Kino Lorber Acquires All US Rights to Guy Maddin’s THE FORBIDDEN ROOM

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Kino Lorber has announced the acquisition of all US rights to Guy Maddin’s (My Winnipeg, The Saddest Music in the World) THE FORBIDDEN ROOM (2015), following the film’s world premiere at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival.

THE FORBIDDEN ROOM was produced by Phi Films, Buffalo Gal Pictures and the National Film Board of Canada (NFB), with the participation of Telefilm Canada and with the financial investment of Manitoba Film & Music and SODEC.

“I feel fantastic about Richard Lorber and his team handling THE FORBIDDEN ROOM,” wrote director Guy Maddin. “When we first met, before he saw the movie, I felt that rare pleasure of tastes synching up every second moment, but immediately after the screening we connected with wondrous electrified crackles! It was like we were giddily letting this film finish each other’s sentences for us! Our movie instantly galvanized a shared experience. It’s only right, and extremely thrilling, that THE FORBIDDEN ROOM marry up with Kino Lorber!”

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Co-directed by Maddin’s long-time collaborator Evan Johnson, the film stars Mathieu Amalric, Udo Kier, Charlotte Rampling, Geraldine Chaplin, Louis Negin, and Maria de Medeiros, all playing a cavalcade of misfits, thieves and lovers in an exhilarating world of cinematic treasures.

Kino Lorber is planning a fall theatrical release for the film, along with key festival engagements throughout the country. A digital and home media release will follow. The deal was negotiated between Kino Lorber CEO Richard Lorber and Charlotte Mickie, President of Mongrel International.

Allegedly made from scenes pulled from legendary lost films, THE FORBIDDEN ROOM is “a masterful, operatic delight of strangeness” (Nicholas Bell, IonCinema) that plays like a glorious meeting between Italo Calvino, Sergei Eisenstein and a perverted six year-old child.  This trip “through the looking glass, down the rabbit hole, into the twilight zone …” (Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter) is also a culmination of Guy Maddin’s body of work and an unhinged resurrection of cinema’s glorious past.

“It’s such a delight to have Richard Lorber on board, as the captain of the US release of THE FORBIDDEN ROOM.  Kino Lorber has the right profile and unique skills to deliver this film to a delirious audience,” wrote Charlotte Mickie. “We are all deeply impressed by their recent work on A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night and Goodbye to Language 3D.”

Guy Maddin has outdone himself with THE FORBIDDEN ROOM,” wrote Richard Lorber. “Every frame here is a work of art, and his genius vision of our cinematic past is both an epic culmination of his interest in silent cinema as well as an aesthetic explosion of joy, desire and beauty.”

Honoring classic cinema while electrocuting it with energy, this Russian nesting doll of a film begins (after a prologue on how to take a bath) with the crew of a doomed submarine chewing flapjacks in a desperate attempt to breathe the oxygen within.

Suddenly (and impossibly), a lost woodsman wanders into their company and tells his tale of escaping from a fearsome clan of cave dwellers. From here, Maddin takes us high into the air, around the world, and into dreamscapes, spinning tales of amnesia, captivity, deception and murder, skeleton women and vampire bananas.

Teaser: https://vimeo.com/user4895266/review/117400724/efd27dabb7

CineVegas Review: ‘It Came From Kuchar’

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You’ve probably never heard of George Kuchar or his twin brother Miek.  Even though they have hundreds of directing credits between them (George has 215 alone), their names are as lost to the general public as a ship that has entered into the Bermuda Triangle.  Yet, despite this unfamiliarity in the minds of general film audiences, the works of the Kuchar brothers have inspired filmmakers like John Waters, Guy Maddin, Atom Egoyan and Buck Henry.

The documentary film ‘It Came From Kuchar’ is a celebration of their life, work and inspiration.  Director Jennifer Kroot works in all the angles spending equal amounts of time on each of these three aspects.  We see interviews she conducted with George and Mike as they discuss their lives, their childhood, and the relationships they each had with their mother.  We see interviews with filmmakers, critics, and film historians alike as they discuss the ways the Kuchar Brothers have influenced the media of film.  These are spliced with actual scenes from various Kuchar films, films that a majority of the public has never seen.  With titles like ‘Hold Me While I’m Naked,’ ‘The Devil’s Cleavage,’ and ‘Sins of the Fleshapoids,’ you can clearly see why the Kuchar Brothers never made it into the big leagues.

