Seen @Venezia71 – Eva Robin’s,
Roberto Spada, Carla Alvera and Randy Ingerman
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Sunday, August 31, 2014
Venice 71: Film Festival – Berlluscone. Una Storia Siciliana – Franco Maresco
Venice 71: Film Festival – Berlluscone.
Una Storia Siciliana – Franco Maresco. Directed by Franco Maresco and staring Ciccio
Mira, Salvatore De Castro, Vittorio Ricciardi, Tatti Sanguineti, Salvatore
Ficarra and Valentino Picone, the film critic Tatti Sanguineti arrives in
Palermo to find out what has happened to Franco Maresco’s unfinished movie:
Belluscone. Una storia siciliana. A film that was supposed to tell the story of
the unique relationship between Berlusconi and Sicily through the misadventures
of the Palermitan impresario of Neapolitan “neomelodic” singers and organizer
of street festivals, Ciccio Mira, an undaunted supporter of Berlusconi,
nostalgic for the old days’ Mafia— and two artists in his stable, Erik and Vittorio
Ricciardi, who perform in the squares of Palermo a song entitled “Vorrei
conoscere Berlusconi” (“I Want to Meet Berlusconi”). The film focuses on three
failures: the political and human one of a Berlusconi now on the wane; that of
the unfortunate and “slapdash” Ciccio Mira, rooted in an old but tenacious
culture; and finally, the artistic one of the director, who chooses to
disappear after realizing that tilting at political windmills is pointless, in
a country that has long identified with Berlusconian “culture” and probably
continues to do so.
Berlluscone. Una Storia Siciliana
– Tatti Sanguineti and Franco Maresco
Berlluscone. Una Storia Siciliana
– Andrea Occhipinti
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Venice 71: Film Festival – The Cut – Fatih Akin
Photograph
courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
Venice
71: Film Festival – The Cut – Fatih Akin. Fatih Akin’s The Cut stars Tahar Rahim,
Akin Gazi, Simon Abkarian and George Georgiou. Armenian
man, Nazareth Manoogian, after surviving the genocide learns that his twin
daughters may be alive, and goes on a quest to find them. This takes him from
his village Mardin to Mesopotamian deserts, Havana and finally North Dakota. “The
Cut is an epic film, a drama, an adventure movie and a western all rolled into
one. The film may be set a hundred years ago, but it could not be more topical:
it tells a tale of war and displacement, as well as portraying the power of
love and hope, which enables us to achieve the unimaginable. The Cut is the
conclusion of the Love, Death and the Devil trilogy. It explores the theme of
“the devil,” examining evil and the harm we are capable of inflicting on others—both
unwittingly and deliberately—showing the fine line that often separates good
from evil. The Cut has become a very personal film. Thematically, it explores
my conscience and formally it expresses my passion for the medium of film.” The
director Fatih Akin states.
Above. The director Fatih Akin.
Photograph
courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
The Cut
Venice 71: Film Festival – Hungry Hearts - Saverio Costanzo
Photograph
courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
Venice
71: Film Festival – Hungry Hearts - Saverio Costanzo. Costanzo’s Hungry Hearts
stars Adam Driver, Alba Rohrwacher and Roberta
Maxwell. Jude is an American, Mina an
Italian. They meet by chance in New York City. After a whirlwind romance, they
get married and she becomes pregnant. A brand new life begins for both of them.
Since the early months of pregnancy Mina is convinced that her child will be
special; it is her mother instinct that tells her so. This child must be
protected from all the pollution of the outside world and, to respect his
nature, his purity must also be preserved. For the sake of his love for Mina,
Jude plays along with her, until he reaches the point where he has to face a
terrible truth: his son is not growing, and his life is in danger. Jude must
act quickly. A covert battle of suspicions and resentments begins between Jude
and Mina, leading to a desperate search for a solution in which everyone’s
motive gets blurred.
Above. Alba
Rohrwacher and Adam Driver in Hungry Hearts.
Hungry
Hearts - Alba Rohrwacher
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Venice 71: Film Festival – Manglehorn - David Gordon Green
Photograph courtesy La Biennale di
Venezia
Venice 71: Film Festival – Manglehorn
- David Gordon Green. David Gordon Green’s Manglehorn stars the great Al
Pacino. Reclusive small town locksmith
Angelo Manglehorn has never quite recovered from losing the love of his life,
Clara. Fixated on her memory, he feels closer to his beloved cat than the
people around him and prefers to find comfort in his work and daily routine.
