Thursday, December 15, 2022

Eddie Murphy to receive Cecil B. Demille Award at 80th annual GOLDEN GLOBE® Awards

Eddie Murphy to receive Cecil B. Demille Award at 80th annual GOLDEN GLOBE® Awards: the Hollywood Foreign Press Association® (HFPA) announced that Golden Globe Award® winner and six-time nominee Eddie Murphy will be honored with the coveted Cecil B. DeMille Award at the 80th Annual Golden Globe Awards. 
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Winners announced for BUFF Awards

This year’s 8th annual British Urban Film Festival awards ​took place at Rich Mix in East London and ​was the climax to BUFF 2022 ​- the UK’s premier film showcase for diversity and representation. ​Actor, writer and director Femi Oyeniran​ (The Evolution of Black British Music)​ hosted proceedings ​alongside​ co-presenter Mosique Lavontelle​ (MLavontellePresents, The Hotlist UK).​ This year’s ​BUFF ​honorary award was presented by producer​/​director Don Omope​ (Makate Must Sell, TATU, The Wedding Party)​ and received by ​prolific British Nigerian filmmaker ​Obi Emelonye​ in recognition of his 20+ years contribution to cinema​ with films including Black Mail, The Mirror Boy, Oxford Gardens and Badamasi.

Winners of 2022 BUFF Awards 

Best Short Film Award

Fifty Four Days (dir: Cat White & Phoebe Torrance)​ NOMINEES:
  • My Jerome (dir: Adjani Salmon)
  • Dysphoria (dir: Yennis Cheung)
  • Fifty Four Days (dir: Cat White & Phoebe Torrance)​
  • Puzzled Path (dir: Kenneth Ma)

The Blessing Anyiam-Osigwe Best Actress Award

Sophie Cartman for Four O’Clock FlowersNOMINEES:
  • Shin-Fei Chen (Dysphoria)
  • Sophie Cartman (Four O’Clock Flowers)​
  • Kelise Gordon (Long Walk Home)
  • Ledisi (Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story)

Best Actor

Nicholas Pinnock for Can I Help? ​​NOMINEES:
  • Nicholas Pinnock (Can I Help?)​
  • Kelechi Udegbe (Collision Course)
  • Wil Johnson (The Track)
  • Bally Gill (Bus Driver)

The Victor Adebodun Best Feature Film Award

The Wife and her House Husband (dir: Marcus Markou) ​​​NOMINEES:
  • The Wife and her House Husband (dir: Marcus Markou)​
  • Donkey Dust (dir: Kit Akinluyi)
  • Four O’Clock Flowers (dir: Peter Callow)
  • Pattern (dir: Ivan Madeira)

Best Documentary (sponsored by PBS)

Buddleia – The Unchained Story (dir: Tracy Kiryango) ​​​NOMINEES:
  • Buddleia – The Unchained Story (dir: Tracy Kiryango)​
  • Fenom (dir: Kayla Johnson)
  • Hostile (dir: Sonita Gale)
  • Black Daddy: The Movie (dir: Damon Jamal Taylor)

Best International Film

Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (dir: Denise Dowse)​ ​​​​NOMINEES:
  • Remember Me: The Mahalia Jackson Story (dir: Denise Dowse)​​
  • Collision Course (dir: Bolanle Austen-Peters)
  • Child of The Occult ( dir: Adesola Sunday Oyin-Adejobi, Isaac Oluwole Olaleye)

Best Soundtrack

Silent World (dir. Charlie Dennis) ​ ​​​​NOMINEES:
  • Silent World (dir. Charlie Dennis)​​
  • When the Rain sets in (dir. James Hughes)
  • Wetin Man Go Do (dir. Lukas Zeickner)
  • Remember Me – The Mahalia Jackson Story (dir: Denise Dowse)

Best Live Script Award 

  • Helen Alexis Yonov (Burden of Light)​
  • Stephen Graham (I’m a Gun)​​
  • Hecham Elhajoui (War Criminal)​

The British Urban Film Festival Honorary Award recipient:

Obi Emelonye — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

Berlinale 2023: Kristen Stewart to head the International Jury

BERLIN (December 9, 2022) — American actor, screenwriter and director Kristen Stewart will be the president of the International Jury at the 73rd Berlin International Film Festival. “We’re excited about Kristen Stewart taking on this distinguished task. She’s one of the most talented and multi-faceted actors of her generation. From Bella Swan to the Princess of Wales she has given life to everlasting characters. Young, shining and with an impressive body of work behind her, Kristen Stewart is the perfect bridge between US and Europe,” say the festival directors Mariette Rissenbeek and Carlo Chatrian. Kristen Stewart is considered one of Hollywood’s major young talents. In 1999, at the age of nine, she celebrated her screen debut. Just three years later, she starred alongside Jodie Foster in David Fincher’s Panic Room and achieved wider public recognition. Her international breakthrough came with the five-part Twilight saga (2008–2012). In 2010, she attended the Berlinale with the independent production Welcome to the Rileys (directed by Jake Scott). That same year, she received the Orange Rising Star Award for Best Newcomer at the BAFTAs. In 2014, she played alongside Juliette Binoche in Clouds of Sils Maria, directed by French auteur Olivier Assayas, and in 2015 she became the first American to receive the French film award César for her role in the film. She continued her work with Assayas in 2016 on Personal Shopper, in which she played the lead. The following year, she celebrated her directorial and screenwriting debut with the short film Come Swim and in 2018, she was a member of the International Jury at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2019, she made a foray into the action genre in Charlie’s Angels (directed by Elizabeth Banks) and delivered a fascinating performance in the biopic Seberg (directed by Benedict Andrews) which celebrated its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival. In 2020, she presented her next work as a director – the short film Crickets. Most recently, she wowed audiences as Princess Diana in Pablo Larraín’s film drama Spencer, garnering nominations for an Academy Award and at the Critics Choice Awards for Best Actress. She has just completed production on Love Me, opposite Steven Yeun and just wrapped production on Love Lies Bleeding, directed by Rose Glass. Kristen Stewart has become one of the most eminent international actors, thrilling audiences and critics alike. She is currently working on her feature-length directorial debut, the film adaptation of the bestseller “The Chronology of Water” by Lidia Yuknavitch. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

The European University Film Award (EUFA) 2022 goes to EO by Jerzy Skolimowski

BERLIN/HAMBURG (December 9, 2022) — The European Film Academy and Filmfest Hamburg congratulate Jerzy Skolimowski’s EO who has been chosen by university students across Europe as the winner of this year’s European University Film Award (EUFA). Since October, five nominated films, based on the European Film Awards Feature and Documentary Film Selections 2022, have been viewed and discussed in 25 universities in 25 countries before each institution selected its favourite film. In early December, one student representative from each university attended a three-day meeting in Hamburg to decide on the overall winner.
EO, Jerzy Skolimowski
EO, Jerzy Skolimowski
EO Poland, Italy DIRECTED BY Jerzy Skolimowski WRITTEN BY Ewa Piaskowska & Jerzy Skolimowski PRODUCED BY Ewa Piaskowska, Jerzy Skolimowski & Eileen Tasca “Through the melancholic eyes of a donkey, Jerzy Skolimowski depicts a post-human odyssey across the absurdity of human cruelty and its relationship with nature. A masterclass on cinematic language as a means of expression, the film portrays a mélange of euphoric and traumatic experiences with a striking colour palette, daunting sound design and an almost brutalist approach to editing. Traversing a borderless Europe, EO embarks on a transient journey filled with magical realism and allegories. Enchanting the audience, the film allows for an experience of metamorphosis and transcendence,” says the jury consisting of 25 students from the participating universities about their choice. The aim of this initiative, introduced in 2016 by the European Film Academy and Filmfest Hamburg is to involve a younger audience, to spread the European idea and to transport the spirit of European cinema to an audience of university students. It shall also support film dissemination, film education and the culture of debating. The European University Film Award 2022 is supported by Hamburg Marketing and Hamburg Foundation for the Advancement of Research and Culture. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

Palm Springs International Film Awards to present VIOLA DAVIS with the Chairman’s Award

PALM SPRINGS, CA (December 8, 2022) – The Palm Springs International Film Awards has announced that Viola Davis is the recipient of the Chairman’s Award recognizing her work as an actress and producer for The Woman King. The Film Awards will take place in-person on January 5, 2023 at the Palm Springs Convention Center, with the festival running through January 16, 2023. The event will be presented by American Express and sponsored by Entertainment Tonight and IHG Hotels & Resorts. “Whether as an actress or producer, Viola Davis brings powerful stories to the screen. In The Woman King, Davis continues to prove that she is a force of nature in this groundbreaking performance about the leader of the Agojie, a unit of all-female warriors,” said Festival Chairman Harold Matzner. “It is our honor to present the Chairman’s Award to Viola Davis celebrating her work as both an actress and producer.” Davis joins this year’s previously announced honorees Austin Butler (Breakthrough Performance Award, Actor), Cate Blanchett (Desert Palm Achievement Award, Actress), Colin Farrell (Desert Palm Achievement Award, Actor), Sarah Polley (Director of the Year Award), Michelle Yeoh (International Star Award) and The Fabelmans (Vanguard Award). Past recipients of the Chairman’s Award include Amy Adams, Jessica Chastain, George Clooney, Matt Damon, Tom Hanks, Dustin Hoffman, Jennifer Hudson, Nicole Kidman, Regina King, Gary Oldman, Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon. The Woman King is the remarkable story of the Agojie, the all-female unit of warriors who protected the African Kingdom of Dahomey in the 1800s with skills and a fierceness unlike anything the world has ever seen. Inspired by true events, The Woman King follows the emotionally epic journey of General Nanisca (Viola Davis) as she trains the next generation of recruits and readies them for battle against an enemy determined to destroy their way of life. Some things are worth fighting for. Directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood with a story by Maria Bello and Dana Stevens and a screenplay by Dana Stevens, the TriStar Pictures film also stars Thuso Mbedu, Lashana Lynch, Sheila Atim, Hero Fiennes Tiffin, and John Boyega. Cathy Schulman, Julius Tennon and Maria Bello also serve as producers and Peter McAleese serves as executive producer. Viola Davis is a critically revered, award-winning actress, producer, and New York Times Best-Selling Author. She is the first black actress to win two Tony Awards (Fences and King Hedley II), an Oscar (Fences) and an Emmy (How to Get Away with Murder). In 2021, Davis received an Oscar nomination for her transformative performance as Ma Rainey in Netflix’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. She also won a SAG award for the role and received a Golden Globe Award nomination and Critic’s Choice Award nomination. Recent credits also include How to Get Away with Murder, Widows, Suicide Squad, Ender’s Game, Prisoners, Beautiful Creatures, The Help, Doubt, Get On Up, Blackhat, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, Knight and Day, Nights in Rodanthe, Madea Goes to Jail, Law Abiding Citizen, Disturbia, It’s Kind of a Funny Story, Never Back Down, Far From Heaven and many more. Davis and her husband founded JuVee, with its focus being to give a voice to the voiceless through strong, impactful and culturally relevant narratives. The Los Angeles-based and artist driven company produces film, television and digital content across all of entertainment. This year, Davis received a Grammy Award nomination for her audiobook, “Finding Me”.

About the Palm Springs International Film Society

The Palm Springs International Film Society is a 501(c)(3) charitable non-profit organization whose mission is to cultivate and promote the art and science of film through education and cross-cultural awareness. The Film Society produces the Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) and Film Awards every January and Palm Springs ShortFest in June. In addition to curating the best in international cinema, PSIFF’s Film Awards has come to be known as the first stop on the campaign trail for the Academy Awards® and our Oscar®-qualifying ShortFest is the largest short film festival and market in North America. Our festivals, year-round member screenings and educational programs manifest our organization’s mission by nurturing and encouraging new filmmaking talent, honoring the great masters of world cinema, and expanding audience horizons. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

The Jewish Museum and Film at Lincoln Center announce the 32nd annual New York Jewish Film Festival, presented January 12-23, 2023

NEW YORK, NY (December 8, 2022)The Jewish Museum and Film at Lincoln Center will present the 32nd annual New York Jewish Film Festival (NYJFF) from January 12 through 23, 2023. Among the oldest and most influential Jewish film festivals worldwide, NYJFF presents the finest documentary, narrative, and short films from around the world that explore the Jewish experience. 
  • Opening Film: America by Ofir Raul Graizer
  • Centerpiece: Charlotte Salomon: Life and the Maiden by Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin
  • Closing Film: Alegría by Violeta Salama
The 2023 edition will feature in-person screenings at the Walter Reade Theater, 165 West 65th Street, NYC, and two virtual offerings. The NYJFF line-up showcases 29 wide-ranging and exciting features and shorts (21 features and 8 shorts), including the latest works by dynamic voices in international cinema, as well as the world premiere of a new 4K restoration of the groundbreaking 1997 documentary A Life Apart: Hasidism in America by Oren Rudavsky and Menachem Daum. In the Opening Film, America, director Ofir Raul Graizer follows up on the international success of his acclaimed drama The Cakemaker with an enveloping and visually sumptuous story about sexual identity and personal trauma, following a swimming coach living in Chicago whose return to his home country, Israel, after his father dies, triggers a series of life-altering events for him and his childhood friend. This year’s Centerpiece is Charlotte Salomon: Life and the Maiden, receiving its world premiere at the NYJFF. This new documentary on artist Charlotte Salomon by Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin offers an intimate and expansive look at the young woman who, though she was murdered in Auschwitz at age 26, completed an astounding amount of art, including some 1,300 paintings, before her deportation. The film delves into her youth in Berlin, her escape to the south of France after the rise of the Nazis, her love affair with a music teacher, and the creative explosion that resulted in her brilliant body of multimedia work. The Closing Film is Alegría. Filmmaker Violeta Salama makes her moving and wise feature debut with this layered, comic-tinged drama about women breaking free from patriarchal tradition in a contemporary Jewish diasporic community. Set in Melilla, an autonomous, multicultural Spanish city on Africa’s north coast, the film centers on Alegría, a single mother who has returned to her hometown from Mexico for her niece’s Orthodox Jewish wedding, although Alegría does not acknowledge her own Jewish heritage. Salama’s film sensitively depicts Alegría coming to terms with her roots and the cultural past she rejected, while reconnecting with family and friends. Several other notable highlights in this year’s festival include June ZeroWhere Life Begins, I Am Not, This Is National Wake, and Krzysztof Wodiczko: The Art of Un-War. In June Zero, from American filmmaker Jake Paltrow, the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann, architect of the mass murder of Jews during World War II, is revisited from the three disparate perspectives of Eichmann’s Moroccan prison guard; a Polish Holocaust survivor who helped capture the infamous Nazi war criminal; and a 13-year-old Jewish Libyan immigrant. Based on true accounts, Paltrow’s gripping and surprising new drama reminds us that the same histories are experienced differently by people all over the world. Set in the bucolic Calabrian countryside during the citron harvest, Where Life Begins, an intimate and elegantly rendered romantic drama about family, faith, and freedom, is the directorial debut of veteran French actor Stéphane Freiss. The film follows the blossoming attraction between the farm owner and a rabbi’s daughter who is questioning the constraints of her religious upbringing. Acclaimed filmmaker Tomer Heymann’s latest documentary, I Am Not, is a deeply emotional work that follows the life-changing journey of Oren, who was adopted from Guatemala by an Israeli family when he was a baby and now returns to his birth country to seek out his biological family and sense of self. In This Is National Wake, her energetic and revelatory directorial debut, Mirissa Neff tells the amazing story of National Wake, a group of young Jewish and Black musicians who dared to start a band in 1979 against the rupture and racism of South Africa’s apartheid regime. Maria Niro’s compelling documentary Krzysztof Wodiczko: The Art of Un-War pays tribute to the artistry and political commitment of Polish artist Krzysztof Wodiczko, whose large-scale works, often projected onto the facades of major architectural monuments, disrupt the complacency of a public increasingly inured to violence. Several films in this year’s line-up incorporate the Yiddish language, including:
  • Jewish Life in Lwow, Shaul Goskind and Yitzhak Goskind. This rarely screened 1939 documentary short portrait of the daily lives of Jews in Lwow, Poland, now Lviv, Ukraine, home to a thriving Jewish community before World War II, captures a prosperous world on the precipice of obliteration by the coming Nazi invasion.
  • A Letter to Mother, Joseph Green and Leon Trystand. World Premiere of 35mm film restoration by the National Center for Jewish Film. A classic of Yiddish cinema, A Letter to Mother (also known as The Eternal Song) was among the final Yiddish films made in Poland before the Nazi invasion. Set in the years leading up to World War I, it follows a mother of three children trying to provide for her family after her husband moves to America.
  • A Life Apart: Hasidism in America, Oren Rudavsky and Menachem Daum. World Premiere of 4K Restoration. Celebrating its 25th anniversary, this groundbreaking documentary was among the first American films to offer a full, distinctive, inside look at the Hasidic Jewish communities that found their most vital enclaves in America after mass migrations post-World War II.
  • SHTTL, Ady Walter. SHTTL, an ambitious and technically astonishing film, tells the expansive, multi-character story of a Jewish village in Ukraine on the border with Poland 24 hours before the Nazi invasion that will destroy it. The film was shot in a single take in Ukraine and features a remarkable cast speaking Yiddish and Ukrainian.
See below for the slate of films with full descriptions and schedule. Dates for Q&A sessions to be announced. The films for the 2023 New York Jewish Film Festival have been selected by Rachel Chanoff, Director, THE OFFICE performing arts + film; Lisa Collins, filmmaker, digital journalist/writer/editor, programmer, and events/film producer; Indigo Sparks, performance artist and producer; and Aviva Weintraub, director, New York Jewish Film Festival, the Jewish Museum with Dan Sullivan, assistant programmer, Film at Lincoln Center as advisor, and assistance from Ana Maroto, film festival coordinator, the Jewish Museum. TICKETS Member ticket presale for NYJFF tickets for Film at Lincoln Center and Jewish Museum members begins on December 13 at noon, and tickets for the general public will be on sale beginning December 15 at noon. Tickets can be purchased at nyjff.org. Members will be sent a unique link for Virtual Cinema pre-sale access. In-theater ticket prices are $15 for the general public; $12 for students, seniors, and persons with disabilities; and $10 for FLC and JM members. See everything (excluding Opening Night) and save with the NYJFF All-Access Pass for just $89 (approx. 40% savings)! Esther Takac’s The Narrow Bridge and Mordechai Vardi’s Barren will be available on FLC Virtual Cinema at noon starting January 23. Virtual tickets are $10 each or $8 for FLC and JM members. Both films can be purchased together as a Bundle for $15 or $12 for FLC and JM members. One rental per account. The FLC Virtual Cinema app is available on Apple TV, iPhone, and iPad via the Apple App Store and on Fire TV Stick via the Amazon Appstore. Learn more here. For ticketing assistance or questions about FLC Virtual Cinema, please email [email protected].

