 mm, Colour, 109 mins Screenplay Nicolas Born, Jean-Claude Carrière Kai Hermann, Volker Schlöndorff, Margarethe von Trotta Cinematography Igor Luther, Michael Zens Cast Bruno Ganz, Hanna Schygulla, Jean Carmet, Jerzy Skolimowsi, Gila von Weitershausen, Peter Martin Awards Nominated for Best Foreign Film Oscar (1982) Bruno Ganz portrays a German journalist on assignment in Beirut, dealing with a disintegrating marriage and the disintegrating reality around him. An affair with a German woman (Hanna Schygulla) who is immersed in Arab life, and observations of his world-weary photographer companion only confound his comprehension of such sights as children playing on a beach with human sculls. Shot on location with fighting going on nearby, the film provides provocative authenticity. Legends of Rita / Stille nach dem Schuß, Die 1999, 35 mm, Colour, 101 mins Screenplay Wolfgang Kohlhaase, Volker Schlöndorff Cinematography Andreas Höfer Editor Peter Przygodda Cast Bibiana Beglau, Martin Wuttke, Nadja Uhl, Harald Schrott, Alexander Beyer, Jenny Schily, Mario Irrek Production Babelsberg FilmCo-Production, Mitteldeutsches Filmkontor, Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk Festivals & Awards Berlin (2000, Blue Angel Award for direction, Silver Bear for Best Actress), Brothers Manaki (Golden Camera 300 Award cinematographer Andreas Höfer), Emden The time is marked by a spirit of anarchy and rebellion. Rita Vogt is seduced into the terrorist movement through her sense of justice and her love for Andi. A few years later, realising that the movement is falling apart, she goes underground, hiding out in East Germany. With the help of the Stasi Secret Service Agent, Erwin Hull, she assumes a new identity amidst the everyday world of the working class where she is befriended by a young co-worker, Tatjana. As much as Rita wants to fit into her surroundings, Tatjana yearns to get out, to escape to the West. Nonetheless, they form a deep friendship, which is brought to an abrupt end when a report on West German television blows Rita´s cover. Rita must disappear again, but this time a new name and a new city bring her luck. While on vacation, Rita meets Jochen, a university student working as a lifeguard. When he is posted to Moscow, he asks her to come with him, to be his wife and raise a family. But in the end Rita´s past catches up with her - 1989 brings the fall of the Berlin Wall. East Germany is gone, and with it, her new life. 124 IFFI-2007 VOLKER SCHLONDORFF The Voyager / Homo Faber 1991, 35 mm, Colour, English Cast Sam Shepard (Walter Faber), Julie Delpy (Sabeth), Barbara Sukowa (Hannah), Dieter Kirchlechner (Herbert Hencke), Traci Lind (Charlene), Deborra-Lee Furness (Ivy) Set in the 1950s, Voyager is about the travels of American construction engineer who is wandering throughout Europe, recounting his life story through a series of flashbacks while meeting a variety of new characters. At first, he meets a man whom he knew during his time as a student in Europe in the days before World War 11. Shortly afterwards, he meets a beautiful young German woman whom he accompanies on a journey to her home in Athens, Greece. The Voyager was adapted from the 1957 novel Homo Faber by Max Frisch. 125 Country Focus-Hungary COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Black Brush / Fekete kefe 2005, 35mm, B&W, 80 mins Director Roland Vranik Screenplay Gergely Pohárnok, Roland Vranik Cinematography Gergely Pohárnok Editor Wanda Kiss Music Realistic Crew Cast Gergely Bánki, Károly Hajduk, Csaba Hernádi, András Réthelyi Art Péter Mátyási Sound Tamás Zányi Costume Juristovszky Sosa Production Filmpartners, Filmteam, Inforg Stúdió World Sales Magyar Filmunió 1068 Budapest Városligeti fasor 38, Hungary Tel: +36 (1)351-7760, 351-7761 Fax: +36 (1)352-6734 email: filmunio@filmunio.hu Festivals 2005: Budapest, Chicago, Thessaloniki, Vancouver 2006: Annonay, Antwerp, Brussels, Buenos Aires, Copenhagen, Hong Kong, Montevideo, Nashville, Palic, Perth, Roma, Rotterdam, Taipei “Golden Horse” Film Festival Four men posing as chimneysweepers are looking for the answer in a goat’s stomach after a disastrous afternoon… And they find it! Roland Vranik makes his directorial debut with this feature film. 128 COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Dealer 2004, 35mm, Colour, 135 mins ”When the night is in its darkest hour, it’s then that dawn is the closest.” Only for adult audiences with strong nerves, it is the story of a day in a drug dealer’s life. The main character moves around in different social milieus, but this film is primarily not about the drugs and society, rather it is about a personal tragedy, through which it examines ancient questions of fate. How much can we influence our fate? When do we make our bad decisions, which can sometimes be fatal? Benedek Fliegauf, born in 1974 in Budapest, started off as a set designer in the “Hét Tükör” Studio Theatre. Since 1998, he has worked as assistant director with Miklós Jancsó and Árpád Sopsits. In 2003, after the success of his short films, he made his first feature Forest, which won Wolfgang Staudte Prize at the Forum of the Berlinale. His films have been screened at several prestigious festivals all over the world. 129 Director Benedek Fliegauf Screenplay Benedek Fliegauf Cinematography Péter Szatmári Editor Károly Szalai Music Raptors’ Kollektíva Cast Felícián Keresztes, Anikó Szigeti, Lajos Szakács, Edina Balogh, Barbara Thurzó Art Raptors’ Kollektíva Sound Tamás Zányi Costume Raptors’ Kollektíva Production Inforg Stúdió, Filmteam Festivals 2004: Athens, Auckland, Barcelona, Berlin, Bratislava, Brussels, Budapest, Chicago, Copenhagen, Geneva, Haifa, Helsinki, Karlovy Vary, Linz, London, Mar del Plata, Montreal, Rio de Janeiro, Stuttgart 2005: IFFI-Goa, Hong Kong, Montevideo, Prague, Pula, Rome, San Francisco, Sao Paulo, Taipei, Trieste 2006: Rotterdam COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Eastern Sugar / Szezon 2004, 35mm, Colour, 92 min Director Ferenc Török Screenplay Szilárd Podmaniczky, Ferenc Török Cinematography Dániel Garas Editor Béla Barsi Music Zagar Cast Zsolt Nagy, Judit Rezes, Cast: Zsolt Nagy, Judit Rezes, Ervin Nagy, Péter Kokics, Ági Szirtes, Imre Csuja, Erzsébet Kútvölgyi, Zoltán Géczi, Gabriella Hámori, László Sinkó, Éva Kerekes, Géza Hegedûs D., Péter Takátsy Sound Tamás Zányi Costume Juristovszky Sosa, Fruzsina Nagy Production Új Budapest Filmstúdió Festivals 2004: Bratislava, Budapest, Cottbus, Locarno, Sevilla 2005: Antwerp, Belgrage, Bradford, Moscow, Palic, Pusan, Rome, Rotterdam, Singapore, Taipei, Valencia 2006: Barcelona 2003. Hungary. The boys from the Plains region, who have just graduated from the vocational school for catering, set out to discover the country. The only important thing for them is that something should finally happen. However, they have not the faintest idea what that ”something” should actually be. They set off to Lake Balaton in the hope of finding what they are looking for… The 1971-born Ferenc Török studied film history at the University of Esztergom during 1991-1995. he graduated from the Hungarian Academy of Drama and Film as a film director in 2000. His diploma film Moscow Square won the Best First Film Prize and Audience Prize at the 32nd Hungarian Film Week. This is his second feature film. In 2007, he made his latest film Overnight. 130 COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Hukkle 2002, 35mm, Colour, 75 min An old man sitting on a bench has the hiccups, a drunken youth snores on a carriage, a kind old lady picks lilies of the valley, women sew in the dressmaker’s shop, men are bowling in a pub, the bees make honey, a machine harvests the wheat that in the mill will be made into flour, and then into dumplings in Grandma’s kitchen – and throughout it all a policeman investigates a murder... A film with the deceptive appearance of a documentary, where each scene contains clues to a detective story. This popular festival film has accumulated a number of trophies along the way, starting in its home country at the Hungarian Film Week where it picked up the Critics Award and Best Debut Film. Since then, the film took home four prizes at Cottbus including the Special Prize, Audience Award and the FIPRESCI Critics Prize, a Special Mention at San Sebastian and the European Film Awards European Discovery of the Year nod. This is György Pálfi’s first feature film. 131 Director György Pálfi Screenplay György Pálfi Cinematography Gergely Pohárnok Editor Gábor Marinkás Music Balázs Barna, Samu Gryllus Cast Ferenc Bandi, József Farkas, Attila Kaszás, Ági Margitai, Ferenc Nagy, Jánosné Nagy, Eszter Ónodi, Józsefné Rácz Sound Tamás Zányi Production Mokep Festivals 2002: Ankara, Belfort, Budapest, Chicago, Cottbus, Kiev, London, Mahhheim, Paris, Pusan, San Sebastian, Santa Fe, Sao Paulo, Stockholm, Thessaloniki, Torino, Toronto, Vancouver, Warsaw 2003: Adelaide, Barcelona, Belgrade, Bogota, Brasilia, Bratislava, Brisbane, Brussels, Calgary, Copenhagen, Edmonton, Hong Kong, Houston, Istanbul, Leeds, Los Angeles, Mar del Plata, Melbourne, IFFI-New Delhi, Philadelphia, Rome, Rotterdam, San Francisco, San Jose, Santa Barbara, Sarajevo, Seattle, Sydney 2004: Riga, Singapore 2005: Jakarta 2006: Barcelona, Bergen 2007: Skopje COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Temptations / Kísértések 2001, 35mm, Colour, 88 mins Director Zoltán Kamondi Screenplay Zoltán Kamondi Cinematography Gábor Medvigy Editor Zsuzsa Pósán Music László Melis Cast Juli Básti, Kati Budai, János Derzsi, Julianna Kovács, Marcell Miklós, Zoltán Seress Art György Árvai Sound István Sipos Costume János Breckl Production Nextreme Film Festivals 2002: Ankara, Berlin, Bratislava, Budapest, Denver, Haifa, Karlovy Vary. Kiev, Manchester, Minneapolis, Montreal, Moscow, Pyongyang, Seattle, Shanghai 2003: Cleveland, Palm Springs, Prague Anna brings up her son Marci on her own. Everyone predicts a great future for him, but he isn't interested in his career. He is desperate to find his unknown father and his place in the world. What sort of life should he lead? Should he relax in Anna's loving devotion? Should he give in to the lure of Elvira, who shows him the sensual side of life? Should he be a criminal, breaking codes at banks? Should he follow the example of his father Tibor? Should he be an alcoholic, a wasted talent who has preserved his sense of freedom, but has never achieved anything? Or should he find himself in the love of the ten -year-old gypsy girl with mysterious talent, Juli? Will the unselfish, deep and pure feelings of this girl resolve his life? Juli accepts with unquestionable devotion and humility that she belongs to Marci - however, he is incapable of identifying with this archaic role and this proves to be fatal... Zoltán Kamondi was born in 1960 in Budapest. After finishing his studies at the Faculty of Art, he went on to get a degree in film directing at the Academy of Theatre and Film Art Budapest, where he graduated in 1988. His examination film Kiki and the Males won the Best Direction Award at the West-Berlin Short Film Festival in 1985. In 1990, he made his first feature film Path of Death and Angels which was screened in the Un Certain Regard section of Cannes. In 1992, he started to work in theatre and became a highly acclaimed theatre director in Hungary. In 1997, he began shooting The Hungarian Speckled Variety, a documentary series, considered by critics as one of the most important documents of the years after the political changes in Hungary. In 1996, his video film The Golden Deck Chair won the Best Direction Award at the 27th Hungarian Film Week. In 1999, his second feature film The Alchemist and the Virgin won the Best Independent Feature Award at the Manchester International Film Festival. His latest film Dolina is being shown in the Cinema of the World section of this festival. 