Sundance Insider
Transcription
Sundance Insider
DAY January 21–30, 2005 • Printed On Recycled Paper • Available At Festival • Sunday, January 23, 2005 3 FREE Fred Hayes/Wireimage.com WEATHER Sunday 40 L 26 H Park City yesterday, you might have thought each one of them was driving. Take the shuttle! An American accustomed to watching the nightly network news could be forgiven for thinking that the war in Iraq is by now a routinized engagement and not the viciously uncertain conflict that it is. Reports of seven dead soldiers appear one day, five the next, nine the day after that. It is a slow and unnerving trickle of death, but through the television, at least, the news from Iraq now has a humdrum quality to it. War, prolonged conflict, occupation: America is now entangled in all three, but American news broadcasts can feel removed and reassuring — as if war were waged by correspondents standing there in the sand with a microphone. Screening Change: Joy of Life replaces Tropic of Cancer 6:15 pm Holiday Village Cinemas 3 The war documentaries at Sundance this year, which are screening in the World Documentary Competition, are a bracing antidote to all that nightly cage rattling from the broadcast networks. Even calling them “war documentaries” seems odd: They do not feature archival footage from the wars they depict, and they do not educate their audiences about the chronology or the battles of the wars they cover. All of them, though, are told from deep within conflicts, in indelibly personal and idiosyncratic ways. It is not so surprising that they are all made by European filmmakers. Why We Fight by the American filmmaker Eugene Jarecki is a cogent analysis of war, but its topic is the American military-industrial complex. American wars tend to happen far from American soil, and it seems natural that American documentaries about war tend to be analytical. The idea that a documentary about war could be poetic, incantatory, elliptical, unflinchingly grim, or blatantly refuse to entertain has not yet flourished in America. “We received a lot of work that focused on conflict and the aftermath of war, but not from the United States,” said Diane Weyerman, Director of the Sundance Documentary Program. The films selected for this year’s Festival that cover conflict are “very human,” she commented. “They’re not didactic; they’re about war and conflict } SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 Screening Change: Duane Hopwood replaces Kekexili 6:00 pm Trolley Theatre A affecting an individual, affecting a family, affecting a village. There’s tremendous humanity in the work we’re seeing, even though it’s dealing with something very harsh and devastating.” It may seem obvious that human stories are the ones that end up at the Festival – those kinds of movies, and not academic ones, tend to be the ones we want to see – but the filmmakers at this year’s Festival who depict war, occupation and prolonged conflict have done everything they can to avoid approaching those topics in a direct, stentorian manner. British filmmaker Sean McAllister’s inroad to covering occupied Iraq arrived via the inscrutable logic of chance. Six months after the fall of Saddam Hussein, McAllister (Working for the Enemy) decided that it might be useful to go to Hotel Baghdad, amid the grenades and rocket launchers. “I wanted to make a film about what liberation meant for ordinary Iraqis,” McAllister explains at the beginning of The Liberace of Baghdad. He was then “led astray,” as he says in the film, by Samir Peter, a passionate, open-hearted Iraqi concert pianist who, in his heyday, earned $10,000 a month from his performances. The viewer immediately senses that McAllister’s hunch to follow Peter rather than pursue his earlier, more sociological notion is the richer path. McAllister stumbled upon a telling family drama: Peter’s daughter supports The following changes occured after the Film Guide was printed: THURSDAY, JANUARY 27 Finding Poetry in Conflict BY CLAIBORNE SMITH, STAFF WRITER Tuesday H 41 L 30 SCHEDULE UPDAT ES Each year the Festival attracts over 35,000 people. If you were in { Monday 41 L 28 H Screening Change: Mitchellville replaces Live-in Maid 9:00 pm Trolley Theatre A Screening Change: Swimmers replaces Grizzly Man 9:45 pm Broadway Centre Cinemas 5 El Inmortal. INFO BOOTH Hussein, and she adamantly disagrees with her father, an unabashed admirer of America in a place where being tagged as a Western collaborator invites death. There is a world of commentary, as well as human interest, in the impatient sighs of their arguments. “In the evenings I’d sit and have a drink,” McAllister said of the hotel where Peter had a room in the basement and would occasionally perform. “The tendency is for these people just to appear,” he said. “That’s what I’ve learned. Instead of going out to Falluja to find a story, it’s right there, really.” While Peter seemed to emerge from nowhere and, with the force of his personalCONTINUED ON PAGE {4 } How to Wait List Show up at a screening one hour before it begins to purchase one of the numbered cards that is distributed on a firstcome, first-serve basis. Each person can receive two cards. Thirty minutes before the screening begins, any available tickets will be sold for cash only, based on card number. Holding a card does not guarantee a ticket and if seats are not available, wait list refunds are given immediately at the theatres. 02 Stalking... 03 Culture Wars Panel 05 Romantico 07 Q&A 07 From the Street 10 Music Café 12 Flotsam/Jetsam 13 Seen & Overheard 14 The List Liberace of Baghdad. Wall. 2 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 Stalking... Shelby Knox, documentary subject Each day The Daily Insider tracks a different person through the Festival. Today’s column was contributed by the dynamic young woman whose story is documented in The Education of Shelby Knox. 2:58 am: I just woke up and ran to my suitcase to check that my black sweater is indeed tucked safely inside. I am not sure why I thought it wasn’t, but maybe I can sleep now. 3:24 am: Now I am boiling water for some tea in hopes of calming the butterflies in my stomach and salvaging any hope of sleep before my alarm goes off at 5:00 am. 4:15 am: The butterflies must find tea invigorating because they are flapping harder than before. I give up. I am definitely awake now. I am going to go get in the shower and try to calm down. I have never been so excited or nervous in my life. 5:45 am: I can’t get my suitcase closed. I have way too much stuff. I just don’t know what I’ll want to wear. 7:45 am: On board the plane now, still shaking with excitement. I can’t believe I am finally leaving. I am headed to the Sundance Film Festival. I keep thinking things like “this don’t happen to little girls from Lubbock, Texas.” I am so lucky, so grateful and so excited. Shelby Knox. 11:00 am: I am in the air somewhere over Utah. The snowcapped mountains are beautiful. I’ve never seen so much snow. I am getting antsy and restless. I am so ready to be in Park City. I have redone my makeup, again. I want to look semihuman when the Sundance Channel crew picks me up at the Salt Lake City airport. 