| The films at
this year's LA FILM FESTIVAL, held June 16-26, 2005, were incredibly
diverse, engaging, entertaining, thought provoking and in some cases,
enchanting and adorable. Moviegoers have a lot to look forward to not
only in the coming months as festival debuts hit movie theatres
throughout the country, but in years to come. Some outstanding new
directors had their works showcases, including documentary film maker
Eric Lahey and Festival Winners David Zeiger, John Harden and Beth Bird.
At the conclusion of the Festival, awards were announced in the various
categories for everything from Feature Films to Documentaries to
Animated Shorts to Narratives to International Films to Audience Awards.
I am extremely pleased that some of my personal favorites came up
winners and can be seen in theatres now and throughout the coming Summer
months. Some of the highlights are:
LA FILM FESTIVAL 2005 AUDIENCE AWARD -
BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE MARCH OF THE PENGUINS by Luc Jacquet
Written and directed by Luc Jacquet,
"March of the Penguins" chronicles the journey of an Emperor
Penguin colony in Antarctica.
Marching single file through catabatic
conditions, blinding blizzards and gale force winds across the icy
plains, the male Emperor
Penguins leave the safety of the ocean once a year as they head to their
instinctively known breeding grounds to find the love of their life and
satisfy their overwhelming urge to reproduce. And yes, it is true, the
Emperor Penguin has one mate for life. Fascinatingly, once the female
lays a lone egg, it is the male that stays as guardian until hatching
while the female goes out across the plains back to the ocean to find
her own nourishment. In two months when the little hatchlings arrive,
it's up to mom to make sure that she makes it back with food for her
young, at which point, dad then heads back out to see. A cycle that
continues until the young chick is able to make its first venture into
the icy seas of the Antarctic, a more beautiful story of familial love
can not be found.
Four
years in the making, Jacquet and his crew spent over a year in
Antarctica. Using 16mm film in order to capture the true magnificence of
the region, Jacquet and his crew shot 120 hours of footage, eventually
editing it down to 80 minutes of the most breathtakingly beautiful,
elegant and endearing film around. With specialized underwater cameras,
he was able to obtain never before seen footage of the penguins
underwater - a site that will make your eyes wide with the wonder of
those of a child.
Not only concerned with minimizing human
contact with the 1200 plus penguins filmed during this march,
Jacquet and his crew faced some incredible technical and logistical
challenges. 130 pounds of equipment had to be carried daily by each crew
member working a day's shoot. According to one of the Directors of
Photography Laurent Chalet, only two things ever kept them from shooting
- the weather and running out of film when out on ice floes. Jacquet and
company also lacked the luxury of dailies or rushes and never saw even
one frame film until after they had returned to
"civilization." There was also the added uncertainty of not
knowing when the penguins would be gathering for their march or what
would happen as nature took its course, which meant the crew had to be
ready at a moment's notice.
The
result of Jacquet's commitment and dedication to this specialized form
of documentary is a film for the entire family. "March of the
Penguins" is a rare gem that is not just visually stunning and
stimulating, but emotionally stimulating as well. It touches the heart.
With sparse narration by Morgan Freeman, written by Jordan Roberts, and
beauteous orchestrations led by conductor Jeff Schindler, Jacquet lets
the magic of the penguins speak for itself. Currently playing in the Los
Angeles area and at selected theatres nationwide, this is a film not to
be missed. Directed by Luc Jacquet. Based upon the story by Luc Jacquet
and screenplay by Luc Jacquet and Michael Fessler. A Warner Independent
Pictures and National Geographic Feature Films release. Rated G. (80
min)
"March of the
Penguins" - Photo Credit: Jérôme
Maison. © 2005 Bonne Pioche Productions / Alliance De Production Cinématographique
LA FILM FESTIVAL 2005 AWARD - BEST
NARRATIVE SHORT FILM La Vie D'un Chien by John Harden
With five different programs, each
showing 7 or 8 films, I must admit this year my festival favorite was
Short Program 1 which consisted of 8 shorts from filmmakers of all walks
of life with films just as diverse. But the one short that did it for me
was "La Vie D'un Chien" aka My Life As A Dog by John Harden.
Using nothing but several thousand black and white still photographs
processed on a computer with Photo Shop and several other nifty film
programs, Harden came up with a wildly entertaining piece of work.
Set in 1962 Paris, this is the story of a
scientist who discovers a formula that turns him from human to dog and
back again at his will. . .and with some rather interesting and thought
provoking results - especially when the government gets involved. (I'll
refrain on the humor here, girls, but you know what I'm thinking!). With
this particular technique, Harden was able to photograph in at least 3
different cities in California and then use the computer to put the
photos into film form. As low budget as low can go, Harden called on the
ASPCA for dog trainers who very graciously provided some of their
charges to star in the film.
Debuting at Slamdance earlier this year
and already Short Film Competition Jury Award Winner at the Seattle
International Film Festival, "La Vie D'un Chien" adds the LA
Film Festival 2005 Best Narrative Short Film Award to its laurels. John
Harden is a director to watch in the coming years.
