Posts Tagged 'KID-THING'

Festival Programming Highlights #6: THE ATOMIC STATES OF AMERICA, KID-THING, THIS IS NOT A FILM

As Maryland Film Festival begins its first full day of programming – we’re running films on all 5 screens of The Charles starting today at 11am, as well as MICA’s Brown Center and WindUp Space later today – here’s another round of programming picks from our own Eric Hatch for your consideration.

THE ATOMIC STATES OF AMERICA

THE ATOMIC STATES OF AMERICA
This riveting documentary offers an informative and angering look at the history of U.S. atomic energy. It argues that our nation’s nuclear policy was flawed from the very beginning, and has left us holding a legacy of abysmal environmental conditions, major public-health outbreaks, and dangerously decrepit infrastructure. The filmmaking team here is Don Argott and Sheena M. Joyce, who also brought us both the much-discussed ART OF THE STEAL and MFF 2011’s LAST DAYS HERE.  From the shady politics behind art museums to the dark side of the hard-rock lifestyle, these filmmakers keep tackling intriguingly different topics with consistently exciting results. Bonus points for some very funny (and insightful) appearances from Alec Baldwin! THE ATOMIC STATES OF AMERICA plays tonight at 9:40pm at MICA.

 

KID-THING

KID-THING
We love the Zellner Brothers here at MFF. From their many psychotronic, madcap shorts to their delirious 2008 feature GOLIATH, Nathan and David Z. have long been favorites of Baltimore audiences (and film programmers). Their new feature KID-THING, which premiered at Sundance, gives their aesthetic an unexpected art-house twist as it follows a mischievous 10-year-old Texas girl who, through solitude, has developed a unique outlook on life. It’s an offbeat, sumptuous film that’s like a mash-up of THE CATECHISM CATACLYSM and (the good parts of) TREE OF LIFE. We’re very proud to have both Zellners here, alongside cameraman Clay Liford and lead Sydney Aguirre, who delivers an amazing film-debut performance.  KID-THING plays tonight at 5:30pm at the Charles Theater, and again at 5pm on Saturday 5/5 at the Charles Theater.

THIS IS NOT A FILM

THIS IS NOT A FILM
If you’ve been following the political situation of Jafar Panahi, the director behind such masterpieces as THE CIRCLE and CRIMSON GOLD, THIS IS NOT A FILM is simply required viewing. Placed under house arrest and banned from doing the thing he knows and loves best – filmmaking – Panahi responded with this collaborative self-portrait charged with risk and uncertainty. It’s something like a film, made under severely compromised conditions. As Mika Sam writes in our program notes for the film, “Not merely concerned with the everyday, THIS IS NOT A FILM poses compelling questions about acts of defiance and human expression.”  THIS IS NOT A FILM plays tonight at 7:30pm at MICA and Saturday 5/5 at 12:00pm at the Charles Theater.

– Eric Hatch, Director of Programming

 

 

SATURDAY

 

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

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.

 

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.

LUV, GAYBY, THE COMEDY, and 9 More Announced for Maryland Film Festival 2012!

Following up on last week’s first line-up announcement, the Maryland Film Festival proudly announces twelve more features for MFF 2012 (May 3-6 in downtown Baltimore).

Among these titles are LUV, the Baltimore-shot drama which premiered at Sundance 2012 and boasts an all-star cast that includes Common, Charles S. Dutton, Danny Glover, and Michael Kenneth Williams; GAYBY, fresh from its premiere at SXSW 2012, a warm-hearted comedy about two best friends, a gay man and straight woman, who decide to have a child together; and THE COMEDY, a dark and challenging mix of comedy and drama starring Tim Heidecker.

As with every year, the MFF 2012 full line-up will include 40+ new feature films and 75+ new shorts from around the world, as well as a vintage 3-D filma silent film with live music by Alloy Orchestra, and a favorite film selected by legendary filmmaker and MFF board member John Waters.

All U.S.-made feature films will be presented by their filmmakers.

