Tag: Sydney Film Festival 2016

Full coverage of the 63rd Sydney Film Festival.

  • SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival launches full program

    SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival launches full program

    The Customs House at Sydney’s Circular Quay was once again the host for a program launch this morning, as the 63rd Sydney Film Festival revealed its 2016 program with the theme “Change Your View, Change Your World.” Under the curatorial helm of SFF Festival Director Nashen Moodley’s fifth year, the 12-day festival will showcase 244 films from 60 countries, including 25 world premieres, 3 international premieres and 137 Australian premieres. Moodley has also announced that he will stay on as Festival Director for another four years.

    The Festival will open on 8 June 2016 at the State Theatre with the world premiere of Ivan Sen’s GOLDSTONE, the Australian follow-up to Mystery Road, a stylish outback noir which is also screening in competition. It will close 12 days later on 19 June with Closing Night film LOVE & FRIENDSHIP from Whit Stillman, an adaptation of Jane Austen’s early novella Lady Susan, starring Chloe Savigny, Xavier Samuel and Stephen Fry. On that night, they will also announce the winners of the $50,000 fellowship for short film makers, designed to screen at the Festival in 2017.

    Films in Competition

    • APPRENTICE (Boo Junking, Singapore)
    • AQUARIUS (Kleber Medonca Filho, Brazil)
    • CERTAIN WOMEN (Kelly Reichardt, USA)
    • THE CHILDHOOD OF A LEADER (Brady Corbet, USA)
    • THE ENDLESS RIVER (Oliver Hermanus, South Africa)
    • GOLDSTONE (Ivan Sen, Australia)
    • IT’S ONLY THE END OF THE WORLD (Xavier Dolan, Canada)
    • LAND OF MINE (Martin Zandvliet, Denmark)
    • LETTERS FROM WAR (Ivo M. Ferreira, Portugal)
    • NOTES ON BLINDNESS (Peter Middleton and James Spinney, UK)
    • PSYCHO RAMAN (Anurag Kashyap, India)
    • VIVA (Paddy Breathnach, Ireland)

    Highlights (aka Bitsy’s Choices)

    • BLOOD FATHER (Jean-François Richet) starring Mel Gibson and GIMME DANGER (Jim Jarmusch) – direct from the Midnight Screenings at Cannes, the latter is a documentary about Iggy Pop. Gibson will join the festival as a guest this year, for talks in The Hub.
    • THE BFG – OMG! BFG crashes SFF! Steven Spielberg takes the honours of being the big animated film debuting at the Festival this year, straight from Cannes and the first Spielberg film to debut at the SFF.
    • KOREA ON THE VERGE – Not a film, but a whole mini-retrospective of five indie films from Korea. As long-time supporters of Korean cinema, including our association with KOFFIA, it great to finally see such a strong level of support for Korean cinema.
    • JULIETA – The 20th film from the legendary Pedro Almodóvar, starring Emma Suárez and Adriana Ugarte, who play the older and younger versions of the film’s title character
    • LURE – Agnieszka Smoczynska’s played at Sundance, as was described as an erotic, Lesbian, vampire, musical. Sold!
    • EVERYBODY WANTS SOME – Richard Linklater’s follow-up film to the monumental Boy, it follows a group of college baseball players in Texas during the 1980s. It stars Blake Jenner, Tyler Hoechlin, Ryan Guzman, and Zoey Deutch.
    • I SAW THE LIGHT – Tom Hiddleston plays country legend Hank Williams, and apparently does all of his own singing. Can this man do no wrong?
    • HIGH-RISE – Hiddleston again, alongside Sienna Miller, Luke Evans, and Elisabeth Moss in this thriller from Ben Wheatley
    • RED CHRISTMAS – the world premiere of this Australian premiere, starring horror legend Dee Wallace. Part of the Freak Me Out program, these screenings are always fun and challenging, an endurance test at the end of a long night.
    • THE COMMUNE – Thomas Vinterberg’s films (The Hunt, The Celebration) are guaranteed to frustrate and challenge audiences, and Trine Dyrholm win for Best Actress at the Berlinale only heightens our anticipation for this.
    • MAGGIE’S PLAN – Months ahead of the Australia cinema release date! Written and directed by Rebecca Miller, it has a massive cast of Greta Gerwig, Ethan Hawke, Bill Hader, Maya Rudolph, Travis Fimmel, Wallace Shawn, Ida Rohatyn, Monte Greene and Julianne Moore.
    • SING STREET – Did you love Once, Begin Again and the 80s? John Carney’s musical inclinations lead him to a new musical comedy-drama with a soundtrack that contains The Cure, Duran Duran, The Jam and Motörhead. What else could we want?
    • SWISS ARMY MAN – Paul Dano rides Daniel Radcliffe’s corpse across the ocean. What is not to like here?
    • ESSENTIAL SCORSESE – David Stratton guest programs 10 films from the great Martin Scorsese, offering a journey through 10 essential classics from Mean Streets (1973), through Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore (1974), Taxi Driver (1976), New York, New York (1977), Raging Bull (1980), The King of Comedy (1982), Goodfellas (1990), The Age of Innocence (1993), Casino (1995) and finally, The Aviator (2004). For many, this will be the first opportunity to see these films on the big screen in Australia for years.

