Pages 61 - Raindance
Transcription
Pages 61 - Raindance
NOW, I [IMA, BOKU WA] FRIDAY 10 OCTOBER AT 4:30PM Country Japan Running Time 87 mins Format DV-Cam Director/Screenplay/Producer Yasutomo Chikuma DoP Erio Muneta Cast Yasutomo Chikuma, Yoshiharu Fujisawa, Masato Shiga Email [email protected] SCREENING SPONSORS Satoru is a so-called NEET (‘not engaged in employment, education or training’), living a reclusive life in the apartment of his single mother, to whom he barely ever speaks, and literally doing nothing except hole up in his bedroom where he sleeps, subsists on junk food, watches TV and plays video games. One day, at his anxious mother’s request, a young acquaintance Tôsawa appears on the doorstep and attempts to coax him out of his shell, but he faces an uphill battle if he wishes the painfully shy and withdrawn Satoru to venture out into the wider world. This year Raindance is proud to introduce to UK audiences two stunning and highly personal first features both made by directors at the tender age of 23; Ryo Nakajima’s This World of Ours, and this astonishingly confident debut by Yasutomo Chikuma, who not only wrote and directed Now, I…, but also plays its main character. Based on the experiences of some actual friends of his, Chikuma painfully draws attention to a social phenomenon that might be more prevalent than one imagines. Though literally the first time he has picked up a camera, Chikuma acquits himself remarkably in the main role in a film which, despite being realised on an unbelievably small budget of 500,000 yen (under $5000), nevertheless never puts a foot wrong. An auteur is born. JS In Permanent Part-Timer in Distress, Iwabuchi, after graduating from university, finds himself biding time as a part-time worker (furiitâ) for Canon, but soon finds himself stuck in a rut working endless hours for a meager hourly wage and unable to pay off his student debts. Humorously documenting his plight on video, he finds himself uncomfortably hoisted into TV news studios as an unwilling spokesman for a generation of disenfranchised workers following the recent deregulation of Japan’s labour market. But are the media really interested in his situation, or are they too exploiting him for a quick news story? Produced by Yutaka Tsuchiya, director of The New God and Peep ‘TV’ Show, Iwabuchi’s documentary debut is a fine example of someone using new video technology to reaffirm his own identity and reclaim his place in society. JS PERMANENT PART-TIMER… + FUJICA SINGLE … WEDNESDAY 8 OCTOBER AT 9:15PM RT 67 mins Format DV-Cam Dir/Screenplay/DoP Hiroki Iwabuchi Prod Yutaka Tsuchiya E [email protected] W www. geocities.jp/sounan_freeter/e_top.htm SCREENING SPONSORS RT 29 mins Format DV-Cam Director/Producer/S’play/ DoP Kenji Murakami E [email protected] With over a decade of filmmaking under his belt, Kenji Murakami’s independently-produced documentaries straddle the boundaries of fiction and fact. Fujica Single-Date starts off as a lament to Fuji’s decision to cease production of Super 8mm film in 2007, a medium on which so many of today’s established filmmakers honed their craft, but soon meanders into a nostalgic meditation on film and its romantic possibilities. JS Current reigning King of the Pink Film Shinji Imaoka (Lunch Box, Uncle’s Paradise) returns to Raindance’s screens once more with Tender Throbbing Twilight, a quirky and surprisingly touching tale of love at the far side of retirement age, proving that Japanese sex films are not just for dirty old men; they can also be about dirty old men. Funakichi should be old enough to know better, but his burning ardour still keeps getting the better of him. When his wife passes his way, he is reacquainted with an high-school sweetheart Kazuko at a class reunion and finds his youthful dreams of love rekindled. But will the new couple succeed in flying in the face of convention against the wishes of their families to act their ages? JS TENDER THROBBING… + VIRGIN WILDSIDES… TUESDAY 7 OCTOBER AT 9:15PM & WEDNESDAY 8 OCTOBER AT 2PM RT 64 mins Ft 35mm Dir S Imaoka Prod D Asakura Cast M Taga, Y Namikibashi, KYoshioka E [email protected] RT 85 mins Ft DV-Cam Dir/S’play/Prod Tetsuaki Matsue DoP Y Shimada E [email protected] W www.spopro.net/virgin_wildsides/ SCREENING SPONSORS Last year, Raindance screened volume one of The Virgin Wildsides, in which we witnessed director Tetsuaki Matsue’s desperate attempts at initiating a reluctant friend into adulthood by inviting him to a star in a pornographic video to relieve him of his virginity. Now Matsue brings us The Virgin Wildsides Vol II in