ALL SINGIN’, ALL DANCIN’, ALL JUDY! July 26 – August 9

Impressive retrospective of Judy Garland’s films will feature 31 titles including a presentation of seldom seen short films and rarities as well as a special “sing-along” screening of THE WIZARD OF OZ.

On the occasion of what would have been Judy Garland’s 89th birthday, the Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Paley Center have announced the details today for FSLC’s comprehensive retrospective of the peerless film icon’s work, All Singin’, All Dancin’, All JUDY! which will screen at the Walter Reade Theater July 26 – August 9 and The Paley Center’s comprehensive retrospective of Garland’s television work,JUDY GARLAND: THE TELEVISION YEARS which will be presented July 20 – August 18.

With autumn marking the 75th anniversary of Judy Garland’s feature film debut (PIGSKIN PARADE, 1936), the Film Society of Lincoln Center will screen 31 titles from July 26 – August 9, including each of her big-screen acting performances, to pay tribute to the incomparable talent known as Judy Garland. All but two films will be presented in 35mm, with the two exceptions (THE WIZARD OF OZ and A STAR IS BORN) presented in stunning 4k digital restorations.

All Singin’, All Dancin’, All JUDY! will mark the first-ever United States celebration of Judy Garland’s movies to be presented by an arts organization of this kind as well as being the most complete and comprehensive retrospective of her films since the London National Film Theatre’s program 40 years ago in 1971.

The program will be coordinated with and produced in association with The Paley Center, which will present the first comprehensive retrospective of Judy Garland’s television work called JUDY GARLAND: THE TELEVISION YEARS from July 20 – August 18. In addition to highlights from The Judy Garland Show, which allowed her to share the spotlight with such entertainers as Mickey Rooney, Barbra Streisand, Ethel Merman, and Peggy Lee, the screening series will include rarely shown guest spots Garland did on such programs as The Ed Sullivan Show, The Tonight Show, The Sammy Davis Jr. Show, On Broadway Tonight, and The Jack Paar Program. For more information go to www.paleycenter.org.

Highlights of the films being screened at the Walter Reade Theater (165 West 65th Street, between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway) will include; a sing-along screening (co-presented with NewFest) of THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939); screenings of the Andy Hardy classics that teamed Garland with Mickey Rooney (LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY (1938), ANDY HARDY MEETS DEBUTANTE (1940) and LIFE BEGINS FOR ANDY HARDY (1941)); classic and beloved musicals (MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS (1944) and EASTER PARADE (1948)); and her Academy Award nominated performances in A STAR IS BORN (1954) and JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG (1961).

Another highlight will be a presentation of short films and rarities hosted by noted Judy Garland and THE WIZARD OF OZ authority, historian and author, John Fricke on Friday, July 29 at 7:30PM. An Emmy winner and Grammy nominee for his work on various Garland-based documentaries and recordings, Fricke will be on hand throughout the retrospective to discuss and add insight into the film legend’s career. He is an author of several books on the subject of Garland, THE WIZARD OF OZ and L. Frank Baum (the author of The Wizard of Oz), and will be signing copies of his latest book published by Running Press, JUDY: A Legendary Film Career on Friday, August 5 at the Walter Reade.

FSLC Program Director Richard Pena said, “The idea for this series occurred to us when we were presenting the restoration of THE WIZARD OF OZ at the NYFF in 2009. In discovering the amazing number of web sites, festivals and fan clubs still devoted to Judy Garland, it was clear that she is still very much alive and part of our culture. Working with John Fricke, we have been able to assemble an unprecedented panorama of her work. We’re delighted to give Judy Garland fans and New York film goers an opportunity to see one of the truly magical screen icons up on the big screen, where she belongs.”


FILM LINEUP FOR All Singin’, All Dancin’, All JUDY!

ANDY HARDY MEETS DEBUTANTE (88min) (1940)
Director: George B. Seitz
Faithful pal Betsy Booth (Garland) comes to the aid of small-town Andy (Andy Rooney) when he sets his sights on a wealthy society woman. (35mm)
ANDY HARDY MEETS DEBUTANTE screens Tuesday, August 2 at 6:00PM.

BABES IN ARMS (90min) (1939)
Director: Busby Berkeley
Children of fading vaudevillians reclaim their families’ honor by putting on a show in the barn. Rooney and Garland! Arthur Freed’s first film as head of his own MGM unit! (35mm)
BABES IN ARMS screens Thursday, July 28 at 1:00PM and Monday, August 1 at 6:15PM.

BABES ON BROADWAY (118min) (1941)
Director: Busby Berkeley
A group of aspiring New York performers surmounts all the odds in their efforts to stage a benefit for inner-city children. Rooney and Garland! (35mm)
BABES ON BROADWAY screens Thursday, July 28 at 3:00PM and Monday, August 1 at 8:15PM.

BROADWAY MELODY OF 1938
(110min) (1937)
Director: Roy Del Ruth
The financial backing for a Broadway revue depends on a racehorse, his tap-dancing owner, and her performing partners. Garland’s MGM feature-film debut! (35mm)
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1938 screens Saturday, July 30 at 1:00PM.

A CHILD IS WAITING (102min) (1963)
Director: John Cassavetes
A rootless musician (Garland) seeks stability as a teacher for challenged children, but her emotionalism is deemed counterproductive by the school psychiatrist (Burt Lancaster). (35mm)
A CHILD IN WAITING screens Sunday, August 7 at 8:40PM and Monday, August 8 at 4:15PM.

THE CLOCK
(90min) (1945)
Director: Vincente Minnelli
A New York office worker (Garland) meets, loses, and then marries an army corporal (Robert Walker) during his 48-hour leave. (35mm)
THE CLOCK screens Tuesday, July 26 at 9:00PM and Friday, July 29 at 1:30PM.

EASTER PARADE (107min) (1948)
Director: Charles Walters
“The happiest musical ever made” (per the original ad copy): 17 Irving Berlin songs and the only screen teaming of Garland and Astaire. (35mm)
EASTER PARADE screens Friday, August 5 at 6:00PM and Monday, August 8 at 2:00PM.

EVERYBODY SING (91min) (1938)
Director: Edwin L. Marin
The precocious singing daughter (Garland) of a madcap theatrical family saves them from financial ruin, aided by their Russian maid and singing chef. (35mm)
EVERYBODY SING screens Sunday, July 31 at 5:30PM.

FOR ME AND MY GAL (104min) (1942)
Director: Busby Berkeley
Vaudevillians encounter romantic challenges and World War I in their hopes of crashing “the big time”: The Palace Theatre in New York City. (Print courtesy of the Academy Film Archive.) (35mm)
FOR ME AND MY GAL screens Thursday, August 4 at 6:15PM.

GAY PURR-EE
(85min) (1962)
Director: Abe Levitow
Chuck Jones co-wrote this innovative cartoon feature about a country cat (voiced by Garland) who seeks adventure in Paris. Songs by Arlen and Harburg. (35mm)
GAY PURR-EE screens Sunday, August 7 at 10:00AM.

GIRL CRAZY (99min) (1943)
Director: Norman Taurog
A Gershwin score enhances the saga of a New York playboy (Rooney) who is sent to a Western agricultural college and chases the dean’s granddaughter (Garland). (35mm)
GIRL, CRAZY screens Tuesday, August 2 at 3:45PM and Sunday, August 7 at 12:30PM.

THE HARVEY GIRLS (102min) (1946)
Director: George Sidney
Overcoming saloon girls, snakes, arson, and amorous complications, a mail-order bride (Garland) turns waitress in the Old West. With Angela Lansbury. (35mm)
THE HARVEY GIRLS screens Monday, August 1 at 4:00PM and Thursday, August 4 at 8:30PM.

I COULD GO ON SINGING (100min) (1963)
Director: Ronald Neame
While appearing at the London Palladium, a legendary singer (Garland) hopes to rekindle an old love (Dirk Bogarde) and reunite with their illegitimate son. Garland’s final film. (35mm)
I COULD GO ON SINGING screens Sunday, August 7 at 6:30PM and Tuesday, August 9 at 3:45PM.

IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME (102min) (1949)
Director: Robert Z. Leonard
Turn-of-the-century Chicago clerks (Garland, and Van Johnson) feud at their music store while carrying on an anonymous lonely-hearts correspondence. (Preservation print courtesy of the UCLA Film & Television Archive.) (35mm)
IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME screens Saturday, August 6 at 8:30PM.

JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG
(187min) (1961)
Director: Stanley Kramer
An all-star cast revisits the moral issues and responsibilities that permeated the post-war Nuremberg trials of Nazi government officials. With Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Richard Widmark, Marlene Dietrich, Montgomery Clift. (35mm)
JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG screens Thursday, August 4 at 2:30PM and Sunday, August 7 at 2:45PM.

LIFE BEGINS FOR ANDY HARDY
(101min) (1941)
Director: George B. Seitz
Andy (Rooney) weighs post-graduation options — college or a New York job? — while tempted by a Manhattan “wolfess” and championed by Betsy Booth (Garland). (35mm)
LIFE BEGINS FOR AND HARDY screens Tuesday, August 2 at 8:00PM.

LISTEN, DARLING (75min) (1938)
Director: Edwin L. Marin
To prevent her mother (Mary Astor) from re-marrying for security, a teen (Garland) and her best friend “kidnap” the woman in a trailer. (35mm)
LISTEN, DARLING screens Wednesday, July 27 at 3:30PM and Sunday, July 31 at 12:00PM.

LITTLE NELLIE KELLY (98min) (1940)
Director: Norman Taurog
An immigrant, multi-generational Irish family adjusts to life, loss, and love in New York City. (35mm)
LITTLE NELLIE KELLY screens Friday, July 29 at 8:30PM.

LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY (91min) (1938)
Director: George B. Seitz
When Andy needs a car and a date for the Christmas Eve dance, the visiting girl-next-door solves his problems. With Lana Turner. (35mm)
LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY screens Wednesday, July 27 at 1:30PM and Sunday, July 31 at 3:30PM.

MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS (113min) (1944)
Director: Vincente Minnelli
The happy, turn-of-the-century, St. Louis existence of The Smith Family is threatened when Mr. Smith is offered a job in New York. (35mm)
MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS screens Tuesday, July 26 at 6:15PM, Friday, July 29 at 3:30PM and Tuesday, August 9 at 6:00PM.

PIGSKIN PARADE (93min) (1936)
Director: David Butler
A hillbilly melon-thrower and his musical kid sister propel a Texas college to singing, dancing, and gridiron victory. Garland’s feature debut! (35mm)
PIGSKIN PARADE screens Saturday, July 30 at 3:15PM.

THE PIRATE (102min) (1948)
Director: Vincente Minnelli
Cole Porter wrote the songs for this tongue-in-cheek romp about a Caribbean girl (Garland) in love with the legend of a ruthless seaman (Gene Kelly). (35mm)
THE PIRATE screens Tuesday, July 26 at 4:00PM and Saturday, July 30 at 5:30PM.

PRESENTING LILY MARS (104min) (1943)
Director: Norman Taurog
Indiana teen makes good on Broadway (eventually) thanks to a producer from her hometown and despite his temperamental leading lady. (Preservation print courtesy of the UCLA Film & Television Archive.) (35mm)
PRESENTING LILY MARS screens Wednesday, August 3 at 6:15PM.

A STAR IS BORN (181min) (1954)
Director: George Cukor
A band singer (Garland) is touted to Hollywood stardom by an alcoholic film legend (James Mason), but their evolving love is undercut by the industry’s machinations. (DCP)
A STAR IS BORN screens Sunday, July 31 at 7:30PM, Friday, August 5 at 2:15PM and Tuesday, August 9 at 8:15PM.

STRIKE UP THE BAND (120min) (1940)
Director: Busby Berkeley
Midwestern teens fight all the odds to get their high school swing band to Chicago for a radio contest. Rooney and Garland! (Preservation print courtesy of the Academy Film Archive.) (35mm)
STRIKE UP THE BAND screens Friday, July 29 at 6:00PM and Wednesday, August 3 at 1:30PM.

SUMMER STOCK
(108min) (1950)
Director: Charles Walters
A Connecticut barn becomes a summer theater, thanks to its singing/dancing owner and the performing troupe of a New York actor/director. (35mm)
SUMMER STOCK screens Saturday, August 6 at 6:10PM and Tuesday, August 9 at 1:30PM.

THOROUGHBREDS DON’T CRY (80min) (1937)
Director: Alfred E. Green, 1937
A boarding house manager, her niece, a British boy, and an American jockey thwart crooked bookies prior to the big race. (35mm)
THOROUGHBREDS DON’T CRY screens Sunday, July 31 at 1:45PM.

TILL THE CLOUDS ROLL BY (132min) (1947)
Director: Richard Whorf
In this “bio-pic,” the life of composer Jerome Kern is musically celebrated by an all-star MGM roster; Garland portrays Broadway’s Marilyn Miller. (35mm)
TILL THE CLOUDS ROLL BY screens Friday, August 5 at 8:30PM.

THE WIZARD OF OZ
(101min) (1939) – Co-presented by NewFest
Director: Victor Fleming
A Kansas girl travels with a Scarecrow, Tin Man, Lion (and Toto, too) through the magical, musical land of Munchkins, witches, and the Wonderful Wizard. (35mm – Regular version) (DCP – Sing-along version)
THE WIZARD OF OZ screens Saturday, July 30 (Sing-along version) at 11:30AM and Wednesday, August 3 (Regular version) at 4:00PM.

ZIEGFELD FOLLIES (110min) (1946)
Director: Vincente Minnelli
From an elegant Heavenly perch, legendary impresario Florenz Ziegfeld envisions a new edition of his Follies, as populated by MGM. (35mm)
ZIEGFELD FOLLIES screens Tuesday, July 26 at 1:45PM and Saturday, July 30 at 8:00PM.

ZIEGFELD GIRL
(132min) (1941)
Director: Robert Z. Leonard
A teen vaudevillian, an elevator operator, and a faithful wife face personal repercussions when selected to perform in the legendary Ziegfeld Follies. (35mm)
ZIEGFELD GIRL screens Wednesday, August 3 at 8:30PM.

Tickets will go on sale Thursday, May 5 both at the box office and on-line. Discounts are available for Film Society members. Read more about The Film Society of Lincoln Center.

Screenings will be held at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater, located at 165 West 65th Street, between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway.

About The Film Society of Lincoln Center

Under the leadership of Rose Kuo, Executive Director, and Richard Peña, Program Director, the Film Society of Lincoln Center offers the best in international, classic and cutting-edge independent cinema. The Film Society presents two film festivals that attract global attention: the New York Film Festival, currently planning its 49th edition, and New Directors/New Films which, since its founding in 1972, has been produced in collaboration with MoMA. The Film Society also publishes the award-winning Film Comment Magazine, and for over three decades has given an annual award—now named “The Chaplin Award”—to a major figure in world cinema. Past recipients of this award include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, and Tom Hanks. The Film Society presents a year-round calendar of programming, panels, lectures, educational programs and specialty film releases at its Walter Reade Theater and the new state-of-the-art Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, opening June 2011. The Film Society receives generous, year-round support from 42BELOW, American Airlines, The New York Times, Stella Artois, the National Endowment for the Arts, WNET New York Public Media, Royal Bank of Canada and the New York State Council on the Arts. For more information, visit www.filmlinc.com

About The Paley Center

The Paley Center for Media, with locations in New York and Los Angeles, leads the discussion about the cultural, creative, and social significance of television, radio, and emerging platforms for the professional community and media-interested public. Drawing upon its curatorial expertise, an international collection, and close relationships with the leaders of the media community, the Paley Center examines the intersections between media and society. The general public can access the collection and participate in programs that explore and celebrate the creativity, the innovations, the personalities, and the leaders who are shaping media. Through the global programs of its Media Council and International Council, the Paley Center also serves as a neutral setting where media professionals can engage in discussion and debate about the evolving media landscape. Previously known as The Museum of Television & Radio, the Paley Center was founded in 1976 by William S. Paley, a pioneering innovator in the industry.  For more information, please visit www.paleycenter.org

Human Rights Watch Film Festival, June 16-30

 THE 2011 HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH FILM FESTIVAL 

Co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center
June 16-30 at the Walter Reade Theater Program of 19 Films from 12 Countries — including 17 New York Premieres

Now in its 22nd year, the 2011 Human Rights Watch Film Festival returns to New York with an extraordinary program of films set to inspire, inform and spark debate. A co-presentation of Human Rights Watch and the Film Society of Lincoln Center, the festival will run from June 16 to 30 at the Film Society’s Walter Reade Theater. Nineteen of the best human rights themed films from 12 countries will be screened, 17 of them New York premieres. A majority of the filmmakers will be on hand after the screenings to discuss their films with the audience.
The Human Rights Watch Film Festival program this year is organized around four themes: Truth, Justice and Accountability; Times of Conflict and Responses to Terrorism; Human Dignity, Discrimination and Resources; and Migrants’ and Women’s Rights. Many of this year’s films demonstrate the power of traditional and new media to influence filmmaking and impact human rights.
“By incorporating many forms of media, human rights filmmakers are increasing their impact, advancing the art of filmmaking, and bringing human rights stories to a broader audience,” said John Biaggi, Human Rights Watch Film Festival director.

