April 2010


Last updated on April 6, 2010. Please check back later for additions.

Contents

The Washington DC International Film Festival
A Sneak Preview of Filmfest DC
Adam's Rib Looks Back at the Best of the '00s
The Cinema Lounge
Mother: Q&A with Director Bong Joon-Ho
The Sixth Annual Korean Film Festival
Chloe Press Conference with Director, Actresses and Producer
Eclipse: Director Q&A (Just posted April 5)
We Need to Hear From You
Calendar of Events

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April 15-25

Washington, DC International Film Festival Launches 24th Year

From the press release

Filmfest DC ... for people who love movies!


Hipsters, the opening night film.

The 24th Annual Washington, DC International Film Festival (Filmfest DC) commences April 15 and runs through April 25, bringing the best in new international cinema to the Nation's Capital. This year the festival will feature Bel Cinema!, a selection of new Italian films; The New Romanian Wave, a program of cutting edge work from one of the hottest spots on the international cinema scene; and Justice Matters, features and documentaries exploring issues of social justice. The festival presents feature premieres, restored classics, shorts and special events in an enjoyable atmosphere for movie lovers. Filmfest DC has developed into one of Washington's major cultural events with an audience that is widely diverse, curious and knowledgeable.

This year's Opening Night features the Washington, DC premiere of the free-spirited musical Hipsters (Russia) with a gala champagne and dessert reception following throughout Mazza Galleria. The Master of Ceremonies is the respected and well loved local television film critic, Arch Campbell.

The Closing Night film, from director Fatih Akin (The Edge of Heaven), is the award-winning comedy and Venice Film Festival favorite Soul Kitchen (Germany). The screening will be held at Regal Cinemas Gallery Place followed by the closing night party at Bar Louie.

Fans can also look forward to The Balibo Conspiracy (Australia) starring Anthony LaPaglia, I Am Love (Italy) starring Tilda Swinton, Harry Brown (United Kingdom) starring Michael Caine, The Tango Singer (Argentina), Heliopolis (Egypt), Will You Marry Us? (Switzerland), Moloch Tropical (Haiti), 25 Carats (Spain), and scores of other international award winning films. Music documentaries include The White Stripes Under Great Northerne Lights (USA/Canada), I, Don Giovanni (Spain), and Charlie Haden: Rambling Boy (Switzerland) profiling the Grammy winning jazz composer, musician and activist.

Most screenings will be held at Regal Cinemas Gallery Place (701 7th St NW), The Avalon Theatre (5612 Connecticut Ave NW), The Goethe-Institut Washington (812 Seventh St NW), and Landmark's E Street Cinema (555 11th St NW) with opening night at AMC Mazza Gallerie (5300 Wisconsin Avenue NW).

Tickets for opening night are $40 and on sale now. All other tickets will be on sale by April 1 and are $10.00, unless otherwise noted. Tickets are available through Tickets.com and online at www.tickets.com. They may also be purchased at the theater on the day of the show one hour before the first screening of the day. Filmfest DC's 24-page catalog will be distributed through The Washington Post on Friday, April 9 and a centerfold ad will appear in the Washington City Paper on April 1 and 15. For more information, please visit
the website or call 202-234-FILM.



The Cinema Lounge

The next meeting of the Cinema Lounge will be on Monday, April 19 at 7:00pm. Our topic is "How do actors break out of typecasting, or should they?"

The Cinema Lounge, a film discussion group, meets the third Monday of every month at 7:00pm at
Barnes and Noble, 555 12th St., NW in Washington, DC (near the Metro Center Metro stop). You do not need to be a member of the Washington DC Film Society to attend. Cinema Lounge is moderated by Daniel R. Vovak, ghostwriter with Greenwich Creations.



Adam's Rib Looks Back at the Best of the '00s

By Adam Spector, DC Film Society Member

Film critic and programmer Eddie Cockrell once discussed how films can seem different when you see them again years later. Cockrell remarked “The films don’t change, but you do.” I remembered those words often as I went back and watched my picks for the best of the last decade. For me this was celebration of films that not only achieved excellence, but also have a true staying power. Check out my picks in
my new Adam's Rib column.



DC Film Festival Sneak Preview

By James McCaskill, Ron Gordner, and Linda Schwartz, DC Film Society Members

We feel that this year's
Washington International Film Festival is a very strong festival. There are a number of films in this festival that we have seen and recommend. These comments are compiled from previous stories on the Toronto, Rotterdam and London Film Festivals as well as comments from the Palm Springs festival.

Air Doll (Kore-eda Hirokazu, Japan, 2009). What is it to be human? In Kore-eda's examination of that question he has a vinyl sex doll gradually comes to life. "The doll was a good way to visualize an inanimate object becoming human. When the vinyl doll got cut and deflated, her loved one would blow her up with air. The breath of life. That was very erotic. I try to show all the human emotions. She's sad, she's happy, she's jealous." Before Kore-eda wrote the screenplay his research included Japanese men who have made these sex toys their partners. He even went to the factory that makes them. The Korean actress Bae Doo-na, who was seen in the US in The Host gives an impressive performance and is perfect for the silent partner as she speaks no Japanese. "I told her not to try and play a doll. She was to imagine that she was a newborn baby and to grow from there." Kore-eda concluded his remarks at the screening, "These were the qualities I was looking for in the air doll and she conveyed them perfectly." (3 Stars, Very Good).

Alamar (Pedro Gonzales-Rubio, Mexico, 2009). Pedro Gonzales-Rubio now lives in Playa del Carmen in Mexico. Since he moved to what was once a fishermens' village it has now become the fastest growing urban center in Mexico at great cost to the environment. An extensive coral reef was destroyed to make a dock for cruise ships. Hectares of mangrove along the coast were destroyed to build big chain hotels and the sea has become polluted with sewage water. This film was made to counterbalance such destruction. In Alamar a young man with Mayan ancestry takes his five year old son to Banco Chinchorro to spend their last days together in a natural unspoiled setting. The son and his mother will soon be leaving for Rome. It is in this setting that they connect not only with each other but with their ancestors' way of life. An existence that brings harmony between man and nature and between father and son. None of the characters are professional actors. Jorge Machado, the son, was spotted working as a guide in a nature preserve. Nestor Martin was a happy find. "I was captured by his personality and his hospitality," said the director. "When I met him, he offered me some homemade tortilla. When I heard him laugh I knew I needed him as the father." In fiction you always manipulate. Putting a camera in front of someone changes their behavior. It is the only way that I can see myself communicating my experiences and my story. In Alamar I was inspired by the simplicity of happiness. The day to day activities at Chinchorro and the interaction with Matraca, the old fisherman, resulted in a perfect experience when Nathan could learn about an ancestral interaction between man and nature. Nathan is a child who moves between both worlds of his parents. An austere life with his father and the urban world of his mother in Rome. Not that any of the realities are better than the other, they are simply different and the child is able to be himself in both, free from any preconception or judgement. I tried to focus on the boy's point of view, to accomplish a pure feeling in every way." (3 Stars, Very Good).

Autumn Adagio (Inoue Tsuki, Japan, 2009). A Tokyo nun comes to grips with aging. Filmed in autumn-hued parks, Sister Maria matches the beautiful and sad feelings of autumn. In the film the nun encounters three males who play different roles in her slow emergence from a cloistered life. From playing the piano for a local dance class she encounters the handsome ballet instructor. She later consoles a young gardener grieving for his deceased mother. Rei Shibvakusa plays Sister Maria with great restraint. (3 Stars, Very Good).

The Balibo Conspiracy (Robert Connolly, Australia, 2009). "In 1975, the small nation of East Timor declared independence after 400 years of Portuguese colonial rule. Nine days later the Indonesian army invaded East Timor. The world turned a blind eye. For more than 30 years the events of those days have been shrouded in secrecy. Five young Australian TV journalist covering the invasion disappeared in Balibo, a border village. Their story is grippingly recreated in this tense and emotionally affecting film from Robert Connolly." (Palm Springs International Film Festival catalogue) (4 Stars, Must See).

