FSLC announces Neighboring Scenes: New Latin American Cinema, January 7-10

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announces Neighboring Scenes, a new showcase of contemporary Latin American cinema co-presented with Cinema Tropical. Launching in the New Year, this selective slate of premieres highlights impressive recent productions from across the region and exhibits the vast breadth of styles, techniques, and approaches employed by Latin American filmmakers today.

“It’s been some years since Latin American cinema ‘reemerged,’” said Programmer at Large Rachael Rakes. “Now, as the output from countries like Mexico, Argentina, and Brazil continues to be some of the most compelling and engaged cinema today, new scenes are establishing themselves all across the map, showcasing fresh talent and ideas, and challenging the notion of an identifiable contemporary Latin American cinema. We’re pleased to highlight a few of the most impressive recent films from the region.”

Opening the series is Benjamín Naishtat’s El Movimiento, a stark, black-and-white snapshot of anarchy in 19th-century Argentina and follow-up to his acclaimed debut, History of Fear. Other highlights include the 2015 Cannes Caméra d’Or winner, César Augusto Acevedo’s Land and Shade; the U.S. premiere of Arturo Ripstein’s Bleak Street, which has drawn comparisons to Luis Buñuel’s Mexican period; Rodrigo Plá’s Venice Horizons opener A Monster with a Thousand Heads; Pablo Larraín’s Silver Bear–winning The Club, Chile’s submission for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar; and more.

With titles from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, and Mexico, Neighboring Scenes spans a wide geographic range, evidencing the many sites of contemporary Latin American filmmaking. Some of the featured directors are established auteurs, while others have recently emerged on the international festival scene, snagging top prizes and critical accolades at festivals like Cannes, Berlin, Venice, and Locarno.

Organized by Rachael Rakes and Dennis Lim.

Tickets go on sale Thursday, December 17 and are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for Film Society members. See more and save with the $75 All Access Pass or 3+ film discount package.

FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS

Opening Night
El Movimiento
Benjamín Naishtat, Argentina, 2015, DCP, 70m
Spanish with English subtitles

Continuing his preoccupation with violence and Argentina’s past, Benjamín Naishtat (History of Fear, a New Directors/New Films 2014 selection) dramatizes a crucial moment in that nation’s history characterized by political zealotry and terrorism. Pablo Cedrón portrays the fiery, unhinged leader of a mysterious militia (modeled on Confederacy-era dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas’s Mazorca) who wantonly roam the pampas in an effort to “purify” and unite society, killing and plundering settlers along the way. Characters emerge from and disappear into dark expanses—the film is masterfully shot in black and white—heightening its intense, chilling atmosphere. Funded by the Jeonju Digital Project.
Thursday, January 7, 7:00pm (Q&A with Benjamín Naishtat)

Alexfilm
Pablo Chavarria Gutiérrez, Mexico, 2015, DCP, 60m
Spanish with English subtitles

Marked by a light touch and emphasizing openness over conventional, linear narrative, biologist-turned-filmmaker Pablo Chavarria Gutiérrez documents the rhythms of a man awaiting an important event that never comes. As he cooks breakfast, naps, paints, tries on sunglasses, and wanders through different rooms in his home, Chavarria Guitérrez lovingly frames every action in beautiful natural light, allowing each moment to flow to the next while maintaining its own transcendent essence. North American Premiere

Screening with:
Gulliver
María Alché, Argentina, 2015, DCP, 25m
Spanish with English subtitles

Flawlessly transitioning from a highly naturalistic family tale to something overtly surreal and back again, Gulliver captures the circumstances—imagined or not—of one of those evenings when siblings come to a deeper understanding of one another. After hanging out at home with their mom (Martín Rejtman regular Susana Pampin) and older sister Mariela (Agustina Muñoz), Agos and Renzo go to a raging party where Agos ends up drinking too much. Upon stepping outside to recover, the pair wander into a strange but familiar landscape, and begin to ask questions about the world and themselves.
Sunday, January 10, 5:00pm