Film Society of Lincoln Center Executive Director Rose Kuo added, “Human Rights Watch has a long tradition of featuring films that go beyond the typical to deliver stunning stories, harsh truths and enlighten New York audiences to the plight of nations and the courage of individuals in our world. The Film Society of Lincoln Center considers it a point of pride to co-present this film festival.”
The festival will launch on June 16 with a fundraising Benefit Night for Human Rights Watch, featuring the Bosnia-set political thriller The Whistleblower, starring Rachel Weisz. The main program will begin on June 17, with the Opening Night presentation of Granito: How to Nail a Dictator, the latest documentary from Pamela Yates, here with her sixth film in the festival. Another highlight is the Festival Centerpiece on June 25, Sing Your Song, an inspiring portrait of Harry Belafonte, with the legendary entertainer and activist present to discuss the film. On June 26 the festival will feature a special program, No Boundaries: Tim Hetherington, a tribute to the visionary work of the late photographer, filmmaker and journalist. The Closing Night screening on June 30 will be Life, Above All, a moving coming-of-age drama set in a South African township ravaged by HIV/AIDS.

Truth, Justice and Accountability

Part political thriller, part memoir, Granito: How to Nail a Dictator illustrates how an individual filmmaker’s long-term relationship with a topic and an archive of footage can shape not only the course of a human rights investigation but the interpretation of history. It is a story of destinies joined together by Guatemala’s past and of how Pamela Yates’ 1982 documentary When the Mountains Tremble, which will also be shown during the festival, emerges as an active player in the present by becoming forensic evidence in a genocide case against a military commander. In a twist of fate, Yates was allowed to shoot the only known footage of the army as it carried out the mass killings. Twenty-five years later, this footage becomes evidence in an international war-crimes case against the army commander who permitted her to film. (Opens theatrically in Fall 2011 through International Film Circuit. Premieres on PBS’s POV series in 2012.)

Hollman Morris and Juan José Lozano’s Impunity documents the hearings in which Colombian paramilitary members describe atrocities they have committed as the families of their victims listen and watch on computer screens. Through this testimony, footage of the crimes, and interviews with victims and experts, the brutal history of paramilitary violence comes to light. Yet due to serious irregularities in the justice and peace process, many families express their fear that they will never know the truth surrounding the deaths of their loved ones, and that the perpetrators will escape punishment.

La Toma captures the November 6, 1985 siege of Bogota’s Palace of Justice, home to Colombia’s Supreme Court by 35 heavily armed M-19 guerrillas. The military moved in and close to a 100 people were killed—including nearly all of the Supreme Court Justices—and 12 others remained unaccounted for. The family of Carlos Rodriguez, like many others, believe their loved ones were “disappeared”—removed from the building by government forces, accused of aiding the guerrillas, tortured, and then killed. Twenty-five years later they demand answers, and filmmakers Angus Gibson and Miguel Salazar expertly record the events that lead to the highly charged trial.

Times of Conflict and Responses to Terrorism

A story of idealism, loyalty and betrayal, Katie Galloway and Kelly Duane de la Vega’s Better This World goes to the heart of the “war on terror” and its impact on civil liberties and political dissent in the US after 9/11. When two teenagers, David McKay and Bradley Crowder, seek to “make a difference” by participating in the anti-war movement, they are introduced to a local activist 10 years their senior. Months later at the volatile 2008 Republican Party Convention, the two cross a line that radically changes their lives. The result: multiple domestic terrorism charges and a high-stakes entrapment defense hinging on the actions of a controversial FBI informant. (Premieres on PBS’s POV series on September 6.)

By providing a backdrop for the urgent blog posts and tweets that became a lifeline to Iranian pro-democracy activists, The Green Wave recounts the dramatic events of one of the most severe domestic crises in the history of Iran. Filmmaker Ali Samadi Ahadi takes viewers into the world of Iranian citizens who risked their lives in the hopes of a better future. Interweaving online posts, video footage caught by those present, and extensive interviews, the film is an artistic portrait of modern political rebellion, an exposé of government-sanctioned violence, and a vision of hope that continued resistance may galvanize a new future.

Patrick Reed’s remarkable The Team brings us behind the scenes of an innovative television soap opera that aims to ease Kenya’s volatile ethnic tensions and set the stage for dialogue and understanding. The story line focuses on a tribally diverse soccer team whose members must find ways to overcome deep-rooted hatred and work together to succeed. Thousands of viewers across Kenya gather around their TV screens to watch the story unfold—building mutual understanding and acceptance with each episode. Yet the message may come too late, as the actors themselves may become victims of the discrimination they have been so passionately seeking to combat.

In If A Tree Falls director Marshall Curry (Street Fight) and co-director Sam Cullman turn their attention to the group the FBI calls America’s “number one domestic terrorism threat”—the Earth Liberation Front (ELF). In December 2005, Daniel McGowan, a New York City social justice organizer, was arrested by federal agents for his links to the organization that carried out arson, from Oregon to Long Island, against businesses they accused of destroying the environment. The filmmakers provide a closer look at the group’s disillusionment with strategies of nonviolent protest, while posing difficult questions about trying to effect change in a post-9/11 world. (Opens theatrically on June 22 through Oscilloscope Laboratories.)

Hebron is home to 160,000 Palestinians and 600 Israeli settlers in the city center—plus 2,000 Israeli soldiers to defend them. The conflict between neighbors in This is My Land… Hebron is fueled by the determination to conquer one more meter of the city, keep the enemy at bay, and simply stand one’s ground. Giulia Amati and Stephen Natanson’s controversial film includes interviews with both Israelis and Palestinians living in Hebron, as well as activists on both sides, members of the Israeli parliament, and prominent Ha’aretz journalists, to lift the lid on a city fraught with violence and hate.

Luc Côté and Patricio Henríquez’s shocking You Don’t Like The Truth – 4 Days Inside Guantanamo uses seven hours of declassified security camera footage from the Canadian government to show the interrogation of 16-year-old Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen and Guantanamo detainee. The film delves into the unfolding high-stakes game of cat and mouse between captor and captive as it analyzes the political, legal, and psychological aspects of the interrogation through interviews with Khadr’s lawyers, a psychiatrist, an investigative journalist, former Guantanamo detainees, and a former US interrogator. (Opens theatrically on September 28 at Film Forum.)

Human Dignity, Discrimination and Resources

In 12 Angry Lebanese: The Documentary, 45 prison inmates in Lebanon’s largest prison work together to present their version of the classic play 12 Angry Men under the direction of a drama therapist, Zeina Daccache. The choice of the play, which touches upon the themes of forgiveness, self-development, stigma, and hope, was no accident. Daccache added monologues, songs, and dance routines created by the prisoners to the original text. Her documentary includes rehearsals, drama therapy sessions, and interviews, revealing the tremendous dignity and despair of the prisoners as well as Daccache’s boundless energy and patience.

Exploring cultural taboos, adolescence and religion through the lens of HIV/AIDS, Oliver Schmitz’s deeply affecting drama Life, Above All brings viewers into the life of 12-year-old Chanda as she struggles to maintain the facade of a normal life amid utter instability. The spread of HIV/AIDS appears to be ravaging Chanda’s South African township even though no one will speak the actual words. When her mother’s illness becomes apparent, the community turns against Chanda’s family. Her mother chooses to leave home on the advice of a well-meaning but overbearing neighbor, who has her own secrets. (Opens theatrically on July 15 through Sony Pictures Classics.)