Cooking with Stella (Dilip Mehta, Canada, 2009). Another interesting food movie, this time Don McKeller is the house or consulate husband in New Delhi who learns a great deal about cooking, servants, and Indian culture from their housekeeper Stella. But does domestic bliss and subservient staff really exist? Recipes were handed out at the Q&A. (3 Stars, Very Good).

Dawson, Island 10 (Miguel Littin, Chile/Brazil/Venezula, 2009). "Dawson, Island 10 is based on the testimony of Sergio Bitar, a former member of the Allende cabinet, who was imprisoned on Dawson Island after the 1973 military coup that brought Pinochet to power. Part documentary and part reenactment of the time, the film is set mostly on Dawson Island, the world's southern most concentration camp. Once men of power and privilege, the men were stripped of every dignity, even their names, and assigned numbers instead. Bitar was number 10." (Palm Springs International Film Festival catalogue) (4 Stars, Must See).

The House of Branching Love (Mika Kaurismaki, Finland, 2009). Aki’s brother directs this madcap charmer about a couple who decide it is time to divorce but can’t afford to live separately. Think a light War of the Roses with lots of quirky characters and the husband and wife trying to impress each other with their new conquests. This previously played at the AFI EU Film Festival in November 2009.(3 Stars, Very Good).

I Am Love (Luca Guadagnino, Italy, 2009). Tilda Swinton stars and co-produces this film she has worked on with the director for several years. She speaks Italian, English and Russian in her role as the wife of a wealthy industrialist and mother of a young son and two older children, who finds herself drawn somehow to her adult son’s new friend. A gorgeous film showing Italian food, culture, city and country vistas, and reminiscent of such richly lush and passionate Visconti films as The Leopard. (4 Stars, Must See).

I, Don Giovanni (Carlos Saura, Austria/Italy/Spain, 2009). The director of films like Flamenco, Tango, and Fados this time creates a beautiful costume drama about the life of Lorenzo da Ponte, a composer and lyricist, who is forced to renounce his Jewish faith and is later banished from Venice. In Vienna he works with Mozart and court composer Salieri, and invents the new opera Don Giovanni. Like Saura’s other films, he captures the music and art of the creative spirit. (4 Stars, Must See).

Learning from Light: The Vision of I. M. Pei (Bo Landin & Sterling von Wagenen, USA/Qatar, 2009). "Culture. Nature. Light. These elements provide the structure to this revelatory documentary exploring the vision of one of the world's most acclaimed architects, the Chinese-American I.M. Pei, through his newest creation: the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar. Pei has spent his distinguished career creating designs for some of the world's most significant buildings, from the pyramid at the Louvre in Paris to the National Gallery in Washington, DC. The film chronicles his most recent monumental challenge, which he accepted when he was already 88 years old and, with typical humility, only to learn something about the history of Islam." (Palm Springs International Film Festival catalogue) (4 Stars, Must See).

Lourdes (Jessica Hausner, Austria/France/Germany, 2009). Hausner turns her camera on the everyday events in this award winning (four prizes at Venice) look at pilgrims desperately needing miracles at Lourdes. Is Lourdes a religious tourist attraction or a place for miracles? (3 1/2 Stars, Excellent).

Mao’s Last Dancer (Bruce Beresford, Australia, 2009). Beresford (Breaker Morant, Driving Miss Daisy, and Tender Mercies) presents a docudrama about a young Chinese ballet dancer who studies in Houston and must decide whether to defect or return to China. Based on a real story, the real dancer and most of the cast were in attendance at our screening and received a standing ovation. The film came in second as the Audience Award this year. The dance sequences are very well done. My only problem was that so many Texans had Australian accents. (4 Stars, Must See).

Mid-August Lunch (Gianni Di Gregorio, Italy, 2008) made the international film festival circuit a year ago. This delightful romp is told with similar humor as Ealing Studio films of 1948-56 that became classics of British cinema (such as Alec Guinness' Lavender Hill Mob and The Ladykillers. Man gets suckered into taking care of a friend's elderly mother and soon finds the tables being reversed by several crafty old girls. (3 Stars, Very Good).

Pandora's Box (Yesim Ustaoglu, Turkey/France/Germany, 2008). What happens when an urban, sophisticated yet dysfunctional middle-class family comes to grips with relatives living in a rural area of Turkey? The Turkish mother is superbly played by French actress Tsilla Chelton, who had the lead in the 1990 film Tantie Danielle. Why a French actress? As Chelton told the 2008 Toronto audience, "No Turkish actress would admit she was old." The director Yesim Ustaoglu said, "At 90 years of age, she was a marvel, learning Turkish and climbing the mountains." This is a special film--like her earlier award winning films Waiting for the Clouds and Journey to the Sun--and shouldn't be missed (3 1/2 Stars, Excellent).

La Pivellina (Tizzza Covi & Rainer Frimmel, Austria/Italy, 2009). Two year old Asia has been abandoned in a park, found by Patti, a circus woman living with her husband Walter in a trailer park in San Basilio on the outskirts of Rome. With the help of Tairo, a teenager who lives with his grandma in an adjacent container, Patti starts to search for the girl's mother and gives the girl a new home for an uncertain period of time A Director's Fortnight winner at Cannes, 2009. (3 1/2 Stars, Excellent).

Puccini and the Girl (Paolo Benvenuti, Italy, 2008). Paolo Benvenuti’s opus was conceived for the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of composer Puccini’s birth. Benvenuti focuses on an episode in Puccini's life: an alleged love affair with his maid at the time he was working on The Girl of the Golden West. Based on recently found letters as well as Puccini's revealing home movies, Benvenuti beautifully weaves the composer's music and traditional songs with extracts from the letters. This is a not to be missed film for opera lovers. (4 Stars, Must See).

Reykjavik - Rotterdam (Oskar Jonasson, Iceland/Netherlands, 2009). An Icelandic crime caper with a sense of humor but without weapons. See this film before Hollywood gets their hands on it; Mark Wahlberg has bought the rights to this film and will release it under the title Reykjavik. The original can be screened in the US, sometimes restrictions are placed on distribution. Kristofer (Baltasar Kormakur) is forced into smuggling booze from Reykjavik to Rotterdam. This entertaining film was Iceland's entry in the Oscar race and is based on Iceland's most famous crime novelist, Arnaldur Indridason, who had a hand in writing the screenplay. Jonasson told me, "We both wrote the script. We did go through a lot of development. While the writing became complicated the structure was always basic. Much of the film takes place on the sea which makes shooting a film on a cargo ship difficult; ten floors, no elevators. We had to carry all the equipment all the time. It was difficult to shoot in narrow spaces." I asked the director how he found the leading man, having been told by other Icelandic directors that the casting pool is so small that they just go to the cafe where the actors hang out and see who is not working. "I know him (Kormakur) quite well, he has been both a director and a producer for ten years. He did a lot of acting in the 90s but never got the role that suited him as he always played the villain, never a sympathetic role. I think he was ideally cast in this role." He added, "Production started in 2007, 2008 in Rotterdam and had its Icelandic premiere the very week of Iceland's financial collapse. We were lucky our film was completed, funding by Icelandic Film Fund and Nordic Film with Blue Eyes producing it. Other films funding collapsed along with our economy." (3 1/2 Stars, Excellent).

Soul Kitchen (Fatih Akin, Germany, 2009). A change from Akin’s usual excellent dramas (Head On, The Edge of Heaven) this film is another great food film but also a wonderful ensemble of actors in a feel-good comedy accompanied by a great soul music soundtrack. Warehouse diner owner Zinos must sort out saving his diner from tax collectors, supposed friends trying to buy him out, a girlfriend leaving for China, and the arrival of his brother fresh out of prison. (4 Stars, Must See).

