PIFF 36: Get Ready for Oregon’s Biggest Film Event

PIFF 36 Opening Night film: THE SAPPHIRES

PIFF 36 Opening Night film: THE SAPPHIRES

We’ve just leaked our first big festival news for next year’s 36th Portland International Film Festival.  The festival runs from February 7-23, 2013 and will bring more than 125 features, documentaries, and short films to the Portland area.  Audiences can expect to thrill over cinematic treats from around the world, as well as films made in our own backyard by members of Portland’s thriving filmmaking community.

Among the titles revealed is our opening night presentation, the hit Australian film THE SAPPHIRES, a period piece set in the golden era of rock ‘n’ roll girl groups starring Chris O’Dowd (BRIDESMAIDS, THE IT CROWD).  Check out the other titles we’ve announced by reading the Oregonian article here.  And, of course, keep your eyes on the Newsroom for any future announcements concerning PIFF 36, the School of Film, and our year-round programming.

You’re probably wondering when and where you’ll be able to purchase tickets for next year’s festival.  Festival tickets don’t go on sale until end of January but you can get your PIFF Pass early and beat the crowds! A PIFF pass is a Director Level membership at the NW Film Center. In addition to the benefits of not waiting in Festival lines and getting in free to the Opening Party, you can enjoy cinema year-round and get exclusive invites. Buy your pass today and mark your calendar: http://www.nwfilm.org/donate/silverscreen/join.

Adjust Your Tracking #6: Midnight Marauders

Adjust Your Tracking is the podcast produced through the facilities of the Northwest Film Center Newsroom. The show is hosted by Joe von Appen and Erik McClanahan, and is produced by Jessica Lyness and Laurel Degutis. Opinions expressed are that of the hosts, and not necessarily of the Northwest Film Center. In episode 6, Joe and Erik conclude their coverage of the 35th Portland International Film Festival with three segments, starting things off by digging deep in to a topic that’s near and dear to our black little desensitized hearts, cult fandom and midnight movies. In the second act we review and highly recommend you seek out the British genre mashup shocker “Kill List,” which screens this Friday at 11:30 at Cinema 21, as part of PIFF After Dark. We also have a bonus spoiler section of our chat on this film, which can be found here below the regular episode. After you’ve seen it make sure to come back and give that a listen to hear our thoughts on what actually happens in this insane film. In the last segment, Erik interviews Michael Roskam, the writer/director of the Oscar nominated Beglian film, “Bullhead.”

Don’t forget PIFF ends this Sunday, February 26, the encore screening day. Head to the Film Center Web site for all information on the films and how to purchase tickets in advance. New episodes of AYT are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. You can download the podcast by right-clicking the link below and selecting ‘Save Link As…’ Once saved, the show can be played in iTunes or any other mp3 player. Or stream it on the embedded player.

AYT #6


(**Spoilers Below**) Do not listen until you’ve seen “Kill List.” Or if you don’t care and wan’t to know our interpretation of the film, mainly what the ending means, click on the player below. If you agree or disagree with us, please leave a comment.


PIFF Recommendation: “Elena”

A review by Adjust Your Tracking co-host Erik McClanahan, previously published at The Playlist on Indiewire.

There are fewer things in cinema more satisfying than a filmmaker in total control of their story. Sure, we love the visceral thrill of a well-choreographed, impeccably staged action sequence as much as the next red-blooded human being. And there’s the perfect combination of song/score over moving images, blissful moments heightened through all the tools available in the medium. But those rare moments when a film has just begun, and the feeling sets in immediately that you’re in good hands; that no matter what happens in this film, you can trust the filmmaker has thought everything through and knows what he or she is doing.  It’s a good feeling. Comforting even. But it’s rare.

[Read more...]

Adjust Your Tracking #5: The PIFF With An Interview

Adjust Your Tracking is the podcast produced through the facilities of the Northwest Film Center Newsroom. The show is hosted by Joe von Appen and Erik McClanahan, and is produced by Jessica Lyness and Laurel Degutis. Opinions expressed are that of the hosts, and not necessarily of the Northwest Film Center. In episode 5, Joe and Erik continue their coverage of the 35th Portland International Film Festival with two segments. In the second half of the show, Erik speaks on the phone with one of the directors of the excellent baseball documentary Pelotero, playing twice in the following week. Segment 1 sees the hosts recommending several titles that should not be missed at the festival. Don’t forget the PIFF ends February 25. Head to the Film Center Web site for all information on the films and how to purchase tickets in advance.