Bleak Street / La calle de la amargura
Arturo Ripstein, Mexico/Spain, 2015, DCP, 99m
Spanish with English subtitles

Based on a true story, the latest feature by Arturo Ripstein is an unflinching look at the mean streets of El Defectuoso. Two prostitutes, Adela (Nora Velázquez) and Dora (Patricia Reyes Spíndola), are burdened by horrible marriages and financial problems stemming from their long-departed youth. In an attempt to make ends meet, they drug and rob dwarf twins (Juan Francisco Longoria and Guillermo López)—who themselves barely scrape by as doubles for professional luchadores. Ripstein masterfully contrasts the grittiness of alleyways and seedy apartments with gliding Steadicam cinematography, siding with neither the victims nor the perpetrators. A Leisure Time Features release. U.S. Premiere
Sunday, January 10, 3:00pm

The Club / El Club
Pablo Larraín, Chile, 2015, DCP, 98m
Spanish with English subtitles

Pablo Larraín (director of No and Post Mortem) continues to explore the long shadows of Chile’s recent past with this quietly scathing film about the Catholic Church’s concealment of clerical misconduct. Four aging former priests peacefully live out their days together in a dumpy seaside town, focused on training their racing greyhound rather than doing penance for their assorted crimes. Their idyll is shattered when a fifth priest arrives and, confronted by one of his victims, commits suicide. A young priest begins an investigation into the retirees’ pasts, setting off a series of events that call into question faith, piety, and complicity. Winner of the Silver Bear at the 2015 Berlinale and Chile’s Oscar submission. A Music Box Films release.
Sunday, January 10, 9:00pm

The Gold Bug, or Victoria’s Revenge / El escarabajo de oro o Victorias Hamnd
Alejo Moguillansky & Fia-Stina Sandlund, Argentina/Denmark/Sweden, 2014, DCP, 102m
Spanish and Swedish with English and Spanish subtitles

Fusing elements of Edgar Allan Poe’s titular short story and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, Alejo Moguillansky and Fia-Stina Sandlund’s meta-film follows an Argentine-Swedish co-production in Buenos Aires shooting a biopic of the 19th-century realist author and proto-feminist Victoria Benedictsson. After a hustling actor finds a treasure map detailing the location of ancient gold hidden near a town in the Misiones province named after the 19th-century politician Leandro N. Alem, he successfully persuades the producers to reframe the project as a portrait of the radical Alem (swapping feminist politics for anti-Eurocentric ones) and move the production there—so he can better search for the treasure. Fast-paced and hilariously self-reflexive, the film takes a playful approach to texts and history that is reminiscent of Borges.
Thursday, January 7, 9:00pm

Hopefuls / Aspirantes
Ives Rosenfeld, Brazil, 2015, DCP, 71m
Portuguese with English subtitles

Focused on the alluring promise of wealth and fame that professional soccer holds for Brazilian youth, Ives Rosenfeld’s directorial debut features a host of excellent performances from its cast. Junior (Ariclenes Barroso) ekes out a living working nights at a warehouse while playing by day in an amateur league with his talented best friend Bento (Sergio Malheiros). When Bento gets signed to a professional team, Junior struggles with his crippling jealousy—which becomes heightened by his pregnant girlfriend and alcoholic uncle. Artfully lensed and deliberately paced, the film silently builds toward a legitimately shocking climax that provides a grim reality check.
Sunday, January 10, 7:00pm (Q&A with Ives Rosenfeld)

It All Started at the End / Todo comenzó por el fin
Luis Ospina, Colombia, 2015, DCP, 208m
Spanish with English subtitles

Luis Ospina (The Vampire of PovertyPaper Tiger) turns the camera toward his radical roots—and his own intestines—for this documentary about the Cali Group, the Colombian artists’ collective that revolutionized art, cinema, and literature amid drug-related terrorism in the 1970s and ’80s. Boasting a wide array of never-before-seen archival material, Ospina (the group’s only surviving member, who was diagnosed with cancer during the making of the film) focuses on telling the stories of co-founders Andrés Caicedo and Carlos Mayolo. Never maudlin or self-important, this kaleidoscopic inside view of “Caliwood” is essential viewing for anyone looking for darkly comic, anarchic inspiration. U.S. Premiere
Saturday, January 9, 2:00pm (Q&A with Luis Ospina)


