March 2012


Last updated on March 8, 2012. Please check back later for additions.

Contents

  • The Cinema Lounge
  • Being Flynn: Q&A with Director/Screenwriter Paul Weitz
  • The 20th Annual Environmental Film Festival
  • Friends With Kids: Q&A With Director/Writer/Actor Jennifer Westfeldt ADDED March 8
  • The Rotterdam Film Festival
  • We Need to Hear From You
  • Calendar of Events

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    The Cinema Lounge

    The next meeting of the Cinema Lounge will be on Monday, March 19 at 7:00pm. This month's topic is "The Broken Ratings System: In Light of the Controversy Over Bully, Has the MPAA Gone Too Far?"

    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 Adam Spector, author of the DC Film Society's Adam's Rib column.



    Being Flynn: Q&A with Director/Screenwriter Paul Weitz

    By Anita Glick, DC Film Society Member

    A screening of Being Flynn was held on February 21 at AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center. Director/Screenwriter Paul Weitz discussed the film and took questions from the audience; AFI’s programmer Todd Hitchcock moderated.

    Being Flynn is adapted from Nick Flynn’s 2004 memoir Another Bullshit Night in Suck City. The book is a series of vignettes detailing Nick Flynn’s fatherless childhood, his mother’s suicide and his time working at a homeless shelter—where he comes face to face with his dad. The movie explores the bonds--fragile and unbreakable--between parent and child.

    Paul Weitz co-directed About a Boy which earned him and his brother Chris an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay.


    Todd Hitchcock and director Paul Weitz. Photo by Jay Berg.

    Todd Hitchcock: Thank you for bringing your great work here and thank you for spending time with us here in Washington.
    Paul Weitz: I’m really excited to be here. Last time I did a Q&A in Washington, the person moderating said he was with the Woolly Mammoth Theatre. I write plays as well. I remember he asked me, “What’s more important to you--film or theater?” I feel like theater is much easier than film but film is more important to me.

    Todd Hitchcock: I wanted to ask a couple questions just to get things started. I know this is a project that you spent some time on. It started around ’04, I believe, and is based on the memoir that has the fantastic evocative title of ...
    Paul Weitz: Yes, Another Bullshit Night in Suck City.
    Todd Hitchcock: I just wanted to hear you say that. Eight years later we have the film. Just from your perspective, and knowing what it takes to shepherd projects through in Hollywood--is that a long time to put in to getting it developed? Is it typical? What’s your take on that? I can also understand it took some work in getting the studio involved.
    Paul Weitz: Basically it was sent to me and over the course of seven years I wrote 30 drafts of it. I know it is that many drafts because I number them on my computer. Nick Flynn, whose memoir and whose true story it is, read most of those drafts. He was nonjudgmental and generous of spirit. Initially the budget was around $25 million. I can completely understand why the studio was not going to make it for that. The budget got lowered and lowered. Happily, it ended up being a fraction of that. Happily, because by the time it got to Focus, they were giving me odd notes such as reassuring me it was okay not to redeem De Niro’s character--the opposite of what you expect from studios. But I would not have gotten to make it without De Niro sticking with it. He read it and everybody sort of tightened their belt straps. It’s quite frightening getting to make something that you really feel can be something that’s important to you. Weirdly, although it is someone else’s narrative it was very very personal to me. It boiled down to some themes I kept touching base with over those seven years. The first of which was whether we are fated to become the father in this case, or whether you can create yourself. What you have to own; parts you don’t like about your heritage and also the aspect that it was about creativity in particular to me as it relates to ego. It is a lesson in humility.

    Todd Hitchcock: I believe we need to talk a little bit about De Niro. It’s great to see him with deep investment in a character; we have not seen this from him in a while--the De Niro that we all think about from his filmography.
    Paul Weitz: I needed some snow. We were shooting in New York in winter and spring and you never know when it is going to snow, of course. I got a weather report one day a month before shooting and it said there was going to be a blizzard the next day. I called De Niro up and asked him, 'Where are you? Are you in New York? What are you doing tomorrow?' He asked, 'Why?' "How would you feel about throwing on some costume and going out in the snow with me?" He understood that during the shooting period we might not have appropriate weather. It was like a student film. We went out with no permits, De Niro and a car, me and a camera guy. We jumped all around the city. Primarily we got our best stuff in the financial district during rush hour — because I knew everybody would be rushing by the camera and De Niro — they all just wanted to get to work. The first thing that we shot was really like a student film, essentially. In the film there’s a section after he has been kicked out of the shelter, where he’s out on the streets and wandering around saying that the doctor said that they are going to have to cut off his toes.

    Todd Hitchcock: You, of course, have worked with him before.
    Paul Weitz: I worked with him recently on Little Fockers which, if I was to write a memoir about the full gamut of the film making process, it would be called "Focking and Sucking." It could not have been a more different experience. I also met him because he was one of the producers of About A Boy, a film I made with my brother. That film has a little boy whose mother is depressed and in the beginning of the movie the little boy is depressed. He was an unknown kid that we had chosen. He has become a star now (Nicholas Hoult). When the studio saw the dailies they said you have hired a completely non-emotive little child who appears to be depressed. We said that is because he is in the movie and he is going to be fine. But we sent the footage to De Niro and we said do you agree and if you do please call the studio. He saw it and he told the studio to back off, that the kid was going to be okay. So I have gotten to spend some time with him. It took me quite a few years to understand that he was joking three-quarters of the time. He is incredibly dry. He really isn’t difficult but because he is Robert De Niro you can’t tell when he is pulling your leg. He doesn’t appear to care if you know that he is joking. By the time I got to direct this he was very empathetic to me. The first thing I shot with him was him coming down those courthouse steps after he has lost his cab license. And he says I am going to put this in my book, Memoirs of a Moron. I had this idea and I went up to him after he did the first take and I said Bob, how about you raise your arms in mock triumph as you’re coming down the stairs and you're mumbling the thing about memoir of a moron. He looked at me and he went "Hmm... I don’t know and it’s my first day and I don’t want to go over the top, that sounds really big — Bob, scratch that, do whatever you want to do and I’ll give you some other notes" and I thought — my first note on this movie and it’s so important to me and I gave him a bad note. I made up for it by every scene that we shot that day and there were a good 5 or 6 of them. I’d come up to him and say, "Bob how about you raise your arms in mock triumph" and we both laughed about it. Luckily I felt quite comfortable with him, oddly.

    Todd Hitchcock: I think we could do the next hour with you just telling us Robert De Niro stories. That would be fun. But I want to bring in audience questions.
    Audience: How did making this film impact how you think the plight of the homeless can be handled?
    Paul Weitz: Nick Flynn, whose memoir the film is based on, understands much more (on a societal level) about homelessness than I do. I understand there a couple of you in the audience that work with the homeless in a very substantial way. I’m extremely grateful for people who are able to focus on a problem and try to tangle with it. My only approach here was to approach everybody from Bob’s character to some of the day players. Some of the day players were formally homeless individuals. I just tried to portray that each person has a particular root to that circumstance. From spending some time with these people, I was really struck by the wide variety of stories of their lives and the wide variety of the people who work at Homeless Shelters. All I tried to do was be specific with Bob’s character. I did feel lucky that along with the actors there were some non-actors that had been homeless.

    Audience: When you were writing this, did you find the problems were substance abuse, social, biological, personal or something else?
    Paul Weitz: I feel that to some degree the father reminded me of my own father. There was something about the book that had a fable-like quality to me. Am I fated to become my father? In terms of the entry into it, I was going through Paul Dano’s character. It’s a generational thing. It was alcohol and now it is spoken about much more in the open. It’s been de-stigmatized. Bob’s character is of the generation of my father. My father was a relatively successful person but he always dreamed of being a writer and he would write late at night. He started drinking early in the day. But, lucky for me he was around and he was very loving. I got some great gifts from him. I do identify with the human demons aspect of the story. When De Niro, Nick and I went to meet Nick's dad he was living in an assisted care facility near Boston. We sat down with Jonathan [Flynn] and he said to De Niro “So, do you think you can pull this off?” (audience laughs) Nick said, “Dad he’s a very well known actor. He did The Godfather.” Jonathan said, “I hear you’re good, but are you going to be able to play me?” (audience laughs) In the film I think at the core level Nick has not been able to process his mother’s suicide. He can’t ask his dad for love but there are some harsh lessons in survival he can get. I know I didn’t directly address your question because I really don’t feel capable of it.

