The 28th Annual Toronto International Film Festival
By Ron Gordner and James McCaskill
The 28th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) was held September 4-13, 2003. This year 336 films were shown (about 252 or 75% were North American or World premieres) from 55 countries. The program was divided into sections such as Gala Presentations, Masters, Visions, Special Presentations, Perspective Canada, Contemporary World Cinema, Discovery (first time directors' films), Planet Africa, Real to Reel (documentaries), Wavelengths (new section devoted to experimental and avant-garde films), Dialogues: Talking with Pictures (current directors present their favorite retrospective films), and Midnight Madness (usually fringe, outrageous or horror films). The special directors chosen for the Director’s Spotlight section this year were Turkish directors Nuri Bilge Ceylan, Zeki Demirkubuz, and Omer Kavur and included this year’s Grand Prize winning film from Cannes, Distant (Uzak). The country whose cinema was highlighted this year in the National Cinema Spotlight was Brazil, which presented seven recently produced films.
TIFF is generally considered to be the second most important film festival after Cannes. Unlike Cannes however, the public screenings are a large part of the festival. Being held in September is also an excellent time for the major Hollywood studios to strut out their fall films, and for some independent film and foreign films to still capture distribution, and for any film to capture a buzz for Oscar time. Due to the 9/11 disasters and the following year of remembrance, the last 2 years of the Festival were more somber and parties were held to a minimum. Also despite the summer outbreak of SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome) and earlier travel restrictions, by September the Festival was on track. We felt that there may have been fewer Americans that came to the Festival this year because of SARS. Earlier reports of a rather poor Cannes Film Festival this year and some critics’ reports that Toronto would also not have a good selection of films, we quickly realized were mostly unfounded. Only a few of the bigger fall films were not there, such as Kill Bill, The Big Fish, Master and Commander, Mona Lisa Smiles, Cold Mountain, and the Last Samurai. These films did not appear in any of the larger festivals. There seemed to be more directors, producers, and actors (including Hollywood stars) in attendance this year. Studio and premiere parties were back in full swing.
The festival is usually very well organized. Our concern was that the press and industry showings were becoming more important than the public screenings, and we hope that Toronto can remain one of the great film festivals that public cineasts can continue to attend. Sadly, this was also the last year to see public screenings in the historic Uptown Theatre at Yonge and Bloor which closed just after the festival and will become commercial condos. The Uptown, originally built in the 1920s had been a grand movie palace with some 3,000 seats. Even after being cut down into smaller venues, the Uptown still had three of the larger screening rooms at the festival: the large Uptown #1 auditorium held 922 seats (this had originally been the balcony) with a huge screen and stage, the Uptown #2 had 604 seats, and the Uptown #3 had 404 seats. Other festival screening venues at the Varsity and Cumberland Theatres, and nearby Isabel Bader Theatre and Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) made it possible many times to quickly run from one film to another film within 5-10 minutes. So exactly where all the theatres will be next year is still under debate.
The Toronto International Film Festival Group (TIFFG) has announced a design and plans to create a Festival Centre which will be far downtown near the Roy Thomson Hall, which now screens the premiere Galas. Planned are at least three state-of-the-art cinemas (with additional space for one or two more screening rooms), an exhibition gallery, rooms for educational seminars, a box office, bookstore, bar/café restaurant, and a film reference library around the corner at the King and John Streets area. Completion of these facilities was not projected until 2005 or 2006.
Awards
Although it is not really a contested festival, TIFF does announce a few awards:
AGF People's Choice Award for the most popularly voted film of the festival by the audience was Zatoichi (also the Golden Lion winner in Venice Film Festival) from Japan directed by Takeshi Kitano, who also stars in the film as a blind masseur, traveling the countryside with a secret. Second place went to Ron Mann's Go Further, a Canadian film documenting Woody Harrelson’s Simple Organic Living Tour down the U.S. Pacific Coast. Third place for the audience vote went to another Canadian documentary film The Corporation directed by Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott, about history and impact of the business institution.
The Volkswagen Discovery Award voted by festival journalists went to Aaron Woodley's U.S. film Rhinoceros Eyes, a dark fantasy about a prop-house employee.