Two in the Wave (Emmanuel Laurent, France, 2009). The gloves come off in this documentary about the Truffaut/Godard friendship that turned nasty. In 1959 Truffaut's film The 400 Blows was the talk of Cannes. They worked together on Godard's debut film Breathless. Truffaut and Godard's decade-long friendship was influenced by each other's work. "When Truffaut made Jules and Jim, Godard replied with A Woman is a Woman, both menage-a-trois stories. Or, when Truffaut made Soft Skin, Godard did A Married Woman. Always the same topic, the same subject. They talked with each other through their films." Godard and Truffaut even used the same actor Jean-Pierre Leaud in films from 400 Blows to Stolen Kisses." After the Paris riots in 1968 their relationship turned bitter as Godard's films moved toward radical politics and Truffaut stayed on pretty much the same path. "I think it would be healthy to have to have a new New Wave," director Laurent said at the Rotterdam screening. "Today's cinema would benefit from a jolt similar to the one New Wave gave film in the late 50s and 60s." 2010 is certainly Godard's year with a new film (Socialisme) and it finally looks like Antoine de Baecque will finish the biography. This is a Must See film for film fanatics. (3 1/2 Stars).

Women Without Men (Shirin Neshat, Germany/Austria/France, 2009). This film is adapted from Shahrnush Parsipur's book by directors Shirin Nashat and Shoja Azari. When I interviewed the director she said, "I am a filmmaker and a visual artist. For me it is great that the world is interested in Iran and film. There is a big difference for Iranians living inside from those living outside Iran. [Note: the director was born and raised in New York City.] I want to make art that lasts a long time. I want to be an artist, not a Muslim artist, not a Iranian artist. The world is so free and we are so repressed." The book, which portrays the lives of four women in Iran in 1953 (the year when Iran's elected Prime Minister was removed in a coup d'etat backed by Britain and the US in order to reinstate the Shah and avoid nationalizing the country's oil resources), has been banned in Iran since its publication in 1989. Nonetheless the book is well known in Iran and widely read by women. In the book's look at the women's own search for freedom or survival in a culture with strict rules about religion and sexual and social behavior, each of them is led to a beautiful ephemeral garden, a place of safety and refuge. I asked Neshat about the garden and its location. "We found it in Morocco." she said. "We wanted to find something like Iran in the 50s. A garden in Iran stands for heaven - a place of peace." Sandra Hebron, the festival's Artistic Director says about this film: "Filmed in haunting muted hues, the women's individual journeys are compelling, and the broader themes of the tensions between religion and secularism and between tradition and modernity have never felt more relevant." (3 1/2 Stars, Excellent).



Chloe: A Press Conference with Director Atom Egoyan, Producer Ivan Reitman, and Actresses Julianne Moore and Amanda Seyfried

By James McCaskill and Annette Graham, DC Film Society Members

Atom Egoyan's latest film Chloe opened March 26. This press conference took place at the London Film Festival. Present were director Atom Egoyan, producer Ivan Reitman, actress Julianne Moore and actress Amanda Seyfried.

Question: What was it about the piece that turned you on?
Ivan Reitman: I was the first one to see it. There was a lovely French movie called Natalie that played the Toronto Film Festival four or five years ago. I thought what an interesting concept for a movie. I thought there was lots more to explore in it and was able to buy the rights and hired Erin Cressida Wilson to start writing a screenplay which we worked on for a few years. For a moment I thought I might actually direct it myself then thought better and thought Atom Egoyan would do a much better job of this and called him up and he fortunately responded to the screenplay. That's how this whole thing evolved.
Amanda Seyfried: The challenge. I'm pretty young in my career and haven't had many opportunities to spread my wings. It was an opportunity I couldn't resist. I couldn't resist the challenge. And also Atom.
Julianne Moore: For me it was Atom. We'd known each other since the early 1990s and I'd been a great great admirer of his work and had rushed him at the Toronto Film Festival and said I really hope we can work together someday. So it was lucky, great circumstance when I received the script and Atom said he wanted me to do it. So I was inclined to say yes immediately.
Atom Egoyan: For me it was Ivan, the ability to work with the man who made Ghostbusters. It was an extraordinary script. I'd seen the French film as well. It would have never occurred to me to remake it. What this really is is a reinvention of it. I thought Erins' script was really compelling and an amazing opportunity to work with wonderful actors. I'd always had Julianne in mind because I've loved her work for so many years. Every young actress you can think of and Amanda was so, so astonishing. I had done a play with Liam [Neeson] and he said wanted to do something else and I said well this is it, let's do this. So this incredible cast came together and it was a great opportunity.

Question: There are some quite intimate scenes in this. How did you approach them and discuss them and was it a day that burned in the script?
Atom Egoyan: Every scene is treated like a dramatic scene. That's first and foremost what we would talk about. Of course you talk about how it's going to be photographed and make sure the actresses are feeling comfortable. But once that's out of the way then it's really about the drama and where those two characters are. And that's what makes that scene powerful, because they are in such different spaces in their own minds. So there's a physical intimacy but we know that they're thinking about so many different things and that's what gives it its charge. So yes there are stresses and considerations when you're shooting that sort of scene but really it's about drama and has to be rooted in that.
Amanda Seyfried: It always is very technical when you have to do something very physically intimate. Atom showed us exactly what he had in mind to make it as easy as possible and then we just laughed.
Julianne Moore: We had already spent a lot of time together by the time we shot that scene. We'd had a lot of heavy emotional scenes and a lot of language and we'd established the relationship. It was very prepared. Atom knew exactly how he wanted to shoot it; we knew how we were going to do it. And then you just make a lot of jokes, which you always do when you do a love scene whether it is a man or a woman. There's usually a lot of jokes.
Atom Egoyan: One funny thing I remember is we had these two stand-ins as you do when shooting a film. I took the stand-ins aside and said it might be more comfortable for the actressses if we were able to show them what it might look like. So I had the stand-ins choreograph the scene and then I brought Amanda and Julianne in and we all started laughing because it seemed so ridiculous that they're watching these two other people writhing on a bed. And it was kind of unnecessary as it turned out. I really do think it's about preparation, or over-preparation in that case.

Question for Amanda: Congratulations on a remarkably sensuous performance. Did you think your character was predatory or vulnerable and did you find it easy or difficult to relate to some presumably quite different from yourself?
Amanda Seyfried: It was difficult to relate to her until I started absorbing what Atom was actually describing to me. Because we spoke at great length about Chloe and about how she was dealing with different moments in the film. It was just so extensive. I felt overwhelmed at times about how much information you had and I was able to finally absorb to a point where I could really really connect to her and to fall in love with her. I really did like her. It was completely challenging. This character is so inconsistent throughout the movie. It's almost like I'm playing so many different characters in one and it's really exciting to do that.

Question: Julianne, you are playing older women in two films in the festival: A Single Man and this one. Most of us don't see you as older. How it feels doing these older parts now? And Amanda what it feels like to work with Julianne whose work you must have known before?
Julianne Moore: Age is relative. You're older if there's somebody younger than you in the room and you're younger if there's somebody older in the room. I think I'm playing in both movies my age which is 48. In this movie I think it's about a woman's confidence eroding in a long-term relationship which can happen if you're young, medium, old, whatever. I think having been together for a long time, there's something that's been lacking in the relationship. And frankly her husband has given her cause to feel insecure. You see him paying all this attention to much younger women and not paying that much attention to her. So that could happen given wherever you are in your life. That erosion of who you are and lack of confidence in your partner can be most destructive to a relationship. One of the things that I liked about the relationship with Amanda too is precisely what's happening to her which is the feeling of not being seen. She basically finds someone who is receptive and open and pays her attention then she just projects everything onto in order to find her way back to her husband. When she says to her husband You don't see me, I'm not here for you anymore." she does it to the other young woman who is simply kind of conduit to her husband. She doesn't acknowledge her as a human being.
Amanda Seyfried: Working with her? It was amazing. I got to work with talented actresses whose work I have seen. And I've learned a lot. You've done a lot of stuff. You're not old.
Julianne Moore: Older than you.
Amanda Seyfried: This is the first time I've worked on a movie with someone like Julianne where I've been respected. And it's the best feeling in the world. It makes me feel like an equal. Sometimes you don't get that.