SUPPORT

The New York Jewish Film Festival is made possible by the Martin and Doris Payson Fund for Film and Media. Generous support is also provided by Wendy Fisher and the Kirsh Foundation, The Liman Foundation, Sara and Axel Schupf, Louise and Frank Ring, Mimi and Barry Alperin, the Ike, Molly and Steven Elias Foundation, Amy Rubenstein, and Steven and Sheira Schacter. Additional support is provided by the Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany in New York, the Polish Cultural Institute New York, Villa Albertine, and the Austrian Cultural Forum New York.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Stuart Hands, Toronto Jewish Film Festival; Jessica Rosner; Isaac Zablocki, Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan; Marlene Josephs, Linda Lipson, Volunteers; Ksenia Filipovich, Reese Neal, Interns.

Film descriptions & schedule

All in-person films screen at the Walter Reade Theater (165 West 65th St.) unless otherwise noted as a virtual presentation. Each virtual presentation will be available for viewing beginning at 12pm ET on the below dates and available to rent up to five days after the specified premiere date with 24 hour playback.

Opening Film

America Ofir Raul Graizer Israel/Germany/Czech Republic, 2022, 127 min. Hebrew with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere Following the international success of his acclaimed romantic drama The Cakemaker, writer, director, and editor Ofir Raul Graizer presents an enveloping and visually sumptuous story about sexual identity and personal trauma, following a man whose return to Israel triggers a series of life-altering events. Having lived in Chicago for a decade, Israeli swimming coach Eli (Michael Moshonov) goes back to Tel Aviv after the sudden death of his estranged father. While there, he visits his childhood friend Yotam (Ofri Biterman) and Yotam’s fiancée, Iris (Oshrat Ingedashet), with whom he runs a flower shop; however, the reunion leads to a shocking turn of events that will affect everyone’s lives forever. The patient storytelling style Graizer forged in his previous film is in full evidence in America, a penetrating, tactile study of the inner lives of three people who will forever be physically and emotionally entwined, set in dramatic natural locations. Thursday, January 12, 8:15pm

Centerpiece

Charlotte Salomon: Life and the Maiden Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin France, 2022, 75 min. French with English subtitles World Premiere The extraordinary life of artist Charlotte Salomon has inspired novels, plays, operas, ballets, and even an animated film. This new documentary by Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin offers an intimate and expansive new look at the young woman who, though she was murdered in Auschwitz at age 26, completed an astounding amount of art, including some 1,300 paintings, before her deportation. Narrated as though from her own voice and featuring a cascade of her images, the film delves into her youth in Berlin, her escape to the south of France after the rise of the Nazis, her love affair with a music teacher, and the creative explosion that resulted in her brilliant body of multimedia work—ahead-of-their-time creations mixing gouache, text, and music. The film features the voices of Vicky Krieps, Mathieu Amalric, and Hanna Schygulla. Wednesday, January 18, 12pm & 6pm

Closing Film

Alegría Violeta Salama Spain, 2021, 104 min. Spanish and Chelja with English subtitles Violeta Salama makes her moving and wise feature debut with this layered, comic-tinged drama about women breaking free from patriarchal tradition in a contemporary Jewish diasporic community. Set in Melilla, an autonomous, multicultural Spanish city on Africa’s north coast, the film centers on Alegría (Cecilia Suárez), a single mother who has returned to her hometown from Mexico for her niece Yael’s Orthodox Jewish wedding, although Alegría does not acknowledge her own Jewish heritage. Salama’s film sensitively depicts Alegría coming to terms with her roots and the cultural past she has rejected, while reconnecting with family and friends. It features a standout performance from Suárez and a gorgeous evocation of a fascinating and beautiful corner of the world not often seen on-screen. Sunday, January 22, 2:30pm & 8pm

MAIN SLATE FILMS

Barren Mordechai Vardi Israel, 2022, 108 min. Hebrew with English subtitles U.S. Premiere An ultra-Orthodox twenty-something couple in Israel, unable to conceive children, find their lives upended in this provocative drama about faith and sexual exploitation. After Naftali travels to Ukraine during Rosh Hashanah to pray for a child, his wife, Feigi, is left alone with her in-laws, who invite the rabbi Elijah for the holiday. Claiming to be a healer of barren women, Elijah convinces Feigi to undergo his treatment, starting a chain of events that lead to crises of belief, conscience, and marriage for the couple once Naftali returns. Director Mordechai Vardi based his film on true events, raising fundamental theological questions and revealing the vulnerability of women living within such enclosed religious environments. Monday, January 23, 12pm (virtual screening) Exodus 91 Micah Smith Israel, 2022, 90 min. Hebrew, Amharic, and English with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere In his vital, gripping film, director Micah Smith brings a historical moment to vivid life through a hybrid of documentary and dramatic narrative. Smith returns to the politically complex May 1991 event known as Operation Solomon. Israeli diplomat Asher Naim travels to Ethiopia to act as negotiator for the release of 15,000 Ethiopian Jews, hoping to save them from a country plagued by famine and civil war. This seemingly altruistic mission, however, is thrown into doubt and skepticism when Naim begins to suspect the rescue mission might be a publicity stunt for his home country, and the Ethiopians wonder whether they have been little more than pawns. At the same time that the escalating situation on the ground becomes combustible, Naim’s crisis of faith grows. Sunday, January 22, 12pm & 5:30pm Farewell, Mr. Haffmann Fred Cavayé France, 2021, 116 min. French with English subtitles N.Y.C. Premiere In this acclaimed, engrossing drama set in Paris during the Nazi occupation, beloved French actor Daniel Auteuil (Jean de Florette) stars as Joseph Haffmann, a Jewish jeweler who sends his family away to safety, with the intention of joining them later. Haffmann has decided to hand off the business to his trusted assistant François Mercier (Gilles Lellouche) and Mercier’s wife, Blanche (Sara Giraudeau), who are recently married and struggling to conceive a child—though Haffmann’s plans go awry when he is unable to escape the city under the watch of German authorities. After Haffmann returns home, the Merciers agree to let him stay in their basement, but they strike a deal that will change the course of all their lives. Based on a play by Jean-Philippe Daguerre, Farewell, Mr. Haffmann is a twisting, turning, and satisfying tale that reveals the complex and contradictory sides of humanity pushed to its darkest limits. Thursday, January 12, 2:30pm Monday, January 16, 8:30pm Haute Couture Sylvie Ohayon France, 2021, 101 min. French with English subtitles A warm, witty, and wildly stylish testament to women working together, this Paris-set drama stars the captivating and elegant French standout Nathalie Baye as Esther, a seamstress for Dior on Avenue Montaigne. Now on the verge of retirement, the cutting and acerbic Esther has given her life to her job, which has created conflict in her personal relations, including with her estranged daughter. After an unexpected and seemingly random course of events brings her face to face with Jade (Lyna Khoudri), a young woman from the Parisian banlieues, Esther makes the surprising decision to pass down her skills to Jade, taking her on as an intern and giving her life a new meaning and aspect. French writer-director Sylvie Ohayon’s second feature is an absorbing and tactile experience whose delight is equally attributable to its caustic, smart script and its precise focus on the hard work that goes into creating high fashion. Thursday, January 19, 1pm Saturday, January 21, 9:45pm I Am Not Tomer Heymann Israel/Guatemala, 2022, 96 min. Hebrew, English, and Spanish with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Tomer Heymann’s latest film is a deeply emotional work that follows an outcast teenager’s life-changing journey. Oren was adopted from Guatemala by an Israeli family when he was a baby. Long unable to find his place in society, the teenager has been subject to ridicule and racism for years, while at the same time dealing with recurring false diagnoses of mental illness. Oren decides to take up a small video camera and document his own life. He embarks on a quest back to the country of his birth to seek out his biological family in the hopes of better defining his own identity. Thursday, January 12, 5:30pm I Like It Here Ralph Arlyck USA, 2022, 88 min. English N.Y. Premiere An American documentarian for more than 50 years, Ralph Arlyck, at age 82, has created one of his most personal films. A clear-eyed meditation on the reality and surprising beauties of aging, I Like It Here finds the filmmaker reflecting on his life with discursive wit and composure while spending time with friends and lovers, neighbors and colleagues, children and grandchildren. As Arlyck reckons with the physical and emotional obstacles of growing old, he also considers the tranquility and pleasure that can come with moving into one’s final years. Threaded through with wistfulness rather than sadness or regret, situating the filmmaker within the natural beauty of his upstate New York farm, this is an eloquent cinematic statement about finding inner peace and accepting life in all its joys and challenges. Sunday, January 15, 3pm Jews of the Wild West Amanda Kinsey USA, 2022, 83 min. English N.Y.C. Premiere Widening the historical lens, this documentary focuses on an under-explored aspect of Jewish history: the role that Jews played in Western American expansion, both in real life and in the movies. Through a tapestry of archival footage, photographs, and interviews, Amanda Kinsey’s pioneering film entertainingly excavates the past through the stories of an array of people, from known names like Max Aronson (the real “Bronco Billy Anderson” of early Hollywood) and Levi Strauss, to some you may not have heard about, like the Prussian immigrant who became a tribal leader in New Mexico and the Sephardic painter and photographer who documented the Kansas, Colorado, and Utah territories in the 1800s. Kinsey also surveys the experiences of those persecuted European Jews who picked up stakes and left the American Northeast, forging westward for better opportunities. Through the narratives of such trailblazers, and interviews with contemporary Jewish Westerners, the film tells a tale of American resilience and determination too often left out of the official history books. Sunday, January 15, 5:30pm June Zero Jake Paltrow USA/Israel, 2022, 105 min. Hebrew and English with English subtitles U.S. Premiere The 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann, architect of the mass murder of the Jews during World War II, is revisited in a gripping and surprising new vision from American filmmaker Jake Paltrow (The Good Night). This Hebrew-language drama—based on true accounts—tells its story from the intertwined perspectives of three largely unrelated figures: Eichmann’s Moroccan prison guard; a Polish Holocaust survivor who helped capture the infamous Nazi war criminal; and a 13-year-old Jewish Libyan immigrant. Largely shot on 16mm film, Paltrow’s vividly textured work uses these disparate points of view to paint an image of the diasporic Jewish people and, in its unorthodox narrative approach, reminds us that the same histories are experienced differently by people all over the world, and we are connected through shared traumatic pasts. Sunday, January 15, 8pm Krzysztof Wodiczko: The Art of Un-War Maria Niro USA, 2022, 61 min. English, French, Italian, and Japanese with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere Polish artist Krzysztof Wodiczko has devoted his career to work that calls attention to the inhumanity of war, imploring us to dismantle and change our perceptions of human conflict so we can drive toward peace—a concept he calls “Un-War.” Now 79 years old, Wodiczko is the subject of a compelling documentary by Maria Niro. The film pays tribute to his artistry and political commitment, demonstrating how his large-scale works, which include slide and video projections onto the sides and facades of major architectural sites and monuments, serve to disrupt the complacency of a public increasingly inured to violence. Delving into Wodiczko’s extensive array of stirring installations as well as his own past traumas—which include his having been born in 1943 Warsaw, two days before the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, as well as growing up in a Communist Poland still feeling the tragic aftereffects of World War II—Niro’s film also features interviews with fellow artists and activists in its pursuit of the heart and soul of a major artist whose work will, unfortunately, never be irrelevant. Saturday, January 14, 7pm March ’68 Krzysztof Lang Poland, 2022, 115 min. Polish with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere In this gripping coming-of-age story set against the volatile backdrop of late-1960s Communist Warsaw, Hania, a student at the state theater school, experiences political awakening and her own personal revolution. At first, Hania is blinded by love, falling intensely for technology student Janek, whom she meets at a play opening; gradually, however, she comes to realize that her fellow Jewish citizens—including Hania’s doctor father—are being persecuted in a series of antisemitic purges conducted in response to the hate-fueled rhetoric of Poland’s leader, Władysław Gomułka. When her family decides to emigrate for their own safety, Hania doesn’t want to join them, and instead tries to build a life with Janek. However, things spiral out of control, leading to a powerful climax set during the infamous events of March 1968. Inspired by a moment in time that shaped the social consciousness of director Krzysztof Lang, the film depicts the momentous collision of history and romance. Monday, January 16, 2:30pm Tuesday, January 17, 4pm The Narrow Bridge Esther Takac Australia, 2022, 76 min. Arabic, Hebrew, and English with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere The Narrow Bridge is an eye-opening work of nonfiction about trauma and healing that follows four individuals, Palestinian and Israeli, who have each suffered unimaginable grief—the loss of a loved one to violence—but who manage to use their misfortunes to find a way to healing and reconciliation. The film’s four main subjects, Bushra, Rami, Meytal, and Bassam, are part of an organization called Israeli Palestinian Bereaved Families, a union of people who aim to turn their personal devastation into social change through workshops, talks, and public memorials. As Australian filmmaker and trauma psychologist Esther Takac’s sensitively drawn documentary shows, their objectives are met with strong opposition, yet they are driven along their brave path toward some form of peace that exists beyond politics. Monday, January 23, 12pm (virtual screening) Schächten—A Retribution Thomas Roth Austria, 2022, 110 min. German with English subtitles N.Y.C. Premiere This dynamic, lavishly mounted historical drama about the scars of war and the long road to revenge explores the lives of Austrian Jews in the years following World War II and the legacies of anti-Semitism and racism that follow them. Set in Vienna in the 1960s, Schächten follows a young Jewish businessman named Victor who bears witness to an unthinkable miscarriage of justice: the acquittal of an SS commandant who oversaw the murder of Victor’s mother, sister, and grandparents when he was a child. As a result, Victor loses faith in the ability of the legal system to mete out proper punishment and vows instead to take the law into his own hands. Thomas Roth’s film sensitively handles difficult subject matter and builds to a haunting conclusion. Thursday, January 19, 3:45pm Saturday, January 21, 7pm SHTTL Ady Walter Ukraine/France, 2022, 114 min. Yiddish and Ukrainian with English subtitles U.S. Premiere This ambitious and technically astonishing film tells the expansive, multi-character story of a Jewish village in Ukraine on the border with Poland 24 hours before Nazi Germany invades the Soviet Union. Shot in a single take in Ukraine, the film unspools with our knowledge of imminent terror and destruction looming, while at the same time focusing on the vitality of lives about to be destroyed. Featuring a remarkable cast that includes Moshe Lobel (who appeared in Broadway’s Yiddish Fiddler on the Roof revival) and Yiddish-fluent actor Saul Rubinek, this is a ruminative, philosophical work of naturalism that insightfully depicts a place brimming with vibrancy and the romance, politics, and intrigue of everyday life. Monday, January 16, 5:30pm Tuesday, January 17, 1pm This Is National Wake Mirissa Neff South Africa/USA, 2022, 66 min. English N.Y.C. Premiere In her energetic and revelatory directorial debut, Mirissa Neff tells the amazing story of young musicians who dared to start a band together against the rupture and racism of South Africa’s apartheid regime. Launched in 1979, National Wake was the collaboration of a Jewish guitarist from Johannesburg, Ivan Kadey, and two Black musician brothers from Soweto, Gary and Punka Khoza, at a time when it was illegal for them to play or live together. Though the government shut them down, the bandmates filmed their rebellious, brave performances on Super 8, capturing themselves for posterity. Neff uses this archival footage, along with audio interviews, to create a grainy, visually appropriate plunge into the past, telling the immersive story of a short-lived yet remarkable countercultural attempt at using music to fight an entrenched, racist world. Saturday, January 14, 9:15pm Where Life Begins Stéphane Freiss Italy/France, 2022, 101 min. Italian and French with English subtitles N.Y.C. Premiere Set in the bucolic Calabrian countryside, this intimate and elegantly rendered romantic drama about family, faith, and freedom is the directorial debut of veteran French actor Stéphane Freiss. An ultra-Orthodox family has arrived in the south of Italy from their home in eastern France to assist with the annual harvest of the citron fruits used during the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. Among them is Esther (Lou de Laâge), a rabbi’s daughter who is increasingly dissatisfied with her life, chafing at the bonds of her religious upbringing and resentful of her imminent arranged marriage. When she meets and feels a growing attraction for the farm’s owner, Elio (Riccardo Scamarcio), she dares to imagine a different, potentially happier path for herself. Where Life Begins is an intelligent and honest depiction of the pain of questioning one’s faith and community that offers no easy answers. Tuesday, January 17, 7pm Wednesday, January 18, 2:30pm Yamna’s Blessing Ilanit Swissa Israel, 2021, 55 min. Hebrew with English subtitles U.S. Premiere Set in Sderot, a city in the south of Israel, this loving documentary portrait follows the life, culture, and rituals of an 84-year-old named Yamna. A miracle worker and a righteous woman, Yamna is regularly approached by people asking for help. Ilanit Swissa’s film frames Yamna’s life in prismatic fashion, allowing us to get to know her through those seeking her blessings, including a seemingly infertile woman who wants to get pregnant and a grandson who dreams of success in the music industry. At the same time, Yamna hopes to pass her mystical powers down to her daughter, Shula, though Shula has yet to discover how to embody them. In her observational work of nonfiction, Swissa portrays this unique and delightful individual with a combination of joy and curiosity. Preceded by Susam Sami Morhayim Turkey, 2021, 18 min. Turkish with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere In Turkish director Sami Morhayim’s provocative drama, young Susam, on the morning of his bar mitzvah, locks himself in his bedroom and refuses to leave. His family is unable to convince him to come out and, abiding by strict Shabbat rules, cannot break the door down, leading to an intellectual debate about religious faith and manhood. Monday, January 16, 12pm SIDEBAR A Letter to Mother Joseph Green and Leon Trystand Poland, 1939, 106 min. Yiddish with English subtitles World Premiere of 35mm Film Restoration by the National Center for Jewish Film A classic of Yiddish cinema, A Letter to Mother (also known as The Eternal Song) was among the final Yiddish films made in Poland before the Nazi invasion. Set in the years leading up to World War I, Joseph Green and Leon Trystand’s film follows Dobrish (Lucy German), a mother of three children trying to provide for her family in a town in Poland (now Ukraine), after her husband moves to America. Struggling against the ever-increasing challenges of poverty and war, Dobrish and her children finally strike out for New York with help from the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) in the hopes of rebuilding their lives for a better future. The most financially successful Yiddish film of its era, and a hit in New York, where it opened just two weeks after Germany’s blitzkrieg over Poland, the landmark A Letter to Mother is a moving work of traditional melodrama and a metaphor for the displacements facing European Jews in 1939. Preceded by Jewish Life in Lwow Shaul Goskind and Yitzhak Goskind Poland, 1939, 10 min. Yiddish with English subtitles This rare 1939 portrait of the daily lives of Jews in Lwow, Poland, now Lviv, Ukraine, home to a thriving Jewish community before World War II, is one of a handful of surviving films from Warsaw-based filmmakers Shaul Goskind and Yitzhak Goskind. Full of vibrant images of stylish women, thriving markets, parks, and promenades, this short documentary captures a prosperous world on the precipice of obliteration by the coming Nazi invasion. Sunday, January 15, 12pm A Life Apart: Hasidism in America Oren Rudavsky and Menachem Daum USA, 1997, 96 min. English, Russian, and Yiddish with English subtitles World Premiere of 4K Restoration Celebrating its 25th anniversary, this groundbreaking documentary was among the first American films to offer a full, distinctive, inside look at the traditional Eastern European Jewish communities that found their most vital enclaves in America after mass migrations post–World War II. Taking an analytical and highly informative approach to its subject, Menachem Daum and Oren Rudavsky’s film—which premiered at the New York Jewish Film Festival in January 1997—looks at the rituals, beliefs, challenges, and daily lives of Hasidic Jews in New York City. Narrated by Sarah Jessica Parker and Leonard Nimoy and featuring a score by klezmer musician and composer Yale Strom, A Life Apart presents a plurality of voices to paint a complex and lively picture of a people who had to struggle to establish their community amid ignorance and anti-Semitism. Thursday, January 19, 7pm, followed by panel discussion

