Tag Archives: tribeca2012

War Witch and Una Noche Take Top Tribeca Film Festival Prizes

Kim Nguyen’s War Witch cast a spell at the Tribeca Film Festival Thursday evening, winning the event’s $25K Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature, while Una Noche ‘s Lucy Mulloy won $50K and the fest’s Best New Narrative Director prize at a ceremony in Lower Manhattan. Also taking home prizes at the ceremony were The World Before Her by Canadian Nisha Pahuja, which took Best Documentary Feature while Dutch director Jeroen van Velzen’ won Best New Documentary Director for Wavumba . “It’s been so gratifying to see the audiences react so positively to the films, and our juries have been equally passionate. I celebrate these immensely talented filmmakers,” commented Nancy Schafer, TFF Executive Director in a statement. “We salute the courage of the jury to award films that not only tell stories about real issues in the world, but are beautifully constructed and crafted,” said Frederic Boyer, TFF Artistic Director. “The amazing first-time performances by young actors are a tribute to the creativity of the films and filmmakers.”   Screenings of all winning films will take place throughout the final day of the festival, Sunday, April 29. The List of 2012 Tribeca Film Festival winners : The Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature – War Witch , directed by Kim Nguyen (Canada) Best Actor in a Narrative Feature Film – Dariel Arrechada and Javier Nuñez Florian as Raul and Elio in Una Noche , directed by Lucy Mulloy (UK, Cuba, USA) Best Actress in a Narrative Feature Film – Rachel Mwanza as Komona in War Witch , directed by Kim Nguyen (Canada) Best Cinematography in a Narrative Feature Film – Cinematography by Trevor Forrest and Shlomo Godder, for Una Noche , directed by Lucy Mulloy  (UK, Cuba, USA) Special Jury Mention – Alex Catalan for Unit 7 Best Screenplay for a Narrative Feature Film – All In (La Suerte en Tus Manos) , written by Daniel Burman and Sergio Dubcovsky and directed by Daniel Burman (Argentina) Best New Narrative Director – Lucy Mulloy, director of Una Noche (UK, Cuba, USA) Special Jury Mention – P. Benoit, director of Stones in the Sun ; and Sharon Bar-Ziv, director of Room 514 Best Documentary Feature – The World Before Her , directed by Nisha Pahuja (Canada) Special Jury Mention – The Revisionaries , directed by Scott Thurman Best Editing in a Documentary Feature – The Flat (Hadira) Best New Documentary Director – Jeroen van Velzen for Wavumba  (Netherlands) Special Jury Mention – Christian Bonke and Andreas Koefoed, directors of Ballroom Dancer Best Narrative Short – Asad , directed by Bryan Buckley (USA) Special Jury Mention – Ritesh Batra, writer and director of Café Regular Cairo Best Documentary Short – Paraíso , directed by Nadav Kurtz (USA) Special Jury Mention – David Darg and Bryn Mooser, directors of Baseball in the Time of Cholera Special Jury Mention –Tati Barrantes and Andinh Ha, writers and directors of Adirake Tribeca (Online) Film Festival Best Feature Film: On The Mat , directed and written by Fredric Golding (USA) Tribeca (Online) Film Festival Best Short Film: CatCam , directed by Seth Keal (USA) Read more from Tribeca here .

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War Witch and Una Noche Take Top Tribeca Film Festival Prizes

Brad Bird, Christopher Nolan Stay on IMAX Warpath

Where have you read this before ? “In December, Paramount made the unconventional decision to release Ghost Protocol exclusively in IMAX theaters five days before broadening its release. The move, which Mr. Bird advocated, helped catapult the film to the No. 1 spot when it went wide the following week on the way to becoming the highest-grossing Mission Impossible installment yet. For Mr. Bird, the point is that the typical multiplex theater lacks excitement. When he was young, he says ‘if you wanted to see a brand new movie, the only way was to see it perfectly projected in a really big theater with the bulb turned all the way up and an attentive projectionist.'” Adds Christopher Nolan: “These were cameras that had been to the top of Mount Everest, to the bottom of the ocean and into outer space, but people thought we couldn’t make a feature film. It was absurd.” [ WSJ ]