132 COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 The Porcelain Doll / A porcelánbaba 2005, 35mm, Colour, 75 min There was once the Farm. Somewhere in Hungary.More precisely: in Europe. Even more precisely: on planet Earth. Farm folk, who are amiable and simple yet cunning lived here on this Farm. From time to time strangers come to the Farm. And it is then that all hell always breaks loose.Because the strangers have also brought death with them. And destruction. And hate. And jealousy. And vanity. And shame. And lies. On this Farm strangers always just cause trouble…Based on Ervin Lázár’s Csillagmajor Péter Gárdos, who has made a number of documentaries and shorts, made his first feature film, The Philadelphia Attraction, in 1984. With his later films he won several awards in film festivals from Montreal to Cairo. His theatrical directions are also popular in Hungary. 133 Director Péter Gárdos Screenplay Péter Gárdos Cinematography Tibor Máthé Editor Marianna Miklós Music Agens Cast Lajos Bertók, Sándor Csányi, Judit Németh Art Balázs Hujber Sound Ferenc Császár Costume János Breckl Production Duna Television, Tivoli Filmproduction Festivals 2005: Ankara, Bratislava, Budapest, Kolkata, Istanbul, Jerusalem, Montreal, Moscow, Munich, Pusan, Reykjavik, Toronto, Vancouver 2006: Brussels, Hong Kong, Maine, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Seattle, Tampa COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 Vagabond 2002, 35mm, Colour, 102 mins Director György Szomjas Screenplay György Szomjas Cinematography Ferenc Grunwalsky Editor Anna Kornis Music Ferenc Kiss, folk music Cast Judit Ábrahám, Gráci Benke, Kata Horváth, Róbert Kerényi, Enikõ Kocsis, Csaba Simon, Péter Simon, Réti Attila Sound György Kovács Costume Zsuzsa Stenger Production RF produkció Festivals 2003: Amiens, Berlin, Bratislava, Karlovy Vary, Maine, Moscow, Sarajevo, Seattle 2004: Mexico, Sofia, Trieste Karesz’s childhood was spent in an orphanage. At the beginning, he is a member of a gang of street urchins who wash car windscreens at traffic lights in the hope of a tip. Besides this, they are involved in a host of evils offered by the capital: in-fighting, burglary, drunkenness and drugs. In pursuit of a girl, Zsófi, Karesz unintentionally finds himself in the dance house where young people practice folk music and dance, and is smitten by its unique atmosphere. He becomes friendly with Gráci, an immigrant, moonlighting worker who only ceases to feel out of place in the big city when he can play the music of his home village at the dance house. The trio is made up by Szerb, a Hungarian lad from Yugoslavia who has come to Budapest to escape the Southern Slavonic wars. As Karesz tries to bring himself to Zsófi’s attention, he learns the dances and even experiments with some drumming. In this way, Karesz becomes acquainted with Zsófi, with the group, the dances and the various percussion instruments which are used in Hungarian, Southern Slavonic and Gypsy music. Meanwhile, his old cronies turn up and hustle him into participating in a burglary. Later, they all get drunk and the inebriated Karesz is knocked down by a car. He ends up in hospital, where he is visited by Zsófi. Once back to health, he is received back into the dance house circle as a member. He even lives with them. He is beginning to be a talented percussionist and it is looking as though he will succeed in breaking away from his old friends of the underworld when… György Szomjas studied architecture at the Budapest Technical University between 1960 and 1964, and then graduated from the Academy of Performing Arts in 1968. He was on the board of The Béla Balázs Studio between 1969 and 1974 and was initiator of the sociological film programme. After his ironic documentaries made in the early 1970s, he directed his first feature film, The Wind is Whistling under Their Feet. He has been manager and organizer of Kõbánya Amateur Film Studio since 1973. He has been chief secretary of the Association of Hungarian Filmand Television Artists since 1995. In the past five years, he has made portrait films and documentaries about folk music and musicians as well as television magazines about folk music. 134 COUNTRY FOCUS-HUNGARY IFFI-2007 IFFI Goa Film Treasures 135 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 The 38th International Film Festival of India, Goa introduces IFFI Goa Film Treasures 1st edition - November 27th to December 1st 2007 A new section dedicated to international film heritage directed by Thomson Foundation for Film and TV Heritage, National Film Archive of India and Cinémathèque Française, with the support of Film and TV Institute of India *** "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" is a creation of a " classics " section entirely dedicated to film heritage, representing a key part of culture and history as well as a strong basis for the cinema of tomorrow. Programming of this first edition "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" 2007, has been designed on a common theme: "Freedom". • Special Screenings. Treasures from the cinema world : Nov. 27th : The Grand Illusion (Jean Renoir, France) Nov. 28th: Modern Times (Charlie Chaplin, USA) Nov. 29th: The Hole (Jacques Becker, France) Nov. 30th: To be or not to be (Ernst Lubitsch, USA) Dec. 1st: The Legend of Bailiff Sansho (Kenji Mizoguchi, Japan) Venue: INOX Multiplex • Interactive workshops / masterclasses with cinema personalities (filmmakers, actors, archivists...) Nov 28th - 1.00-2.30 pm "Creating from scratch": With or without film heritage knowledge, what are the differences in creating a film…? Nov 29th: 1.30-3.00 pm: "Catching the visible, tracking the invisible": How cinema is reflecting and modeling society Nov 30th 1.30-3.00 pm: "There is no such thing as an old film!": Why films continue to change overtime to turn into new creations Venue: INOX Multiplex "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" partners Thomson Foundation for Film & TV Heritage: Thomson Foundation is a non-profit entity, acting worldwide in the field of preservation and promotion of film and TV heritage. Created in 2006 by its founder Thomson (technologies, services and systems for media and entertainment industry), the Thomson foundation for Film and TV Heritage operates with archive institutions or film collection entities, public or private, through annual programs run in priority on site, directly and pragmatically. Today, the Foundation runs programs in more than 6 countries in Asia, Europe and America. National Film Archive of India (NFAI) The mission of the National Film Archive of India is to safeguard the heritage of Indian Cinema for posterity and act as a centre for dissemination of a healthy film culture in the country. Promotion of film scholarship and research on various aspects of cinema also form part of its Charter. Familiarizing foreign audiences with Indian Cinema and to make it more visible across the globe is another declared objective of the Archive. La Cinémathèque française, Paris, France Created in September 1936, the Cinemathèque française is a private organisation, financed by the state for a large part (Secretary of culture and communication through the Cinematographic National Center), the "Cinémathèque française" is a non-profit association. Since 1981 the "Cinémathèque française" preserves a part of its collections on security record, at the Saint Cyr Fort (40,000 titles). This collection reflects Henri Langlois' sharp tastes: the basis is international, with a strong presence of German and American silent films, and 1920's avant-garde movies. 136 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 Film and Television Film Institute of India (FTII) Established in the year 1960 on the erstwhile Prabhat studio premises at Pune and thereby inheriting a rich legacy in quality Cinema , the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) has truly lived up to its avowed objective in the field of imparting training in film making and television programme production. Today the FTII is considered as a Center of Excellence not only in India but also in Asia and Europe. The FTII is an autonomous body under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting of the Government of India. 137 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" MOVIE PROGRAMMING Day 1: Opening day: The Grand Illusion - Jean Renoir (France) "If a French farmer found himself dining with a French financier, those two Frenchman would have nothing to say to each other. But if a French farmer meets a Chinese farmer they will find any amount to talk about". Jean Renoir. DR: Crédit Photo Studio Canal Plot: A film about war without a single scene of combat, Jean Renoir's masterpiece suggests that the true divisions of that conflict were of class rather than nationality. The point is embodied in the friendship between two aristocratic officers, a German (Erich von Stroheim), and a Frenchman (Pierre Fresnay), both of whom ultimately become sacrificial victims after a nouveau riche Jewish officer (Marcel Dalio) and a French mechanic (Jean Gabin) manage to escape from Stroheim's fortress to freedom. The relationship between the mechanic and a German widow, who barely speak each other's language, is no less moving. By Jonathan Rosenbaum, the Chicago Reader. Cast: Erich Von Stroheim, Jean Gabin, Pierre Fresnay, Marcel Dalio, Dita Parlo, Julien Carette, Gaston Modot, Jean Dasté, Jacques Becker. Director's biography Jean Renoir Born in Paris on September 15 1894, Jean Renoir was the son of the Impressionist painter Auguste Renoir. Renoir produced his first movie, Une Vie Sans Joie in 1924, to star his wife, his father's former model, Catherine Hessling. He directed his first film, La Fille d'Eau, in the same year. In 1975 Jean Renoir has received an honorary Academy Award for his lifetime contribution to film. He is considered one of the first great "auteurs," a cinematic master whose distinctive style always contained a concern for human issues and a reverence for natural beauty. Jean Renoir died in California in 1979. France, 35mm print with English subtitles, 113 min, B&W Released in 1937, 1946, new editing in 1958, restored version in 1997. Screening in INOX Movie Theater, on Thursday 27th, at 11:00am 138 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" MOVIE PROGRAMMING Day 2 : The Modern Times - Charlie Chaplin (USA) "Modern Times marked the last screen appearance of the Little Tramp, the character which had brought Charles Chaplin world fame, and who still remains the most universally recognized fictional image of a human being in the history of art." David Robinson, Director of Pordenone Silent Film Festival DR: Crédit photo