SHORTS PROGRAM

Shorts by Women Wednesday, January 18, 8:30pm The Waltz Yulia Ruditskaya USA, 2022, 5 min. Yiddish with English subtitles Employing beautiful, autumnal animation, this short by Yulia Ruditskaya, an immigrant artist from Belarus who lives in New York, is inspired by a poem by the Ukraine-born Yiddish poet A. Lutsky and uses nonlinear narration and phantasmagoric imagery. Shirey Mara Nata Korneyeva Belarus, 2021, 10 min. Russian with English subtitles N.Y. Premiere This gorgeously animated fairy tale from Belarus tells the story of reconciling with the loss of a loved one. Using an evocative collage style, Nata Korneyeva depicts the possibility of renewal and the healing magic of music that transcends death. My Parent, Neal Hannah Saidiner USA, 2021, 9 min. English Hannah Saidiner uses vivid, colorful animation to reflect on her parent, with whom she shares a birthday, coming out as transgender and how their relationship evolved. My Parent, Neal evokes its emotional landscape through the depiction of domestic spaces and meaningful intimate objects. Anatevka Danielle Durchslag USA, 2022, 4 min. English U.S. Premiere The new film from artist and filmmaker Danielle Durchslag playfully interrogates the cultural prevalence of Fiddler on the Roof, showing a group of schoolchildren singing a darkly comedic, lyrically updated version of the show’s most mournful tune, “Anatevka.” Castles in the Sky Pearl Gluck USA, 2022, 33 min. English and Yiddish with English subtitles World Premiere Filmmaker and professor Pearl Gluck’s provocative latest dramatic short film centers on Malke, a Holocaust survivor and sex-ed teacher who has been leading a secret life for decades: performing slam poetry on the Lower East Side. Castles in the Sky features commanding performances from actor Lynn Cohen, who died in 2020, and poet Venus Thrash, who died in 2021. Make Me a King Sofia Olins United Kingdom, 2021, 16 min. English and Yiddish with English subtitles Award-winning British filmmaker Sofia Olins directed this delightful queer narrative about a young Jewish drag king performer. Though shunned by their parents, the nonbinary Ari continues to pursue their dream, while honoring the legacy of real-life Yiddish vaudeville drag king legend Pepi Litman. Schedule of Films All screenings are at the Walter Reade Theater unless otherwise indicated. Thursday, January 12 2:30pm: Farewell, Mr. Haffmann (116′) 5:30pm: I Am Not (96′) 8:15pm: America (127′) (Opening Film) Saturday, January 14 7pm: Krzysztof Wodiczko: The Art of Un-War (61′) 9:15pm: This Is National Wake (66′) Sunday, January 15 12pm: A Letter to Mother (106′) preceded by Jewish Life in Lwow (10′) 3pm: I Like It Here (88′) 5:30pm: Jews of the Wild West (83′) 8pm: June Zero (105′) Monday, January 16 (Martin Luther King, Jr. Day) 12pm: Yamna’s Blessing (55′) preceded by Susam (18′) 2:30pm: March ’68 (115′) 5:30pm: SHTTL (114′) 8:30pm: Farewell, Mr. Haffmann (116′) Tuesday, January 17 1pm: SHTTL (114′) 4pm: March ’68 (115′) 7pm: Where Life Begins (101′) Wednesday, January 18 12pm: Charlotte Salomon: Life and the Maiden (75′) 2:30pm: Where Life Begins (101′) 6pm: Charlotte Salomon: Life and the Maiden (75′) (Centerpiece) 8:30pm: Shorts by Women (total run time: 77′) Thursday, January 19 1pm: Haute Couture (101′) 3:45pm: Schächten—A Retribution (110′) 7pm: A Life Apart: Hasidism in America (96′) followed by panel discussion Saturday, January 21 7pm: Schächten—A Retribution (110′) 9:45pm: Haute Couture (101′) Sunday, January 22 12pm: Exodus 91 (90′) 2:30pm: Alegría (104′) 5:30pm: Exodus 91 (90′) 8pm: Alegría (104′) (Closing Film)

Virtual screenings

Available Monday, January 23 at noon ET through Saturday, January 28 at noon ET, with 24-hour playback window Barren (108′) The Narrow Bridge (76′)

About THE JEWISH MUSEUM

The Jewish Museum is an art museum committed to illuminating the complexity and vibrancy of Jewish culture for a global audience. Located on New York City’s Museum Mile, in the landmarked Warburg mansion, the Jewish Museum was the first institution of its kind in the United States and is one of the oldest Jewish museums in the world. The Museum offers diverse exhibitions and programs and maintains a unique collection of nearly 30,000 works of art, ceremonial objects, and media reflecting the global Jewish experience over more than 4,000 years.

About FILM AT LINCOLN CENTER

Film at Lincoln Center is dedicated to supporting the art and elevating the craft of cinema and enriching film culture. Film at Lincoln Center fulfills its mission through the programming of festivals, series, retrospectives, and new releases; the publication of Film Comment; and the presentation of podcasts, talks, special events, and artist initiatives. Since its founding in 1969, this nonprofit organization has brought the celebration of American and international film to the world-renowned Lincoln Center arts complex, making the discussion and appreciation of cinema accessible to a broad audience and ensuring that it remains an essential art form for years to come. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

34th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival announces festival lineup

The 34th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) announced that the festival’s opening night will be the World Premiere of 80 For Brady directed by Kyle Marvin, on Friday, January 6. The festival will close with The Lost King, directed by Stephen Frears on Sunday, January 15. The festival will screen 134 films from 64 countries, including 27 premieres (2 World, 12 North American, 1 International and 13 U.S.) from January 5-16, 2023.  The line-up includes 35 of the International Feature Film Oscar® Submissions along with Talking Pictures, New Voices New Visions, Modern Masters, Queer Cinema, Cine Latino, True Stories, World Cinema Now, and more.
  • Fest to Open on January 6 with the World Premiere of Paramount Pictures’ “80 For Brady” with Jane Fonda, Sally Field, Rita Moreno and Lily Tomlin Scheduled to Attend;
  • Fest to Close with “The Lost King,” Screen World Premiere of “Shot in the Arm,” and Films Featuring Juliette Binoche, LeVar Burton, Eugenio Derbez, Colin Farrell, Jim Gaffigan, Luca Guadagino, Mia Hansen-Løve, Lasse Hallström, Sally Hawkins, Anna Kendrick, Udo Kier, Vicky Krieps, Eva Longoria, Lena Olin, Ray Romano, Tim Roth, Rhea Seehorn, Léa Seydoux, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Paul Weitz, Olivia Wilde, Stephen Williams, Alex Wolff and More!
  • Complete Line-up Includes 35 International Feature Film Oscar Submissions, Talking Pictures, New Voices New Visions, Modern Masters, True Stories and World Cinema Now!

OPENING AND CLOSING SCREENINGS

PSIFF will open with the Paramount Pictures film 80 For Brady on Friday, January 6 at the Richards Center for the Arts. The film’s stars are expected to attend Opening Night including Academy Award® nominee Lily Tomlin, Academy Award® winner Jane Fonda, Academy Award® winner Rita Moreno and Academy Award® winner Sally Field, along with additional cast members. The film is inspired by the true story of four best friends living life to the fullest when they take a wild trip to the 2017 Super Bowl LI to see their hero Tom Brady play. 7-time Super Bowl Champion Tom Brady is a producer and will appear in the film. 80 For Brady is in-theaters February 3, 2023. The festival will close with The Lost King on Sunday, January 15. The Warner Bros. Pictures film stars Sally Hawkins, Shonagh Price, Helen Katamba and Lewis Macleod. The film follows an ambitious writer and amateur historian guided by instinct and spectral visions, who defies the academic establishment to unearth Richard III’s long-missing remains in a Leicester car park. Highlights for this year includes the World Premiere of documentary Shot in the Arm with director Scott Hamilton Kennedy and subject Neil deGrasse Tyson scheduled to attend. Other films with guests include Alice, Darling with Anna Kendrick; The Banshees of Inisherin with Colin Farrell; Chevalier with director Stephen Williams; Desperate Souls, Dark City and the Legend of Midnight Cowboy with director Nancy Buirski and Michael Childers; the North American Premiere of Hilma with director Lasse Hallström and actress Lena Olin; Linoleum with director Colin West and actors Jim Gaffigan and Rhea Seehorn; the US Premiere of Moving On with director Paul Weitz; the North American Premiere of My Neighbor Adolf with Udo Kier; the North American Premiere of Racist Trees with directors Sara Newens and Mina T. Son; and Somewhere in Queens with Ray Romano which he stars in and directs. “We are beyond excited to welcome back our beloved audience and filmmakers in Palm Springs. We’re especially thrilled to be joined by all four leads of 80 For Brady. The film is brimming with joy and heart, and it’s a perfect film to kick off our 34th edition,” said Artistic Director Lili Rodriguez. “Our programmers have dedicated almost a year to scouting the world for the films that make up this edition. It is our most thematically diverse year yet and I don’t believe you’ll find two movies that are alike. From light entertainment for casual nights out to urgent commentaries that beg for post-screening conversation and beyond, the cinema is there to capture it all.”

AWARDS BUZZ – BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM SUBMISSIONS

This section is selected by Festival programmers as the strongest entries in this year’s Academy Awards® race and will screen 35 official submissions from the Best International Feature Film category. A special jury of international film critics will review these films to present the FIPRESCI Award for Best International Feature Film of the Year, as well as Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Screenplay in this category.
  • Ajoomma (Singapore) Director He Shuming
  • Alcarràs (Spain) Director Carla Simón
  • All Quiet on the Western Front (Germany) Director Edward Berger
  • Argentina, 1985 (Argentina) Director Santiago Mitre
  • Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths (Mexico) Director Alejandro G. Iñárritu
  • Beautiful Beings (Iceland) Director Guðmundur Arnar Guðmundsson
  • Blanquita (Chile) Director Fernando Guzzoni
  • The Blue Caftan (Morocco) Director Maryam Touzani
  • Cairo Conspiracy (Sweden) Director Tarik Saleh
  • Cinema Sabaya (Israel) Director Orit Fouks Rotem
  • Close (Belgium) Director Lukas Dhont
  • Corsage (Austria) Director Marie Kreutzer
  • Darkling (Serbia) Director Dušan Milić (U.S. Premiere)
  • Decision to Leave (South Korea) Director Park Chan-wook
  • EO (Poland) Director Jerzy Skolimowski
  • Eternal Spring (Canada) Director Jason Loftus
  • The Happiest Man in the World (North Macedonia) Director Teona Strugar Mitevska (U.S. Premiere)
  • Holy Spider (Denmark) Director Ali Abbasi
  • Il Boemo (Czech Republic) Director Petr Václav (U.S. Premiere)
  • Joyland (Pakistan) Director Saim Sadiq
  • Kalev (Estonia) Director Ove Musting
  • Klondike (Ukraine) Director Maryna Er Gorbach
  • Last Film Show (India) Director Pan Nalin
  • Mars One (Brazil) Director Gabriel Martins
  • Mediterranean Fever (Palestine) Director Maha Haj
  • Nostalgia (Italy) Director Mario Martone
  • The Quiet Girl (Ireland) Director Colm Bairéad
  • Return to Seoul (Cambodia) Director Davy Chou
  • Saint Omer (France) Director Alice Diop
  • Under the Fig Trees (Tunisia) Director Erige Sehiri
  • Utama (Bolivia) Director Alejandro Loayza Grisi
  • Victim (Slovakia) Director Michal Blaško
  • War Sailor (Norway) Director Gunnar Vikene (U.S. Premiere)
  • World War III (Iran) Director Houman Seyyedi
  • You Won’t Be Alone (Australia) Director Goran Stolevski

TALKING PICTURES

The Talking Pictures program includes in-depth discussions with directors, writers and actors from the year’s top titles. The following film selected for this year’s program with guests attending are:
  • Alice, Darling (Canada/USA) with actress Anna Kendrick
  • Chevalier (USA) with director Stephen Williams
  • The Banshees of Inisherin (Ireland/UK/USA) with actor Colin Farrell
  • Moving On (USA) with director Paul Weitz and producer Andrew Miano

MODERN MASTERS

New films, classic auteurs.
  • All the Beauty and the Bloodshed (USA) Director Laura Poitras
  • Broker (South Korea) Director Hirokazu Koreeda
  • A Compassionate Spy (USA/UK) Director Steve James
  • Hilma (Sweden) Director Lasse Hallström (North American Premiere)
  • No Bears (Iran) Director Jafar Panahi
  • One Fine Morning (France/UK/Germany) Director Mia Hansen-Løve
  • M.N (Romania/France/Belgium/Sweden) Director Cristian Mungiu
  • Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams (Italy) Director Luca Guadagnino
  • Tori and Lokita (Belgium/France) Director Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Luc Dardenne