Thomas Napper’s revealing documentary Lost Angels introduces viewers to Los Angeles’ Skid Row, home to many of the city’s estimated 48,000 homeless people. The residents include a former Olympic runner, a transgendered punk rocker, and an eccentric animal lover and her devoted companion. Their stories paint a multifaceted portrait of life lived on the streets. Residents face challenges, including mental illness and drug addiction, with hope and a strong sense of community, while the local welfare officers see the roots of these problems in a political context.

Susanne Rostock’s Sing Your Song intimately surveys the life of entertainer and activist Harry Belafonte. From his rise to fame as a singer and his experiences touring a segregated country, to his crossover into Hollywood, Belafonte’s groundbreaking career personifies the American civil rights movement. Rostock reveals Belafonte to be a tenacious activist, who worked intimately with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., mobilized celebrities for social justice, participated in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, and took action to counter gang violence, poor prison conditions, and youth incarceration. (This HBO Documentary Film premieres on HBO in Fall 2011.)

Migrants’ and Women’s Rights

The poignant documentary Familia observes one matriarch’s decision to go to work as a hotel maid in Spain and the impact that choice has on her family in Peru. Working with a family they have known for over 35 years, filmmakers Mikael Wiström and Alberto Herskovits (Compadre, HRWFF 2005) take an emotional look at family members’ separation due to economic circumstances, providing insight into the experience of thousands of families who do the same each year. The film develops the double plot line of Nati’s lonely life as a maid in Spain and the lives of the loved ones she leaves behind in Peru.

Love Crimes of Kabul is a fascinating look inside Afghanistan’s Badam Bagh women’s prison, where half the inmates are jailed for “moral crimes.” Kareema awaits trial for pre-marital sex with her fiancé; Aleema ran away from a violent home; Sabereh stands accused of having slept with her neighbor. In a society where behavior is strictly controlled by an ideology of honor, and transgression can bring ruin to an entire family, these young women are seen as threats to the very fabric of society. Filmmaker Tanaz Eshaghian (Be Like Others) follows each case to trial, giving voice to those seen by the court only in terms of blame and embarrassment. (This HBO Documentary Film premieres on HBO on July 11.)

Intimate and revealing, The Price of Sex focuses on young Eastern European women who have been drawn into a world of sex trafficking and abuse. The award-winning photojournalist Mimi Chakarova, who grew up in Bulgaria, takes viewers on a personal journey, exposing the shadowy world of sex trafficking from Eastern Europe to the Middle East and Western Europe. Filming undercover and gaining extraordinary access, Chakarova illuminates how, even though some women escape to tell their stories, the trafficking of women continues to thrive. Chakarova is the recipient of the festival’s 2011 Nestor Almendros Award for courage in filmmaking.

Based on true events, Larysa Kondracki’s compelling political thriller The Whistleblower tells the story of Nebraska police officer Kathryn Bolkovac (Rachel Weisz) who discovers a deplorable cover-up and carries out a fight for justice in the former Yugoslavia. Bolkovac accepts a UN peacekeeping job through a private security contractor, but when she arrives in post-war Bosnia expecting a harmonized international effort, she finds chaos and disorder instead. When a brutally injured young woman lands in the UN’s care, Bolkovac unearths an underworld of trafficking and traces the path of criminality to a shocking source. (Opens theatrically on August 5 through Samuel Goldwyn Films.)

In conjunction with this year’s film program, the festival will present Exiled: Burma’s Defenders, the renowned photographer Platon’s portraits of Burmese former political prisoners, civil society leaders, ethnic minority group members, journalists, and other people in exile from their repressive homeland. The exhibit will be featured in the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery at the Walter Reade Theater for the duration of the festival.

No Boundaries: Tim Hetherington pays tribute to photographer, filmmaker (Restrepo, Liberia: An Uncivil War), journalist, human rights activist, and artist Tim Hetherington, who was killed while covering the armed conflict in Libya in April 2011. Tim was a visionary who used photos, video, memoir, and testimony to explain and humanize conflicts as well as to simply illuminate the human condition. The festival will present a screening of Diary, a highly personal and experimental film that expressed the subjective experience of his work, followed by a discussion with friends and collaborators, including Carroll Bogert (Human Rights Watch) and James Brabazon (Liberia: An Uncivil War), who will discuss Hetherington’s work and legacy.

COMPLETE PROGRAM INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND AT:
www.hrw.org/iff

All films are screened at the The Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater, 165 West 65th Street, upper level (between Broadway and Amsterdam Ave.)

TICKET INFORMATION: Ticket information for the 2011 Human Rights Watch Film Festival can be found at www.FilmLinc.com or in person at the Walter Reade Theater box office. Hours: Mon.-Fri. opens at 12:30 p.m., Sat./Sun. opens 1/2 hr before first public screening; closes 15 minutes after last public screening, at 6 p.m. when there are no public screenings. For more information visit www.FilmLinc.com or call 212-875-5601. Experience the festival on the go with HRWFF’s new mobile site: Visit www.hrw.org/iff from your mobile device to buy tickets to your favorite events, browse the film schedule, invite friends to screenings, view trailers and listen to interviews with filmmakers.

Human Rights Watch

Human Rights Watch is one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. We work tenaciously to lay the legal and moral groundwork for deep-rooted change and fight to bring greater justice and security to people around the world. Through the Human Rights Watch Film Festival we bear witness to human rights violations and create a forum for courageous individuals on both sides of the lens to empower audiences with the knowledge that personal commitment can make a difference. The film festival brings to life human rights abuses through storytelling in a way that challenges each individual to empathize and demand justice for all people. To learn more about our work or to make a donation, visit www.hrw.org

Film Society of Lincoln Center

Under the leadership of Rose Kuo, Executive Director, and Richard Peña, Program Director, the Film Society of Lincoln Center offers the best in international, classic and cutting-edge independent cinema. The Film Society presents two film festivals that attract global attention: the New York Film Festival, currently planning its 49th edition, and New Directors/New Films which, since its founding in 1972, has been produced in collaboration with MoMA. The Film Society also publishes the award-winning Film Comment Magazine, and for over three decades has given an annual award—now named “The Chaplin Award”—to a major figure in world cinema. Past recipients of this award include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, and Tom Hanks. The Film Society presents a year-round calendar of programming, panels, lectures, educational programs and specialty film releases at its Walter Reade Theater and the new state-of-the-art Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, opening June 2011. The Film Society receives generous, year-round support from 42BELOW, American Airlines, The New York Times, Stella Artois, the National Endowment for the Arts, WNET New York Public Media, Royal Bank of Canada and the New York State Council on the Arts. For more information, visit www.FilmLinc.com

ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE Film Series

FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER announces ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE May 20-22


Retrospective of Elizabeth Taylor’s films will include exhibit of classic images from the film legend’s iconic life.

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced the details today for the upcoming film series, Elizabeth: The Golden Age which will screen at the Walter Reade Theater May 20-22. The series will mark the first retrospective of Taylor’s work in New York following her recent passing. As part of the retrospective, FSLC has teamed with The Kobal Collection and Big Eye Gallery.com to display a photo exhibit of some of the most well-known and celebrated images of the screen icon. The exhibit will be on display from May 20 – June 9.

Highlights from Elizabeth: The Golden Age include; a rare screening of JULIA MISBEHAVES (1948), the raucous romantic comedy directed by Jack Conway, features the 16-year-old Taylor’s first on-screen kiss (with Peter Lawford); a deluxe screening of CLEOPATRA (1963) from a 70 mm print; and a 60th Anniversary screening of A PLACE IN THE SUN (1951).

Associate Director of Programming Scott Foundas said, “This brief but comprehensive overview of Elizabeth Taylor, spanning the peak years of her stardom and including four of her five Oscar-nominated performances, should delight Liz fans and newcomers alike. From the supremely confident 12-year-old of NATIONAL VELVET to the icon of bigger than life epics like GIANT and CLEOPATRA, we see Taylor evolve from the last great star of classic Hollywood into the first great celebrity of the modern media era, as captivating to the public off screen as on.”

Tickets will go on sale Thursday, May 5 both at the box office and on-line. Discounts are available for Film Society members. Read more about The Film Society of Lincoln Center (www.filmlinc.com).

