Tag: Your Sister’s Sister

  • IFP Gotham Independent Film Awards Nominees for 2012

    IFP Gotham Independent Film Awards Nominees for 2012

    IFP Gotham Independent Film Awards Logo 2012As our awards screeners start to turn up in the mail, the awards season is upon us as 26 films receive nominations in IFP’s 22nd Annual Gotham Independent Film Awards. Benh Zeitlin’s Beasts of the Southern Wild, Richard Linklater’s Bernie, Ava DuVernay’s Middle of Nowhere and Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom all received 2 nominations a piece.

    The interesting thing about the list is Beasts of the Southern Wild was not nominated for Best Feature, despite its high profile and nominations for actress Quvenzhané Wallis. The nomination committees that determine the list of films and winners are quite separate, leading to what THR calls “results in nominations that are all over the map, send mixed messages and into which deeper meaning — read: Oscar implications — should not be read”.

    The winners will be announced at a ceremony on 26 November 2012.

    Best Feature

    BernieThe Loneliest PlanetThe MasterMiddle of NowhereMoonrise Kingdom

    Best Documentary

    DetropiaHow to Survive a PlagueMarina Abramović: The Artist is PresentRoom 237The Waiting Room

    Best Ensemble Performance

    BernieMoonrise KingdomSafety Not GuaranteedSilver Linings PlaybookYour Sister’s Sister

    Breakthrough Director:

    Zal Batmanglij for Sound of My Voice, Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky for Francine, Jason Cortlund and Julia Halperin for Now, Forager, Antonio Méndez Esparza for Aquí y Allá (Here and There), Benh Zeitlin for Beasts of the Southern Wild

    Breakthrough Actor: Mike Birbiglia in Sleepwalk with Me, Emayatzy Corinealdi in Middle of Nowhere, Thure Lindhardt in Keep the Lights On, Melanie Lynskey in Hello, I Must Be Going, Quvenzhané Wallis in Beasts of the Southern Wild

    Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You: Kid-ThingAn Oversimplification of Her BeautyRed FlagSun Don’t ShineTiger Tail in Blue

  • MIFF 2012: Wrap Up and Reflections

    MIFF 2012: Wrap Up and Reflections

    MIFF 2012 Campaign ArtAs winter draws to a close, another Melbourne International Film Festival also wraps up, having screened a few hundred new films to Victorians and travellers alike over the last few weeks of fun across the CBD of the greatest city in Victoria. As we begin to roll out our full coverage, here is a snapshot of what we saw, liked or wanted to bury in a dark mine somewhere.

    We had a privilege of seeing a number of these already at the 2012 Sydney Film Festival or the inaugural Sundance London, and have reviewed them previously on the site. In addition to this, we visited the festival for the final weekend, and managed to squeeze in another 13 films. We share because we care.

    Links to the full reviews have been provided where available, but more will be available in the coming weeks.

    ★★★★★ – Certified Bitstastic

    Beasts of the Southern Wild – Few debut films manage to be saddled with the term “masterpiece” on their first pass, and this singular take on the coming of age story gets almost everything right from the start. The most human of all possible stories is a startlingly original film that will remain a classic for years to come. Full Review >>

    Harold and Maude – This one goes without saying, but we did anyway. Hal Ashby’s 1971 classic is playing as part of MIFF’s retrospective program, and this is a terrific chance to catch it on the big screen and spot all the moments that Wes Anderson has a lot to answer for.

    Holy Motors – As we say on the film’s official Australian poster, Leos Carax’s art fantasy is one of the most original films of the century. Equal parts magic and insanity, and a reminder of all the things that cinema has to offer.Carax leads us into uncharted territory we might readily call “post film”. Full Review >>

    ★★★★ – Highly Recommended

    Alps – Winner of the Sydney Film Festival Official Competition prize, along with a plethora of other awards, Yorgos Lanthimos’ follow-up to Dogtooth is unlikely to find two audience members in complete agreement. Coupled with absurdity, including an electro-pop remix of the 1960s hit “Popcorn”, Lanthimos may simply be pointing out the craziness of the world we live in. But are you ready for pop? Full Review >>

    The Angels’ Share – Ken Loach made a feel-good film. It happened. Winner of the Prix du Jury win at Cannes this year, Loach’s latest collaboration with lawyer/screenwriter Paul Laverty has yielded another lost soul on his last chance, finding hope in bottles of whisky and an unconventional heist. We feel like a drink. Full Review >>

    Awesome I Fuckin’ Shot That – After the tragic death of Beastie Boy Adam Yauch this year from cancer, this MIFF tribute to the one and only MCA will also see several other long-form shorts screened, and is a rare chance to see this crowd-sourced picture in a large format.

