Posts Tagged 'Maryland Film Festival 2012'

Maryland Film Festival and the American Visionary Art Museum’s Flicks From the Hill present BLUE HAWAII on Thursday, August 16th!

We are pleased to announce that Maryland Film Festival has teamed up with American Visionary Art Museum‘s Flicks From the Hill series to bring you a FREE screening of Elvis Presley‘s 1961 musical hit sensation, BLUE HAWAII on August 16th!

Maryland Film Festival will be handing out limited edition MFF beach balls and other FREE GIFTS while supplies last!!

AVAM’s Flicks From the Hill is a FREE summer film series that screens outdoors on Thursday nights in July and August on Federal Hill at the Hughes Family Outdoor Theater.  Click here for the complete Flicks From the Hill summer schedule.  AVAM is located at 800 Key Highway, Baltimore, MD 21230.

Join us at Flicks From the Hill on 8/16 for BLUE HAWAII!

BLUE HAWAII was one of Elvis Presley‘s most commercially successful movies and included many songs that gained popular appeal, including “Can’t Help Falling in Love”, “Blue Hawaii,” and “The Hawaiian Wedding Song.”  The soundtrack album was number one on the record charts for 20 weeks and included 14 songs, more songs than any other Elvis movie.  Presley was 26 years old when this film was released, and Angela Lansbury, who played his mother, was not quite 36 years old.

SCREENING DETAILS:
BLUE HAWAII
Thursday, August 16
9:00 PM
Hughes Family Outdoor Theater on Federal Hill

SYNOPSIS:
Chadwick Gates (Elvis Presley) has just gotten out of the Army, and is happy to be back in Hawaii with his surfboard, his beach buddies, and his girlfriend. His mother wants him to go to work at the Great Southern Hawaiian Fruit Company, but Chad is reluctant, so Chad goes to work as a tour guide at his girlfriend’s agency.

Maryland Film Festival 2012 Opens TONIGHT!!! Opening Night Tickets Still Available!!!

Andrew O'Hehir

Andrew O’Hehir

Tonight is Opening Night for the 2012 Maryland Film Festival!!  Our Opening Night Shorts Program and Party will be held at the MICA Brown Center, located at 1300 West Mt. Royal Avenue.  Doors open at 7pm and the program starts at 8pm, followed by the after party.  Although online tickets are now closed for this event, TICKETS ARE STILL AVAILABLE and can be purchased onsite at MICA for $50.00 and include the film program and party.  Salon‘s Andrew O’Hehir hosts what promises to be a fantastic evening of the best film has to offer!

Opening Night will be at the MICA Brown Center.

The MFF 2012 Opening Night Shorts are: 

I Am John Wayne (Christina Choe)

The Kook (Nat Livingston Johnson and Gregory Mitnick)

Modern Man (Kerri Lendo and John Merriman)

Cork’s Cattlebaron (Eric Steele)

Fishing Without Nets (Cutter Hodierne)

BREAKING NEWS: SALON CRITIC ANDREW O’HEHIR ANNOUNCED AS MFF 2012 OPENING NIGHT HOST!

Andrew O’Hehir

The Maryland Film Festival is extremely proud to announce that Andrew O’Hehir, film critic and writer for Salon, will host the MFF 2012 Opening Night Shorts Program.  The event takes place at 8pm this Thursday, May 3rd, at the MICA Brown Center, 1300 West Mt. Royal Avenue.

Andrew O’Hehir has been writing about film since the early 1990s for publications including The San Francisco Weekly, The New York Times, SPIN, The Times of London, and The Washington Post.  He started writing for Salon.com in 1995, where he has served as Arts Editor and is now the principal film critic.  His reviews and interviews appear regularly in Salon, and his “Pick of the Week” has become a popular feature for filmgoers. Andrew is a 1984 graduate of The Johns Hopkins University. He joins such esteemed hosts from past years as Academy Award winning writer/director Barry Levinson, filmmaker/comedian Bobcat Goldthwait, and Washington Post film writer Ann Hornaday.

Maryland Film Festival’s 2012 Opening Nights shorts have been announced as:

I AM JOHN WAYNE (dir: Christina Choe; the film won Slamdance 2012’s grand jury award for short films)

THE KOOK (dirs: Nat Livingston Johnson and Gregory Mitnick; award-winning veteran of over 25 festivals)

MODERN MAN (dirs: Kerri Lendo and John Merriman; the team behind MFF 2011’s short Sleep Study)

CORK’S CATTLEBARON (dir: Eric Steele; this will be the film’s world premiere)

FISHING WITHOUT NETS (dir: Cutter Hodierne; the film has screened within Sundance ’12 and Sundance London)

This announcement comes quickly on the heels of this weekend’s news that MFF 2011 Opening Night short director David Lowery (PIONEER) will write and direct the feature AIN’T THESE BODIES SAINTS with leads Rooney Mara, Ben Foster, and Casey Affleck.

The Maryland Film Festival’s Opening Night Shorts Program is supported by a generous grant from the William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund, Creator of the Baker Artist Awards.

For tickets and more information for this event and the entire MFF 2012 line-up, visit:

http://mdfilmfest.com/film-guide-2012.cfm

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

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