The Toronto City Award was given to Denys Arcand's Les Invasions Barbares (The Barbarian Invasions), this year’s Opening Night Gals, a long awaited follow-up to his 1986 classic The Decline of the American Empire, and which won the best Screenplay Prize at the Cannes International Film Festival in May 2003. The other Canadian film award, the City TV Award went to Toronto filmmaker Sudz Sutherland for Love, Sex and Eating the Bones is an urban romantic comedy which draws upon the characters’ African-Caribbean roots. The Best Canadian Short Film was awarded to Constant Mentzas for Aspiration, a tale of a man’s silent alienation.
The Fipresci Award from the International Film Critics' Association went to November by Spanish director Achero Manas about a group of actors who take theatre to the streets.
Recommendations
In our opinion, this was a good year for films at TIFF. The following are recommendations from films we saw this year, unless otherwise noted from other reliable sources:
Must See: 16 Years of Alcohol (U.K.), Depuis Otar Est Parti (Since Otar Left) (France), Facing Windows (Italy/Turkey/U.K./Portugal), Good Morning, Night (Buongiorno, Notte) (Italy), Jeux d’Enfants (Child’s Play also known as Love Me, If Your Dare)(France), The Return (Russia), Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter, and Spring Again (South Korea), and The Station Agent (U.S.).
Must See: (Other Reliable Sources): Dying at Grace (Canada), The Fog of War (U.S.), Goodbye, Lenin (Germany), Kitchen Stories (Norway), Los Angeles Plays Itself (U.S.), The Mayor of Sunset Strip (U.S.), and Nicotina (Mexico).
Very Good: 21 Grams (U.S.), Alexandra’s Project (Australia), Les Bellesvilles Triplettes (Bellesville Rendezvous) (France), Fuse (Bosnia-Herzegovina), I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead (U.K.), Io Non Ho Paura (I’m Not Scared) (Italy/Spain/U.K.), The Last Life in the Universe (Thailand), Lost in Translation (U.S.), Le Meglio Gioventu (The Best of Youth), Nathalie (France), Noi Albino (Iceland/Germany/U.K./Denmark), Shattered Glass (U.S.), The Story of the Weeping Camel (Germany/Mongolia), and Wilbur Wants to Kill Himself (Denmark/U.K.), Young Adam (U.K.), and Zatoichi (Japan).
Good: At Five in the Afternoon (Iran/France), The Boys from County Clare (Ireland), Christmas (New Zealand), Coffee and Cigarettes (U.S.), Les Corps Impatients (Eager Bodies) (France), Elephant (U.S.), The Green Butchers (Denmark), A Heart Elsewhere (also known as l Cuore Altrove and Incantanto) (Italy), Les Invasions Barbarians (Invasion of the Barbarians) (Canada), Koktebel (Russia), Love, Actually (U.K.), Matchstick Men (U.S.), Mille Mois (A Thousand Months) (France/Morocco), Rosenstrasse (Germany), The School of Rock (U.S.), Silence Between Two Thoughts (Iran), Le Silence de la Foret (The Forest) (Cameroon/Gabon/Central African Republic), Stormy Weather (Iceland/France), Travellers and Magicians (Bhutan), Twentynine Palms (France), Uzak (Distant) (Turkey), Valentin (Netherlands/Spain), Veronica Guerin (U.S.), and Zhou Yu’s Train (China/Hong Kong).
Awful (Avoid These): Golden Chicken (Hong Kong/China), Sansa (France/Spain), and Les Mains Vides (Idle Hands also known as Where is Madame Catherine?) (France/Spain).
16 Years of Alchohol and Young Adam were discussed earlier by Jim in his Edinburgh Festival review and in director interviews. See Storyboard articles in September 2003 and other issues.
The best French films we viewed this year were Nathalie, Since Otar Left, and Jeux d’Enfants. Anne Fontaine’s (Augustin, Dry Cleaning) new film Nathalie stars Fanny Ardant and Gerard Depardieu as a married couple and the lovely Emmanuelle Beart as the third character of a fascinating character study of fidelity, love, and sexuality. The screenplay was co-written by Fontaine and Jacques Fieshi (co-writer of 1992 film Un Couer en Hiver) and based on an original work by Phillippe Blasband. Julie Bertucceli’s Since Otar Left (Critics’ Week prize winner at 2003 Festival de Cannes) takes place in the former Soviet republic of Georgia and Paris. It is a wonderfully layered study of three generations of women in a family with the storyline tied to the son, brother, uncle Otar who is supposedly working in France. The grandmother played by Esther Gorintin (recently seen also in Carnage) has a wonderful minimalistic acting style. Jeux d’Enfants (Love Me, If You Dare) directed by Yann Samuel introduces us to eight-year-olds Sophie and Julien. The children begin a game of crazy dares and outdoing each other’s outrageous actions that covers a twenty-five year period. The colors and rapid camera work reminiscent of films like Run, Lola, Run and Amelie, and the joyous acting of newcomers Guillaume Canet and Marion Cotillard (nominated for France’s Cesar awards) make this a thrilling, romantic, roller-coaster ride.