    Audience: How difficult is it to make a movie now?
    Paul Weitz: It’s easy to make a film. You can make a film very inexpensively now. It is just difficult to get it distributed and to get people to come see it.

    Audience: Thirty drafts! Do you go back to the old ones?
    Paul Weitz: Sometimes I go back to the old one but in this case once my bluff was called and I was actually given a number ($) at which to make it and De Niro said, “Okay, I’ll do it for that”--I just knew I could not shoot anything that could not be in the movie. The last scene in the movie is actually not in the memoir. It was the only scene that I was not sure I was going to shoot it and not include it. Particularly because we shot it the first day that Paul and Bob were acting with each other. I didn’t know if that relationship would be present enough to warrant it. It was encapsulating some things that I thought were important in the script. I like writing and if I could I would have kept on writing drafts. One thing about being a director, you need to make a lot of decisions very fast and need to accept the fact that you are going to make a lot of bad decisions, so you have to make them quickly. I don’t go back. When I realized I was really going to make it, I went immediately to a café and wrote a 200 page book of every shot. In particular I wanted to know how the end of one scene would relate to the beginning of the next. In a story about two characters equally you need to do a lot to sew it together. It is complex and needs to flow.

    Audience: In the last scene when the father is at the poetry reading after Nick has won an award it was interesting to see how he would handle it.
    Paul Weitz: I really liked that scene. It was the last day of shooting. In theory I wanted to be showing the moment of maximum emotional impact between the two of them and glossing over with irony and other elements. It is interesting to me that Nick takes ownership of it. I know that in real life Jonathan said to Nick, “You are going to win the Nobel Prize before I do, you bastard.”

    Audience: What made you think Paul Dano could handle working head to head with Robert De Niro?
    Paul Weitz: I knew that he had acted with Daniel Day Lewis a couple of times. I had read that Daniel Day Lewis doesn’t leave character. Paul said he once called him when they were shooting There Will Be Blood and Daniel said "hello" in character. I thought if Paul was not intimidated by that he could work with De Niro. Paul is a smart guy and he is respectful as well. De Niro has been around long enough that he would not want to put up with any crap from anybody. I tend to want to direct people to suppress their emotions because I think that is what we normally do. I felt like that was his approach.

    Audience: I appreciated the orientation of the De Niro character with Dano at the poetry reading. They were facing each other but Dano was not looking straight at him.
    Paul Weitz: That was Bob’s decision, on the first day of them being together. It illustrates Jonathan not giving of himself when his kid is reading his poetry.

    Audience: Have Nick and Jonathan seen the film? What comments have they made?
    Paul Weitz: Nick really put his life on hold. He was there throughout the shooting--generous and giving. The only very disturbing part and an issue was the day of his mother’s suicide which he made the decision to come see. Actually, I think it was healthy in terms of an additional distancing moment for him. It was quite beneficial to me because I had gotten to be friends with him. He had seen various cuts of it. His dad has seen the trailer. Apparently he really liked the part where he said, "You are me I made you." He asked to play it again and again. Nick is going to show it to him.

    Being Flynn opens in DC on March 9.

    NOTE: Being Flynn doesn't just address big issues--it's doing something to make a difference. To help those who continue to face homelessness, 100 percent of the ticket sales for the March 7 premiere will benefit Boston Medical Center's Elders Living At Home Program, the agency that gave Jonathan Flynn a place to stay.



    Ken Burns, Health, Water and Lucy Walker:

    20th Annual Environmental Film Festival

    The 20th anniversary Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital, March 13 through 25, presents 180 documentary, narrative, animated, archival, experimental and children’s films selected to provide fresh perspectives on environmental issues facing our planet. The critical relationship between health and the environment is a special theme of the 2012 Festival, which features cinematic work from 42 countries and 93 Washington, D.C., United States and world premieres. Seventy-five filmmakers and 115 special guests will discuss their work at the Festival.


    War Elephants. Photo from the Environmental Film Festival website.

    Iconic documentary filmmaker Ken Burns presents a sneak preview with clips from his upcoming film, The Dust Bowl. Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Lucy Walker hosts a retrospective of her films, including her latest, The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom, winner of the Festival’s Polly Krakora Award for artistry in film. Eco filmmaker Deborah Koons Garcia screens the world premiere of Symphony of the Soil, highlighting the significance of soil as an overlooked protagonist of Earth’s story.

    The Festival kicks off on opening night with the Washington, D.C. premiere of Switch about transitioning from fossil fuels to clean energy and a Memorial Tribute to Kenyan environmentalist and Nobel Prize-winner Wangari Maathai. The Festival closes with a selection from 2012 Sundance Film Festival, A Fierce Green Fire: The Battle for a Living Planet, capturing the history of the environmental movement in the United States.

    Academy Award-winning director Jessica Yu’s Last Call at the Oasis, a Washington, D.C. premiere, identifies the global water crisis as the central issue facing the world in this century. Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for the New West, directed by Mark Decena and produced by James Redford, Jill Tidman and Renata Foucre, offers a new plan for equitably sharing the scarce water of the Colorado River and will have its world premiere at the Festival. Robert Redford introduces the film. Ocean advocate Alexandra Cousteau focuses on a local river, the Potomac, in her clips presentation from Expedition Blue Planet: North America.

    Semper Fi: Always Faithful exposes the lethal results of water contamination – and coverup – by the U.S. Marine Corps at Camp Lejeune, N.C. Selections from The Science of Healing with Dr. Esther Sternberg investigate the interplay between mind and body in health. Clips from the PBS series, “Designing Healthy Communities” explore the impact of the built environment on health. The Washington, D.C. premiere of Biophilic Design:The Architecture of Life recommends ways to create healthy habitats for humans.

    The health and economic effects of the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico are examined in The Big Fix and Beyond Pollution while the environmental impact of Alberta’s tar sands and the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline are explored in Dirty Oil and Pipe Dreams. The decade-long battle over a proposed wind farm in Nantucket Sound is documented in Cape Spin: An American Power Struggle.

    The United States premiere of La Clé des Champs (The Field of Enchantment), a French film by the directors of the multi-award winning Microcosmos, spotlights the wonders of nature through close-up photography. Pioneering filmmaker Perry Miller Adato presents her latest film, Paris: The Luminous Years. Indie animator Bill Plympton screens two new animations along with a series of his classics. The world premiere of Bones of Turkana illuminates the life of paleoanthropologist and conservationist Richard Leakey.

    Someplace with a Mountain, The Hungry Tide and There Once Was An Island put a human face on climate change, showing how rising sea levels are threatening the survival of low-lying Pacific islands. The world premiere of Shattered Sky contrasts the lack of progress on climate change with the decisive action on the ozone layer 30 year ago.

    The meaning of the organic food label, the disastrous introduction of cane toads into Australia, the Himalayan mountain kingdom of Bhutan, the future of the electric car, the story of eco-pirate Paul Watson and the dangers of nuclear power, are among additional topics explored in the 2012 Festival. Winners from the 2011 Jackson Hole Wildlife Festival will also be shown.

    Celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2012, the Environmental Film Festival has become the leading showcase for environmental films in the United States. Presented in collaboration with over 100 local, national and global organizations, the Festival is one of the largest cooperative cultural events in the nation’s capital. Films are screened at over 60 venues throughout the Washington metropolitan area, including museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theaters. Most screenings are free.

    For a complete schedule, visit
    the Festival Web site. To receive a film brochure, sign up on the Web site, or call 202-342-2564.



    Friends With Kids: Q&A with Director/Writer/Actor Jennifer Westfeldt

    By Annette Graham, DC Film Society Member

    At an advance screening of Friends With Kids on March 1 at AMC's Georgetown Theater, the director, producer, screenwriter and actress Jennifer Westfeldt answered questions about the film. The discussion was moderated by the Washington Post's 'On Parenting' blogger Janice D'Arcy.