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Brad Bird, Christopher Nolan Stay on IMAX Warpath

Cuban Castmates Defect En Route to Tribeca Premiere

I know at least part of the feeling : “The Tribeca Film Festival premiere of Una Noche , a film about three Cuban teens trying to escape the Communist island nation for a better life in the U.S., was marred by the disappearance of two of the film’s lead stars — who went missing as soon as their plane from Cuba touched down in Miami. Anailin de la Rua de la Torre and Javier Nunez Florian, the 20-year-old Cuban-born actors, were flown from Cuba to the United States on Wednesday and were supposed to make their way to New York on Friday in order to promote the film. But instead, the pair stayed in Miami, according to 20-year-old Dariel Arrechada, the third star of the film who traveled with them.” [ Huffington Post ]

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Cuban Castmates Defect En Route to Tribeca Premiere

Moody Monster Flick? Lesbian Letdown? Puzzling Jack and Diane Debuts at Tribeca

Oh to be young and in love and periodically a flesh-rending creature of globular, hairy, throbbing pulp. That’s the curse heaped upon the eponymous romantics in Jack and Diane , one of the more anticipated — and more disappointing — features in Tribeca 2012’s narrative competition. It’s hard to be too down on such lean passion; Jack and Diane ‘s premiere Friday night amounted to the culmination of nine years of work by filmmaker Bradley Rust Gray, whose acclaimed 2010 drama The Exploding Girl served as sort of a hetero prelude to the lesbian body horror/romance mashup swamping his latest: Diane (Juno Temple) is a hot British teen mess visiting her aunt in New York City, all babydoll dresses, knit watermelon halter tops and purple knee socks, rocked by the hormonal lighting strike that is butch, brooding Jack (Riley Keough). The girls club, they kiss, they bond, they exchange vaguely sweet Manhattan banalities (“I have a Metrocard if you want it”), and then… I don’t even know. On the one hand it’s not worth spoiling; jumpy genre reveals are involved, hinted at by customarily grisly animation by the Brothers Quay. On the other hand, Jack and Diane is too much of a mess to spoil, suffocated in the dynamics of longing without even the hope of dramatic — or even darkly comedic — satisfaction. It’s a movie whose shadowy genre overtones — a girl! In a bathroom! With a bloody nose! And a monster! — surrenders to the same auteurist A.D.D. that sank The Exploding Girl . For once, I would like to see Gray’s New York not refracted surveillance-style through long lenses and the fraught nubile wits of characters whose doe eyes and costumes connote virtually the whole story. Temple’s expressive genius — all matted blond hair and mischievous (and monstrous) pixie — goes only so far against Keough’s near-total blankness, getting most of its mileage out of a single early, affecting confessional between the star-crossed girls. Ultimately, though, it’s hard to know just how seriously to take Jack and Diane , with all its sinewy portent and bizarre porn digressions and tragicomic pube-shaving and actual straight-faced dialogue such as, “Do you have to take a shit? Try to do like I do and fart it out.” Viewers familiar with The Exploding Girl might realize after a while that they’re only staying with Jack and Diane for the promise of more B-list hipster-goddesses losing control; then it was Zoe Kazan’s simmering epileptic panic, and now it’s the viscera-devouring prospect of sapphic passion — in one case featuring Elvis Presley’s grandaughter (Keough’s mother is Lisa Marie Presley) and Kylie Minogue in a heavily tattooed cameo. It is what it is, and it never feels like much more. Nevertheless, there is at least one glint of salvation in Jack and Diane , though it has nothing to do with its filmmaking or performances (and here I should issue a spoiler alert): Keough and Minogue make out to the strains of Shellac’s rare and entrancing hate-punk ballad ” Doris ,” which I suppose means that someone somewhere has a clean MP3 of the notoriously vinyl-only single. Rejoice! Can I have a copy? Read all of Movieline’s Tribeca 2012 coverage here . Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Moody Monster Flick? Lesbian Letdown? Puzzling Jack and Diane Debuts at Tribeca