Five Italian films that are recommended are: Buongiorno, Notte (Good Morning, Night), A Heart Elsewhere (Incantanto), Io Non Ho Paura (I’m Not Scared), Le Meglio Gioventu (The Best of Youth) and La Finestra di Fronte (Facing Windows). All these films except Facing Windows were also screened in October in DC at the new Italian films at Visions. I’m Not Scared is this year’s film nominated by Italy for best foreign-film award contention. Gabriele Salvatores’ (Mediterraneo) new film deals with a moral dilemma for a nine-year old boy, Michele when he finds another kidnapped boy. Another story with a kidnapping is Marco Bellochio’s Good Morning, Night. It’s a docudrama re-enactment of the 1978 Red Brigade capture of Italian primer minister Aldo Moro. Marco Tullio Giordana’s six hour film The Best of Youth is a family drama centering on two brothers, Matteo and Nicola Carati, and their lives from 1966 to date and plays out like a mini-series. A Heart Elsewhere directed by Pupi Avati and recounts the adventures of shy, bookish, thirty-five year old virgin Nello, who is sent to Bologna by his father to experience more of life and romance. Director Ferzan Ozpeteck (Steam, Ignorant Fairies, Haram Suare) again brings his meld of Turkish and Italian themes to this carefully layered tale of a married couple, a handsome neighbor, and elderly amnesiac who enters their lives.
Two other excellent films were The Return (Vozvraschenie) and Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring Again. The Return by first time Russian director Andrey Zvyagintsev is the profound story of an errant father who returns after ten years to take his two estranged sons on a fishing trip. The cinematography and music assist in this dark psychological study. The film won the Golden Lion Award at this year’s Venice Film Festival and the phenomenal acting of 13 year old Ivan Dobronravov (non-actor) will really grab you. South Korean director Kim Ki-duk’s Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter… and Spring Again was one of the most stunningly beautiful films seen and tells the story of and old and young Buddhist monk and a young monk living on a floating temple and the nature of the seasons (really years) reflect the ages of man. South Korea has also nominated this film as their chance for foreign-language Oscar contention.
We will also want to provide warnings for two of our recommended films: Alexandra’s Project and Twentynine Palms. Both films deal with male/female relationships (one in a marriage) where the raw language, nudity, sex scenes, and violence may be beyond some spectators’ thresholds. Alexandra’s Project directed by Australian director Rolf de Heer (The Quiet Room, The Tracker) finds Steve, a successful business man, coming home on his birthday, to find his marriage is disintegrating and a house full of surprises. Twentynine Palms by French director Bruno Dumont (La Vie de Jesus, L’humanite) with another startling film; this time about the rocky relationship of David and his Eastern European girlfriend Katia as they take day trips into the desert vistas of the Joshua Tree National Park.
Documentaries this year were very strong at the festival with highly praised films like: The Fog of War by Errol Morris, about the life of Robert S. McNamara, former U.S. Secretary of Defense; Dying at Grace by Canadian Allan King which details the last days of five patients at the palliative care unit of the Salvation Army Toronto Grace Health Centre; George Hickenlooper’s Mayor of the Sunset Strip, about L.A. disc jockey Rodney Bingenheimer; and The Story of the Weeping Camel, by German film students about an old ritual to make a camel mother accept her new colt.
A few of these films have opened commercially already. Others will be opening soon or within the next few months at your theatres, or come to the next DC Film Fest, be seen in DC museums, or sadly some may never be screened in DC.
For more description of this year's Toronto International Film Festival and the films screened visit their wonderful interactive website.
In America: Interviews with Jim Sheridan, Paddy Considine, and Samantha Morton
By James McCaskill
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND. The following interviews and press conference took place at the 56th Edinburgh International Film Festival. The 57th EIFF takes place 18 to 29 August 2004.