NEW VOICES NEW VISIONS

Unique viewpoints from first- and second-time directors.
  • Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe (USA) Director Aitch Alberto (U.S. Premiere)
  • Butterfly Vision (Ukraine/Czech Republic/Croatia/Sweden) Director Maksim Nakonechnyi (U.S. Premiere)
  • The Damned Don’t Cry (France/Belgium/Morocco) Director Fyzal Boulifa (North American Premiere)
  • How to Blow Up a Pipeline (USA) Director Daniel Goldhaber
  • Love According to Dalva (Belgium/France) Director Emmanuelle Nicot
  • Our Father, the Devil (USA) Director Ellie Foumbi
  • Riceboy Sleeps (Canada) Director Anthony Shim
  • Snow and the Bear (Turkey/Germany/Serbia) Director Selcen Ergun (U.S. Premiere)
  • Susie Searches (USA/UK) Director Sophie Kargman (U.S. Premiere)

TRUE STORIES

Non-fiction filmmaking at its most urgent and illuminating.
  • 1341 Frames of Love and War (Israel) Director Ran Tal
  • All That Breathes (India/UK) Director Shaunak Sen
  • Anxious Nation (USA) Director Vanessa Roth, Laura Morton
  • The Art of Eating: The Life of M.F.K. Fisher (USA) Director Gregory M. Bezat
  • Bella (USA) Director Bridget Murnane
  • Body Parts (USA) Filmmakers Kristy Guevara-Flanagan and Helen Hood Scheer
  • Born in Chicago (USA) Director Bob Sarles, John Anderson
  • Butterfly in the Sky (USA) Director Bradford Thomason, Brett Whitcomb
  • The Caviar Connection (France) Director Benoît Bringer
  • Crows Are White (Japan/Ireland/USA) Director Ahsen Nadeem
  • Desperate Souls, Dark City and the Legend of Midnight Cowboy (USA) Director Nancy Buirski
  • The Grab (USA) Director Gabriela Cowperthwaite
  • I Like It Here (USA) Director Ralph Arlyck
  • Lakota Nation vs. United States (USA) Director Jesse Short Bull, Laura Tomaselli
  • Lift (USA) Director David Petersen
  • Liquor Store Dreams (USA) Director So Yun Um
  • Of Medicine and Miracles (USA) Director Ross Kauffman
  • Roberta (USA) Director Antonino D’Ambrosio
  • Shot in the Arm (USA) Director Scott Hamilton Kennedy (World Premiere)
  • Split at the Root (USA) Director Linda Goldstein Knowlton
  • Subject (USA) Director Camilla Hall, Jennifer Tiexiera
  • The Thief Collector (USA) Director Allison Otto
  • To Kill a Tiger (Canada) Director Nisha Pahuja (International Premiere)
  • Turn Every Page: The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb (USA) Director Lizzie Gottlieb

CINE LATINO

Latin American/Latinx Stories
  • Chile ’76 (Chile/USA) Director Manuela Martelli
  • Huesera (Mexico/Peru) Director Michelle Garza Cervera
  • I Have Electric Dreams (Belgium/France/Costa Rica) Director Valentina Maurel (North American Premiere)
  • Sublime (Argentina) Director Mariano Biasin
  • The Substitute (Argentina/Italy/France/Spain/Mexico) Director Diego Lerman

QUEER CINEMA TODAY & THE GAYLA

Poignant, heartfelt and insightful stories from the LGBTQ community.
  • 1946: The Mistranslation that Shifted Culture (USA/Canada) Director Sharon “Rocky” Roggio
  • Casa Susanna (USA) Director Sebastien Lifshitz
  • Eismayer (Austria) Director David Wagner (North American Premiere)
  • Esther Newton Made Me Gay (USA) Director Jean Carlomusto
  • Gayla! Screening – God Save the Queens (USA) Director Jordan Danger
  • Gayla! Screening – Mama Bears (USA) Director Daresha Kyi
  • My Emptiness and I (Spain) Director Adrián Silvestre
  • Nelly & Nadine (Sweden/Belgium/Norway) Director Magnus Gertten
  • Punch (New Zealand/USA) Director Welby Ings (North American Premiere)
  • Winter Boy (France) Director Christophe Honoré
  • You Can Live Forever (Canada) Director Mark Slutsky, Sarah Watts

WORLD CINEMA NOW

Travel the world without leaving your seat.
  • Back Then (Poland) Director Kinga Dębska
  • The Beasts (Spain/France) Director Rodrigo Sorogoyen
  • Before, Now & Then (Indonesia) Director Kamila Andini
  • Burning Days (Turkey/France/Germany/Netherlands/Greece/Croatia) Director Emin Alper
  • Concerned Citizen (Israel/USA) Director Idan Haguel
  • Dirty, Difficult, Dangerous (France/Italy/Lebanon/Saudi Arabia/Qatar) Director Wissam Charaf (North American Premiere)
  • Driving Madeleine (France) Director Christian Carion (U.S. Premiere)
  • Emily (UK) Director Frances O’Connor (U.S. Premiere)
  • Freaks Out (Italy/Belgium) Director Gabriele Mainetti
  • Golden Years (Switzerland) Director Barbara Kulcsar (North American Premiere)
  • Greener Pastures (Israel) Director Matan Guggenheim, Assaf Abiri (North American Premiere)
  • Gyeong-ah’s Daughter (South Korea) Director Kim Jung-eun
  • Haute Couture (France) Director Sylvia Ohayon
  • The Judgement (Netherlands/Germany) Director Sander Burger
  • Juniper (New Zealand) Director Matthew J. Saville
  • Linoleum (USA) Director Colin West
  • Lullaby (Spain) Director Alauda Ruiz de Azúa
  • Max, Min & Meowzaki (India) Director N Padmakumar (U.S. Premiere)
  • Melchior the Apothecary (Estonia/Latvia/Lithuania/Germany) Director Elmo Nüganen
  • My Neighbor Adolf (Israel/Colombia/Poland) Director Leonid Prudovsky (North American Premiere)
  • My Sailor, My Love (Finland/Ireland) Director Klaus Härö
  • Next Sohee (South Korea) Director July Jung
  • The Origin of Evil (France/Canada) Director Sébastien Marnier
  • Revoir Paris (France) Director Alice Winocour
  • Simone: Woman of the Century (France) Director Olivier Dahan (U.S. Premiere)
  • Somewhere in Queens (USA) Director Ray Romano
  • Stonewalling (Japan/China) Director Huang Ji, Ryuji Otsuka
  • The Storyteller (India) Director Anant Narayan Mahadevan (North American Premiere)
  • Talia’s Journey (Belgium/Senegal/Luxembourg) Director Christophe Rolin
  • Viking (Canada) Director Stéphane Lafleur
  • Where Life Begins (Italy) Director Stéphane Freiss
  • Without Her (Iran/Germany) Director Arian Vazirdaftari (North American Premiere)
  • The Word (Czech Republic/Slovakia/Poland) Director Beata Parkanová (U.S. Premiere)

LOCAL SPOTLIGHT

These films have been selected as part of the Local Spotlight program highlighting films from the Coachella Valley.
  • Don’t Worry Darling (USA) Director Olivia Wilde
  • Racist Trees (USA) Director Sara Newens, Mina T. Son (North American Premiere)
Juried awards for films in-competition will be announced Sunday, January 15 for seven categories, including the FIPRESCI Prize for films in the International Feature Film Oscar® Submissions program; New Voices New Visions Award for unique viewpoints from first- and second-time directors; Best Documentary Award for compelling non-fiction filmmaking; Ibero-American Award for the best film from Latin America, Spain or Portugal; Local Jury Award for a film that promotes understanding and acceptance between people; Young Cineastes Award for a film chosen by our Youth Jury; and the Mozaik Bridging the Borders Award for a film that is successful in bringing the people of our world closer together. The complete line-up will be available online on December 6 at www.psfilmfest.org.  Attached is a complete list of films selected for the festival. General tickets will go on sale December 22.

About the Palm Springs International Film Society

The Palm Springs International Film Society is a 501(c)(3) charitable non-profit organization whose mission is to cultivate and promote the art and science of film through education and cross-cultural awareness. The Film Society produces the Palm Springs International Film Festival (PSIFF) and Film Awards every January and Palm Springs ShortFest in June. In addition to curating the best in international cinema, PSIFF’s Film Awards has come to be known as the first stop on the campaign trail for the Academy Awards®, and our Oscar®-qualifying ShortFest is the largest short film festival and market in North America. Our festivals, year-round member screenings and educational programs manifest our organization’s mission by nurturing and encouraging new filmmaking talent, honoring the great masters of world cinema, and expanding audience horizons. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

IFFR 2023: Competition Juries and first Short & Mid-length titles announced

ROTTERDAM (December 8, 2022) – As the 52nd edition of International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) draws nearer, the festival announces the names of its competition juries alongside its latest programme confirmations. Highly lauded American producer Christine Vachon and Filipino filmmaker Lav Diaz are amongst the Tiger Competition jurors, whilst IFFR 2023 filmmaker in focus Stanya Kahn is part of the Ammodo Tiger Short Competition jury. The first titles in the Short & Mid-length strand are announced, next to a programme which reflects on the socio-political development of India over the past 30 years. Press and industry are now invited to apply for their accreditations. India-focused programme asks: The Shape of Things to Come? Festival director Vanja Kaludjercic: “After launching our new visual campaign that celebrates our home city with our return in full force, the 52nd edition is now really taking shape. These latest confirmations are testament of the broadening and deepening of our programme, from the delights of the Short & Mid-length programme, to a vital delve into contemporary India – surprising our audiences with great films that underline relevant and pressing issues.”

Short & Mid-length

IFFR presents the first confirmations in its non-competitive space for short and mid-length work in all its diversity. Finnish filmmaker Laura Rantanen reflects on the end of life through the books we leave behind in the wistful documentary Goodbye Words. Chinese filmmaker Gao Wei presents a photochemical, x-ray journey through the compositions of flowers and leaves in Flower Rain. Since 2008, Austrian filmmaker Siegfried A. Fruhauf has been showing his tactile explorations of cinematic frames and movement at IFFR. He returns to present the world premiere of his latest film Cave Painting. Amsterdam-based Argentine filmmaker Sebastian Diaz Morales presents the festival world premiere of the mid-length Smashing Monuments, where members of the Indonesian art collective ruangrupa converse with city statues. Morales’s films and installations have been shown all over the world, including at the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Tate Modern in London, and at IFFR since 2002. See the first Short & Mid-length lineup.
Stills from the films: Goodbye Words, Flower Rain, Smashing Monuments, Cave Painting
Clockwise, stills from the films: Goodbye Words, Flower Rain, Smashing Monuments, Cave Painting / Courtesy of IFFR

Focus: The Shape of Things to Come?

IFFR presents a programme of documentaries and fictional narratives that reflect on the socio-political development of India over the past 30 years, focusing on the institutional ascent of right-wing Hindu-nationalist groups and the persecution of dissenting voices. The programme stretches back to Sanjiv Shah’s 1992 musical political satire Love in the Time of Malaria, to the world premiere of Which Colour? by Shahrukhkhan Chavada. Survival in the first four months of the pandemic-induced lockdown in Mumbai is the focus of Mihir Fadnavis’s documentary Lords of Lockdown, which screens in Europe for the first time. See the first titles in Focus: The Shape of Things to Come?

Competition juries

The Tiger Competition Jury includes filmmaker Lav Diaz, producer and director of the Udine Far East Film Festival, Sabrina Baracetti, film critic Alonso Díaz de la Vega, and actress and filmmaker Anisia Uzeyman (Neptune Frost, IFFR 2022). Celebrated producer Christine Vachon (Safe, IFFR 1996; Boys Don’t Cry, IFFR 2000; The World to Come IFFR 2021), completes the lineup. Together they will choose the winners of the Tiger Award, worth €40,000, and the Special Jury Awards, worth €10,000. The jury for the Ammodo Tiger Short Competition consists of writer, cultural programmer and organiser Simone Zeefuik, programmer, art curator and writer Herb Shellenberger, and film and video artist Stanya Kahn – whose work is also presented in a Focus programme at IFFR 2023. The jury will determine which three titles will receive three equal Ammodo Tiger Short Awards, each worth €5,000. The lineup for both competitions, as well as the Big Screen Competition which is decided on by an audience jury, will be announced at the online IFFR 2023 Press Conference on Monday, 19 December at 11am.
Tiger Competition Jury, left to right: Lav Diaz, Sabrina Baracetti, Alonso Díaz de la Vega (photo credit: Javier Azuara), Anisia Uzeyman, Christine Vachon
Tiger Competition Jury, left to right: Lav Diaz, Sabrina Baracetti, Alonso Díaz de la Vega (photo credit: Javier Azuara), Anisia Uzeyman, Christine Vachon / Courtesy of IFFR

Further programme confirmations

The festival continues to announce selections in its largest and broadest programme, Harbour, including the international premiere of Australian documentary filmmaker Sari Braithwaite’s candid portrait of a neurodiverse family Because We Have Each Other. Also making its international premiere is Revolution der Augen, the cinematic comeback of Austrian 70s feminist video art and film legend Friederike Pezold – a tranquil, sound-free flow of images. Brazil’s cinema marginal pioneer Júlio Bressane returns to IFFR to present the world premiere of an extensive reflection on his six decades of filmmaking, The Long Voyage of the Yellow Bus, made in tandem with Rodrigo Lima. In 2000, IFFR honoured Bressane with one of the first comprehensive retrospectives on his work outside of Brazil. The latest confirmation in the Limelight programme of eagerly anticipated festival favourites is the international premiere of Wir sind dann wohl die Angehörigen – Hans-Christian Schmid’s film on the 1996 kidnapping of millionaire academic Jan Philipp Reemtsma. In the Bright Future strand of debut features, Peruvian filmmaker Felipe Esparza Pérez brings the world premiere of the delicate Cielo abierto, after screening shorts at IFFR in 2020 and 2021.
Stills from the films: Because We Have Each Other, The Long Voyage of the Yellow Bus, Wir sind dann wohl die Angehörigen, Cielo Abierto
Clockwise, stills from the films: Because We Have Each Other, The Long Voyage of the Yellow Bus, Wir sind dann wohl die Angehörigen, Cielo Abierto / Courtesy of IFFR

Press and industry at IFFR 2023

The full lineup for IFFR 2023 including the Tiger, Big Screen and Ammodo Tiger Short competitions will be announced at the IFFR 2023 Press Conference, which takes place online at 11am CET on Monday, 19 December. Press and industry are invited to apply for their accreditations, and should do so before 23 December.

