00 - 00 : 00 : 00

Banner

Film Listings

Fri Feb 10, 2012

Tue Feb 14, 2012

Wed Feb 15, 2012

Fri Feb 17, 2012

Fri Feb 24, 2012

Wed Feb 29, 2012

Fri Mar 02, 2012

Sat Mar 03, 2012

Thu Mar 08, 2012

Fri Mar 09, 2012

Wed Mar 14, 2012

Fri Mar 16, 2012

Fri Mar 23, 2012

Wed Mar 28, 2012

Fri Mar 30, 2012

Fri Apr 06, 2012

Wed Apr 11, 2012

Fri Apr 13, 2012

Fri Apr 20, 2012

Wed Apr 25, 2012

Fri Apr 27, 2012

Fri May 04, 2012

Wed May 09, 2012

Fri May 11, 2012

Wed May 16, 2012

Fri May 18, 2012

Fri May 25, 2012

Fri Jun 01, 2012

Fri Jun 08, 2012

Fri Jun 15, 2012

Fri Jun 22, 2012

Fri Jun 29, 2012

Tue Jul 03, 2012

Fri Jul 13, 2012

Fri Jul 20, 2012

Fri Jul 27, 2012

Fri Aug 03, 2012

Fri Aug 10, 2012

Wed Aug 15, 2012

Fri Aug 17, 2012

Fri Aug 24, 2012

Fri Aug 31, 2012

Fri Sep 14, 2012

Fri Sep 21, 2012

more listings



Tribeca dispatch #9

Posted by Pierre-Alexandre Despatis on May 07, 2006
Source: None
[Pierre-Alexandre Despatis suffers for his cinema. Now covering his second edition, our official festival reporter and multi-function human cyborg will provide us the sights (plenty of cool pics!), the sounds, the reviews and the occasional interviews of the still very young 5th edition of the Tribeca film festival. Below are some of Pierre-Alexandre’s reviews in easy to read, insightful capsule form. Enjoy!]







MIST IN THE PALM TREE
Tribeca's selection of experimental films has been a wealthy bunch this year. This anti-film by Carlos Molinero and Lola Salvador relates the biographical flashes of Santiago Bergson and focus on a few events that that marked his life. As his daughter notes, "It's as if he never existed"-- no one remembers him! Of course, Bergson never existed and even his daughter is played by three separate actresses living in three different places. The poetry of the film is very reminiscent of Chris Marker's LA JETEE with remarks like "I have photographed the future" and a very interesting montage of still images and archival footage dating from the first half of the century. The film is composed of 6 segments. While some are better than others, overall the film, and especially the third segment which imitates a silent film with inter-titles, is purely exquisite. The mix of archival footage with the narration and industrial/house music makes up for a very fascinating film to watch – and watch again. The theater was full (400 seats) on a Friday night for the fifth screening of the film, let alone the film is an experimental film(!) – and most of the people stayed for the Q&A. This is another indication of the film's compelling narrative and visual treatment. Definitely, one of Tribeca's best films this year.



THE TV SET
Jake Kasdan’s THE TV SET tells the tale of a TV writer (Duchovny) who is faced with many problems as a studio has agreed to shot a pilot of the series—he soon discovers that they have very different artistic visions. The usual! Already on day one, problems emerge; the series is centered around a brother who kills himself, and for the casting of the lead, the writer bring in 2 actors—one very bad, and one very good—knowing his first choice will be selected, of course. Well, not quite; the brother killing himself thing is deemed too depressing by the studio and, surprise-surprise(!), the TV execs prefer the very bad actor. From then on things go to the worse for the writer. The film is funny throughout, but it manifests itself in a light tone. It's nothing compared to the adventures found in Mamet’s STATE AND MAIN movie set, which was pure fun to delve into. THE TV SET lacks in the wittiness department, yet on some level remains a fair watch.



BLESSED BY FIRE
Tristán Bauer's film opens with a fake documentary sequence during which an agitated protest in the Argentinean streets is filmed by a TV crew. The remarkably well-shot footage is soon followed by the sirens of an ambulance going to rescue a war veteran. From then on, the film combines a very interesting parallel montage, alternating between the atrocities of the war that lead to the man's suicide attempt with footage of him and his family after his suicide attempt. This kind of juxtapositioning is not new by any means but here it's well balanced. Both the war footage and the modern footage are compelling in the manner in which they are combined together. The film’s strong points include: the superb and dramatic cinematography as well as an intense narrative. BLESSED BY FIRE goes beyond the usual war film genre conventions and plays with the genres' conventions and allies’ drama, action and sometimes comedy in a quite innovative manner.

Tribeca Dispatch #8
Tribeca Dispatch #7
Tribeca Dispatch #6
Tribeca Dispatch #5
Tribeca Dispatch #4
Tribeca Dispatch #3
Tribeca Dispatch #2
Tribeca Dispatch #1
Tribeca Preview


Comments

ADD A COMMENT

You must be logged in to add a comment
Banner

 

January Spotlight

January Spotlight

Coming Soon!

See My All Time Top 10 Films

deco

Reviews

Review: V/H/S

Review: V/H/S

"Overall, V/H/S is a slick and fun little romp of offerings from some newer voices in horror cinema. A much publicized incident of a couple vomiting and suffering seizures during the premier screening at Sundance 2012 may have has more to do with altitude sickness rather than disturbing imagery, as most of what occurs is quite tame by today’s horror standards. But the two standout elements of the anthology are the book ends."


more reviews

Interviews

main feature right

Interview: Daniel Mulloy (Baby)

Brit Daniel Mulloy is an award-winning short filmmaker (over 80 fest awards folks) who belongs to both the extended Sundance filmmaking family and a celluloid loving family of his own -- we've featured his sister Lucy and her debut film, Una Noche which is headed off to Berlin next month. We've been keeping tabs on the helmer since 2006's "Antonio’s Breakfast," and it was last year where I got to speak to Mulloy about what should be the last of a string of shorts, before he embarks on the feature filmmaking portion of his career.


right column more interviews

Festivals

festival photo

2012 Berlin Int. Film Festival (62nd)

Berlin: an exciting, cosmopolitan cultural hub that never ceases to attract artists from around the world. A diverse cultural scene, a critical public and an audience of film-lovers characterise the city. In the middle of it all, the Berlinale: a great cultural event and one of the most important dates for the international film industry. Around 300,000 sold tickets, more than 19,000 professional visitors from 115 countries, including 4,000 journalists: art, glamour, parties and business are all inseparably linked at the Berlinale.


festival link more

Community Film Ratings

community link more