Ixcanul
Jayro Bustamante, Guatemala, 2015, DCP, 93m
Kaqchikel and Spanish with English subtitles

Maria (María Mercedes Coroy) is set to marry a much older foreman at the coffee plantation, but she has a crush on Pepe, who has fanciful dreams of getting rich in the U.S. After consummating their flirtation, Pepe leaves for the States—without Maria, who soon learns she is expecting a baby. A difficult pregnancy assisted only by traditional medicine finally leads her to the hectic big city, but on very grim terms. Shot in collaboration with the Kaqchikel Mayans of Guatemala’s coffee-growing highlands, Jayro Bustamante’s exquisitely shot debut feature (winner of a top prize at the Berlinale and Guatemala’s Oscar submission) explores what tradition and modernity mean for women living in marginalized communities. A Kino Lorber release.
Friday, January 8, 7:00pm

Land and Shade / La tierra y la sombra
César Augusto Acevedo, Colombia, 2015, DCP, 94m
Spanish with English subtitles

A poetic and devastating statement on how environmental issues impact every aspect of life, César Augusto Acevedo’s Caméra d’Or–winning directorial debut is not to be missed. The elderly Alfonso (Haimer Leal) returns to the small house in Valle del Cauca he left 17 years earlier in order to care for his bedridden son Geraldo (Edison Raigosa), who suffers from a mysterious ailment related to the harsh farming techniques of the sugar-cane plantations around them. Tensions quietly simmer between Alfonso and his ex-wife (the wonderful Hilda Ruiz), but familial ties and pride keep them tied to the land in Acevedo’s meditative and painterly allegory.
Friday, January 8, 9:00pm

Mar
Dominga Sotomayor, Chile, 2014, DCP, 70m
Spanish with English subtitles

Reminiscent of the films of Josephine Decker and Joe Swanberg, this low-key drama centers on the problems between Martin, aka Mar (Lisandro Rodríguez), and his girlfriend, Eli (Vanina Montes). On vacation in the Argentine resort town of Villa Gesell, conflicts arise concerning expectations and long-term commitments—having a baby, home ownership—but get pushed aside or elided. A visit from Martin’s gregarious, wine-guzzling mother and a random act of God threaten to push the couple to breaking point. Dominga Sotomayor matches her characters’ frustrations with the film’s expert framing, which often obscures faces and bodies, visually emphasizing their mutual misunderstanding.
Saturday, January 9, 6:30pm Q&A with Dominga Sotomayor)

A Monster with a Thousand Heads / Un monstruo de mil cabezas
Rodrigo Plá, Mexico, 2015, DCP, 74m
Spanish with English subtitles

Developed in tandem with his wife’s novel of the same title, Rodrigo Plá (The DelayThe Zone) crafts another airtight thriller, this time taking on a health-insurance system that prefers profit to adequate medical care. Refused treatment that would alleviate her terminally ill husband’s pain—yet not the frustrations of dealing with maddening bureaucracy—Sonia (Jana Raluy) snaps and, gun in hand, single-mindedly goes up the chain of command with a vengeance. The series of increasingly harrowing provocations are interspersed with moments of dark comedy, and coalesce into a final, shocking climax.
Saturday, January 9, 8:30pm (Q&A with Rodrigo Plá)

For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org

FSLC ANNOUNCES ANA VAZ AS THE 2015 KAZUKO TRUST AWARD RECIPIENT

Vaz’s film Occidente is a selection of the Projections section in the 53rd New York Film Festival

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announces Ana Vaz as the 2015 Kazuko Trust Award Recipient. The grant is presented by the Kazuko Trust and the Film Society, in recognition of the  excellence and innovation of an artist’s moving-image work. Vaz’s latest short film, Occidente, will premiere on Friday, October 2 and Saturday, October 3 in Program 3 of this year’s Projections section, running October 2-4 and sponsored by MUBI. Visit filmlinc.org/nyff for more information. 