    Bully – Bullying comes in all forms, and at all stages in life, and Lee Hirsch’s documentary about Bullying in the US school system is a must-see for parents, students, teachers and anybody with a pulse.

    For Love’s Sake (Ai To Makoto) – Takashi Miike‘s most energetic film of the last few years, fusing music, unrequited love and a bit of the old-fashioned ultra-violence for good measure. Vividly realised with the assistance of regular collaborators cinematographer Nobuyasu Kita and production designer Yuji Hayashida.

    Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai – Japanese filmmaker Takashi Miike has no less than three films at this year’s MIFF, as this plays along with above’s For Love’s Sake and Ace Attorney. Here he continues to put his own stamp on the jidaigeki genre, switching his penchant for bloodbaths to a serene examination of samurai honour. Full Review >>

    Killer Joe – William Friedkin returns with a vengeance in this southern-fried tale of hillbilly murder, rampage and good old-fashioned insanity. Inspired by the excesses of Letts’ script, adapting his own screenplay, Killer Joe might be violent and vile, but it is also sharp, engaging and outright hilarious at all times. Proof positive that Matthew McConaughey belongs in every movie. Full Review >>

    Like Someone In Love – Following the painful Certified Copy, Abbas Kiarostami redeems himself with this wonderfully measured character piece. It’s more riding in cars with boys, as he uses conversations between three restrained Japanese personalities (principally veteran Tadashi Okuno and the popular Rin Takanashi) to reveal details about these characters. What is amazing is just how much this minimalist approach completely holds your attention, right up until the ambiguously gripping conclusion.

    Moonrise Kingdom – Like most of Wes Anderson’s films, it exist in a bubble of the past that never actually existed except in memory and dreamscapes. Apart from recalling Rushmore, just as directly as the bespectacled clone Gilman does, Anderson is giving us an early signal that his film is about so much more than teenage love. Visually stunning, Moonrise Kingdom is an open love letter to youth of all ages. Full Review >>

    ParaNorman – While Pixar have become the masters of making children’s films that adults can also enjoy, Coraline makers Laika continue to prove that it is possible to do it the other way around as well. Originally conceived for Disney in the 1980s, it has an old-fashioned sensibility that effortlessly weaves a wonderful group of characters into a myriad of film and cultural references, set against the timely backdrop of Salem-style witch hunts.

    Safety Not Guaranteed  We were lucky enough to catch this one at Sundance London. Charming and funny, this pseudo time-travel dramedy is a delightful and heartfelt retro throwback to a bygone era of filmmaking, drawing inspiration from the Spielberg and Zemeckis films of the 1980s. Based loosely on an Internet meme, the fantastical idea of a man with no education building a time machine in his garage is about as American as it gets. Full Review >>

    Side By Side – Keanu Reeves fronts Chris Kenneally‘s insightful and candid investigation into the film versus digital debate, one with no clear winners but a lots of strong opinions from industry heavyweights. Side By Side doesn’t come to any startling conclusions, but it offers up a series of arguments. Full Review >>

    Sound of My Voice – Following a recent run of powerful films about cults and faith (Martha Marcy May Marlene, Red State, Higher Ground), it is amazing that Zal Batmanglij’s debut has something new to say. While it asks far more questions than it answers, the central performances are mesmerising. Co-written by Another Earth‘s Brit Marling, who stars as the enigmatic cult leader Maggie.

    Tabu – A fable mixed with nostalgic surrealism, this fills that unknown void between Out of Africa and The Artist. Another film that has divided audiences straight down the middle, be swept away in the magic of cinema. Winner of the FIPRESCI Prize and the Alfred Bauer Award at Berlin. Full Review >>

    Take the Money and Run – One of Woody Allen’s earliest funny ones, this 1968 spoof on the crime film is a farce of the highest order. If for no other reason, it is worth watching for Woody’s attempts to join a marching band while playing the cello.