    Friends With Kids is a comedy exploring the lives of friends--couples and singles--whose relationship with one another changes when children come into the picture. Jennifer Westfeldt, known for writing and acting in the 2002 film Kissing Jessica Stein, takes on four roles here; she is the film's director, writer, star and producer. She began her career as a theater actress in New York, starring in Broadway, regional and off-Broadway productions and has received numerous awards.

    Janet D'Arcy: This is a really honest depiction of married life with kids. One interesting thing about it is that you don't have any kids. Where did the inspiration come from?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: I do have a dog that feels like a daughter (everyone laughs). The inspiration really came from watching so many friends and people in our lives start to have children and make that transition and the sensation of being out of synch with your peer group--watching them change before your eyes and go away for a bit, and watching the friendships change and the relationships and romances change. You feel a bit left out but you are also observing how everybody feels a little bit differently. That's where the germ of the idea came from. Ironically, three months after we wrapped the movie my manager and business partner sat me down and said, "We're having a baby together." And I said, "You don't need to do that for the press tour." (everyone laughs) They had their baby two days ago. It's just amazing. Maybe we'll start a trend.

    Janet D'Arcy: One of the elements that fascinated me about the movie was how deeply you go into the male perspective. How were you able to observe that?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: I don't know how to answer that. I'm an actor first, so that I think that in terms of the writing, I try to play every part--boy or girl, old or young and think about what would feel truthful to me based on how I hear people speak. I don't have a great answer for that.

    Janet D'Arcy: The casting here was just incredible. The group had such chemistry that it felt to me that it was voyeuristic at some points--as if you were just eavesdropping on a really good group of friends. How did you assemble this cast?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: I'm still pinching myself that this group of actors agreed to do this tiny movie in the dead of winter in New York last year, which was the worst winter in 40 years in New York. We did not have a very glamorous or luxurious shoot. Adam has been a dear friend for almost 15 years, so he was a natural person to come aboard. He actually read the first draft of the screenplay. The day that I finished the first draft, we had invited some actors over to read it cold at our dining room table. We made pasta and had wine and it was just low-key. Adam [Scott] came, among others and read. After that moment, I felt like "I'm done." If we can ever have your schedule free enough to do it, we sort of based everything around that. Kristen [Wiig] and Maya [Rudolph] have worked together for years so they have such a built-in history. Jon [Hamm] has worked with Kristen and Maya on SNL and Chris O'Dowd just worked with Maya and Kristen on Bridesmaids and Eddie Burns is best friends with the cinematographer. Megan's [Fox] husband did a movie with Adam ten years ago. There were a lot of connections among us that existed; in this case it was really helpful since you have no time to shoot it and not a lot of takes and any built-in chemistry is to the good.

    Audience: What was it like directing yourself?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: It was a challenge. I was not planning on directing this movie; it was definitely not what I wanted to do. In every Indie film, there is one magical moment where the cast that you want comes together. Jake Kasdan was going to direct it and I was really excited about that; we've been trying to work together for a long time. He was still working on Bad Teacher and it kept extending and we didn't really know when we'd find that 4-week chunk when everyone was available. And of course that happened in the dead of winter a year ago. At that point I would step in or we would lose the opportunity. Jake basically made a bargain with me to be on set every day of the shoot itself to watch the monitor when I was on camera. And he became the mentor of the project which is the only way I would have accepted the challenge. My DP Will Rexer was an amazing partner and collaborator and really helped me with the steep learning curve. But I had another set of eyes. It was a challenge. I don't know that that aspect of it I'd do again. We shot this in 24 days last year with babies and toddlers most of those days.

    Audience: About the ending--why did you decide to have them come together rather than lead their separate lives?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: This was the ending from the beginning, from that first table reading. Adam and I believed in it. I felt like I'm not sure what the message would be if they ended up estranged and we left the theater worrying that we had ruined this child's life. I think the premise of the selfish single thinking they can have it all and beat the system and avoid complications and avoid the compromises and the messier parts of life--there needs to a lesson, there needs to be consequences and I don't actually see the ending as running off into the sunset. Let's see how that goes. I think it's going to be a long road for them still. I think they're beginning again at the end of the film and it may or may not work and might continue to be complicated.

    Audience: Are you going to do a sequel? (everyone laughs)
    Jennifer Westfeldt: I don't know what we'd call it, Kids with Friends. I'll take suggestions.

    Audience: You had a lot of little kids to direct. How well did they take direction and how many takes did you have to do for some of these complicated-looking scenes?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: We got really lucky for the most part, considering what a disaster it could have been. There were a few days that were dark days on our set because of the kids. For me it was a window into the world of parents on some level because the kids will do whatever they want when they want and nothing else. So if they don't feel like doing what you're doing, you have to wait it out, do something else, frame them out of the shot, come back, play a game with them, try to make them laugh. You felt a lot like a circus performer, trying to get them excited. In particular the two scenes at the end--the three year old playing two and a half at the end. We double cast that with two different actors, not twins, I couldn't find twins who could say lines and look like the younger version of Joe in most of the movie. So we just figured we'll shoot these scenes with two of them and one of them will give us a performance. On that day we had the tantrum scene to get and the scene where we put them to bed. I stupidly thought that the bed scene would be easier to start with because the tantrum I felt like we'll wait until they're tired and tantrum-y. And that was a terrible mistake because no child wants to get into bed ever and definitely not in the middle of the day in front of strangers with large cameras. So both children melted down, "Mommy, I want to go home," devastated, screaming, sad. I started to cry; I was going to be carted away by Child Services, having scarred these kids for life. That was a bad day. And we had to shoot that whole scene without the kids just hand-held, just me and Adam talking to the kids. And we had to wait until one of them was in a good mood. One moment they were so unhappy and I thought I had destroyed their lives and the next moment.... It was such a lesson. Those scenes were really hard. Oddly the tantrum scene was easy. "Hey, do you want to hit Adam and kick the floor?" "Yeah!" But getting them to bed and say lines, that was not of interest. It was a challenge. The Joe we had for most of the shoots, Theo, was like the light of the sun on the set. He was a most special beautiful kid and we couldn't wait until he got there every day because he put everyone in such a great mood. He's probably the best actor in the film.

    Audience: What was your budget?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: The budget was low. It was under $10 million. I'm not allowed to say how much under $10 million but not a small amount under $10 million. Every indie film is hard to get off the ground. Money is hard, in these times especially. This one was different from my first two films in that the other two we raised private equity share by share, so there were many many investors. Which is longer and harder in a sense but it's also easier in a sense because no one really has a say; everyone is just visiting. But they're not full-on partners with you. This was different in that we fortunately found Red Granite pictures and they had been reading scripts for two years looking for their first project. And they wanted to do this one, so they were all in. I had never had that experience before where someone wrote the whole check and wanted to be a big part of it. So that was faster in some ways but more complicated because you have partners in every way, and you already have so many people working on it. So it was very fortunate but posted a different set of challenges too.

    Audience: How did you get Mike Nichols [executive producer] involved in the project?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: We were lucky enough to workshop the screenplay for a long weekend at a place called New York Stage and Film which is my summer creative home. It's a great place on the Vassar campus during the summer where playwrights go to work out their material before it comes to New York. I've done a lot of plays there. They produced a four day workshop with the actors and we started the process with just a cold table read with some screenwriting mentors. And Mike was one of those. That was a great fortunate thing but also terrifying. I remember I had just gotten off the plane and we all came in and no one had looked at the script in months and I looked up at this long long table and there was Mike and next to Mike was Tina Fey and I thought, "This is a terrible idea, terrible idea, this is going to go very badly." We ended up having him on roundtable and getting noticed. Mike really responded to the material. He was moved enough to say he wanted to get involved and kind of godfather it.

