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Mediafilm’s 8th CinéBazar will be held on Saturday, March 28

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For the past 7 years, Mediafilm’s CinéBazar was held in the dead of winter. For its 8th edition, the movie buffs’ fair moves up to late March, in order to welcome the sunshine and a long awaited spring. The CinéBazar will take place on Saturday, March 28, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Centre du Plateau, located on the corner of East St-Joseph Blvd and Fullum St.

Something for everyone, for one day only

This event, the only one of its kind in Montreal’s cultural landscape, caters to a very diversified clientele, ranging from regular movie lovers to the most seasoned aficionados and collectors”, explains Martin Bilodeau, chief editor of Mediafilm. With the participation of 60 exhibitors displaying over 100 tables, this 8th CinéBazar promises to present its 2000 expected visitors with an attractive array of films of all formats (Blu-ray, DVD, VHS, 8 & 16mm), vintage posters, books, magazines, movie stills, games, projectors, cameras and other memorabilia dedicated to the 7th Art and sold at friendly prices.

The core industry at the Centre
It is a testament to the CinéBazar’s impacts on the local cinema industry that many organizations and institutions take pride in participating every year. Their goal: reaching out to film lovers to promote their activities and offer to bargain hunters all kinds of subscriptions, pass-tickets and loyalty card programs. These are: la Cinémathèque québécoise, the magazines 24 images, Ciné-Bulles and Cinémas, the cinemas Beaubien, Du Parc and Excentris, the distributors AZ Films, Les Films du 3 mars, FunFilm and K-Films Amérique, as well as the Montreal International Documentary Festival (RIDM).

CinÉcole

CinéBazar is a fund-raiser dedicated to CinÉcole, a free film-education program driven by Mediafilm, in partnership with Régie du cinéma. At the end of the present school year, CinÉcole will have shown, on the big screen, great works of Quebec cinema (1987, Bidonville, Henri Henri, Tu dors Nicole,Félix et Meira) to some 4000 high-school kids.

CinéBazar’s 8th Edition
Saturday March 28, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Centre du Plateau (2275 E. St-Joseph Blvd)
Laurier Metro / 27-E or Frontenac Metro / 94-N
Admission: 2$, free for kids accompanied by an adult
Parking: Centre Lucie-Bruneau (2275 E. Laurier) – only 3$


CFC Presents an Evening with Academy Award-Winning Writer/Director John Patrick Shanley

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[UPDATE BELOW]

Writer/Director John Patrick Shanley on Adaptation and his Creative Process

On the heels of the world premiere announcement of A Woman is a Secret, the new play written by John Patrick Shanley, the Canadian Film Centre (CFC), is pleased to present An Evening with Academy Award-Winning Writer/Director John Patrick Shanley on Adaptation and his Creative Process.

Taking place on Monday, March 23, 2015 at TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto, Shanley will take the stage to discuss writing for the screen versus writing for the stage, the challenges associated with adapting work for the screen as both a writer and a director, as well as his experience with casting, working with other directors and producers, and future adaptations of his plays.

John Patrick Shanley is an American playwright, screenwriter and director. In 1987, he won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Moonstruck, starring Cher and Nicholas Cage. In 2005, Shanley's play Doubt: A Parable was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Tony Award for Best Play. In 2008, Shanley’s film version of Doubtstarring Meryl Streep and Philip Seymour Hoffman earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay, and in 2009 the Writers Guild of America awarded him the Lifetime Achievement in Writing.

Shanley’s latest play, A Woman is a Secret, tells the stories of small town oracles who foretell the future, curses of desire and destruction, women haunted by the memory of those they have lost, and men tempted by the promise of those they might possess. Presented by Rip Jaw Productions, A Woman is a Secret plays at The Theatre Centre in Toronto from March 19 through April 5, 2015. Directed by META award-winner Andrew Shaver, the play features live music by Juno-nominated singer/songwriter Matthew Barber as well as talented ensemble cast, including Martha Burns, Molly Flood, CFC Actors Conservatory alumnus Jade Hassouné, Anna Hardwick, Jonathan Higgins, Karen Knox, Tony Nappo, Trent Pardy, Anand Rajaram, Noah Reid and Katie Swift.