which a new friend, or rather victim, Yoshirô Umezawa, a reclusive fanboy who has built a shrine in his bedroom, stuck out in the boondocks of rural Japan, to a long-forgotten pop idol, and new quest, to bring him face to face with his obsession. JS SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL 61 THIS WORLD OF OURS [ORETACHI NO SEKAI] SATURDAY 11 OCTOBER AT 6:45PM Country Japan Running Time 92 mins Format DV-Cam Director/Screenplay/DoP Ryo Nakajima Producer Koji Onomichi Cast Yoshihiko Taniguchi, Arisa Hata, Satoshi Okutsu Email [email protected] Website www.peijafilm.nightfall.jp SCREENING SPONSORS TURTLES ARE SURPRISINGLY FAST SWIMMERS SUNDAY 12 OCTOBER AT 4:30PM Country Japan Running Time 90 mins Format 35mm Director/Screenplay Satoshi Miki Producer Akiko Sasaki DoP Gen Kobayashi Cast Juri Ueno, Yû Aoi, Ryo Iwamatsu Email [email protected] W www.goldview.co.jp/tit_e.html Playing with The Milky Audition 8 mins 62 SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL SCREENING SPONSORS Matarai regularly finds himself picked upon by school bullies Hiroki and Ryo, despite the ineffective interventions of their teacher. Spurred on by Ami, a girl so full of self-loathing she regularly self-harms, his attempts at fighting back begin an terminal downward spiral of violence and retribution. Years later, when Ami gets drunk at a party held by her tutor, Hiroki’s university chums send her home early before they begin their usual ‘games’. But the events of the night will haunt all concerned for the rest of their lives. This brutal portrait of disaffected youth is the talking point Japanese film of the year. Its 23-year-old director, Ryo Nakajima, started working on the script when he was a 19-year-old hikikomori, or social recluse, so socially withdrawn that he never left his house, and describes his determination to make this film as an attempt ‘to connect with somebody and break out of my own shell.’ The end result is a raw and anarchic portrait of a generation sick of the world they live in, a generation without hope or future living by their own rules. With as incendiary a debut as this, Nakajima is most certainly a filmmaker to keep an eye on in the future. JS Just an ordinary housewife, Suzume Katagura’s life passes by without excitement or incident. Her husband is constantly away on business overseas, and though he phones her regularly, he seems more concerned with the welfare of his pet turtle. No one seems to notice her, and her daily routine looks set to hold few surprises. Then one day Suzume spots a flier advertising for spies which appears to offer some relief from her humdrum existence. Intrigued, she phones the number and is instructed to rendezvous at a derelict apartment three days later, where she is greeted by an odd middle-aged couple. The two hardly seem like the spies contracted to a foreign state that they claim to be – he is unemployed, she is a shopping mall announcer. Nevertheless, they’re very ordinariness might well be their greatest asset, and at first glance Suzume seems like the ideal candidate to join in their games. With its breezy, easygoing charm and perky array of oddball characters, Miki’s second feature is an ideal entry point into the chaotic and random worlds created by this prodigious new filmmaking phenomenon. JS ACOLYTES MONDAY 6 OCTOBER AT 9:15PM Country Australia Running Time 91 mins Format HD Director Jon Hewitt Screenplay SP Krause, Shayne Armstrong, Jon Hewitt Producers Penny Wall, Richard Stewart DoP Mark Pugh Cast Joel Edgerton, Michael Dorman, Sebastian Gregory Print Source Acolytes Production Email [email protected] BLACKSPOT TUESDAY 7 OCTOBER AT 5PM & WEDNESDAY 8 OCTOBER AT 2:30PM Country New Zealand Running Time 83 mins Format DV Director Ben Hawker Screenplay Ben Hawker, Luke Hawker Producer Freya Blackwood DoP Glenn Miers, Kevin McTurk Cast Luke Hawker, Simon Smith, Camille Keenan Print Source Talking Hawker Pictures Email [email protected] Website www.blackspot.co.nz Playing with The Ambient Medium 10 mins LEFT EAR SATURDAY 4 OCTOBER AT 7:30PM Country Australia Running Time 79 mins Format DigiBeta Director Andrew Wholley Screenplay Lech Mackiewicz Producers Clare Mackey, Lech Mackiewicz, Andrew Wholley DoP Judd Overton Cast Lech Mackiewicz, Clare Mackey, Helena Malczewska Print Source Red Rug Email [email protected] Website www.leftearmystery.com Playing with The Lost Child 18 mins 64 SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL Whilst strolling around in the woods, high school teenager Mark comes across a freshly buried grave and spots an SUV leaving the