Bright Future latest confirmation

  • Cielo abierto, Felipe Esparza Pérez, 2023, Peru, France, world premiere

Focus: The Shape of Things to Come? first lineup

  • All Was Good, Teresa Braggs, 2022, India
  • Bajrangi Bhaijaan, Kabir Khan, 2015, India
  • Final Solution, Rakesh Sharma, 2004, India
  • Firaaq, Nandita Das, 2008, India
  • Follower, Harshad Nalawade, 2023, India, world premiere
  • I Am Offended, Jaideep Varma, 2015, India
  • A Knock on the Door, Ranjan Palit, 2023, India, world premiere
  • Lords of Lockdown, Mihir Fadnavis, 2021, India, European premiere
  • Love in the Time of Malaria, Sanjiv Shah, 1992, India
  • The Men in the Tree, Lalit Vachani, 2002, India
  • Sameer, Dakxinumar Bajrange, 2017, India
  • The Kali of Emergency, Ashish Avikunthak, 2016, India, Germany
  • Which Colour?, Shahrukhkhan Chavada, 2023, India, world premiere

Harbour latest confirmations

  • 2551.02 – The Orgy of the Damned, Norbert Pfaffenbichler, 2023, Austria, world premiere
  • Because We Have Each Other, Sari Braithwaite, 2022, Australia, international premiere
  • De noche los gatos son pardos, Valentin Merz, 2022, Switzerland
  • Geylang, Boi Kwong, 2022, Singapore, European premiere
  • The Long Voyage of the Yellow Bus, Júlio Bressane, Rodrigo Lima, 2023, Brazil, world premiere
  • Revolution der Augen, Friederike Pezold, 2022, Austria, international premiere
  • Stiekyt, Etienne Fourie, 2022, South Africa

Limelight latest confirmation

  • Wir sind dann wohl die Angehörigen, Hans-Christian Schmid, 2022, Germany, international premiere

Short & Mid-length first confirmations

  • Ashes By Name Is Man, Ewelina Rosinska, 2023, Germany, international premiere
  • Baba, Mbithi Masya, 2022, Kenya
  • Can’t Help Myself, Anna Ansone, 2022, Latvia, international premiere
  • Cave Painting, Siegfried A. Fruhauf, 2023, Austria, world premiere
  • DVA, Alexandra Karelina, 2023, Russia, world premiere
  • Flower Rain, Gao Wei, 2022, South Korea, world premiere (festival)
  • The Funeral of Spring, Gao Zee, 2023, Hong Kong, world premiere
  • Goodbye Words, Laura Rantanen, 2022, Finland, world premiere
  • Issues With My Other Half, Anna Vasof, 2023, Austria, world premiere
  • No Changes Have Taken In Our Life, Xu Jingwei, 2023, China, world premiere
  • Smashing Monuments, Sebastian Diaz Morales, 2023, Netherlands, Indonesia, world premiere (festival)
IFFR 2023 Full program can be found here. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

2023 Sundance Film Festival announces lineup of 99 feature films

PARK CITY, UTAH, December 7, 2022 — Today the nonprofit Sundance Institute announced the comprehensive slate of independent films selected across the feature film categories for the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. The 2023 Festival will take place January 19–29, 2023, in person in Park City, Salt Lake City, and the Sundance Resort, along with a selection of films available online across the country January 24–29, 2023. Festivalgoers will once again return to theaters to discover this upcoming year’s most impactful independent stories. In-Person Ticket Packages are currently on sale through December 16, Online Ticket Packages go on sale December 13 at 10 a.m. MT, and single film tickets go on sale January 12 at 10 a.m. MT. Setting the scene, Day One Features will open the Festival in Park City: 11 features, plus a Shorts program, will illustrate the scope of Festival work across genre and form. Day One Features are birth/rebirthL’ImmensitàIt’s Only Life After AllKim’s VideoLittle Richard: I Am EverythingThe Longest GoodbyeThe Pod GenerationRadical, ShaydaSometimes I Think About Dying, and Run Rabbit Run. In addition, on January 19, the Institute will host the inaugural Opening Night: A Taste of Sundance presented by IMDbPro. The celebration will kick off the Festival welcoming everyone back together again while raising funds for the Institute’s critical year-round artist support. The evening will honor Ryan Coogler, Nikyatu Jusu, W. Kamau Bell, and more whose journeys have been connected to Sundance throughout the years. In addition, in-person attendees will get to experience a robust offering of talks and events during the Festival, with more details to be announced. Films will become available online during the second half of the Festival — beginning January 24 — and will include all Competition titles (U.S. Dramatic, U.S. Documentary, World Cinema Dramatic, World Cinema Documentary, and NEXT), as well as exciting work across other sections of the feature film program, Indie Episodic Program, and Shorts Program. Audiences can enjoy the selection of films exclusively on the Sundance Film Festival online platform — those that will be available online are noted below. The online offering reinforces the Institute’s commitment to accessibility by allowing audiences coast to coast to take part in the discovery of captivating stories. The Shorts and Indie Episodic lineups for the 2023 Sundance Film Festival will be announced on December 13. “Maintaining an essential place for artists to express themselves, take risks, and for visionary stories to endure and entertain is distinctly Sundance,” said Robert Redford, Sundance Institute Founder and President. “The Festival continues to foster these values and connections through independent storytelling. We are honored to share the compelling selection of work at this year’s Festival from distinct perspectives and unique voices.” “As a program of the Sundance Institute, the Festival provides a place for artists globally to connect with audiences around a shared and inclusive experience of discovery,” said Joana Vicente, Sundance Institute CEO. “These filmmakers reflect the world around us through bold and thrilling storytelling. It is critical for the arts to foster dialogue, especially during unprecedented times — these stories are needed to provoke discussion, share diverse viewpoints, and challenge us. We are delighted to welcome this group of passionate artists to the Festival and look forward to celebrating the films together with audiences.” “The program for this year’s Festival reiterates the relevancy of trailblazing work serving as an irreplaceable source for original stories that resonate and fuel creativity and dialogue,” said Kim Yutani, Sundance Film Festival Director of Programming. “In so many ways this year’s slate reflects the voices of communities around the world who are speaking out with urgency and finally being heard. Across our program, impactful storytelling by fearless artists continues to provide space for the community to come together to be entertained, challenged, and inspired.” The 2023 Sundance Film Festival’s Salt Lake City Opening Night Gala Film is Blueback, premiering at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center on January 20The upcoming Festival will expand its presence in Salt Lake City, providing more places to take part in the thrilling experience, including at The Megaplex Theatres at The Gateway. Also announced today, The Pod Generation, screening in the Premieres section, has been named the winner of the Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize, an annual award given to an artist with the most outstanding depiction of science and technology in a feature film. The slate announced to date includes SLAM and The Doom Generation, which are featured in the From the Collection section bringing archival screenings back into focus as part of the Festival. The Sundance Film Festival is an artist program of the Sundance Institute. Proceeds earned through Festival ticket sales go to uplifting and developing emerging artists on a year-round basis through focused labs, direct grants, fellowships, residencies, and more. The full slate of works announced today, along with the From the Collection films previously announced, includes 101 feature-length films representing 23 countries. The 2023 program is made up of 32 of 115 (28%) feature film directors who are first-time feature filmmakers, and 17 of the feature films and projects announced today were supported by Sundance Institute in development through direct granting or residency labs. World premieres make up 93, or 94%, of the Festival’s 99 feature films announced today. These films were selected from 15,855 submissions, including 4,061 feature-length films. Of the 4,061 feature film submissions, 1,662 were from the U.S., and 2,399 were international. Director demographics are available in an editor’s note below.

U.S. DRAMATIC COMPETITION

Presenting 12 world premieres of fiction feature films, the Dramatic Competition offers audiences a first look at groundbreaking new voices in American independent film. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include Nanny, CODAPassingMinari, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, The Farewell, Clemency, Eighth Grade, and Sorry to Bother You. The Accidental Getaway Driver / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Sing J. Lee, Screenwriter: Christopher Chen, Producers: Kimberly Steward, Basil Iwanyk, Andy Sorgie, Brendon Boyea, Joseph Hiếu) — During a routine pickup, an elderly Vietnamese cab driver is taken hostage at gunpoint by three recently escaped Orange County convicts. Based on a true story. Cast: Hiệp Trần Nghĩa, Dustin Nguyen, Dali Benssalah, Phi Vũ, Gabrielle Chan. World Premiere. Available online. All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Raven Jackson, Producers: Maria Altamirano, Barry Jenkins, Adele Romanski, Mark Ceryak) – A decades-spanning exploration of a woman’s life in Mississippi and an ode to the generations of people, places, and ineffable moments that shape us. Cast: Charleen McClure, Moses Ingram, Kaylee Nicole Johnson, Reginald Helms Jr., Sheila Atim, Chris Chalk. World Premiere. Available online. Fair Play / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Chloe Domont, Producers: Leopold Hughes, Ben LeClair, Tim White, Trevor White, Allan Mandelbaum) — An unexpected promotion at a cutthroat hedge fund pushes a young couple’s relationship to the brink, threatening to unravel far more than their recent engagement. Cast: Phoebe Dynevor, Alden Ehrenreich, Eddie Marsan. World Premiere. Available online. Fancy Dance / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Erica Tremblay, Screenwriter: Miciana Alise, Producers: Deidre Backs, Heather Rae, Nina Yang Bongiovi, Tommy Oliver) — Following her sister’s disappearance, a Native American hustler kidnaps her niece from the child’s white grandparents and sets out for the state powwow in hopes of keeping what is left of their family intact. Cast: Lily Gladstone, Isabel Deroy-Olson, Ryan Begay, Shea Whigham, Audrey Wasilewski. World Premiere. Available online. Magazine Dreams / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Elijah Bynum, Producers: Jennifer Fox, Dan Gilroy, Jeffrey Soros, Simon Horsman) — An amateur bodybuilder struggles to find human connection as his relentless drive for recognition pushes him to the brink. Cast: Jonathan Majors, Haley Bennett, Taylour Paige, Mike O’Hearn, Harrison Page, Harriet Sansom Harris. World Premiere. Available online. Mutt / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Vuk Lungulov-Klotz, Producers: Alexander Stegmaier, Stephen Scott Scarpulla, Jennifer Kuczaj, Joel Michaely) — Over the course of a single hectic day in New York City, three people from Feña’s past are thrust back into his life. Having lost touch since transitioning from female to male, he navigates the new dynamics of old relationships while tackling the day-to-day challenges of living life in between. Cast: Lío Mehiel, Cole Doman, MiMi Ryder, Alejandro Goic. World Premiere. Available online. The Persian Version / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Maryam Keshavarz, Producers: Anne Carey, Ben Howe, Luca Borghese, Peter Block, Corey Nelson) — When a large Iranian-American family gathers for the patriarch’s heart transplant, a family secret is uncovered that catapults the estranged mother and daughter into an exploration of the past. Toggling between the United States and Iran over decades, mother and daughter discover they are more alike than they know. Cast: Layla Mohammadi, Niousha Noor, Kamand Shafieisabet, Bella Warda, Bijan Daneshmand, Shervin Alenabi. World Premiere. Available online. Shortcomings / U.S.A. (Director: Randall Park, Screenwriter: Adrian Tomine, Producers: Margot Hand, Randall Park, Hieu Ho, Jennifer Berman, Howard Cohen, Eric d’Arbeloff) — Following Ben, Miko, and Alice as they navigate a range of interpersonal relationships and traverse the country in search of the ideal connection. Cast: Justin H. Min, Sherry Cola, Ally Maki, Debby Ryan, Tavi Gevinson, Sonoya Mizuno. World Premiere. Available online. Sometimes I Think About Dying U.S.A. (Director: Rachel Lambert, Screenwriters: Kevin Armento, Stefanie Abel Horowitz, Katy Wright-Mead, Producers: Alex Saks, Daisy Ridley, Dori Rath, Lauren Beveridge, Brett Beveridge) — Fran likes to think about dying. It brings sensation to her quiet life. When she makes the new guy at work laugh, it leads to more: a date, a slice of pie, a conversation, a spark. The only thing standing in their way is Fran herself. Cast: Daisy Ridley, Dave Merheje, Parvesh Cheena, Marcia DeBonis, Meg Stalter, Brittany O’Grady. World Premiere. Available online. DAY ONE The Starling Girl / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Laurel Akira Parmet, Producers: Kevin Rowe, Kara Durrett) — Seventeen-year-old Jem Starling struggles with her place within her Christian fundamentalist community, but everything changes when her magnetic youth pastor Owen returns to their church. Cast: Eliza Scanlen, Lewis Pullman, Jimmi Simpson, Wrenn Schmidt, Austin Abrams, Jessamine Burgum. World Premiere. Available online. Theater Camp / U.S.A. (Directors and Screenwriters: Molly Gordon, Nick Lieberman, Screenwriters: Noah Galvin, Ben Platt, Producers: Erik Feig, Samie Kim Falvey, Julia Hammer, Ryan Heller, Will Ferrell, Jessica Elbaum) — When the beloved founder of a run-down theater camp in upstate New York falls into a coma, the eccentric staff must band together with the founder’s crypto-bro son to keep the camp afloat. Cast: Molly Gordon, Ben Platt, Noah Galvin, Jimmy Tatro, Patti Harrison, Ayo Edebiri. World Premiere. Available online. A Thousand and One / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: A.V. Rockwell, Producers: Eddie Vaisman, Julia Lebedev, Lena Waithe, Rishi Rajani, Brad Weston) — Convinced it’s one last, necessary crime on the path to redemption, unapologetic and free-spirited Inez kidnaps 6-year-old Terry from the foster care system. Holding on to their secret and each other, mother and son set out to reclaim their sense of home, identity, and stability in New York City. Cast: Teyana Taylor, Will Catlett, Josiah Cross, Aven Courtney, Aaron Kingsley Adetola. World Premiere. Available online.

U.S. DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

World-premiere American documentaries that illuminate the ideas, people, and events that shape the present day. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include Fire of LoveSummer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), Boys State, Crip Camp: A Disability RevolutionAPOLLO 11, Knock Down the House, One Child Nation, American FactoryThree Identical Strangers, and On Her Shoulders. AUM: The Cult at the End of the World / U.S.A. (Directors and Producers: Ben Braun, Chiaki Yanagimoto, Producers: Dan Braun, Josh Braun, Rick Brookwell) — On the morning of March 20, 1995, a deadly nerve gas attack in the Tokyo subway sent the nation and its people into chaos. This exploration of Aum Shinrikyo, the cult responsible for the attack, involves the participation of those who lived through the horror as it unfolded. World PremiereAvailable online. Bad Press / U.S.A (Directors: Rebecca Landsberry-Baker, Joe Peeler, Producers: Conrad Beilharz, Garrett F. Baker, Tyler Graim) — When the Muscogee Nation suddenly begins censoring its free press, a rogue reporter fights to expose her government’s corruption in a historic battle that will have ramifications for all of Indian country. World Premiere. Available online. The Disappearance of Shere Hite / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Nicole Newnham, Producers: Molly O’Brien, R.J. Cutler, Elise Pearlstein, Kimberley Ferdinando, Trevor Smith) — Shere Hite’s 1976 bestselling book, The Hite Report, liberated the female orgasm by revealing the most private experiences of thousands of anonymous survey respondents. Her findings rocked the American establishment and presaged current conversations about gender, sexuality, and bodily autonomy. So how did Shere Hite disappear? World Premiere. Available online. Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project / U.S.A. (Directors and Producers: Joe Brewster, Michèle Stephenson, Producer: Tommy Oliver) — Intimate vérité, archival footage, and visually innovative treatments of poetry take us on a journey through the dreamscape of legendary poet Nikki Giovanni as she reflects on her life and legacy. World Premiere. Available online. Going Varsity in Mariachi / U.S.A. (Directors: Alejandra Vasquez, Sam Osborn, Producers: James Lawler, Luis A. Miranda, Jr., Julia Pontecorvo) — In the competitive world of high school mariachi, the musicians from the South Texas borderlands reign supreme. Under the guidance of coach Abel Acuña, the teenage captains of Edinburg North High School’s acclaimed team must turn a shoestring budget and diverse crew of inexperienced musicians into state champions. World Premiere. Available online. Joonam / U.S.A. (Director: Sierra Urich, Producer: Keith Wilson) — Spurred by a provocative family memory and a lifetime of separation from the country her mother left behind, a young filmmaker delves into her mother and grandmother’s complicated pasts and her own fractured Iranian identity. World Premiere. Available online. Little Richard: I Am Everything / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Lisa Cortés, Producers: Robert Friedman, Liz Yale Marsh, Caryn Capotosto) — This celebration of Little Richard reveals the Black queer origins of rock ’n’ roll, finally exploding the whitewashed canon of American pop music. Through archival and performance footage, the revolutionary icon’s life unspools with all of its switchbacks and contradictions. World Premiere. Available online. DAY ONE Nam June Paik: Moon is the Oldest TV / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Amanda Kim, Producers: Amy Hobby, David Koh, Mariko Munro, Jennifer Stockman, Jesse Wann) — The quixotic journey of Nam June Paik, one of the most famous Asian artists of the 20th century, who revolutionized the use of technology as an artistic canvas and prophesied both the fascist tendencies and intercultural understanding that would arise from the interconnected metaverse of today’s world. World Premiere. Available online. A Still Small Voice / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Luke Lorentzen, Producer: Kellen Quinn) — An aspiring hospital chaplain begins a yearlong residency in spiritual care, only to discover that to successfully tend to her patients, she must look deep within herself. World Premiere. Available online. The Stroll / U.S.A. (Directors: Kristen Lovell, Zackary Drucker, Producer: Matt Wolf) — The history of New York’s Meatpacking District, told from the perspective of transgender sex workers who lived and worked there. Filmmaker Kristen Lovell, who walked “The Stroll” for a decade, reunites her community to recount the violence, policing, homelessness, and gentrification they overcame to build a movement for transgender rights. World Premiere. Available online. Victim/Suspect / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Nancy Schwartzman, Producers: Julie Goldman, Christopher Clements, Alice Henty, Rachel de Leon, Amanda Pike) — Investigative journalist Rae de Leon travels nationwide to uncover and examine a shocking pattern: Young women tell the police they’ve been sexually assaulted, but instead of finding justice, they’re charged with the crime of making a false report, arrested, and even imprisoned by the system they believed would protect them. World Premiere. Available online.