Question: I've seen the original film but don't remember the thriller aspects as being so prominent. Is that something you wanted to bring out in order to make the character of Chloe a bit more emotionally threatening?
Atom Egoyan: It certainly was something that was in the script by the time I read it. But it is part of the reinvention. That's not there at all in the French film. There's no thriller aspect at all. But it's something that Ivan saw when he watched the film.
Ivan Reitman: I felt the story needed some kind of motor. There's something very dangerous about this situation. There's very few movies about mature relationships, about long term marriages, what happens to sexuality when you've been with the same person for 10, 15, 20 or in my case over 35 years. And to tell a story about that and then when some other person comes into that story there's an inherent danger to it and to the whole family unit. Just trying to work those dynamics into a seriously told story, a naturally told story about family, about partnerships. I thought it would be really interesting.

Question: Liam was obviously going through a very difficult time due to tragic personal circumstances. How much did that affect the production in terms of shooting schedule.
Atom Egoyan: Of course it affected the film in a profound way. But what was remarkable was that he did come back and he was so professional and so dedicated to the film, it was astonishing. Yet that old adage is absolutely true that the show does goes on. I think in some ways the best thing he could have done was to be back with a group of people who supported him in a working environment. We were so blessed by his determination to finish the film.
Ivan Reitman: Most of all it affected the film in technical things, in a subtle way and sometimes dramatic way for a few days. But most of all it affected us as human beings. We become a family on a film. He's an extraordinarily talented but fine man. To see tragedy strike so close and so quickly. Everything seems ordinary, life is going along and suddenly something happens like this, it forces you to think about your own life and how ephemeral everything is.

Question: We always appreciate actresses who don't use body doubles. Has the person in your life seen this film and what is his reaction?
Amanda Seyfried: He's seen half of it. Funny story. We were seeing it for the first time together and his tooth chipped. He called my friend's dentist for an emergency appointment because he's also an actor who needs that piece of chipped tooth to be put back on in a timely fashion. So therefore he did not see the bulk of it unfortunately. But he can redeem himself tonight because he is going to watch the second half and then he can finally tell me how he feels about the content.

Question for Julianne Moore: You look absolutely stunning in the movie. You always do. When you know you are going to have to disrobe and the camera is going to go lovingly on your body. Do you feel that because Hollywood can be quite fascist at times towards women that you go on a diet beforehand?
Julianne Moore: Beforehand? Constantly! You're trying to be nice to the cameraman, chatting up Atom. It's very unnerving obviously. The camera is pretty close and as we've established I'm pretty old. I keep swearing I'm never going to do this again.and then I get another script that I want to do except this time it's with a girl. Of course you have a tremendous amount of trepidation about this. But one of the things I admire so much about Atom is that he makes movies about the human condition, about who we are, what we want, how we communicate with one another. And as Ivan said, this is also an exploration of a long term relationship and what happens in it and human sexuality. That all helps because you realize you're not trying to communicate something that's completely unrealistic. It's supposed to be about this woman in this particular point in time. So while yes, vanity comes in to play at least you have the support of knowing that you're trying to tell a story about a woman who is your own age in a relationship. But that aside, yes of course I dieted.

Question: What are the main challenges of adapting foreign films?
Ivan Reitman: I think the challenges are the same in any picture which is telling an original story in an original way. Finding a truth in the story that people can relate to. Really there was just this kernel of an idea in the original film that attracted me to tell the story again in a fresh way. I felt there was great opportunities in the continuation of the story the French movie posed. I wasn't thinking of making an American film vs. a French film. It was just the best way to tell the story.

Question for Julianne Moore: I saw the film in Toronto and again this morning, and am trying to understand your relationship with the girl. Can you tell us something more about the attraction to the girl and her love for you. I really don't understand your idea
Julianne Moore: I think that Catherine doesn't feel seen by her husband, doesn't feel like she exists in any kind of a sexual way. She doesn't understand what her husband wants any more; she has lost touch with her own sexuality and what he is looking for. And she meets this girl who just listens to her and who is incredibly receptive and attentive and she starts to spend time with her and then it occurs to her that she might be able to experience what her husband is feeling or learn from this girl, find a way to get to her husband. One of the things she finally says to her when she sleeps with her is, "Tell me how he touches you. What does he do?" She feels that by being with her physically she is going to find a way to feel what he feels and therefore feel kind of close to him. Now unfortunately I don't think she ever takes this girl as a person. I don't think she ever sees her, I don't think she wants to. So what I liked was the duality of the character. I liked the idea that here is someone who is so bereft and so lacking in confidence and feeling so unloved. I like the duality of the character. Here was someone feeling so unloved who was simultaneously able to go down that path in her own relationship with her husband. And then this utter callousness of "No, you are for me. I'm not thinking of you." And she says "This meant something to me." And Catherine says "Yeah, I liked it but guess what, it didn't mean anything to me. This is about my husband." That to me is interesting cinematically and emotionally, that there is this duality in this character that she is very much about her own needs and own relationship and simultaneously able to really hurt someone and not understand it until the end. I think that's the tragedy of the end. "How did this happen?" She uses this girl. That's the nature of intimacy and perception. If something is happening do we know it's happening or is it only that we perceive it? And because Catherine perceives it it's actually happening. And for Chloe as well. Chloe is perceiving a relationship as happening that Catherine is not participating in. But that doesn't make it any less real. One of the things that I've always loved about Atom's films is that it is about perception about what that reality means to us. And then with the audience you have another perception happening all the time. Because the audience is having a different experience and perception of that same story. But that's the nature of communication and mis-communication and the mess we make of our relationships. It was all interesting to me.
Atom Egoyan: That's a really beautiful response. There's that scene outside the elevator where Catherine stops and talks about how it used to be, and how physical the relationship was. She is so consumed in her loss over that moment, and there's a great second where she looks at Chloe and says, "Have you ever felt that way?" There's something almost accusing and angry. It's all in that moment where she's using Chloe in almost a therapeutic way for her to hear all this. And yet there's an anger towards her as well. Obviously when you work with extraordinarly intelligent actresses and people who are able to absorb the contraditions of the part, It creates something else. And the script of course is so beautifully written as well. And a lot of those passages were not written in the French original . It didn't really go to that place where Catherine is exploring a therapeutic relationship that she has engineered and is directing in a way. That is part of the thrill that she feels. There's something cruel about that as well because she's dealing with this part of herself that she has come to loathe and yet wants to desperately to retrieve.

Question: There is a line in movie when you do say I feel old and invisible. I think it's because they've stopped taking care of their relationship. Do you take time out to take care of that side of your life?
Julianne Moore: I think we try; I think everyone does. As Ivan said, there's a lot that a life encompasses. They say this at the beginning. We spent all our time together we waited for each other outside of appointments. And then of course, you get married, you have jobs, you have children, you have friends, you have travel. Suddenly what started out as just two people becomes this huge life and usually becomes a family as well. So the thing that you spent 95% of your energy and time on becomes something that suddenly is mixed in with everything else. So it ceases to have that central importance in your life. That doesn't mean it's centrally not important because it is. But all of us then struggle with how to keep that relationship alive and yet it can't be static either. It's never going to be what it was when you first met because you're not in that place anymore and you're not necessarily the same people. That's the struggle that you're trying to make the relationship move forward with the rest of your life and make it special and make it meaningful. It's incredibly challenging. But that's one of the reasons that this film is so relatable. One of the things I'm most proud of is that I feel that Liam and I really seem like we've been together for a long time. We had a scene in the car that Atom actually hadn't conceived of as being like a fight. We did it and we were all alone in the car and the camera was outside and it kept escalating and our lines were on top of each other until it turned into a kind of spat. Then it dissipated and he kept driving. We both felt it was realistic. You didn't mean to fight; you're just sitting in the car. But you set each other off and then you're left with that. But it didn't turn into a big fight it was just there and you move on. And I think that's something we all understand. It's a challenge. It doesn't mean it's not valuable and that you shouldn't keep at it. But you can't deny that it's something that is incredibly difficult to do.