What: An Evening with John Patrick Shanley on Adaptation and his Creative Process

Who: John Patrick Shanley, Academy Award-Winning Writer/Director

When: Monday, March 23 at 7 p.m. ET

Where: TIFF Bell Lightbox, Cinema 2 | 350 King Street West, Toronto

For more information on A Woman is a Secret, please visit: ripjawproductions.com

Social media links:

Website: cfccreates.com
Twitter: @cfccreates
Facebook: Canadian Film Centre (CFC)
Instagram: cfccreates
A Woman is a Secret: @AWomanIsASecret
John Patrick Shanley: @JohnJpshanley

About CFC
CFC accelerates the careers of the brightest talent in film, television, screen acting, music, and digital media. A charitable organization, CFC is committed to promoting and investing in Canada's diverse talent; providing exhibition, financial, and distribution opportunities, and fostering industry collaborations and creative partnerships. CFC makes a significant cultural and economic contribution to Canada by launching the country's most creative ideas and voices to the world. For more details, visit cfccreates.com.

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Update: this event is apparently invite-only. For media requests, the contact information is as follows:

Cory Angeletti-Szasz
Communications Specialist, CFC
416.445.1446 x463
cangeletti@cfccreates.com

Call for submissions: 44th Festival du nouveau cinéma

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS 2015

Montreal's Festival du nouveau cinéma has announced a call for submissions for their 44th edition of the festival. They are looking for films, interactive works and performances for the next festival which will run from October 7 to 18, 2015 in Montreal.

The Festival du nouveau cinéma is committed to the exploration and development of new practices in cinema and new media. It is a premiere showcase for original and brand-new works, particularly in the fields of independent cinema and digital creation. The Festival du nouveau cinéma’s calling card is its rigorous and diverse programming, consistently presenting high-quality and often unseen works selected for their originality and innovation. The FNC has always developed in tandem with evolving practices and trends in cinema, and equipped with high-tech screening and presentation facilities, it has earned an international reputation as a leading-edge festival.

The FNC is also an excellent platform for discoveries, introductions, events and exchanges uniting audiences and industry professionals.

Early bird rate before April 30, 2015. The final deadline is June 1st, 2015.

Two easy ways to submit a short or feature film on line:
- via Zone Festival
- via Withoutabox

For more information, you can write to soumissions@nouveaucinema.ca

To submit an interactive work, please send the following documentation to innovation@nouveaucinema.ca:

- title of the work
- name of the author (optional: short biography)
- year of production
- short description of the work
- hyperlink, video or visual

To submit a performance, please write to fnclab@nouveaucinema.ca

Submission fees:
(excepted for the interactive works and the performances)
March 16 > April 30: 35$
May 1st > June 1st: 40$


Hot Docs announces 2015 lineup – 210 documentaries from 45 countries

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Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival announced its full film line-up for the upcoming 22nd edition, April 23–May 3, at a press conference this morning at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema in Toronto. From 2,724 film submissions, this year’s slate will present 210 titles from 45 countries in 12 screening programs.

"This year’s Festival takes us around the world, showcasing stories from 45 different countries and the best in Canadian filmmaking,” says Hot Docs director of programming Charlotte Cook. “Through even more live and interactive experiences we have more ways than ever for the audience to be a part of the Festival. Bringing this exceptional work to Toronto is a huge honour and we can’t wait to join the filmmakers in sharing their work with our incredible audience.”

This year’s Scotiabank Big Ideas Series will welcome such notable subjects as: Grammy-nominated comedian Tig Notaro (TIG); charismatic former Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador Danny Williams, subject of (DANNY); director Alex Winter, WIRED senior writer Andy Greenberg and the parents of subject Ross Ulbricht (DEEP WEB); Ex-Fugee Pras Michel (SWEET MICKY FOR PRESIDENT); and Olympic Gold Medal–winning hockey player Charline Labonté, former Major League Baseball player Billy Bean and American college football player Conner Mertens (OUT TO WIN).