New episodes of AYT are released every Thursday, so make sure to come back and check out what Joe and Erik are discussing every week. We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments section, or feel free to email adjustyourtracking@gmail.com or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/adjustyourtrack. You can download the podcast by right-clicking the link below and selecting ‘Save Link As…’ Once saved, the show can be played in iTunes or any other mp3 player. Or stream it on the embedded player.

AYT #5


PIFF Recommendation: ‘Bullhead’

A review by Adjust Your Tracking co-host Erik McClanahan, previously published at The Playlist on Indiewire.

“No matter what you do or think, one thing is for sure, you’re always fucked. Now, tomorrow, next week or next year, until the end of time, fucked.”

The opening voiceover in “Bullhead,” from Belgian director Michael R. Roskam, expresses, in no uncertain terms, anything other than a deeply pessimistic view of the world. It’s a bold move by Roskam, in his debut feature film, and works twofold: it properly orients the viewer in to the film’s universe and subject matter, the illegal trade in growth-hormone-laced beef in Belgium; and it bluntly contextualizes the mindset of our protagonist, Jacky (Matthias Schoenaerts). Is this bleak outlook justified?

A resounding yes. “Bullhead” works because, similar to some other strong films that made the festival rounds in 2011 – the excellent “Miss Bala” and “Policeman” – it never descends in to didactic grandstanding, instead opting for a more subtle, nuanced approach that respects the intelligence of its audience. Don’t expect to learn too much about this seedy trade (and, honestly, why would you, that’s better suited for a documentary any way), but if you view the film as a character study first and foremost, you’ll be rewarded with a gripping, assuredly constructed piece of melodrama that also dabbles in the ever ubiquitous world of the crime genre.

Actually, come to think of it, melodrama is the wrong word, for it connotes a sensationalized dramatic outline predicated on the notion that the laws of cause and effect do not matter, or at least go unexamined, in the interest of plot and exaggerated emotions over characterization. Whatever generic label you want to throw at “Bullhead,” it’s impossible to say it sacrifices character development for plot and theatricality, or that anything we’re shown in the film is superfluous. On the contrary. Every detail, flashback, character connection and family history matters here. In fact, you could argue that Roskam, who also wrote the script, almost goes too far in connecting all the dots, not unlike the best show currently on television, “Breaking Bad.” So thorough and insistent is he on proving the worth of each scene, and how they all matter later on in the story, that you may find the film to be a bit tiresome and overly-reliant on coincidence.

You will not hear that argument at The Playlist, though. This is a film especially for an audience that hates waste; people who want every minute to count, for each scene to mean something, and add to the bigger picture. Schoenaerts gives the kind of performance that makes stars out of other, more fortunate actors. His portrayal of Jacky, a hulking mass of steroidal tension, is revelatory. We were sure we had this guy figured out from the beginning. He’s just another jockish tough guy who’s used his size and strength to reach a level of success in this criminal milieu, right? Wrong. As each scene comes and goes, another layer is stripped away from Jacky, revealing a deep sadness and tragedy to the character that was always there in his eyes, but protected by pure machismo. Hopefully other smart, film-savvy directors out there discover “Bullhead” and give this guy more work, because Schoenaerts nearly reaches Tom Hardy-in-“Bronson”-level magnificence, even though the two films are very different.

Jacky injects and swallows a freaking medicine cabinet worth of “supplements” in to his body every day, a routine that usually ends with him standing naked in his room flexing and punching at air. He’s trying to prove his worth to himself. In this world, your value is measured by your manhood, and well, Jacky has a lot of issues in that department. When the film suddenly flashes back 20 years, the big piece of this character’s puzzle is exposed, and gracefully explains so much of his behavior and action up to that point. Movies are often far too reductive when they purport the clichéd one big moment in a character’s history that defines them for the rest of their life. Again, not so in the case of “Bullhead.” It’s interesting to think how different, and frustratingly opaque, this film would be without any of the flashbacks. Mostly, it’s that the one big moment in this film would, in fact, absolutely define a man for the rest of his life, and irrevocably change his life forever.

If Rob Zombie proved with his unnecessary “Halloween” remake that giving the back story and reasons for the creation of a “bad guy” takes the piss out of what makes Michael Myers scary, then Roskam has successfully countered that argument with “Bullhead.” Do not mistake this comparison. We’re not saying Jacky is the next slasher villain ready for his own franchise and a doll adorned on every Hot Topic shelf across the country. It’s more that we love being proven wrong, believe it or not. There are no “rules” to cinema in the end. It’s ok to feel bad for this guy. It wasn’t his fault. This is evidence that giving us the how and why for the creation of a sociopath can actually strengthen a film. In “Bullhead,” having sympathy for the devil is justified.

