ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP! Ezra Alexandra Stuff and Dough
Transcription
ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP! Ezra Alexandra Stuff and Dough
FF1_winter08_p1.qxd 11/26/07 2:49 PM Page 1 J A N U A R Y – M AY 2 0 0 8 ADMISSION: $10.50 NON-MEMBERS / $5.50 MEMBERS A NONPROFIT CINEMA SINCE 1970 BUY TICKETS ONLINE! PREMIERES 209 WEST HOUSTON ST. NEW YORK, NY 10014 BOX OFFICE: (212) 727-8110 E-MAIL: filmforum@filmforum.org www.filmforum.org RECEIVE OUR E-NEWSLETTER WEEKLY! Go to: www.filmforum.org/info CALENDAR PROGRAMMED BY KAREN COOPER AND MIKE MAGGIORE F E B R U A R Y 1 3 2 W E E K S – 2 6 Ezra WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY NEWTON I. ADUAKA FRANCE / NIGERIA / AUSTRIA 2006 110 MINS. IN ENGLISH CALIFORNIA NEWSREEL WOMAN ON THE BEACH J A N U A R Y 9 – 2 W E E K S 2 2 Woman on the Beach WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY HONG SANG-SOO SOUTH KOREA 2006 127 MINUTES IN KOREAN WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES NEW YORKER FILMS “HONG SANG-SOO BELONGS TO A FAST-GROWING CATEGORY OF INTERNATIONAL FILMMAKERS: MASTERS AT THE HEIGHT OF THEIR POWERS who remain almost entirely unknown in the United States… Mr. Hong, a wry, unsparing anatomist of the romantic discontent of South Korean twenty- and thirty-somethings (with special emphasis on the failings of South Korean men), has made his most coherent and emotionally accessible film yet. On the surface the story of a short, not-too-happy love affair, filmed in a clear, unassuming style, it turns out on closer examination to be full of subtle narrative symmetries and visual patterns. It’s a wicked comedy of manners…” — A.O. Scott, The New York Times THROUGHOUT THE WORLD, HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF CHILDREN ARE KIDNAPPED BY MARAUDING ARMIES AND TRANSFORMED INTO CHILD-SOLDIERS who help escalate the chaos and madness that has engulfed much of the African continent. Many were already orphaned by years of civil war; they find a new kind of family in the brutal ragtag military that captures them body and soul. Ismael Beah’s A Long Way Gone is a best-selling memoir of his experiences as a child soldier in Sierra Leone, and now EZRA by Nigerian filmmaker Newton Aduaka becomes the first dramatic feature to do justice to this frightening phenomenon. Ezra’s story is told in a series of flashbacks: Brainwashed by the military, he’s given powerful amphetamine shots that keep him awake for days, destroy his conscience and wipe out any memory of the bloody events in which he participates. In 2007, EZRA won the top prize at FESPACO, Africa’s leading film festival. 1, 3:15, 5:35, 7:45, 10 1:15, 3:45, 6:45, 9:15 ALEXANDRA M A R C H 2 2 6 – A P R I L W E E K S 8 Alexandra WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY ALEXANDER SOKUROV RUSSIA 2007 92 MINS IN RUSSIAN WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES CINEMA GUILD THE GREAT ALEXANDER SOKUROV (RUSSIAN ARK, MOTHER AND SON) has made a powerful anti-war film in which not a shot is fired. Russian opera legend Galina Vishnevskaya stars as an elderly woman visiting her grandson, an officer stationed among the bored, weary troops at a desolate military outpost. More myth than contemporar y politics — the movie juxtaposes her womanly warmth with the hard steel of their weaponry; the value she places on their lives, with the pessimism of their mind set; her memories of family life and hopes for their future with the cynicism inherent in their mission. “A life of struggle and dignity emanates from ever y pore. Sure, she’s Mother Russia, but she’s every mother viewing the wasted lives of young men and wondering why. Hers is no operatic performance, à la Maria Callas: this is the soul of Eleonora Duse.” — Jay Weissberg, Variety 1:15, 3:15, 6, 8, 10 EZRA FEBRUARY 27 – MARCH 