Hot Docs is pleased to announce DocX, a new program that celebrates innovative documentary storytelling through new technologies and original experiences, will feature a one-night-only participatory live performance of Katerina Cizek’s HIGHRISE: UNIVERSE WITHIN, LIVE. Festival audiences will also have the opportunity to experience the DocX Virtual Reality Showcase, a free exhibit at the Isabel Bader Theatre, available to view from Friday, April 24 to Friday, May 1, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.

In addition to the opening night international premiere of Kristina Goolsby and Ashley York’s TIG, a testament to comedian Tig Notaro’s defiant spirit and incredible humour in the face of adversity, other notable films in the Special Presentations program include: Andreas Koefoed’s THE ARMS DROP, which follows a British arms dealer’s hunt for the MI5 agent who betrayed him; Violeta Ayala’s THE BOLIVIAN CASE, a sensational exposé about three teenage girls caught smuggling cocaine; Jessica Edwards’ MAVIS!, a powerful film rich with songs and stories from music legend and civil rights icon Mavis Staples; Nick Berardini’s TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RIFLE, an investigative look at the allegedly non-lethal TASER gun; Matthias Bittner’s WAR OF LIES, a riveting account about the effects of misinformation about weapons of mass destruction; and Bill Ross IV and Turner Ross’ WESTERN, a subtle portrait of the ever-growing divide between two towns straddling the US-Mexico border.

In the competitive Canadian Spectrum program, notable films include: Charles Wilkinson’s HAIDA GWAII: ON THE EDGE OF THE WORLD, a look at a sustainable and healing community at risk from a proposed oil tanker route; Shelly Saywell’s LOWDOWN TRACKS, which tells the stories of five transient musicians on Toronto’s streets; Su Rynard’s THE MESSENGER, which highlights ever-worsening environmental devastation through the alarming disappearance of songbirds; Rama Rau’s NO PLACE TO HIDE: THE REHTAEH PARSONS STORY, an alarming account of the effects of cyber-bullying; and André-Line Beauparlant’s PINOCCHIO, a deeply personal portrait of the struggle to trust someone who feels no obligation to the truth.

In the competitive International Spectrum program, notable films include: Malin Andersson’s BLOOD SISTERS, the story of twin sisters bound by trauma; Karen Guthrie’s THE CLOSER WE GET, a sharply focused snapshot of strained family dynamics; Ramyata Limbu, Amy Benson and Scott Squire’s DRAWING THE TIGER, a powerful portrait of a studious daughter carrying her family’s hopes for a brighter future; and Ross Sutherland’s STAND BY FOR TAPE BACK-UP, a poetic and humourous meditation on memory and loss.

In the World Showcase program, notable films include: Yael Melamede’s (DIS)HONESTY—THE TRUTH ABOUT LIES, a fascinating and insightful study on honesty; Monika Pawluczuk’s END OF THE WORLD, a revealing look at personal struggles as the Mayan doomsday prophecy looms in the night; Maya Newell’s GAYBY BABY, a moving and honest film about the lives of children of same-sex parents; Scott Christopherson and Brad Barber’s PEACE OFFICER, a timely investigation of the controversies behind recent police shootings and the militarization of American law enforcement; and Gillian Laub’s SOUTHERN RITES, a complex look at race relations and the true pace of progress in America.

The Made In India program includes: Spandan Banerjee’s ENGLISH INDIA, a look at a country coming to terms with its own identity as it shakes off the weight of its colonial past; Parvez Sharma’s A SINNER IN MECCA, a fascinating personal essay on a gay Muslim’s inner-most struggles, and Anuj Adlakha and Farha Alam’s THE SUPERSTARS OF KOTI, a coming-of-age tale about three boys united as “chosen ones.”

The Next program includes: Luke Meyer’s BREAKING A MONSTER, a behind-the-scenes look at the tension between being a kid amidst the overwhelming demands of the music industry machine; and David Shapiro’s MISSING PEOPLE, an engrossing examination of the effects of violence on the psyche.

The Nightvision program includes: Bryan Carberry and Clay Tweel’s FINDERS KEEPERS, a stranger-than-fiction tale of a human foot inadvertently bought at an auction; and Rodney Ascher’s THE NIGHTMARE, a real-life horror film about the mysterious phenomenon of sleep paralysis.