    Teddy Bear – Another great two-hander of a character piece as super-heavyweight bodybuilder Kim Kold tries to connect with a woman despite living under the thumb of his domineering mother. Danish director Mads Matthiesen’s debut film, expanding on his own 2007 short Dennis, won the World Cinema Directing Award at Sundance this year, and the restrained nature of this emotionally powerful film gives us a clear indication why.

    Your Sister’s Sister – Lynn Shelton continues to prove that Mark Duplass is king of the indies, as he is joined by Rosemarie DeWitt and Emily Blunt for an intimate film that brings a quiet dignity to the romance genre. Full Review >>

    ★★★½ – Better Than Average Bear

    Himizu – Sion Sono has made a name for himself across his psycho-sexual “Hate” trilogy of Love Exposure, Guilty of Romance and Cold Fish, with the latter two playing at MIFF2011. With Himizu, which is a species of mole in Japan, he begins a “brave” trilogy focusing on the individual repercussions of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. A great character study that drags on a tad too long, and certainly misses the electricity of Sono’s earlier work. Looking forward to The Land of Hope.

    Liberal Arts – Another one we caught at Sundance London, the continuation of a strong storytelling voice in Josh Radnor, who hopefully focus more on this kind of filmmaking when his television children eventually find out how he met their mother. Smart, funny and sincere, with fine performances from Radnor and Elizabeth Olsen, this is a film that you should let wash over you. Full Review >>

    Miss Bala – The stark and fast-paced Mexican action film heralds a new voice in Gerardo Naranjo for this Hollywood-inspired look inside the drug cartels of Mexico. Naranjo’s world is relentless, one in which corruption exists at all levels, and it is this bleak outlook that immediately separates Miss Bala from its cousins north of the border. Full Review >>

    No – A mockumentary set in 1980s Chile, this film concerns the anti-Pinochet referendum, that was allowed 15 minutes a day to advertise their cause on national television. Cleverly using the U-Matic cameras of the day to seamlessly blend in with the archival ad campaign that the group is making, this has all the immediacy and wit of political comedies The Thick of It or Veep. Gael Garcia Bernal is excellent as the advertising executive who runs the 1988 campaign.

    Wild Bill – The debut film from Dexter Fletcher, bringing a cast a genuine characters to his vision of East London. There is nothing terribly subtle about this approach, it’s sense of social welfare informed just as much by episodes of The Bill as it is by poverty in the UK. However, literally building its story under the shadow of the Olympic Stadium, Fletcher seems to be saying that the shop-front might be shiny, but another British staple is still lurking under the surface. Full Review >>

    ★★★ – Worth A Look

    The Hunt – Built around a powerhouse Cannes-winning performance by Mads Mikkelsen, Dogme 95 co-founder Thomas Vinterberg crafts a tale of a man falsely accused of child molestation, and himself becomes the victim of mass hysteria. Intentionally frustrating, with the audience only knowing slightly more than the main character, it is also consciously manipulative, wearing its politics on its sleeve. Of most interest as a character study.

    Something From Nothing: The Art of RapFollowing in the footsteps of Style Wars (1983) and Rhyme And Reasons (1997), rapper/actor Ice-T narrates and co-directs this exploration of how artists come up with their lyrics. Filled with contemplative shots of the narrator, it also features interviews in the A to Yeezy of the hip-hip world. While much of this remains about Ice-T for some reason, the insights are many, although it is great need of a re-edit with extended material made available.

    Undefeated – The Oscar-winning documentary about the ‘little football team that could’ is sure to have its fans, but part of us still feels that a love of American football might aid in the enjoyment of this popular piece of sports cinema. While a big-screen viewing isn’t essential, this might be one of your only chances.

    ★★½ – Wait For the DVD/Blu-ray

    11/25: The Day Mishima Chose His Own Fate – Kimitake Hiraoka, better known under his pen name Yukio Mishima, is largely considered to be one of the greatest Japanese writers of the 20th century. Yet he is also remembered for his ritual suicide by seppuku after a failed coup d’état in 1970. Kōji Wakamatsu’s film traces the final years of Mishima’s life, as his disillusionment led to his eventual actions. Slow-moving to the point of tedium at times, any emotional resonance that this film might have is undermined by repetition and a cause that is never fully realised for a non-Japanese audience.