11:36 am: Just landed, in the fog! It was really scary and really interesting landing. I am so excited to finally be here. I have been waiting since November. The Sundance Channel crew picked me up, and now we are driving to Park City to meet the filmmakers, Marion and Rose, at the condo. 12:14 pm: It’s so fun to see Marion and Rose, and to see all this amazing snow. There are so many people in this condo and they all are going in different directions at the same time. Rose and I are going to go swimming to escape all this craziness. 2:15 pm: We miss the pool hours. Now we’re heading over to headquarters so I can meet our publicist, Susan Norget. She gave me an update and schedule. 4:00 pm: I went to get a MAC makeover. It was so amazing. I got false eyelashes! I look older, I think. I hope I look like myself for the premiere! 5:55 pm: My screening starts in two minutes and we’re stuck in traffic. 6:19 pm: Arrive at the screening only to be ushered into a corner, so no one knows I am here. Problem is, there is a film crew following me and a guy trying to take my picture. I am shown to my seat after the theater is dark. 8:00 pm: I absolutely loved the film. I’ve seen a rough cut, but this is the first time I’ve seen the finished film. I am proud to be part of such a wonderful project. The Q & A is amazing. I love connecting with an audience that just saw my film. I can’t wait to see what other audiences think. 10:30 pm: At some restaurant, trying not to fall asleep in my salad. It feels an hour later than it is to me, and I have been awake a long time. These people came up to me and said they had seen the film and had been watching me all through dinner. They wanted my autograph! I was very nice and signed their notebooks, but inside I was wondering why they would want the autograph of a teenage girl from Texas. Maybe this is all bigger than I thought. Whatever it is, I love it and can’t wait to see what happens next. Shelby Knox is currently a sophomore at the University of Texas at Austin majoring in political science. Her birthday is the same as Bill Clinton’s. 3 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 Are We at War With Ourselves? { BY ANDY BAILEY, STAFF WRITER } The Sundance Film Festival on Saturday afternoon launched the first of several panels scheduled this week at the Yarrow Hotel Theatre exploring issues pertaining to filmmaking and its impact on society. As introduced by Festival programmer Caroline Libresco, The Culture Wars delved into the aftermath of last year’s presidential election, positing a general inquiry into how culture informs moral values in this country in the wake of an election that was supposedly won on moral values. Marty Kaplan, associate dean of the Annenberg School of Communications at the University of California and a former motion picture and television producer, moderated a panel that included writer-director Don Roos, whose current feature Happy Endings opened this year’s Festival; best-selling novelist Walter Mosley; musician and filmmaker Michael Franti; Byron Turk, the White House Correspondent for the National Review as well as the author of The Vast Left-Wing Conspiracy; Hamburg Cell director Antonia Bird, a last-minute replacement for Killer Films producer Christine Vachon; and former Clinton White House Chief of Staff John Podesta, who is currently the director of the Center for American Progress, a nonpartisan research and educational institute promoting civil liberties that co-sponsored the event. The conversation opened with Kaplan’s insistence that the so-called cultural wars that have come to divide the country into red and blue factions are, in fact, wars that have existed for some time. “There are old themes, in our country and in all of thinking about society,” Kaplan said. “When we talk about these wars, there are deep roots sunk.” Subjects examined during the 90-minute panel included such wildly diverse topics as F.C.C. censorship, the success of the African-American publishing industry, Janet Jackson’s wardrobe malfunction, same sex Editorial Director & Publisher JESSICA BUZZARD Editor MAUD KERSNOWSKI civil rights, new distribution channels for documentary films and the eternal struggle for access to funding for independent filmmakers. Kaplan kicked off his argument with remarks made during President George W. Bush’s recent inauguration and questioned the President’s insistence that Americans are experiencing more personal freedoms right now than at any other time in history. Turk, the lone conservative panelist responded, “The state of civil liberties has been perfectly fine under Bush, considering the aftermath of 9/11,” prompting vocal disagreement from some members of the audience. Roos, who is openly gay and recently obtained a civil union in Vermont with his companion of twelve years, surprised the audience by agreeing with Turk’s claim, adding that he has not noticed any reductions in his civil rights despite so much chatter from the Left indicating otherwise. “I feel perfectly fine and freer than I did when I was in my 20’s, when you were more free to denigrate homosexuals,” Roos said, adding that he would still not patronize the states that would have denied him the right to marry his significant other. Later, after it was revealed by Podesta that the popular ABC series Desperate Housewives is just as popular among so-called red states and blue states, the Los Angeles-based Roos proclaimed that all Americans were sexual hypocrites. “It’s a very human thing,” CONTINUED ON PAGE {4 } Wilshire Screening Room An Official Provider for