Of all the films I have ever done this was the most personal in regards to art imitating life. I did four films in a row that had brilliant scripts, brilliant film, and great filmmakers and the last film I did was In America which is all about family. At the end of the film the most important thing for me is family and love. I did take it home with me. (Samantha Morton).
After a six year wait Jim Sheridan is back with his fifth film in a reality based film career (My Left Foot(1989), The Field (1990), In the Name of the Father (1993), The Boxer (1997) and In America is a love song to New York City, based on his own life. In the early 1980s Sheridan, wife and two children moved to New York City and many incidents in the film came from those early days. He tells the story of stealing an air-conditioner from a theatre he worked in and dragging it across Manhattan as his family was not use to the summer heat and humidity. Two guys were sleeping on bunk beds there and one was Carl Frank. Carl use to wait outside his house every day and Jim would give him a quarter. One day he just looked at it and from then on Jim gave him a dollar. Carl went missing for a week once and when he returned "he said I owed him seven dollars." "Most of the characters were true that I based the whole thing on. Sometimes the facts were more extraordinary than the fiction. Like I did go across the American border with Canada and got arrested for speeding. The two policemen did take us to an midnight court and we got fined $40 but we only had $38. The two cops gave a dollar each. And the judge asked me if it was my money and I said 'No." He asked me again, I said no again. I thought this guy wants to get me for perjury. He got the two cops to perjure themselves by saying I put the money down. Outside, the cops said, 'We didn't mean to arrest you. Our grandparents came over from County Kerry. Here is $10 to get back on the highway.' That was nice."
"When I was throwing the balls for the dolls, I lost." Sheridan continued, "But when you change one fact which is that they had a dead child when it was my brother who died of a brain tumor, you have to temper reality with a little bit of (salt? pepper? No, that does not sound right.) sugar. I could not have them lose the doll. I did steal that air conditioner and it did blow the wiring in the house. All that happened."
"And our third child arrived early," he revealed. "I was taking over for an actor one night in a play. Usually I did not care to the extent that I cared about the lines, but it was a regular play and I had to feed everyone their lines. I heard a voice when I was trying to remember a line and looked out into the audience. It was my daughter and she was prompting me. So there is nothing like your daughter prompting you to make you totally freeze up so after about three prompts she was doing all the lines and the audience was in hysterics. At the interval I said move her to the back row. Then at the end I asked her why Fran [his wife] sent her down. 'Oh, it is because she is having the baby.' My wife had walked down four flights, walked to the Roosevelt Hospital only to be told that they did not handle emergencies. She had to go up to Harlem. So she went back out, stopped a cab, put the kids in the cab and went up. I arrived as Tess was being born early. The only result of being in an incubator for the first five weeks is that she has extraordinarily good hearing."
Paddy Considine was asked about the difficulty of playing the director's life. "When I read the script," he answered, "I did not know it was about your life. I read it, thought it was brilliant. I remember your saying to me early on, 'You are not playing me.'" Said co-star Samantha Morton, "I think that was very gracious of a director to do that. It takes the pressure off. 'You don't have to be me.' I was terrified at the thought of playing someone who was alive. I could not get my head around it," she continued. "It was written so well that like an amazing book that haunts you. You put it down but have to pick it up again. Pick it up again and again. Haunting. This was like that. Perhaps my instinct as a mother means I can interpret life a little bit better." Jim shares screenwriting credits with his daughters. "I gave them a script that was little more that a series of humorous anecdotes. They gave me a script in which I had vanished. We worked on it."
Jim (everyone calls Sheridan by his first name--he is comfortable and low key in interviews) picked up the reading theme. "Two kinds of ways of reading. A lot of people read logically and don't really see it. And other people see it and you don't have to fill in all the dots. But [the script] was very sparse."
"It is all about instinct," Samantha interjected, "and being directed. That opening yourself up and saying 'Yeah, I will go to any place you want to take me to; just look after me when you take me there and bring me back.' Which is what happened."
How did an actor from the English Midlands learn an Irish accent? Paddy revealed that "I hung around with [Sheridan]for a while. Went to the races. Lived the Jim life for a few weeks. We did have good voice guy. When you are working with an Irish crew, we lived in Dublin for a few months, you just develop it. Soak things up."
Samantha felt that "You have to get the person first." Paddy picked up the point, "Accents should be like the clothes you wear and not the point of the performance--so it should be secondary." How did he feel about the scene where his character was auditioning? "That was one of the more difficult scenes we did. Just one of those scenes you just struggle through."