    Audience: You've written a lot and now directing is added to your resume. In what directions do you plan to go?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: I thought I was just going to be on stage my whole life. That was all I ever planned for or wanted to do. It was ironic that I went to LA and did a sitcom to get on to Broadway. You never quite know where your path will lead you. Kissing Jessica Stein just organically came to pass. I was on a show and I had two months off and we were going to put up a night of sketches. It became this little play that we ran for 3 nights in the basement of a church. I got back to LA and my agent called and said all these studios called and wanted to make it into a movie. And I was, "Huh? What? We just invited our friends and family." I didn't understand how that happened. So I really feel like the Indie film thing just happened to me. I didn't ever think about it. I'm still learning every day and every second and trying to rise to new challenge. But it's also exciting especially as a woman to have a bit of say in your creative destiny. We happen to be at a moment this year in particular where so many women are doing that. It's a really cool time between Tina's success on 30 Rock, and Kristen and Annie with Bridesmaids and Miranda July, Lena Dunham, Rashida Jones just wrote something that she's in, there are 5 movies at Sundance that have women writing for themselves. There is a wave of people trying to change the reality and have more stories that speak to women and more roles for women. I'm excited about that, I don't want to let that go entirely. I've only made one movie every five years, so I'm not exactly prolific, but I'm going to try to keep mixing it up.

    Audience: After doing all this, do you want to have kids?
    Jennifer Westfeldt: We don't know; we love kids and our friends' kids, our lives are so crazy, I've been on a plane every day for the last 3 weeks. And it's hard to know how that would fit in. That may happen; but I don't know.

    Friends with Kids opens in the DC area on March 9.



    The 41st International Film Festival Rotterdam

    By James McCaskill, DC Film Society Member

    Year after year the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) attracts top quality filmmakers from around the globe. Not surprising since approximately 350,000 tickets are sold which makes this one of the world's largest festivals. This year it continued the tradition of mixing bright young directors with their first films and experienced maestros. Coming as it does just weeks before Berlin, a film festival that ranks with the best in the world, Rotterdam does not sense that it is losing top films to its larger competitor. IFFR brings superb films that are overlooked by Berlin and Cannes. Some of those attending Berlin moan about losing the absolute top tier films to Cannes. I would be amazed if that thought entered into the thinking of the IFFR leaders.


    Posters from the IFFR, above and below


    The Rotterdam festival is divided into three parts: Spectrum (films by experienced directors and master filmmakers of artistic and experimental cinema). Seventy-two films from thirty-two countries were screened this year. Bright Futures (idiosyncratic and adventurous new films by novice directors) and Signals (thematic programs and retrospectives "offering insight in topical as well as timeless ideas within cinema", their press release says). In addition their commercial arm, CineMart, is a co-production market that attracts 800 sales agents, distributors and fund raisers from seventy countries. That's power in this time of worldwide economic problems so many come seeking the Next Big Film.

    Opening Night film was the world premiere of Lucas Belvaux's 38 Witnesses (38 temoins, France, 2012). The film is freely adapted from Didier Decoin's book that itself was based on the 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese in New York, whose cries for help were ignored by everyone. The book and film transplant the murder to Le Havre and studies the different memories of the witnesses.

    Only Rotterdam, in presenting the works of the Chinese independent filmmaker Ai Weiwei whose works are most often screened in private home and small cafes in China, would construct a Chinese cafe in which to screen Ai's films. Seating only 20 at a time, you really do have the feeling that you are in a clandestine space watching films that the Chinese government would rather you not see. Among the films screened was one you probably won't see at your local cinema, the 150 hour Beijing 2003, a documentary of ring roads and boulevards. As one might expect of an underground filmmaker, Ai did not attend, fearing arrest upon his return. Ai has been severely beaten by police in the past.

    One of the pleasures that Rotterdam offers me is the opportunity to meet with directors from countries that do not have a strong film making tradition. This year I met with Uganda's JOSEph S KEN (sic--that's how Joseph Kenneth Ssebaggals spells his nom de film) on his debut film A Small Piece (Uganda, 2011). Ken told me, "Before coming up with the story I went to visit my village, to hide out and write. I met this guy, a strong witch doctor, and interviewed him. From that interview I developed this story. Told him, 'I think we are going to do film in my village.' In traditional times a strong witch doctor would have been a rich guy. Now he works as a sharna boy (gardener) for my grandmother. I had a good time with him; he told me a lot--how everything works. He contacts spirits in trees, in traditional times spirits would come and talk telling you who is giving you problems, who is causing trouble. In the film I have family fighting each other, that's to move the story along. In the past females would select a wife or husband for you. Today people make their own choices. People do fight to protect land. You don't just come and take land. Today rich people bribe local officials to take land in cities. No one bothers in rural area. My sister financed this film, she knew from experience how films are made. I studied in Kenya and know how to develop a script, how to edit and do post-production so I don't have spend money on that. If I had had funds I would have had a bigger cast and crew. Coming to Rotterdam means a lot to me for future films. I can use this experience to speak with people about funds. When they ask to see what I have I have done I can show them A Small Piece and the Rotterdam exposure. My next film will be different." Ken's film shows talent and now he may be able to make a film with a greater possibility of wide distribution.

    My highlight at Rotterdam was asking the Press Desk for assistance in speaking with filmmakers from Arab Spring countries, expecting two and having sixteen show up. That's a different article.

    AND THE WINNERS ARE ...
    The winner of the Audience Award was Monsieur Lazhar, a film in the spirit of Être et avoir (Nicolas Philibert, 2002), in which the Algerian immigrant Lazhar helps a primary school class come to terms with a tragic loss, while benefiting himself from the innocence of the schoolchildren. Monsieur Lazhar, which also took the award for Best Canadian feature film at the Toronto film festival and was in the running for an Oscar for Best Foreign Film, will be given a Dutch theatrical release on 22 March 2012 by Imagine Nederland.

    In the Dioraphte Award winner Goodbye, a young female lawyer tries to leave Iran. This personal, gripping film by Rasoulof, who himself has been the subject of legal persecution in Iran for his films, was made thanks to a contribution from the Hubert Bals Fund. Other films scoring highly in the audience award poll included Hugo by Martin Scorsese, Die Unsichtbare by Christian Schwochow (Germany) and the topical documentary Back to the Square by Petr Lom (Norway).

    The three equal winners of the Tiger Awards, given to a director's first or second film are:

    Clip by Maja Miloš (Serbia, 2012) A vigorous, rebellious, authentic, honest and revealing film using modern means to depict in a punchy way the mobile generation, who capture their lives through images recorded on their phones. An emotionally disturbed main character in a fractured family, within a broken society, Clip provokes many questions and gives no answers. Clip saw its world premiere in the Tiger Awards Competition 2012. The film is produced by Film House Bas Celik (Serbia).

    De jueves a domingo by Dominga Sotomayor (Chile/Netherlands, 2012) This film is a very precise and gentle depiction of the intimate space of a family. We are captured in a journey seen through a child’s perspective, and recall the moments of our own childhood, at the same time experiencing and understanding all the complexities that adult life entails. The minimalistic story is revealed through the fresh angles of the camerawork. A gentle piece, rich with sensitive observations. De jueves a domingo was supported by the IFFR’s Hubert Bals Fund for script and project development and was selected for the Hubert Bals Fund Plus-program. The film saw its world premiere in the Tiger Awards Competition 2012 and was produced by Forastero and Cinestación (Chile) in co-production with Circe Films (Netherlands). Sales agent is FiGa Films (USA).

    Egg and Stone by Huang Ji (China, 2012). The director creates a sensation by telling the private story of a girl who unwillingly becomes trapped in a life on the margins. The taboo present in the film is broken by means of poetic language. The director does so with a convincing author’s approach and sensitive direction of non-professional actors. The beautifully framed, conscious choice of camerawork is relevant to storytelling, and unveils human secrets. Egg and Stone saw its world premiere in the Tiger Awards Competition 2012 and was produced by Yellow-Green Pi and Panorama (China).

    MUST SEE

  • Back to the Square (Peter Lom, Norway/Canada, 2011). A year after the euphoria on Tahrir Square, the demonstrators’ goals have not even come close to being reached. The country is ruled with an iron fist and there is still no democracy. The ‘eye of the world’ has moved elsewhere. How things have been in Egypt since 25 January 2011 is explained using five portraits of people from various walks of life. I asked the director how he chose these five people and he said, "I left two or three more films on the cutting room floor. We followed 60 individuals and picked these five as the most important. We wanted to honor people's courage." I had the opportunity to interview Mark, brother of the blogger who went to jail last April. Mark said, "Before going to prison he was campaigning against required military service. My brother will continue doing that. As of 25 January there have been over 12,000 military trials of civilians. Since the military government took charge military courts have sent 20,000 civilians to prison. 12,000 were revolutionaries."

