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Sundance 2015
Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2015 8:22 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: The Film Festival Circuit
Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2015 7:25 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: The Film Festival Circuit
Posted: Fri Jan 23, 2015 7:27 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: The Film Festival Circuit
Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2015 3:18 am
by ordinaryperson
Re: The Film Festival Circuit
Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2015 6:22 am
by lacritfan
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2015 12:11 am
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2015 3:02 am
by Jeff
A24 just announced that they picked up The Witch, which has been getting some of the best notices of the festival thus far.
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2015 3:23 am
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Jan 25, 2015 10:01 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Mon Jan 26, 2015 2:15 pm
by Jeff
The most buzzed about titles seem to be Me & Earl & The Dying Girl and Dope.
Me & Earl & The Dying Girl is from Alfonso Gomez-Rejon (whom Wiki tells me was personal assistant to Martin Scorsese, Nora Ephron, Robert De Niro and Alejandro Gonzalez Iñárritu before directing second unit on a lot of major films, and directing that new version of The Town That Dreaded Sundown). It sold to Fox Searchlight through some sort of financing and distribution deal reportedly worth up to $12 million.
Dope is by Rick Famuyiwa who has done several features, including the underrated Talk to Me. It went to Open Road for $7 million.
Both films sound very "Sundancy," but both are getting solid reviews from people whose opinions I respect so hopefully it's not all a lot of Little Miss Sunshine.
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Mon Jan 26, 2015 11:01 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Tue Jan 27, 2015 2:05 am
by ianungstad
Kyle Patrick Alvarez is getting RAVE reviews on social media for his ultra-transgressive take on The Stanford Prison Experiment. It only screened a few hours ago and the only full review I could find is courtesy of former Variety writer Josh Dickney who states that visually and tonally the film is heavily influenced by the work of David Fincher.
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Thu Jan 29, 2015 9:54 pm
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Fri Jan 30, 2015 1:55 am
by Dylan
An extremely positive review of
Brooklyn, starring Saoirse Ronan. The film has been picked up by Fox Searchlight.
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Fri Jan 30, 2015 1:44 pm
by rohmerin
My friend Claudia Llosa visits Sundance for 2nd time, this time with Oscar winner Jennifer Connelly. Aloft
http://variety.com/video/sundance-aloft ... -connelly/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 2:04 am
by ordinaryperson
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 6:22 am
by Cronenfly
Though it's nice to see contemporary American filmmakers taking cues from him, I worry that James White will be to La Gueule Ouverte what Listen Up Philip is to Nous ne vieillirons pas ensemble: an earnest attempt to match Pialat's hairpin emotional turns and deft character shadings that isn't quite successful enough to make you wish you weren't watching the Pialat again instead.
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Sun Feb 01, 2015 2:50 pm
by hearthesilence
Cronenfly wrote:Though it's nice to see contemporary American filmmakers taking cues from him, I worry that James White will be to La Gueule Ouverte what Listen Up Philip is to Nous ne vieillirons pas ensemble: an earnest attempt to match Pialat's hairpin emotional turns and deft character shadings that isn't quite successful enough to make you wish you weren't watching the Pialat again instead.
I never thought of
Listen Up Philip in that way, but I've seen both of those films. I see what you mean and definitely prefer Pialat's. Wasn't Albert Brook's
Modern Romance actually based on it? I've been meaning to see it but it's tough to track down - I know it was released on DVD so I don't want to go the VOD route until I find a disc that's cheap to buy or rent.
Looking back at the last festival, three competitive films clearly stand-out:
Boyhood,
Ida and
Whiplash. The first didn't need Sundance, it was made by an established filmmaker doing pretty damn well and IFC was going to put it out.
Ida was well-established, it already had a terrific run through major European festivals - Sundance was simply its first exposure to the American market. That kind of leaves
Whiplash, and I'd side with the naysayers on that one. It definitely has big supporters here though.
Which films this time around are likely have the same critical respect at the end of this year?
Re: Sundance 2015
Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2015 8:22 am
by Cronenfly
Perry has discussed Pialat as an influence in interviews about Philip (We Won't Grow Old Together in particular; he even provides an introduction on the recent Kino Blu-Ray). Modern Romance seems to me a much better translation of WWGOT to an American context, and even if it was a fairly direct homage (had not heard the two mentioned in the same breath before) fits well enough within the wider context of Brooks' cinema of neurosis as to be the best kind of artistic tip of the hat. The lurching emotional rollercoaster of the Pialat is ripe for Brooks' equally horrifying but more overtly comic treatment of ruinous codependence and consumerism-as-emotional-balm; worth seeing under any conditions, but particularly good as a tonic to Sundance's tendency to put a feel-good gloss on what would in reality be disastrous interpersonal issues.