Roy Export Company DR: Crédit photo Roy Export Company Plot: Playing a tramp struggling to survive in a modern industrial society, Charlie Chaplin created with Modern Times, one of the most elaborate cinematic critiques of the effects of mass production on 20th century life. With his usual charm and bad luck, Charlie Chaplin's most famous character The Tramp, executes some of his most famous slapstick routines around massive/glorified machines, accidentally ends up in the middle of a communist rally, and falls in love with a street waif played by Chaplin's then real-life partner Paulette Goddard. Cast: Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Henry Bergman, Stanley J. ('Tiny') Sandford, Chester Conklin, Hank Mann, Louis Natheaux, Stanley Blystone, Allan Garcia Director's biography Charlie Chaplin: The first great screen comedian, Chaplin was the most important filmmaker of the silent film era, in addition to being a formidable talent as a writer and composer. The son of music hall performers from England, he began working on the stage at age five. In 1919, he formed United Artists along with Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford and D.W. Griffith. In 1929, at the first Academy Awards, he was given the special award "for versatility and genius in writing, acting, directing and producing" for The Circus (1928). Charlie Chaplin said: "A day without laughter is a day wasted." USA, 35mm, 87 min, B&W. Released in 1936. Screening in INOX Movie Theater, on Wednesday 28th, at 11:00am 139 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" MOVIE PROGRAMMING Day 3: Le Trou - Jacques Becker (France) "Becker was interested in what the cinema could do just as he was interested in what men and women do. Never searching for the extraordinary, he would go to endless lengths to bring out not some abstract rhythm in the lives of people did but the true style and rhythm of their sensibilities." Dudley Andrew (International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, 1991) DR: Crédit Photo Studio Canal DR: Crédit Photo Studio Canal Plot: Marc Michel, the protagonist, plays an imprisoned man awaiting trial for the attempted murder of his wife. He is transferred to another cell, where his fellow prisoners are planning a jailbreak. He decides to go along with the elaborate plan, and the cellmates attempt to tunnel their way to freedom. The film is based on the true story of a prison escape plan in which the author, José Giovanni, took part. Becker wrote the script with Giovanni and cast the film with nonprofessionals, one of whom, Jean Keraudy (Roland), played the same role in real life that he plays in the film. Le Trou represents the last film of director Jacques Becker, who died shortly after its completion. Cast: Michel Constantin, Jean Keraudy, Philippe Leroy, Raymond Meunier, Marc Michel, Andre Bervil, J. Paul Coquelin, Eddy Rasimi Director's biography Jacques Becker: Jacques Becker was born in 1906. He began his film career in the early 1930s by working as an assistant to film director Jean Renoir on Boudu, sauvé des eaux (in which Becker appeared as a young poet) and La Marseillaise. Over the next two decades he directed and co-scripted a dozen more films, most notably the classic Casque D'Or, as well the crime film Touchez Pas Au Grisbi. France, 35mm print with English subtitles, 132 min, B&W. Released in 1960. Screening in INOX Movie Theater, on Tuesday 29th, at 11:00am 140 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" MOVIE PROGRAMMING Day 4 : To be or not to be - Ernst Lubitsch (USA) "I let the audience use their imaginations. Can I help it if they misconstrue my suggestions?" Ernst Lubitsch Plot: In Warsaw at the beginning of WWII, Maria Tura and husband Joseph perform anti-Nazi plays with their theatre troupe until they are forced to switch to Shakespeare's Hamlet. Lt. Stanislav Sobinski falls for Maria and meets up with her during Joseph's famous "To Be or Not to Be" speech as Hamlet. When Stanislav is eventually dispatched for war, he implicates Maria with Professor Siletsky, who has a secret plan to destroy the Warsaw resistance. The Polish theatre troupe is then forced to use their theatrical skills to ensure their survival. By Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide Cast: Jack Benny, Carole Lombard, Robert Stack, Felix Bressart, Lionel Atwill, Stanley Ridges, Sig Ruman Director's biography Ernst Lubitsch: Lubitsch had turned his back on his father's business to enter the theater, and by 1911 he was a member of Max Reinhardt's Deutsches Theater. His first film work came in 1912 as an actor. Gradually, he abandoned acting to concentrate on directing and in 1918 he made his mark as a serious director with The Eyes of the Mummy starring Pola Negri. Lubitsch left Germany for Hollywood in 1922, invited by Mary Pickford. With the beginning of the sound era, he created witty and sarcastic dialogue, and malicious and bizarre comedic situations. In 1939, Lubitsch moved to MGM, and directed Greta Garbo in Ninotchka. In March of 1947 he has received a special Academy Award for his 25-year contribution to motion pictures. USA, 35mm, 99 min, B&W. Released in 1942. Screening in INOX Movie Theater, on Friday 30th, at 11:00am 141 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 "IFFI Goa Film Treasures" MOVIE PROGRAMMING Day 5: The Legend of Bailiff Sansho - Kenji Mizoguchi (Japan) "Mizoguchi is cinema's Shakespeare, its Bach or Beethoven, its Rembrant, Titian or Picasso." James Quandt, Mizoguchi the Master (Introduction) Plot: Sansho the Bailiff is based on an ancient legend and set in the harsh feudal world of eleventh-century Japan. The father of young Zushiô and Anju, is a wellregarded Governor, loved by the masses. Unfortunately, he has opposed the latest Government conscription demand, recognising that if he complies his people may starve. Inevitably, he is struck from his post and dispatched into exile; all his wife Tamaki can do is wrap their children in the charity of relatives. Several years later the trio is forced to embark on a difficult journey, to the distant province where the ex-Governor now lives. In a sequence of heart-rending tragedy, Tamaki becomes separated from Zushiô and Anju. While she is sold into prostitution and they become the slaves of Sanshô dayû. A decade later, Zushiô and Anju have become inured to their fate… Cast: Yashiaki Hanayagi, Kinuyo Tanaka, Kyoko Kagawa, Eitaro Shindo, Akitaka Kohno, Ichiro Sugai, Ken Mitsuda, Masahiko Kato, Keiko Enami Director's biography Kenji Mizoguchi: Kenji Mizoguchi was born in 1898, the middle child of a Tokyo family. The abrupt ending of the 1904-5 Russo-Japanese war, dashing his father's attempts to sell raincoats to the army, precipitated a desperate financial crisis which forced Mizoguchi's older sister Suzu to be given up for adoption then sold to a geisha house. Though she was fortunately "rescued" and later married by a wealthy patron, the event, along with the death when he was 17 of the mother he idolised, had a huge impact on Mizoguchi's life and future career as a director- a principal theme of his films being the oppression and suffering of women. Japan, 35mm, 120 min, B&W. Released in 1954. Screening in INOX Movie Theater, on Saturday 1st, at 11:00am 142 IFFI GOA FILM TREASURES IFFI-2007 Indian Retrospectives Tapan Sinha Vijay Anand Navya Movement India @ 60 143 TAPAN SINHA IFFI-2007 Lest We Forget – Tapan Sinha Tapan Sinha, born in Kolkata on October two, 1924, is considered by some as one of the most uncompromising filmmakers of India. His awe-inspiring body of work can perhaps be matched by only a Mrinal Sen or a Satyajit Ray. Sinha’s works have won 19 National Film Awards in various categories apart from laurels in international film festivals like those in Berlin, Venice, London, Moscow, San Francisco and Locarno. A science graduate from University of Calcutta – his and actress-wife Arundhati Devi’s son Anindya Sinha is a noted scientist - Sinha began his film career as a sound engineer in Kolkata’s New Theatre in 1946. In 1950, he got the opportunity of working at Pinewood Studios in the UK where he spent two years. On returning to India, he turned his attention to film directing, making films in Bengali, Hindi and also Oriya. Influenced by American and British styles of filmmaking and also by Rabindranath Tagore’s work, he made three films based on the Nobel Laureate’s: Kabuliwala, Khudito Pashan and Atithi. His first Ankush was based on Narayan Gangopadhyay’s story Sainik. A storyteller par excellence, his films are well-crafted in terms of structure and technique. Sinha mentions in his memoirs Mone Pore that as a child in Bhagalpur, he had seen A Tale of Two Cities – a Hollywood film starring Ronald Coleman – and it perhaps was “sub-consciously responsible for him becoming a filmmaker”. In 1961, Sinha was to pay homage to Coleman in Jhinder Bandi – a lavish historical melodrama about palace intrigue based on one of Coleman’s major hits, The Prisoner of Zenda. His other films include Upahar (1955), Tonsil (1956), Louhakapat (1957), Kalomati (1957), Hansuli Banker Upakatha (1962), Nirjan Saikate (1963), Jotugriha (1964), Aarohi (1965), Galpo Holeo Satyi (1966), Hatey Bazaare (1967), Apanjan (1968), Sagina Mahato (1970), Ekhoni (1971), Zindagi Zindagi (1972), Aadhar Periye (1973) , Raja (1975) Ek Je Chilo Desh (1977), Safed Hathi (1977), Sabuj Dwiper Raja (1979), Banchharamer Bagan (1980), Adalat O Ekti Meye (1982), Atanka (1986), Aaj Ka Robinhood (1987), Ek Doctor Ki Maut (1991), Wheelchair (1994), Aajab Gnayer Aajab Katha (1998), Anokha Moti (2000), Shatabdir Kanya (2001), exhibiting his virtuosity and capability to handle all kinds of subjects with equal élan and sensitivity. 144 TAPAN SINHA IFFI-2007 Kabuliwala 1956, 35mm Colour, 116 mins, Bengali Director Tapan Sinha Cinematography Subodh Ray Music Ravi Shanker Cast Kali Bannerjee, Chhabi Biswas, Tinku Thakur, Radhamohan Bhattacharya Based on a Tagore story of the same name, the film is a touching tale of Rahmat Sheikh, a Pathan who came from Afghanistan to Kolkata to make a living. However, he is homesick and seeks the company of children, particularly little girls as they remind him of his own daughter back home. One day he meets Mini, a five-year-old daughter of a writer, and they become great friends. The beautiful friendship that develops is suddenly interrupted by Rahmat’s being sent to prison for assaulting his landlord. Years pass, and when Rahmat is released, he goes back to see Mini. Still expecting to meet the charming little girl he had left behind, he is stunned to realise that he has reached on Mini’s wedding day and that she no longer recognises him. He also realises that his own daughter must also be of a similar age and tears well up in his eyes. Mini’s father presents him the money kept for the decoration of the house during the wedding and urges him to return as soon as possible to his house in Afghanistan. Sinha’s version of a Tagore story remains one of the most acclaimed version of the film, which was remade in other languages, including Hindi. Sagina Mahato 1970, 35mm, B&W, 148 mins, Bengali Director Tapan Sinha Cinematography Subodh Ray Music Ravi Shanker Cast Kali Bannerjee, Chhabi Biswas, Tinku Thakur, Radhamohan Bhattacharya This movie was remade as a Hindi movie titled Sagina in 1974. The hero is a natural leader who emerges during a period of industrial struggle when some poor and illiterate workers at a Bengal factory in British-dominated India try to form a trade union. 