“Bullhead” screens tonight, Feb 14 at the Whitsell Auditorium at 8:45 p.m.  For more information check out the official PIFF Web site.

 

PIFF Recommendation: ‘Breathing’

Written by Nick Bruno. This review has been re-published from the blog The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

Roman Kolger (Thomas Schubert) has a problem.  He’s been in prison since the age of 14 and now, at age 19, needs to find work in order to gain parole.  He’s not terribly animated, motivated or skilled, so it seems awfully befitting when he falls into a job as an undertaker.  Breathing (Atmen) is a slow-moving, Austrian character piece that hovers warily over its protagonist, rarely offering hope but, patiently, revealing small details and slight grace notes that allow for insight into Roman’s plight.

At first, there is only one thing we know about Roman; he’s alone in this world.  The only advocate he has is a social worker who drives him around town, prepping him for an upcoming parole hearing.  The film is predominantly built upon extended moments of observation that yield small reveals, most of which occur in the spare moments when Roman risks interaction with others.  There is a fleeting encounter with a girl on the train back to his holding cell.  A failed attempt to reach out to a co-worker.  And another involving an older woman…but I don’t want offer up too much, especially since this is a film that hinges so delicately on little details.

Austrian actor-turned-director Karl Markovics understands that explanations aren’t of primary concern to his story.  Instead, he sticks with small events and repeated passages, like the indignities that Roman must endure each night as he returns to prison, to draw in the viewer.  It’s a particularly strong directorial debut for Markovics, who has spent much of his prior career on television and in the theater.  Likewise, Schubert’s turn as Roman, his first film role, has an appropriately affectless feel to it.  He plays Roman as someone who has been abandoned by society; a truth that only deepens as the evidence of his life unfolds.

“Breathing (Atmen)” screens tonight, Feb. 14th at the Lake Twin Cinema at 6 p.m. For more information check out the official PIFF Web site.

PIFF Recommendation: ‘The Fairy’

Written by Nick Bruno. This review has been re-published from the blog The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

Fans of absurdist humor shouldn’t hesitate to rush out to one of the upcoming screenings of The Fairy, the newest comedy from the French acting/directing trio of Dominique AbelFiona Gordon and Bruno Romy (L’icebergRumba).  How to begin talking about this one?  It’s a film powered by it’s own off-kilter logic, beginning with a woman (Gordon) walking into the lobby of a hotel, bluntly declaring herself a fairy and offering the desk clerk (Abel) three wishes.  Odd as that sounds, the truly weird and wonderful thing about that moment (and the majority of what follows) is the wide-eyed acceptance by these characters of everything and anything that the story throws at them.

Take for instance, the romantic underwater dance scene that paves the way for a baby to enter the narrative.  Any other film that might orchestrate as pleasurably surreal a sequence as this would likely have it spring from the dream state of one of its characters.  Not at all the case inThe Fairy.  The scene, which comes off as some kind of hybridized love child of the classic output of Buster Keaton and the Fleischer brothers, is played completely straight, as if there is no distinction between the reality of the hotel and the undersea dance palace where Dom and Fiona boogie the night away.

I’d never seen anything by Abel, Gordon and Romy before catching The Fairy (something I’ve since remedied with a home viewing of L’iceberg).  Their style strikes me as a fresh, revisionist take on farce that regularly slips into extremely amusing displays of whimsy.

There’s really no one to whom I wouldn’t recommend this film, unless there’s someone out there with a grudge against laughter and fun.  It’s entirely fine for older kids, although it certainly isn’t aimed at a children’s audience.  It isn’t often that something with the potential to have such a wide demographic appeal plays the art house circuit (the last example I can think of is A Town Called Panic).  Seriously, don’t miss it, okay?

“The Fairy” screens tonight, Feb. 14th at the Lake Twin Cinema at 8:30 p.m. 

PIFF Recommendation: ‘Café de Flore’

Written by Nick Bruno. This review has been re-published from the blog The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

When writing during PIFF 34 about Le Quattro Volte (The Four Times), I noted that every year there’s at least one film at the festival that seems to come out of nowhere, surprising me to no end and causing me to wonder how it escaped being caught up in the festival-circuit hype machine. This year, Café de Flore is that film.