the 2005 Sundance Film Festival Dolby Digital with Surround-EX & E HD Digital Projection / 6-trk mag Plush / 6 feet between rows 24 / 7 /365 Layout Coordinator RICK BALIAN Ranked Highest in Variety’s Small is Beautiful Photo Editor KELLY SCHAEFER Staff Writers ANDY BAILEY ANN LEWINSON ANDREA MEYER CLAIBORNE SMITH Contributors Michael S. Hall, President Cell (310) 701-8925 Phone (310) 659-3875 8670 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 112 Beverly Hills, CA 90211 JEFF HANSON BOB MOCZYDLOWSKY MIKE PLANTE ELIZABETH RICHARDSON Photography generously provided by WireImage, the Official Photography Provider of the 2005 Sundance Film Festival Volume 2, Issue 3 Printed daily on recycled paper Art Gallery and Reception Room www.StudioScreenings.com Official Press, Programmer and Jury screening room for the 2005 IFP/LA Film Festival 4 2005 Sundance Film Festival CULTURE, CONTINUED FROM PAGE Sunday, January 23, 2005 {1 } ity, usurp McAllister’s original plans, being taken over by a subject (or subjects) is precisely what Simone Bitton had in mind when she began shooting Wall, her searching and spare examination of the Israeli construction of a gargantuan and extended wall between its own nation and Palestinian territory. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict may be the most well-recorded conflict in modern history, but for many people, it is far from clear what either side demands from the other, or hopes to attain. “People see it on the media every day, every night,” said Bitton, who has made more than 15 films about the Middle East and North Africa. “They all say, ‘We don’t understand anymore.’” The issue is complex, “there’s no real explanation; the media makes things more complicated than they are,” Bitton said So Bitton, an Israeli and French citizen who also speaks Arabic, decided to construct a document that would provide ruthless clarity on the matter. One of her techniques while filming the land around the wall was to leave the camera and microphone on in long, long takes. People would approach the crew out of curiosity. “Oh, you’re filming the fence,” they would say. “What do you think about it?” the filmmaker would ask. And then the people would begin talking about themselves and their own perceptions of the stark edifice before them. In many cases, Bitton decided not to film their faces. Instead, she lets them talk. “They think about the wall and they meditate about it with the spectator,” she pointed out. “It’s the truth of the shoot. It’s not an edited manipulation.” Bitton’s stylized take on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict does not feature any stock footage of the war, and its only talking-head interview is left wholly intact, interspersed throughout the film in long, eerie takes. There is a spare poetry to it. “A poetic aesthetic has existed for a very long time in documentary in certain parts of Europe,” Weyerman said. “But it hasn’t been exposed in this country that much.” To say that a film is “poetic” makes it sound like it is something you should watch rather than something you want to watch. But poetic documentaries, like other movies, can entertain. Mercedes Moncada Rodríquez has learned that lesson well, but that may be because she doesn’t think of herself as a poetic documentary filmmaker. El Inmortal, her incantatory and haunting portrait of a rural Nicaraguan family still reeling from that country’s civil war in the early 80s, reveals itself in elliptical layers of increasing tension. After interviewing scores of families in rural Nicaragua, Rodríquez found a family whose siblings were forced to fight against one another in war. “So when I shot at someone, I would say, ‘Please Lord, let my bullets never hit anyone in my family,’” one of the daughters says. “That is what I would say, but I had to defend myself.” Coming across the corpses of enemy soldiers on the battlefield, she would turn them around if she couldn’t see their faces – that way she could determine if one of them was her brother. Grim stuff, but El Inmortal is a visual wonder: Rodríquez, who lives in Madrid but grew up in Nicaragua, captures the death rattle of a just-slaughtered pig, but rather than display the carnage, her camera sticks tight to the bloody knife the pig’s killer dangles eerily above its head. A strange and ominous bus named El Inmortal appears in odd spots in the village, and appears to call forth mala suerte, more insidious than mere “bad luck,” its English translation. But do not call Rodríquez a poet. “I don’t think my intention is poetic; my intention is cinematic,” she said. “The way I try to make a film is to keep in the abstractions,” she said. “In some cases, if you are only filming the reality and talking heads, that’s very limited. I am talking with real people, and I have a responsibility to the things they are saying to me, but I can’t clearly separate the line between fiction and documentary.” If there is one war documentary at the Festival this year that is emblematic of a “European” sensibility, it is Finnish filmmaker Pirjo Honkasalo’s The 3 Rooms of Melancholia, an unreservedly bleak, and affecting, portrait of the children caught in the conflict between Russia and Chechnya. The three “rooms” of the title are the film’s WAR, CONTINUED FROM PAGE ShouldYou Be Taking Your Film Business To New Mexico? Find out why it may not be such a great idea at www.hsus.org/ New_ Mexico_cockfighting Promoting the protection of all animals That particular drama – the kind that makes you want to look away it’s so painful – can easily cross over into maudlin territory, but Honkasalo’s patient eye follows the children beyond that moment of crisis into the more settled life that ensues. They were taken from their mother by a woman named Hadizhat, who “collects children” and gives them new homes. She is the quiet mover of this film, never interviewed or explained, although her work and her personality are gripping. Partly because of its refusal to over-analyze what it depicts, The 3 Rooms of Melancholia has the power to leave a viewer quite literally speechless. It almost goes without saying that “these are not films that will likely have a huge commercial potential,” as Weyerman pointed out. That may be the grim reality, all the more grim because all of the war documentaries at the Festival this year manage to express something universal