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Video: Get to Know 5 More 2012 Tribeca Filmmakers (and Their Films)

Movieline spotlighted filmmakers and trailers from the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival over the weekend and last week . The festival is still underway all this week, so it’s certainly not too late to catch a little Tribeca action. If you’re in New York and want to see some films at the festival (or if you are looking for a taste of Tribeca from afar), here is a sneak glimpse of more of this year’s offerings from the festival’s World Narrative Competition and World Documentary Competition . Tuesday’s spotlights include World Narrative Competition features Nancy, Please and War Witch as well as World Doc Competition contenders The Flat and The List . And in Tribeca’s genre-centered Cinemania section is Rat King . Nancy, Please by director Andrew Semans – U.S. [World Narrative Competition] Synopsis : Paul’s life is good. He is a gifted graduate student at Yale, completing a PhD in English literature, and has finally moved in with his longtime girlfriend, Jen. A bright and promising future seems assured. There’s just one thing. Paul has left an item of great importance at his old apartment: a tattered, personally annotated copy of Dickens’ Little Dorrit, the subject of his dissertation, and he simply must have it back. Doing so will mean recovering it from his casually sinister and inexplicably vindictive former roommate, Nancy, who blithely thwarts Paul’s increasingly frantic attempts at retrieval. His annoyance turns to rage and then to obsession, until his life begins to come undone. Things will get much, much worse before they get better. [Courtesy of Tribeca Film Festival] Comments by Andrew Semans … Nancy, Please quick pitch : Paul has recently moved in with his girlfriend. In the process, he has left something of great personal importance behind in his old apartment. Nancy, his casually sinister former roommate, refuses to give it back for reasons unknown. Paul is confused; Paul is frustrated; Paul is doomed. Nancy, Please is a black comedy that explores obsession, self-righteousness, and the perverse allure of victimhood in New Haven, CT.   …and why it’s worth seeing at Tribeca : It’s a funny and occasionally ghoulish story that tracks the process by which a seemingly mundane conflict can evolve into something truly absurd and truly destructive.   Thoughts about the clip : In this clip, our protagonist (Paul) confronts his former roommate (Nancy) on her doorstep in an effort to retrieve a cherished book that she’s been inexplicably withholding from him.  The Flat , by director Arnon Goldfinger – Israel, Germany [World Documentary Competition] Comments by Arnon Goldfinger … The Flat quick pitch : After my grandmother passed away at the age of 98, my family and I went to empty out the flat and soon discover hints to a mysterious and painful past. …and why it’s worth seeing at Tribeca : [It is] an unbelievable story, the secrets that are revealed, the moving characters – and the deep feelings that the film brings up with viewers. Thoughts about the trailer … The trailer is taken from the beginning of the film and is the starting point for a complicated journey that is about to unfold on screen. The flat is still filled with objects, photos and letters that accumulated over a lifetime. Soon this will all disappear, but along the way, secrets that were hidden, will begin to emerge. The List by director Beth Murphy – U.S. [World Documentary Competition] Synopsis : After working for an aid group tasked with improving infrastructure in war-torn cities in Iraq, young American Kirk Johnson returns home to news that his Iraqi co-workers are being killed, kidnapped or forced into exile by radical militias who perceived them as traitors because of their involvement with the U.S. Frustrated by his government’s inability to safeguard its endangered allies, Johnson begins compiling a list of Iraqis seeking refuge and a new life in America — all of them desperately in need of an advocate. [Courtesy of Tribeca Film Festival] Comments by Beth Murphy … The List quick pitch : The List is a modern-day Oskar Schindler story about a young American who is working to save Iraqis who are being targeted for death because they worked for the United States government and military to rebuild their country.   …and why it’s worth seeing at Tribeca : [The film] shows the human face of the Iraq War, an example of the aftermath of war. And I believe the aftermath of war is something that is all too often forgotten. America has moved on from Iraq, but for Iraqis who worked with our government and military, there is no moving on from the life-threatening reality they and their families face. And in this big picture is a very personal and emotional story of a former U.S. government employee who is single-handedly trying to redeem a nation.   Thoughts about the clip : In this scene from The List , Kirk Johnson meets in a cramped Baghdad hotel room with desperate Iraqis who are being hunted down as “traitors” and “collaborators with the enemy.” All of these Iraqis are among the thousands on Kirk’s list. They are all in danger because of their affiliation with America, and they have all been waiting for years for help from the U.S. War Witch by director Kim Nguyen – Canada [World Narrative Competition] Synopsis : Montreal-based filmmaker Kim Nguyen paints a poignant and harrowing portrait of Komona, a 14-year-old girl (wonderfully played by nonprofessional actress Rachel Mwanza) who has been kidnapped from her African village by rebels to become a child soldier. She escapes from the camp with an older albino soldier and experiences for the very first time the joys of a peaceful and loving life, but a fresh tragedy will force her to confront and fight the ghosts haunting her mind. [Courtesy of Tribeca Film Festival] Brief comments by Kim Nguyen … The War Witch quick pitch : It’s a love story at a time of war, and it’s also a story of resilience in a world filled with magic, violence and poetry.   …and why it’s worth seeing at Tribeca : Definitely, first and foremost, to see Rachel Mwanza, one of the most powerful actresses we have seen on the screen in the last decade.   A thought about the trailer : Hope in troubled times! Rat King by director Petri Kotwica – Finland [Cinemania section] (non-English) Synopsis : Eighteen-year-old Juri spends his days absorbed in his computer gaming world, to the exclusion of school, friends, and his exasperated girlfriend. One night his Internet ally “Modred,” actually another student named Niki, turns up at his door, fearing for his life. Niki is caught in the grasp of a mysterious new online game, and Juri, warned of the dangers but with nothing to lose, eagerly follows him down the rabbit hole. Initially unimpressed with a game that seems to be nothing but a series of banal tasks, Juri soon finds himself immersed in an all-consuming race against the clock for his very life. [Courtesy of Tribeca Film Festival] Comments by Petri Kotwica … The Rat King quick pitch : [It is] the story of Juri, 18, who is looking for a way out of his online gaming addiction only to find himself drawn into a deadly psychotic real-life nightmare by net-mate Niki.   …and why it’s worth seeing at Tribeca : Cleverly constructed and with outstanding cinematography, Rat King manages to combine contemporary issues, such as the relative dangers of gaming addiction, with a fast paced and entertaining storyline.   Thoughts about the trailer : I wanted to show the topic and style of the film. Rat King is a thriller spiced up with horror elements about a high school kid who enters a deadly online game. Read all of Movieline’s Tribeca 2012 coverage here .