Screenings will be held at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater, located at 165 West 65th Street, between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway.


SCREENING SCHEDULE FOR ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE

Screening Venue:
The Film Society of Lincoln Center – Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65 Street, between Broadway & Amsterdam (upper level)

Friday, May 20
1:30PM          JULIA MISBEHAVES (99min)
3:30PM          A PLACE IN THE SUN (122min)
6:00PM          WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? (131min)
8:45PM          CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF (108min)

Saturday, May 21
1:30PM          NATIONAL VELVET (122min)
4:00PM          FATHER OF THE BRIDE (92min)
6:00PM          GIANT (201min + 10min intermission)
9:50PM          REFLECTIONS IN A GOLDEN EYE (108min)

Sunday, May 22
12:00PM        CLEOPATRA (242min + 10min intermission)
5:00PM          A PLACE IN THE SUN (122min)
7:30PM          RAINTREE COUNTY (188min + 10min intermission)

About the Film Society of Lincoln Center

The Film Society of Lincoln Center was founded in 1969 to celebrate American and international cinema, to recognize and support new directors, and to enhance the awareness, accessibility and understanding of film. Advancing this mandate today, the Film Society hosts two distinguished festivals. The New York Film Festival annually premieres films from around the world and has introduced the likes of François Truffaut, R.W. Fassbinder, Jean-Luc Godard, Pedro Almodóvar, Martin Scorsese, and Wong Kar-Wai to the United States. New Directors/New Films, co-presented by the Museum of Modern Art, focuses on emerging film talents. Since 1972, when the Film Society honored Charles Chaplin, its annual Gala Tribute celebrates an actor or filmmaker who has helped distinguish cinema as an art form. Additionally, the Film Society presents a year-round calendar of programming at its Walter Reade Theater and offers insightful film writing to a worldwide audience through Film Comment magazine. For more information, visit: www.FilmLinc.com<http://www.FilmLinc.com>

About the Kobal Collection

The Kobal Collection is delighted to have been closely associated with the Film Society of Lincoln Center for over 20 years, supplying images for a wide range of publications and events from its archive of over 1.5 million movie stills. Go to http://www.kobal-collection.com for further information.

About Big Eye Gallery.com

The Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Kobal Collection are delighted to be working in collaboration with Big Eye Gallery.  A new online resourse for collectors, interior designers and architects, for high quality photographic art. Big Eye Gallery in turn, are printing, mounting, and hanging the exhibition, and making limited edition prints available for purchase. Collectors and fans are invited to go bigeyegallery.com for further information.

The Film Society receives generous, year-round support from 42BELOW, American Airlines, The New York Times, Stella Artois, the National Endowment for the Arts, WNET New York Public Media, Royal Bank of Canada and the New York State Council on the Arts. For more information, visit: www.FilmLinc.com

Norman Jewison Retrospective Presented By Film Society of Lincoln Center

FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER announces RELENTLESS RENEGADE: THE FILMS OF NORMAN JEWISON May 25-30


Jewison to appear in-person along with Academy Award winners Olympia Dukakis and Lee Grant

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced the details today for the upcoming film series, Relentless Renegade: The Films of Norman Jewison which will screen at the Walter Reade Theater May 25-30. The series will mark the first major retrospective of the director’s work in New York featuring appearances by Jewison, along with Academy Award winners Olympia Dukakis and Lee Grant and others participating in Q&As and discussing several of the classic films helmed by the great director.

Special guest appearances include:

Olympia Dukakis  – who will join Jewison to discuss the film MOONSTRUCK (Saturday, May 28 at 5:45PM)

Lee Grant  – who will attend screenings of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (Friday, May 27 at 6:00PM) and THE LANDLORD (Monday, May 30 at 6:00PM)

Lyricist Sheldon Harnick  – who will be on hand to talk about FIDDLER ON THE ROOF (Sunday, May 29 at 2:15PM)

Sony Pictures Classics Co-President and Co-Founder Michael Barker  – who will attend a screening of ROLLERBALL (Saturday, May 28 at 8:30PM) to discuss United Artists and Arthur Krim, who was Chairman of United Artists from 1951 to 1978.

Jewison will also attend screenings of GAILY, GAILY (Wednesday, May 25 at 8:15PM), JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR (Thursday, May 26 at 6:00PM), THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING (Thursday, May 26 at 8:45PM), AGNES OF GOD (Friday, May 27 at 8:45PM), THE CINCINNATI KID (Saturday, May 28 at 3:00PM), THE HURRICANE (Sunday, May 29 at 6:00PM), and A SOLDIER’S STORY (Sunday, May 29 at 9:15PM).

Programming Associate Josh Strauss said, “In American mainstream movie history there is a small handful of producer/directors that can lay claim to an extraordinarily immense, eclectic, and successful body of work. There is no doubt that Norman Jewison is a prominent member of that club. We are delighted to present this wonderful series of films and even more thrilled to have the man himself here, in person, to talk about them.”

A vibrant force in the motion picture industry for four decades, Norman Jewison has been nominated for seven Oscars. Those nominations included three for Best Director (IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT, FIDDLER ON THE ROOF, MOONSTRUCK) and four for Best Picture (THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING; FIDDLER ON THE ROOF; A SOLDIER’S STORY; MOONSTRUCK). His films have received a total of 46 nominations and 12 Academy Awards. In 1999, Jewison received the prestigious Irving Thalberg Award at the 71st Academy Awards and last year, he received the coveted Lifetime Achievement Award from the Directors Guild of America.

Additional honors include Best Director at the Berlin Film Festival, the Moscow Film Festival and Camerimage from Poland. In 1992, Jewison was decorated a Companion of the Order of Canada, the country’s highest civilian award. He also received the Donatello Award from Italy and the Genie Award from the Canadian Academy. In the past four years he has received a lifetime Achievement Award from the Eurasia Film Festival, the Sarasota Film Festival, the Argentina Film Festival and The King Vidor Award at San Luis Obispo Film Festival.

Jewison’s career as a filmmaker began with his directing and producing for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In 1958, Jewison accepted an invitation from CBS in New York to direct the memorable series “Your Hit Parade.”  He followed this with “The Andy Williams Show,” two Harry Belafonte specials, “The Fabulous Fifties,” Danny Kaye’s television debut, “The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe” and the award-winning Judy Garland specials.  Along the way, he collected three Emmy Awards.

His film debut as a director came with the 1962 comedy 40 POUNDS OF TROUBLE starring Tony Curtis. After THE THRILL OF IT ALL, SEND ME NO FLOWERS and THE ART OF LOVE for Universal, Jewison went the independent route and directed THE CINCINNATI KID starring Steve McQueen. Since then, Jewison’s films have covered a wide range of subjects and styles, from the sharp pre-glasnost (by 20 years) political satire of THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING and the stylish gamesmanship of THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR to the sultry mystery of IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (winner of five Academy Awards, including Best Picture of 1967) and the angry irony of …AND JUSTICE FOR ALL.

Other highlights include the hit screen versions of Broadway musicals, FIDDLER ON THE ROOF and JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, and the futuristic ROLLERBALL. In 1984, Jewison directed and co-produced the critically acclaimed A SOLDIER’S STORY, which was nominated for three Academy Awards. The following year, AGNES OF GOD marked the first feature he filmed in his native country of Canada. The film was honored with three Oscar nominations, including Best Supporting Actress nominations for Meg Tilly and Anne Bancroft.

MOONSTRUCK, released in 1987, was a smash success and another multiple
Oscar-winner, with star Cher winning Best Actress, Olympia Dukakis for Best
Supporting Actress and John Patrick Shanley for Best Original Screenplay. Additional notable films included the Bruce Willis and Emily Lloyd starrer, IN COUNTRY; OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY, starring Danny DeVito, Gregory Peck and Penelope Ann Miller; the acclaimed drama THE HURRICANE, based on the life of prizefighter Rubin “Hurricane” Carter starring Denzel Washington; the Sundance favorite DANCE ME OUTSIDE (which he executive produced); and the Emmy nominated HBO movie, DINNER WITH FRIENDS starring Andie MacDowell, Dennis Quaid, Toni Collette and Greg Kinnear.