"Paddy and Sam are convincing as parents of two children who aren't changing their accents at all," Jim said. "When you have those two kids there is no way you act. The main thing for me was to get a real family."
"The story will always bring you back because the film has its own life and it will always pull you up," said Samantha. "Not the kids. It is their truth. When there is that much truth around, you can't lie. You would stand out like a sore thumb. The children express love every second of the day."
Jim came back to an earlier point of Samantha's, "The actors have to trust that you will not let them die. You have a more complex relationship with actors. But with kids and their innocence you are back in the Garden [of Eden]. Each actor has crossed that border in a different way and has a different set of complexities."
How did he find those two "scene stealing" Bolger children? "My daughter had been through every kid in Ireland to cast another film. I walked in the rehearsal hall and saw this kid, Emma. Had her read the script. And amazing for a six-year old, her reading was excellent. She was too good so I had another child read. Felt a tug on my jacket and turned around. There was Emma with a look like God help you. 'Is she reading my part?' I tried to stare her down but it didn't work. This kid has focus and that is important so I said, 'No one is reading your part. You are cast.' She then wanted to know who the other girl was. 'My sister is in the car,' she said. How old? 'Ten.' Too young. 'Come down and give her a chance.' I knew I would gain a lot with two sisters and they were cast."
"On the first day of shooting something did not go right with one take and I said, 'Shit.' Sarah came up and said, 'It is OK to curse in front of me. I'm ten but my sister is only six. Rude to curse in front of her.' Told her I didn't think I could do it [stop cursing] so they could yell 'Action' and 'Cut' and that they did throughout the shooting."
What qualities did the actors bring? "Looking at a six year old and saying this kid has self confidence," Jim answered. Like Sean Connery who only does Scottish accent. 'This is who I am. Scotland is OK. Go to Hell.' I had seen the work of the adults and knew the actors. Sam is too young to be the mother of the oldest girl but you never for one minute don't believe it." He went on, "I needed people who were certain that they could play Irish in Ireland. And at the same time I needed people who were strong enough and had the intelligence and the self esteem. So, for me, it was always a combination. Just sitting down and talking to people. You know this will work. I have seen what they can do in film. I know actors You get to know the melodies. They were great to work with."
The actors were asked what it was like to work with Jim. Paddy said, "I grew up with Jim's films. His are quite pivotal films for me. He cuts the bullshit and goes straight to what is going on. Creates a very safe environment where you do not feel you are going to fall. He had a script that was fantastic. Once we were doing a scene that was just not working. Jim stripped to the waist, moved the other actor aside and pined me to the wall. I have never had a director that involved."
Samantha added, "I am 26 and have been doing this since I was 12 and I have never worked with a director who feels what you feel. Knows when you are lying. A good director knows when you are lying."
"I remember a day," she concluded, "when were were doing a scene where something had gone wrong. We were all just sitting around waiting. I was Paddy with one kid on an arm and another on a leg. I wanted to say, 'Careful, you'll get hurt.' I knew we had become a family."
Credits for In America. Principal actors: Samantha Morton, Paddy Considine, Djimon Hounsou. Produced by Jim Sheridan and Arthur Lapin. Screenplay by Jim Sheridan, Naomi Sheridan, and Kristen Sheridan. Directed by Jim Sheridan. Running time: 1 hour 42 minutes. UK/Ireland. 2003.
Cast Notes: Samantha Morton (Sarah) was last seen in Lynne Ramsay's Morvern Callar. She also appeared in Steven Spielberg's Minority Report, Alison McLean's Jesus' Son, and was nominated for an Academy Award (2000) for Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown. Paddy Considine (Johnny) was most recently seen in Michael Winterbottom's 24 Hour Party People. He also had the lead roles in A Room for Romeo Brass, Happy Now and The Last Resort. His next film is Pavel Pawlilowski's My Summer of Love. Djimon Hounsou (Mateo) was not at the EIFF. He received a Golden Globe nomination for Cinque, the rebel slave leader in Amistad. His recent films are The Four Feathers and Gladiator. Sarah Bolger's (Christy) first film was A Love Divided. Emma Bolger (Ariel) is making her acting debut in In America.