145 TAPAN SINHA IFFI-2007 Adalat O Ekti Meye 1982, 35mm Colour, Bengali Director Tapan Sinha Music Tapan Sinha Cast Vishwa Guha Takurta, Nirmal Kumar, Manoj Mitra, Devika Mukherjee, Tanuja A hard-hitting film, it sought to expose the insensitive way rape cases are dealt with in courts, even as it took the viewer through the trauma of a mental torture that is perhaps even worse than the physical crime itself. Aadmi Aur Aurat 1984, 35mm Colour, 56 mins, Bengali Director Tapan Sinha Cinematography Kamal Nayak Music Ashish Khan Cast Amol Palekar, Mahua Roychodhury A young village girl waits on the highway for a bus into town. She looks tired and ill, and carries a shapeless bundle in her arms. There are others waiting with her, but she seems to know none of her companions. After a long futile wait for the bus the men walk away in the group, the girl slowly rises helplessly, goes after them. Bansi, a poacher, follows the group. He turns back curiously to look at the girl struggling slowly up the hilly path, and decides to approach her. When he comes close to her, he realizes that she is pregnant, and learns that her destination is the hospital at Vakilganj. He decides to help her get there. It is drizzling and in the process of conversation Bansi learns that her first child had miscarried and she was ill for very long afterwards, her husband had taken a loan to get her to the hospital. The rain has increased and tired girl is half-conscious. Determined to save her, Bansi drags her and reaches to the hospital. Next morning, Bansi goes to the hospital and is told that the woman has given birth to a baby boy, and goes inside to have a look at the baby. He asks the woman the name of her husband. Anwar Hossain, says the girl. Bansi frowns. It is muslim girl whose life he saved, and he is good Hindu. He smiles again. The girlsmiles back gratefully and raises her frail arms. I shall always pray to Allah for you, she says. 146 VIJAY ANAND IFFI-2007 AN ETERNAL ROMANTIC VIJAY ANAND Vijay Anand (left) with his brothers Dev Anand and Chetan Anand Vijay Anand (January 22, 1934 - February 23, 2004), was one of India’s, particularly the Hindi film industry’s, most-acclaimed producer, director, writer, editor and actor. Born in Gurdaspur, Punjab, he was the youngest of the Anand siblings, with his elder brother Chetan and Dev etching out their own legendary status within the film industry. Anand, who served a short but controversial stint as the chairman of the Central Board of Film Certification, before resigning in 2002 after ideological differences with the government over introduction of ratings for adult movies, wrote the script for Taxi Driver (1954) when he was barely 20. In 1957, he made his directorial debut with Nau Do Gyarah. Some of his successful movies as director were Johny Mera Naam (1970), Jewel Thief (1967), Teesri Manzil (1966), Kala Bazar (1960), Tere Ghar Ke Saamne (1963), Tere Mere Sapne (1971) and Guide (1965), the last being his most critically-acclaimed movie. His most memorable acting roles were in Kora Kagaz (1974) and Main Tulsi Tere Aangan Ki (1978), although he acted in several other films like Agra Road (1957), Haqeeqat (1964) and Chhupa Rustom (1973). To the generation of the 1990s, he is also known for playing detective Sam in the television series Tehkikaat. Anand’s films shone with technical virtuosity and marvelous sense of storytelling, and talent as a filmmaker came through even more forcefully in his picturisation of songs. His use of creating unusual situations and sets, using long complicated takes involving both character and camera movement (the entire Tere Mere Sapne Ab Ek Rang Hai song from Guide comprise just three shots), incredible use of foreground and background of the frame, dynamic camera work and making the most of tightly-enclosed spaces created magic for the moviegoer. His other films include Blackmail (1973), Chhupa Rustom (1973), Ram Balram (1980), Rajput (1982), Hum Rahe Na Hum (1984) and Main Tere Liye (1988). Anand died in Mumbai on February 23, 2004 due to a heart attack. His last film Jaana Na Dil Se Door, which he completed just before his demise and stars his brother Dev Anand and a fresh couple as the romantic lead, is awaiting commercial release. 147 VIJAY ANAND IFFI-2007 Guide 1965, 35mm, Colour, Hindi Cinematography Fali Mistry Music S D Burman Cast Dev Anand, Waheeda Rehman, Leela Chitnis, Kishore Sahu Raju, once a successful tourist guide, hesitates to return to his hometown of Udaipur after his is released from jail and decides to search for his fortunes elsewhere. He ends up in a remote village temple wearing over his threadbare clothes a saffron scarf which had once belonged to some passing mendicant, and finds himself suddenly elevated to the position of a holy man. Six months pass; Raju’s mother and Rosie, a dancer and Raju’s lover, arrive at the jail to take him home but are told he was let off six months earlier. Rosie takes Raju’s mother home and relates her own side of the story. Raju now has got accustomed to being a holy man, but in that role he has actually helped the village to acquire its own school, hospital and postal service. One day, he tells the villagers a story his mother had told him about another holy man long ago who had kept a fast for 12 days to bring rain to a parched land. Unfortunately, before the story is forgotten, drought hits the village. And then .......... Tere Ghar Ke Samne 1963, 35mm, Colour, Hindi Cinematography V Ratra Music S D Burman Cast Dev Anand, Nutan, Harindranath Chattopadhyay, Om Prakash, Rajendranath Two feuding millionaires Lala Jagannath and Seth Karamchand are always finding ways to be one up on the other. They buy adjacent plots to each other and each wants to make a better house them the other. Unknowingly they hire the same architect, Rakesh and insist on the same design! Rakesh is Jaganath’s son whom he had thrown out and to compound things further, he falls in love with Karamchand’s daughter, Sulekha… 148 VIJAY ANAND IFFI-2007 Jewel Thief 1967, 35mm, Colour, Hindi Music S D Burman Cast Dev Anand, Ashok Kumar, Vyjayantimala, Tanuja, Helen, Master Sachin The whole country is rocked by a series of daring jewellery heists leaving the cops at their wits’ end. The Police Commissioner of Bombay swears that he would solve the case by 26th January. Meanwhile, his son Vinay gains employment with well-known city jeweller Seth Bishwambar Das as an efficient ‘johari’ after gaining his trust. He also wins the heart of his daughter Anjali. But soon, he is mistaken as a certain Amar by a host of unknown people, including Shalini who has come down to Bombay from Gangtok with her brother. She claims that Vinay is actually Amar, her fiancé. It appears that there is actually somebody called Amar resembling Vinay who could be the real jewel thief. Vinay gets involved in the plot to unearth the mystery by assuming the identity of Amar and in the course of his investigation meets Amar’s companions, who believe his is Amar, aka Prince. The hunt takes him to Sikkim where Amar/ Prince has his hideout. A big surprise awaits for him there. Nau Do Gyarah 1957, 35mm, B&W, 170 mins Hindi Music S D Burman Cast Dev Anand, Kalpana Kartick, Shashikala, Madan Puri, Jeevan It is a combination of the urban thrillers that Bollywood was churning out in the 1950s with the road film, and was a promising debut for the young director. It remains one of the most enjoyable and likeable Hindi films of the 1950s that gave early evidence of Vijay Anand’s craft. 149 NAVYA MOVEMENT IFFI-2007 Samskara 1970, 35mm, B&W, 113 mins, Kannanda Director Pattabhi Rama Reddy Written by U R Ananthamurthy Cinematography Tom Cowan Music S D Burman Cast Girish Karnad, Snehlata Reddy, P Lankesh, P R Jayarama Set in a small South Karnataka village about half a century ago, the film revolves around a group of Brahmins. A young, scrupulous priest, Praneshcharya leads them in conducting their lives strictly by tradition. But Narayanappa is a rebel, leading a dissolute life and regularly breaking their tenets. When he suddenly dies, his mistress, Chandri, asks the Brahmins to conduct his funeral rites. The village elders discuss the issue but evade performing the last rites. Praneshcharya is approached for guidance, seeking which he in turn consults the holy texts. His task is further complicated as he has surrendered himself to Chandri’s charms, passionately and helplessly. Filled with remorse, he sets out to seek guidance. Wandering about, he meets a low caste man, Putta, with whom he strikes a rapport and the two travel together. At a fair, Putta urges Praneshcharya to eat at a nearby temple where a free meal is being offered to Brahmins. While eating at a place he has no right to be, Praneshcharya realises that having succumbed to his own weaknesses, he had no right to judge others. He returns to perform the funeral rites. Adapted from U R Ananthamurthy’s remarkable story and helped along by excellent scripting by Girish Karnad, this landmark film launched the Navya Movement in Kannada cinema. Chomana Dudi / Choma’s Drum 1975, 35mm, B&W, 141 mins, Kannada Based on a 1931 novel by Shivaram Karanth, it deals with the life of the untouchables and the problems they face. It is about Choma, a low caste untouchable from a village in Karnataka in South India. Unlike other sub-castes, the Maris are not allowed to own land but Choma dreams about becoming a land owning farmer. To achieve this, he must break with past traditions and either become a Christian or lease land from the government which he will not do. The film traces the eventual tragic disintegration of his family and highlights the inhuman nature of the caste system when Choma’s younger son Nila drowns because a Brahmin youth is prevented by others from saving the ‘untouchable’ boy. Set during the time of the British rule in India, it moves towards the finale as Choma takes refuge with his dudi (a small drum) which he beats furiously even as he loses his three sons, one by one. Director B V Karanth Written by Shivaram Karanth Cinematography S Ramachandra Music B V Karanth Cast M V Vasudeva Rao, Padma Kumta, Jayarajan, Sunder Rajan, Nagraja 150 NAVYA MOVEMENT IFFI-2007 Ghatashradha 1977, 35mm, B&W, 144 mins, Kannada Direction & Screenplay Girish Kasravalli Cinematography S Ramachandra Music B V Karanth Cast Ajith Kumar, Meena Kuttappa, Narayana Bhatt, Ramakrishna, Shanta Ramaswamy Iyengar The story of a child widow seen through the eyes of a young boy, this film is set in the 1920s rural Karnataka steeped in orthodoxy. Yamunakka as a widow, lives with her father Udupa, who runs a traditional scripture school for young Brahmins. She has to live within a lot of restrictions and cannot lead a normal life, and a little boy is her only friend. However, she protects Nani, a young student who is bullied by classmates and is later witness to Yamnua’s desperate attempts to end an undesirable pregnancy, which the village elders discover leading to swift retribution. Her father performs the ‘ghatashradha’, or death