through the details of their subjects’ lives, and deserve large audiences. But Weyerman thinks the future is positive for documentaries like these whose style may seem so foreign to Americans. “Distributors are taking a chance on docs in general that are not commercial, but will appeal to a limited audience and are more artistic,” she said. “It would not be unlike many feature films that are not going to reach a large audience, but will reach a smaller, target audience. With the theatrical marketplace opening up, there is room for these kinds of films.” {3 } Roos said. “We like to watch Desperate Housewives but if you quizzed us about it the next day, we’d say we object. We’re always at war with ourselves.” One of the more thoughtful questions that surfaced during the panel was whether the majority of the country was more tolerant and open-minded than the current political climate would lead to believe. Could this perception be more of an issue of grandstanding politicians trying to push a conservative agenda? In response to the ratings success of Desperate Housewives, Podesta indicated that the so-called red states hardly seem offended by the prime-time hit. “People aren’t exactly rising up and demanding change,” he said of the program. Bird, a native Britain who holds a green card that permits her to work in the United States, criticized the American media and the way it covers world events before condemning capitalism and its tendency to disenfran- Required Viewing Film Sales and Marketing 48 Perry Street suite 3E NY, NY 10019, (917) 287-1679 email: sterapha@aol.com three sad sections (“longing,” “breathing” and “remembering”), and in each one Honkasalo portrays, with very little dialogue, the ways in which conflict works itself into daily life: a child playing in a gas mask even though there’s no evident war going on around him; a boy who’s shunned at the Kronstadt Cadet Academy because the other boys think he’s Chechen. But the scenes that have the power to make viewers shuffle and cringe in their seats involve a group of young siblings who are taken from their mother because she is too sick to take care of them. They are very young, but they all seem to sense that they will probably never see their mother again. chise those without access to power. “I’m not a fan of capitalism,” Bird said. “I don’t think it works and I’d like to see it ended.” She also spoke out against the small number of media organizations who hold the power to determine what audiences can and cannot see. Mosley agreed with Bird, “There’s such a small group of people who make those decisions that those decisions start to [resemble] a caste [system],” he said. Other topics addressed included the recent attack on the popular children’s cartoon SpongeBob SquarePants by the conservative Focus on the Family leader James Dobson, who claimed that the television series supported a pro-homosexual lifestyle rooted in personal choice and encouraged the idea of tolerance for other sexual identities. Amid laughter from the audience, Podesta reminded his fellow panelists that sponges do not have even sexes and therefore could not be held accountable to Dobson’s assertions. Sundance Institute President and Founder Robert Redford welcomed filmmakers and other guests to Sundance Village for the traditional filmmaker’s brunch yesterday, emphasizing that Sundance is first and foremost a filmmaker’s festival. On a Clear Day director Gabby Dellal, Juror Jehane Noujaim, and Sundance Documentary Program Director Diane Weyermann were among those who escaped the hustle and bustle of Park City to attend the event. 5 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 BACK STORY Romántico { BY CLAIRBORNE SMITH, STAFF WRITER Like the Mexican mariachi singers in his documentary Romántico, director Mark Becker (Jules at Eight) used to walk the streets of San Francisco’s Mission District. He would approach the mariachis, introduce himself, chat with them, and ask them if they would mind answering a few questions for a short, character-based documentary he wanted to make about mariachis in the Mission District. Becker, who co-edited The Lost Boys of Sudan, wanted to comment on “the nature of how people risk their lives to come to the United States. And the U.S. in so many ways encourages and also tries to prevent it.” } musical partner; in Mexico, he began “belting it out,” as Becker said. “There was something very moving about the beauty of having a revelation about Carmelo. Instead of having that be a voice-over, I let the viewer see it. I tried to make the whole film a series of revelations about Carmelo.” But that’s almost an accident; by the time he got to Mexico, Becker knew that overt commentary about immigration was not what he was after. “When my film is working at its best,” he said, “it’s about Carmelo striving to find peace and happiness.” Those revelations are small, specific, compelling, charming, and sometimes sad. “There’s no enormous drama in the film where something’s happening and you want to know what’s going to happen. Will they live? Will they win the big basketball game?” Becker pointed out. The bittersweet little details of Carmelo’s life are, in fact, indicative of the confused immigration policy between the United States and Mexico. Carmelo Muñiz Sanchez. Potential subjects were not difficult to spot —Hispanic men loaded down with guitars; Hispanic men peering into restaurant windows to see if their services were needed; Hispanic men who may not have spoken a word of English. But pinpointing one trusting and engaging subject who would talk about his illegal status remained, for a time, elusive. “If I put myself in their shoes, it seems like it might be pretty random for them when I approached them,” Becker said. “I’m always a little shy about it.” And then one afternoon, Becker came across Carmelo Muñiz Sanchez, a genial and earnest 57year-old man who revealed to him that he had been waiting to tell his life story for some time. “I hope I don’t disappoint him,” Becker thought, because the filmmaker wanted to depict the ways in which U.S. immigration policy had fomented an “amazing bachelor culture” of mariachis that Sanchez was only one member of — a group of men “all living together sort of like surrogate families.” Five days after Becker started shooting, Sanchez announced that he was going back to Mexico, torn between