The Kazuko Trust was established upon the death of Kazuko Oshima, a Patron of the Film Society who loved film, and experimental film most of all. It was her wish to contribute to this area of the film world after her passing, by awarding the Film Society with a $50K grant for the purpose of creating a scholarship fund for worthy experimental filmmakers featured in NYFF's Projections. In addition, a seat in the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center was named in her honor.

In 2012, Laida Lertxundi and Michael Robinson each received $5,000 grants during the Trust’s inaugural year, and in 2013, the committee awarded Dani Leventhal with a $10,000 grant. Last year, Jean-Paul Kelly was given a $10,000 grant. The 2015 committee includes Projections curators Dennis Lim (Director of Programming, Film Society of Lincoln Center), Aily Nash (independent curator), and Gavin Smith (Senior Programmer, FSLC and Editor-in-Chief, Film Comment); Rachael Rakes (Programmer at Large, Film Society of Lincoln Center); and Christopher Stults (Associate Curator, Film/Video, Wexner Center for the Arts). 

Rakes says: “Brazilian artist and filmmaker Ana Vaz combines film and video, ethnography and speculation, precise photography and found footage in her series of short, carefully crafted works. Vaz’s pieces often explore the meeting points between personal and geographic history in the post-colonial sphere, documenting place without the signals of exact physical orientation, but with a heightened sense of memory and time. Her latest work, Occidente, presents a mesmerizing cycle of establishing moments: the outside spaces of sea life, plants, and monuments, and variations on the domestic space of the table—all of which give over to a sense of locality that is at once subjectively knowing and voyeuristic, visually transmitting the scars of the past in the surfaces of the present."

Reflecting on her practice, Vaz says: “The work in itself does not exist, there is no whole or wholesomeness, what exists is a series of gestures, a multiplicity of perspectives, a savage mode of thinking, a history that is not his and that incarnates itself into a patchwork of materials and resources—moving or still, phrased or shot, imprinted or traveling. I want to disorganize, to dissociate through association—to bring things together in order to undo their normative state. A multiple becoming through film or otherwise, an untying of historical thinking and monolithic prose, a becoming that renders narration an art of trickery, of cheating and betraying both sight or sound only to permanently decolonize our modes of thinking.”

Ana Vaz was born in Brazil in 1986. A graduate of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and Le Fresnoy - Studio National des Arts Contemporains, she was also a member of SPEAP (an experimental Art and Politics research group), a project conceived and directed by Bruno Latour. Her films have screened at a number of international film festivals including the New York Film Festival (as part of Views from the Avant-Garde, Toronto (Wavelengths), Visions du Réel, Media City, Ann Arbor, Images, Videobrasil, Buenos Aires Biennial of Moving Image, Premiers Plans, Melbourne International Film Festival, as well as solo and group shows at Rosa Brux (Brussels), Museum of the Republic (Brazil), Museum of Contemporary Photography (Chicago), Jeune Création (Paris), and Temporary Gallery (Cologne). In 2015, she was awarded the Grand Prize for the international competition at Media City Film Festival as well as the Main Prize at Fronteira International Documentary & Experimental Film Festival for Occidente. Ana currently lives in Paris where she is developing a medium-length film with the aid of the CNAP (Centre National des Arts Plastiques) and will be a resident at Triangle Association (NYC) in Spring 2016. Her films are distributed by Light Cone.

Tickets for Projections are $15 for General Public; $10 for Members & Students, and a $99 Projections All Access Pass will also be available for purchase. Visit 
filmlinc.org/NYFF for more information. Additional NYFF special events, documentary section, and filmmaker conversations and panels will be announced in subsequent days and weeks.