    Monsieur Lazhar – An audience favourite wherever it goes, we have a singular opinion on this one. Mohamed Saïd Fellag delivers a solid performance, balancing his own dark past against the weight of nurturing young lives, but the signposts are too obvious to truly feel anything but a sense of inevitability. A charming if familiar tale of teacher knows best, so much so that it almost charms itself out of existence. Full Review >>

    On the Road – Are we there yet? Much of the public attention will be focused on Kristen Stewart’s performance, building on her non-Twilight roles such as The Runaways, and her frequent nudity will keep Google in business for some years to come. A classic American novel that takes just as long to get going as it has getting to the screen. Full Review >>

    ★★ – Rental For Sure

    Rampart – A character portrait of a dirty cop in Los Angeles is a case of arrested development, as a terrific cast meander about on an endless beat. The hard-working cast are merely covering the cracks of a script that loses its way at the mid-point and never fully regains its way by the time Overman finds his ambiguous conclusion. Full Review >>

    ★½ – It’s Your Money

    Mine Games – A predictable mish-mash of familiar horror movie characters and devices, you won’t want to go back into the mine. As the Australian director Richard Gray repeatedly reminds us in the film, we need to break the cycle, and this is where audiences can take control and demand a better class of horror. Filled with thoughts that never play out, this is one film that should remain buried. Full Review >>

    ★ – Avoid Like Plague

    Maniac – Remaking William Lustig’s 1980 slasher may have seemed like a pointless exercise from the outset, and director Franck Khalfoun (P2) proves that theory right. Shot mostly in the first-person perspective, it makes little use of star Elijah Wood, with characters clearly not in the same room when interacting. At all other times, Maniac is brutal, repetitive, misogynistic and utterly pointless. A hollow shell masquerading as film.

  • MIFF 2012: What to Watch

    MIFF 2012: What to Watch

    MIFF 2012 Campaign ArtThe 61st Melbourne International Film Festival kicked off last night, and while we are stranded in our home town of Sydney, our various viewings and travels have allowed us to recommend a number of titles for people over the coming weeks.

    Here is a brief guide to films you must see, talk about or narrowly avoid. Happy festival-ling and we’ll join you all in Melbourne next week for various soirées and maybe the odd movie or ten.

    ★★★★★ – Certified Bitstastic

    Beasts of the Southern Wild – Few debut films manage to be saddled with the term “masterpiece” on their first pass, and this singular take on the coming of age story gets almost everything right from the start. The most human of all possible stories is a startlingly original film that will remain a classic for years to come.

    Harold and Maude – This one goes without saying, but we did anyway. Hal Ashby’s 1971 classic is playing as part of MIFF’s retrospective program, and this is a terrific chance to catch it on the big screen and spot all the moments that Wes Anderson has a lot to answer for.

    Holy Motors – As we say on the film’s official Australian poster, Leos Carax’s art fantasy is one of the most original films of the century. Equal parts magic and insanity, and a reminder of all the things that cinema has to offer.Carax leads us into uncharted territory we might readily call “post film”.

    ★★★★ – Highly Recommended

    Alps – Winner of the Sydney Film Festival Official Competition prize, along with a plethora of other awards, Yorgos Lanthimos’ follow-up to Dogtooth is unlikely to find two audience members in complete agreement. Coupled with absurdity, including an electro-pop remix of the 1960s hit “Popcorn”, Lanthimos may simply be pointing out the craziness of the world we live in. But are you ready for pop?

    The Angels’ Share – Ken Loach made a feel-good film. It happened. Winner of the Prix du Jury win at Cannes this year, Loach’s latest collaboration with lawyer/screenwriter Paul Laverty has yielded another lost soul on his last chance, finding hope in bottles of whisky and an unconventional heist. We feel like a drink.

    Awesome I Fuckin’ Shot That – After the tragic death of Beastie Boy Adam Yauch this year from cancer, this MIFF tribute to the one and only MCA will also see several other long-form shorts screened, and is a rare chance to see this crowd-sourced picture in a large format.