Thanks for the London Film Festival for permission to use this press conference (edited and condensed).



Mother Q&A with Director Bong Joon-Ho

South Korean director Bong Joon-ho made a splash (and piles of money) with a mutant Han River monster in The Host, the biggest box office hit in Korean film history. In Mother he takes on the overprotective, obsessive Asian mother whose mentally-challenged son is accused of murder. He said, "The relationship between mother and son is the focus. Every element in the story, from the murder in the village to some other minor incidents, is there to explore this relationship in its entirety. But if you look at the film as a whole, it's not just about motherhood and their relationship, it also hints at something greater again." Mother opened March 26 and is currently playing at Landmark's E Street Cinema.

This Q&A took place on March 2 at Landmark's E Street Cinema. DC Film Society director Michael Kyrioglou moderated.

Michael Kyrioglou: What are the origins of the story which you worked on before The Host?
Bong Joon-Ho: I was inspired to work with Kim Hye-ja, a leading actress in Korea. She has been acting for 40 years and most Koreans know her. She is almost a mythical actress and the epitome of the mother figure role in the film industry. I grew up watching her on TV and always wanted to work with her. I sensed a dark side that could be in her, contrary to what she is known for. I wanted to bring out the dark obsession in mother psychosis.

Michael Kyrioglou: Did she make any suggestions as to the character of the story?
Bong Joon-ho: No. She wasn't part of the script writing. But her initial reaction to the script was very impressive. Her first reaction was "I see a lonely wounded animal trying to protect its baby. That's where I got inspiration and guidance--a lonely hurt animal trying to protect its baby. She had strong but sad feelings after reading the script. But I'm most grateful she agreed to play the role. If she had not agreed, the project would have been scrapped. To replace her was out of the question.

Question: What was the budget?
Bong Joon-ho: Excluding marketing, only the production--$4 to 5 million. This is average for films in Korea. It's not a big scale movie, just average.

Question: Where did you get the inspiration for the visual theme of her alone in the field?
Bong Joon-ho: I thought about it 4 to 5 years ago. I think this opening scene shows her madness and the feeling that she is out of this world with her weird purple clothes. With the opening scene in the field of flowers I wanted to surprise the audience. Viewers are being attacked; it's very random and suddenly she stares at the screen. That's not normal. I wanted to focus on her face. The lady isn't normal and would gradually become more psychotic throughout the movie. You see her in the middle of the field alone--isolated, helpless. The image of her is one of loneliness. I wanted to repeat it throughout the movie. But at the same time you see a lot of closeups. But very long shots at the same time. I wanted that contrast.

Question: The Host and Mother have an ending that is not happy and not sad. Is that a typical Korean movie ending?
Bong Joon-ho: Sixty to seventy films are made each year in Korea. Many are romantic movies with a happy ending. But my movies aren't typical in that way. It's just my style. My movies tend to end that way.

Question: The Host premiered in the US and now Mother is opening in the US. Do you plan to make movies in the US and who do you want to work with?
Bong Joon-ho: Since The Host, I have been receiving scripts from agencies in Hollywood but 80-90% of the scripts I find ridiculous. In Korea I have 100% control with final cut. But I understand studios in Hollywood have more power and control over movies. As long as I have 100% control I have no problem working in Japan, US, or anywhere else. I did work on an omnibus film in Japan [the segment "Shaking Tokyo" in Tokyo!. In the US there are a lot of actors I would like to work with. But the question is would they want to work with me?

Question: Could you elaborate on the ending?
Bong Joon-ho: You see her with her acupuncture needle. She is in agony wants to forget her painful memories. If you stick a needle in your thigh you forget memories and pain. She tries to do the same to her son. Her son commits a murder and she also committed a murder. It is really a hellish situation. She is trying to forget all those memories. This movie theme is memory equals pain--pain from recollection and horror from recollection. She tried to poison her son when he was five years old and endures that painful memory. How can she keep going on with that pain? So she tries to erase it. It was ironic that throughout the movie all actions committed by the mother are committed for her son. In the ending scene she is doing something for herself for a change. She has to do it in such a hellish situation.

Question: Should we assume that the son knows what his mother has done when he gives her back the needles?
Bong Joon-ho: How much does the son know? I get this question from people in Korea. I wanted to know this even when writing the script. I think he is an enigma, a perplexed character. We never know. Most people think he is stupid or mentally challenged. Is he stupid? The character has ambiguity. It is told from the perspective of the mother. She never finds out what her son is really like. That is what is the most scary thing about this movie.

Question: Did your mother see the movie?
Bong Joon-ho: My mother saw the movie in May 2009. I was so nervous, more so than when I was in Cannes. She didn't know the plot of the film. I've seen her since then but we don't talk about the movie. Maybe in due time... I hope to discuss the movie with my mother some day.

Mother is currently playing at Landmark's E Street Cinema. See below for more Korean movies in April and May.



Sixth Annual Korean Film Festival


An eclectic mix of artistic themes and styles marks this year’s Korean Film Festival at the Freer’s Meyer Auditorium, April 9 through May 16, 2010. Festival highlights include six new films by contemporary directors; a special focus on the 1980 Gwangju Uprising; and a retrospective with Jeon Soo-il, one of Korea’s foremost independent film directors, in attendance.

“This year’s festival highlights the diversity that has made Korean cinema so popular over the last several years,” said Tom Vick, film programmer at the Freer and Sackler Galleries, and author of Asian Cinema: A Field Guide. “The Jeon Soo-il Retrospective gives audiences a chance to discover the work of a unique voice in contemporary Korean cinema.”

Since directing Wind Echoing in My Being in 1997, Jeon Soo-il has established himself as a distinct voice in Korean independent cinema, crafting films that resonate with intense emotion and a unique sensitivity to landscape. His films have received international recognition, including awards at the Pusan, Venice, and Amiens Film Festivals. Born in 1959, Jeon Soo-il is an Associate Professor of Kyungsung University’s Department of Theatre & Film and President of Dongnyuk Film.On April 16 through 18, Jeon Soo-il will introduce his films. After visiting Washington, Jeon will appear at New York University’s Department of Cinema Studies on April 22 through 25.

A special event "The Gwangju Uprising Twenty Years Later" will be presented May 15 and 16. The Galleries and the U.S.–Korea Institute at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, will co-sponsor two film screenings and talks to explore the legacy of the May 18, 1980, uprising, a pivotal moment in South Korea’s pro-democracy movement.

The 2010 Korean Film Festival is co-presented with the AFI Silver Theatre and co-sponsored by the Korean Film Council. The Jeon Soo-il Retrospective was organized by Ciné-Asie, Montreal, with support from the Korean Culture and Information Service and Dongnyuk Film. In May, the Korean Film Festival will continue at the AFI Silver Theatre.
Visit the website for more information and a complete schedule.