Directed by Jean-Marc Vallée (C.R.A.Z.Y.The Young Victoria), this French-Canadian import had me aware that I was watching a truly great film in the first fifteen minutes, something that always makes me nervous, worrying about the path that the rest of film will take, hoping that the delicate balance struck by the filmmakers doesn’t dissipate before the end credits crawl across the screen.

Café de Flore did not disappoint. Vallée is unapologetic in his attempts to wow the audience with the sheer audacity of how he intends to tell the story.  His technique is an invigorating mixture that pulls from familiar scenarios; a man who regrets where his choices have led him, while pushing the tale with a structure that offers unique thrills throughout.

At the beginning of the film, we’re introduced to three characters: Antoine (Kevin Parent), Jacqueline (Vanessa Paradis) and Carole (Hélène Florent). Thanks to the fact that dreams are heavily involved in the story — one of the three characters is a somnambulist – it’s initially unclear if all of the characters are real, due to the disruptive nature of the quick shifts between sleeping and waking states and Vallée’s clever use of differing color palettes. This ambiguity, coursing through the whole of the picture, heightens the storytelling beyond the base realities of the lives portrayed. The result is a film that dares the audience to care; a drama with all the dressings of a tense thriller.

I’ll be very surprised if I am still not raving about Café de Flore at the end of the year. So far, I’ve seen twenty-four of the features programmed for this year’s festival. Of that number, Café de Flore easily rests in the top three overall.

“Café de Flore” screens at the Lloyd Mall 5 on Feb. 13th at 6 p.m.  A final screening will occur on Monday, Feb. 20th at the Cinema 21 at 7:30 p.m. For more information and to purchase tickets in advance, check out the official PIFF Web site.

Las Acacias

Argentina’s Pablo Giorgelli delivers a film that, like any good road trip, unfolds slowly- but by the end, has us wishing it could start all over again. This beautiful film is the winner of the Camera d’Or for Best First Feature at the Cannes Film Festival, and the Premio Horizontes Prize for Best Latin American Film at the San Sebastián International Film Festival.

The story takes place on the long road from Paraguay to Buenos Aire, as Rubén, a truck driver delivering a load of Acacia wood, reluctantly takes Jacinta and her young child Anahí along as a favor for a friend.  As they adjust to each other’s company on the long trip, the words they exchange come few and far between- but despite Rubén’s struggle to accomodate his new travel partner, they slowly grow comfortable with one another, sharing more in their silence than many friends share in hours of conversation. As the miles disappear and their destination grows closer, the pair realizes that they aren’t ready for the journey to end after all.

Showing at PIFF35 Monday, February 13th at 8:45 PM (Lloyd Mall 5), and Wednesday, February 15th, at 8:30 PM (Lake Twin Cinema)

PIFF Recommendation: ‘Monsieur Lazhar’

Written by Nick Bruno. This review has been re-published from the blog The Rain Falls Down on Portlandtown.

Philippe Faladeau’s Monsieur Lazhar travels well-trodden cinematic ground; it’s easily filed into the inspirational teacher genre, of which there are already some fairly successful models out there (To Sir, with Love and Stand and Deliver come to mind).  So it’s nice to see that what could have been yet another by-the-numbers entry is, in fact, an intelligent and humanistic look at a group of students and the adults mentoring them through the healing process in the wake of a tragic event.

Bachir Lazhar (Mohamed Fellag) is a man who has recently immigrated to Quebec from his Algerian homeland.  He shows up at the elementary school where most of the action of the film takes place, seeking to replace a teacher who has recently died.  While the circumstances behind Bachir’s move are complicated, they make him the ideal candidate for dealing with a classroom packed full of children who have recently experienced their own loss.

While Fellag is wonderful in the film, exuding both deep sorrow and empathy, often in the same moment, the children’s performances are amazingly nuanced as well.  This is especially true of the work of Sophie Nélisse and Émilien Néron, both of whom fearlessly project a complexity beyond their years.

Monsiuer Lazhar is an excellent film with an emotional core that has the potential to resonate for all ages (however, younger children might have difficulty with the themes or the fact that the film is subtitled).  In many ways, it reminded me of Thomas McCarthy’s The Visitor, another film that tackles difficult subject matter in an optimistic fashion without attempting to declaw the more troubling aspects at play.

“Monsiuer Lazhar” screens at the Lloyd Mall 6 today at 6:15 p.m.  Its final screening is  on Wednesday, Feb. 15th at Pioneer Place 5 at 8:45 p.m. For more information and to purchase tickets in advance, check out the official PIFF Web site.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 44 other followers