The Show Me the Funny program includes: Howie Mandel, Reed Grinsell and Steve Sunshine’s COMMITTED, an inspiring look at the hard road to success; and Bao Nguyen’s LIVE FROM NEW YORK!, the story of SNL’s enduring brand of television magic as told by the show’s countless alumni.

The Screen on Screen program includes: Florian Heinzen-Ziob and Georg Heinzen’s ORIGINAL COPY, a delightful ode to Mumbai’s last one-of-a-kind film poster painter; Jeremy Coon and Tim Skousen’s RAIDERS!, the story of two friends painstakingly remaking Raiders of the Lost Ark; and Alex Sichel and Elizabeth Giamatti’s A WOMAN LIKE ME, a funny and moving documentary-drama hybrid about the filmmaker’s tumultuous journey with terminal cancer.

The Redux program will highlight six films that deserve another outing on the big screen.

Additionally, Hot Docs is pleased to present two retrospective programs: Focus On Carole Laganière, a mid-career retrospective of the filmmaker’s work; and the Outstanding Achievement Award Retrospective, honouring the influential work of Chilean documentary filmmaker Patricio Guzmán.

Also a premier documentary conference and market, Hot Docs will be welcoming over 2,000 industry delegates who will partake in a wide array of industry events and services, including conferences sessions, receptions and parties, Hot Docs Deal Maker, The Doc Shop and the Hot Docs Forum, April 29 and 30.

Hot Docs (www.hotdocs.ca), North America’s largest documentary festival, conference and market, will present its 22nd annual edition from April 23–May 3, 2015. An outstanding selection of 210 documentaries from Canada and around the world will be presented to Toronto audiences and international delegates. Hot Docs will also mount a full roster of conference sessions and market events and services for documentary practitioners, including the renowned Hot Docs Forum, Hot Docs Deal Maker and The Doc Shop. In partnership with Blue Ice Group, Hot Docs operates the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema, a century-old landmark located in Toronto’s Annex neighbourhood.


Complete listing of films for Hot Docs 2015

The 100 Years Show
Meet the vibrant and productive Cuban-American abstract painter Carmen Herrera, an artist who—well into her 90s—went from relative obscurity to being hailed as the missing link in the history of painting. "Better late than never," says Carmen, as she prepares for her 100th birthday exhibition.

3 Still Standing
Three stand-up comics are joined by contemporaries Dana Carvey and the late Robin Williams in this hilarious and moving look at success, 30 years after making their start in the comedy hotbed of 1980s San Francisco.

The 414s: The Original Teenage Hackers
In 1983, a group of Milwaukee teens—inspired by the movie WarGames—broke into dozens of high-profile computer systems, including the Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. See how adolescent curiosity about a brave new online world led to the current criminal laws governing the internet.

Above and Below
From the tunnels below the Las Vegas strip to simulated missions to Mars in the Utah desert, Above and Below is a strikingly beautiful exploration of people inhabiting unusual spaces that almost offers a glimpse into an apocalyptic world.

All the Time in the World
A family disconnects with the modern world to reconnect with each other by relocating to an isolated cabin in the remote Canadian North—spending nine winter months without electricity, running water or a trace of technology.

The Amina Profile
Lesbian eroticism, the Arab Spring and a suspicious abduction turn an online love affair between a Montreal woman and the writer of the popular blog A Gay Girl in Damascus into an international thriller about identity.

Araya
A rarely seen and recently restored masterpiece, Margot Benacerraf’s poetic film portrays a day in the life of three families living and working in one of the harshest places on earth: Araya, an arid peninsula in northeastern Venezuela.

The Arms Drop
After narrowly escaping execution and surviving eight years in an Indian prison, a British arms dealer hunts down the MI5 agent who betrayed him, leading to a shocking confrontation with the Danish terrorist who started it all.

Around the World in 50 Concerts
Award-winning documentary veteran Heddy Honigmann follows Netherlands’ prestigious Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra on an astounding musical journey as they perform 50 concerts on six continents to celebrate their 125th anniversary. With stunning passion and intellect, the masters perform and discuss their music.