scene. Deciding with some friends to dig up what they assume to be a dead pet, they find the body of a murdered young girl. After the initial shock of the discovery, the friends agree to track down the killer and turn the situation to their advantage – blackmailing him in a very unusual way, and setting off a horrific chain of events. The film soon takes a sinister turn. The revelations keep on coming, drawing you in and wasting no time before smashing the conventions of the genre. It’s gripping while managing never to be predictable, marking out first time writers Armstrong and Krause as a duo to keep an eye on. Reinforcing Australia’s growing reputation for terrific cinema, there is much to be found in Jon Hewitt’s unsettling directorial effort. At a time where the gratuitous violence of films in the vein of Hostel are deemed as horror, Acolytes is a welcome and refreshing change. It’s not for the faint of heart, but stick with it and you’ll be rewarded with a truly exhilarating experience. CP While driving along the dark late night roads of New Zealand, two young men suddenly find themselves stranded when their car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. The pair decide to wait until sunrise before seeking help, but as the hours slowly pass by and the sun fails to appear, they realise the horrid truth – the dawn isn’t coming. The first directorial effort from Ben Hawker (of Peter Jackson’s Weta Workshop), the film explores the men’s paranoia in such extreme isolation as it becomes progressively more apparent that there is much more to be frightened of outside the confines of their stationary vehicle – and as the events continue to unfold the men begin questioning the very foundations of their apparent friendship. Shot with a crew comprised almost entirely of Hawker’s Weta colleagues over the course of nineteen months (owing to New Zealand’s contrastingly short and freezing summer nights) and achieving on average an incredible 28 shots per night, it’s a stark contrast to their work most people will have seen on the Lord of the Rings trilogy. A clever low budget horror film that succeeds at never being predictable, Blackspot plays on childhood fears and succeeds with terrifying results. This nightmarish vision will keep you on the very edge of your seat. CP Bore is a 40-odd year old Polish immigrant who lives with his religious and overbearing mother. Alienated by his host country having moved to Australia, his isolation is broken when a woman, Kym exposes him her left ear. At this point his life alters and he becomes haunted by and infatuated with her. If, in the moment he was disillusioned by his new home country and lacked the confidence to approach her, he arms himself with a video camera with the intention to document his obsession and desire for her. Shot on mini-DV and moody 16mm, Left Ear is a gritty portrayal of a man who, disillusioned by his new home, trawls the beaches whenever he can, and begins filming his tormented relations with the women who have changed his life. We see Bore through the security camera behind a bank machine, on an empty bus and through his own camera as he films pornography and plays it back – a man isolated behind the camera with the blow-up doll that becomes his substitute for the woman, Kym. ‘I think lonely people should be trained as spies,’ he says, as his obsession and isolation grows deeper and more desperate. Left Ear is a searing, claustrophobic portrait of one man’s isolation as he crosses the line separating obsession and self-destructive madness. TB THE AUTEUR SATURDAY 11 OCTOBER AT 10PM Country USA Running Time 80 mins Format DVC-Pro/HD Director/Screenplay James Westby Producers Amber Geiger, Bryan McDonald DoP Alan Jacobson Cast Melik Malkasian, Katherine Flynn, John Breen P/S Amber Geiger Email [email protected] W www.theauteurmovie.com SCREENING SPONSOR CHOKE WEDNESDAY 1 OCTOBER AT 7PM USA RT 89 mins Ft 35mm Dir/S’play Clark Gregg (novel by Chuck Palahniuk) Prods Beau Flynn, Tripp Vinson, Johnathan Dorfman, Temple Fennell DoP Tim Orr Cast Sam Rockwell, Angelica Huston, Kelly Macdonald P/S Fox Searchlight E [email protected] W www.foxsearchlight.com/choke SCREENING SPONSOR FUGITIVE PIECES SUNDAY 12 OCTOBER AT 2PM Country Canada Running Time 105 mins Format 35 mm Director/Screenplay Jeremy Podeswa Producers Robert Lantos, Sandra Cunningham DoP Gregory Middleton Cast Stephen Dillane, Rade Sherbedgia, Rosamund Pike Print Source Maximum Films Email [email protected] Things are not going well for Arturo Domingo. His career, as the most artistic hardcore pornography director who ever