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Thread: San Francisco International Film Festival 2018

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  1. #1
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    THE OTHER SIDE OF EVERYTHING (Mila Turajlić 2017)

    Prizewinning documentary is an illustration of how the personal parallels the political as it follows filmmaker Mila Turajlić's mother Srbijanka's description of family and national history starting with the subdivision of their sumptuous apartment in downtown Belgrade in the time of Tito.


  2. #2
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    2018 Golden Gate Awards Official Selections
    Presented at the Festival since its inaugural year in 1957, the Golden Gate Awards (GGAs) are among the most significant honors for emerging global film artists in the United States. Prizes are awarded in 14 narrative, documentary, and short film categories and total nearly $40,000.

    DOCUMENTARY FEATURES
    McBaine Documentary Feature Prize winner winner will receive $10,000, and McBaine Bay Area Documentary Feature Prize winner will receive $5,000. Documentary films in competition include:

    City of the Sun
    Rati Oneli, Georgia/USA/Qatar/Netherlands

    The Distant Barking of Dogs
    Simon Lereng Wilmont, Denmark/Sweden/Finland

    Hale County This Morning, This Evening
    RaMell Ross, USA

    The Judge (Bay Area)
    Erika Cohn, USA/Palestine

    Minding the Gap
    Bing Liu, USA

    The Next Guardian
    Arun Bhattarai, Dorottya Zurbó, Hungary/Netherlands

    The Other Side of Everything
    Mila Turajlić, Serbia/France/Qatar

    The Rescue List (Bay Area)
    Alyssa Fedele, Zachary Fink, USA/Ghana

    Shirkers
    Sandi Tan, USA

    Tre Maison Dasan
    Denali Tiller, USA

    NEW DIRECTORS PRIZE

    The Golden Gate Award New Directors Prize of $10,000 will be given to a narrative first feature that exhibits a unique artistic sensibility and deserves to be seen by as wide an audience as possible. This year, ten films are in contention for this award. Narrative films in competition include:

    Djon África
    João Miller Guerra, Felipa Reis, Portugal/Brazil/Cape Verde

    I Am Not a Witch
    Rungano Nyoni, UK/France/Zambia/Germany

    Night Comes On
    Jordana Spiro, USA

    Ravens
    Jens Assur, Sweden

    Scary Mother
    Ana Urushadze, Georgia/Estonia

    The Sower
    Marine Francen, France

    Suleiman Mountain
    Elizaveta Stishova, Kyrgyzstan/Russia

    Those Who Are Fine
    Cyril Schäublin, Switzerland

    Tigre

    Ulises Porra Guardiola, Silvina Schnicer, Argentina

    Winter Brothers
    Hlynur Pálmason, Denmark/Iceland

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 04-13-2018 at 07:51 PM.

  3. #3
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    GARY WINOGRAND: ALL THINGS ARE PHOTOGRAPHABLE (Sasha Waters Freyer 2018)

    Not the ultimate word on this premier American street photographer of the Sixties and Seventies, but a word long overdue. Part of the PBS American Masters series

    MINDING THE GAP (Bing Liu 2018)

    Bing Liu's participatory five-year film project becomes a triple coming-of-age story about three guys with parental abuse in their pasts who skateboarded away the pain. Filmed in failing blue collar town Rockford, IL. Well received at Sunance and SXSW, sponsored by Steve James and Kartemquin Films, this seems scattered at times but winds up feeling healing and true. Part of the PBS POV series.


  4. #4
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    GODARD MON AMOUR/LE REDOUTABLE (Michel Hazanavicius 2017)

    Hazanavicius is good at pastiches and this is a series of them with Louis Garrel and Stacy Martin as Jean-Luc Godard and Anne Wiazemsky in May 1968. A mildly amusing passive-aggressive homage that's surprisingly bland and uninteresting for such a topic. Godard is still alive and making radical films. If anybody needed to make this - which is, however, doubtful - it would have been him.

    See Armond White's comment on this film which he calls "appalling and entertaining." He says: "Even a bad film about Godard, as this one is, introduces people to his genius."

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 04-22-2018 at 12:47 AM.

  5. #5
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    Ones that got away.

    San Francisco 2018 film festival films that might have been cool to see but I missed.




    Boom for Real
    It's no secret that I am a huge fan of Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-88). In fact I did see the show at the Barbican Art Gallery, London (21 Sept. '17-28 Jan. '18) which presumably this doc was made to go with, and watched some of it there. Boom for Real: The Late Teenage Years of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Sara Driver, USA


    Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Untitled (1982). Photograph: Jean-Michel Basquiat/Barbican



    A Kid Named Jake

    The Opening Night Film of the festival, and I got invited to it, but I didn't go. Don't know that I'll like it, but its transgender and class themes make it relevant to today. Coming June 1. A Kid Like Jake, Silas Howard, USA



    Makala, Emmanuel Gras, France A documentary about an African guy who struggles to make charcoal to sell. I've now missed it twice; it was included in a day of ND/NF last month that I missed, and was in the SFIFF too.



    Tully, Jason Reitman, USA

    A new movie starring Charlize Theron. She was the honored actor at this year's festival and the premiere of this new movie starring Charlize crowned the celebration of her career. Which ain't over yet, for sure!

    القاضية

    The Judge, Erika Cohn, USA / Palestine

    Doc about Kholoud Al-Faqih, a Palestinian trailblazer as the first woman judge on the Shari’a (Islamic law) court in the Middle East.

    More to come....


    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 04-14-2018 at 01:39 PM.

  6. #6
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    RBG (Julie Cohen, Betsy West 2018)

    An admiring documentary portrait of the life and achievement (not over) of Supreme court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, now 84 but still not retired. With the heavily conservative court since Bush's two appointments, she represents a further to the left element and must write many dissenting decisions. She has become a liberal pop icon, known as "The Notorious RBG."


  7. #7
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    HALF THE PICTURE (Amy Adrion 2018)

    Half the picture, women think, should be women. Hollywood is a very sexist community, more than most. The percentage of women actually directing films in Hollywood is minuscule, and it starts with a lot of women in film school studying to be directors. They get filtered out, and by the time you get to the top there are virtually none. Ava DuVernay was the first woman to get to make a $100 million movie. It didn't turn out to be very good,, but how many men have gotten to make lousy $100 million movies? Hundreds? Thousands? A talking heads picture. The EEOC has looked into this lately. They have brought charges against all the major studios for discrimination against women.

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 04-15-2018 at 03:06 PM.

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