As I AM: The Life and Times of DJ AM
This moving and fascinating portrait of pioneer DJ AM takes us through his meteoric rise to stardom, long-time battle with addiction, dedication to recovery and miraculous plane crash survival less than a year before his untimely death.

Attacking the Devil: Harold Evans and the Last Nazi War Crime
Fiercely intelligent and principled, Sir Harold Evans, long-time editor of the Sunday Times, spearheaded such landmark public interest campaigns as redress for Thalidomide victims against entrenched pharmaceutical and political powers in his dogged pursuit of journalism that made a difference.

The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young
With a secret application process, unknown start time and an ever-changing course, each year the Barkley Marathons tempt runners to rural Tennessee to test their limits in a gruelling trail race that’s seen only 10 competitors finish in 25 years.

The Battle of Chile
Widely regarded as one of the best documentaries ever made, this three-part epic following Chile’s popular revolution and eventual coup d’état is a vital historic document that captures the spirit of the Chilean people.

Beaver Trilogy Part IV
A chance meeting in 1979 between a filmmaker and a charming young man, who moonlights in drag as Olivia Newton-Don, grew into underground classic The Beaver Trilogy—but the film itself is only part of the adventure.

Being Canadian
Calgary hometown boy turned Hollywood comedy guru Rob Cohen (The Simpsons, The Big Bang Theory) returns to Canada on an epic quest to rediscover our national identity. Meeting up with Canadian funny men Mike Myers, Seth Rogen and Will Arnett along the way, it's a comic maple syrup-filled odyssey.

Bernice
Art world pioneer, flamboyant gallerist and enthusiastic artist advocate Bernice Steinbaum has made it her mission to promote female artists and artists of colour. Her tireless work to have them included in the world’s largest museum and gallery collections is a testament to the impact and change one creative visionary can have over an entire industry.

Best of Enemies
When ABC News hired archenemies Gore Vidal and William F. Buckley Jr. to cover the 1968 Republican and Democratic National Conventions, their intellectual and personal mudslinging not only revolutionized TV news, but the shape of American political discourse.

Beyond the Fear
Delving deep into the mind of Yigal Amir, the rightwing Israeli radical who assassinated Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, the directors pore over his life-altering decisions, opening a window onto humankind’s capacity for both good and evil.

Blood Sisters
Bearing deep emotional scars from their abduction as children, twin sisters flee their native Azerbaijan to seek refuge in Sweden. Bound by their trauma, they find comfort in each other, but will their intense attachment smother their independence?

The Bolivian Case
Three Norwegian teenaged girlfriends get caught smuggling cocaine out of Bolivia. Each is guilty, so why does only one take the fall? Cue a tabloid media storm, professional kidnappers and a behind-bars pregnancy in this sensational exposé.

Born to Be Mild
Meet the Dull Men’s Club, a group of golden-agers quite content with living life in the slow lane. The men take pleasure in the mundane—from traffic roundabouts to postboxes—and create their own sanctuaries from the ever-evolving modern world. So sit back, relax and enjoy the mild ride.

Breaking a Monster
Mixing metal and speed punk, the talented Brooklyn seventh-graders behind the band Unlocking the Truth skyrocket to fame when their video goes viral, but can these adolescents manoeuvre the music industry and emerge unscathed?

Censored Voices
Shortly after the Six-Day War, renowned author Amos Oz and others audiotaped Israeli soldiers' battlefield stories. Strictly censored until now, these explosive recordings reveal a hidden narrative that questions the treatment of the enemy, Zionism and their role as occupier.

Chameleon
A Ghanaian investigative journalist with a dash of James Bond rises to become a national hero as he slips into disguise undercover to expose corruption and injustice while on a relentless campaign of “naming, shaming and jailing” criminals.

Chile, Obstinate Memory
Returning to Chile after a 23-year absence, Guzmán uses The Battle for Chile as a catalyst for discussing the country’s turbulent past with those lived through it, and explores the devastating impact of decades of imposed- and self-censorship.

Chuck Norris vs Communism
In Communist Romania of the 1980s, ordinary citizens risked arrest and imprisonment to secure bootlegged copies of Hollywood blockbusters. Hear the stories of these Stallone-loving, dictatorship-toppling movie fans.