  • Dernière séance (Laurent Achard, France, 2011). The lonely, taciturn Sylvain is a projectionist in an old local cinema. The place has to close because it doesn’t get enough customers, but the film lover Sylvain doggedly keeps screening films. At night he has a very different, macabre obsession. A cinematic thriller that plays with the conventions of the genre, it is not often that a horror film makes my Must See list and this one deserves its place at the top.

  • Goodbye (Mohammad Rasoulof, Iran, 2011). Without her husband and without her lawyer’s licence, which has been withdrawn, Noora is left pregnant and alone in her apartment. Her attempt to leave Iran turns into a fight with male chauvinism. A personal, nerve-wracking and infuriating film by Rasoulof, who was himself convicted for his films in Iran. Goodbye won Cannes' Un Certain Regard award for Best Director. Rasoulof said, "In Iran the majority of the media belongs to the State. All of them considered that the presence of my film in Cannes, and the prizes it obtained were a form of disloyalty, and that the Cannes Festival was using my film to make a political statement.... I have appealed against my first court ruling and am waiting for another trial. If the verdict is identical, I will return to prison for six years."

  • Patience (After Sebald) (Grant Gee, UK, 2011). Unique, beautifully shot essay about the work of the influential writer W.G. Max Sebald (1944-2001). Gee ventures to East Anglia to provide an impression of Sebald and the latter’s most famous book The Rings of Saturn. A film about landscape, art, history, life and loss. When interviewing the director I asked him why he chose to make this film. Gee said, "Despite the film seeming to be serious, making it was a joy. I walked the same route Sebald did. It became one of the great experiences of my life. I'm not a literature expert, I read Sebald's books as a fan. I still don't know what I took away. Most surprising was realizing, was seeing England as part of Europe. The east of England is like Holland. W. G. Sebald has, in the ten years since his sudden death in a car crash in 2001, begun to exert an almost uncanny influence over contemporary art and writing. He's become on of those rarest of writers: the adjectival author. I wanted to find out why this is, and trace his influence through the zeitgeist." There will be a screening in April at the New York City Cinema Guild.

  • Voice of My Father (Orhan Eskikoy & Zeynel Dogan, Turkey/Germany/France, 2012). The history of a Kurdish family from 1979-2009, utilising a mix of documentary and fiction. Exquisite images and personal sound recordings (tapes sent from the father working abroad) embellish this film about the repression of the Kurds, immigrant labor and language. "When I heard his father's voice," Eskikoy told me about the tapes Dogan had found, "I was impressed. His father spoke to the family like he was there, as if he were living in the village with his family. All of the tape's contents are real but for technical qualities were not good and Dogan had to re-record them." His mother re-recorded her tapes to her husband, a very stressful experience for her.

    EXCELLENT

  • Black & White & Sex (John Winter, Australia, 2011). Eight excellent actresses together play Angie, a woman who is more than just a prostitute and wants to show that too. In her interview in this film-in-a-film, she keeps revealing more of herself, while at the same time she undresses the interviewer, literally and metaphorically. Sexy and funny. In a bare film studio, a director is standing ready with his crew for an interview with a prostitute. Shot in classic black and white, the documentary maker in Black & White & Sex interviews her at length, with various cameras and a barrage of questions. Eight different actresses portray one and the same woman: Angie, the eloquent prostitute.

  • Die Unsichtbare (Christian Schwochow, Germany, 2011). Maybe it’s her shyness, possibly it is something else, but drama student Fine seems invisible in groups. That is also what she is told by her mentor at drama school just before - to everyone’s surprise - she is given the demanding leading role of Camille in a play by the celebrity director Kaspar Friedmann, who is determined to work with students this time. 'Friedmann was looking for a sheep rather than a wolf for the role' is one of the many destructive remarks that Fine hears. And Friedmann does want to destroy her, break her down until she almost disappears and then build her up again so she can play Camille. In the meanwhile, the fairly vague boundary between Fine’s turbulent private life and her work on stage becomes even more vague à la Aronofsky’s Black Swan and Cassavetes’ Opening Night.

  • Future Last Forever (Özcan Alper, Turkey/Germany/France, 2011). Sumru, an ethnomusicologist by profession, travels to Diyarbakir to make sound recordings of elegies and the stories that belong with them. While she listens to the stories of Kurdish women who lost their husbands or sons during the bloody tyranny, she is confronted with her own past. Sumru’s lover left for the Kurdish front years ago and never came back. What happened to her missing lover?

  • Girimunho (Halvecio Manns Jr. and Clarissa Campolina, Brazil/Germany/Spain, 2011). Time takes it easy in São Romão, situated in a distant corner of Brazil. The river calmly follows its course, no one gets worked up. The young Branca is thinking about going to study somewhere else, but for now an important task keeps her at home: caring for her grandmother, who could use some company after her husband died. Bastú is a vivacious 81-year-old, just like her old friend Maria, who cheers up every local feast with her music and singing. The neighbours find a lot of support from each other, but not even Maria has any answer to the apparitions that haunt Bastú.

  • Grandma Lo-fi: The Basement Tapes of Sigrídur Níelsdóttir (Orri Jonsson/Kristin Bjork/Kristjansdottir/Ingibjorg Birgisdottir, Iceland/Denmark, 2011). Charming documentary, mostly shot on nostalgic Super-8, about the grand old lady of Icelandic music, Sigrídur Níelsdóttir. She released her first album in 2001 at the age of 71 and became a cult phenomenon. She had made music all her life but never recorded any of it. When she finally started doing so on a cassette recorder in her kitchen, playing keyboard and any household appliances that made weird sounds, she couldn't stop. Since then, she has recorded over 600 homemade songs and made 59 (!) albums.

  • Lost in the Mountain (Gao Zipeng, China, 20911). Four friends hike into the mountains in search of another friend who has been missing for some time. They may not even hope to find him, but they do have hope. The film portrays an unusual friendship in an exceptional landscape scarred by yesteryear’s intensive mining. This film is an exception within the Hidden Histories programme; it is the only fiction film in the programme - one with a hidden story that is told indirectly. Bie Lei has disappeared in a mountainous region and hasn’t been found, even after lengthy searches. Part of his family still lives on the mountain - a hollow mountain. Hollowed out by large-scale and intensive mining that has now stopped and left the villages in a desolate state.

  • Monsieur Lazhar (Phillippe Falardeau, Canada, 2011). A primary school class is horrified by a most unpleasant event. Simon finds his teacher Martine after she has hanged herself in the classroom. Her replacement, the strict yet fair Algerian immigrant Bachir Lazhar, first tries to teach the children the literature of Honoré de Balzac--in vain, as they have other things on their mind. The suicide left a deep wound, especially on Simon and Alice. Bachir is himself in the meantime wrestling with family problems and can be thrown out of the country at any moment.

  • Romance Joe (Lee Kwang-Kuk, South Korea, 2011). A filmmaker with writer's block is given stories by a fun-loving waitress in exchange for night-time overtime. Full of the pleasure of telling stories and causing confusion, this debut film from Hong Sang-Soo's assistant is bound to be lauded for its unique sense of humour. "Everyone in the world lives in their own universe, within which they have their stories," director Lee said in Rotterdam. "Everywhere you look you see people talking about their lives, giving each other part of their stories. I want to introduce that feeling into my own film." The organization of Lee's debut feature follows that concept resulting in a delightful tangle of stories. Lee Kwang-Kuk told me that he wrote the screenplay in 2010, started filming in Spring 2011, and finished film in Autumn 2011. Eight months filming. "I have no specific audience in mind," he responded. "If I make a film about a subject I enjoy then there is an audience who will enjoy it. I am interested to see how the audience will see the film as a whole. How people will see the ending."

  • Stories that Exist Only When Remembered (Historias que so existem quando lembradas, Julia Murat, Brazil/Argentina/France, 2011). Every morning Madalena makes bread for Antonio’s old coffee shop. And every day she crosses the railroads where no trains have passed for years, cleans up the gate of the locked cemetery, listens to the priest’s sermon and then shares lunch with the other old villagers. Clinging to the memory of her dead husband and living in her past, Madalena is awakened by the arrival of Rita, a young photographer who comes to the village of Jotuomba where time seems to have stopped and people are stuck in their memories and daily rituals. And why is the cemetery locked?