Without further ado, the second batch of features announced for MFF 2012 are:

ATTENBERG (Athina Rachel Tsangari)
A young woman with a bizarre way of looking at friendship, love, and life spends long hours with her father, their small town’s chief architect now on his deathbed. DOGTOOTH fans take note: ATTENBERG is directed by that film’s associate producer, co-stars that film’s director Yorgos Lanthimos, and has an offbeat sensibility that, while all its own, can only have DOGTOOTH as its closest point of comparison.

THE COMEDY (Rick Alverson)
Tim Heidecker stars in this abrasive, challenging, and yes, hilarious film, arguably closer in tone to FROWNLAND or THE IDIOTS than it is TIM AND ERIC’S BILLION-DOLLAR MOVIE. A group of jaded, ultra-privileged Brooklynites with sharp comedic tongues and little respect for social norms seeks out confrontational situations, with sometimes shocking results.

EMPIRE BUILDER (Kris Swanberg)
A young mother (Kate Lyn Sheil, also of MFF 2012 titles SUN DON’T SHINE and THE COMEDY) seeks a rural retreat from the doldrums of married life. The second feature film from Kris Swanberg (MFF 2009’s It was great, but I was ready to come home).

FOUND MEMORIES (Júlia Murat)
In this stunningly shot drama from Brazil, a young female photographer sets out on a hike and stumbles upon a mysterious village populated entirely by elders. Her well-intentioned presence there disrupts the flow of their daily rituals, causing them to contemplate their mortality and look at life differently.

GAYBY (Jonathan Lisecki)
Warm-hearted, often explosive humor and vibrant characters drive this crossover comedy about best friends—a gay man and a straight woman—who in their 30s decide to make good on their promise they made back in college to have a child together.

KID-THING (David and Nathan Zellner)
This beautifully shot feature from the directors of GOLIATH (MFF 2008) shows us a slice of Texas populated by listless moments, odd behavior, and piles of pop-culture debris – all seen through the eyes of a mischievous 10-year-old girl who, through solitude, has developed a unique outlook on life.

LUV (Sheldon Candis)
An all-star cast that includes Common, Charles S. Dutton, Michael Kenneth Williams, Dennis Haysbert, and Danny Glover drives this Baltimore-set drama about a man who, just released from prison and trying to start a new life for himself, takes an interest in teaching his 11-year-old nephew how to be a man.

OSLO, AUGUST 31st (Joachim Trier)
From the director of the spectacular REPRISE (2006) comes this poetic and deeply moving account about a recovering addict on his first day leave from a recovery program. As he reconnects with old friends and family and fantasizes about a clean life on the outside, will he fall prey to his old demons? Reverently based on the same novel that inspired the Louis Malle classic THE FIRE WITHIN.

THE PATRON SAINTS  (Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky)
This extraordinary documentary gives us a poignant look into the daily lives of residents of a home for the aged and disabled. Incapable or unwilling to self-censor, they say whatever is on their minds, giving us unforgettable access to a phase of human life we may have never before looked at head-on.

PILGRIM SONG (Martha Stephens)
In this atmospheric, sensory-rich mix of comedy and drama, a downsized middle-school teacher in a struggling relationship sets off alone for a hike on the Sheltowee Trace Trail, meeting a cast of characters worthy of Kaurismaki or Jarmusch along the way.

THE SOURCE  (Jodi Wille and Maria Demopoulos)
This is the ultimate documentary about The Source Family, a spiritual group that formed in L.A. during the height of the psychedelic era. Central to their story is their Sunset Strip restaurant The Source, their albums and performances as Yahowa 13, and, above all, Father Yod, a former Marine and jujitsu expert who reinvented himself first as a vegetarian restaurateur and then as a spiritual guru.

WILD IN THE STREETS (Peter Baxter)
Since medieval times, the UK town of Ashbourne has played an annual, multi-day game that divides the town into two groups, the Up’ards and Down’ards, each hellbent on carrying a beautiful handmade four-pound ball to one of two goals three miles apart. This riveting documentary captures the tradition in all its sweat and glory.

Note for press: Festival artwork and images for announced titles are available for download here:

http://mdfilmfest.com/press_images.cfm