Calendar of Events
FILMS
American Film Institute Silver Theater
The AFI's annual European Union Film Festival runs through November 9 with films from countries belonging to the EU. Two premiers, Girlhood (Liz Garbus, 2003) and The Backyard (Paul Hough, 2002) run through November 9. Other premiers in November include New Suit (Francois Velle, 2003) and American Chai (Anurag Metha, 2001). Revivals include Sweet Smell of Success (Alexander Mackendrick, 1957), Chinatown (Roman Polanski, 1974) The Adventures of Robin Hood (Michael Curtiz, 1938), and a series of five films by Woody Allen. A series of seven new films from Australia stars November 12 and a series of films from Iran starts November 22. See the website for more.
American Film Institute at the Kennedy Center
Some of the films from the European Union Film Festival are also at the Kennedy Center, see the website for details.
Freer Gallery of Art
The Freer concludes its film series of Himalaya films with The Horse Thief (Tian Zhuangzhuang, 1985) on November 2 at 2:00pm and Kundun (Martin Scorsese, 1997) on November 7 at 7:00pm. "Discoveries 2003," a series of new films from Asia, begins November 9 at 2:00pm with a film from China Unknown Pleasures (Jia Zhang-Ke, 2002). A program of short films and videos, "Breakthroughs: New Experimental Films from Asia" is on November 13 at 7:00pm; an animated My Life as McDull (2001) from Hong Kong is on November 16 at 2:00pm; from Korea is urning Gate (Kong Sang-soo, 2002) on November 21 at 7:00pm and a Turkish film Confession (Zeki Demirkubuz, 2001) is on November 23 a 2:00pm. More follow in December.
National Gallery of Art
In November is a series of films by Chris Marker: On November 2 at 5:00pm and November 7 at 2:30pm is Sans Soleil (1983); on November 8 at 3:30pm is Le Jetee (1962) and Remembrance of Things to Come (2001) with an introduction by Martin Winkler; on November 22 at 12:00noon is The Last Bolshevik (1993); and on November 28 at 12:30pm is One Day in the Life of Andrei Arsenevich (1(2001).
Two restored films by director William Wyler include Carrie (1952) with an introduction by Catherine Wyler, the director's daughter, on November 23 at 4:30pm and November 28 at 2:30pm; and Roman Holiday (1953) on November 29 at 3:00pm.
Other films in November include Golub (Gordon Quinn, 1988/2001) about painter Leon Golub on November 8 at 1:00pm; A Great Day in Harlem (Jean Bach, 1995) with Jean Bach present for discussion; My Architect: A Son's Journey (Nathaniel Kahn, 2003) about architect Louis Kahn; and three programs of films from the International Festival of Films on Art on November 16 at 4:00pm, November 21 at 2:30pm and November 22 at 2:30pm. See the website for titles.
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
On November 6 and 7 at 8:00pm is Remembrance of Things to Come (Chris Marker and Yannick Bellon, 2001), a documentary about Bellon's mother, and Colette (Yannick Bellon, 1951). On November 13 and 14 at 8:00pm for the centennial of the birth of Joseph Cornell is Alice (Jan Svankmayer, 1987) shown with the short films Rose Hobart (Joseph Cornell, 1936) and By Night with Torch and Spear also by surrealist Joseph Cornell, and Fast Film (Virgil Widrich, 2003).
National Museum of African Art
Films include Seven Songs for Malcolm X shown with The Last Angel of History on November 2 at 2:00pm; Black Indians: An American Story on November 6 at 7:00pm followed by a discussion about the Black and Indian Connection at 8:00pm; short films by Portia Cobb on November 13 at 7:00pm and another program of short films by Portia Cobb on November 16 at 3:00pm.
National Museum of Women in the Arts
A series of films by Anne-Marie Mieville include Living It Up (1987) shown with After the Reconciliation (2000) on November 9 at 7:00pm; My Dear Subject (1988) on November 12 at 7:00pm; The Book of Mary (1984) shown with We're All Still Here (1977) on November 16 at 7:00pm; and How Can I Love (A Man When I Know He Don't Want Me) (1983) shown with Lou Didn't Say No (1993) on November 19 at 7:00pm.