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Video: Get to Know 5 More 2012 Tribeca Filmmakers (and Their Films)

Michel Gondry’s Latest to Open 51st Cannes Directors’ Fortnight

The Cannes Directors Fortnight released its 2012 lineup Tuesday following yesterday’s Critics Week announcement and the Cannes official selection lineup last week. Michel Gondry’s The We and the I will open this edition of the sidebar, which was founded in May 1968 in the wake of the massive student uprisings in France. The Directors’ Fortnight styles itself to “independent-mindedness” and is non-competitive (though debut films are eligible for the Camera d’Or prize recognizing Cannes’ outstanding first-time filmmaker). Since its beginning it has showcased the first films of Werner Herzog, Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Nagisa Oshima, George Lucas, Martin Scorsese, Ken Loach, Jim Jarmusch, Michael Haneke, Chantal Akerman, Spike Lee, Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Francis Ford Coppola Sofia Coppola and more. Feature Films : 3 de by Pablo Stoll Ward (Uruguay, Germany, Argentina) – Première internationale Granny’s Funeral by Bruno Podalydès (France) – Première mondiale Alyah by Elie Wajeman (France) – Caméra d’or – Première mondiale Camille redouble by Noémie Lvovsky (France) – Première mondiale The King of Pigs by Yeun Sang-Ho (South Korea) – Caméra d’or – Première Internationale Dangerous Liaisons by Hur Jin-Ho (China) – Première mondiale Le Repenti by Merzak Allouache (Algeria) – Première mondiale Ernest et Célestine by Stéphane Aubier, Vincent Patar, Benjamin Renner (France, Belgium, Luxembourg) – Première mondiale Fogo by Yulene Olaizola (Mexico, Canada) – Première mondiale Gangs of Wasseypur by Anurag Kashyap (India) – Première mondiale Enfance clandestine by Benjamin Ávila (Argentina, Spain, Brazil) – Première mondiale La Nuit d’en face by Raoul Ruiz (France, Chile) – Première mondiale – Séance spéciale La Sirga by William Vega (Colombia, France, Mexico) – Caméra d’or – Première mondiale No by Pablo Larraín (Chile, USA) – Première mondiale Opération Libertad by Nicolas Wadimoff (Switzerland, France) – Première mondiale Hold Back by Rachid Djaïdani (France) – Caméra d’or – Première mondiale Room 237 by Rodney Ascher (USA) – Caméra d’or – Première internationale Sightseers  by Ben Wheatley (United Kingdom) – Première mondiale – Séance spéciale Sueño y silencio by Jaime Rosales (Spain, France) – Première mondiale The We and the I by Michel Gondry (USA) – Première mondiale – (Opening film) A Respectable Family by Massoud Bakhshi (Iran)- Caméra d’or – Première mondiale Short Films : Programme 1 – 1H38 With Jeff by Marie-Eve Juste (Canada) Rodri by Franco Lolli (France) Königsberg by Philipp Mayrhofer (France) Enraged Pigs by Leonardo Sette et Isabel Penoni (Brazil) Les Vivants pleurent aussi by Basil da Cunha (Switzerland , Portugal) 
Programme 2 – 1H25 Drawn from Memory by Marcin Bortkiewicz (Poland) The Curse by Fyzal Boulifa (United Kingdom, Morrocco) Tram by Michaela Pavlátová (France, Czech Republic) The Living Dead by Anita Rocha da Silveira (Brazil) Wrong Cops by Quentin Dupieux (France)

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Michel Gondry’s Latest to Open 51st Cannes Directors’ Fortnight

Ron Howard May Count to 364, and 7 Other Stories You’ll be Talking About Today

Happy Friday! Also in today’s edition of The Broadsheet: Michel Gondry returns to France… Inside India’s disappearing softcore porn industry… The 50 Cent/Mickey Rourke Russian roulette movie you’ve been waiting for is coming… George Carlin may get his own street… and more.

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Ron Howard May Count to 364, and 7 Other Stories You’ll be Talking About Today

VIDEO: This Failed Remake of Star Wars With Simon Pegg and Nick Frost is Better Than the Prequels

Great Day For Movie Lovers: Martin Scorsese and 5 Other Singular Directors Announce New Projects

Somewhere in between false rumors about an Olivia Wilde Tomb Raider reboot and hopefully untrue speculation about another Terminator sequel , six interesting directors including Martin Scorsese, Richard Kelly and Kimberly Pierce announced new projects today. Thanks, movie-news Gods! Granted, not all of these projects will necessarily turn out well (or even at all), but if past work is any indication, the ones that crash and burn will at least do so in a unique, fascinating and hopefully spectacular fashion (Looking at you, Kelly…). Click through for a rundown and place bets on your favorites.

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Great Day For Movie Lovers: Martin Scorsese and 5 Other Singular Directors Announce New Projects

Glee’s Heather Morris on Her Viral Rap Video, Sofia Vergara and Her Lesbian Make Out Scene

The second season of Glee has been an important one for Heather Morris. The actress — who portrays Brittany, the ditzy New Directions member who believes that Dr. Pepper is a dentist — became an official series regular, made her singing debut (in her character’s titular episode), out-danced Britney Spears and established herself as the most reliably funny actor on the Emmy-nominated series. Knowing all of this, Movieline made a point to track down the Arizona-raised back-up-dancer-turned-actress at Tuesday night’s Fox TCA Press Party to ask the break-out triple talent about her hilarious viral rap video , the possibility of a lesbian relationship on the show and her character’s patented one-liners.