    VERY GOOD

  • I'm Still Alive (Peter van Heuten, Netherlands, 2012). She’s alive, but won’t be for long. Soon a host of angels will fetch her. A poetic and visual portrait of the old Polish woman Jadwiga Kubis Waslicka. Her life coincided with the 20th century. The great movements of history, such as communism, capitalism and fascism meant she had to roam Europe from Poland via Germany and the United Kingdom to Holland. Now she’s back in her homeland, in Warsaw. She is old. Her body is decaying and she’s basically waiting until the angels come to fetch her.

  • Room 514 (Sharon Bar-Ziv, Israel, 2012). This is a disturbing film wherein a female Israeli soldier is ordered to interrogate an Israeli officer who is alleged to have abused an Arab family. Lower in rank and also a woman, she is barely taken seriously by the haughty man; he only gives her sarcastic answers. Her colleagues, including her lover, advise her to stop the case - because it is too political, too complex and too notorious. Instead, she fastens her teeth in it, in the hope of getting justice for the victims. In the meantime she has the thumbscrews tightened by her lover and his intended. The film displays the divided political world of Israel. "The real story of Israel is the conflict between security needs and moral issues," Bar-Ziv said. "Room 514 is about the Israeli conflict, but the internal conflict, not between us and the Palestinians but between ourselves. Let's look at ourselves and judge our own behavior."

  • The Loneliest Planet (Julia Loktev, USA/Germany, 2011). Taking its name from the travel guide, this backpackers' adventure is a loose adaptation of Tim Bissell’s Expensive Trips Nowhere, a series of stories about rich Westerners travelling in poor, beautiful parts of the world. In this case, Alex (Gael García Bernal) and Nica (Hani Furstenberg) have decided to go trekking in the Caucasus a few months before their wedding, led by local guide Dato (Bidzina Gujabidze). They walk for hours, sometimes talking or singing, but usually surrounded by the intoxicating silence of the rugged mountains. An unexpected event sorely tests their relationship.

  • Way of Passion (Joerg Burger, Austria, 2011). Trapani, Sicily. The men of the town prepare for the Easter procession. Clothes are remodelled and the immense statues that have to be carried on their shoulders through the narrow streets of the town during the procession have to be repaired. This annual procession has taken place for 400 years, a tradition that is cherished. It’s a great honor to be chosen as one of the bearers, but it's a heavy and emotional task. Joerg Burger follows the preparations and the procession itself which lasts all night. His floating camera follows the events without commentary: not only is there no narrator, but in the film itself barely a word is said. The film focuses on the extreme devotion and worship that grips Trapani for 24 hours, both for Christ as for the bearers who now briefly have to take his place.

    The 41st International Film Festival Rotterdam took place January 25-February 5, 2012. For more information,
    visit the website.



    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, Karlovy Vary 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
    "Rendezvous with French Cinema" presents six films from the contemporary French film series at New York's Lincoln Center. The films are shown March 3-8 and include Moon Child, Pater, The Screen Illusion, The Last Screening, Smuggler's Songs and The Well-Digger's Daughter. Some will have live Q&A's from the Lincoln Center.

    The "10th Annual New African Films Festival" takes place March 8-13. The opening night film is Mama Africa (2011) about the singer Miriam Makeba (1932–2008). Other titles include Lucky (2011) from South Africa, Themba (2010) from South Africa, Come Back, Africa, winner of the Venice Critics Award in 1959, Grey Matter (2011) from Rwanda, Born on the 25th of January (2011) from Egypt, A Million Colours (2011) from South Africa, How to Steal 2 Million (2011) from South Africa, No More Selections! We Want Elections! (2011) from Liberia, Imani (2010) set in Uganda, An African Election (2011) from Ghana, Ties That Bind (2011) and Pegasus (2010) from Morocco.

    The AFI takes part in the Environmental Film Festival. Last Dogs of Winter is a documentary about Eskimo dogs; an evening with Animator Bill Plympton, films by Lucy Walker, Land of Oblivion about Chernobyl, the DC premiere of The Hunter with Willem Dafoe, and many more.

    "Not So Long Ago: The Films of Whit Stillman" celebrates Stillman's return to filmmaking by showing three of his films from the 1990s: Metropolitan (1990), Barcelona (1994) and The Last Days of Disco (1998).

    "Screen Valentines: Great Movie Romances" concludes in March with Happy Together and The Notebook.

    In honor of the Charles Dickens (1812-1870) bicentennial, AFI presents "Dickens in the Cinema: A Bicentennial Retrospective." Films in March are The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (1947), The Pickwick Papers (1952), and A Tale of Two Cities (1958) starring Dirk Bogarde.

    "Bigger Than Life: The Films of Nicholas Ray" continues in March with Rebel Without a Cause, Hot Blood, Knock on Any Door, Bigger Than Life, Wind Across the Everglades, The Savage Innocents, Party Girl, The True Story of Jesse James and The High Green Wall. More in April.

    Gene Kelly, born in 1912, gets a well-deserved retrospective in his centenary year. In March the "Gene Kelly Centennial Retrospective" includes films such as On the Town, Summer Stock, An American in Paris, It's Always Fair Weather, Brigadoon, Les Girls, Hello Dolly and Xanadu. One more in April.

    "Things to Come: The City Imagined on Film" is presented in cooperation with the National Building Museum's exhibit "Unbuilt Washington." The films present futuristic views of city life and urban design and include Brazil, Playtime, The Trial, Gattaca, THX 1138 and Logan's Run.

    The opera on film for March is "La Boheme" and the ballet on film for March is "La Corsaire" and "Romeo and Juliet." Check the website for dates and times.

    Other special engagements at the AFI in March include The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover, "A Tribute to the Nicholas Brothers," Attack the Block (2011), The Quiet Man (1952), and Troll 2.

    Freer Gallery of Art
    The "Korean Film Festival DC 2012," co-presented with the AFI, presents Korean films in March and April. On March 11 at 2:00pm is Foxy Festival (Lee Hae-young, 2010); on March 16 at 7:00pm is Anyang, Paradise City (Park Chan-kyong, 2011); on March 18 at 2:00pm is Cyrano Agency (Kim Hyun-seok, 2010); and on March 25 at 2:00pm is My Dear Desperado (Kim Kwang-sik, 2010). The series continues in April.

    National Gallery of Art
    "PhotoFilm!", a series exploring the use of still photographs in motion pictures concludes in March with "The Filmic Photographic" on March 4 at 4:30pm. Two other "PhotoFilm!" programs are at the Goethe Institute.

    A series of films by Robert Bresson (1901-1999) includes Les Anges du Peche (1943) on March 3 at 2:00pm, Pickpocket (1959) on March 3 at 4:15pm introduced by Keith Cohen. Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945) is on March 10 at 4:30pm preceded by the short film Les Affaires Publiques (1934). Diary of a Country Priest (1950) is on March 11 at 4:30pm; Four Nights of a Dreamer (1972) is on March 17 at 4:30pm; Au Hasard, Balthazar (1966) is followed by Mouchette (1967) on March 18 at 4:30pm. The Devil, Probably (1977) is on March 24 at 2:00pm; A Man Escaped (1956) is on March 25 at 4:30pm; The Trial of Joan of Arc (1962) is on March 31 at 2:30pm; Lancelot du Lac (1974) is on March 31 at 4:00pm and Une Femme Douce (1969) is on April 1 at 4:00pm and is followed by L'Argent (1982).

    Special events and art films include The Reach of Resonance (Steve Elkins, 2010) on March 15 and 16 at 12:30pm; The Nine Muses (John Akomfrah, 2011) and the short film Sack Barrow (Ben Rivers, 2011) on March 17 at 2:00pm; and Grande Hotel (Lotte Stoops, 2010) preceded by the short film The Silver and the Cross (Harun Farocki, 2011) on March 24 at 4:00pm.

    Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
    On March 1 at 8:00pm is Elite Squad: The Enemy Within (José Padilha, 2010), a cop drama which was Brazil's selection for Best Foreign Language Film. On March 8 at 8:00pm is Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone (Lev Anderson and Chris Metzler, 2010), a documentary about Fishbone, and introduced by Chris Metzler. On March 15 at 8:00pm, as part of the Environmental Film Festival, is Arctic Trilogy (Janet Biggs, 2010-2011) with an introduction by the filmmaker.

    National Museum of African Art
    On March 22 at 6:30pm is The Man Who Stopped the Desert (2010) about an African peasant farmer in the Sahel, shown as part of the Environmental Film Festival.

    National Museum of the American Indian
    Shown daily at 3:30pm (except Wednesdays) is the documentary Mohawk Girls (Tracey Deer, 2005), about 3 young Mohawk women living on the Kahnawake reserve. Finding My Talk Among the Skywalkers: Mohawk (Paul M. Rickard, 2001) is shown daily except Wednesdays at 12:30pm. As part of the Environmental Film Festival is People of a Feather (Joel Heath, 2002) on March 17 at 2:00pm with the filmmaker present for Q&A. Also part of EFF is Skydancer (Katja Esson, 2011), about Mohawk ironworkers on March 23 at 7:00pm, with the filmmaker in attendance.

    Museum of American History
    On March 2 at 12:00 noon is Sworn To the Drum: A Tribute to Francisco Aguabella (Les Blank, 1995). Following the film, Blank discusses the film with Smithsonian scholars Marvette Pérez, James Early, and Jim Deutsch, and with the audience.

    Films shown as part of the Environmental Film Festival are The Wilderness Idea: John Muir, Gifford Pinchot and the First Great Battle for Wilderness (Diane Garey and Lawrence Hott, 1990) on March 18 at noon, Wild by Law: The Rise of Environmentalism and the Creation of the Wilderness Act (Lawrence Hott and Diane Garey, 1992) on March 18 at 1:00pm, A Place in the Land (Charles Guggenheim, 1998) on March 18 at 2:15pm, the world premiere of California Forever: The Story of California State Parks (David Vassar, 2012) on March 18 at 3:00pm, Monumental: David Brower's Fight to Protect Wild America (Kelly Duane, 2003) on March 24 at noon, Butterflies and Bulldozers: David Schooley, Fred Smith, and the Fight for San Bruno Mountain (Ann Dunsky, 2010) on March 24 at 1:30pm, and Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for New West (Mark Decena, 2012) on March 24 at 3:00pm.

    National Portrait Gallery
    The National Portrait Gallery takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with John Muir in the New World (2011), a documentary about Muir's life and legacy.

    Smithsonian American Art Museum
    On March 16 at 8:30pm is TRON (1982), about a video game inventor who is transported into the digital world. On March 17 at 7:00pm is The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007), a documentary about two rival gamers. Several of the film's stars will be present for discussion. Both films complement the exhibit "The Art of Video Games."

    National Museum of Women in the Arts
    A five-part French-inspired film series begins with Dangerous Liaisons (1988) based on the 1782 novel, on March 4 at 2:00pm.

    Two films are presented as part of the Environmental Film Festival: on March 19 at 7:00pm is the DC premiere of Arc of Light: A Portrait of Anna Campbell Bliss (2010) with filmmaker Cid Collins Walker present for discussion. On March 20 at 7:00pm is the world premiere of Deafening Silence (2011) about the Burma military dictatorship with filmmaker Holly Fisher attending.

    Washington Jewish Community Center
    On March 20 at 7:30pm is Season 3, episodes 1, 2 and 3 of Srugim, a popular Israeli TV show. Post-film discussion with Srugim actor Amos Tamam.

    Goethe Institute
    The Goethe Institute takes part in "PhotoFilm!" a series exploring the uses of still photographs in motion pictures. On March 5 at 6:30pm is "The Photo Novel," a program of short films and on March 12 at 6:30pm is "The Plasticity of the Moment," also a collection of short films. One other program in the "PhotoFilm!" series is at the the National Gallery of Art.

    For Women's History Month is Settlement Houses to the Olympics, about Jewish women in American sport on March 6 at noon. Discussion will follow with Dr. Linda J. Borish, Associate Professor at Western Michigan University and executive producer of the film and moderator Dr. Pam Nadell, Director, Jewish Studies Program at American University.

    "The State and the Individual: Films by Marc Bauder and Dorte-Franke" is a new series beginning March 26 at 6:30pm with Last to Know (2006), a documentary about three German families from the GDR that had one or more members imprisoned. More in April.

    The Goethe Institute takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with Under Control (Volker Sattel, 2011), a documentary about nuclear energy in Germany on March 19 at 5:30pm and Taste the Waste (Valentin Thurn, 2011) on March 19 at 7:30pm.

    National Geographic Society
    The "All Roads Film Project" presents a three-film series "Women Hold Up Half the Sky." On March 2 at 7:30pm is Here I Am (Beck Cole, 2011) from Australia, about a woman recently released from prison. On March 3 at 4:30pm is A Small Act (Jennifer Arnold, 2010) about a student from Kenya who was sponsored by a stranger and years later tries to find his sponsor. On March 3 at 7:30pm is My Wedding and Other Secrets (Roseanne Liang, 2010) from New Zealand, about a daughter in a traditional Chinese family who hides her boyfriend from her disapproving family. All three films will have their directors present for discussion.

    As part of the Environmental Film Festival on March 16 at 7:30pm is The Tundra Book: A Tale of Vukvukai, the Little Rock (Aleksei Vakhrushev, 2011) from Russia. This documentary is about the nomadic reindeer herding Chuchki people who live in a remote Russian peninsula in the Arctic Circle. The director will be present for discussion. On March 19 at 7:30pm is Bones of Turkana, a documentary about Richard Leakey with director John Heminway attending. On March 17 at 1:00pm is "An Animated Retrospective," a program of some of the most popular animated films screened during the last 20 years of the Environmental Film Festival. On March 14 at 7:30pm is War Elephants and on March 13 at 7:00pm is "A Tribute to Wangari Maathai" and a screening of Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai with documentary filmmakers Lisa Merton and Alan Dater.

    "Samurai Cinema" is a day devoted to three classic samurai films, shown in conjunction with the exhibit "Samurai: The Warrior Transformed." All are in 35mm and all star the great Toshiro Mifune. On March 31 at 11:00am is Samurai Rebellion (Masaki Kobayashi, 1967); on March 31 at 1:30pm is Hidden Fortress (Akira Kurosawa, 1958); and on March 31 at 4:15pm is Sword of Doom (Kihachi Okamoto, 1966). All three are introduced by Michael Jeck.

    The Japan Information and Culture Center
    For the Environmental Film Festival, the Japan Information and Culture Center shows Eatrip (Yuri Nomura, 2009) on March 14 at 6:30pm, an exploration of contemporary Japanese food culture.

    On March 21 at 6:30pm is Fukushima Hula Girls (Masaki Kobayashi, 2011), a documentary narrated by actress Yu Aoi, star of the original "Hula Girls" film of 2006.

    The National Theatre
    Burt Lancaster is the subject of a new series at the National Theater on Mondays at 6:30pm. On March 12 at 6:30pm is From Here to Eternity (Fred Zinnemann, 1953); on March 19 at 6:30pm is Sorry, Wrong Number (Anatole Litvak, 1948); and on March 26 is Sweet Smell of Success (Alexander Mackendrick, 1957). More in April.

    Arlington Arts and Artisphere
    A Robert Rodriguez film series is shown as part of the exhibit "Frida Kahlo: Her Photos." It begins with his first film El Mariachi on March 7 at 8:00pm and continues through March. On March 14 at 8:00pm is Desperado, a sequel to El Mariachi. On March 21 is Once Upon a Time in Mexico, a sequel to Desperado. On March 28 at 8:00pm is From Dusk til Dawn.

    As part of the Environmental Film Festival on March 15 at 7:00pm is Jardin en el Mar (Thomas Reidelsheimer), about an underwater installation by Spanish artist Cristina Iglesias.

    The Artisphere is one of the locations for the Northern Virginia Jewish Film Festival with films March 18-25.

    National Archives
    In conjunction with the exhibit "Benjamin Franklin: In Search of a Better World" is the 2002 PBS documentary shown in two parts. Part I is on March 8 at noon and Part II is on March 15 at noon.