Films on the Hill
Ray Brubacher will provide piano accompaniment to an evening of silent comedy on November 14 at 7:00pm. Films include Harold Lloyd in Hot Water (Fred C. Newmeyer and Sam Taylor, 1924), Pass the Gravy (Fred Guiol, 1928) which was the biggest hit at the Slapsticon Film Festival last July), and Get Out and Get Under (Fred C. Newmeyer, 1920) also with Harold Lloyd. On November 5 at 7:00pm is The Bowery (Raoul Walsh, 1933), with Wallace Beery, George Raft and Fay Wray which incorporates some historical incidents (most notably Steve Brodie's jump off the Brooklyn Bridge), and on November 19 at 7:00pm is A Message to Garcia (George Marshall, 1936) with Wallace Beery, Barbara Stanwyck and John Boles, based on a true adventure from the Spanish American War.
DC Jewish Community Center
On November 11 at 1:00pm and 7:00pm are two screenings of A Vilna Legend (George Roland, 1924/1933), a recently restored film, and a precursor to the 1937 classic The Dybbuk. In 1933 narration and several new scenes were added to the 1924 original silent film. The 7:00pm screening includes a sneak preview of the 14th Washington Jewish Film Festival with clips and discussion. (We will have full details of the upcoming Jewish Film Festival in the December Storyboard).
If you didn't see A Trumpet in the Wadi (Slava and Lina Chaplin, 2001) last spring at FilmFest DC, you have another chance on November 3 at 8:30pm. For tickets see Box Office Tickets or call 800-494-TIXS.
Pickford Theater
The Pickford continues its film series "Rivers, Edens, Empires" with Sergeant Rutledge (John Ford, 1960) on November 4 at 7:00pm, Silverado (Lawrence Kasdan, 1985) on November 13 at 7:00pm, and River of No Return (Otto Preminger, 1954) on November 20 at 7:00pm. See the website for others.
Goethe Institute
The Goethe Institute concludes its series "Young Turks of the German Cinema." On November 3 at 6:30pm is We Forgot to Go Back (Fatih Akin, 2000) shown with Weed (Fatih Akin, 1996); on November 10 at 6:30pm is Dealer (Thomas Arslan, 1998) shown with German Cops (Aysun Bademsoy, 1999); and on November 17 at 6:30pm is Anam (Buket Alakus, 2001). Germany, Pale Mother (Helma Sanders-Brahms, 1980) is the "Viewer's Choice" for November, shown on November 24 at 6:30pm.
French Embassy
The French Embassy concludes its Nicolas Philibert series of films with Every Little Thing (1997), a documentary about a psychiatric clinic on November 4 at 7:00pm; and the last in its series of Cocteau films with Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945) on November 6 at 7:00pm.
National Museum of Natural History
The Gullah Film Festival is on November 1 and 2: a program of shorts, features and documentaries about the Gullahs and their roots. Films include Family Across the Sea (1990), The Language You Cry In (1998), Conrack (1974), When Rice Was King (1990), Gullah Tales (1986), and Daughters of the Dust. Films start at 10:30am both days and run to 5:30pm.
Smithsonian Associates
On November 15 at 7:30pm the Baltimore-based five-person ensemble "Anne Watts and Boister" will perform an original music score to accompany a screening of Love (Edmund Goulding, 1927) which stars Greta Garbo and John Gilbert, a modern-dress version of Anna Karenina.
A series of three Native American films will be shown in November, introduced by Ceni Myles. On November 5 at 7:00pm is True Whispers (Valerie Red Horse, 2002) about the World War II Navajo Code Talkers. On November 12 at 7:00pm is Is the Crown at War With Us? (Alanis Obomsawin, 2003) a Canadian documenary about the conflict of fishing rights. On November 19 at 7:00pm is the winner of the 28th Annual American Indian Film Festival. (Title to be announced November 13).
The Washington premiere of The Hittites (Tolga Ornek), a new feature-length docu-drama about the ancient Hittite civilization, narrated by Jeremy Irons is on November 20 at 6:00pm. A champagne reception follows.
The Charles Theater, Baltimore
Special events at the Charles include Dr. Garrett (Susan Hannah Hadary and Bill Whiteford), on November 11 and 12 at 5:00pm; Girlhood (Liz Garbus) on November 19 at 7:30pm with the director and cast in attendance; and Diner Guys (Barry Levinson) on November 20 at 7:00pm. A panel discussion with the "Diner Guys" follows the film.
The Meyerhoff Symphony Hall
Alexander Nevsky (Sergei Eisenstein, 1938) will be accompanied by a the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra performing Prokofiev's score for the film. Conducted by Yuri Temirkanov and featuring mezzo-soprano Nancy Maultsby and the Choral Arts Society of Washington.
FILM LECTURES