The 17-day New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema, featuring top films from celebrated filmmakers as well as fresh new talent. The selection committee, chaired by Kent Jones, also includes Dennis Lim, FSLC Director of Programming; Marian Masone, FSLC Senior Programming Advisor; Gavin Smith, Editor-in-Chief, Film Comment; and Amy Taubin, Contributing Editor, Film Comment and Sight & Sound

Tickets for the 53rd New York Film Festival went on sale to Film Society patrons at the end of August, ahead of the general public. Learn more about the patron program at 
filmlinc.org/patrons. Becoming a Film Society Member offers the exclusive member ticket discount to the New York Film Festival and Film Society programming year-round plus other great benefits. Current members at the Film Buff Level or above enjoy early ticket access to NYFF screenings and events ahead of the general public. Learn more at filmlinc.org/membership.

For even more access, VIP Passes offer buyers the earliest opportunity to purchase tickets and secure seats at the festival’s biggest events including Opening, Centerpiece, and Closing Nights. VIP passes also provide access to many exciting events including the invitation-only Opening Night party, “ An Evening With…” Dinner, Filmmaker Brunch, and VIP Lounge. Benefits vary based on the pass type.

For more information about purchasing VIP Passes, go to filmlinc.org/NYFF or contact patrons@filmlinc.org.

For more information, visit: www.filmlinc.org

FSLC announces PRINT SCREEN event with The Mountain Goats's John Darnielle, book signing of WOLF IN WHITE VAN & screening of MEDEA

The Mountain Goats frontman John Darnielle to discuss debut novel, Wolf in White Van, and present restored 35mm print of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Medea on August 31

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Additional author spotlights to include James Hannaham (October), Susan Howe (November) & Garth Risk Hallberg (December)

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The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced additional Print Screen events, which are geared toward bridging the worlds of cinema and literature. Film Society’s newest recurring series invites notable authors to present films that complement and have inspired their work. On the occasion of the paperback release of his debut novel, Wolf in White Van (September 1 from Picador), The Mountain Goats frontman and indie-rock icon John Darnielle joins us to introduce a screening of Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Medea, followed by a discussion and book signing on August 31. 

Upcoming Print Screen events include authors James Hannaham (October 29), Susan Howe (November 24), and Garth Risk Hallberg (December 10). Full details on these events and film pairings will be announced at a later date. The Print Screen series is organized by Rachael Rakes and Dennis Lim. 

John Darnielle Print Screen tickets will go on sale Thursday, August 13 and are $18; $13 for members, students, and seniors (62+). Visit 
filmlinc.org for more information.

Discussion with John Darnielle & screening of Medea

“Wolf in White Van is a novel that unspools rather than reads. Told in a tricky, deftly structured reverse chronology, the narrator, Sean Phillips, backtracks to a traumatic teenaged event . . . Darnielle has a masterful way of putting the reader in the position of reverse engineer. . . [His] is an art that spins pain into gold."Emily M. Keeler, The Hairpin

“It’s a gripping and strange read that defies all genre expectations and captures a world that very few of us know about but that feels very real.”—John Green, author of The Fault in Our Stars, in Rolling Stone

John Darnielle is a writer, composer, guitarist, and vocalist for the band The Mountain Goats and is widely considered one of the best lyricists of his generation, crafting “songs that read like stories” (NPR) about society’s marginalized and underdogs—undercard boxers, meth addicts, teens who form death-metal bands. He took the name The Mountain Goats from a line in “Yellow Coat,” a Screamin’ Jay Hawkins song. While working toward an English degree at Pitzer College in 1991, a local label released Taboo VI: The Homecoming—10 initial songs, sung by Darnielle including a cover of “This Magic Moment.” Eventually pairing with others to form the indie-rock band The Mountain Goats, their 2002 first studio concept album Tallahassee was released to critical acclaim by British label 4AD (Pixies, Throwing Muses, Modern English) and centers on an embittered husband and wife who move from Southern California to Florida. The band has released multiple albums and over 500 songs, many written by Darnielle. After writing for his own blog, Last Plane to Jakarta, and publishing a book on Black Sabbath’s Master of Reality as part of the 33 1/3 series about classic albums, he penned Wolf in White Van. The novel takes place in a “tortured-adolescent head-space” (Rolling Stone) and centers on a man who is disfigured during his days as a heavy-metal loving teen. The book was nominated for the 2014 National Book Award. Darnielle lives in Durham, North Carolina, with his family. 