the good money he could make in the U.S. and his regret at being an absentee father and husband. Sanchez’s decision ruined Becker’s notion that Romántico would be “a film that was going to hold Mexico at bay” and changed it “to one that very much lets you experience Mexico.” “I knew that I wanted to follow him, but I didn’t have the money,” Becker recalled. Two months later, after raising more funds, Becker watched as Sanchez revealed more aspects of himself in Salvatierra, his little hometown in the state of Guanajuato. In San Francisco, Sanchez was always la segunda voz, the back-up singer, when performing with Arturo, his Clayton Chase/Wireimage.com But personality quickly trumped any overt discussion of immigration policy in Becker’s formulation of his documentary. “It was definitely Sanchez’s openness that was the catalyst for the film being about him,” Becker said. And there were the “little surprises” Sanchez kept throwing Becker’s way: Sanchez disclosed that he had been cursed at one time, and used to think he was an awful father and husband. Even though he felt supremely in charge of his own destiny, he bathed in garlic water, just like the spiritual curandera adviser told him. Sanchez —uneducated and wanting to carve out only a tiny niche in the world for himself — was becoming a poetically complex man. 6 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 AVID <> HD Your story. Avid Xpress Pro HD Tell it with Avid Xpress® Pro HD. The industry’s leading editing environment. An unmatched array of creative options and professional features. Incredibly flexible HD, SD, DV, and film support. Everything a filmmaker needs in one very affordable package. Make a powerful connection. Avid Xpress Pro HD software is part of the Avid family of professional editing solutions, so you can take your skills—and your ideas—to a whole new level. You won’t compromise. Neither will we. That’s why today’s leading artists choose the tools that revolutionized the way the world tells its stories. This is your time. These are your tools. www.avid.com/xpressproHD $1,695 USMSRP. Educational pricing available. 800.949.AVID © 2005 Avid Technology, Inc. All rights reserved. Product features, specifications, system requirements, and availability are subject to change without notice. All prices are USMSRP for the U.S. and Canada only and are subject to change without notice. Contact your local Avid office or reseller for prices outside the U.S. and Canada. Avid, Avid Xpress, and make manage move | media are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Avid Technology, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries. All other trademarks contained herein are the property of their respective owners. 7 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 FROM THE STREET Q&A The Talent Given Us { BY ANN LEWINSON, STAFF WRITER { BY ANDREA MEYER, STAFF } Question: If you could meet one person at the festival, who would it be? Why? What would you say to them? } Judy and Allen Wagner’s quiet Upper West Side life of Q: How much was improvisation and how much was written? Andrew Wagner: This is a scripted narrative. That being said, there were moments when we certainly made discoveries. Particularly with my mom and dad, who are non-actors — whereas my sisters and Bumby [Judy Dixon] and Billy are actors — I wanted to let them have some latitude in finding their way in the scenes. So rather than having my dad fixated on the script, if he needed to find some word for something, it was certainly okay. But from start to finish it’s a script. Q: How long did it take you to convince your parents to do this? Andrew Wagner: The better part of three to four months. I think they said “no” about six different times. My mom’s first answer was, “Who wants to look at my fat face?” Photos by Andrea Meyer crossword puzzles and Zabar’s turns upside down when, during a contentious trip with daughters Emily and Maggie to their beach house, Judy suddenly decides they will drive cross-country to see their son Andrew. But wait, isn’t he the man behind the camera? In his first feature, Andrew Wagner used the talent given him, casting his family and friends, actors Judy Dixon and Billy Wirth, in a road movie in which the Wagners are forced to confront their strained marriage and two very neurotic daughters. At an audience Q&A after the premiere of The Talent Given Us, Andrew Wagner and his cast spoke about the challenges of making the ultimate home movie. Andrew Wagner directing All the Talent Given Us. Doug Sadler, Director, Swimmers: Emily Wagner: It wasn’t for me because I just think it’s fun. I really enjoy going to those places. The more weird and scary and challenging and uncomfortable, I think as actors you kind of get more out of it. “Steve Buscemi and I would say, ‘Buy me a pint.’ He would be a good guy to drink a pint with.” Maggie Wagner: For me it was just fun to be me in a movie. I guess I’m kind of interesting, now that I watch myself. I guess we all are — more than we really thought. It was fun just to be who you really are. You don’t really get that chance when you’re an actress —you’re playing parts, you’re bringing yourself to the role, but you’re not really yourself. Andrew Wagner: You are very interesting. I’ve always felt that. Q: How was it directing your family? Allen, Judy and Emily Wagner. Q: How much of it is autobiographical? Andrew Wagner: It draws heavily from an emotional and a historical truth. Definitely for me it was genre-bending. Without a doubt, coming out of the gate our intention was to make a film, and for it to survive as a creative work, but in no uncertain terms it was very important to me that we really try to be as vulnerable as possible to bring reality to that story. Q: How come you’re not in the movie? Andrew Wagner: I did peek in at the end of the film. I have a mild confession of sorts — there was a smaller scene where I tried a little bit to participate in the story, but I’m better behind the camera. And ultimately it’s not about me. I hope it doesn’t seem like I’m taking potshots at anyone. In the event that it seems that way, I have my ex-girlfriend bringing me down a few notches. Q: Were some of the scenes you did difficult for your sisters, like talking about sex with your parents? Was it ever uncomfortable, or were you just in the mode of “I’m acting?” Andrew Wagner: It is