The Eclipse: Q&A with Director Conor McPherson and Actor Ciarán Hinds

By Anita Glick and Annette Graham, DC Film Society Members

A preview screening of The Eclipse was held at the AMC Loew's Georgetown Theater on March 23. Afterward, a short Q&A was held with director Conor McPherson and actor Ciarán Hinds. Conor McPherson is an Irish playwright and filmmaker who has received numerous awards for his plays and has received two Tony nominations. His play "The Seafarer" was performed last year at DC's Studio Theater. Ciarán Hinds is an Irish film and stage actor well known for his portrayal of Julius Caesar in the HBO series Rome. He recently appeared in There Will Be Blood and In Bruges. The discussion was moderated by Nelson Pressley; he has been covering theater in the Washington area for more than a decade and has served as the chief drama critic of both The Washington Post and The Washington Times. The Eclipse is a film about the challenges of love, fear of the unknown, character comedy and horror, and release from the burden of guilt--all embellished by the supernatural.

Nelson Pressley: Two years ago, Conor, I saw you in New York; at the time it was your play "The Seafarer." Since then you and Ciarán collaborated on "The Birds," in Dublin, is that correct?
Conor McPherson: Yes, we did the show at the Dublin Theater just last October with Ciarán and Sinead Cusack.

Nelson Pressley: And now this. So I'm wondering how your dreams are these days? (everyone laughs)
Conor McPherson: They're good.

Nelson Pressley: But it is interesting. The supernatural, the thriller; it's got to be a different vocabulary doing this on stage as opposed to doing it on screen, for both of you, I would think.
Conor McPherson: Yes. They're very different things, stage and screen. On stage you need so much dialogue otherwise when people stop talking it feels like nothing is happening. But in film you can get inside the actor's mind, inside what they are really thinking. Somehow I think that's a great luxury to be able to do that without having to actually have people say something. I'm sure it's very different for Ciarán as well, different kinds of acting.
Ciarán Hinds: When we're on stage the idea is you inhabit the soul of the character, but you have to also push it out there, to share it with the audience. Whereas camera work is very different in that as you perform it it has to be emanating from inside you and you hope the camera picks it up.

Nelson Pressley: Have you watched it with audiences before? I imagine you must have. We got some good screams here tonight. Is this how it's been going?
Conor McPherson: Yes. We had just managed to finish the film in time for our very first screening which was in New York at the Tribeca Festival last April. So we really had no idea what the reaction was going be. I was just wondering is it even going to work or make sense and when people started to really freak out it was very gratifying. I know that's a very perverse thing to say but I think that in a film like this, yes it is a horror film in a way. But what is happening to Ciarán's character if we don't feel as frightened as he is at those moments. It doesn't quite take us deep into his predicament which is really what we're trying to do and have the audience feel his sense of isolation with what he's experiencing and the inner turmoil that he somehow needs to escape from.
Ciarán Hinds: I first saw it last April at Tribeca and in Boston last night. So this is the third time I've seen it. Tonight it was quite gratifying. Throughout the story we strive for a sense of truth that therefore you can allow these visitations or manifestations to be also the possibility that they actually do happen to people whether they're self-manifested or whether they're visitations from beyond, whether they're dredged up through guilt or through fear or panic. Tonight just watching it with the audience I was gratified that the little elements of pure humanity that exist between people, the elements of humor that are thrown in, the truisms of life were responded to. That was very gratifying for me.

Question: Are the ghosts Michael's exclusively? What about the scratches on his arms? Otherwise, I get the impression that all of these experiences he has are a product of his own psyche and the things that he is going through.
Conor McPherson: I want to have my cake and eat it. I want it to be a psychological manifestation of all the things he can't process but have to be dealt with. But also I would like it to be real as well. So the scratches on his arm--she does say, "You could have done this to yourself." Maybe that's possible too. You want to leave people with more questions. I don't want to leave people saying, "I don't know what that was about at all." But certainly that you come away talking about it and thinking about it which is more interesting to me than really nailing it as one thing or another. It's a very good question, but it's not one that I have the answer to actually.
Audience: The dog barked.
Conor McPherson: The dog knew. But if you want to look at it on a purely rational way that the ghosts aren't real, it's possible that the dog might be sensing something else. I don't know. But personally I would like to sort of believe the ghosts are real. But that's just my opinion.
Audience: Is it fair to ask what "Michael" feels about it?
Ciarán Hinds: It's fair. Obviously, Conor wrote and directed it--he sees one thing. When I saw it the first time, the manifestation... there are nightmares and dreams. It's like the life we lead. The malign and the benign. The good and the bad. The light and the dark. To me the idea of the redemption at the end, the visitation finally of the wife that he was waiting for. To be able to really really grieve. He was blocked, he felt guilty. Her selfness her possibility of allowing him to go to me reads very true. On the other side, the malign of the father in law manifesting itself in that way, I would put down to his own state of guilt and inability to focus on what he could do--knowing that his father in law hates him because his daughter died of cancer. Even though he was in no way responsible for that, it doesn't matter--he should have saved her, says the father. So he's guilty in every way. And also he's in a home. He's just trying to look after his kids. So his self-induced visitations of this man are full of bile and rage and that's what he feels. The other thing is the opposite of that, the cathartic release at the end.

Question: Could you talk about the lovely patterns of windows throughout the movie?
Conor McPherson: For me it was three things--windows, mirrors, and pictures were usually in almost every shot. For me it was a little hole into the beyond--somehow that the infinite is just beyond the veil of what we can touch and know. So in a sense I'm just to try to suggest that feeling. It's not literal, not a message, just to aid the feeling that perhaps Michael was close to something grabbing him.

Nelson Pressley: Conor, what about the transition for you from writing in words to writing in images? You have a fairly long body of work behind you. In plays, as you said earlier, the actors speak it all. But here it almost seems that it comes naturally for you--this whole thinking in otherwordly ways and thinking and being able to write in images. Was that a tricky transition for you?
Conor McPherson: No. it was a beautiful thing to be able to do. It's lovely to be able to move to a different place and be able to tell a story. It's still just storytelling, but to do it in a different way in film. It's lovely . You get to take lovely photographs, and have lovely music. Plays are hard to do. It's got to happen now, it's got to happen here. You got to believe it. It's all got to work in one compressed time frame. It's tough. It's great, we love it. But in film you have that extra feeling that you are a little more in control of all the elements. I sometimes think when the audience watching a play that we all have to concentrate so hard that we all go on a collective concentrated dream together in the darkness.

The Eclipse opens in Washington, DC on April 9.



We Need to Hear From YOU

We are always looking for film-related material for the Storyboard. Our enthusiastic and well-traveled members have written about their trips to the Cannes Film Festival, London Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto Film Festival, Austin Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival, the Berlin Film Festival, the Palm Springs Film Festival, the Reykjavik Film Festival, the Munich Film Festival, and the Locarno Film Festival. We also heard about what it's like being an extra in the movies. Have you gone to an interesting film festival? Have a favorite place to see movies that we aren't covering in the Calendar of Events? Seen a movie that blew you away? Read a film-related book? Gone to a film seminar? Interviewed a director? Taken notes at a Q&A? Read an article about something that didn't make our local news media? Send your contributions to Storyboard and share your stories with the membership. And we sincerely thank all our contributors for this issue of Storyboard.



Calendar of Events

FILMS

American Film Institute Silver Theater

"Larger Than Life: Orson Welles" is a near-complete retrospective of the films of Orson Welles, beginning in late March and continuing into May. During April you can see Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons, The Lady from Shanghai, Journey Into Fear, and The Stranger. More in May.

"Elia Kazan: A Centennial Retrospective" opens April 3 and continues into May. This month's titles include A Face in the Crowd in a restored 35mm print, A Streetcar Named Desire and East of Eden, with more films in May.

"The Films of Federico Fellini" continues in April with The Road, I Vitelloni, Nights of Cabiria, The Swindle, La Dolce Vita, 8-1/2, Juliet of the Spirits and Satyricon. More in May.