lived, has been in a lull since he stopped working with long-time actor collaborator Frank E Normo. The love of his life, Fiona, is long gone after enduring his jealous rage for too long. There is, however, hope on the horizon. Arturo has a new film in development and is headed to Portland, Oregon (director James Westby’s home and regular backdrop) for a film festival honouring and retrospective screening. In Portland, he is faced with his past in all its forms, and as he attempts to pull his life back together, it may just come apart at the seams. The film’s semi-mockumentary style offers an interesting exposition as we get to know this bizarre pseudo-artist through his personal history. We are soon bombarded with porn takes of famous films, and this is good indication of the tone that Westby has set – the humour is often loud and extroverted, at times purposefully crude, but always cleverly conceived. There are moments of sentimentality, but the film slips neither into soap opera nor adolescent slapstick. The soundtrack, in part provided by Jason Wells, offers whimsy, and a solid driving force for the humour. This film, then, has it all: nudity, copious drug use, and many laughs. JG High school dropout Vincent Mancini (Sam Rockwell) spends his days dressed as an indentured Irish servant at his job at an 18th century theme park. After hours, he and co-worker Denny (Brad William Henke) attend a 12-step sex addiction program. Denny is a compulsive masturbator while Vincent can’t even sit through the class without searching for a quickie. Apart from sex, Vincent’s primary focus is his confused mother Ida (Angelica Huston) who resides in an expensive psychiatric care facility paid for mainly by Vincent’s sideline – staging fake choking incidents at upscale restaurants where he is inevitably ‘saved’ by bystanders only too willing to dust off their Heimlich manoeuvres. These incidents often result in such a degree of emotional bonding that his ‘saviours’ frequently go on to send him hefty cheques out of continued concern for his well being. For his directorial debut Clark Gregg has taken on the daunting task of bringing only the second adaptation of cult author Chuck Palahniuk’s work to the big screen after David Fincher’s brilliant Fight Club. Palahniuk’s legion of fans should not be disappointed. Shot on a relatively small budget over 25 days in wintry New Jersey, this was a project that took seven years to get off the ground despite the fact that Palahniuk himself was championing it every step of the way. SB Based on the Orange Prize winning novel by Canadian author Anne Michaels, Fugitive Pieces tells the story of Jakob Beer, a young Polish boy who witnesses the capture of his family by the Nazis while he escapes and is rescued by a Greek archeologist named Athos. He adopts the boy and eventually they settle in the safety of a Toronto apartment but Jakob remains forever haunted by the family that he lost in the Holocaust. His relationships with people suffer from his obsession with his past. Even into adulthood and now a successful writer, romantic relationships, such as that with his beautiful first wife Alex, do little to fill the endless void. This is Jeremy Podeswa’s third feature. He has also had an impressive career in TV where he has directed many episodes of cult TV shows Six Feet Under and Queer As Folk. Podeswa, himself the son of a Holocaust survivor has described Michael’s book as ‘a sustained work of poetry’. Supported by a superb cast which includes Stephen Dillane as the adult Jakob and Rosamund Pike as his wife Alex, this is an emotionally ambitious film that examines the light and shade of despair and hope and is in itself a work of poetry. SB Director Jeremy Podeswa will be present for a Q&A. 66 SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL GARDENS OF THE NIGHT THURSDAY 2 OCTOBER AT 9:30PM & FRIDAY 3 OCTOBER AT 2:30PM Country USA Running Time 110 mins Format 35mm Director/Screenplay Damian Harris Producer Thomas Carter DoP Paul Huidobro Cast Tom Arnold, Gillian Jacobs, Evan Ross, John Malkovich Email [email protected] Website www.gardensofthenight.com GOLIATH SUNDAY 5 OCTOBER AT 7PM Country USA Running Time 81 mins Format HD Director/Screenplay David Zellner Producer Nathan Zellner DoP Jim Eastburn Cast David Zellner, Nathan Zellner, Caroline O’Connor Print Source Zellner Bros E [email protected] W www.goliathismissing.com Playing with A Fitting Tribute 14 mins PRODUCTION OFFICE SATURDAY 4 OCTOBER AT 6:45PM Country Canada RT 84 mins Ft HD-Cam Dirs Deborah Marks, Steve Solomos Prods Spillos Kapoglis, Deborah