rites performed for a living person, to mark her excommunication from the Brahminical society. Head shaven, clad in a white sari, the little boy taken away, she is banished from the village and tries to kill herself in the forests that surround the village. Meanwhile, her father prepares to remarry a 16-year-old girl, young enough to be his daughter. Based on a U R Ananthamurthy story, this was Girish Kasaravalli’s debut feature, and one that was responsible for strengthening the Navya Movement in Kannada cinema in a major way. The film has some wonderfully shot and enacted sequences, especially when Yamuna, chased by the villagers, takes refuge among in the dark forest, which seems far kinder than the village she has been thrown out of. 151 INDIA @ 60 IFFI-2007 Biyalis 1949, 35 mm, B&W, 156 mins, Bengali Direction & Story Hemen Gupta Cinematography G K Mehta Music Hemanta Mukherjee Lyrics Tarit Kumar Ghosh Cast Bikash Roy, Manju Dey, Sombhu Mitra, Suruchi Sengupta, Pradeep Kumar Production Film Trust of India. The film addresses the violent agitations against the colonial police in the Midnapore district of Bengal in late 1942. Set against the Quit India agitation, it sees an aged women activist explain that Mahatma Gandhi advocated non-violence but asked every woman to carry a knife as well, just in case. Ajoy, his wife Bina and aged Grandmother are fixed with the 'Karenge Ya Marenge' (Do or Die) zeal. Violence erupts when the village blacksmith's daughter is killed. The blacksmith is tortured and killed by the evil army officer Major Trivedi, providing one of Bengali Cinema's most enduring images of untrammeled Villany. Bina, who becomes a courier for the terrorists, is gang- raped by the army and goes insane, whereupon the entire village rises in anger. The grandmother is shot while leading an unarmed procession. Ajoy is shot too. The soldiers finally refuse to obey further orders to fire and eventually tramples over the major to join the marchers in raising the Indian Tricolour. Nam Iruvar 1947, 35 mm, B&W, 153 mins, Tamil Director A V Meiyappan Cinematography T Muthusamy Music R Sundarshanam Cast T A Jayalakshmi (Kannamma), Kamala Kumari (Kannamma’s Sister), T R Mahalingam (Sukumar), B Ramakrishnaiah Panthulu (Jayakumar) Production AVM Film Company The first production of AVM Film Company, it is based on Sahasranamam’s stage hit of the same name. It is a political and patriotic melodrama, replete with nationalist symbols. The film begins with a Subramanya Bharati anniversary and ends with Mahatma Gandhi’s 77th birthday celebrations. Even today, some of the songs of in this film are standard fare on television and radio during occasions of national importance. The film comes down heavily on the evils of black marketeering and lust for money. The producer-director of the film, Meyyappan, brought the rights to the patriotic poems of the great poet Subramanya Bharathi and set them to tune in the film. Kamala Kumari was off to a great start with this film, dancing to the tune of Bharathiyar. 152 INDIA @ 60 IFFI-2007 Shaheed 1965, 35 mm, B&W, 163 mins, Hindi This is a hugely-successful film version of revolutionary Bhagat Singh's life story. Starring Manoj Kumar in the title role, the film shows how Bhagat Singh grew up in a revolutionary household, went to the National College, and wrote essays in revolutionary newspapers and pamphlets, before joining Chandra Shekhar Azad and the Hindustan Republican Association. In October 1928 came the Simon Commission, protests against which turned sour when Bhagat Singh's mentor Lala Lajpat Rau died after being beaten up boy the police. Angry and seeing the government do nothing after Lajpat Rai's death, a group of revolutionaries, including Bhagat, decided they would kill the police chief, Scott, who had ordered the attack. They waited for him in ambush, but the Assistant Superintendent of Police, J P Saunders, emerged instead and was shot. Bhagat Singh later threw a bomb into the National Assembly, especially designed not to be too powerful so that it wouldn't kill anybody, to protest the passing of a Public Safety Bill. He along with Rajbir and Sukhdev threw the bomb, then flyers describing their position, then waited in the visitor's gallery to be arrested. They caught, tried, and condemned to death, not for the bombing but for the murder of Saunders. Bhagat Singh used his court appearances to continue delivering his revolutionary message to the masses, who would read about the trial and so hear what he had to say. Before long, he had a huge following. He staged a hunger strike while in prison to improve conditions there, before being hanged on March 23, 1923. 153 Director S Ram Sharma Story B K Dutt Screenplay Din Dayal Sharma Cinematography Ranjodh Thakur Editor B S Glaad, Vishnu Kumar Singh Music Prem Dhawan Cast Manoj Kumar, Prem Chopra, Kamini Kaushal, Nirupa Roy, Pran, Anand Kumar, Manmohan, Sailesh Kumar, Madan Puri, Asit Sen, Kamal Kapoor, Ifthekar, Anwar Hussain Production Kewal P Kashyap INDIA @ 60 IFFI-2007 Kala Pani – A Pilgrimage 1985, 20 mins, English Director N S Thapa Producer Prem Vaidya The Andaman and Nicobar islands in the Bay of Bengal are over 1,200 km south of Kolkata and 1,200 km east of Chennai. During India’s First War of Independence in 1857, the British chose to send freedom fighters to these islands, to the Cellular Jail in the Andamans. To be sent to the Andamans was considered to be a living death and hence it came to be known as Kala Pani. This film provides historical background to the islands. Gandhi An Emerging Reality 1997, 36 mins, English Director D Gautaman Producer Kuldeep Sinha Emerging from the midst of people, Mahatma Gandhi came as a whirlwind to Indian Politics. This film shows how he influenced the thinking of the people the world over. India Wins Freedom 1985, 22 mins, English Director N S Thapa Producer Bhanumurthy Alur This part 16 of the India’s Struggle for Freedom series deals with the arrival of the new Governor General Lord Mountbatten and the series of events that took place for the transfer of power from the King’s Government to the people of India on August 15, 1947. 154 INDIA @ 60 IFFI-2007 Tribute 155 TRIBUTE IFFI-2007 And miles to go… Aribam Syam Sharma It is indeed rare to find an individual who expresses his artistic vision through different media. One such consummate artiste from North-East India is Aribam Syam Sharma. Better known for his landmark films like Imagi Ningthem and Ishanou, the artistic personality in Sharma is more than his films. It would be impossible to fathom and understand his films before knowing him in relation to his first love: music. Within his home state Manipur, he is as much as synonymous with the modern music movement of Manipur as he is with his films, if not more. The lyricism, rhythm and the earthiness of his films are a legacy of his music. Though rooted in the socio-cultural milieu of Manipur, the universal appeal of the subjects of his films has found favour globally, including in Cannes where Ishanou, which created a stir when screened in the highly-respected Un Certain Regard section in 1991. His films have represented India at the biggest of international films festivals, such as Locarno, Montreal and London, and many other festivals. An 11-time winner of the National Award, Sharma, trained as a musician in Shantiniketan, made his directorial debut with Lamja Parshuram in 1974, which was followed by films like Saaphabee (1976), Olangthagee Wangmadasoo (1979), Imagi Ningthem (1983) and Paokhum Ama (1983). Sharma, who has authored an autobiographical book, Living Shadows, has always made films with serious topics, but some of his films have been big Box Office hits in Manipur while garnering honours all over the world. Sharma had the unique honour at the 37 th IFFI when the Indian Panorama (Non-Feature section) screened a film by him and another on him. In this 38th edition of IFFI too, his latest film in part of the same section. Ishanou 1991, Colour, 35 mm, 95 mins, Manipuri Director Aribam Syam Sharma Screenplay M K Binodini Devi Cinematography Girish Padhiar Editor Ujjal Nandi Music Aribam Syam Sharma Cast Anoubam Kiranmala, Kangabam Tomba, Monbi Sound A Shantimo Sharma, Durgadas Mitra Costumes M K Binodini Devi Production Guwahati Doordarshan Festivals & Awards Cannes, Festival du 3 Continents (Nantes), IFFI, London, Seattle, Singapore, Toroto, Vancouver, Fribourg, Hawaii. A happy young couple is preparing for the ear-piercing ceremony for their first child, a daughter. This is an important custom in Manipur, signifying the beginning of a responsible stage in life. Things go awry when the wife begins talking to flowers, singing odd songs, and having fits. In fact, the fits get so violent that she has to be physically restrained and tied down to prevent her from hurting herself. It eventually emerges that she has been chosen by a spirit which is special to a particular religious cult, the Meibis. Things proceed swiftly with her new, unsought, allegiance as she makes contact with the cult and its leader and prepares to leave her husband and child behind. 156 TRIBUTE IFFI-2007 Homage 157 HOMAGE: K K MAHAJAN IFFI-2007 K K Mahajan Select Filmography Features Directed by Mrinal Sen Bhuvan Shome, 1969 (Hindi), Icchapuran (The Wish Fulfilment), 1970 (Bengali), Interview, 1970 (Bengali), Ek Adhuri Kahani, 1971 (Hindi), Calcutta 71, 1972 (Bengali), Padatik, 1973 (Bengali), Chorus, 1974 (Bengali), Mrigaya (The Royal Hunt), 1976 (Hindi), Oka Oorie Katha, 1977 (Hindi/Telugu), Ek Din Pratidin, 1979 (Bengali), Akaler Sandhaney, 1980 (Bengali), Chalchitra, 1981 (Bengali), Kharij, 1982 (Bengali), Khandhar, 1984 (Bengali), Ek Din Achana, 1988 (Hindi) Directed By Basu Chatterji (All In Hindi) Sara Akash (1969), Piya Ka Ghar (1971), Rajnigandha (19730, Us Paar (1974), Chhoti Si Baat (1975), Chit Chor (1976), Swami (1977), Safed Jhooth (1977), Priyatama (1977), Dillagi (1978), Tumhare Liye (1978), Chakravyuha (1979), Do Ladke Dono Kadke (1979), Manzil (1979), Apne Paraye (1980), Man Pasand (1980), Jeena Yahaan (1981), Sara Jahan (1982), Sheesha (1986), Directed by Kumar Shahani Maya Darpan (1972), Tarang (1984), Khayal Gatha (1988), Kasba (1990), Char Adhyay (1996) Directed By Mani Kaul Uski Roti (1970), Ashad Ka Ek Din (1971) Directed By Mohan Kumar Avtaar (1983), All Rounder (1984), Amrit (1986), Amba (1990) Directed By Ramesh Sippy Bhrashtachaar (1989), Akayla (1991), Zamana Deewana (1995) Directed By Raj Tilak Mukti (1977), Chehre Pe Chehra (1980), Jeevan Saathi (1988) Directed By Mukul Dutt Chhalia (1973), Aaj Ki Radha (1979) Directed By Ravi Tandon Waqt Ki Deewar, Jawab; Nadaniyan (1984) Dir. Ved Rahi), Ek Pal (1986, Dir. Kalpana Lajmi) Short Films & Documentaries Directed By Kumar Shahani The Glass Pane (1966), A Certain Childhood (1967), Rails For The World (1970), Object (1971, Made For A Psychoanalyst’s Thesis), Bamboo Flute (2001); Directed By Shyam Benegal Child Of The Streets (1967), Indian Youth: An Exploration (1968) Directed By B D Garga Amrita Sher-gill (1968, Best Documentary Film, National Awards, 1969), Mahabalipuram (1968), Iron Ore Exports (1969) Tanmay Agarwal In this Subhash Nandy photograph, KK is seen taking a risky shot for the film Chorus as director Mrinal Sen holds him from behind K K Mahajan (1944-2007) is considered one of India’s best-ever cinematographers with a body of work comprising over 80 feature films, about 100 commercials, over 20 significant documentaries and several television serials. A four-time National Award winner, his cinematographic contribution to both mainstream and art cinema has remained unparalleled. His prolific virtuosity has rightly been considered a major factor in the Indian New Wave which saw the emergence of path-breaking feature films like Mrinal Sen’s Bhuvan Shome (1969), Basu Chatterji’s Sara Akash (1969), Mani Kaul’s Uski Roti (1970) and Kumar Shahani’s Maya Darpan (1972). The one common factor to all these classics was brilliant cinematography by ‘KK‘, as he was fondly known. Born on 2 nd October 1944, at Gurdaspur, Punjab, India, Mahajan was a graduate in Physics from Punjab University (1963). He attended the prestigious Film Institute of India, Pune (later known as the FTII) for a three-year course in Motion Picture Photography and was a Gold Medalist in the class of 1966. As one of the early graduates of the FTII, he began his career at a time when the film industry was unwilling to believe that training in cinema could be imparted, since apprenticeship had been the traditional entry route, right from the silent era. Trained and qualified technicians from the FTII had a difficult time and felt constantly pressurised to prove themselves. In more ways than one, Mahajan was a trailblazer. He began working as an independent cinematographer in Mumbai in 1966, at first with advertising films and then with documentaries and short films, with renowned directors. Fittingly, his first break into feature films came as a result of the impact that his work at the FTII, with Kumar Shahani (their avant garde graduation film The Glass Pane), had on Mrinal Sen. That led to Bhuvan Shome , and the beginning of a long journey. Over the next three decades and more, KK’s cinematographic oeuvre was quite impressive not only quantitatively but also in terms of its qualitative variations. More than any other cinematographer, even as he worked with many “off-beat” filmmakers, photographing acclaimed albeit low-budget films, he proved that he had no problems in adjusting to the so-called gap between art and commercial films, with his work in mainstream Hindi cinema. His ouvre included films by directors like Subhash Ghai, Ravi Tandon, Mohan Kumar Ramesh Sippy and Basu Chatterji, to name a few. His craft is said to “…evoke memories of impressionist painting, setting new standards in motion picture photography, which even today remains a source of inspiration for all aspiring cinematographers.” (From the citation, MAMI Award, 2000). Mahajan received his four National Awards for Best Cinematography quite early in his career, for his work on films by directors Basu Chatterji (Sara Akash 1969, which got him the first of his four National Awards) ,Mani Kaul (Uski Roti 1970), Kumar Shahani (Maya Darpan 1972) and Mrinal Sen (Chorus 1974). A record that he particularly valued, considering the near-feudal conditions in which he started his own career, is that about 25 of those who assisted him over the years went on to become cinematographers in their own independent capacity. Over the years, along with his professional commitments, K K Mahajan continued his association with the FTII, with the workshops he held for students. He was a member of the Governing Council and of the Society of the FTII for two terms. He also conducted workshops at the Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute (SRFTI), Kolkata. He was also on jury panels of several major film awards and on the script advisory committee of the NFDC. In May 1999, he got together with a small group of concerned cinematographers in Mumbai, to form Cinematographers’ Combine, a forum for cinematographers and those associated with cinematography. Among the honours he received were the Mumbai Academy of the Moving Image (MAMI)’s 1 st Kodak Technical Excellence Award for his “Innovative Contribution to Cinematography and Enrichment of Indian Cinema” (2000), Honorary Membership of the Indian Society of Cinematographers (ISC) for his “Outstanding Contribution to Indian Cinematography and Excellence in Professional Work” (2003), Honorary Life Membership of the Western India Cinematographers’ Association (WICA) for his “Outstanding Contribution in the field of Cinematic Art” (2005), and the Ezra Mir Award for Lifetime Achievement by the Indian Documentary Producers’ Association (IDPA) for a “Lifetime of Excellence and Inspiration” (2006). He also received the International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) Award for “Outstanding Contribution to Indian Cinema” in 2006. In June 2007, he was conferred the 1 st Katha Centre for Film Studies Lifetime Achievement Award given in recognition of “Outstanding Contribution to Indian Cinema.” As KK had said once, “I am lucky to be in this profession. This is a beautiful profession. I meet and work with a lot of people. You travel a lot. And the best thing about this profession is that I am learning every day. There is no end to learning … Nobody is the master of his craft. It changes every day and you have to learn...” 158 HOMAGE: K K MAHAJAN IFFI-2007 Sara Akash / The Whole Sky 1969, 35 mm, B&W, 100 mins, Hindi Direction & Screenplay Basu Chatterji Cinematography K K Mahajan Editor G G Mayekar Music Salil Chowdhury Cast Rakesh Pandey, Madhu Chanda, A K Hangal, Dina Pathak, Mani Kaul, Tarla Mehta, Naditta Thakur, Jalal Agha Production Cineye Films An authentic view of a lower middle class Indian family set in the 1950s. It is about a young, immature man’s turmoil when forced into an arranged marriage. The generation gap between young and old, the jealousies of women in the family, the difference between the domesticated and the rebellious are well depicted in this film. On the one hand, it is a satire on how unprepared young minds forced into marriage are, and on the other it is about how two strangers locked into matrimony slowly discover each other. Based on a novel by Rajendra Yadav, the pioneer of the ‘Nai Kahani’ movement in Hindi literature. 159 HOMAGE: O P NAYYAR IFFI-2007 O P Nayyar Omkar Prasad Nayyar was born on January 16, 1926 in Lahore. He started his career in film music with the background score for the film Kaneez (1949), followed by Aasman (1952). Guru Dutt’s Aar Paar (1954) was his first success, and it led to a successful partnership between the two in films like Mr. & Mrs. 55 and C.I.D. which was a runaway musical hit 1956. This was followed up by Tumsa Nahin Dekha in 1958. With the practised ease of a maestro, Nayyar went on to notch even bigger success in Phir wohi dil laya hoon (“Banda p a r w a r, t h a m l o j i g a r. . . ” ) and M e re S a n a m (“Jaayiye aap kahan jaayenge” and “Pukarata chala hoon main”). Around the same time, his music helped Kashmir Ki Kali become a super hit. At the height of his reign as a composer, he is reported to have commanded the highest fee in the industry. He was the first music director to command the figure of Rs 100,000, a very substantial figure in the early 1950s. In addition to this, he had a reputation for stubborn individuality all along. Many remember him as being aloof and imperious, but always generous with struggling newcomers and those marginalised in the industry. The Press frequently referred to him as a rebel composer, and many columnists labeled him a maverick. During the 1950s, the statecontrolled All India Radio had put in place a ban on most of his very famous tunes from being broadcast, apparently for being too trendy! The Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation, then Radio Ceylon, however, played his new hits. Nayyar worked extensively with Geeta Dutt, Asha Bhonsle and Mohammed Rafi and was instrumental in building their careers. But he never worked with Lata Mangeshkar, the melody queen of India. After a break up with Mohammed Rafi, he switched to Mahendra Kapoor, then a newcomer, and also engaged Mukesh in Sambandh much to the surprise of the industry but delivering the superhit “chal akela, chal akela, chal akela....”. Nayyar had also recognised the talented Kishore Kumar long before he became a popular. The film Baap re Baap is full of Kishore hits in the inimitable Nayyar style. But the relationship did not endure. In the black and white era. A parting of ways with Asha Bhonsle in 1974 was to haunt Nayyar for the rest of his life. Many in the industry felt the break up was the start of Nayyar’s downslide. It was perhaps a tradition started by Nayyar to give a full length song to the comedians in the films which became more famous than any of the songs sung. Remember Johnny Walker in C.I.D with that famous “Yeh dil hai muskil jeena yahan” ,and “Mein Bambai ka baboo, nam mera anjana” in Naya Daur? O P Nayyar was referred to as Opee by the film industry in Mumbai and his specialty was rhythm. His “Yeh desh hai veer jawonon ka” , featuring Dilip Kumar and Ajit from Naya Daur (1957) is an alltime hit among people of all ages, 50 years after he composed it. Nayyar also composed music for a few South Indian movies. Nayyar passed away on January 28, 2007, due to cardiac arrest. Among the major films he composed music for are Aar Paar, Naya Daur, Tumsa Nahin Dekha, Kashmir Ki Kali, Mere Sanam, Ek Musafir Ek Haseena, Phir Wohi Dil Laya Hoon, C.I.D., Sawan Ki Ghata, Raagini , Kismat, Phagun, Howrah Bridge, 12O’Clock, Baap Re Baap, Humsaaya, Kalpana, Pran Jaye P a r Va c h a n N a J a y a e , B a h a re n P h i r B h i Aayaegi, Sambandh, Ek Bar Muskurado, Sone ki Chidiya , Kahin Din Kahin Rat and Yeh Raat Phir na Aayegi. 