    Bully – Bullying comes in all forms, and at all stages in life, and Lee Hirsch’s documentary about Bullying in the US school system is a must-see for parents, students, teachers and anybody with a pulse.

    Hara-Kiri: Death of a Samurai – Japanese filmmaker Takashi Miike has no less than three films at this year’s MIFF, as this plays along with For Love’s Sake and Ace Attorney. Here he continues to put his own stamp on the jidaigeki genre, switching his penchant for bloodbaths to a serene examination of samurai honour.

    Killer Joe – William Friedkin returns with a vengeance in this southern-fried tale of hillbilly murder, rampage and good old-fashioned insanity. Inspired by the excesses of Letts’ script, adapting his own screenplay, Killer Joe might be violent and vile, but it is also sharp, engaging and outright hilarious at all times. Proof positive that Matthew McConaughey belongs in every movie.

    Moonrise Kingdom – Like most of Wes Anderson’s films, it exist in a bubble of the past that never actually existed except in memory and dreamscapes. Apart from recalling Rushmore, just as directly as the bespectacled clone Gilman does, Anderson is giving us an early signal that his film is about so much more than teenage love. Visually stunning, Moonrise Kingdom is an open love letter to youth of all ages.

    Safety Not Guaranteed We were lucky enough to catch this one at Sundance London. Charming and funny, this pseudo time-travel dramedy is a delightful and heartfelt retro throwback to a bygone era of filmmaking, drawing inspiration from the Spielberg and Zemeckis films of the 1980s. Based loosely on an Internet meme, the fantastical idea of a man with no education building a time machine in his garage is about as American as it gets.

    Side By SideKeanu Reeves fronts Chris Kenneally‘s insightful and candid investigation into the film versus digital debate, one with no clear winners but a lots of strong opinions from industry heavyweights. Side By Side doesn’t come to any startling conclusions, but it offers up a series of arguments.

    Tabu – A fable mixed with nostalgic surrealism, this fills that unknown void between Out of Africa and The Artist. Another film that has divided audiences straight down the middle, be swept away in the magic of cinema. Winner of the FIPRESCI Prize and the Alfred Bauer Award at Berlin.

    Take the Money and Run – One of Woody Allen’s earliest funny ones, this 1968 spoof on the crime film is a farce of the highest order. If for no other reason, it is worth watching for Woody’s attempts to join a marching band while playing the cello.

    Your Sister’s Sister – Lynn Shelton continues to prove that Mark Duplass is king of the indies, as he is joined by Rosemarie DeWitt and Emily Blunt for an intimate film that brings a quiet dignity to the romance genre.

    ★★★½ – Better Than Average Bear

    Liberal Arts – Another one we caught at Sundance London, the continuation of a strong storytelling voice in Josh Radnor, who hopefully focus more on this kind of filmmaking when his television children eventually find out how he met their mother. Smart, funny and sincere, with fine performances from Radnor and Elizabeth Olsen, this is a film that you should let wash over you.

    Miss Bala – The stark and fast-paced Mexican action film heralds a new voice in Gerardo Naranjo for this Hollywood-inspired look inside the drug cartels of Mexico. Naranjo’s world is relentless, one in which corruption exists at all levels, and it is this bleak outlook that immediately separates Miss Bala from its cousins north of the border.

    ★★★ – Worth A Look

    Undefeated – The Oscar-winning documentary about the ‘little football team that could’ is sure to have its fans, but part of us still feels that a love of American football might aid in the enjoyment of this popular piece of sports cinema. While a big-screen viewing isn’t essential, this might be one of your only chances.

    ★★½ – Wait For the DVD/Blu-ray

    Monsieur Lazhar – An audience favourite wherever it goes, we have a singular opinion on this one. Mohamed Saïd Fellag delivers a solid performance, balancing his own dark past against the weight of nurturing young lives, but the signposts are too obvious to truly feel anything but a sense of inevitability. A charming if familiar tale of teacher knows best, so much so that it almost charms itself out of existence.

    On the Road – Are we there yet? Much of the public attention will be focused on Kristen Stewart’s performance, building on her non-Twilight roles such as The Runaways, and her frequent nudity will keep Google in business for some years to come. A classic American novel that takes just as long to get going as it has getting to the screen.