Still, he forges on with his tenuous human connections, maintaining
intermittent contact with his son, taking misplaced pride in a former protégé
gone astray, and establishing a cautious friendship with a kindhearted woman
from the local bank. As this solitary man approaches the possibility of new
love, he finds himself at a crossroads between remaining consumed by the past
and embracing the present. Manglehorn is a movingly humanistic portrait of a
man rendered with unsentimental simplicity and idiosyncratic humor.
Manglehorn Press Conference - David
Gordon Green and Al Pacino
Manglehorn Press Conference - Al
Pacino
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Venice 71: Film Festival – 3 Coeurs (3 Hearts) – Benoit Jacquot
Photograph courtesy La Biennale di
Venezia
Venice 71: Film Festival – 3
Coeurs (3 Hearts) – Benoit Jacquot. 3 Coeurs directed by Benoit Jacquot stars Benoit Poelvoorde, Charlotte Gainsbourg,
Chiara Mastroianni and Catherine Deneuve. One night in a French provincial
city, Marc meets Sylvie after missing his train back to Paris. They wander
through the streets until morning, talking about everything except themselves,
in rare, almost choreographed, harmony. Marc takes the first train back, and
sets a date with Sylvie in Paris, a few days later. They know nothing about
each other, but this is much more than a game. Sylvie keeps the date.
Misfortune befalls Marc, and he cannot. He searches for her and ends up finding
someone else: Sophie. He does not know that she is Sylvie’s sister. Marc and
Sylvie meet again. Their unparalleled harmony still exists... but it is too
late...
Above. Charlotte Gainsbourg and
Benoit Poelvoorde in 3 Coeurs.
photograph ASAC -
courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
3 Coeurs – director Benoit Jacquot
photograph ASAC -
courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
3 Coeurs – Chiara Mastrioanni and
Catherine Deneuve
Venice 71: Film Festival - Ich Seh Ich Seh (Goodnight Mommy) - Veronika Franz, Severin Fiala
Venice 71: Film Festival - Ich Seh
Ich Seh (Goodnight Mommy) - Veronika Franz, Severin Fiala. Ich Seh Ich Seh (Goodnight Mommy) directed by
Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala, stars Susanne Wuest, Elias Schwarz and Lukas
Schwarz. In the
heat of the summer. An isolated house in the countryside between woods and cornfields.
Ten-year-old twins wait for their mother. When she comes back, her head wrapped
in bandages after plastic surgery, nothing is as it was before. Stern and
distant now, she shuts the family off from the outside world. Starting to doubt
that this woman is actually their mother, the boys are determined to find the
truth by any means.
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Venice 71: Film Festival - Anime Nere (Black Souls) - Francesco Munzi
Photograph courtesy La Biennale di
Venezia
Venice 71: Film Festival - Anime Nere (Black Souls) - Francesco
Munzi.
The story of Anime Nere, directed by Francesco Munzi is of a Calabrian criminal family unfolds like a
western set in our own day, where the laws of blood and the vendetta take
precedence over everything. A tale that begins in the Netherlands and passes
through Milan on its way to Calabria, amid the peaks of the Aspromonte, where
everything begins and ends. Anime Nere is the story of three brothers, the sons
of a shepherd, close to the ’Ndrangheta, and of their divided soul. Luigi, the
youngest, is an international drug dealer. Rocco, Milanese by adoption and a
member of the middle class, runs a business funded by his brother’s ill-gotten
gains. Luciano, the oldest, cherishes the pathological illusion of a
preindustrial Calabria, conducting a gloomy and solitary dialogue with the
deads. Leo, his twenty-year-old son, represents the lost generation, without an
identity. All he has inherited from his forebears is hatred. As a result of a
trivial quarrel he carries out an act of intimidation against a bar under the
protection of the rival clan. Anywhere else it would have been no more than a
prank. Not in Calabria. It’s the spark that sets off a blaze. Luciano finds
himself in the same predicament as at the time his father was killed many years
earlier. In a dimension suspended between the archaic and the modern the
characters are drawn into the archetypes of tragedy. Staring; Marco
Leonardi, Peppino Mazzotta, Fabrizio Ferracane, Anna Ferruzzo and Barbora
Bobulova.
Above.
Director Francesco Munzi.
