Posts Tagged '2012 Programming Picks'

Festival Programming Highlights #7: JEFF, GAYBY

As MFF 2012 reaches its mid-point, here’s another pair of programming picks from Eric Hatch–two very different films, both of which have their first of two screenings today, Saturday, and then repeat on Sunday.

JEFF

JEFF
This beautiful, brilliant, and somehow not (visually) graphic film is half-doc, half-fiction, and 100% about Jeffrey Dahmer. That said, this is a million miles from the lurid pulp that comprises most serial-killer film and literature. Instead, what we have here is sometimes quite beautiful dramatic filmmaking a la Gus Van Sant fused to documentary interviews with three people changed by Jeffrey Dahmer—a neighbor, a medical examiner, and the interrogator who got the killer’s confession. We’ll have both director Chris James Thompson and Dahmer’s interrogator, Patrick Kennedy, here for our screenings of this unique hybrid film. JEFF is something unexpected, exciting, and new.  JEFF plays tonight (5/5) at 9:30pm and again Sunday (5/6) at noon at the Charles Theater.

GAYBY

GAYBY

GAYBY
Looking to laugh? You can’t go wrong with GAYBY.  As much about straight people looking for love as it is an insider’s look at the pleasures and pitfalls of modern gay culture, this crossover comedy follows two thirty-something friends who, despite incompatible sexual preferences, decide to make a baby (and do it the old fashioned-way). We had director Jonathan Lisecki’s short of the same name here for MFF 2010 and again for that summer’s Artscape, and it was a runaway hit at both. This feature generously reimagines and expands upon that short, with warm and hilarious results. GAYBY brims with a contagious belief in our capacities for love and friendship—and earns it by never cheating in its honest portrayal of real life in all its messy, hilarious, awkward complexities.  GAYBY plays tonight (5/5) at 8pm and again on Sunday at 5:00pm at the Charles Theater.

– Eric Hatch, Director of Programming

Festival Programming Highlights #1: VITO and PILGRIM SONG

As we roll out the Baltimore premieres of over 100 new movies within MFF 2012 this weekend, we know it can be hard to make your final selections. Each day this week, MFF director of programming Eric Hatch will be highlighting a few titles he thinks you’re going to love.

Today’s programmer picks are the documentary VITO and the narrative PILGRIM SONG. Both have Friday daytime first screenings (to which our Friends of the Festival have FREE access!), and second screenings on Saturday.

VITO – A documentary about the inspiring story of gay-rights activist and Celluloid Closet author Vito Russo.

VITO is an incredibly moving documentary about Vito Russo, a lifelong film lover and activist who wrote The Celluloid Closet and co-founded ACT-UP. Courageous, full of personality, and unapologetically his own person, Vito was a true inspiration. Everyone I know who has seen this film has been blown away; file this one alongside The Times of Harvey Milk as an absolutely crucial documentary about gay activism in the United States. MFF regulars will remember director Jeffrey Schwarz from his William Castle documentary Spine Tingler! Head’s up: his next project is a documentary about Baltimore icon Divine!  VITO plays Friday 5/4 at 1:30pm and Saturday 5/5 at 2:30pm at the Charles Theater.  Click here for tickets.

PILGRIM SONG is an atmospheric, sensory-rich mix of comedy and drama by Martha Stephens.

PILGRIM SONG is an exquisitely shot drama with plenty of laughter along the way. Director Martha Stephens tells the story of a laid-off teacher in a sagging relationship who sets off on a solitary hike along a Kentucky trail. Along the way, he meets a cast of characters both poignant and humorous, worthy of comparison to the films of Kelly Reichardt (especially Old Joy and Wendy and Lucy) and Jim Jarmusch. Fresh from its world premiere at SXSW 2012, Pilgrim Song is a true gem of American indie filmmaking.  PILGRIM SONG plays Friday 5/4 at 2:30pm and Saturday 5/5 at 4:30pm at the Charles Theater.  Click here for tickets.

-Eric Hatch, Director of Programming