    A full program can be found at sff.org.au. Tickets are on sale now. You can follow our full coverage on the site. We’ll see you at the cinema. Check out the festival trailer below:

  • SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival goes beyond cinema with interactive elements

    SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival goes beyond cinema with interactive elements

    As the Sydney Film Festival 2016 prepares to take over half of the city, at least the bits not currently having holes dug into them for light rail lines, SFF 2016 expands its border beyond the cinema screens with three experiences that blend movies and technology in a program called called Beyond Cinema. They will be held at the Festival Hub at Sydney’s Lower Town Hall, UNSW Australia, and Carriageworks.

    Down the Rabbit Hole – Virtual Reality at the Hub (9 – 19 June) will screen 9 different VR experiences throughout the course of the festival. If you went to the Biennale of Sydney on Cockatoo Island this year, you may have seen Cécile B. Evans’ virtual experiences through the Dog Leg Tunnel. SFF’s VR experiences include a stroll along the streets of Havana (A History of Cuban Dance), going on stage with the Sydney Dance Company dancers (Stuck in the Middle with You), going inside the world of a cattle farmer and one of Australia’s top saddle bronco riders (Warwick Gold – Australian Rodeo), falling down the rabbit hole and into a Lewis Carroll inspired music video (Fabulous Wonder.Land), finding out what it’s like to lose your sight (Notes On Blindness: Into Darkness), haunting an asylum (Madeleine), walking in the footsteps of a filmmaker’s army officer father in Chile’s Caravan of Death (Assent), experiencing the first ever fully hand-drawn VR experience (Drawing Room), and stepping into an animated encounter with a lonely rose (The Rose and I). It will also be accompanied by a free talk Diving down the VR Rabbit Hole (Saturday 11 June, 12:00pm) featuring writer Mike Jones and a selection of the VR filmmakers who have works screening at The Hub.

    The Festival’s second Beyond Cinema experience is co-presented with UNSW Australia at the University’s 360-degree 3D world leading iCinema (8 – 18 June).  Two interactive experimental films will have their world premiere at the Festival: Deluge, dealing with devastating cyclone Yasi (QLD 2011), and Nebula, a dream work exploring relationships between the human and natural worlds; created by Dennis Del Favero, celebrated Australian playwright Stephen Sewell and others. It marks the second time in recent years that SFF have teamed up with Del Favero and Sewell, whose previous iCinema work Scenario debuted at SFF 2011.

    Deluge - iCinema

    The final Beyond Cinema Festival experience is presented in association with Carriageworks (9 June – 17 July) and is a four-sided video installation entitled: HOSSEIN VALAMANESH: CHAR SOO that places viewers at the intersection of an Iranian bazaar to contemplate movement, human interaction and the passing of time.