amazing because in the last 12 hours of being here together, I have wondered how we did this for 37 days. I can’t for the life of me imagine what was happening inside of me that drove me to pull this all together and stay with it, but that’s with reflection and time. In the making of it, it was a really dynamic and vital experience. Had I made this 10 years ago, I probably would have been much more blinded by all the emotional and psychological ties that we all have in the family, but at the ripe age of 41 – well, 40 when I was making this – I stepped back a bit and really treated it as a story. So it didn’t take long for me directorially to find that observational posture and just see where this story would bring us — toward intimacy and exposure and possibly some revelation — and to that end I can only say that the actors just availed themselves in the most surprising and complete way. My mother, her style is to get hysterical about things before she does them but then just go totally into them, and from the moment we started shooting she had her script out and was memorizing her lines and was very concerned about continuity and wardrobe. With my father I had some suspicion that if he could just forget that the camera was there, he might portray some of that beautiful and heartbreaking life force and affliction. It was just like life for him. And my sisters, they’re just pros, love to work, ready to just get busy and be involved in something creative and artistic. And of course Bumby and Billy, I’ve worked with these guys for years, and they’re just always ready and always 100% there. Chris Thrasher, Publicist, Billy's Dad is a Fudge-packer : “The lift ticket guy on the ski slopes. ‘How ya doin'? Nice to get away from the festival for a change.’” Rebecca Sekulich, event director, Queer Lounge: “Nicole Kidman, she’s the most beautiful person I’ve ever seen in my whole life. She’s amazing. I’d say that she should come visit us, because she embraces the community.” Q: Were there other filmmakers whom you looked to for inspiration? Andrew Wagner: When it came to using my family, no, I can’t say I looked to anyone for that — that came from pure desperation. You’re 40 years old and teaching public school — great kids, I love them — and I just could not find the door into my career. I’ve been at this for 20 years. There were certain circumstances that led me to this story, but what came after that was, “My God, I have to use my parents!” I fought that off for months until it proved irresistible, in spite of the warnings from all my friends. The second part of the answer is about my professional heroes, and there’re so many, but I certainly look towards the films of Mike Leigh and John Cassavetes in terms of their attention to the detail and intimacy, finding the extraordinary in the ordinary and celebrating small moments. I have a sneaking suspicion and hope that the aggregate of these small moments might lead to something that hopefully can make you feel something. Germaine Lewis, aspiring actor and student: “I'd like to meet Mr. Robert Redford himself because he started it all. What would I say to him? ‘Great job!’” 2005 Sundance Film Festival 8 Sunday, January 23, 2005 2005 Sundance Film Festival 9 Sunday, January 23, 2005 10 2005 Sundance Film Festival Music Café: Sunpants Sunday, January 23, 2005 by Bob Moczydlowsky, Contributor “Raz Mesinai, Gary Louris, and Pete Fitzpatrick are three very different musical personalities and come together as performers in a unique way,” said Peter Golub, Director, Sundance Institute Film Music Program. “They each come from a different part of the present musical terrain, but each has an uncanny ability to bring the narrative, storytelling element into their music.” That challenge—to sublimate individual expression in favor of collaborative service to a director’s images and emotions—is part of what attracted the three musicians to the Composers Lab master class. That, and the opportunity to be influenced by the musical processes of the program’s accomplished creative advisors Osvaldo Golijov, Thomas Newman, and Bill Bernstein. “Osvaldo Golijov is one of my favorite composers, so to work with him, and to take criticism from Thomas Newman after trying to score scenes from Road to Perdition, it was a great learning experience,” Mesinai said. “I’m a loner. I work on my own. I never used to trust anyone with my ideas. But directors have to trust composers, and they are going to let you know if it isn’t working. I understand that feeling, and learned that we musicians have a lot to learn CONTINUED ON Pete Fitzpatrick. It is not often that a band plays its first-ever show in the Festival’s Music Café, especially with just a single rehearsal. But that is exactly what happens tonight when Gary Louris, Pete Fitzpatrick and Raz Mesinai—three of this year’s Film Music Program Composers Lab fellows— take the stage for a loose, experimental performance of each members’ songs and compositions. “It is going to be like what we were doing in the Lab, off the cuff,” said Louris when asked about the performance. “We may even, God forbid, just jam a bit. I don’t even know if I’m going to sing. We probably won’t have a set list.” “The idea is to have a little show of how these three diverse guys can get together and make some beautiful harmony,” Fitzpatrick added. “We truly did influence each other during the Lab program. So we’re feeling some pressure to make music that represents the program. It’ll Raz Mesinai (left) and Gary Louris. be a party atmosphere. We want to get into some killer grooves, have fun, and ideally a few people will like it.” But do not fret. These guys are not Johnny-come-lately indie rock darlings. Louris is a prodigiously gifted singer/ songwriter who helmed the pioneering alt-country band The Jayhawks, enjoying a near 20-year run beginning with the rise of the No Depression scene and ending with the universally praised 2003 album Rainy Day Music. He is also a founding member of the roots-rock super-group Golden Smog, loosely comprised of musicians from Soul Asylum, Wilco, and The Replacements. Mesinai is a Middle Eastern-influenced composer, percussionist, and engineer who has released albums under the monikers Badawi and Sub Dub for John Zorn’s avant-garde label Tzadik. He also recently contributed to the score of director Mark Becker’s documentary