    ★★ – Rental For Sure

    Rampart – A character portrait of a dirty cop in Los Angeles is a case of arrested development, as a terrific cast meander about on an endless beat. The hard-working cast are merely covering the cracks of a script that loses its way at the mid-point and never fully regains its way by the time Overman finds his ambiguous conclusion.

    What Else We Are Seeing

    Wild BillMine GamesTeddy BearFor Love’s SakeNoManiacParanormanLike Someone In Love, Sound of My Voice, Himizu, 11/25: The Day Mishima Chose His Own Fate, Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap and The Hunt

  • Rev Film Fest 2012 Review: Your Sister’s Sister

    Rev Film Fest 2012 Review: Your Sister’s Sister

    Perth’s Revelation Film Festival opened with Lynn Shelton’s latest, continuing the dominance of Mark Duplass on the world of indie film.

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”Your Sister’s Sister (2011)” float=”true” align=”right” width=”200″]

    Revelation Film Festival Banner

    Your Sister's Sister poster - Australia

    Director: Lynn Shelton

    Writer(s)Lynn Shelton

    Runtime:  90 minutes

    Starring: Mark Duplass, Rosemarie DeWitt, Emily Blunt

    Festival: Revelation Film Festival

    DistributorMadman

    Country: US

    Rating (?): Highly Recommended (★★★★)

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    In Lynn Shelton’s debut film We Go Way Back, she depicted the comic-tragic circumstances around a 23-year-old actress being confronted by her 13-year-old self. The personal aspect to this theme is something that continued throughout Shelton’s work, which is probably what made her last film Humpday (2009) such a disappointment to followers. After coming out as bisexual this year, Your Sister’s Sister continues injecting her films with personal poignancy, exploring gender relations with her familiar micro-budget and semi-improvisational techniques that she has used in other films.

    A year after the death of his brother, Jack (Mark Duplass) is still in emotional arrested development. Following his outburst at a memorial for his brother, his best friend Iris (Emily Blunt) suggests he take a time-out in her cabin in the woods. Thinking he will be alone, he is surprised to meet Iris’s sister Hannah (Rosemarie DeWitt). Despite Hannah being openly gay, the pair sleep together after they get incredibly drunk. Complicating matters is the arrival of Iris, who Jack secretly harbours feelings for, and they may be mutual.

    Shelton’s low-key film is simplicity itself, a character piece that focuses on it three outstanding cast members, who largely make up the dialogue as they go along. Given scenarios and some dialogue, the actors are encouraged to go with a scene once they get a feeling for it, and this results in an incredibly natural set of interactions between this triptych. Each one of the characters is harbouring a secret from at least one other character, which leads to an interesting dynamic.

    The intimacy of the approach leads the viewer to feel like a fly on the wall, and occasionally complicit in the complications that arise. This approach would not work without the support of a phenomenal cast, including the incredibly talented DeWitt, seen most recently on TV’s United States of Tara. Blunt is outright charming as usual, and her humour is infectious. Duplass is, as always, so earnest and open in his performance that it is impossible to not find his style magnetic and refreshingly open.

    Your Sister's Sister

    While not precisely sitting inside rom-com genre, it borrows from “mumblecore” by virtually removing all external obstacles to the union of the leads. What remains is a group separated by their own insecurities, a far more realistic approach than the cookie-cutter comedies that are released with alarming regularity. Your Sister’s Sister is filled with an intangible sweetness, and gets to the heart of complex human relations effortlessly.

    Your Sister’s Sister opened Perth’s Revelation Film Festival in July 2012. It is released in Australia on 6 September 2012 from Madman.

  • Perth’s Revelation Film Festival 2012 Program Announced

    Perth’s Revelation Film Festival 2012 Program Announced

    Revelation Film FestivalThe 2012 program for the Perth International Revelation Film Festival, showing nightly from 5 to 15 July 2012 at The Astor Theatre in Perth, Western Australia has been announced in full. It’s only two weeks to go, so get your

    Opening with Mark Duplass’ Your Sister’s Sister, the festival will also see a number of international guests make their way to WA. Crispin Hellion Glover (Back to the Future, Charlie’s Angels, The People Vs. Larry Flynt, The Doors) will be a featured guest. Joining Glover will be iconic Australian comedienne, Judith Lucy as Revelation’s inaugural Patron alongside national and international filmmakers, musicians, screen artists, academics and distributors.