Marks, Steve Solomos S’play John Berrie Cast Shauna McDonald, Brandon McGibbon, Maury Chaykin E [email protected] Playing with The Gravity of Belief 4 mins SCREENING SPONSORS Gardens of the Night, is a haunting, gritty and topical story which delves into the world of child abduction. Based on kids, counselors, cops and pimps he met during two solid years of research, Damian Harris has crafted a glimpse into a horrific world that exists in the midst of our own. We meet Leslie (Gillian Jacobs) as a teenager, signing herself into a youth shelter and being questioned about her past. Soon, we are transported to it. Aged 8, she’s abducted and taken to a strange home under false pretenses. It’s only a matter of time before she realises her situation. Scared, confused, angry, and convinced that her family no longer want her, her horrific future faces her head-first. Her only solace in this time is another abducted child whom she befriends; they create a comfort-zone in which they can feel safe. Now, 17 years old with the attitude that ‘friends are just people that haven’t fucked you over yet’, their sense of morality skews as they do their best to survive. Life on the cold heartless streets is tough, with theft and prostitution being the norm. Slowly becoming a part of the very monster that ruined their lives so early on, they must overcome their own devils and re-assess their childhood if they are to be able to live with themselves. RS Recently divorced and professionally dissatisfied, David Zellner’s unnamed protagonist finds purpose in his life when his beloved pet cat Goliath goes missing. It is only when his search ends that his intense and increasingly volatile rivalry with a local sex offender comes to a shocking crescendo that – the aptly credited – ‘Guy’ can move on and start over. The film reinforces the suggestion of ‘the butterfly effect’ and Goliath’s disappearance interrupts the disturbing routine of his owner and forces him to deal with and express the anger building since his failed marriage. When he confronts, without provocation, a local citizen with a history of sex offending, he is putting himself out there in a way he has never done before. Goliath is a comedy with a heart. The Zellner Brothers’ clever script is universally appealing due, primarily, to its variety of influences. The comedic elements, for example, range from prolonged awkward silences and recurring jokes that would appeal to those who prefer more juvenile, gross out gags. Whilst there are plenty of laughs, there are also touching moments which are effectively punctuated by the film’s fantastic soundtrack. By not focusing on overly grandiose situations, the Zellner Brothers have grounded their hysterical but moving triumph in ‘spoofery’. Absurd, clever and inspiring. ZB Shot entirely in one room, and mostly between two characters, ‘Production Office’ recreates the high-tension, insanely minute-obsessed parody of a military campaign that is the ‘below the line’ world of film production. Jane, foul-mouthed and cynical is coordinator of a production office in Toronto that is headquarters for the latest Tales of the Space Knight shoot in New York, and beholden to the overbearing American producer, ‘The Enchilada’. Anxious to get home to her young daughter, she prepares to leave, letting her assistant Justy, an emo-type kid, to handle the wrapping up details when the phone rings. First an actor can’t get through US customs with his plastic light sabres (which, post-9/11, are classified as weapons) then a key costume goes missing, then Jane has to locate a missing actor to fill the role of Spacelord Fauntelroy while the Enchilada’s phone calls become increasingly menacing and a rapid chain reaction takes motion. As evening becomes night and night becomes dawn, Jane and Justy attempt to pull genies out of the bottle while different characters – an amiable if sleazy driver, a degenerate but likeable go-to-guy, a costume supervisor with a bizarre sexual fetish, and a dimwitted PA careen in and out of the action, and the tension is relieved by demented sexual jokes, playfulness, viscious infighting, and bouts of barracks-style humour. TB SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL 67 THE PROJECT SUNDAY 5 OCTOBER AT 2:45PM Country USA Running Time 87 mins Director/Screenplay Ryan Piotrowicz DoP Daniel Sharnoff Cast Michael Stahl-David Website www.theprojectny.com Playing with Nosebleed 9 mins WELLNESS SATURDAY 4 OCTOBER AT 2:15PM Country USA RT 96 mins Format DV Director/S’play/ Producer/DoP Jake Mahaffy Cast Jeff Clark, Paul Mahaffy P/S Handcranked Films