Other films at the AFI include The Natural, the last in the "Sports Cinema" series, two recent documentaries (Crystal World and Unseen) from Russia as part of "Best of INPUT" on April 5 at 7:00pm. On April 12 at 7:00pm Silverdocs presents To Catch a Dollar: Muhammad Yunus Banks on America (Gayle Ferraro, 2010) with Nobel Peace Prize Winner Muhammad Yunus (inventor of the microcredit loans in developing countries) and director Gayle Ferraro in person.

Freer Gallery of Art
The Freer's Sixth Annual Korean Film Festival starts in April and runs through May. On April 9 at 7:00pm is My Dear Enemy (Lee Yoon-ki, 2008), on April 23 at 7:00pm is Dream (Kim Ki-duk, 2008), on April 25 at 2:00pm is My Friend and His Wife (Shin Dong-il, 2008). In addition, four films are shown as part of a Jeon Soo-il retrospective with director Jeon Soo-il present to introduce three of those films April 16-18. On April 11 at 2:00pm is Wind Echoing in My Being (1997), on April 16 at 7:00pm is With a Girl of Black Soil (2007), on April 17 at 2:00pm is Time Between Dog and Wolf (2005) and on April 18 at 2:00pm is Himalaya, Where the Wind Dwells. More in May.

On April 3 is the Freer's annual Cherry Blossom anime marathon. At 11:00am is Chocolate Underground (Takayuki Hamana, 2009); at 4:00pm is Sword of the Stranger (Masahiro Ando, 2007) and at 7:00pm is Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade (Hiroyuki Okiura, 1998). Susan Napier, author of two books anime will be present for all three films.

On April 6 at 7:00pm is $9.99 (Tatia Rosenthal, 2008) with the filmmaker present to introduce and discuss her animated feature based on short stories by best-selling Israeli author Etgar Keret.

National Gallery of Art
"From Ecstasy to Rapture: A Journey through Spanish Experimental Film" complement's the Gallery's exhibition of Spanish painting and sculpture. Six programs are arranged by theme and technique. On April 3 at 2:00pm is "Documents and Itineraries," a program of shorts and realities; on April 3 at 4:00pm is "Appropriations/Grand Super-8," a mix of Super-8mm shorts and 16mm found-footage films; on April 9 at 2:30pm is Movement/Painting (Jose Antonio Sistiaga, 1968-70), constructed entirely of handpainting on film; on April 10 at 2:00pm is "Animated Experiments: Rhythm, Light, Color," various types of animation, and "Investigations/Metacinema" and on April 10 at 4:30pm is Arrebato (Ivan Zulueta, 1980), a vampire piece.

"Catalunya: Poetry of Place" continues the Spanish theme. On April 4 at 4:00pm is Diamond Place (Francesc Betriu, 1982) preceded by short films Barcelona, Pearl of the Mediterranean (1912-13) and Barcelona Park (1911). On April 11 at 4:30pm is Los Tarantos (Francisco Rovira-Beleta, 1962); on April 24 at 2:30pm is People and Landscapes of Catalonia (Josep Gaspar, 1926) preceded by short films Playa y Costa Brava (1934) and Electric Hotel (1908). Gillian Anderson will appear for this cine-concert. The Catalan series continues in May.

"Still Voices, Inner Lives: The Journals of Alain Cavalier" is a retrospective of the French director's work. On April 17 at 3:30pm is Lives (2000) and on April 25 at 4:30pm is Irene (2009) followed by the short film Holy Places (2007). The series concludes in May.

Other special film events include The Marriage of Figaro (Georg Wildhagen, 1949) on April 17 at 1:00pm with an introduction by Harry Silverstein, presented in association with Washington National Opera. On April 18 at 4:30pm is "Flamenco at the Source," a screening and discussion with flamenco scholar Brook Zorn. Segments from Rito y Geografia del Cante Flamenco, a ethnographic documentation of flamenco will be screened, focusing on the diversity of flamenco song. On April 23 at 1:00pm is Battle of Wills (Anne Henderson, 2008) will the filmmaker in person to introduce the film about a portrait of William Shakespeare.

Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
On April 8 at 8:00pm is Everything you always wanted to know about the making of a video installation (Marina Abramovic, 2009), a behind the scenes documentary about a performance project in Laos. On April 15 at 8:00pm is Michael Snow's avant-garde Wavelength (1967). On April 22 at 8:00pm is Lunch Break (Sharon Lockhart, 2008), a documentary about blue-collar workers at a ship building firm in Maine. On April 29 at 8:00pm is "Democracy Challenge Finalists," a competition of three-minute films that address the meaning of democracy.

National Museum of African Art
On April 10 at 2:00pm is Fela Kuti: Music is the Weapon (1985), a documentary about the composer and human rights activist Fela Kuti (1938-1997). On April 16 at noon is "A Lost Picture Story: The Smithsonian-Chrysler 1926 Expedition to East Africa." The film about a 1926 Smithsonian expedition to collect animals for the Zoological Park has been lost but partially recreated using archival photographs and intertitles. Amy Staples discusses the cinematic practices of expeditionary films of the early 20th century.

National Museum of the American Indian
Shown daily at 12:30pm and 3:30pm is March Point (2008), about teenagers from the Swinomish Reservation in Washington State who make a film about two oil refineries that affect their community.

Museum of American History
Icons Among Us: Jazz in the Present Tense is a documentary about the history of jazz and its cultural identity. Director Lars Larson, producer John Comerford and some of the featured artists in the film will take part in a discussion following the film on April 7 at 6:30pm. On April 8 at 6:30pm is Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench by Damiel Chazelle, a jazz lover and drummer who started the project as his Harvard thesis. Damiel Chazelle will discuss the film after the screening.

National Portrait Gallery
On April 18 is "Echoes of Memphis," related to the exhibition "One Life: Echoes of Elvis." At 2:00pm is Jailhouse Rock (Richard Thorpe, 1957) with Elvis Presley; at 4:00pm is Great Balls of Fire (Jim McBride, 1989) with Dennis Quaid as Jerry Lee Lewis; and at 6:00pm is Man in Black: Johnny Cash Live in Denmark (1971), a live-performance film with Johnny Cash.

Smithsonian American Art Museum
Several events are related to the museum's exhibit "Christo and Jeanne Claude: Remembering the Running Fence." On April 2 at 7:00pm is The Running Fence Revisited (Wolfram Hissen, 2010), a film created for the exhibition. Director Wolfram Hissen and artist Christo will be present to discuss the film and the exhibition. On April 8 at 6:30pm is The Running Fence (1978) about Christo and Jeanne-Claude's 24-mile fabric fence through the hills of California. On April 29 at 6:30pm is Christo in Paris (1986) and Valley Curtain (1973) both introduced by legendary documentary filmmaker Albert Maysles.

On April 15 at 6:30pm is Hud (1963) starring Paul Newman, part of the exhibit "Framing the West: The Survey Photographs of Timothy H. O'Sullivan."

Washington Jewish Community Center
Among the Righteous: Lost Stories from the Holocaust in Arab Lands (2010) is on April 11 at 11:00am. This documentary by William Cran seeks to find Arabs who saved Jews during the Holocaust and is based on Robert Satloff's award-winning book. Special guest Robert Satloff will be present for post-film discussion.

Srugim (Eliezer Shapiro, 2008) is a popular Israeli television series about Orthodox singles and winner of Best Drama 2009. Episodes 1, 4, 5 and 6 will be shown April 21 at 7:00pm and episodes 7, 8, 9, and 10 will be shown April 22 at 7:00pm.

Goethe Institute
"The Best of Okofilmtour" is a selection of films from the German festival, an environmental film tour. On April 12 at 6:30pm are two short documentaries: Sekem, Born of the Sun (Bertram Verhaag, 2007), about a balanced ecological oasis in the middle of the Egyptian desert; shown with Life in Plastic (Bertram Verhaag, 2008), about the problems, risks and studies associated with plastic.