Photograph
by Marco Leonardi courtesy La Biennale di Venezia
Anime
Nere
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Friday, August 29, 2014
Venice 71: Film Festival – She’s Funny That Way – Peter Bogdanovich
Photograph courtesy La
Biennale di Venezia
Venice 71: Film Festival –
She’s Funny That Way – Peter Bogdanovich. She’s Funny That Way directed by
Peter Bogdanovich, stars Owen Wilson, Imogen Poots, Jennifer
Aniston, Rhys Ifans, and Kathryn Hahn. Young Hollywood starlet Isabella Patterson recalls how the
actions of a charming Broadway director, Arnold Albertson, changed her life
forever. As told to a reporter in a not-so-reliable recollection of events, the
Brooklyn-born former escort reminisces about how a rendezvous with the director
turned into a larger-than-expected sum of money and an offer she couldn’t
refuse. Like a cockeyed fairy tale, a chain of events affecting the lives of
everyone involved, including Arnold’s wife Delta, leading man Seth Gilbert,
playwright Joshua Fleet and even Isabella’s therapist Jane ensues.
Above. Imogen Poots and Owen Wilson.
Photograph courtesy La
Biennale di Venezia
Jennifer Aniston and
Peter Bodgdanovich
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Photograph
ASAC - courtesy La Biennale di Veneiza
Red Carpet - She’s
Funny That Way – Owen Wilson
Venice 71: Film Festival Miu Miu Women’s Tales #7 - #8.
Venice 71: Film Festival Miu Miu
Women’s Tales #7 - #8.
#7 - Spark and Light –
Kim So Yong. Spark and Light is directed by So Yong Kim. It’s the seventh
commission from Miu Miu Women’s Tales, the acclaimed short-film series by women
who critically celebrate femininity in the 21st century. “Mom’s stable, asleep. Drive safe! Xoxo Dad.”
Soon after Elizabeth receives this text message, her mother isn’t the only one
lost in sleep. Elizabeth’s car has broken down. It’s freezing cold, no sign of
life nearby. She just has to wait, patiently. The recovery guys will be here
soon, Elizabeth. Till then, she warms her young hands on the vents, drifts into
a strange slumber, followed by an even more surreal awakening. Icelandic
landscapes merge with Elizabeth’s memories. Fears are magically transformed
into comforting and fantastical fabrics. Father, upstairs, alone. This latest addition to Women’s Tales is
redolent of So Yong Kim’s previous features—such as For Ellen, Treeless
Mountain and Inbetween Days, which won a Special Jury Prize at the 2006
Sundance Film Festival. “I’ve always been obsessed with family dynamics,” says
the Korean born American writer and director, “I’m always trying to develop my
understanding of that.”In the new film, we see this take the shape of a mother
divided in two: one unconscious on a hospital bed; the other vibrantly alive
surrounded by love. Riley Keough’s acute performance as Elizabeth paired with
the poetic isolation of Iceland effectively multiplies the size of this
dream-like story. It adds new intellectual and emotional colour to the Miu Miu
Women’s Tales series: that twilight space between childhood, adulthood and
mortality."
Above. Attending the Miu
Miu Women’s Tales screening; Dakota Fanning, Kirsten Dunst, Kate Mara,
Felicity Jones, Lena Dunham and Nicoletta Romanoff.
Dakota Fanning with Lena
Dunham
Kirsten Dunst
#8 - Somebody – Miranda July. “Test my soil.
Deeper.” Have you ever found it
impossible to say something, face to face, to someone you know, someone you
love? The words just won’t come out? A new messaging service, SOMEBODY, by
Miranda July could help. It’s the star of her film for Miu Miu Womens’ Tales,
the eighth commission in the acclaimed short-film series by women directors who
critically celebrate femininity in the 21st century. Jessica wants to tell Caleb she can’t be his
girlfriend anymore. She opens up SOMEBODY, types in the heartbreaking message,
and selects Paul from a list. Paul is in the park. Paul’s phone dings. He eyes
Caleb having a picnic. Paul delivers the bad news—as Jessica. Eyes bawling.
Arms flapping. Caleb is, devastated. The
SOMEBODY app then totally saves Yolanda and Blanca’s friendship, makes Jeffy’s
marriage proposal to lonely Victoria, and initiates a curious ménage-a-trois
between two prison workers and a parched potted plant named Anthony. This latest addition to Womens’ Tales
showcases Miranda July’s unique ability to capture the strange tenderness of
contemporary relationships. SOMEBODY takes our endless hunger for
communication, technology, avatars and outsourcing, and blends it into what
seems to be a surreal near-future — but it’s not. It’s right now. In close
collaboration with Miu Miu, July worked with a team of developers to create this
radical and complex app; when the movie ends we’re invited to visit
somebody app.com to send or deliver our first message.
Above. Director Miranda
July.
Kate Mara
Felicity Jones
Alba
Rohrwacher
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