160 HOMAGE: O P NAYYAR IFFI-2007 Aar Paar 1954, 35 mm, B&W, Hindi It is the story of a taxi-driver in Mumbai who has two women falling for him. The Taxi driver, however, wants to first establish himself and then consider marriage. Father of one the girls is an outlaw. He offers the protagonist a job, with a motive to exploit his talents and physical capabilities. The protagonist has however different ideas. The film had several memorable songs, such as “Kabhi aar kabhi paar”, “Hoon Abhi Main Jawan”, “Babu Ji Dheere Chalna”, “Ja Ja Ja Bewafa Mohabbat Kar Lo”, “Na Na Na Tauba Tauba”, “Sun Sun Sun Zalima” and “Yeh Lo Main Haari” 161 Director Guru Dutt Screenplay Aar Paar Cinematography V K Murthy Music O P Nayyar Editing Y G Chawhan Lyrics Majrooh Sultanpuri Cast Shakila, Johnny Walker, Shyama, Jagdeep Production Guru Dutt HOMAGE: VANMALA DEVI IFFI-2007 Born as Susheeladevi Pawar in 1915 in Ujjain, this feisty lady adopted the screen name Vanmala Devi and acted in several Marathi and Hindi movies from the 1930s. Best known for her title role in Marathi film Shyamchi Aai, that fetched her the Best Actress award in 1953 when India's first-ever National Awards were given away, she began her film career when she was 21, a graduate and a t e a c h e r. H e r d r e a m y e y e s w o n h e r t h e r o l e o f t h e legendary Rukhsana in Minerva Movietone's blockbuster Sikander in which she starred along with Sohrab Modi and Prithviraj Kapoor. Vanmala acted in several films produced and directed by Acharya Pralhad Keshav Atre, including Payachi Dasi, Shyamchi Aai and Moruchi Mavshi. The supposedly demure Vanmala was a staunch nationalist and deeply involved in the freedom movement along with stalwarts like Aruna Asaf Ali and Achyut Patwardhan. Even at the age of 92, when she passed away, she was running a school called The Haridas Kala Sansthan to train children in traditional Indian arts and culture. She was also a member of the Chhatrapati Shivaji National Memorial Committee. Vanmala's filmography includes films like Gharjavai (1941), Brahma Ghotala (1949), Payachi Dasi / Charno Ki Daasi (1941), Sharbati Ankhen (1945), Vasantasena (1942), Dil ki Baat (1944), Hatim Tai (1947), Beete Din (1947) and Shree Ram Bharat Milap (1965). She spent her final years involved in social service in Gwalior, where she passed away on May 30, 2007. Vanmala Devi Shyamchi Aai 1953, 35 mm, B&W, 153 mins, Marathi Regarded as a cult classic today, this film is based on one of the most influential Marathi novels of the 20th century, a fictionalised account of the childhood years of Sane Guruji (1899-1950), a nationalist influenced by Vinoba Bhave and Mahatma Gandhi. As the title suggests the central character is Shyam's mother and the kind of enormous influence she has on Shyam's upbringing. It involves sticking to one's ideals even though one is neck deep in abject poverty. Like life, the book starts with Shyam's mother getting married into a wealthy family and its slow progression into debt-ridden poverty and ends with illness and tragic death of his mother. Director & Producer: Acharya P K Atre; Screenplay: Acharya Atre, Cinematography: R M Rele; Editor: Narayan Rao, Music: Vasant Desai; Cast: Vanmala, Madhav Vaze, Shankar Kulkarni, Baburao Pendharkar, Sumati Gupte, Saraswati Bodas. 162 BIRTH CENTENARIES: DEVIKA RANI IFFI-2007 Devika Rani Born in Vishakhapatnam (then Waltair), Devika Rani came from a distinguished background: she was the great-grand-niece of the Nobel Laureate Rabindranath Tagore and her father, Col M N Chaudhuri, was the first Indian Surgeon-General of Madras. Her mother’ was Leela Chaudhuri. After completing her early schooling in the early 1920s, she studied drama at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and the Royal Academy of Music in London with scholarships. She also studied architecture, textile and decor design, and apprenticed under Elizabeth Arden. Here, through her Brahmo Samaj connections, she met scriptwriter Niranjan Pal who would eventually write many of her most successful screen roles. Devika Rani married producer-actor Himanshu Rai in 1929. Together they starred in Karma. They soon founded the Bombay Talkies film studio, along with retainers Niranjan Pal and Franz Osten whose films challenged the caste system. Devika Rani’s most notable film was Achhut Kanya (1936), costarring Ashok Kumar. Widowed in 1940, she fought for control of Bombay Talkies. After Sashadhar Mukherjee, Ashok Kumar and a lot of Bombay Talkies veterans left and formed a new studio – Filmistan – in 1943, the studio started to fade and she married Russian painter Svetoslav Roerich in 1945, left films and joined her husband in Bangalore. In 1970, she became the first recipient of India’s highest film prize, the Dadasaheb Phalke Award. Achhut Kanya was among the early superhits in the Mumbai film industry, and is considered a reformist period-piece. It reflected the most representative features of the Indian social film of the first decade of sound and was made at a time when law and precedent obstructed the inter-caste marriage and firmly supported the ostracism of the untouchable. Gandhi, Nehru and other leaders of Indian National Congress had called for an end to this with the argument that Independence in itself would not be enough, that Hindu society must also reform itself from within. Even today, this film is surprisingly honest, evocative and sensitive. 164 IFFI-2007 BIRTH CENTENARIES: KHEMCHAND PRAKASH Khemchand Prakash If anyone remembers Mahal (1949), the Ashok Kumar-Madhubala starring classic, perhaps it is for the film’s immortal music. That musical magic was created by Khemchand Prakash, a pioneer in the field of classical music and Rajasthani folk music. Prakash had a complete grasp of folk songs from Marwar, thumris and ghazals. He was among the major music directors in the Hindi film industry of the 1940s along with Ghulam Haider, C Ramchandra, Anil Biswas and Naushad, with Naushad considering him as his guru. The brilliant Aaegaa Aanewaalaa sung by Lata Mangeshkar in Mahal, which was used as the leitmotif for the ghost, set the trend for a suspense and ghost film to always have a song that works as a signing call of the ‘ghost’, be it in Madhumati (1958), Woh Kaun Thi (1964) or Mera Saaya (1966). Prakash’s brilliance in orchestrisation comes through in this story about recording of this song - it is said that the recording began with the mike placed in the centre of a large hall with Mangeshkar in the corner of the room. As the prelude began, she inched her way to the mike singing Khamosh Hai Zamana. Without any doubt, Mahal represents the finest work of Prakash at his peak, and it is not known whether it is true or an apocryphal tale, but the story goes that during the production of of the film, someone carelessly remarked to the studio authorities that if the film did not prove to be a hit it would be because of the music. Once the film was released, Prakash received innumerable letters from all over India for his music, and despite being ill, he took a cab to the man’s house and forced him to read all those letters. Besides turning around Lata Mangeshkar’s career, Prakash was the composer who gave the brilliant Kishore Kumar his initial break with Marne ki Duayen Kyon Mangoon in Ziddi in 1948 and gave him one of his earlier assignments in Rhim Jhim (1948). Unfortunately, Prakash could not live for long to enjoy Mahal’s stupendous success as he passed away the following year when still in his early 40s. But it was not before giving another scintillating musical score in the Raj KapoorNargis starrer Jan Pehchan (1950). Lata Mangeshkar has been quoted as saying in one of her interviews that at the time when Mahal was made, it was the practice not to put the name of the singer on the record, and only that of the character on whom the song was filmed used to be named. When Aayega Aanewala’ was first played on All India Radio, there was such a flood of calls asking for the name of the singer that AIR was forced to find out from the record company and announce it on air! Prakash, in his short but brilliant career, composed music for films like Tamasha (1952), Jai Shanker (1951), Shri Ganesh Janma (1951), Bijli (1950), Muqaddar (1950), Sati Narmada (1950), Sawan Aya Re (1949), Asha (1948), Chalte Chalte (1947), Gaon (1947), Mera Sohag (1947), Mulaqat (1947), Samaj Ko Badal Dalo (1947), Dhanna Bhagat (1945), Bhanvara (1944), Bhartruhari (1944), Mumtaz Mahal (1944), Shahenshah Babar (1944), Chirag (1943), Gauri (1943), Kurbani (1943), Ladai Ke Baad (1943), Tansen (1943), Vish Kanya (1943), Chandni (1942), Dukh Sukh (1942), Fariyad (1942), Khilauna (1942), Maheman (1942), Holiday In Bombay (1941), Pardesi (1941), Pyas (1941), Ummeed (1941), Aaj Ka Hindustan (1940), Diwali (1940), Holi (1940), Pagal (1940), Gazi Salauddin (1939), and Meri Ankhen (1939). 165 BIRTH CENTENARIES: T R SUNDARAM IFFI-2007 T R Sundaram Born in Tiruchengodu in Tamil Nadu, T R Sundaram was one of the earlier pioneers of the Tamil film industry. He produced 98 films, including works by Duncan, C V Raman and T R Raghunath, and approached filmmaking with a business-like attitude, importing foreign technicians for his debut Sati Ahalya, of which he made two versions - one for Modern Theatres Studio and the other for Chandra Bharathi Cineton. He also produced the first Malayalam sound film, Balan (1938) as well as the first colour film in Tamil, Alibabavum Narpathu Thirudargalum (1955), and in Malayalam, Kandam Bacha Coat (1961). Sundaram worked at Angel Films, before taking it over and starting the Modern Theatres Studio (1937) in Salem. He worked in several genres, most notably the swashbuckling adventure movies of P V Chinnappa (Uthama Puthran, an adaptation of Alexander Duma’s The Man in the Iron Mask), that later developed into filmic and political signature of superstar M G Ramachandran. He also made the war movie, Burma Rani (1944). Going with the story that Cleopatra used to took bath in donkey’s milk, he, in order to create a similar scene in a Tamil movie, brought 1000 donkeys, milked them and took bath. Sundaram’s film oeuvre includes 1000 Thalaivengia Apporva Cinthamani (1947), Mayavathi (1949), Manthiri Kumari (1950), Baghdad Thirudan (1960). Born on July 16, 1907, he passed away on August 30, 1963 in Chennai. 166 BIRTH CENTENARIES: T R SUNDARAM IFFI-2007 Master Class 167 MASTER CLASS IFFI-2007 Adoor Gopalakrishnan An unwavering flag bearer of the meaningful cinema movement in India, Adoor Moutatthu Gopalakrishnan Unnithan is regarded internationally as a real master of cinema. Consistently making films in his mother tongue Malayalam, Gopalakrishnan has been a recipient of India’s highest cinematic honour, the Dada Saheb Phalke Award, in 2004. Born on June 3, 1941, Gopalakrishnan is considered a master in his craft, as he keeps on focusing his directorial vision on issues related to humanity and the society through stories set in the backdrop of his home state Kerala in southern India. A staunch backer of the film society movement and an author – his book Cinimayude Lokam (The World of Cinema) got him the National Award for the Best Book on Cinema in 1983 – he was born into a family of patrons of the classical dance form Kathakali, in a village called Adoor. He made his debut in theatre when he was just eight years old, and since then he has been actively involved in stagecraft. After graduating from Gandhigram Rural Institute, Madurai, with a degree in Political Science, he went to the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) in Pune from where he graduated in 1965. Immediately thereafter, he founded the Chitralekha Film Cooperative along with other FTII graduates to help in production and distribution of serious films. Influenced by the works of Satyajit Ray, Gopalakrishnan’s work, like the Bengali maestro’s, also emphasize on the psychology of the characters. His first feature film, Swayamvaram (One’s Own Choice, 1974), won the President’s Gold Medal for the best film, best director, best cameraman and best actress. Through a story of two young rebels – one of them a woman fighting the despair and realities of small town life, it tackled a sensitive topic with the title being an allusion to the ancient practice of Royal women selecting husbands of their own choosing. His Kodiyettam (Ascent, 1977) came as a breath of fresh air with its simple and sincere approach to the crumbling Nair community who were once the lords of Kerala. He returned to the theme of feudalism with his critically acclaimed Elipathayam (The Mouse Trap) in 1981, and then Communism and its conflict with the feudal system in Mukhamukham (“ace to Face) in 1987. Gopalakrishnan, who has made a number of documentaries, has made other features Mathilukkal (Walls, 1989), Anantharam (Monologue, 1987), Vidheyan (The Docile, 1993), Kathapurushan (The Protagonist, 1995), Nizhalkkuthu (Shadow Kill, 2003) and Naalu Pennungal (2007), the last mentioned being part of the Indian Panorama section in this festival. Gopalakrishnan has been the recipient of Indian government’s second highest civilian award, the Padma Vibhushana, and the French government’s Legion of Honour award. Vidheyan 1993, 35 mm, Colour, 112 mins, Malayalam Direction & Screenplay Adoor Gopalakrishnan Cinematography Mankada Ravi Varma Editing M Mani Music Vijaya Bhaskar Cast Mammootty, M R Gopakumar, Tanvi Azmi, Sabitha Anand Production Adoor Gopalakrishnan Festivals & Awards National Film Award for best actor to Mammootty (1993); Netpac Award at the Rotterdam International Film festival, Interfilm Award - Honorable Mention - at the MannheimHeidelberg International Film Festival. Bhaskara Patelar is a feudal relic, an autocrat in a south Indian village, ruling not by traditional right but by virtue of his ability to create terror. Into this village come the simple Thommi, a Christian migrant labourer from Kerala, and his wife. And soon, the former is drawn into Patelar’s machinations as the autocrat decides to do away with his wife. The plan goes awry; the perpetrator, Thommi, is injured. Thommi and Patelar are forced to abscond - deep in the wilderness that is their refuge, Thommi arrives at his own solution to problems not of his making. A cinematic adaptation of the novel Bhaskara Pattelarum Ente Jeevithavum by Paul Zacharia, it explores the master-slave dialectic in a South Karnataka setting. 