E [email protected] W www.handcrankedfilm.com/intro/intro1.html SCREENING SPONSOR The Project is a well-weaved faux documentary delving into the streets of Brooklyn NY narrated in the perspective of first-time filmmakers who have set out to make a documentary about the hardships and conflicts between the city kids and the law. Justin (Michael Stahl-David, Cloverfield) follows two NYPD officers, while his girlfriend Dana and friend John focus on a struggling black youth, Thomas, attempting to move up from his hardships. With his father away in prison, he does what he can in his attempts to be a good son and a role model for his younger brother, while fighting his own battles for popularity, friends and their shady activities. Filled with excitement and promise, the filmmakers dive into their project without knowing the real dangers of becoming so closely involved with their subject. When by coincidence their two stories converge, they rapidly come to realise they’re no longer innocent bystanders, they’ve become participants in the underground world they had set out to document. So close to completion, the trio must now battle their own conflicts. To let the project go, out of safety for themselves or to complete their masterpiece at the risk of becoming the very centre of their own story? RS Thomas Lindsey is a travelling salesman who arrives in a small town seeking investment for a miracle drug by the name of Wellness. He doesn’t really know what the product does and to make things worse the head office has continually failed to provide him with some of the essential sales materials, and it becomes apparent that the company (in which Lindsey himself has invested) and the product don’t actually exist. Set over the course of a week against the snowy backdrop of Warren, Pennsylvania, Wellness depicts a man so desperate to be a success at something in his life that he continues with it, despite all the signs that it’s a complete scam. Jeff Clark’s portrayal of the unconfident but likeable Lindsey is spot on as he deals with the contempt and complete disinterest of the people he is trying to sell to. Paul Mahaffy also shines as Lindsey’s boss who arrives to provide him with some motivation and show him how it’s done – and is absolutely terrifying. The performances are particularly impressive given that the cast is made of non-actors that were local residents at the time of filming. Wellness is a lovely little indie film that features some great storytelling, moments of pure comedy and occasional quirkiness and heart. CP Playing with Inertia 2 mins WHO IS KK DOWNEY? FRIDAY 10 OCTOBER AT 9:30PM Canada RT 87 mins Ft HD Dirs Darren Curtis, Pat Kiely S’play D Curtis, Matt Silver, Patrick Kiely Prods Brandi Milbradt, Kieran Crilly DoP Bobby Shore Cast D Curtis, Kristin Adams, Matt Silver E [email protected] W www.whoiskkdowney.com Playing with Directions 15 mins 68 SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL SCREENING SPONSORS Theo Huxtable is laughed out of publisher Brett Jones’s office after submitting his debut novel, Truck Stop Hustler for his consideration with the words ‘Who wants to read the work of a suburban white kid – everyone’s got one of those at home.’ So with the help of best friend, punk-musician Terence Permenstein, the pair hatch a scheme to relaunch the novel with a more media friendly author – one who will fuel the press and keep the public spellbound. Without missing a beat, pasty-faced dough boy Huxtable is replaced by hard-livng, charisma drenched KK Downey, a towering figure of Dylanesque stature, only too ready and willing to speak for a generation. Terence meanwhile has his own problems – his punk band is going nowhere and his on-off girlfriend, performance artist Sue has hooked up with loathsome music critic Connor Rooney. This is a laugh out loud debut feature from Montreal based comedytroupe Kidnapper Films, most of whom also appear in the film. Of particular note are Darren Curtis (Terence Permenstein) and Pat Kiely, (Connor Rooney) in addition to extra screenwriting credited to Matt Silver (Theo Huxtable). This abundance of comedic talent seems to suggest there just might be something in the polite Canadian water supply that has delivered such a steady stream of brilliantly quirky comedians. SB 9TO5 – DAYS IN PORN WEDNESDAY 8 OCTOBER AT 10PM Country Germany Running Time 114 mins Format Super 16mm Director/DoP Jens Hoffmann Producer Cleonice Comino Featuring Belladonna, Sasha Grey, Mia Rose Print Source Media Luna Entertainment E [email protected] W www.9to5-themovie.com Delving into the controversial