WORLD CINEMA DRAMATIC COMPETITION

Fiction projects from emerging artists around the world offer fresh perspectives and inventive styles. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include Brian and Charles, Hive, Luzzu, The Souvenir, The Guilty, Monos, YardieThe Nile Hilton Incident, and Second Mother. Animalia France, Morocco, Qatar (Director and Screenwriter: Sofia Alaoui, Producers: Margaux Lorier, Toufik Ayadi, Christophe Barral) — A young, pregnant woman finds emancipation as aliens land in Morocco. Cast: Oumaïma Barid, Mehdi Dehbi, Fouad Oughaou. World Premiere. Available online. Bad Behaviour New Zealand (Director and Screenwriter: Alice Englert, Producers: Molly Hallam, Desray Armstrong) — Lucy, a former child actor, seeks enlightenment at a retreat led by spiritual leader Elon while she navigates her close yet turbulent relationship with her stunt-performer daughter, Dylan. Cast: Jennifer Connelly, Ben Whishaw, Alice Englert, Ana Scotney, Dasha Nekrasova, Marlon Williams. World Premiere. Available online. Girl U.K. (Director and Screenwriter: Adura Onashile, Producers: Rosie Crerar, Ciara Barry) — Eleven-year-old Ama and her mother, Grace, take solace in the gentle but isolated world they obsessively create. Ama’s growing up threatens the boundaries of their tenderness and forces Grace to reckon with a past she struggles to forget. Cast: Déborah Lukumuena, Danny Sapani, Le’Shantey Bonsu, Liana Turner. World Premiere. Available online. Heroic Mexico, Sweden (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: David Zonana, Producers: Michel Franco, Eréndira Núñez Larios) — Luis, an 18-year-old boy with Indigenous roots, enters the Heroic Military College in hopes of ensuring a better future. There, he encounters a rigid and institutionally violent system designed to turn him into a perfect soldier. Cast: Santiago Sandoval Carbajal, Fernando Cuautle, Mónica del Carmen, Esteban Caicedo, Carlos Gerardo García, Isabel Yudice. World Premiere. Available online. MAMACRUZ Spain (Director and Screenwriter: Patricia Ortega, Screenwriter: José Ortuño, Producer: Olmo Figueredo) — With the help of her newly emigrated daughter, a religious grandmother learns how to use the internet. However, an accidental encounter with pornography poses a dilemma for her. Cast: Kiti Mánver. World Premiere. Available online. Mami Wata Nigeria (Director and Screenwriter: C.J. “Fiery” Obasi, Producer: Oge Obasi) — When the harmony in a village is threatened by outside elements, two sisters must fight to save their people and restore the glory of a mermaid goddess to the land. Cast: Evelyne Ily, Uzoamaka Aniunoh, Kelechi Udegbe, Emeka Amakeze, Rita Edochie, Tough Bone. World Premiere. Available online. La Pecera Puerto Rico, Spain (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Glorimar Marrero Sánchez, Producers: Amaya Izquierdo, José Esteban Alenda) — As her cancer spreads, Noelia’s ultimate decision is to return to her native Vieques, Puerto Rico, and claim her freedom to decide her own fate. She reunites with her friends and family, who are still dealing with the contamination of the U.S. Navy after sixty years of military practices. Cast: Isel Rodríguez, Modesto Lacén, Magali Carrasquillo, Maximiliano Rivas, Anamín Santiago, Idenisse Salamán. World Premiere. Available online. Scrapper U.K. (Director and Screenwriter: Charlotte Regan, Producer: Theo Barrowclough) — Georgie is a dreamy 12-year-old girl who lives happily alone in her London flat, filling it with magic. Out of nowhere, her estranged father turns up and forces her to confront reality. Cast: Harris Dickinson, Lola Campbell, Alin Uzun, Ambreen Razia, Olivia Brady, Aylin Tezel. World Premiere. Available online. Shayda Australia (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Noora Niasari, Producer: Vincent Sheehan) — Shayda, a brave Iranian mother, finds refuge in an Australian women’s shelter with her 6-year-old daughter. Over Persian New Year, they take solace in Nowruz rituals and new beginnings, but when her estranged husband re-enters their lives, Shayda’s path to freedom is jeopardized. Cast: Zar Amir Ebrahimi, Osamah Sami, Leah Purcell, Jillian Nguyen, Mojean Aria, Selina Zahednia. World Premiere. Available online. DAY ONE Slow Lithuania, Spain, Sweden (Director and Screenwriter: Marija Kavtaradze, Producer: Marija Razgute) — Dancer Elena and sign language interpreter Dovydas meet and form a beautiful bond. As they dive into a new relationship, they must navigate how to build their own kind of intimacy. Cast: Greta Grinevičiūtė, Kęstutis Cicėnas. World Premiere. Available online. Sorcery Chile, Mexico, Germany (Director and Screenwriter: Christopher Murray, Screenwriter: Pablo Paredes, Producers: Juan de Dios Larraín, Pablo Larraín, Rocío Jadue, Nicolás Celis) — On the remote island of Chiloé in the late 19th century, an Indigenous girl named Rosa lives and works with her father on a farm. When the foreman brutally turns on Rosa’s father, she sets out for justice, seeking help from the king of a powerful organization of sorcerers. Cast: Valentina Véliz, Daniel Antivilo, Sebastian Hulk, Daniel Muñoz. World Premiere. Available online. When It Melts Belgium (Director and Screenwriter: Veerle Baetens, Screenwriter: Maarten Loix, Producers: Bart Van Langendonck, Ellen Havenith, Jacques-Henri Bronckart) — Many years after a sweltering summer that spun out of control, Eva returns to the village she grew up in with an ice block in the back of her car. In the dead of winter, she confronts her past and faces up to her tormentors. Cast: Charlotte De Bruyne, Rosa Marchant. World Premiere. Available online.

WORLD CINEMA DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION

Documentaries by some of the boldest global filmmakers capturing the world today. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include All That Breathes, Flee, Honeyland, Sea of ShadowsShirkers, This Is HomeLast Men in Aleppo, and Hooligan Sparrow. 5 Seasons of Revolution Germany, Syria, Netherlands, Norway (Director: Lina, Producer: Diana El Jeiroudi) — An aspiring video journalist in her 20s finds herself already facing self-reckoning. Born in Damascus, Syria, Lina starts to report on the events around her until she is compelled to become a war reporter and, later, the unexpected narrator of her own destiny. World Premiere. Available online. 20 Days in Mariupol Ukraine (Director and Producer: Mstyslav Chernov, Producers: Michelle Mizner, Raney Aronson-Rath, Derl McCrudden) — As the Russian invasion begins, a team of Ukrainian journalists trapped in the besieged city of Mariupol struggle to continue their work documenting the war’s atrocities. World Premiere. Available online. Against the Tide India (Director and Producer: Sarvnik Kaur, Producer: Koval Bhatia) — Two friends, both Indigenous fishermen, are driven to desperation by a dying sea. Their friendship begins to fracture as they take very different paths to provide for their struggling families. World Premiere. Available online. The Eternal Memory / Chile (Director and Producer: Maite Alberdi, Producers: Juan de Dios Larraín, Pablo Larraín, Rocío Jadue) — Augusto and Paulina have been together for 25 years. Eight years ago, he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Both fear the day he no longer recognizes her. World Premiere. Available online. Fantastic Machine Sweden, Denmark (Directors and Producers: Axel Danielson, Maximilien Van Aertryck) — From the first camera to 45 billion cameras worldwide today, the visual sociologist filmmakers widen their lens to expose both humanity’s unique obsession with the camera’s image and the social consequences that lay ahead. World Premiere. Available online. Iron Butterflies Ukraine, Germany (Director: Roman Liubyi, Producers: Andrii Kotliar, Volodymyr Tykhyy, David Armati Lechner, Isabelle Bertolone, Trini Götze) — In summer 2014, sunflower fields and coal mines in eastern Ukraine turned into a 12 square kilometer crime scene. A multi-layered investigation into the downing of flight MH17, in which a butterfly-shaped shrapnel was found in the pilot’s body, implicated the state responsible for a war crime that remains unpunished. World Premiere. Available online. Is There Anybody Out There? U.K. (Director: Ella Glendining, Producer: Janine Marmot) — While navigating daily discrimination, a filmmaker who inhabits and loves her unusual body searches the world for another person like her, and explores what it takes to love oneself fiercely despite the pervasiveness of ableism. World Premiere. Available online. The Longest Goodbye Israel, Canada (Director and Producer: Ido Mizrahy, Producers: Nir Sa’ar, Paul Cadieux) — Social isolation affects millions of people, even Mars-bound astronauts. A savvy NASA psychologist is tasked with protecting these daring explorers. World Premiere. Available online. DAY ONE Milisuthando South Africa (Director and Screenwriter: Milisuthando Bongela, Producer: Marion Isaacs) — Set in past, present, and future South Africa — an invitation into a poetic, memory-driven exploration of love, intimacy, race, and belonging by the filmmaker, who grew up during apartheid but didn’t know it was happening until it was over. World Premiere. Available online. Pianoforte Poland (Director: Jakub Piątek, Producer: Maciej Kubicki) — Young pianists take part in the legendary International Chopin Piano Competition. A unique chance of a lifetime, portrayed from backstage and set to Chopin’s music. World Premiere. Available online. Smoke Sauna Sisterhood Estonia, France, Iceland (Director: Anna Hints, Producer: Marianne Ostrat) — In the darkness of a smoke sauna, women share their innermost secrets and intimate experiences, washing off the shame trapped in their bodies and regaining their strength through a sense of communion. World Premiere. Available online. Twice Colonized Greenland, Denmark, Canada (Director: Lin Alluna, Producers: Emile Hertling Péronard, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, Stacey Aglok MacDonald, Bob Moore) — Renowned Inuit lawyer Aaju Peter has long fought for the rights of her people. When her son suddenly dies, Aaju embarks on a journey to reclaim her language and culture after a lifetime of whitewashing and forced assimilation. But can she both change the world and mend her own wounds? World Premiere. Available online.

NEXT

Visionary works distinguished by an innovative, forward-thinking approach to storytelling populate this program. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include A Love SongRIOTSVILLE, USAThe InfiltratorsSearchingSkate KitchenA Ghost Story, and Tangerine. NEXT is presented by Adobe. Bravo, Burkina! / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Walé Oyéjidé, Producers: Giulia Alagna, Heather Barnes) — A Burkinabé boy flees his village and migrates to Italy. When disillusioned by heartbreak and haunted by memories of home, he travels through time in hope of regaining all he has lost. Cast: Alain Tiendrebeogo, Mousty Mbaye, Noel Minougou, Aissata Deme, Afissatou Coulibaly. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Divinity / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Eddie Alcazar, Producer: Steven Soderbergh) — Two mysterious brothers abduct a mogul during his quest for immortality. Meanwhile, a seductive woman helps them launch a journey of self-discovery. Cast: Stephen Dorff, Moises Arias, Jason Genao, Karrueche Tran, Bella Thorne, Scott Bakula. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Fremont / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Babak Jalali, Screenwriter: Carolina Cavalli, Producers: Marjaneh Moghimi, Sudnya Shroff, Rachael Fung, George Rush, Chris Martin, Laura Wagner) — Donya works for a Chinese fortune cookie factory in San Francisco. Formerly a translator for the U.S. military in Afghanistan, she struggles to put her life back in order. In a moment of sudden revelation, she decides to send out a special message in a cookie. Cast: Anaita Wali Zada, Jeremy Allen White, Gregg Turkington. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Kim’s Video / U.S.A. (Directors, Screenwriters, and Producers: David Redmon, Ashley Sabin, Producers: Deborah Smith, Dale Smith, Francesco Galavotti, Rebecca Tabasky) — Playing with the forms and tropes of various cinema genres, the filmmaker sets off on a quest to find a legendary lost video collection of 55,000 movies in Sicily. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online. DAY ONE King Coal / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Elaine McMillion Sheldon, Producers: Shane Boris, Diane Becker, Peggy Drexler) — The cultural roots of coal continue to permeate the rituals of daily life in Appalachia even as its economic power wanes. The journey of a coal miner’s daughter exploring the region’s dreams and myths, untangling the pain and beauty, as her community sits on the brink of massive change. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online. KOKOMO CITY / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: D. Smith, Producers: Harris Doran, Bill Butler) — Four Black transgender sex workers explore the dichotomy between the Black community and themselves, while confronting issues long avoided. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online. To Live and Die and Live / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Qasim Basir, Producers: Nina Yang Bongiovi, Forest Whitaker, Amin Joseph, Dana Offenbach, Samantha Basir) — Muhammad returns home to Detroit to bury his stepfather and is thrust into settling his accounts, but Muhammad’s struggles with depression and addiction may finish him before he finishes the task. Cast: Amin Joseph, Skye P. Marshall, Omari Hardwick, Cory Hardrict, Dana Gourrier, Maryam Basir. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. The Tuba Thieves / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Alison O’Daniel, Producer: Rachel Nederveld, Wendy Ettinger, Maida Lynn, Su Kim, Maya E. Rudolph) — From 2011 to 2013, tubas were stolen from Los Angeles high schools. This is not a story about thieves or missing tubas. Instead, it asks what it means to listen. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online. Young. Wild. Free. / U.S.A (Director: Thembi L. Banks, Screenwriters: Juel Taylor, Tony Rettenmaier, Producers: Charles D. King, James Lopez, Poppy Hanks, Tommy Oliver, Baron Davis, Tracy “Twinkie” Byrd) — High school senior Brandon is drowning in responsibilities when his world is turned upside down after being robbed at gunpoint by the girl of his dreams. Cast: Algee Smith, Sanaa Lathan, Sierra Capri, Mike Epps. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online.

MIDNIGHT

From horror and comedy to works that defy genre classification, these films will keep you wide awake, even at the most arduous hour. Films that have premiered in this category in recent years include FRESHHereditary, Mandy, RelicAssassination Nation, and The Babadook. birth/rebirth / U.S.A. (Director and Screenwriter: Laura Moss, Screenwriter: Brendan J. O’Brien, Producers: Mali Elfman, David Grove Churchill Viste) — A single mother and a childless morgue technician are bound together by their relationship to a little girl they have reanimated from the dead. Cast: Marin Ireland, Judy Reyes, A.J. Lister, Breeda Wool. World Premiere. Fiction. DAY ONE In My Mother’s Skin / Philippines (Director and Screenwriter: Kenneth Dagatan, Producers: Bradley Liew, Bianca Balbuena, Huang Junxiang, Stefano Centini) — Stranded in the Philippines during World War II, a young girl finds that her duty to protect her dying mother is complicated by her misplaced trust in a beguiling, flesh-eating fairy. Cast: Beauty Gonzalez, Felicity Kyle Napuli, Jasmine Curtis-Smith, James Mavie Estrella, Angeli Bayani. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Infinity Pool / Canada (Director and Screenwriter: Brandon Cronenberg, Producers: Karen Harnisch, Andrew Cividino, Christian Piovesan, Noah Segal, Rob Cotterill, Anita Juka) — James and Em are enjoying an all-inclusive beach vacation when a fatal accident exposes the resort’s perverse subculture of hedonistic tourism, reckless violence, and surreal horrors. Cast: Alexander Skarsgård, Mia Goth, Cleopatra Coleman. World Premiere. Fiction. My Animal / Canada (Director: Jacqueline Castel, Screenwriter: Jae Matthews, Producers: Andrew Bronfman, Michael Solomon) — Heather, an outcast teenage goalie in a small northern town, falls for newcomer Jonny, an alluring but tormented figure skater. As their relationship deepens, Heather’s growing desires clash with her darkest secret, forcing her to control the animal within. Cast: Bobbi Salvör Menuez, Amandla Stenberg, Stephen McHattie, Heidi von Palleske, Cory Lipman, Joe Apollonio. World Premiere. Fiction. Onyx the Fortuitous and the Talisman of Souls / U.S.A. (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Andrew Bowser, Producers: Clark Baker, Michael Mobley, Olivia Taylor Dudley) — Onyx joins a group of fellow occultists to attend a dark ritual at the mansion of their idol, Bartok. Suspecting Bartok’s nefarious intentions, Onyx is suddenly immersed in a world of monsters, mystery, and mayhem. Cast: Andrew Bowser, Olivia Taylor Dudley, Jeffrey Combs, Ralph Ineson, Rivkah Reyes, T.C. Carson. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Polite Society / U.K. (Director and Screenwriter: Nida Manzoor, Producers: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Olivier Kaempfer, John Pocock) — Aspiring martial artist Ria Khan believes she must save her older sister, Lena, from her impending marriage. With the help of her friends, Ria attempts to pull off the most ambitious of all wedding heists in the name of independence and sisterhood. Cast: Priya Kansara, Ritu Arya, Nimra Bucha, Akshay Khanna, Seraphina Beh, Ella Bruccoleri. World Premiere. Fiction. Run Rabbit Run / Australia (Director: Daina Reid, Screenwriter: Hannah Kent, Producers: Sarah Shaw, Anna McLeish) — As a fertility doctor, Sarah has a firm understanding of the cycle of life. However, when she is forced to make sense of the increasingly strange behavior of her young daughter, Sarah must challenge her own beliefs and confront a ghost from her past. Cast: Sarah Snook, Lily LaTorre, Damon Herriman, Greta Scacchi. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. DAY ONE Talk to Me Australia (Director and Screenwriter: Danny Philippou, Director: Michael Philippou, Screenwriter: Bill Hinzman, Producers: Samantha Jennings, Kristina Ceyton) — When a group of friends discover how to conjure spirits using an ancient embalmed hand, they become hooked on the new thrill. Until one of them goes too far and opens the door to the spirit world. Cast: Sophie Wilde, Miranda Otto, Alexandra Jensen, Joe Bird, Zoe Terakes, Otis Dhanji. International Premiere. Fiction.