Romantico, screening in the Festival’s American Documentary Competition. Fitzpatrick is a guitarist and multi-instrumentalist for the art pop outfit Clem Snide, and he also writes and records with his own band, The Pee Wee Fist. He recently added his signature bowed-banjo sound to the score of director Hank Rogerson’s Shakespeare Behind Bars (also screening in the American Documentary Competition), along with writing, directing, and scoring his own short film, Iris. { 11 } 11 2005 Sundance Film Festival MUSIC CAFÉ, CONTINUED FROM { 10 } Sunday, January 23, 2005 Sundance on Any Budget from directors. If we can let go of some ego and support what they’re doing, we can get a lot out of that process.” { For Louris, who found significant inspiration in the talents of the other fellows, the lab experience solidified his desire to work outside of a touring band’s constraints — hence, tonight’s adventurous and collaborative performance. “When I was asked to perform at the Festival, I thought we should exhibit the spirit of the lab,” Louris chuckled. “It was this intensive schooling — learning about the process, working with other lab — participants, and growing close to them all. We learned to be a little more subservient, more of a complement to other ideas than our own self-centered expression, which can be hard for a songwriter, you know.” Onstage tonight, Louris, Mesinai, and Fitzpatrick will attempt to “score” each other’s songs. Expect a dizzying array of sampled beats, electric banjo, guitar effects, and hand drumming. There will also be country-twinged vocal harmonies, an occasional electronic beep or blip, and a recurring Middle Eastern vibe. “We’re all contributing something, and we’re all ready to do some deconstructing,” Fitzpatrick said with a laugh. “We will sort of remix each other’s songs as we play live,” added Mesinai. “It’s going to be really diverse from one song to the next. We’ve never played together, and there will be only one day of rehearsing. It is really going to be fun.” Gary Louris, Raz Mesinai, and Pete Fitzpatrick take up the wry new band name Sunpants for tonight’s 9:15 p.m. performance at the Music Café. Sunpants is playing tonight from 9:15 ro 10. Also scheduled are alaska!, Andy Tubman and The Jane Does, and Calexico. For evening events at the Music Café, credential holders and pre-paid tickets receive priority admittance (tickets can be purchased at the main box office). The general public will be admitted on a space-available basis for a $10.00 cover charge. The Music Café is located at the Star Bar at Plan B, 268 Main Street. BY ELIZABETH RICHARDSON, CONTRIBUTOR } Sundance on 0 Dollars Sundance on Unlimited Dollars Lodging On the floor in the condos of push-over Sundance staff. The house where Greenlight put up J. Lo and Ben. Transportation Trudging home at 3 am in frozen sneakers. Helicopter. Dining Free party hors d’oeuvres and vodka. Free party hors d’oeuvres and vodka. Pick-up Line Do you know where Albertson’s is? Naomi’s having a little get-together later. Want to come along? Dayjob Selling popcorn at the ArcLight. Hollywood phony. Role Model Sundance Directing Award winner. Whoever is currently top dog on EW’s A-List. Accessory Jansport backpack (filled with free energy bars). Small dog wearing sheepskin coat. Cell Phone Ring Tone Deathstar theme song. Can’t figure out how to change it. Favorite Sundance Venue Eccles (balcony). Eccles (lobby). Festival Crush Volunteer distributing cute headshots. Festival Programmer with the disarming smile. Extracurricular Activity Boarding. Room service. Skeleton in Closet Never saw Primer. Said Napoleon Dynamite would flop. THE FOLLOWING SPONSORS OF THE 2005 SUNDANCE FILM FESTIVAL HAVE BEEN RATED G PRESENTING SPONSORS LEADERSHIP SPONSORS SUSTAINING SPONSORS FOR GENEROUS PERSONS OF ALL AGES ATTENDING THE FESTIVAL OWE THESE SPONSORS A BIG “THANK YOU.” 12 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 SHORT SHOT Flotsam/Jetsam { BY ANDY BAILEY, STAFF WRITER } Merry multimedia pranksters with a flair for the absurd, the Austin, Texas-based filmmakers Nathan and David Zellner dare you to question the veracity of their outrageous cinematic universe. In their short film Flotsam/Jetsam, a man adrift at sea suffers a gar- David (left) and Nathan Zellner. ish freak accident that the actor/producer Nathan and writer/director David insists really happened during the shoot. “Naysayers challenge the notion of a cinema verité, but we beg to differ,” David said, coyly. “Film is the purest, most truthful and untainted art form to have ever existed. The same goes for videotape, which some studies indicate being 24% more pure and truthful even than film.” The Zellners are no strangers to rollicking absurdity in both life and art. The siblings’ professional bio indicates that both appeared as featured extras in Pasolini’s orgiastic 1976 “coming-of-age” drama, Salo, which would have occurred when both were children. But wait, this is a true story. “Thanks in part to a summer filmmaking camp, Salo was our first exposure to all the components that combine to create movie magic,” David boasted. “I was ‘Mangia Victim #17’ and Nathan was ‘Mangia Victim #11.’” The brothers arrive in Park City with several short films and two features to their name, including the self-financed 1998 drama Plastic Utopia, hailed by Film Threat as “David Lynch meets the Zucker Brothers meets the Coen Brothers,” and 2002’s Guy Maddinesque Frontier, in which the Zellners painstakingly (and side-splittingly) created the quasi-fictional kingdom of Bulbovia, nestled at the foot of the Carpathian Mountains. “We wanted to make an Eastern-European surrealist war movie,” insisted Nathan. “So we employed the language of the little-known country of Bulbovia, which is the most downtrodden country in the history of the world — one that has been occupied by almost every nation of any significance including Switzerland. It’s based on an old folk tale we adapted for the big screen — the first U.S.Bulbovian coproduction.” Colorado born and Texas bred, the Zellners share a scant year-and-a-half age difference that has fostered a close working relationship ever since Nathan joined David in Austin after his brother completed a film studies degree at the University of Texas. They started a production company, Fortified, and threw themselves into the vibrant Austin film scene that