world of hardcore pornography, a business bigger than the music industry, Jens Hoffman’s film is an unflinching document of the people who earn their living having or selling sex as a living. Comprising ten stories from America and Europe, 9to5 is a bold step in filmmaking, not for its sexual content, but for giving a voice to the workers in the industry. Taking a particular focus on the San Fernando Valley we are introduced to the studio execs through to distribution, directors and the stars themselves, who range from a couple whose day jobs involve fucking other people, to a retired star who qualified as a doctor now running a healthcare company specifically for the adult entertainment industry. What differentiates 9to5 from other documentaries on this subject is the way in which notions of exploitation are challenged, particularly by the allegedly vulnerable female stars. Of specific note, Sasha Grey, now one of the most successful porn actresses in the world, is revealed to be an intelligent, strong woman who entered the industry to actively push the boundaries of female sexual experience portrayed in adult cinema. That said, Hoffmann acknowledges the negative aspects of the industry through numerous interviews that expose specific types of pressure these women can be forced under. JM Art and Apathy studies the role of political art in the state of Israel amidst the Palestinian conflict and observes the effect the dispute is having upon its cultural aspects including music, painting and poetry. Among the artists whose works are depicted there are contributions from conscientious objectors and a 15-year military veteran who use their respective mediums to campaign for the end to the atrocities that make their lives hell, and try to promote reconciliation through a completely peaceful process. The film examines the segregation of the two countries, and conveys the message that the people of both sides want and end to the atrocities in a conflict that began long before the majority of their citizens were born. CP ART AND APATHY + KAROSTA SUNDAY 5 OCTOBER AT 12:30PM Country Canada/Palestine Running Time 56 mins Format HDV Director Jessica Habie Producer Nirah Shirazipour DoP Yvonne Miklosh Print Source Eyes Infinite Country UK Running Time 49 mins Format HD Director Peter King Producer Rowland Kimber DoP David Procter Print Source David Procter Email [email protected] Website www.ontheagenda.co.uk CHRIS AND DON: A LOVE STORY MONDAY 6 OCTOBER AT 6:30PM & TUESDAY 7 OCTOBER AT 2PM Country USA Running Time 90 mins Format HDV, Mini DV, HDCam Directors/Producers Tina Mascara, Guido Santi Print Source Tina Mascara Email [email protected] Playing with Lovers’ Lane 5 mins 70 SIXTEENTH RAINDANCE FILM FESTIVAL Peter King’s film presents the dualities surrounding the eponymous neighborhood, located in the Liepaja region of western Latvia, which has seen occupation from the Nazis and Soviets. Since the country gained independence in 1994 it has become largely uninhabited, with the remaining residents judged as unruly and dangerous by the outside world. Despite this, Karosta boasts a true sense of community and significant artistic value through the collective K@2, whose events seek to bring the inhabitants together through creativity and restoration activities. JM Christopher Isherwood is the writer whose Berlin Stories inspired the making of the film Cabaret; and this doc is about the long relationship between Isherwood and his younger lover Don Bachardy. It’s not just about a homosexual relationship – it’s about the influence of one artist upon another. When Bachardy met Isherwood it wasn’t quite love at first sight. Bachardy, a much younger man, was starstruck by actors and actresses and Isherwood was just a humdrum writer. But that was to change. Bachardy’s narration examines homosexuality in the 1950s and the dangers involved; the couple’s exciting social life (Isherwood’s stellar circle of friends included Aldous Huxley, Thomas Mann and Greta Garbo) – and Isherwood’s death from cancer in the eighties. We are treated to home footage Of Isherwood and Bachardy from the 1950s onwards. But it is not just a touching love story that unfolds before our eyes, we see the emergence of Barchardy – due to the influence of Isherwood – as an artist in his own right. For Bachardy’s other love is painting and that becomes something that he is truly respected for. Bachardy is a charming, goodhumoured host throughout and tells us, better than anyone could, about the true nature of Isherwood. A truly moving (and, on occasion, even magical) depiction of love. GB