Jewison’s most recent big screen outing was THE STATEMENT (2003) starring Michael Caine, Tilda Swinton, Jeremy Northam, Charlotte Rampling, Alan Bates, and John Neville. He is currently at work with Academy Award winning writer, John Patrick Shanley, on a project based on the Italian film, BREAD AND TULIPS.

Tickets will go on sale Thursday, April 21 both at the box office and on-line. Discounts are available for Film Society members. Read more about The Film Society of Lincoln Center. <http://www.filmlinc.com/>

Screenings will be held at the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater, located at 165 West 65th Street, between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway.


SCREENING SCHEDULE FOR RELENTLESS RENEGADE: THE FILMS OF NORMAN JEWISON

Screening Venue:
The Film Society of Lincoln Center – Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65 Street, between Broadway & Amsterdam (upper level)

Wednesday, May 25
1:45PM             A SOLDIER’S STORY (101min)
3:45PM            AGNES OF GOD (98min)
6:00PM             THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR (102min)
8:15PM             GAILY, GAILY (107min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison)

Thursday, May 26
1:45PM             THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR
3:50PM             MOONSTRUCK (102min)
6:00PM             JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR (108min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison)
8:45PM             THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING (126min)
(Introduction by Norman Jewison)

Friday, May 27
1:00PM             THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING (126min)
3:30PM             AND JUSTICE FOR ALL (119min)
6:00PM             IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (109min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison and Lee Grant)
8:45 PM             AGNES OF GOD (98min)
(Introduction by Norman Jewison)

Saturday, May 28
12:15PM           MOVIES FOR KIDS: 40 POUNDS OF TROUBLE (106min) w/THE RED BALLOON (32min)
3:00PM            THE CINCINNATI KID (102min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison)
5:45PM             MOONSTRUCK (102min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison and Olympia Dukakis)
8:30PM             ROLLERBALL (125 min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison and Michael Barker)

Sunday, May 29
12:00PM           JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR (108min)
2:15PM             FIDDLER ON THE ROOF (181 min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewsion and Sheldon Harnick)
6:00PM             THE HURRICANE (145 min)
(Q&A with Norman Jewison)
9:15PM             A SOLDIER’S STORY (101min)
(Introduction by Norman Jewsion)

Monday, May 30
1:15PM             IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (109min)
3:45PM             GAILY, GAILY (107min)
6:00PM             THE LANDLORD (112 min)
(Q&A with Lee Grant)
8:30PM             AND JUSTICE FOR ALL (119min)


About the Film Society of Lincoln Center
The Film Society of Lincoln Center was founded in 1969 to celebrate American and international cinema, to recognize and support new directors, and to enhance the awareness, accessibility and understanding of film. Advancing this mandate today, the Film Society hosts two distinguished festivals. The New York Film Festival annually premieres films from around the world and has introduced the likes of François Truffaut, R.W. Fassbinder, Jean-Luc Godard, Pedro Almodóvar, Martin Scorsese, and Wong Kar-Wai to the United States. New Directors/New Films, co-presented by the Museum of Modern Art, focuses on emerging film talents. Since 1972, when the Film Society honored Charles Chaplin, its annual Gala Tribute celebrates an actor or filmmaker who has helped distinguish cinema as an art form. Additionally, the Film Society presents a year-round calendar of programming at its Walter Reade Theater and offers insightful film writing to a worldwide audience through Film Comment magazine. For more information, visit: www.FilmLinc.com

The Film Society receives generous, year-round support from 42BELOW, American Airlines, the New York Times, Stella Artois, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York State Council on the Arts.

Film Lineup for the 40th Annual New Directors/New Films Announced

The Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center Announce Feature Film Lineup for the 40th Annual New Directors/New Films March 23 – April 3

J.C. Chandor’s “MARGIN CALL” is the Opening Night presentation with Maryam Keshavarz’s Award-winning “CIRCUMSTANCE” the Closing Night selection

The Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center announced the full lineup today for the 40th edition of New Directors/New Films (March 23 – April 3). Dedicated to the discovery of new works by emerging and dynamic filmmaking talent, the film festival will screen 28 feature films (24 narrative, 4 documentary) representing 22 countries.

The opening night feature is J.C. Chandor’s MARGIN CALL. Screening on Wednesday, March 23, at 7:00PM at MoMA, Chandor’s feature film directing debut is a timely and terrifying dramatic expose that tackles twenty-four hours on an investment bank trading floor; a day that brings layer upon layer of human and professional wrongdoing that jeopardizes the entire fabric of the banking system. The film features an all-star ensemble cast, led by Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Zachary Quinto, Demi Moore, Stanley Tucci and Jeremy Irons.

Maryam Keshavarz’s Audience Award winner from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, CIRCUMSTANCE will be the closing night feature. Screening Sunday, April 3 at 7:00PM at MoMA, Keshavarz’s searing feature debut follows two young Iranian women as they live life in the shadow of the regime, going to parties and listening to forbidden music while starting to explore their true feelings for each other.

Film Society of Lincoln Center Program Director Richard Pena said, “We are thrilled to have MARGIN CALL and CIRCUMSTANCE as our Opening and Closing Night films. Both are dynamic and riveting dramas from first time feature film directors that give a unique view into the human lives at the core of two vastly different, but very immediate worlds.”

Among the film festival’s highlights are additional recent film festival award winners including; Anne Sewitsky’s comedy HAPPY, HAPPY (Grand Jury Prize for World Cinema at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival) about a young couple dealing with a newly acquainted, sophisticated couple that has jarred their world; Daniel Vega’s and Diego Vega’s OCTUBRE (Jury Prize of the “Un Certain Regard” section of Cannes 2010) about a small time money-lender in the barrio who must learn to care for a baby left on his doorstep; and Athina Rachel Tsangari’s drama ATTENBERG (featuring a performance by Ariane Labed, that earned her the Best Actress award at the 2010 Venice Film Festival) about the changing dynamics in the lives of a father and daughter.

Two selections were previously honored at last year’s Locarno Film Festival, with Denis Côté garnering a Silver Leopard for Best Director and Emmanuel Bilodeau receiving the Best Actor Award for CURLING, his tale of a father in Quebec trying to shield his daughter from the outside world, and WINTER VACATION, Li Hongqi’s comedy about four teenagers facing the end of their holiday, taking the Golden Leopard for Best Film.

In addition, Denis Villeneuve’s INCENDIES, which follows two twins as they deal with the surprises delivered to them via their recently deceased mother’s will, received an Academy Award nomination this year for Best Foreign Film as Canada’s official entry.

As a socio-political sea-change unfolds in Egypt, two films will represent that country: Amhad Abdalla’s MICROPHONE, about a young man who becomes enmeshed in the alternative music and arts scene he encounters on the streets of Alexandria; and Mohamed Diab’s “6, 7, 8,” which explores the issue of sexual harassment via the intertwined stories of three women of various economic means living in Cairo.

Commenting on the feature film lineup as a whole, Rajendra Roy, The Celeste Bartos Chief Curator, Department of Film, The Museum of Modern Art, added, “There is great variety both within the makeup of our filmmakers as well as the subject matter and styles of the films themselves. From very intense drama to clever comedy to some truly fascinating documentaries, New Directors/New Films continues to be a major New York venue for new voices in film.”

MoMA Department of Film Senior Curator Laurence Kardish (the only member that has been on the selection committee since the very beginning) summed up New Directors/New Films’ 40th Anniversary, saying, “New Directors’ discoveries over these past 40 years include a mind-boggling roster of talent. By any measure, this film festival has enriched film culture in New York and beyond by introducing audiences to a host of great filmmakers.”

Tickets will be available for purchase directly through the New Directors/New Films website beginning March 13. In celebration of the 40th anniversary, the website will also feature videos and testimonials from New Directors/New Films filmmakers from past years, who talk about the impact the festival had on their careers. Patrons are encouraged to visit http://www.newdirectors.org for latest film information and festival updates.

New Directors/New Films tickets can also be purchased at the box offices at The Film Society of Lincoln Center (Walter Reade Theater, 165 W. 65th St., near Amsterdam Avenue) and The Museum of Modern Art (11 W. 53rd Street).

There are two advance ticketing opportunities:

Film Society Patrons and MoMA FilmPlus Members may purchase tickets starting Wednesday, February 16.

Film Society and MoMA Members may purchase tickets starting Tuesday, March 2.