LA FILM FESTIVAL 2005 AUDIENCE AWARD
FOR BEST NARRATIVE FEATURE ME AND YOU AND EVERYONE WE KNOW by Miranda
July
A 2005 winner at Cannes, Miranda July
brings us the endearingly quirky tale of a struggling single father who
works as a shoe salesman and an aspiring film-maker/performance artist.
A narrative comedy, Rich and Christine
meet when Christine (in one of her odd jobs as an "Eldercab
"driver) takes one of her fares to buy shoes. Zeroing in on Rich
with more accuracy than a SCUD missile, Christine is determined "he
is the one" and they will be together come hell or high water.
Juxtapositioning Rich's rather
haphazardly confining lifestyle with that of Christine's, July gives us
a multi-layered work that has stories going on from both an adult
interactive and kid interactive level, delicately weaving the two
generations together with undetectable ease. Perhaps one of the film's
most charming scenes involves the fate of a child's goldfish a la Rudy
Huxtable in Season One of "The Cosby Show." That one scene
sets a tone that is evidence throughout the film. Already and
accomplished video artist, Miranda July brings a silky smoothness to the
both the directing and editing of "Me and You and Everyone We
Know" that makes it easy to see why this was an audience favorite
at the Festival. Currently playing at the Nuart, look for "Me and
You and Everyone We Know" to be a sleeper hit of the summer.
Photo © IFC Films. All
Rights Reserved
THE CENTURY PLAZA by ERIC LAHEY
Although not a Festival winner, director
Eric Lahey's "The Century Plaza" garnered enough attention to
be considered for pick-up by several major film distributors.
A very unique documentary, "The
Century Plaza" was shot in Portland, Oregon and takes a look at the
residents of a single room
occupancy hotel (SRO) by the same name. Diverse and eclectic by nature,
Lahey uses the camera to provide snapshots of the hotel's tenants,
allowing us to meet them up close and personal, but always cognizant
that who and what we see today can all change with the flip of coin
tomorrow.
Using the hotel's one permanent resident,
Rico the Cat, in the form of a silent narrator, we are initially given a
tour of what was once, and still is, a grand form of architecture. With
cinematic technique reminiscent of that of Anatole Litvak in 1948's
"The Snake Pit", Lahey captures every sound that resonates
from each and every corner of the hotel, whirling sound around picture,
taking you in a spiral which at first blush, sounds and feels like you
are being placed in the middle of a snake pit or insane asylum. It is
only from there that identities form and we are made privy to the events
that spiraled these once productive members of society into the
unfortunate circumstances that now brings them to "The Century
Plaza."
By
no means a downbeat or depressing film, this is still a reminder to all
of us that "this could be you." Many of the residents, who
only came to trust Lahey after he became a resident himself for some six
months, have dreams of leaving the hotel and getting back into more
accepted society. Some are especially touching, such as Bob, a convicted
pedophile whose guilt and remorse are genuinely heartfelt. Others have
an incredible sense of pragmaticism which gives way to some rather
riotous moments which when compounded with Rico's take on the situation,
brings forth some real
guffaws. And then we have Greg our self-deprecating and philosophical
gay, drug using Mormon who garners more laughs with his outlandish
antics than anything in the film. But then still others, such as Brook,
who wants to be a stripper and thinks living in a place such as
"The Century Hotel" is "romantic", show gross
amounts of naiveté.
With time lapse photography setting time
and space blended and montaged with 60 some hours of 35mm footage and
still photographs, from the opening shot of a well lighted Banker's lamp
with its swaying brass pull-chain switch to a closing-shot of its
stillness, the film comes full circle. With a limited budget that even
had him using reconditioned riding lawnmowers for some of his exterior
shots, Lahey's inventiveness and creativity are evident. Despite some
technical roughness and an occasional out-of-focus shot, he brings a
consistency to a very inconsistent situation. Written and Directed by
Eric Lahey. (79 min)
AND COMING IN JULY. . .
Opening July 15, Lisa Kudrow and Tom
Arnold head an all star cast in "Happy Endings."
Directed by Don Roos, "Happy Endings" is a heartwarming, yet
wickedly funny film, where worlds collide among a rather interesting
cast of characters.
Gus van Sant brings us "Last
Days". Opening July 22, this is the story of a Kurt Cobain type
rocker who teeters between a refusal to conform and the refusal to die.
Michael Pitt stars the reclusive, on-the-edge Seattle based musician,
Blake. Pitt, one of the most chameleonesque actors of our day, is
mesmerizing with his transformation into Blake. Van Sant, known for
interesting eccentricity within his work, has supporting actors using
their own names (Lukas Haas, Scott Green). Using montage with a 1 step
forward-2 step backward technique, van Sant effectively creates a world
of claustrophobic existence for his characters, providing the basis for
a study in duality. Harris Savides' cinematography is especially
effective as we are faced with the question of whether the course of
events (such as hurtling toward death) can be stopped like a clock. A
fascinatingly compelling work, the combination of Van Sant and Pitt is
an unstoppable force.Photo © Fine Line Films.
Moving to Westwood in 2006, LA FILM FESTIVAL
is a centerpiece event in the Los Angeles film community. Open to the
public, the festival draws over 60,000 attendees and showcases more
than 125 films of varying types from around the world. Produced by Find
Independent, LA Film Festival showcases independent filmmakers and their
work.
|