    Some of the highlights include France’s Livid, the Oscar-winning documentary Undefeated, a celebration of comic super heroines in Wonder Women ! The Untold Story of American Superheroines and a film about film fandom simply title Buff. That’s one for us lovers of film, surely.

    Head over to the Revelation Film Festival site to view the full program, and grab a ticket or fifteen.

    Narrative Features

    25th Reich (Australia) B-movie mayhem as five heroes travel through time to kick Nazi ass!

    Archeo (Slovenia) Three individuals gradually come together in the empty, strangely uncanny landscape.

    Livid (Livide) (France) Described as painfully beautiful, this is supernatural, gothic horror at its best.

    Love (aka Angels & Airwaves Present Love) (USA) Driven by the powerful music of Angels & Airwaves, Love explores the fundamental human need for connection and the limitless power of hope.

    My Brothers (Ireland) A poignant road movie that follows three young brothers as they search for a watch for their dying father.

    Rampart (USA) Follows the tribulations of renegade LA cop Dave Brown (Woody Harrelson) as he faces his career’s biggest challenge.

    The Caretaker (Australia) So begins an uneasy alliance that soon threatens to fall apart.

    The Color Wheel (USA) Voted the #1 best undistributed movie of 2011 by the Village Voice & Indiewire.

    The Trouble With Bliss (USA) A coming-of-age dramedy about Morris Bliss, a 35-year-old who should have come of age a long time ago.

    The Whisperer In Darkness (USA) Filmed on location in New England in Mythoscope™ by the H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society, The Whisperer in Darkness treats audiences to a cinematic thrill not felt since the Hoover administration.

    Those Who Kill: Shadows of the Past (Denmark) Opening with a late-night mass shooting on a bus, this tense Danish thriller takes the audience on a journey deep into the black heart of darkness.

    Yakuza Weapon (Japan) Wild, violent, bloody, hyperactive science fiction action mayhem!

    Your Sister’s Sister (USA) Focuses on the relationships between a trio of friends staying at a remote cabin.

     

    Documentary Features

    Bad Brains: A Band in DC (USA) Bad Brains combine hardcore punk and reggae and influenced two generations of musicians, this blistering documentary tells their story.

    Battle For Brooklyn (USA) A David versus Goliath tale of a Brooklyn community fighting for its very survival against the bulldozers of urban development.

    Beauty Is Embarrassing (USA) A glorious, joyous, irreverent yet utterly essential and deeply inspiring documentary following the life of free thinking designer, artist, and puppeteer Wayne White.

    Buff (Australia) A pure celebration of cinema!

    Eames: The Architect and the Painter (USA) An absorbing portrait of husband and wife team Charles and Ray Eames whose visionary designs defined modernism and defined the second-half of the twentieth century.

    Golden Slumbers (Le sommeil d’or) (France and Cambodia) An exceptional and moving portrait of the once lively and joyous Cambodian film industry told by the few surviving directors and actors.

    Last Days of the Arctic (Iceland and Germany) Following photographer Ragnar Axelsson as he journeys through the arctic documenting the lives and landscapes he sees, this award winning film offers a rare and hauntingly beautiful glimpse into the frozen north.

    Marina Abramovic: The Artist Is Present (USA) Artist Marina Abramovic has a three month retrospective at MOMA, this absorbing documentary explores her career and the unveiling of her latest work at the gallery.

    Mongolian Bling (Australia) Discovering the roots of hip hop in the heart of Asia.

    Paul Williams Still Alive (USA and Philippines) Lifelong Paul Williams fan Stephen Kessler wants to make a film exploring his idol, what follows is a search for his own Rainbow Connection.

    Shock Head Soul (Netherlands and UK) A visually stunning, lavish and in parts experimental docu-drama exploration of Judge Schreber’s Memoirs of My Mental Illness.

    Surviving Progress (USA) From the makers of The Corporation, with executive production from Martin Scorsese, Surviving Progress is a stunningly visual documentary based in the best seller A Short History of Progress. “Every time history repeats itself the price goes up.”