11 2 W E E K S Chop Shop WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY RAMIN BAHRANI USA 2007 85 MINS. KOCH LORBER FILMS DOC J A N U A R Y 2 3 1 W E E K – 2 9 Doc DIRECTED BY IMMY HUMES USA 2007 98 MINS. HAROLD L. HUMES (AKA DOC HUMES) WAS BRILLIANT AND PRECOCIOUS (HE WENT TO MIT AT 16), A LITERARY PHENOMENON (the author of two acclaimed novels, The Underground City, Men Die, who never wrote again), who was instrumental in founding The Paris Review. He was also a deeply paranoid, peripatetic “talking machine” (so dubbed by George Plimpton), who charmed, confounded and infuriated his distinguished friends and far-flung family. Plimpton, Norman Mailer, Paul Auster, Peter Matthiessen, William Styron and Timothy Leary recall an extraordinary man, a Zelig-like figure who led a protest in Washington Square Park (“300 Beatniks Riot in Village” — NY Daily Mirror), championed the use of medical marijuana, and managed Mailer’s 1961 run for mayor of New York. His daughter Immy Humes, in Doc’s own words, “puts a frame around the wreckage” in her affectionate, yet profoundly disquieting portrait. STALAGS “AN INDEPENDENT FILM THAT IS MIRACULOUS… an American film with the raw power of CITY OF GOD or PIXOTE, a film that does something unexpected, and inspired, and brave.” — Roger Ebert. Ramin Bahrani, after his auspicious debut (MAN PUSH CART), sets his story of a 12-year-old Latino boy and his older sister in the no-man’s-land that is Willet’s Point, Queens, a 20-block stretch of junkyards and chop shops (where stolen cars are dismantled for parts), overshadowed by Shea Stadium’s giant billboard: “Make Dreams Happen.” Perhaps it is because Bahrani and co-author Bahareh Azimi are both of Iranian descent that they are able to conjure up an outsider’s reality with such palpable compassion and realism. Without a smidgeon of sentimentality, CHOP SHOP suggests that for many New York City is closer to a third world country than the glittering jewel in the crown of a land of infinite opportunity. 1, 2:45, 4:30, 6:15, 8, 10 1:15, 3:15, 6, 8, 10 CHOP SHOP A P R I L 9 – 2 2 2 W E E K S Stalags WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY ARI LIBSKER PRODUCED BY BARAK HEYMANN ISRAEL 2007 63 MINS. IN HEBREW WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES Two Women and a Man WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY ROEE ROSEN ISRAEL 2005 16 MINS. IN HEBREW WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES “IT WAS ONE OF ISRAEL’S DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS. In the early 1960s, as Israelis were being exposed for the first time to the shocking testimonies of Holocaust survivors at the trial of Adolf Eichmann, a series of pornographic pocket books called Stalags, based on Nazi themes, became best sellers throughout the land... The books told perverse tales of captured American or British pilots being abused by sadistic female SS officers outfitted with whips and boots. The plot usually ended with the male protagonists taking revenge, by raping and killing their tormentors… The Stalags, a peculiar Hebrew concoction of Nazism, sex and violence, are re-emerging in the public eye.” — Isabel Kershner, The New York Times (Sept. 6, 07). Ari Libsker, a grandson of Holocaust survivors, explores this phenomenon and considers how fantasy may seep into public consciousness and become indiscernible from the historical record. Complementing STALAGS is a movie by Israeli artist Roee Rosen who plays games with gender identity, history and the pornographic imagination. 1:15, 3, 4:45. 