The Circus Dynasty
The success and longevity of two of Europe’s greatest circus families hangs in the balance as their respective heirs fall for one another—but combining love and work may be their greatest challenge yet.

The Closer We Get
After the filmmaker’s indomitable mother suffers a debilitating stroke, her normally tight-lipped family opens up to unravel the astonishing secrets of her parent’s 50-year relationship and their twisted family tree with roots stretching from Scotland to Ethiopia.

Committed
Aspiring performer Vic Cohen talked his way into comedian Howie Mandel’s life. Charmed by Cohen’s determination to find his creative path, Mandel begins shooting him for 13 years, capturing a fearless struggle to make it not only in show business, but in life.

The Conversation
Deep in the Russian countryside, an old man awaits a phone call from his wife. When a mischievous cat makes a sudden appearance, the man is drawn towards dusty relics of his past. With wry humour and exquisite compositions, The Conversation is a sublime meditation on love, loneliness and the inexorable passage of time.

Copycat
In 1991, Rolfe Kanefsky released his self-aware horror film, There’s Nothing Out There. Five years later, Wes Craven released his own self-aware horror film, Scream. Copycat explores the connection between the two, and why one was overlooked by audiences while the other was credited for revitalizing the horror industry.

The Creation of Meaning
Once the scene of a devastating World War II massacre, the breathtaking Tuscan Alps are now home to a shepherd whose pastoral life is made precarious by money troubles. But time and meaning can blur at high altitudes, as this unhurried study shows.

The Creeping Garden
Take a psychedelic science-non-fiction plunge into the world of plasmodial slime moulds—a rare organism that moves like a plant/animal hybrid—and the fascinating people who study and collaborate with them. A vibrant cinematic cabinet of curiosities!

The Cult of JT LeRoy
By captivating readers with stories of his traumatic childhood, JT LeRoy was catapulted to literary fame at age 19 and earned a fiercely devoted celebrity following, but lurking just beneath the pages was a secret that would explode into a scandal.

Danny
This dynamic portrait laced with humour, political shenanigans and backroom anecdotes reveals the real Danny Williams, the charismatic premier who stared down two prime ministers and Big Oil to transform the fortunes of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Daughter of the Lake
When a mining corporation threatens the waters that she holds sacred, a young indigenous Andean woman who seemingly speaks with the spirits of the lake summons all her mystical powers to come to their defense.

A Day at School
Winding around the dusty, mirage-soaked roads of Burkina Faso on their donkey carts, two young brothers transport soil in this jaunty slice-of-life film. Layered with lively regional folk sounds, the boys fulfill their daily grind, encountering worlds vastly different from their own.

Dear Araucaria
John Graham, better known as Araucaria, has set the Guardian’s cryptic crossword for 55 years. In December 2012, a puzzle appeared in the paper that, once solved, revealed a very personal message from its creator to his adoring public. A beautiful film that clues us in on the themes, images, ideas and memories that inspire a writer.

Deep Web
Following the story of Ross Ulbricht, alleged founder of the online black market Silk Road, Deep Web weaves the historic government case against him with an exploration at the darkest corners of the Internet to offer a revelatory look at this Pandora’s box of the online world.

Democrats
Can sworn political enemies work together for a common good? Follow Zimbabwe’s unlikely coalition government of reigning dictator Mugabe’s party and his opposition as they slyly maneuver and reluctantly negotiate to forge a new constitution.

Deprogrammed
Anti-cult crusader Ted Patrick’s controversial deprogramming techniques spurred an underground movement that spanned decades until halted by lawsuits and felony convictions for kidnapping and imprisonment. Years later, his subjects speak to the true cost of their ‘emancipation.’

The Dictator's Hotel
It’s known as the hotel with 500 rooms—a luxury resort in the Central African Republic owned by Gaddafi. But after the Libyan dictator’s death, the never-used hotel is left in limbo. The gardener still mows the lawn, the guards still patrol and the manager tends to the ghost hotel that may never welcome its first guest.

