![]() | ||||
| ||||
| ||||
|
Friday, October 22, 2004
COASTAL DIVIDE Perhaps you've heard that the IFP/New York has retooled its annual Gotham Awards, moving the event out of IFP Market week to December 1 -- smack dab at the start of the Oscar push. This week the IFP/New York announced the Gotham's first two 2004 award recipient: actor Don Cheadle, who has Hotel Rwanda coming out from United Artists, and Michel Gondry's film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, which is being honored under the new "Celebrate New York" tag for films shot in New York that "expand the boundaries of creative expression." With its December 1 date, the Gotham's unfold just a day after the IFP/LA announces its roster of Spirit Award nominations, a fact not missed by David Poland in his new Hot Blog. As usual, Poland focuses on the politics of the announcement far more exhaustively than us tired-at-2:00 A.M. types at Filmmaker are able to... # posted by Scott Macaulay @ 10/22/2004 02:30:55 AM Comments (0) | ||||
|
Wednesday, October 20, 2004
WEIR, GIBSON, PATTERN RECOGNITION AND JOHN KERRY I stumbled across author William Gibson's (Neuromancer) online blog today and caught up with the news that director Peter Weir is attached to direct a film version of Gibson's latest, Pattern Recognition. The novel is a contemporary cybernoir about a "cool hunter" who winds up on the chase for the director of mysterious multi-part Internet film. Locations are being scouted in Moscow, London and Tokyo. I wound up bookmarking Gibson's blog as he seems to update it daily and has some interesting political commentary on it as well. In today's entry he describes the process by which he feels an imaginative collective mental barrier may be working against John Kerry: "As I took the zeitgeist's temperature this morning (the hard way, as we professional prescients always insist on doing) I noticed that it was decidedly more difficult to imagine life after a Kerry win than life after a Bush win. Aside from the fact that, as we professionals know, it's inherently more difficult to imagine things getting relatively unfucked than it is to imagine things getting more fucked but in a familiar direction, I found myself wondering whether that Bush-as-idiot-shaman essay I quoted here recently might not be literally true, in some ghastly Castanedan way? Could it be that the obscenely comforting narrowing of imaginative bandwith (the real payoff in becoming a Bushite believer) was actually changing the world, or threatening to, via its chilling effect on concensus-reality?" # posted by Scott Macaulay @ 10/20/2004 09:57:22 PM Comments (0) | ||||
MOXIEDOCS ![]() MoxieDocs' Co-Production Award deadline has been extended to October 30, 2004. MoxieDocs' goal is to provide select documentaries with asistance in production, postproduction, and theatrical distribution. Since its founding, the MoxieDocs Award has become one of the most valuable production resources available to documentary filmmakers with projects in the work-in-progress stage. Each competition receives an average of 200 submissions, five finalists are then selected for a "pitch" at which projects are presented to a panel of jurors made up of award winning documentary filmmakers and industry executives. Submissions are judged based on subject matter, a filmmaker's access to the issue at hand and production personnel experience. Past MoxieDocs Award recipients include Farmingville, which premiered at Sundance 2004, aired on the PBS series P.O.V. earlier this summer, and will open theatrically at the Quad Cinemas in NYC on October 22; Cheeks, which screened as part of the 2004 IFP Market's Spotlight on Documentaries and which focuses on a Southern New Jersey family as they face despair, suicide attempts, manic depression, schizophrenia, and secret societies trying to ruin their lives; Hart Island: An American Cemetery, about the NYC-based potter's field which dates back to the American Civil War; and Revolucion: Visions of Cuba Since the Revolution, a feature-length work-in-progress which traces the Cuban Revolution as experienced by three distinct generations of photographers. # posted by Steve Gallagher @ 10/20/2004 01:40:53 PM Comments (0) | ||||
TURNER PRIZE NOMINEES ![]() Left to right: Kutlug Ataman's Twelve (detail); Jeremy Deller's Memory Bucket: A Film About Texas; Langlands and Bell's The House of Osama Bin Laden "I Love Jeremy Deller," Jonathan Jones's decidely partisan article in the Guardian, handicaps this year's Turner Prize nominees, each of who produce video work. # posted by Steve Gallagher @ 10/20/2004 10:38:13 AM Comments (0) | ||||
|
Tuesday, October 19, 2004
SCREAM AND SCREAM AGAIN New Yorkers with a yen for scary movies are going to be in hog heaven as the third annual NYC Horror Film Festival rolls into town just in time for the Halloween season. Running from October 20-24 at the Tribeca Film Center, the festival promises over 45 feature and short films, including rare classics among the newer fare.Besides the latest offerings from cult directors Tobe Hooper and Joe Lieberman, there will be a selection of cool parties and panel discussions with high-profile industry figures, making this fright fest the place to be for thrills and chills. For film schedule info or to buy tickets, log onto www.nychorrorfest.com. # posted by Andre Salas @ 10/19/2004 05:45:37 PM Comments (0) | ||||
NECROMANIA As Nick Paumgarten reports in the Talk of the Town section of this week's New Yorker magazine, "In 2001, after a seventeen-year quest, Rudloph Grey, the author of the Ed Wood biography Nighmare of Ecstasy (which became the basis for the Tim Burton film Ed Wood), found [Wood's final film,] the triple-X Necromania in a warehouse in Los Angeles." Wood wrote, produced and directed a soft-core and hard-core version of the film in three days under the name Don Miller; the soft-core version was discovered in 1992 and has since been available in limited release. Necromania: A Tale of Weird Love (1971) -- "one of the first skin flicks to have what, technically, could be called a plot," according to the New Yorker -- is now available on DVD. It's the first title released under the newly launched Fleshbot Films imprint. As described on the Fleshbot site: "The plot involves a coven of witches, led by the mysterious Madame Heles, who concoct a series of 'lessons' for a couple whose sex life is less than satisfying. Their teaching methods involve topless chanting, simulated intercourse with painted skulls, and a lot of oral sex. Madame Heles was to have been played by longtime Wood collaborator Maila 'Vampira' Nurmi, who took one look at the script and withdrew herself from the production citing concerns of 'professional suicide'." # posted by Steve Gallagher @ 10/19/2004 11:04:03 AM Comments (0) | ||||
|
Monday, October 18, 2004
ABOUT FACE ![]() Via the encyclopedic Weblog Green Cine Daily comes this link to an article in Slate about Harry Shearer's video installation "Face Time" at the Conner Contemporary Gallery in Washington, D.C. As the exhibiton's curator, Welmoed Laanstra, writes, "Shearer, who has appeared in such films as Spinal Tap and A Mighty Wind and who does the voice for many characters in The Simpsons (including Montgomery Burns), has an eye for contemporary absurdity. He is both commentator and artist, having written for Slate and having produced for 21 years a weekly radio show spoofing the news. " 'Face Time', a temporary installation pegged to the final weeks of a long and dramatic presidential campaign, will feature television footage of both presidential candidates, the vice presidential candidates, other political figures and media talking heads. Using video footage without any dialogue, Shearer will present all these figures in our national sandbox as artifacts. He will explore the artificiality of political communication. The installation will offer viewers the opportunity to ponder the manner in which politics and news are presented by the mass media and then consumed by individuals. The point will be to remove the viewer from the immediate media slipstream and suspend the from-them-to-you interaction in time."# posted by Steve Gallagher @ 10/18/2004 11:53:46 AM Comments (0) | ||||
|
back to top home page | subscribe | merchandise | history | order form | advertise | contact archives | links | search © 2004 Filmmaker: The Magazine of Independent Film |
||||