To become a Member of the Film Society and MoMA please visit: www.filmlinc.com and www.moma.org

The 40th New Directors/New Films selections include:

6,7,8 (2010, 100min)

Director: Mohamed Diab

Country: Egypt

Diab’s “6,7,8” intersects the stories of three women of very different social and economic status in Cairo as they converge in their collective desire to combat sexual harassment. A wealthy, secular young woman who is molested at football match is revealed to be just as vulnerable as the devout Muslim wife of limited means who must ride the bus with marauding men. Given the cultural and religious implications of family life and gender division, the women look to collective action, the media and even violence as routes to freedom.

AT ELLEN’S AGE (IM ALTER VON ELLEN) (2010, 95min)

Director: Pia Marais

Country: Germany

Marais’ AT ELLEN’S AGE catches a woman at a crossroads following her husband’s confession of having an affair and the loss of her job due to a subsequent panic attack. The film follows the woman’s awakening after she joins forces with a group of animal activists.

ATTENBERG (2010, 95min)

Director: Athina Rachel Tsangari

Country: Greece

Tsangari’s ATTENBERG is a fun melding of (new) Nouvelle Vague, musical, melodrama, and nature documentary, symbolically visualizing a change of generation and perspective as a father and daughter gently negotiate their individual rites of passage. The film follows a visionary architect who has come home to die in the vanishing industrial town that is his legacy to his daughter. Meanwhile, his daughter (played by Ariane Labed, in a performance that garnered her the Best Actress award at The Venice Film Festival) is exploring the mysteries of kissing with her girlfriend and the beyond with a visiting engineer.

BELLE EPINE (2010, 80min)

Director: Rebecca Zlotowski

Country: France

Zlotowski’s BELLE EPINE is a coming of age story about a teenage girl dealing with the death of her mother and absentee father. The girl loses herself in antisocial behavior, turning away from her Jewish heritage personified by her supportive aunt and uncle, and drawn into the orbit of a wrong-side-of-the-tracks classmate and her biker friends, who gather for chaotic, sometimes lethal night-time motorcycle meets on the edge of town.

THE BLACK POWER MIX TAPE 1967-1975 (2011, 100min)

Director: Göran Hugo Olsson

Country: Sweden

Olsson’s documentary utilizes never before seen interviews (with Stokely Carmichael and Angela Davis among others) filmed by a group of Swedish filmmakers from the late sixties to mid-seventies to chronicle the growth of the black power movement. Thirty years later this lush collection of 16mm footage was found in a basement – and combined with additional commentary by artists and activists who were influenced by the struggle – from Harry Belafonte to Erykah Badu – becomes a powerful chronicle of the birth and life of a movement. THE BLACK POWER MIX TAPE 1967-1975 is a Sundance Selects release.

CIRCUMSTANCE (2011, 107min)

Director: Maryam Keshavarz

Country: France/USA/Iran

Keshavarz’s searing feature debut CIRCUMSTANCE follows two young Iranian women as they live life in the shadow of the regime, going to parties and listening to forbidden music while starting to explore their true feelings for each other. CIRCUMSTANCE recently won the Audience Award at the Sundance film festival. CIRCUMSTANCE is a Participant Media and Roadside Attractions release.

COPACABANA (2010, 107min)

Director: Marc Fitoussi

Country: France

Fitoussi’s second film, COPACABANA is a gentle French comedy about the relationship between a daughter and her single mother, starring real-life mother and daughter Isabelle Huppert and Lotlia Chammah. Embarrassed by her mother, the daughter wants a ‘settled’ life, something she believes her mother is not capable (nor desiring) of achieving. So her mother sets out to prove her daughter wrong, and win her respect by selling time-shares in a seaside resort town.

CURLING (2010, 96min)

Director: Denis Côté

Country: Canada

Set in the dead of winter, Côté’s CURLING is a tense and darkly comic portrait of a family in a rural Quebec village. The film follows a single father as he seeks to isolate his adolescent daughter from the outside world for fear that it will scar her as much as it has him. CURLING earned Côté the Silver Leopard for Best Director and Emmanuel Bilodeau the Leopard for Best Actor at the 2010 Locarno Film Festival.

THE DESTINY OF LESSER ANIMALS (2010, 90min)

Director: Deron Albright

Country: Ghana/USA

Albright’s drama THE DESTINY OF LESSER ANIMALS follows a Ghanian Police Inspector as he embarks on a dangerous journey through modern Ghana to retrieve his stolen counterfeit passport. Finding his own search linked to a series of violent crimes, he joins forces with a seasoned police veteran who is still optimistic about his country to solve the mystery.

GROMOZEKA (2010, 104min)

Director: Vladimir Kott

Country: Russia

Kott’s GROMOZEKA is his follow-up to THE FLY, which was a selection at New Directors/New Films in 2009. The drama follows three men who played in a pop-music trio during their high-school days, and are now three middle-aged men in different walks of life—surgeon, police officer, taxi driver,living at different levels in Moscow’s socio-economic structure. Aside from their annual reunions, which book-end the film, their lives intersect only glancingly and unknowingly as their respective personal discontents and professional troubles reach crisis points and presents the contrasting ways in which each of them tries to cope.

HAPPY, HAPPY (SYKT LYKKELIG) (2010, 85min)

Director: Anne Sewitsky

Country: Norway

Switsky’s directorial debut, HAPPY HAPPY is a comedy about a thirty-something couple with a young son, living a rather dull life in the Norwegian countryside.  Then new neighbors move in next door, and while at first glance they seem to be their mirror image and perfect friend material, the differences that do exist (the new couple’s son is an adopted African, the husband is full of sexual energy, and the wife is…Danish!) manifest in increasingly disturbing ways. The film was the winner of the Grand Jury Prize for World Cinema at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival.

HIT SO HARD (2011, 101min)

Director: P. David Ebersole

Country: USA

Ebersole’s rockumentary HIT SO HARD is a pull-no-punches portrait of the hell-and-back life of Patty Schemel, drummer for Courtney Love’s band Hole during its peak years. The result is an unprecedented inside look at the one of the Nineties most crucial and controversial groups. Notwithstanding its amazingly candid interviews (Love included), its unflinching accounts of the personal tragedies that plagued the band in its heyday, and a rare look at hardball music-industry politics gives the viewer the lowdown on the recording of Hole’s 1997 record Celebrity Skin.

HOSPITALITÉ (2010, 96min)

Director: Koji Fukada

Country: Japan

Set in the confines of downtown Tokyo, Fukada’s comedy HOSPITALITÉ is about a man living a mundane life, running a small printing factory and living a quiet life upstairs with his wife and children. Then a man arrives claiming to be the son of a wealthy financier who once helped his business. Soon the stranger has moved in with HIS wife, is running the business, and soon invites guests of his own – a large, eclectic and exotic group – into the apartment, destroying the once orderly and comfortable life of his host.

INCENDIES (2010, 130min)

Director: Denis Villeneuve

Country: Canada/France

Villeneuve’s film, INCENDIES focuses on twins grieving their mother’s death who have their world shaken further when the reading of her will reveals that their father, presumed to be deceased, is actually still alive and that they also have a brother. The film follows the twins as they seek to fulfill their mother’s final wish – for them to find their father and brother and deliver to each of them a sealed letter. A Sony Pictures Classics release.

THE MAJORITY (ÇOGUNLUK) (2010, 111min)

Director: Seren Yüce

Country: Turkey

Yüce’s THE MAJORITY features Barta Küçükçaglayan as a man that manages to slide through each day working as an office assistant for his father’s construction company when not gobbling burgers at the mall with his buddies. That is until he meets a shy but charming Kurdish girl, and suddenly his entire approach and outlook to life begin to change. However, he now must face a new conflict with his parents…upon whom he is completely dependent, and who won’t even consider their son settling down with a Kurd.

MAN WITHOUT A CELL PHONE (BIDOUN MOBILE) (2010, 83min)

Director: Sameh Zoabi

Country: Israel

Zoabi’s feature debut, MAN WITHOUT A CELL PHONE, is a comedy about a young Israeli construction worker with little ambition other than to have fun with his friends and meet girls which is directly at odds with his father’s ambitions to bring down a cell phone tower he is sure is poisoning their Arab neighbors with radiation.