A Different Drummer: Celebrating Eccentrics
Oscar-winning director John Zaritsky celebrates eccentrics in this light-hearted but affectionate look at non-conformists—from a Utah cave dweller who hasn’t used money in 12 years to a beloved Vancouver psychic often seen with her pet duck in a buggy.

(Dis)Honesty - The Truth About Lies
Lying gets easier the more you do it—that is, until you get caught! That’s just one of the conclusions from this fascinating and insightful study on honesty. From marketing scams to financial corruption, the “fudge factor” is explored in all its forms.

Docs at Dusk: Mavis!
Music legends and civil rights icons Mavis Staples and the Staples Singers shine in this powerful film rich with six decades of glorious songs and wonderful stories from the star herself, alongside Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan and more.

DocX Virtual Reality Showcase
Witness the future creative and technical possibilities of documentary cinema. These four short films employ revolutionary 3D stereoscopy video, Oculus Rift technology and Samsung's Gear Virtual Reality headsets to immerse you in unforgettable documentary experiences.

Doglegs
In a renegade Tokyo wrestling league, the disabled battle the able-bodied in the name of smashing stereotypes. After 20 years of glory, a reigning champ dreams of life beyond the mat, but his mentor has other plans.

Double Happiness
This fiercely intelligent essay-film centres on the strange case of a Chinese town built to replicate an idyllic Austrian village—examining larger questions of reproduction, creativity and contemporary Chinese society’s relationship to the West.

Drawing the Tiger
A desperately poor Nepalese family rests their hopes on the narrow shoulders of their studious daughter who attends school on scholarship, but when she doesn’t return home, their dreams of a brighter future dim under the harsh realities of survival.

Dreamcatcher
Acclaimed filmmaker Kim Longinotto crafts a deeply moving portrait of a former teenage prostitute who fought her way off the streets to become an unstoppable force for change in the lives of Chicago’s at-risk women.

Drone
A penetrating investigation into the war on terror’s defining weapon—the armed drone—featuring incisive analysis from pilots, military experts and powerless bystanders who live in fear of becoming the collateral damage of this high-tech weaponry.

Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Story of the National Lampoon
With audacity and verve, the National Lampoon magazine became America’s top humour publication, casting a wide cultural net and launching the careers of many comedy legends including John Belushi, Chevy Chase and Bill Murray.

East End Forever
Eight years after East End Kids, Laganière catches up with its subjects to recollect the dreams they once shared onscreen and to trace to unexpected paths their lives have taken.

East End Kids
In this Hot Docs award winner, Laganière revisits the low-income neighbourhood of her youth and arms young people with cameras to document their lives and reveal their hopes for their future.

Elephant's Dream
Boiling over with poetry, absurdity and compassionate insight, this revealing portrait of a country in transition focuses on public sector workers in the Congo who resiliently toil—sometimes in vain—to reconstruct a nation marred by civil war.

End of the World
As the looming threat of the Mayan doomsday prophecy hangs over a dark night in Poland, the radio speaks of the end of the world while crisis dispatch centres and therapy groups share their own personal struggles

English India
With stunning visuals, this creative travelogue visits India’s big cities and small tourist towns, exploring the nation’s history through the once-robust community of tour guides who have been rendered jobless with the advent of audio guides and apps.

Every Last Child
Caught in the crosshairs of violence and politics, healthcare workers are everyday heroes as they struggle to protect children from polio in Pakistan—the epicentre for this crippling disease that has once again become a global threat.

Exotica, Erotica, Etc.
As a former prostitute lyrically recalls her encounters with the lonely sailors she has met at port, her poetry combined with exquisite cinematography of the ships at sea creates a stunning visual essay of adventure, desire and heartbreak.

Fake Fruit Factory
Added to the National Film Registry’s 2011 list of culturally significant films, Chick Strand’s glorious short film Fake Fruit Factory guides us through the experience of women crafting papier-mâché fruit and vegetables in a small factory in Mexico.

The Fiancee of Life
With a delicate touch, Laganière bravely provides a space for children who have lost a parent or sibling to speak honestly, and often profoundly, on their feelings about death.