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Glee’s Heather Morris on Her Viral Rap Video, Sofia Vergara and Her Lesbian Make Out Scene

See How Michel Gondry Accepted Sony’s Offer to Direct The Green Hornet

As the wonderful Michel Gondry told Movieline this week , his decision to direct The Green Hornet — a film he had played footsie with since 1997 — was not some desperate money grab, but rather the fruition of a lifelong dream: “I came into Hollywood trying to do this movie.” Was Gondry nervous then when Sony finally offered him the opportunity? The director — who is also quite the proficient sketch artist — was kind enough to draw his feelings on the matter for Metro reporter Ned Ehrbar . Click ahead to see the results.

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See How Michel Gondry Accepted Sony’s Offer to Direct The Green Hornet

The Verge: Jay Chou on The Green Hornet and Why He’s Not Replacing Bruce Lee

It’s one thing to have to learn the essence of a character when preparing for a role, but it’s quite another to have to try and learn an entire language . That’s the task Jay Chou faced when he took over as the ever-present sidekick Kato to Seth Rogen’s titular superhero in Michel Gondry’s The Green Hornet . Well, that and the fact that Chou — already an internationally famous recording artist in eastern Asia — is making his American debut in a role that also introduced the States to Bruce Lee.

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The Verge: Jay Chou on The Green Hornet and Why He’s Not Replacing Bruce Lee

‘Green Hornet’ Trailer Showcases Seth Rogen’s Action-Hero Debut

Rogen wrote and stars in the 2011 film based on the classic pulp hero. By Rick Marshall Seth Rogen and Jay Chou in “Green Hornet” Photo: Columbia Pictures The trailer for “The Green Hornet” arrived online Monday night, giving audiences their first peek at “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” director Michel Gondry’s live-action film based on the classic pulp hero. Written by and starring funnyman Seth Rogen, the film has had a long and rocky road to the big screen, having changed studios, cast and filmmakers multiple times since the mid-’90s. The current iteration casts Rogen as Britt Reid, the playboy son of a media tycoon who becomes masked crime fighter the Green Hornet after he inherits his father’s empire. He’s assisted by Kato (played by Jay Chou), a martial-arts expert and gadget genius who had been a close friend of his father. The pair set their sights on the head of the Los Angeles crime syndicate, Benjamin Chudnofsky (played by Oscar-winning actor Christoph Waltz ), and must keep their identities a secret from both the criminal element and amateur detective Lenore “Casey” Case ( Cameron Diaz ), who’s getting a little too close to the duo — and the truth. “The film’s cast also includes “Battlestar Galactica” actor Edward James Olmos and British actor Tom Wilkinson, as well as music (and a possible performance) by heavy-metal rockers Anvil . In the just-released trailer, we get our first look at Chou and Rogen in action, and a hint of what Gondry referred to as the “Kato vision” used by Chou’s character during fight scenes. We also get a good look at the Black Beauty, Green Hornet’s souped-up car , which debuted during last year’s Comic-Con International in San Diego. “The Green Hornet” hits theaters January 14, 2011, in standard, 3-D and IMAX screenings. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Green Hornet.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com .

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‘Green Hornet’ Trailer Showcases Seth Rogen’s Action-Hero Debut

The Green Hornet Trailer: On Second Thought, Maybe This Isn’t So Bad?

Despite a litany of bad buzz , there were always two reasons to remain hopeful about The Green Hornet : Seth Rogen is — for all intents and purposes — very funny, and Michel Gondry is a genius. Like a legitimate genius. And so the preconceived notions that The Green Hornet has to be terrible — which in large part derived from nothing more than the change of a date on the calendar — get left behind within 30 seconds of watching the new trailer. Remember who you’re dealing with here!

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The Green Hornet Trailer: On Second Thought, Maybe This Isn’t So Bad?