6:30, 8:15, 10 M A R C H 1 2 – 2 W E E K S 2 5 WITH SUPPORT FROM THE JOAN S. CONSTANTINER FUND FOR JEWISH AND HOLOCAUST FILM Blind Mountain WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY LI YANG GERMANY / HONG KONG / CHINA 2007 97 MINS IN MANDARIN WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES KINO INTERNATIONAL THE SILENCE BEFORE BACH JANUARY 30 – FEBRUARY 12 2 W E E K S The Silence Before Bach DIRECTED BY PERE PORTABELLA SPAIN 2007 102 MINS IN SPANISH, CATALAN AND GERMAN WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES PERE PORTABELLA, THE LEGENDARY SPANISH SURREALIST and 78-year-old enfant terrible, was honored with a retrospective last fall at the Museum of Modern Art. His newest and arguably greatest film, THE SILENCE BEFORE BACH, “brings Bach’s music to life with a mysterious, magnificent blend of drama, documentary, and quasi-surrealist whimsy. Beginning with a scene of a player piano rattling off the Goldberg Variations while rolling through a bright, bare loft, Portabella tickles the senses with a series of skits… From puckish humor and borderline kitsch, a great and serious notion emer ges: the constr uction of modern Europe on the basis of classical music.” – Richard Brody, The New Yorker 1, 3:15, 5:40, 7:50, 10 ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF MEMBERSHIP! SAVE $5 at EVERY SCREENING! Members pay just $5.50 rather than $10.50 at all times. Membership benefits are valid for one year from date of purchase. Membership cards are non-transferable. Film Forum qualifies for many matching gift programs. Please check with your employer. Questions? Call the Membership Coordinator: 212-627-2035. MODERN-DAY SLAVERY IN CHINA: an attractive, urbane young woman travels to a remote village in mountainous Shaanxi province for a job she has been promised. Instead she is kidnapped, drugged, and sold into marriage. Huang Lu gives a stirring performance as the unwitting bride whose increasingly desperate and ingenious attempts to escape pit her against a corrupt community and its government enablers. Controversial Chinese filmmaker Li Yang (who exposed criminal scams in the Chinese mining industry in BLIND SHAFT) was inspired by the horrific reality of human trafficking for this riveting thriller. Real-life kidnapped brides appear in several roles. “Yang demonstrates once again that he is a master of cinematic tension.” — Lee Marshall, Screen International STUFF AND DOUGH A P R I L 2 2 3 – M A Y W E E K S 6 Stuff and Dough WRITTEN, PRODUCED & DIRECTED BY CRISTI PUIU ROMANIA 2001 91 MINS. IN ROMANIAN WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES MITROPOULOS FILMS THE ROMANIAN NEW WAVE CONTINUES with the release of STUFF AND DOUGH, the debut feature by Cristi Puiu, critically acclaimed director of THE DEATH OF MR. LAZARESCU. Combing genres (the road movie, the buddy movie, the slacker story), he takes us in a rattle-trap van with a naïve young man, his pal and the pal’s girlfriend, en route to Bucharest to deliver a mysterious parcel for a local gangster. Their conversation and the action veers from the mundane and the idiotic to the sinister and the bizarre. Puiu’s sense of humor is never far from the surface, but neither is his notion that Romania is a land of serious contradictions, corruption, foolishness and brutality. 1:30, 3:30, 6, 8, 10 BLIND MOUNTAIN 1, 3:15, 5:40, 7:50, 10 ❑ I would like to become a Friend of Film Forum at the following level: (See graph on back for benefits & tax-deductible portion of fees.) ❑ $75 ❑ $110 ❑ $250 ❑ $550 ❑ $1,000 ❑ $2,500 See ❑ Enclosed is my check made payable to The Moving Image, Inc. graph ❑ Please charge my credit card: ❑ AMEX ❑ MasterCard ❑ Visa ❑ Discover on back for benefits! Card # Expiration Date Signature (required) ❑ I cannot join at this time, but add me to the calendar or e-mail mailing list. (Circle one or both.) ❑ Enclosed is $ as a donation (fully tax-deductible). ❑ Enclosed is a matching gift form. M NAME (as appears on credit card) ADDRESS (APT #) CITY/STATE/ZIP DAYTIME TEL E-MAIL AIL TO : Film Forum be ____ 209 W. Hou rship ston NY, NY 100 St. 14 ATTN: Mem