EuroCinema: New Films from
EuropeDiscuss this series with
other film fans on:
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This series is also at the Aero Theatre June 8 - 14!
Presented in association with « European
Languages and Movies in America »
With the support of the Goethe
Institut Los Angeles; Holland Film; the Consulate General of the Netherlands, Los Angeles;
the Italian Cultural Institute Los Angeles; the Italian Trade Commission; the Consulate
General of the Republic of Poland; the French Film and TV Office, Consulate General of
France in Los Angeles.
When one says European Cinema, one often thinks of major film
movements. German Expressionism, Italian Neorealism, the French New Wave, the Czech New
Wave, the Polish Film School, the New German Cinema, Dogme 95 - filmmaking more in the
auteur tradition than American Cinema.
Yet to be defined, todays European Cinema is very much alive,
although it often has difficulties finding access to American screens. Film critics
travelling the festival world always talk about all the amazing films that do not make it
to LA. This is a showcase for a few of those festival favorites that have yet to appear on
the big screens of Los Angeles -- and most likely will not.
With films by many acclaimed filmmakers: from Irelands John
Boormans is THE TIGERS TAIL a smart black
comedy thriller with the "haves" and the "have-nots" on center stage;
from hollands Alex van Warmerdam's WAITER, is a delightfully
deadpan comedy on a writer and his character, from Frances Claire Denis
is TOWARD MATHILDE, a documentary "pas de deux" and an exploration
of dance; from Greeces Theo Angelopolous is TRILOGY: WEEPING MEADOW,
a historical tableau of the 20th century with the resonance of a classic
Greek tragedy; and a few discoveries like Belgiums first time director Fien
Troch's SOMEONE ELSE'S HAPPINESS, a dramatic portrait of human loneliness in
post-industrialized civilization; Germanys Stefan Krohmers second
feature SUMMER 04, a Rohmerien tale of a family summer vacation and
Polands Michal Rosas WHAT SUN HAS SEEN, a patchwork that captures the
texture of life in Poland today as ordinary people struggle for dignity. And not to be
missed LA TERRA, an astonishing Italian Noir, the eighth film of Sergio Rubini.
This series would not have been possible without the support of ELMA
-- European Languages and Movies in America -- a new non-profit organization
supporting the presentation of European movies in Los Angeles and the support of all the
various Consulates and European cultural organizations.
Check our website for in person guests for this series.
Thursday, June 7 7:30 PM
Los Angeles Premiere! THE
TIGER'S TAIL, 2007, Ireland, Moviehouse Entertainment, 103 min.
A beautiful, intelligent black comedy thriller by writer, director, producer John
Boorman. Liam OLeary (Boormans long time collaborator Brendan Gleeson,
THE GENERAL), an Irish property developer of humble origins, made it big and fast on the
back of the Celtic Tiger. Wildly over-extended, Liam finds himself struggling in a
receding market. Stressed, he seems on the verge of a mental breakdown when he sees his
doppelganger. "A top-form Brendan Gleeson returns to John Boorman's lopsided
modern world in THE TIGER'S TAIL, arguably the director's most appealing entry since THE
GENERAL. Playing dual roles as a rich Irish businessman riding the economic boom and his
down-and-out twin, Gleeson animates Boorman's amusing Prince and the Pauper screenplay,
which sports a dark social underbelly that puts Ireland's rich-poor divide centerstage."
-- Deborah Young, Variety Presented in association with the Irish Screen Los
Angeles. Preceded by Run Wrakes "Rabbit"
(UK, 9 min, 2006). Eye-catching animated black comedy about two children who have much to
learn
.and to lose. NOT ON DVD
Thursday, June 14 7:30
[Spielberg Theatre]
SUMMER 04 (SOMMER 04
AN DER SCHLEI), 2007, Germany, The Cinema Guild, 97 min. Dir. Stefan Krohmer.