    On March 20 at 7:00pm is California State of Mind: The Legacy of Pat Brown (Sascha Rice), presented by the Charles Guggenheim Center for the Documentary Film. After the film is a discussion with the director and producers.

    For the Environmental Film Festival on March 25 at 2:00pm, Ken Burns will introduce excerpts from his forthcoming PBS film The Dust Bowl; the producers and writer will join Burns in discussion.

    National Museum of Natural History
    Several films are shown as part of the Environmental Film Festival. On March 21 at 7:00pm is Last Call at the Oasis based on the book by Alex Prud'homme who will sign copies following the screening. On March 24 at 11:30am is a program of films from the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival.

    Interamerican Development Bank
    On March 1 at 6:30pm is the Uruguayan film Whiskey (Juan Pablo Rebella and Pablo Stoll, 2004).

    As part of the Environmental Film Festival on March 16 at 6:30pm is the DC premiere of A Useful Life (Federico Veiroj, 2010) from Uruguay.

    The Avalon
    This month's Greek film is My Sweet Canary (Roy Sher, 2011), a documentary about the Rebetiko singer Roza Eskenazi on March 7 at 8:00pm. The "Czech Lions" film for March is Mamas and Papas (Alice Nellis, 2010) on March 14 at 8:00pm. The French Cinematheque film is The Fatherless (Marie Kreutzer, 2011) on March 21 at 8:00pm. For "Reel Israel" on March 25 at 10:30am and March 28 at 8:00pm is Intimate Grammar (Nir Bergman, 2010).

    The Avalon takes part in the Environmental Film Festival with Moomins and the Comet Chase (2010) on March 24 at 10:30am and The City Dark (2011) on March 24 at 1:00pm.

    The Corcoran
    As part of the Environmental Film Festival is "A Walk on the Beach with Michele Oka Doner: on March 21 at 7:00pm and on March 22 at 7:00pm is Deadline Every Second: On Assignment with 12 Associated Press Photojournalists with producer Ken Kobre leading a post-screening discussion.

    Anacostia Community Museum
    As part of the Environmental Film Festival is Sea the Truth (2010, about sustainable fishing on March 17 at 2:30pm and Semper Fi (2011) about drinking water contamination on a US Marine Corps base on March 24 at 6:00pm.

    On March 21 at 7:00pm is Pray the Devil Back to Hell (Gina Reticker, 2008) about a group of women who demanded peace for Liberia.

    Embassy of Austria
    On March 13 at 7:30pm is In Another Lifetime (Elisabeth Scharang, 2010), a film inspired by historical events in which a group of 20 Jews walks to a village under the watchful eyes of their Nazi keepers.

    Alden Theater
    "Classics of the Silent Screen" is a new series of films from the silent era with accompaniment by Ben Model. On March 21 at 8:00pm is Orphans of the Storm (D.W. Griffith, 1921) starring Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish and set during the French Revolution.

    University of Maryland, Hoff Theater
    On March 2 is a symposium on crime and cinema, open to the public. Visit the website for registration information. Films shown include episode 3 of Les Vampires (Louis Feuillade, 1915) and an episode of The Wire.

    Smithsonian Associates
    As part of "Francophonie DC" are several film screenings in March, See below.

    As part of the Environmental Film Festival is The Last Reef in 3D (Luke Cresswell and Steve McNicholas), an exploration of the ocean's reefs on March 14 at 7:00pm and Space Junk in 3D (Melissa R. Butts) on March 16 at 7:00pm. Both films will have the filmmakers present for Q&A.

    Busboys and Poets
    On March 15 at 6:30pm is Imagining Mina (2010), a documentary about the Peruvian boxer Mauro Mina. Filmmaker Alfredo Béjar will introduce and discuss the film. (Location: 14th and V Streets, NW).

    On March 11 at 8:00pm is Precious Knowledge about a controversial ethnic studies class in a Tucson, Arizona high school.

    George Mason University
    On March 20 at 6:00pm is Better This World (Katie Galloway and Kelly Duane de la Vega), a documentary about two young men who were accused as domestic terrorists and arrested at the 2008 Republican National Convention. The filmmakers will be present to answer questions.

    The Phillips Collection
    On March 24 at 1:00pm is Paris the Luminous Years (Perry Miller Adato, 2010), a documentary about Paris from 1905-1930. The director will do a Q&A after the film. Part of the Environmental Film Festival.



    FILM FESTIVALS

    The Environmental Film Festival
    March 13-25. See above.

    Francophonie Cultural Festival
    Theater, literary events, music, and film are part of the Francophonie Cultural Festival. As part of "Francophonie DC" are several film screenings. On March 8 at 7:00pm is The Kid with a Bike (Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne, 2011) shown at the Letelier Theater. On March 12 at 7:00pm is "Blame it on Rousseau," a collection of short films inspired by the life and works of the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, shown at the Embassy of Switzerland. On March 14 at 7:00pm is Dreams of Dust (Laurent Salgues, 2006) shown at the Ripley Center. On March 17 at 10:00am is Titeuf, le film (Zep, 2011) shown at the Avalon. On March 21 at 8:00pm is The Fatherless (Marie Kreutzer, 2011) shown at the Avalon and on March 28 at 7:00pm is the documentary Some Kind of Funny Porto Rican?: A Cape Verdean American Story (Claire Andrade-Watkins, 2006) shown at the Ripley Center.

    The 2012 New African Films Festival
    The "10th Annual New African Films Festival" takes place March 8-13 at the AFI's Silver Theater. The opening night film is Mama Africa (2011) about the singer Miriam Makeba (1932–2008). Other titles include Lucky (2011) from South Africa, Themba (2010) from South Africa, Come Back, Africa, winner of the Venice Critics Award in 1959, Grey Matter (2011) from Rwanda, Born on the 25th of January (2011) from Egypt, A Million Colours (2011) from South Africa, How to Steal 2 Million (2011) from South Africa, No More Selections! We Want Elections! (2011) from Liberia, Imani (2010) set in Uganda, An African Election (2011) from Ghana, Ties That Bind (2011) and Pegasus (2010) from Morocco.

    The Baltimore Jewish Film Festival
    This festival takes place March 25-April 30 and includes documentaries and feature films. Titles include Nicky's Family from Slovakia, My Australia from Israel, Kaddish for a Friend from Germany, David from the US, An Article of Hope from the US, Mabul from Israel, Wunderkinder from Germany, and The Time of Silence from France.

    The Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington-Rockville
    The Fourth Annual Jewish Film Festival takes place March 14-24. Titles include Remembrance, Nicky's Family, The Debt, Suzie Gold, Restoration, Blood Relation, David, Dolphin Boy, Melting Away, Nika.

    The Annual VCU French Film Festival
    Now in its 20th year, the VCU French Film Festival starts March 29 and ends April 1. Short films and features are shown. See the website for titles and schedule.

    The 12th Annual NoVa International Jewish Film Festival
    The NoVa Jewish Film Festivals is March 18-27 and takes place at the Rave Fairfax Corner 14 in Fairfax, and the Artisphere in Arlington. Titles include Ahead of Time, Connected, David, Dolphin Boy, The Debt, Melting Away, My Australia, Nicky's Family, The Remembrance, Reuniting the Rubins, Suzie Gold, Trembling Before G-d, The Wave. See the website for more information.

    The DC Independent Film Festival
    Starting February 29 and ending March 4, this festival is now in its 14th year. Films include shorts, documentaries, features, animation and experimental. Most events take place at the US Navy Heritage Center. Other locations include Landmark's E Street Cinema and St. Patrick’s Catholic Church and most films have directors present for discussion. See the website for schedule.

    The Williamsburg Film Festival
    Now celebrating its 16th year, the Williamsburg Film Festival starts March 7 and ends March 10. See the website for more information.



    FILM RELATED EVENTS

    Documentary Summit
    This two day professional filmmaker conference takes place March 10-11 offering seminars and networking. Learn to turn your idea into a proposal, where to find crew and partners,which technologies to use, legal aspects and how to get funding. Speakers include Nina Seavey, founder of Silverdocs, David Vyorst and Marshall Curry, Academy Award nominated documentary filmmaker. See the website for the schedule and other details.



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