PREMIERES

A showcase of world premieres of some of the most highly anticipated fiction and documentary films of the coming year. Fiction films that have screened in Premieres include Good Luck to You, Leo Grande, Promising Young Woman, Kajillionaire,The Report, Late Night, and The Big Sick. Past documentary films include The Dissident, Lucy and DesiOn the Record, and Miss Americana. Cassandro / U.S.A (Director and Screenwriter: Roger Ross Williams, Screenwriters: David Teague, Julián Herbert, Producers: Gerardo Gatica, Todd Black, David Bloomfield, Ted Hope, Julie Goldman) —  Saúl Armendáriz, a gay amateur wrestler from El Paso, rises to international stardom after he creates the character Cassandro, the “Liberace of Lucha Libre.” In the process, he upends not just the macho wrestling world, but also his own life. Cast: Gael García Bernal, Roberta Colindrez, Perla De La Rosa, Joaquín Cosío, Raúl Castillo. World Premiere. Fiction. Cat Person / France, U.S.A (Director: Susanna Fogel, Screenwriter: Michelle Ashford, Producers: Helen Estabrook, Jeremy Steckler) — College student Margot meets 33-year-old Robert at the movie theater where she works. After a casual flirtation at the concession stand, they carry on conversations through texts. As their perceptions of each other collide, events spiral out of control. Based on The New Yorker short story by Kristen Roupenian. Cast: Emilia Jones, Nicholas Braun, Geraldine Viswanathan, Hope Davis, Fred Melamed, Isabella Rossellini. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Deep Rising / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Matthieu Rytz) — The fate of the planet’s last untouched wilderness, the deep ocean, is under threat as a secretive organization is about to allow massive extraction of seabed metals to address the world’s energy crisis. Narrated by Jason Momoa. World Premiere. Documentary. The Deepest Breath / U.K, Ireland (Director and Screenwriter: Laura McGann, Producers: John Battsek, Sarah Thomson, Jamie D’Alton, Anne McLoughlin) — A champion freediver and expert safety diver seemed destined for one another despite the different paths they took to meet at the pinnacle of the freediving world. A look at the thrilling rewards — and inescapable risks — of chasing dreams through the depths of the ocean. World Premiere. Documentary. Drift / France, U.K, Greece (Director and Producer: Anthony Chen, Screenwriters: Susanne Farrell, Alexander Maksik, Producers: Peter Spears, Emilie Georges, Naima Abed, Cynthia Erivo, Solome Williams) — Jacqueline, a young refugee, lands alone and penniless on a Greek island where she tries to survive, then to cope with her past. While gathering her strength, she begins a friendship with a rootless tour guide and together they find the resilience to forge ahead. Cast: Cynthia Erivo, Alia Shawkat, Ibrahima Ba, Honor Swinton Byrne, Zainab Jah, Suzy Bemba. World Premiere. Fiction. Eileen / U.S.A (Director and Producer: William Oldroyd, Screenwriters and Producers: Luke Goebel,  Ottessa Moshfegh, Producers: Anthony Bregman, Stefanie Azpiazu, Peter Cron) — Set during a bitter 1964 Massachusetts winter, young secretary Eileen becomes enchanted by the glamorous new counselor at the prison where she works. Their budding friendship takes a twisted turn when Rebecca reveals a dark secret — throwing Eileen onto a sinister path. Based on Ottessa Moshfegh’s award-winning novel. Cast: Thomasin McKenzie, Anne Hathaway, Shea Whigham, Marin Ireland, Owen Teague. World Premiere. Fiction. Fairyland / U.S.A (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Andrew Durham, Producers: Sofia Coppola, Megan Carlson, Siena Oberman, Greg Lauritano, Laure Sudreau) — Set against the backdrop of San Francisco’s vibrant cultural scene in the 1970s and ’80s, chronicling a father-daughter relationship as it evolves from an era of bohemian decadence to the heartbreaking AIDS crisis. Based on the best-selling memoir Fairyland: A Memoir of My Father by Alysia Abbott. Cast: Scoot McNairy, Emilia Jones, Geena Davis, Cody Fern, Adam Lambert, Maria BakalovaWorld Premiere. Fiction. Food and Country / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Laura Gabbert, Producers: Ruth Reichl, Paula P. Manzanedo, Caroline Libresco) — America’s policy of producing cheap food at all costs has long hobbled small independent farmers, ranchers, and chefs. Worried for their survival, trailblazing food writer Ruth Reichl reaches out across political and social divides to uncover the country’s broken food system and the innovators risking it all to transform it. World Premiere. DocumentaryAvailable online. Invisible Beauty / U.S.A (Directors: Bethann Hardison, Frédéric Tcheng, Producer: Lisa Cortés) — Fashion revolutionary Bethann Hardison looks back on her journey as a pioneering Black model, modeling agent, and activist, shining a light on an untold chapter in the fight for racial diversity. World Premiere. Documentary. It’s Only Life After All / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Alexandria Bombach, Producers: Kathlyn Horan, Jess Devaney, Anya Rous) — Blending 40 years of home movies, film archives, and intimate present-day vérité, a poignant reflection from Amy Ray and Emily Saliers of iconic folk rock duo Indigo Girls. A timely look into the obstacles, activism, and life lessons of two queer friends who never expected to make it big. World Premiere. Documentary. DAY ONE Jamojaya / U.S.A (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Justin Chon, Screenwriter: Maegan Houang, Producers: Alan Pao, David Matheny, Joseph Dang, Alex Chi, Yama Cibulka, Shaun Sanghani) — A father-son relationship is put to the test when an up-and-coming rapper at the crossroads of his career decides to let go of his manager, who is also his father. This decision forces them to confront the past and figure out what they want of each other. Cast: Brian Imanuel, Yayu A.W. Unru, Kate Lyn Sheil, Henry Ian Cusick, Anthony Kiedis. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Judy Blume Forever / U.S.A (Directors and Producers: Davina Pardo, Leah Wolchok, Producers: Sara Bernstein, Justin Wilkes, Marcella Steingart) — The radical honesty of the books by young adult fiction pioneer Judy Blume changed the way millions of readers understood themselves, their sexuality, and what it meant to grow up, but also led to critical battles against book banning and censorship. World Premiere. Documentary. Landscape With Invisible Hand / U.S.A (Director and Screenwriter: Cory Finley, Producers: Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner) — When Earth is taken over by aliens who control the economy, a pair of teenagers come up with a plan to save their family. Cast: Tiffany Haddish, Asante Blackk, Kylie Rogers, Josh Hamilton, Michael Gandolfini, William Jackson Harper. World Premiere. Fiction. A Little Prayer / U.S.A (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Angus MacLachlan, Producers: Lauren Vilchik, Max A. Butler) — In the South, a man tests the limits of patriarchal interference to protect his daughter-in-law when he discovers that his son is having an affair. Cast: David Strathairn, Jane Levy, Celia Weston, Will Pullen, Anna Camp, Dascha Polanco. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Murder in Big Horn / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Razelle Benally, Director: Matthew Galkin, Producers: Ivan Macdonald, Ivy Macdonald) — The deaths of a group of Native American women in rural Montana are the focus as Native families, journalists, and local law enforcement reveal a violent crisis set in motion almost 200 years ago. World Premiere. Documentary. Available online. Passages / France (Director and Screenwriter: Ira Sachs, Screenwriter: Mauricio Zacharias, Producers: Saïd Ben Saïd, Michel Merkt) — An intimate examination of attraction and emotional abuse between men and women. Cast: Franz Rogowski, Ben Whishaw, Adèle Exarchopoulos. World Premiere. Fiction. PLAN C / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Tracy Droz Tragos) — A hidden grassroots organization doggedly fights to expand access to abortion pills across the United States keeping hope alive during a global pandemic and the fall of Roe v. Wade. World Premiere. Documentary. The Pod Generation / Belgium, France, U.K (Director and Screenwriter: Sophie Barthes, Producers: Geneviève Lemal, Yann Zenou, Nadia Kamlichi, Martin Metz) — In a not-so-distant future, amid a society madly in love with technology, tech giant Pegazus offers couples the opportunity to share their pregnancies via detachable artificial wombs or pods. And so begins Rachel and Alvy’s wild ride to parenthood in this brave new world. Cast: Emilia Clarke, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rosalie Craig, Vinette Robinson, Jean-Marc Barr. World Premiere. Fiction. DAY ONE Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields / U.S.A (Director: Lana Wilson, Producers: Christine O’Malley, Jack Turner) — A galvanizing look at actor, model, and icon Brooke Shields as she transforms from sexualized young girl to a woman discovering her power. Holding a mirror up to a society that objectifies women and girls, her story shows the perils and triumphs of gaining agency in a hostile world. World Premiere. Documentary. Radical / U.S.A (Director and Screenwriter: Christopher Zalla, Producers: Ben Odell, Eugenio Derbez, Joshua Davis) — In a Mexican border town plagued by neglect, corruption, and violence, a frustrated teacher tries a radical new method to break through his students’ apathy and unlock their curiosity, their potential… and maybe even their genius. Based on a true story. Cast: Eugenio Derbez, Daniel Haddad, Jenifer Trejo, Mia Fernanda Solis, Danilo Guardiola. World Premiere. Fiction. DAY ONE Rotting in the Sun / U.S.A (Director and Screenwriter: Sebastian Silva, Screenwriter: Pedro Peirano, Producer: Jacob Wasserman) — After filmmaker Sebastian Silva goes missing in Mexico City, social media celebrity Jordan Firstman begins searching for him, suspecting that the cleaning lady in Sebastian’s building may have something to do with his disappearance. Cast: Jordan Firstman, Catalina Saavedra, Sebastian Silva. World Premiere. Fiction. Rye Lane / U.K (Director: Raine Allen-Miller, Screenwriters: Nathan Bryon, Tom Melia, Producers: Yvonne Isimeme Ibazebo, Damian Jones) — Two twenty-somethings reeling from bad breakups deal with their nightmare exes and connect over the course of an eventful day in South London. Cast: David Jonsson, Vivian Oparah. World Premiere. Fiction. Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie / U.S.A (Director and Producer: Davis Guggenheim, Producers: Jonathan King, Annetta Marion, Will Cohen) — The improbable tale of a short kid from a Canadian army base who became the darling of 1980s Hollywood — only to find the course of his life altered by a stunning diagnosis. What happens when an incurable optimist confronts an incurable disease? World Premiere. Documentary. You Hurt My Feelings / U.S.A (Director and Screenwriter: Nicole Holofcener, Producers: Stefanie Azpiazu, Anthony Bregman) — A novelist’s longstanding marriage is suddenly upended when she overhears her husband giving his honest reaction to her latest book. Cast: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Tobias Menzies, Michaela Watkins, Owen Teague, Arian Moayed. World Premiere. Fiction.

NEW FRONTIER FILMS

New Frontier champions artists who engage in experimental storytelling at the crossroads of film, art, performance, and media technology, showcasing cutting-edge work that explores and evolves cinema culture in today’s rapidly changing landscape. New Frontier is presently in a process of reimagination. This year, we return to our roots to offer a lineup of resonant experimental films. A Common Sequence / U.S.A (Directors and Producers: Mary Helena Clark and Mike Gibisser, Producer: Graciela Guerrero-Reyes) — An interconnected look at tradition, colonialism, property, faith, and science, as seen through labor practices that link an endangered salamander, mass-produced apples, and the evolving fields of genomics and machine learning. World Premiere. DocumentaryAvailable online. Gush / U.S.A (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Fox Maxy) — An embodied rumination of both male and female power, healing and haunting, all within an apocalyptic world. A transformation that courses through unknown terror to untamed collective joy. Cast: Michel Sayegh, Ruth Fish, Sergio Mejia, Littlebear Sanchez, No’aash Iswut Peltier, Suavitel Paper. World PremiereFictionAvailable online. Last Things / U.S.A, Portugal, France (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Deborah Stratman, Producers: Anže Peržin, Gaëlle Boucand) — Evolution and extinction from the point of view of rocks. A humid take on minerals, where sci-fi meets sci-fact. The geo-biosphere is a place of evolutionary possibility, where humans disappear but life endures. World Premiere. DocumentaryAvailable online.

SPOTLIGHT

A tribute to the cinema we love from throughout the past year. Films that have played in this category in recent years include The Worst Person in the WorldThe Biggest Little Farm, Birds of Passage, The Rider, Ida, and The Lobster. The Eight Mountains Italy and Belgium (Directors and Screenwriters: Felix van Groeningen, Charlotte Vandermeersch, Producers: Mario Gianani, Lorenzo Gangarossa) — Pietro spends his childhood summers in the same secluded Italian mountain village where Bruno was raised, in which they form a decades-long friendship. Over the years, their paths diverge as Bruno remains faithful to the mountain while Pietro comes and goes from the city. Cast: Luca Marinelli, Alessandro Borghi, Filippo Timi, Elena Lietti. Fiction. Available online. L’Immensità Italy (Director and Screenwriter: Emanuele Crialese, Screenwriter: Francesca Manieri, Vittorio Moroni, Producer: Lorenzo Gangarossa, Mario Gianani — Clara has relocated to Rome with Felice and their three children. From their new apartment, Clara sees a city in transition: an old society washed away by an emerging middle class. The paint is fresh, the appliances are new, but expectations around family, desire, and gender remain traditional as ever. Cast: Penélope Cruz, Vincenzo Amato, Luana Giuliani, Patrizio Francioni, Maria Chiara Gorett, Penelope Nieto Conti. North American Premiere. Fiction. Available online. DAY ONE Joyland / Pakistan (Director and Screenwriter: Saim Sadiq, Producers: Apoorva Guru Charan, Sarmad Sultan Khoosat, Sabiha Sumar, Lauren Mann) — As the Ranas, a happily patriarchal joint family, yearn for the birth of a baby boy to continue the family line, their youngest son secretly joins an erotic dance theater and falls for an ambitious trans starlet. Their impossible love story illuminates the entire family’s desire for a sexual rebellion. Cast: Ali Junejo, Rasti Farooq, Alina Khan, Sarwat Gilani, Sania Saeed, Salmaan Peerzada. Fiction. Available online. Other People’s Children / France (Director and Screenwriter: Rebecca Zlotowski, Producers: Frederic Jouve, Marie Lecoq — Rachel is 40 years old with no children. She loves her life: her high school students, her friends, her guitar lessons. When she falls in love with Ali, she becomes attached to Leila, his 4-year-old daughter. She loves her like her own, but to love other people’s children is risky. Cast: Virginie Efira, Roschdy Zem, Chiara Mastroianni, Callie Ferreira-Goncalves, Yamée Couture, Michel Zlotowski. U.S. Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Squaring the Circle (The Story of Hipgnosis) / U.K. (Director: Anton Corbijn, Screenwriter, and Producer: Trish D Chetty, Producers: Ged Doherty, Colin Firth) — An inside look at the studio responsible for some of the most iconic and recognizable album covers of all time. From Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon to Led Zeppelin’s Houses of the Holy, the studio ruled the ’70s. Documentary. Available online.

KIDS

This section of the Festival is especially for our youngest independent film fans. Films that have played in this category in recent years include The Elephant Queen, Science Fair, My Life as a Zucchini, The Eagle Huntress, and Shaun the Sheep. Aliens Abducted My Parents and Now I Feel Kinda Left Out / U.S.A. (Director and Producer: Jake Van Wagoner, Screenwriter and Producer: Austin Everett, Producers: Micah Merrill, Maclain Nelson, Jeremy Prusso) — Itsy is new in town and her life seems over until she meets her space-obsessed neighbor Calvin, who believes his parents were abducted by aliens. An aspiring journalist, Itsy decides to write an exposé on Calvin but ends up discovering much more. Cast: Emma Tremblay, Jacob Buster, Will Forte, Elizabeth Mitchell, Kenneth Cummins, Matt Biedel. World Premiere. Fiction. Available online. The Amazing Maurice / Germany, U.K. (Director: Toby Genkel, Screenwriter: Terry Rossio, Producers: Emely Christians, Andrew Baker, Robert Chandler) — A streetwise cat and his gang of rats who come up with a perfect money-making scheme. Based on the novel The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents by Sir Terry Pratchett. Cast: Hugh Laurie, Emilia Clarke, Himesh Patel, Gemma ArtertonNorth American Premiere. Fiction. Available online. Blueback Australia (Director, Screenwriter, and Producer: Robert Connolly, Producers: Liz Kearney, James Grandison) — An intimate mother-daughter relationship is forged by the women’s keen desire to protect the inhabitants of the pristine blue oceans on the Australian coast where they live. Adapted from Tim Winton’s bestselling and critically acclaimed novella. Cast: Mia Wasikowska, Eric Bana, Radha Mitchell, Ilsa Fogg, Liz Alexander, Ariel Donoghue. U.S. Premiere. Fiction. SALT LAKE CITY OPENING NIGHT GALA FILM

About The Sundance Film Festival®

The Sundance Film Festival, a program of the nonprofit, Sundance Institute, is the pre-eminent gathering of original storytellers and audiences seeking new voices and fresh perspectives. Since 1985, hundreds of films launched at the Festival have gone on to gain critical acclaim and reach new audiences worldwide. The Festival has introduced some of the most groundbreaking films and episodic works of the past three decades, including Fire of Love, Cha Cha Real SmoothFlee, CODA, Passing, Summer Of Soul (…or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), Clemency, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, Zola, O.J.: Made in America, On The Record, Boys State, The Farewell, Honeyland, One Child Nation, The Souvenir, The Infiltrators, Sorry to Bother You, Top of the Lake, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, Hereditary, Call Me By Your Name, Get Out, The Big Sick, Mudbound, Fruitvale Station, Whiplash, Brooklyn, Precious, The Cove, Little Miss Sunshine, An Inconvenient Truth, Napoleon Dynamite, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Reservoir Dogs and sex, lies, and videotape. The program consists of fiction and nonfiction features and short films, series and episodic content, emerging media, and performances, as well as conversations, and other events. The Festival takes place both in person in the state of Utah and online, connecting audiences across the U.S. to bold new artists and films. The 2023 Festival takes place January 19–29. The Festival is a program of the nonprofit Sundance Institute. To date, 2023 Festival sponsors include: Presenting Sponsors – Acura, AMC+, Chase Sapphire®, Adobe; Leadership Sponsors – Audible, DIRECTV, Netflix, Omnicom Group, Shutterstock, Stacy’s Pita Chips, United Airlines, XRM Media; Sustaining Sponsors – Canada Goose, Canon U.S.A., Inc., DoorDash, Dropbox, World of Hyatt®, IMDb, Lyft, MACRO, Rabbit Hole Bourbon & Rye, Stanley, University of Utah Health, White Claw Hard Seltzer; Media Sponsors – IndieWire, Los Angeles Times, NPR, Variety, Vulture, The Wall Street Journal. Sundance Institute recognizes critical support from the State of Utah as Festival Host State. The support of these organizations helps offset the Festival’s costs and sustain the Institute’s year-round programs for independent artists.