counts Richard Linklater and Robert Rodriguez as founding fathers and patron saints. Like the denizens of Linklater’s Slacker, the Austin film scene is densely interwoven, with key players sharing actors, crew members, and equipment. In true Austinstyle, the Zellners obtained the services of star animator Bob Sabiston (Waking Life, A Scanner Darkly) for a grueling day’s shoot in the Gulf of Mexico. The brothers have also collaborated with actor Wiley Wiggins (Dazed and Confused) on several films. “It’s an easy place to get stuff made on a small scale,” said Nathan of the duo’s home base. To view more of the Zellners’ work, visit their website at www.forthq.com, their webzine POI at www.poi.cc/ or view their music video for Bulbovian technoclash superstars Precarious Warehäus Dwellers at www. atomfilms.com 13 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 William Greaves and Louise Archambault at the "Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take 2 1/2" Premiere. Fred Hayes/Wireimage.com Rebecca Sapp/Wireimage.com Jemal Countess/Wireimage.com SEEN AND OVERHEARD Billy Boyd, Peter Mullan, Benedict Wong, Gaby Dellal, director of "On A Clear Day" and Brenda Blethyn at Opening Night Salt Lake. Randall Michelson/Wireimage.com Mark Duplass, writer/director of "Puffy Chair", Steve Lawson, executive director of the Williamson Film Festival, Jay Duplass, director of "Puffy Chair" and Kathryn Aselton, at the Opening Night Reception. Rebecca Sapp/Wireimage.com Clayton Chase/Wireimage.com La Nina, Miss Prissy, and Daisy at the Rize premiere. Ziad Doueiri at the“Lila Says” Premiere. Rebecca Sapp/Wireimage.com Geoff Sands and David Cole at the Sundance Patron Council Reception. Joey Pantoliano and Martin Luther at the VW Music Party. Jennifer Hathorne at Opening Night Salt Lake. Rusty White/Wireimage.com Fred Hayes/Wireimage.com Soren McCarty/Wireimage.com Ken Brecher and Margaret Wilkerson. Richard Edson and Sara Driver, producer of "Stranger Than Paradise" at the "Stranger Than Paradise" Sundance Collection Screening. 14 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 The List Panels and Events The List: Sunday, January 23 and Saturday, January 24 All events take place in Park City unless otherwise indicated. Sunday, January 23 8:00 am – 9:30 am Yoga, offered by Aquafina Sundance House 10:00 am – 2:00 pm Adobe Systems Incorporated Filmmaker Workshops Digital Center 10:30 am, 11:30 am, 1:30 am and 3:30 pm Filmmaker Workshops: Hewlett-Packard/Avid Digital Center 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Panel: The World is Watching Filmmaker Lodge 12:00 pm Panavision Filmmaker Workshop Digital Center 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm Meet the Foreign Press Filmmaker Lodge 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm Stella Artois beer, Aquafina water, live music and a sponsor giveaway from CESAR Food for Small Dogs Sundance House 2:30 pm Dresden Dolls Music Café, Day Café programmed by ASCAP 3:00 pm Panel: Imaginary Worlds: Animation and Computer-Generated Reality Egyptian Theatre 3:00 pm Online Frontier Project Presentations from the Sundance Online Film Festival (www.sundance.org) Digital Center 3:10 pm Nellie McKay Music Café, Day Café programmed by ASCAP 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm Stella Artois beer, Aquafina water, live music and a sponsor giveaway from Cingular Wireless Sundance House Festivalgoers camping outside the Main Box Office in order to be the first in line for tickets the next morning. “We’ve been here since 8:00 tonight and it opens at 8:00 in the morning. We want to see movies!” exclaimed Katie Field (far left). Michael Perez next to her continued, “Sundance movies are the best. We go to Hollywood Video and all we rent are Sundance movies.” w11:15 pm Calexico Music Café (ticketed event) Monday, January 24 8:00 am — 9:30 am Yoga, sponsored by Aquafina Sundance House 10:00 am, 4:00 pm Adobe Systems Incorporated Filmmaker Workshops: Digital Intermediate Workflow for Desktop PCs Digital Center 2:00 pm — 4:00 pm Stella Artois beer, water from the Aquafina Hydration Station and live music Sponsor giveaway: DirecTV Sundance House 2:30 pm Linda Perry Music Café, Day Café sponsored by ASCAP 3:00 pm The Sex Stays in the Picture (ticketed panel) Yarrow Theatre 3:00 pm Sundance Online Film Festival (SOFF) Digital Center 3:50 pm Peter Cincotti Music Café, Day Café programmed by ASCAP 10:00 am — 12:30 pm Meet and Greet the Commissioning Editors: U.S. and International Documentary Strands (advance sign-up required) Filmmaker Lodge 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm Wine Escape, hosted by PBS Filmmaker Lodge 10:30 am, 11:30 am, 1:30 pm and 3:30 pm Hewlett-Packard/Avid Filmmaker Workshops Digital Center 3:50 pm Peter Cincotti Music Café, Day Café produced by ASCAP 8:30 pm alaska! Music Café (ticketed event) 12:00 pm Forum: The New Digital Market Digital Center 4:00 pm — 6:00 pm Wine Escape, hosted by HBO Filmmaker Lodge 9:15 pm Sunpants (Gary Louris, Raz Mesinai, Pete Fitzpatrick) Music Café (ticketed event) 12:00 pm, 2:00 pm Sony Filmmaker Workshop Digital Center 4:30 pm Nellie McKay, Day Café produced by ASCAP 10:00 pm Andy Tubman and The Jane Does Music Café (ticketed event) 2:00 pm — to 3:30 pm Panel: The New Doc Market Filmmaker Lodge 3:10 pm Billy Currington Music Café, Day Café produced by ASCAP 5:10 pm Michael McDonald, Day Café produced by ASCAP 2005 Sundance Film Festival 15 Sunday, January 23, 2005 VWAJTAP5134-C 16 2005 Sundance Film Festival Sunday, January 23, 2005 RED JETTA, concerned, turns to WHITE JETTA. RED JETTA: Don’t let him get under your skin. White Jetta motions toward Black Jetta. WHITE JETTA: This town ain’t big enough for the two of us. RED JETTA: Oh, please be careful. You don’t know what he’s capable of. WHITE JETTA: What must be, must be. Cont’d. tomorrow... Introducing the new Volkswagen Jetta. A new character and proud participant of the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. To meet our latest protagonist in person or get a ride, come by The 2005 Sundance Volkswagen Main Street Lounge at 301Main Street. While there check your email, charge your cell and maybe catch a celebrity interview as you relax in our cool space, designed in part by Todd Oldham. And oh yeah, we have s’mores. Spice Red Jetta shown available in Canada only at time of launch.