Medea
Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy/France/West Germany, 1969, 35mm, 110m
Italian with English subtitles

Starring the legendary Maria Callas, Pasolini’s interpretation of Euripides’s play shifts the tragedy away from Medea’s betrayal by Jason and her bloody revenge to the loss of her mystical homeland of Colchis. Through poetic, desirous explorations of landscape and ritual, traditional North African music, and sparse dialogue, Pasolini shapes a biting Marxist allegory for Western nations’ menacing influence on the Third World. Glorious to witness for Callas’s performance and the superb costuming, Medea deserves repeated viewings on the big screen. Restored 35mm print from Instituto Luce Cinecittà. Restoration by S.N.C. Presentation of the film in its original 35mm format made possible by Gucci.
Monday, August 31, 7:00pm (Q&A with John Darnielle) at Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center (144 West 65th Street)


“The Greek and Roman tragedians had a profound and lasting effect on me when I immersed myself in them back in college—everything I write articulates at some point with strategies and visions found in those ancient poems. One interesting thing about ancient tragedy is that its threads lead in so many directions—from Renaissance reimaginings to crypto-tragic texts like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre to the syncretic masterpiece The Gospel at Colonus. Pasolini tried his hand at Greek tragedy twice: first Sophocles (Oedipus Rex [1967]), then Euripides (Medea, [1969]). It's not surprising that a lifelong maverick like Pasolini would be drawn to Euripides, whose plays speak so directly to the modern heart. Medea, which contains Maria Callas’s only dramatic role on film, hauls Euripides from the corridors of the academy into the stark, violent world of celluloid. There are few film treatments of ancient tragedy as hell-bent on getting the tone right as this one: the light, the scene, the horror. The film's final frames, once viewed, linger in the mind for a long, long time. It's my pleasure to host a screening of this sometimes-imperfect but genuinely remarkable film.”John Darnielle

For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org

FSLC moves NYFF53 Opening Night screening of THE WALK to Sat, Sept 26

Friday, September 25 will still include NYFF programming. Details to be announced at a later date.

The Film Society of Lincoln Center has announced that the World Premiere of Robert Zemeckis’s The Walk will take place on Saturday, September 26 instead of Friday, September 25 due to Pope Francis’s upcoming visit to New York. The date change was made for logistical and security reasons. The film, which remains the Opening Night selection of the 53rd New York Film Festival (September 25 – October 11), will screen at Alice Tully Hall. Festival dates stay the same, with free NYFF programming to take place on Friday, September 25, prior to the Opening Night screening on Saturday, September 26.

The 17-day New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema, featuring top films from celebrated filmmakers as well as fresh new talent. The selection committee, chaired by Kent Jones, also includes Dennis Lim, FSLC Director of Programming; Marian Masone, FSLC Senior Programming Advisor; Gavin Smith, Editor-in-Chief, Film Comment; and Amy Taubin, Contributing Editor, Film Commentand Sight & Sound.

Tickets for the 53rd New York Film Festival will go on sale in early September. Becoming a Film Society Member at the Film Buff Level or above provides early ticket access to festival screenings and events ahead of the general public, along with the exclusive member ticket discount! Join by August 7 to receive these NYFF benefits. Learn more at 
filmlinc.org/membership.

For even more access, VIP Passes and Subscription Packages give buyers one of the earliest opportunities to purchase tickets and secure seats at some of the festival's biggest events including Opening, Centerpiece, and Closing Nights. VIP passes also provide access to many exciting events including the invitation-only Opening Night party, “ An Evening With…” Dinner, Filmmaker Brunch, and VIP Lounge. Benefits vary based on the pass or package type purchased. VIP Passes and Subscription Packages are on sale now. For information about purchasing Subscription Packages and VIP Passes, go to 
filmlinc.org/NYFF2015

For more information, visit filmlinc.org