168 MASTER CLASS IFFI-2007 Special Screening 169 SPECIAL SCREENING IFFI-2007 India The Last Lear 2007, 35mm, Colour, English Director Rituparno Ghosh Screenplay Rituparno Ghosh Cinematography Abhik Mukhopadhyay Editor Arghya Kamal Mitra Music Raja Narayan Deb, Sanjoy Das Cast Amitabh Bachchan, Preity Zinta, Arjun Rampal, Shefali Shah, Divya Dutta, Jisshu Sengupta, Prosenjit Chatterjee Art Indranil Ghosh Sound Bishwadeep Chatterjee Costume Varsha-Shilpa Producetion & Sales Arindam Chaudhuri Planman Motion Pictures production Harry - 65. Recluse, Eccentric. Passionate. Besides being a Shakespearean stage actor and an ardent fan of The Master, his life seems like a play after he meets Siddharth. A play replete with action, drama, love, emotions, tension - and an expected friendship. Siddharth is a new-age film director - his cool clothes and casual persona well disguise his eccentricities. He is a visionary, a visionary who would stop at nothing to get what he wants. As opposites attract, may be like-minded people get along well too. How else would one explain the fast blossoming friendship between these two eccentrically creative minds? When the cinema-ignorant Harry is offered a magnificent role in Siddharths' next film, he is apprehensive at first, reluctant later and finally acceptable to the idea. As the shoot takes them to the sprawling mountainous landscapes of India, new relationships bloom. Upcoming actor Shabnam, who is struggling hard to cope with her messy personal life, finds an unexpected mentor in Harry. He teaches her more than merely the nuances of acting. From being a complete outsider to the world of commercial cinema, Harry soon becomes one of them - open to learning new methods of working, chatting with the unit members and sipping tea from a fancy thermos he never knew was invented, he is enjoying! Little does he know that as the film rolls and he gets into the skin of the character of the Joker that he is playing, he may be taking his role a bit too seriously. Is he that good an actor, or is fate really making him out to be a Joker on the set? As the intense moments unfold, which are even more engaging that the film itself, masks would be taken off a few faces. Towards the sunset of his life, long after the last shot is taken, as his memory fades, all that Harry can remember are his Masters words. Born in Kolkata in India on August 31, 1961, Rituparno Ghosh has been consistently making award-winning contemporary Indian cinema. After completing his schooling, he went on to pursue his studies in Economics from the Jadhavpur University in Kolkata. In a short while, he realised that his calling lay elsewhere. He thus joined Anandalok magazine and went on to become its editor. He then worked with response, a leading creative agency, for a few years. It was in the early 1990's that he first took up direction. Critical acclaim and astounding viewer response welcomed his maiden venture. The rest, as they say, is history. He has to his credit 14 films, most of which have won national level awards in India. Five of these have been National Awards, which is the highest level of film awards in India. His cinema is cause-driven, modern, witty and more often, an astute commentary of the times we live in, at the same time. His films include Hirer Angti (The Diamond Ring, 1992), Unishe April (19th April, 1994), Dahan (Crossfire, 1997), Bariwali (The Lady of the House, 1999), Asukh (Malaise, 1999), Utsab (The Festival, 2000), Titli (The First Monsoon Day, 2002), Shubho Mahurat (2003), Chokher Bali: A Passion Play (2003), Raincoat (2004), Antar Mahal (Views of the Inner Chamber, 2005), Dosar (The Companion, 2006), The Last Lear (2007), Sunglass (In Post Production). 170 SPECIAL SCREENING IFFI-2007 Closing Film 171 CLOSING FILM IFFI-2007 172 CLOSING FILM CLOSING FILM IFFI-2007 Portugal-Spain Fados 2007, 35mm, Colour, 93 mins, Spanish Fados is the new masterpiece from Spanish legend Carlos Saura and the latest installment in his musical cycle initiated more than 15 years ago through Sevillanas (1992), Flamenco (1995), Tango (1998 - Oscar Nominee for best foreign film), Salome (2002) and Iberia (2005). It opens a new chapter and sets new challenges for the famous director – now 75 - as it attempts to capture the elusive nature of the Portuguese “saudade” and to depict a faithful portrait of the Portuguese soul through its most emblematic musical genre. Using Lisbon as its iconic backdrop, the movie explores the intricate relationship between the music and the city, and Fado´s evolution over the years from its African and Brazilian origins up to the new wave of modern Fadistas. Under the musical supervision of Carlos do Carmo, the movie features one of the finest “World Music” soundtracks to date, gathering the best of new Portuguese talent like Mariza or Camané, together with foreign legends Caetano Veloso and Chico Buarque or up-and-coming stars Lila Downs and Lura. It is a film that hides much more than what one sees at first sight. It’s a musical film, but it’s also full of internal codes that only those who know the world of the Fado will recognize. The research for the film took four years. A legendary Spanish director-writer who has also acted in and produced a couple of films, Carlos Saura was born in 1932 at, Huesca, Aragón, Spain. His interest on cinema started when he was very young. His mother, who was a pianist, instilled in him the liking for music, and his brother, Antonio, who was a painter, the passion for art. When he was a teenager he started to practice photography, and in 1950 he made his first illustrated feature film with a 16 mm camera. Carlos Saura is an excellent photographer, an activity that he shares in a sporadic way with the making of films. He moved to Madrid to continue his Industrial Engineering career, but his vocation for photography, cinema and journalism made him leave his studies and matriculate at the Instituto de Investigaciones y Estudios Cinematográficos (Cinematographic Study and Research Institute). Sporadically, he combined his cinematographic studies with the courses at the Escuela de Periodismo (Journalism School). In 1957 he finished studying and got the director diploma. At the same time, he finished his end-of-career short film Tarde del domingo, La (1957). He continued as a professor until 1963. In that year he was removed from the school for strictly political reasons (Franco’s censorship). In his first stage as director he tried to take a position in favour of outcast people, and he got to make a both lyric and documentary-style cinema. Saura is a well accepted director both nationally and internationally, and in proof of it he won many awards, among which there are the Silver Bear in the Berlin Festival for Caza, La (1966), in 1965, and for Peppermint Frappé (1967), in 1967, and Special Jury Awards in Cannes for Prima Angélica, La in 1973, and for Cría cuervos in 1975. His feature films include Weeping for a Bandit (1964), The Garden of Delights (1970), Cousin Angelica (1974), Cría Cuervos (1976), Faster, Faster (1981), Carmen (1983), El Dorado (1988), The Dark Night (1989), Flamenco (1995), Tango (1998), Goya in Bordeaux (2000) and Salomé (2002). 173 Director Carlos Saura Screenplay Carlos Saura, Ivan Dias Cinematography Jose Luis Lopez-Linares, Eduardo Serra Editor Julia Juaniz Cast Mariza Camane, Carlos Do Carmo, Cuca Roseta, Catarina Moura, Argentina Santos, Maria De Nazare, Vicente Da Camara, Carmo Rebelo De Andrade, Ana Sofia Varela Art Carlos Saura Choreography Patrick De Bana, Pedro Gomes Sound Daniel Beckerman Production Fado Filmes, Duvideo, Zebra Producciones, Ventas Internacionales Latido Films C/ Veneras 9, 6º - 28013 Madrid - Spain Tel: +34 91 548 88 77 Fax: +34 91 548 88 78 www.fados-saura.com World Sales Latido Films C/ Veneras 9, 6º - 28013 Madrid - Spain Tel: +34 91 548 88 77 Fax: +34 91 548 88 78 email: massimo_saidel@latidofilms.com Festivals & Awards Toronto, New York, Rio de Janeiro, San Sebastián, Pusan, Stockholm CLOSING FILM IFFI-2007 Indian Panorama – Feature Films Opening Film – Ore Kadal (Malayalam) S.No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 FILM TITLE Naalu Pennungal Ore Kadal Ratri Mazha Ekti Nadir Galpo Dharm Kayyoppu Jaatingaa Ityaadi Tingya Periyar Gnana Jaara Brishtite Bhijechilo Kada Beladingalu Thaniye Mai Baap Moggina Jade Daatu Gafla Ammuvagiya Naan Aevdhe Se Aabhaal Yenning Amadi Likia Ami, Iyasin Ar Amar Madhubala Kaalchakra DIRECTOR Adoor Gopalakrishnan Shyama Prasad Lenin Rajendran Samir Chanda Bhavna Talwar Renjith Sanjib Sabhapandit Mangesh Hadawale Rajasekaran Anjan Das B.S. Lingadevaru Babu Thiruvalla Gajendra Ahire P.R. Ramdas Naidu K. Shivarudraiah Sameer Hanchate Padma Magan Bipin Nadkarni Makhonmani Mongsaba Buddhadeb Dasgupta Vishal Bhandari 174 LANGUAGE Malayalam Malayalam Malayalam Bengali Hindi Malayalam Assamese Marathi Tamil Bengali Kannada Malayalam Marathi Kannada Kannada Hindi Tamil Marathi Manipuri Bengali Marathi CLOSING FILM IFFI-2007 Indian Panorama – Non-Feature Films Opening Film – Bagher Bachcha (Bengali) S.No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 FILM TITLE Rajashree Bhagya Chandra of Manipur Naushad Ali – The Melody Continues Pandit Ramnarayan Bagher Bachcha Hope Dies Last In War Whose Land Is It Anyway? Masti Bhara Hai Sama M-Tyude Kumaraneloorke Kulangal Poomaram Joy Ride The Dance Of The Enchantress Harvilele Indradhansh Ngaihak Lambida Nokpokliba Mubarak Begum 175 DIRECTOR Aribam Syam Sharma LANGUAGE English Buddhadeb Dasgupta V. Packriswamy Bisnu Deb Halder Supriyo Sen Ladly Mukhopadhyay Ashok Rane M.A. Rehman Vipin Vijay Manisha Issrani Misra Adoor Gopalakrishnan Dhiraj Meshram Haobam Paban Kumar Meren Imchen Bipin Choubal Hindi Hindi Bengali English Hindi Hindi Malayalam Malayalam Bengali Hindi Malayalam Manipuri English Hindi