    SFF 2016’s full program will be announced on 11 May. 26 films have been announced to date, including opening night film Goldstone, a Martin Scorsese retrospective curated by David Stratton. Some films include Richard Linklater’s Everybody Wants Some!!, the Sundance winning documentary Weiner, and Jean-Marc Vallée’s darkly comic drama Demolition withJake Gyllenhaal and Naomi Watts.

  • SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival announces ‘Ants On A Shrimp: Noma in Tokyo’ gourmet event

    SFF 2016: Sydney Film Festival announces ‘Ants On A Shrimp: Noma in Tokyo’ gourmet event

    Food and cinema go well together, as lenses linger long over the food porn on screen, making you wish you’d thought about bringing a packed lunch to your packed day of Sydney Film Festival screenings. This year, SFF has you covered with a special 2-night event of fine dining and cinema, with the debut of ANTS ON A SHRIMP: NOMA IN TOKYO, a documentary about celebrity chef René Redzepi taking his acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant on the road to Japan.

    Offering both a restaurant pairing event or film only screening, SFF has teamed up with the Bride Room to bring a sumptuous four-course meal matched with Eden Road Wines and 4Pines Beer to go with the screening.

    On Tuesday 14 or Wednesday 15 June, the evening commences at 6:30pm with a screening of ANTS ON A SHRIMP: NOMA IN TOKYO at Dendy Opera Quays. It’s followed by a short stroll to The Bridge Room, housed in a 1930’s Heritage Listed building.

    The 66-seater designed by Nick Tobias features an open kitchen with custom built charcoal grill, hand-made ceramics designed by Ross Lusted, solid oak tables and Autoban’s iconic Deer Chairs. There are a strictly limited number of tickets available ($189 each). The Festival advises to book early to avoid disappointment.

    At $189 a head, it’s not a cheap night out, but it will certainly be a one-of-a-kind evening. If you want in on this deal, head over to the SFF website and book right away.

    SFF 2016’s full program will be announced on 11 May. 26 films have been announced to date, including opening night film Goldstone, a Martin Scorsese retrospective curated by David Stratton. Some films include Richard Linklater’s Everybody Wants Some!!, the Sundance winning documentary Weiner, and Jean-Marc Vallée’s darkly comic drama Demolition withJake Gyllenhaal and Naomi Watts.

  • SFF 2016: ‘Goldstone’ world premiere to open Sydney Film Festival

    SFF 2016: ‘Goldstone’ world premiere to open Sydney Film Festival

    The 63rd Sydney Film Festival has announced that the world premiere of Ivan Sen’s GOLDSTONE will be the opening night film at the State Theatre in June.

    GOLDSTONE is the fourth feature by award-winning filmmaker Sen and stars Aaron Pederson who reprises his role of the troubled Indigenous detective Jay Swan, who audiences first met in Sen’s Mystery Road, which opened Sydney Film Festival in 2013. The film’s stellar cast also includes Jacki Weaver, David Wenham, David Gulpilil, Cheng Pei-pei, Michelle Lim Davidson and Tom E. Lewis. Sen previous had success with Toomelah, which we interviewed him about back in 2011.

    A limited number of Film and Party tickets are available from 9am on Thursday 21 April, in addition to film-only tickets. Film and Party tickets include entry to the Opening Night Film and the exclusive afterparty at Keystone’s Bungalow 8.

    SFF 2016’s full program will be announced on 11 May. 26 films have been announced to date, including a Martin Scorsese retrospective curated by David Stratton. Some films include Richard Linklater’s Everybody Wants Some!!, the Sundance winning documentary Weiner, and Jean-Marc Vallée’s darkly comic drama Demolition withJake Gyllenhaal and Naomi Watts.

    You can watch the GOLDSTONE trailer, from Transmission, below.