Miriam (Martina Gedeck) and her husband André (Peter Davor), are joined on
their holiday by their 15-year-old son, Nils (Lucas Kotaranin) and his young
precocious girlfriend, Livia (Svea Lohde). Though it seems that there are no taboos
in Miriams life, the flirtatious Livia, with the handsome intruder Bill (Robert
Seeliger), challenge her liberal principles. Its difficult to predict where this
story of five people on a stressful seaside idyll will go. A successfull drama evoking the
moral tales of Eric Rohmer. In German with English subtitles. "A very subtle
dramedy of manners and emotions, played out during a vacation on Germany's Baltic coast,
SUMMER 04 more than confirms the promise of young Teuton helmer Stefan Krohmer...
With a tip-top cast, headed by well-known actress Martina Gedeck in one of her most
nuanced perfs to date." -- Variety Preceded by Carl Zitelmanns
"Temerario" (UK, 10 min, 2006). After being shot
and left for dead, Rio finds himself in a dream of revenge, where, as an old man, he must
confront his own Shadowside in order to find peace. NOT ON DVD
Friday, June 15 7:30 PM
[Spielberg Theatre]
SOMEONE ELSE'S HAPPINESS (EEN
ANDER ZIJN GELUK), 2005, Belgium, Celluloid Dreams, 98 min. Flemish female writer-director
Fien Troch's debut feature film has received enormous acclaim at prestigious
international film festivals. With superb cinemascope compositions, Troch examines the
life of a small village after a child is killed in a hit-and-run accident, and the
inhabitants start looking at each other suspiciously. What could be a bleak and distant
tale filled with silences, turns into a gripping illustration of human loneliness and an
inability to communicate. With veteran actor Jan Decleir. In Dutch with English
subtitles. "Fien Troch's triumph as a tyro European filmmaker couldn't be more
complete than it is with a superbly staged rendering of the shock felt by a Belgian suburb
after a boy is killed in a hit-and-run incident. Made with the precision of a Michael
Haneke and the social scope of a Jean Renoir, this powerfully resonant expression of life
in post-industrialized civilization would serve as an ideal time capsule item for future
generations." -- Robert Koehler, Variety Preceded by Lluis
Quillezs "Avatar" (Spain, 15 min, 2005).
Beautifully shot, twisting tale of love and deceit tests this couples vows of "for
better or for worse." NOT ON DVD
Saturday, June 16 7:30 PM [Spielberg
Theatre]
WAITER (OBER), 2006, Netherlands,
Fortissimo Films, 97 min. Take elements of ROSENCRANTZ & GUILDENSTERN ARE DEAD, throw
in a little of director Charlie Kaufman, infuse with an off-kilter sense of humor and add
a pinch of surrealism, and you may have an idea of what awaits you in king of Dutch
deadpan comedy writer-director Alex van Warmerdam's delightfully
sophisticated black comedy. Edgar, a waiter (van Warmerdam himself), quietly takes life's
indignities -- ranging from belligerent customers to a chronically ill wife and his
demanding mistress -- until he gets plain fed-up. He then goes to complain about his
miserable existence to his creator. Some of the jokes are belly-laugh funny and many more
are moments of wry intelligence. Great performances, including Ariane Schluter as
Edgars demanding mistress. In Dutch with English subtitles. NOT ON DVD
Sunday, June 17 7:30 PM
[Spielberg Theatre]
LA TERRA, 2006, Italy, Film Italia, 92
min. A remarkable piece of cross-genre Italian cinema from the director of THE STATION
with a clever screenplay, some astonishing performances and very colorful scenery. Luigi
Di Santo (Fabrizio Bentivoglio), exiled after killing his father as a
teenager, returns to his native Puglia for some legal paperwork and is thrown into the
violence of the south. Director Sergio Rubini brilliantly plays the wife-beating
nightclub owner Tonino. In Italian with English subtitles. "A compulsively
watchable combo of lop-sided Italian comedy and Southern film noir. Fabio Cianchetti's
exhilarating lensing echoes classic spaghetti westerns in the burnt landscapes of Nardo,
Lecce, Mesagne and Brindisi. The recurring pizzicato in Pino Donaggio's humorously
over-the-top score recalls Leone's favorite composer, Ennio Morricone, doing Elio Petri's
political thrillers." -- Deborah Young, Variety Preceded by Osbert
Parkers "Film Noir" (UK, 4 min, 2005). This stunning animated
adventure revives film noir greats in a non-stop, non-linear thrill ride of shady deals
and shadier women. NOT ON DVD |