About Sundance Institute

As a champion and curator of independent stories, the nonprofit Sundance Institute provides and preserves the space for artists across storytelling media to create and thrive. Founded in 1981 by Robert Redford, the Institute’s signature Labs, granting, and mentorship programs, dedicated to developing new work, take place throughout the year in the U.S. and internationally. Sundance Collab, a digital community platform, brings a global cohort of working artists together to learn from each other and Sundance Advisors and connect in a creative space, developing and sharing works in progress. The Sundance Film Festival and other public programs connect audiences and artists to ignite new ideas, discover original voices, and build a community dedicated to independent storytelling. Sundance Institute has supported and showcased such projects as Summer of Soul (…or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), CODA, Flee, Passing, Clemency, Never Rarely Sometimes AlwaysZola, On The Record, Boys State, The Farewell, HoneylandOne Child NationThe Souvenir, The Infiltrators, Sorry to Bother You, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, Hereditary, Call Me By Your Name, Get Out, The Big Sick, Mudbound, Fruitvale StationCity So Real, Top of the Lake, Between the World & Me, Wild Goose Dreams and Fun Home. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

95th Academy Awards: Animated, Documentary and International Feature Films Eligible for 95th OSCARS® announced

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LOS ANGELES, CA (December 6, 2022) – The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences today announced feature films eligible for consideration in the Animated Feature Film, Documentary Feature Film and International Feature Film categories for the 95th Academy Awards®. Complete 95th Academy Awards rules can be found at Oscars.org/rules. ANIMATED FEATURE FILM Twenty-seven features are eligible for consideration in the Animated Feature Film category for the 95th Academy Awards.  Some of the films have not yet had their required qualifying release and must fulfill that requirement and comply with all the category’s other qualifying rules to advance in the voting process. To determine the five nominees, members of the Short Films and Feature Animation Branch are automatically eligible to vote in the category.  Academy members outside of the Short Films and Feature Animation Branch are invited to opt in to participate and must meet a minimum viewing requirement to be eligible to vote in the category.  Films submitted in the Animated Feature Film category also qualify for Academy Awards in other categories, including Best Picture.

Complete list of eligible films for consideration for Animated Feature Film:

  • “Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood”
  • “The Bad Guys”
  • “The Bob’s Burgers Movie”
  • “Charlotte”
  • “DC League of Super-Pets”
  • “Drifting Home”
  • “Eternal Spring”
  • “Goodbye, Don Glees!”
  • “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio”
  • “Inu-Oh”
  • “Lamya’s Poem”
  • “Lightyear”
  • “Little Nicholas, Happy as Can Be”
  • “Luck”
  • “Mad God”
  • “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On”
  • “Minions: The Rise of Gru”
  • “My Father’s Dragon”
  • “New Gods: Yang Jian”
  • “Oink”
  • “Paws of Fury: The Legend of Hank”
  • “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish”
  • “Run, Tiger Run!”
  • “The Sea Beast”
  • “Strange World”
  • “Turning Red”
  • “Wendell & Wild”
DOCUMENTARY FEATURE FILM One hundred forty-four features are eligible for consideration in the Documentary Feature Film category for the 95th Academy Awards.  Some of the films have not yet had their required qualifying release and must fulfill that requirement and comply with all the category’s other qualifying rules to advance in the voting process. Documentary features that have won a qualifying film festival award or have been submitted in the International Feature Film category as their country’s official selection are also eligible in the category.  Films submitted in the Documentary Feature Film category may also qualify for Academy Awards in other categories, including Best Picture.  Members of the Documentary Branch vote to determine the shortlist and the nominees.  The shortlist of 15 films will be announced on Wednesday, December 21, 2022.

Complete list of eligible films for consideration for Documentary Feature Film:

  • “Aftershock”
  • “All That Breathes”
  • “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed”
  • “America Boxed In”
  • “Anonymous Club”
  • “Art & Krimes by Krimes”
  • “At Home Walking”
  • “The Automat”
  • “Bad Axe”
  • “The Balcony Movie”
  • “Battleground”
  • “Beba”
  • “The Bengali”
  • “Bitterbrush”
  • “Black Ice”
  • “Black Notebooks – Ronit”
  • “Blue Island”
  • “The Book Keepers”
  • “Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power”
  • “Breaking Bread”
  • “Buried: The 1982 Alpine Meadows Avalanche”
  • “Calendar Girls”
  • “The Camera of Doctor Morris”
  • “Cat Daddies”
  • “The Cathedral”
  • “Children of the Mist”
  • “Civil”
  • “Claydream”
  • “The Corridors of Power”
  • “Cow”
  • “The Day the Music Died: The Story of Don McLean’s American Pie”
  • “Deep in the Heart: A Texas Wildlife Story”
  • “Descendant”
  • “Disturbed Earth”
  • “Dreaming Walls: Inside the Chelsea Hotel”
  • “Eami”
  • “The Eclipse”
  • “Eternal Spring”
  • “The Exiles”
  • “Exposure”
  • “Fanny: The Right to Rock”
  • “Father”
  • “Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen”
  • “Fire of Love”
  • “Four Winters”
  • “Framing Agnes”
  • “Free Chol Soo Lee”
  • “Free Puppies!”
  • “Freedom on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom”
  • “From the Hood to the Holler”
  • “Gabby Giffords Won’t Back Down”
  • “Gamestop: Rise of the Players”
  • “Girl, Taken”
  • “Good Night Oppy”
  • “Gratitude Revealed”
  • “Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, a Journey, a Song”
  • “Hello, Bookstore”
  • “Hidden Letters”
  • “Hold Your Fire”
  • “A House Made of Splinters”
  • “How to Survive a Pandemic”
  • “The Human Trial”
  • “I Am Here”
  • “I Didn’t See You There”
  • “I’m Wanita”
  • “In Her Hands”
  • “Invisible Demons”
  • “Is That Black Enough for You?!?”
  • “The Janes”
  • “Jazz Fest: A New Orleans Story”
  • “Katrina Babies”
  • “Keep Stepping”
  • “Killing Me Softly with His Songs”
  • “Las Hostilidades”
  • “Last Flight Home”
  • “The Last of the Winthrops”
  • “Leave No Trace”
  • “Let Me Be Me”
  • “Let the Little Light Shine”
  • “Life & Life”
  • “Little Palestine, Diary of a Siege”
  • “Look at Me: XXXtentacion”
  • “Loudmouth”
  • “Louis Armstrong’s Black & Blues”
  • “Loving Highsmith”
  • “Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power”
  • “Master of Light”
  • “Midwives”
  • “Mija”
  • “Mr Landsbergis”
  • “Moonage Daydream”
  • “Motherland”
  • “My Old School”
  • “Myanmar Diaries”
  • “Navalny”
  • “Nelly & Nadine”
  • “The New Abolitionists”
  • “Nothing Compares”
  • “Nothing Lasts Forever”
  • “Oleg”
  • “Only in Theaters”
  • “Our American Family”
  • “Out of Breath”
  • “The Princess”
  • “Project Iceman”
  • “Punch 9 for Harold Washington”
  • “The Quiet Epidemic”
  • “Retrograde”
  • “The Return of Tanya Tucker – Featuring Brandi Carlile”
  • “Riotsville, USA”
  • “Salvatore: Shoemaker of Dreams”
  • “Sansón and Me”
  • “2nd Chance”
  • “Selena Gomez: My Mind & Me”
  • “Send Me”
  • ““Sr.””
  • “752 Is Not a Number”
  • “Sextortion: The Hidden Pandemic”
  • “Sidney”
  • “The Silence of the Mole”
  • “Sirens”
  • “Souls in Transit”
  • “A Star without a Star”
  • “The Story Won’t Die”
  • “Stutz”
  • “Surviving Sex Trafficking”
  • “Tantura”
  • “The Territory”
  • “Three Minutes – A Lengthening”
  • “Tiger 24”
  • “To the End”
  • “Trenches”
  • “Turn Every Page – The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb”
  • “The Unredacted (Jihad Rehab)”
  • “Users”
  • “¡Viva Maestro!”
  • “The Voice of Dust and Ash”
  • “The Volcano: Rescue from Whakaari”
  • “We Are Art Through the Eyes of Annalaura”
  • “What We Leave Behind”
  • “Wildcat”
  • “The Will to See”
  • “The Wind Blows the Border”
  • “Young Plato”
INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM Ninety-two countries have submitted films that are eligible for consideration in the International Feature Film category for the 95th Academy Awards. An international feature film is defined as a feature-length motion picture (more than 40 minutes) produced outside the United States with a predominantly (more than 50%) non-English dialogue track.  Uganda is a first-time entrant. Academy members from all branches are invited to opt in to participate in the preliminary round of voting and must meet a minimum viewing requirement to be eligible to vote in the category.  The shortlist of 15 films will be announced on Wednesday, December 21, 2022.

Complete list of eligible films for consideration for International Feature Film:

  • Albania, “A Cup of Coffee and New Shoes On”
  • Algeria, “Our Brothers”
  • Argentina, “Argentina, 1985”
  • Armenia, “Aurora’s Sunrise”
  • Australia, “You Won’t Be Alone”
  • Austria, “Corsage”
  • Azerbaijan, “Creators”
  • Bangladesh, “Hawa”
  • Belgium, “Close”
  • Bolivia, “Utama”
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina, “A Ballad”
  • Brazil, “Mars One”
  • Bulgaria, “In the Heart of the Machine”
  • Cambodia, “Return to Seoul”
  • Cameroon, “The Planters Plantation”
  • Canada, “Eternal Spring”
  • Chile, “Blanquita”
  • China, “Nice View”
  • Colombia, “The Kings of the World”
  • Costa Rica, “Domingo and the Mist”
  • Croatia, “Safe Place”
  • Czech Republic, “Il Boemo”
  • Denmark, “Holy Spider”
  • Dominican Republic, “Bantú Mama”
  • Ecuador, “Lo Invisible”
  • Estonia, “Kalev”
  • Finland, “Girl Picture”
  • France, “Saint Omer”
  • Georgia, “A Long Break”
  • Germany, “All Quiet on the Western Front”
  • Greece, “Magnetic Fields”
  • Guatemala, “The Silence of the Mole”
  • Hong Kong, “Where the Wind Blows”
  • Hungary, “Blockade”
  • Iceland, “Beautiful Beings”
  • India, “Last Film Show”
  • Indonesia, “Missing Home”
  • Iran, “World War III”
  • Iraq, “The Exam”
  • Ireland, “The Quiet Girl”
  • Israel, “Cinema Sabaya”
  • Italy, “Nostalgia”
  • Japan, “Plan 75”
  • Jordan, “Farha”
  • Kazakhstan, “Life”
  • Kenya, “TeraStorm”
  • Kosovo, “Looking for Venera”
  • Kyrgyzstan, “Home for Sale”
  • Latvia, “January”
  • Lebanon, “Memory Box”
  • Lithuania, “Pilgrims”
  • Luxembourg, “Icarus”
  • Mexico, “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths”
  • Moldova, “Carbon”
  • Mongolia, “Harvest Moon”
  • Montenegro, “The Elegy of Laurel”
  • Morocco, “The Blue Caftan”
  • Nepal, “Butterfly on a Windowpane”
  • Netherlands, “Narcosis”
  • New Zealand, “Muru”
  • North Macedonia, “The Happiest Man in the World”
  • Norway, “War Sailor”
  • Pakistan, “Joyland”
  • Palestine, “Mediterranean Fever”
  • Panama, “Birthday Boy”
  • Paraguay, “Eami”
  • Peru, “Moon Heart”
  • Philippines, “On the Job: The Missing 8”
  • Poland, “EO”
  • Portugal, “Alma Viva”
  • Romania, “Imaculat”
  • Saudi Arabia, “Raven Song”
  • Senegal, “Xalé”
  • Serbia, “Darkling”
  • Singapore, “Ajoomma”
  • Slovakia, “Victim”
  • Slovenia, “Orchestra”
  • South Korea, “Decision to Leave”
  • Spain, “Alcarràs”
  • Sweden, “Cairo Conspiracy”
  • Switzerland, “A Piece of Sky”
  • Taiwan, “Goddamned Asura”
  • Tanzania, “Tug of War”
  • Thailand, “One for the Road”
  • Tunisia, “Under the Fig Trees”
  • Turkey, “Kerr”
  • Uganda, “Tembele”
  • Ukraine, “Klondike”
  • United Kingdom, “Winners”
  • Uruguay, “The Employer and the Employee”
  • Venezuela, “The Box”
  • Vietnam, “578: Magnum”
Nominations for the 95th Academy Awards will be announced on Tuesday, January 24, 2023. The 95th Oscars® will be held on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby® Theatre at Ovation Hollywood and will be televised live on ABC and in more than 200 territories worldwide. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews

Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (PÖFF) brought people back to the Cinema

TALLINN (December 6, 2022) – 78 825 visits, 2000 foreign guests, over 7500 articles from 71 countries and 14 billion potential media contacts. These are the numbers that make up this year’s Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival. The number of visits is remarkably higher than it was in the years 2020 and 2021. It is much closer to the year 2018, when PÖFF attracted close to 80 000 film lovers. According to the festival’s director Tiina Lokk, these numbers exceeded all expectations, because the COVID era and the following crises left their mark on the people and the festival feared it had lost some of its audience for good. “But then a miracle happened. People came back to the cinema and that’s not all! We were expecting about 1200 foreign guests to visit Tallinn, but instead we were hit with a tsunami – 2000 guests, far more than we have ever had. It was evident that people wanted to socialize and they were happy that we gave them a chance to do that,” said Lokk. It is also remarkable that more than 7500 articles have been published about PÖFF in 71 countries, among them China, India, USA, Indonesia and Brazil – countries with the largest population in the world. According to the data of the international media monitoring company Meltwater, the media coverage reached 14 billion people. The final results will come by the end of the year.

More numbers and facts about the 26th PÖFF

  • 551 films
  • 132 world premieres and international premieres
  • 75 countries
  • 838 screenings
  • 475 volunteers
  • The most popular film „My Neighbor Adolf”
Until the end of the year, it is possible to watch the festival’s (winning) films in the PÖFF Online Cinema. PÖFF was presented by Elisa, Nordic Hotel Forum and Toyota. Grand Sponsors were Cramo, Postimees, National Geographic and Forus Taxi and sponsors Reval Cafe, Solaris, Estonian Environment Agency, Europark, Lux Charter and DHL. PÖFF is grateful to Estonian Ministry of Culture, Cultural Endowment of Estonia, EAS, Estonian Film Institute, European Commission, European Regional Development Fund, Estonian Environment Agency, Tallinn City Government, Tallinn Culture and Sports Department, Visit Estonia, Visit Tallinn, Media – Europe Loves Cinema, Ministry of Education and Research, Estonian Ministry of Justice, Estonian Ministry of Finance, Estonian Ministry of Social Affairs, Estonian Olympic Committee, Tartu City Government, European Capital of Culture Tartu 2024, Estonian Institute of Human Rights, Estonia’s Integration Foundation, Estonian Research Council, Narva City Government, Kohtla-Järve City Government. PÖFF also want to thank ERR, ETV2, FilmZone, Kuku Raadio, Meedius, Cineuropa, Screen International, Dirty Movies, Caligari, Enmedia Public Relations, Ruum:um and our partners Apollo Cinema, Cinema Artis, Tartu Elektriteater and all our other supporters, sponsors and helpers. The next Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival will take place from 3.-19. November 2023. Since 2014 the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival (started in 1997) has the FIAPF accreditation for holding an international competition programme. This makes PÖFF one of the 15 A-category film festivals in the world. — Deed News website: http://www.deed.news/ Deed News publication on Google News: http://news.google.com/publications/CAAqBwgKMPPbsQswgPfIAw/ Deed News on Twitter: http://twitter.com/DeedNews Deed News on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DeedNewsAgency Deed News company page on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/deed-news Deed News on Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/deed.news/ Deed News channel on Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/channels/filmfestivalnews/ Deed News channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/@deednews