MARGIN CALL (2010, 109min)

Director: J.C. Chandor

Country: USA

Chandor’s timely and terrifying dramatic expose, MARGIN CALL tackles twenty-four hours on an investment bank trading floor; a day that brings layer upon layer of human and professional wrongdoing that jeopardizes the entire fabric of the banking system. An all-star ensemble cast, led by Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Zachary Quinto, Demi Moore, Stanley Tucci and Jeremy Irons, propel this ominous day toward the abyss, preserving just enough pathos to allow us to ultimately recognize these bankers’ humanity.

MEMORY LANE (2010, 98min)

Director: Mikhaël Hers

Country: France

Hers’ MEMORY LANE is a film about characters caught “in between”-between city and country, friendship and love, life and death, and youthful dreams and the impending realities of growing up. Setting in motion several story lines, Hers allows action to develop and characters to emerge through subtle gestures, quick looks and offhand remarks via a splendid ensemble of actors that truly create a sense of closeness, a kind of familiarity that need not be emphasized as it’s always so present.

MICROPHONE (2010, 120min)

Director: Amhad Abdalla

Country: Egypt

Abdalla’s MICROPHONE stars (and is co-produced by) Egyptian heart-throb Khaled Abol Naga as a man who returns to his hometown Alexandria unmoored and restlessly searching for purpose beyond his ex-girlfriend who’s no longer interested and his aging father from whom he feels terminally alienated.  Wandering the streets he happens upon a music and art making group of younger people that he stubbornly pursues and eventually becomes part of as his self-involvement changes into a real connection with this new world.

OCTUBRE (2010, 93min)

Directors: Daniel and Diego Vega

Country: Peru

Co-directed by brothers Daniel and Diego Vega, OCTUBRE follows a small-time money-lender living in a Lima barrio who one day discovers a baby left on his doorstep. To care for the child–the product of one of his frequent liaisons with prostitutes–the man engages a female neighbor for help, and soon a new, unexpected family is formed. The film won the Jury Prize of the “Un Certain Regard” section of Cannes 2010. OCTUBRE is a New Yorker Films release.

OUTBOUND (PERIFERIC) (2010, 87min)

Director: Bogdan George Apetri

Country: Romania

Apetri’s OUTBOUND is a tense race against time as a young woman, serving a five-year prison sentence for a crime she didn’t commit, attempts to right the wrongs done to her, collect on debts and cleanse herself from her past life after she receives a day pass so that she can attend her mother’s funeral.

PARIAH (2011, 86min)

Director: Dee Rees

Country: USA

Executive produced by Spike Lee, Rees’ debut feature PARIAH, is a character study of a seventeen year-old New Yorker (played by Adepero Oduye) whose efforts to explore her lesbian desires are squarely at odd with her middle-class Brooklyn family – and more specifically, her church-going mother (played by Kim Wayans). The film draws an affectionate portrait of a community, one so close everyone knows everyone else’s ‘business’, and dramatizes the longings, disappointments and achievements of a teenager whose ideas of femininity are less traditional than most. A Focus Features release.

SHUT UP LITTLE MAN! AN AUDIO MISADVENTURE (2011, 85min)

Director: Matthew Bate

Country: Australia

Bate’s documentary SHUT UP LITTLE MAN! AN AUDIO MISADVENTURE tells the story of two men who, upon discovering they had rented an apartment next to two men who drank and verbally abused each other every night, decided to record the nightly fights and play them back through their neighbors’ front door.  It didn’t quiet the noisy roommates, but somehow the recordings became part of an underground culture that still inspire musicians, poets, graphic artists and disc jockeys.

SOME DAYS ARE BETTER THAN OTHERS (2010, 93min)

Director: Matt McCormick

Country: USA

McCormick’s debut feature SOME DAYS ARE BETTER THAN OTHERS is a poetic character-driven film that asks why the good times slip by so fast while the difficult times seem so sticky. The film follows a trio of stranded characters that seem to be competing for first prize in a Saddest Job in the World contest as McCormick insists on the reality of work, distinctly rebutting the popular image of Portland as a paradise for under-achieving hipsters and the slacker ethos of “the unemployed, blissful lifestyle.”

SUMMER OF GOLIATH (VERANO DE GOLIAT) (2010, 76min)

Director: Nicolás Pereda

Country: Mexico/Canada/Netherlands

Pereda’s SUMMER OF GOLIATH combines documentary and fiction as it intertwines the stories of people living in a small town in rural Mexico. Those people include: a woman who believes her husband has left her for another woman; her soldier son, who hopes that one day he and his soldier partner will be issued machine guns so that they may intimidate passing motorists; and three brothers whose father left them many years ago in the care of their mother, who can barely support them.

TYRANNOSAUR (2010, 91min)

Director: Paddy Considine

Country: United Kingdom

Actor Considine makes his directorial debut with TYRANNOSAUR, an intense drama about a lonely man with a violent temper and a knack for getting into situations, particularly at pubs, that leave him and others bloody. However, he has a soft spot for a young boy who lives across the street with his feckless mother and her punk boyfriend. Beyond that, he knows better than to seek anyone else’s company until he meets a clerk in a church thrift shop who has some problems of her own. TYRANNOSAUR is a Strand Releasing film.

EL VELADOR (2011, 72min)

Director: Natalia Almada

Country: Mexico

Almada’s documentary EL VELADOR displays the world of “El Jardin,”, a cemetery in the drug heartland of Mexico. Since the war on drugs began in 2007, the cemetery has doubled in size and some of its mausoleums have been built to resemble gaudy cathedrals, creating a skyline that looks like a fantastical surrealist city more than a resting place for the deceased. The film introduces us to both the lives of the cemetery workers and families of the victims – in the shadow of an increasingly bloody conflict that has claimed nearly 35,000 lives.

WINTER VACATION (HAN JIA) (2010, 91min)

Director: Hongqi Li

Country: China

Hongqi’s WINTER VACATION is a deadpan comedy about four teenagers during the last day of their winter vacation as they face the prospects of having to return to school and their studies. The kids argue, debate and fight as the clock ticks away on their holiday and they deal with their love lives and question school’s value and relevance to real life. WINTER VACATION won the Golden Leopard for Best Film at the 2010 Locarno Film Festival.

About New Directors/New Films

Dedicated to the discovery and support of emerging artists, New Directors/New Films has earned an international reputation as the premier festival for works that break or re-cast the cinematic mold.  The New Directors/New Films selection committee is made up of members from both presenting organizations: from The Film Society of Lincoln Center, Marian Masone, Richard Peña, Gavin Smith; and from The Museum of Modern Art, Jytte Jensen, Laurence Kardish, and Rajendra Roy.


About The Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Museum of Modern Art

Under the leadership of Rose Kuo, Executive Director, and Richard Peña, Program Director, The Film Society of Lincoln Centeroffers the best in international, classic, and cutting-edge independent cinema. The Film Society presents two film festivals that attract global attention: the New York Film Festival, now in its 49th year, and New Directors/New Films, which, since its founding in 1972, has been produced in collaboration with MoMA. The Film Society also publishes the award-winning Film Comment Magazine, and for over three decades has given an annual award—now named “The Chaplin Award”—to a major figure in world cinema. Past recipients of this award include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, and Tom Hanks. For more information, visitwww.filmlinc.com.

The Museum of Modern Art’s Department of Film was established as the Film Library in 1935, and presented its first series as circulating exhibitions in 1936.  The Film Department organizes over 50 film exhibitions every year, including annual programs such asPremiere BrazilTo Save and Project and The Contenders.  The Department organizes exhibitions in MoMA’s galleries, including Tim Burton (2009-10) and Pixar: 20 Years of Animation (2005–06). The department also has an extensive archive of over 27,000 film and video works, including the world’s largest institutional collections of the works of D. W. Griffith, Andy Warhol, and Stan Brakhage. Rajendra Roy is the current Celeste Bartos Chief Curator of Film, appointed in May 2007.

Sponsorship

New Directors/New Films is presented by The Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center and is supported by Kenneth Kuchin, Jerry I. Speyer and Katherine G. Farley, The Junior Associates of The Museum of Modern Art, the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s NEW WAVE group, and Eastman Kodak Company.

Media sponsorship provided by indieWIRE.

The Film Society of Lincoln Center receives major, year-round support from 42BELOW; American Airlines; Stella Artois; The New York Times; The New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency; and the National Endowment for the Arts.