On April 10 at 2:00pm is "Short-Courts-Kurz," a an afternoon of new short films from France's 2010 Clermont-Ferrand festival and Germany's 2010 Dresden festival. Titles include Belleville (Pascale Guillon, 2009) from Germany, On a Silk Thread (Peter Jeschke, 2009) from Germany, Logorama (2009) from France, Photograph of Jesus (Laurie Hill, 2008) from the UK, Sinna Mann (Anita Killi, 2009) from Norway, Tuesday (Shirley Petchprapa, 2009) from USA, Bottle Return (Miriam Frank and Xaver Bohm, 2009) from Germany, Fard (David Alapont, Luis Briceno, 2009) from France, It's Me, Helmut (Nicolas Steiner, 2009) from Germany, and Dónde Está Kim Basinger? (Edouard Deluc, 2009) from France. All films are subtitled in English.

The Goethe Institute takes part in "Best of INPUT," a film series from the International Public Television Conference. On April 6 at 6:30pm is Welcome to Westerwald (Tomy Wigand) a comedy about an Iraqi seeking asylum in Germany who has a passion for line dancing. On April 7 at 6:30pm is The Stones of the Kingdom (Luiz Fernando Carvalho) from Brazil. See more about INPUT below.

"Michael Haneke in Focus" takes a look at some of Michael Haneke's films. On April 19 at 6:30pm is his latest film The White Ribbon which was on the short list for Foreign Language Oscar; on April 26 at 6:30pm is Lemmings Part I: Arcadia and on April 29 at 6:30pm is Lemmings Part II: Injuries. All films will be introduced by Dr. Oliver C. Speck, author of Funny Frames: The Filmic Concepts of Michael Haneke.

National Air and Space Museum
On April 22 at 7:00pm is Big Blue Sky (2008), a feature-length documentary about hang gliding. At 8:00pm Bill Liscomb, a pioneer of hang gliding and producer of the documentary will discuss the technology and culture of hang gliding.

National Geographic Society
On April 7 at 7:00pm as part of "Women Hold Up Half the Sky" is the DC premiere of 2501 Migrants: A Journey (Yolanda Cruz, 2008). This documentary is about an art project of life-size clay sculptures representing individuals who have immigrated to the US from the rural Mexican community of Oaxaca. Director Yolanda Cruz will be present to discuss the film.

French Embassy
The French Embassy takes part in "Best of INPUT" with Be Like Others (Tanaz Eshaghian, 2008) a documentary about sex-change operations in Iran on April 11 at 4:00pm.

On April 13 at 7:00pm is Mensch (Steve Suissa, 2009) with actor Sami Frey making a personal appearance.

The Japan Information and Culture Center
On April 14 at 6:30pm is Sakura, Sakura (Toru Ichikawa, 2010) about chemist Jokichi Takamine, "the Japanese father of American biotechnology" and his role in bringing the cherry blossoms to DC. Reservations are required, see the website.

On April 23 at 6:30pm is 20th Century Boys (Yukihiko Tsutsumi, 2008), based on the award-winning manga by Naoki Urasawa.

National Archives
On April 15 at 7:00pm is H.R. 6161: An Act of Congress, a documentary for the anniversary of Earth Day, about the Clean Air Act. The film follows the journey of one piece of legislation from conception through committee amendment and final passage. To accompany the new exhibit "Discovering the Civil War" is a screening of the Academy Award winning film Glory (1989) on April 30 at 7:00pm.

Interamerican Development Bank
On April 13 at 6:30pm is the DC premiere of Blood and Rain (Jorge Navas, 2009), a "film noir" crime drama shot in Bogata and introduced by the filmmaker. On April 21 at 6:30pm is Wind Journeys (Ciro Guerra, 2009).

The Avalon
For this month's "Czech Lions" series is Dirty Soul (Milan Cieslar, 2004) on April 14 at 8:00pm. The film is a tragicomic mosiac of three siblings and was nominated for a Czech Lion for Best Screenplay. The "French Cinematique" film for April is Khamsa (Karim Dridi, 2008) on April 28 at 8:00pm, about a 13-year old Gypsy's descent into juvenile delinquency.

Solas Nua
For this month's "Irish Popcorn" series is Cinegael Paradiso (Robert Quinn, 2004) on April 26 at 7:00pm. Films are shown at Flashpoint, 916 G Street, NW.

Atlas Performing Arts
"Opera in Cinema" is a series of HD presentations of operas from the world's most renowned opera houses. On April 7 at 7:00pm and April 10 at 2:00pm is Verdi's Rigoletto from the Teatro Regio di Parma. On April 14 at 7:00pm and April 17 at 2:00pm is Mozart's Don Giovanni performed at the Salzburg Festival. On April 21 at 7:00pm and April 25 at 2:00pm is Verdi's Otello performed at the Salzburg Festival. On April 28 at 7:00pm and May 1 at 2:00pm is Verdi's Falstaff from the Opera Royal de Wallonie, with more in May. Check the website for names of performers in each opera and more information about tickets.

As part of "Ballet in Cinema" on April 3 at 2:00pm is Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake" performed by the Mariinsky Ballet with Ulyana Lopatkina as Odette-Odile.

"Mikado at the Movies" presents Foul Play (Colin Higgins, 1978) starring Goldie Hawn on April 15 at 8:00pm. Topsy-Turvy (Mike Leigh, 1999) on April 22 at 8:00pm stars Jim Broadbent.

Embassy of Venezuela
Several films will be shown as part of "Celebrating Our Independence's Bicentennial." On April 9 is Miranda Regresa, on April Manuela Saenz, both with subtitles in English. On April 21 is Bolivar Eterno Ciudad de la Libertad, on April 30 is Zamora, both of which are in Spanish with no subtitles. Times weren't available, call 202-342-5828 to RSVP.



FILM FESTIVALS

The 24nd Annual Washington DC International Film Festival
April 15-25. See above.

The Baltimore Jewish Film Festival
The 22nd Baltimore Jewish Film Festival takes place April 8-May 17. See the website for titles and dates.

The 10th Annual NoVa International Jewish Film Festival
The Northern Virginia International Jewish Film Festival takes place April 22-May 2 at several locations including Cinema Arts Theater, Fairfax Corner 14, JCC of Northern Virginia and the Rosslyn Spectrum. Titles to be screened include Brothers, Circumsize Me, Eli and Ben, Father's Footsteps, For My Father, Matter of Size, Nora's Will, A Secret, Wedding Song and others, including features and documentaries.

The Best of INPUT in Washington, DC
Selections from The International Public Television Conference, the world’s most innovative and provocative productions by public broadcasters appear at venues around Washington during Best of INPUT. Venues taking part include the AFI Silver Theater, the Goethe Institute, and La Maison Française from April 5-11. Titles include Crystal World and Unseen from Russia on April 5 at 7:00pm at the AFI, Welcome to Westerwald from Germany on April 6 at 6:30pm at the Goethe Institute, The Stones of the Kingdom from Brazil on April 7 at 6:30pm at the Goethe Institute, Chicago 10 on April 10 at 8:00pm (broadcast by Channel 32, and Be Like Others from France on April 11 at 4:00pm at La Maison Française. All films are subtitled in English; some events require reservations, check the website for more information and updates.

The Johns Hopkins Film Festival
This festival takes place in Baltimore April 16-18. See the website for more information.

Francophonie Cultural Festival
One film still remains in the Francophonie Cultural Festival. On April 7 at 7:00pm is Under the Bombs (Philippe Aractingi, 2008) from Lebanon, to be screened at the Ripley Center. Call 202-633-3030 for tickets.



TALKS WITH FILM MAKERS

Sixth and I Synagogue
On April 22 at 8:00pm is "An Evening With Kevin Smith," a unique and intimate Q&A with the cult director of films such as Clerks and Mallrats.



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