But, unlike ‘Anvil!,’ ‘It Came From Kuchar’ is never about George or Mike’s frustrations and inabilities to become mainstream film directors.  They each have a passion for filmmaking, and they have no regrets for the paths they have chosen.  In fact, George, to this day, continues to direct films with the help of the San Francisco Art Institute.  George has taught a film class there since 1971, and he continues to utalize the institute and his students in helping him create his later films.  Kroot’s documentary also follows the production of George’s latest film, ‘The Fury of Frau Frankenstein,’ and hearing his students/crew talk about George’s work ethic is both humorous and heartfelt.

And that, more than anything, is what ‘It Came From Kuchar’ is all about.  It is a heartwarming depiction of twin brother filmmakers whose passion for the medium outweigh their artistic abilities.  Their films don’t look polished.  They hardly look complete.  But none of that matters.  George makes the films he wants to make, and, without a studio backing him or standing in his way, he is able to do just that.

One negative about  Kroot’s documentary is the way Mike seems to be shortchanged, particularly in the directing pair’s later years.  Much of the film follows George.  It stands to reason, seeing as how George, with 215 directing credits to Mike’s 17, is the much more prolific of the two.  However, the moments featuring both George and Mike under one roof are smile-inducing.

There are several stand-out interview moments in ‘It Came From Kuchar.’  So many times Kroot will be speaking with George and Mike at different locales about a similar subject, and she edits the conversations in such a way that it appears each brother is finishing the others sentences.  Whether it is through a gifted level of editing or the two brothers are that finely tuned to each other remains to be seen.  Regardless, these moments serve as emotional backbone to the depiction of the Kuchar Brothers’ life outside of film.

‘It Came From Kuchar’ is a wonderful documentary that brings to light a film movement not seen by many but that influenced hundreds.  The Kuchar Brothers were and still are pioneers in the underground film movement, and Kroot’s documentary is a heartwarming look at everything they have accomplished and everything they stand for.

Criterion Watch: ‘Brand Upon the Brain’

Here’s the details (from  the Criterion website)  for the upcoming first Criterion release of a Guy Maddin film, ‘Brand Upon the Brain’. Great DVD cover art for this one …

Release Date: August 12, 2008

Synopsis:

In the weird and wonderful supercinematic world of Canadian cult filmmaker Guy Maddin, personal memory collides with movie lore for a radical sensory overload. This eerie excursion into the Gothic recesses of Maddin’s mad, imaginary childhood is a silent, black-and-white comic science-fiction nightmare set in a lighthouse on grim Black Notch Island, where fictional protagonist Guy Maddin was raised by an ironfisted, puritanical mother. Originally mounted as a theatrical event (accompanied by live orchestra, Foley artists, and assorted narrators), Brand upon the Brain! is an irreverent, delirious trip into the mind of one of current cinema’s true eccentrics.

DVD Special Features:

New high-definition digital transfer
Narration tracks by Isabella Rossellini, Laurie Anderson, John Ashbery, Guy Maddin, Louis Negin, and Eli Wallach
97 Percent True, a new documentary featuring interviews with the director and his collaborators
Two new short films directed by Maddin exclusively for this release: It’s My Mother’s Birthday Today and Footsteps
Deleted scene
Trailer
PLUS: A new essay by film critic Dennis Lim

Meet the Makers: Guy Maddin

Maddin is one of the most original and creative indie directors working today. It is true that his films often weigh heavily on the side of the depressing, and many are so unique that the general viewing audiences aren’t likely to get or appreciate his films, but he’s an appreciated favorite of many film buffs like myself for doing his own thing without any apologies. Maddin’s newest film is the docu-fantasy My Winnepeg, which made its US festival debut in April 2008. Unfortunately, It may be some time before we in the Midwest get a glimpse. Featured here is a small taste of what this Canadian filmmaker has to offer movie geeks with a more adventurous cinematic palate …

Continue reading Meet the Makers: Guy Maddin