    The Imposter (UK) A young Frenchman convinces a grieving Texas family that he is their missing 16- year-old son.

    The Interrupters (USA) Steve (Hoop Dreams) James and Alex (There Are No Children Here) Kotlowitz’s powerful documentary of violence and redemption in Chicago’s mean streets.

    The Sheik and I (USA) Invited to make a film by a Middle eastern Biennale Caveh Zahedi (I Am A Sex Addict) turns his camera on all around him, the results are bewildering, funny and terrifying…

    The Substance: Albert Hofmann’s LSD (Switzerland) 1943, and while war ravaged Europe, in neutral Switzerland, Basel chemist Albert Hofmann made a discovery that would change the world.

    Undefeated (USA) Oscar winning documentary about the ultimate underdog high school football team.

    Vigilante Vigilante: The Battle For Expression (USA) Graffiti has long decorated the urban landscape, but it has new adversaries in the figures of self-appointed anti-graffiti vigilantes. These lone individuals are dedicated to keeping the environment free of all street art, posters, tags and graffiti.

    Way of the Morris (UK) For these are the lands of my forefathers. And these are the dances of my ancestors.

    Wonder Women ! The Untold Story of American Superheroines (USA) Part celebration and part exploration of the superheroine as both a cultural icon and an inspirational figure.

  • First Glance: 2012 Melbourne International Film Festival Program and Poster

    First Glance: 2012 Melbourne International Film Festival Program and Poster

    MIFF 2012 Campaign ArtThe 61st Melbourne International Film Festival has released a first look at some of the titles from its 2012 program.

    “We’ve been keeping mum up until now so it’s good to let at least a few little cats out of the bag,” said Festival Director Michelle Carey.

    Highlights include the Cannes Film Festival winning Amour from Michael Haneke, along with Sundance favourite Beasts of the Southern Wild and Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom. These three, and a number of the other announced titles, are premiering this week at the Sydney Film Festival as well.

    Werner Herzog’s documentary Into the Abyss heads up the documentary leg of the festival, with Oscar winning Undefeated also making its second Australian showing.

    The eclectic mix also includes two highly anticipated Japanese films, Takashi Miike’s Ace Attorney, based on the video game of the same name, and Hirokazu Kore-eda’s I Wish.

    Previously announced films include the opening night The Sapphires, and the 12 films in the Next Gen program. On 11 July, members can start buying tickets from the full program, announced on 13 July.

    First Look Feature Films

    • 100 Bloody Acres  – Australia | 2012 | Cameron and Colin Cairnes
    • Ace Attorney  –  Japan | 2012 | Takashi Miike
    • Amour – France/Germany/Austria – 2012 | Michael Haneke
    • Barbara – Germany | 2012 | Christian Petzold
    • Beasts of the Southern Wild – USA | 2012 | Benh Zeitlin
    • Headshot – Thailand | 2011 |  Pen-ek Ratanaruang
    • I Wish – Japan | 2011 | Hirokazu Kore-eda
    • Last Dance – Australia | 2012 | David Pulbrook
    • Monsieur Lazhar – Canada | 2011 | Philippe Falardeau
    • Moonrise Kingdom USA | 2012 | Wes Anderson
    • Postcards From the Zoo – Indonesia/Germany/Hong Kong/China | 2012 | Edwin
    • Ruby Sparks – USA | 2012 | Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
    • Sister –  Switzerland/France| 2012 | Ursula Meier
    • TabuPortugal/Germany/Brazil/France | 2011|  Miguel Gomes
    • The Loneliest PlanetUSA/Germany| 2011| Julia Loktev
    • Your Sister’s Sister – USA | 2011| Lynn Shelton

    First Look Documentaries

    • Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry – USA
    • Beware of Mr. Baker – USA
    • Into the Abyss – USA/UK/Germany
    • Make Hummus Not War – Australia
    • Paul Kelly: Stories of Me – Australia
    • Searching for Sugar Man – UK/Sweden
    • Shut Up and Play the Hits – UK
    • Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap – USA
    • The Ambassador – Denmark
    • The Imposter – UK
    • This Ain’t California – Germany
    • Undefeated – USA

    MIFF 2012 Campaign Art