Filming Obstinately, Meeting Patricio Guzmán
This revealing portrait of acclaimed filmmaker Patricio Guzmán, recipient of this year’s Outstanding Achievement Award, takes the viewer on an intimate journey of his life’s work in the shadow of Chile’s tumultuous past.

Finders Keepers
When an enterprising entrepreneur inadvertently buys a human foot at an auction, he fashions it into an unlikely tourist attraction. But when the original owner lays claim to his errant extremity, a stranger-than-fiction and larger-than-life legal battle ensues.

Finding Macpherson
Gorgeously hand-painted sequences from her films illuminate a black Montreal artist’s magical 10-year search across continents to discover the true identity of a black lumberjack mentioned in a popular Quebec song.

Foodies
Deliciously lavish and inventive, the world’s top restaurants unveil their latest offerings to the new power players on the culinary scene: globe-trotting Foodies whose online reviews reach hundreds of thousands and can make or break a dish.

For Grace
From inspiration to opening night, For Grace follows renowned American chef Curtis Duffy as he strives to overcome adversity in his personal life to build his dream restaurant.

For the Record
Court reporters, live captioners and CART providers strive for the world speed record in court reporting in this fascinating look at the world of the stenographer, the "keepers of the record" from the Nuremberg trials to 9/11.

Fractured Land
With some of the world’s largest fracking operations on his territory, a young Indigenous leader and lawyer confronts the fractures within his community and himself as he struggles to reconcile traditional teachings with the law to protect the land.

Frame by Frame
Four Afghan photojournalists risk their lives to build a free national press and tell their country’s stories after years of war and an oppressive Taliban regime that banned all photography.

From This Day Forward
An awkward teenager when her father first came out as transgender, the director returns to her parents as she approaches her own wedding day to ask how, against such high stakes, they made their love last.

Gayby Baby
In this moving and honest look into the lives of children of same-sex parents, the challenges of navigating a world rife with gender stereotypes and homophobia weave into the routine struggles of just growing up.

Giovanni and the Water Ballet
Ten-year-old Giovanni has a dream—to compete in the Dutch Synchronized Swimming Championships. With the unwavering support of his "girlfriend" Kim, he wades into the female-dominated sport and tries to fit in. Is he in over his head? An adorable look at the future, as seen through Giovanni’s burgeoning romantic relationship and synchro skills.

The Gnomist
When a fairy village mysteriously appears in Overland Park, Kansas, locals become involved in the running narrative, touched by the tiny doors and miniatures, and connected by curiosity over its origins. The Gnomist is a delightful and enchanting reminder that kindness can be a cure and magic, a medicine, with the right dosage.

Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life
In 1924, the makers of King Kong teamed up with journalist and sometime-spy Marguerite Harrison to document the twice-yearly migration of over 50,000 people and half a million animals by the Bakhtiari tribe of what was then Persia.

Hadwin's Judgement
In 1997, Grant Hadwin cut down The Golden Spruce, a unique 300-year-old tree that was both sacred and scientifically remarkable, in a desperately audacious sounding of the alarm to save BC’s rainforest; instead, it brought sorrow and despair.

Haida Gwaii: On the Edge of the World
The team behind Oil Sands Karaoke captures the stunning beauty of Haida Gwaii, where Aboriginal rights activists, newcomer ecologists and quirky islanders unite to create a sustainable and healing community—now at risk from a proposed oil tanker route.

Hell Runs on Gasoline!
“There’s a hell of a lot of debris on the track,” the stadium announcer blares as cars ablaze billow plumes of burnt gasoline smoke. Welcome to the adrenaline-filled Autodrome in St-Félicien, Quebec, in this operatic front seat ride to a day at the races.

Help Us Find Sunil Tripathi
The potential and perils of online vigilantism and crowdsourcing are starkly realized for a family searching for their missing son, when the theory that he is a terrorist behind the Boston Marathon bombings goes viral.

Herders
The majestic landscapes of Mongolia provide the backdrop for this project, which takes users directly into the heart of a distant nomadic community of yak herders. Directed by celebrated Montreal-based team Félix Lajeunesse and Paul Raphaël, Herders demonstrates the power virtual reality offers by taking us to locales we will likely never visit ourselves.

Highrise: Universe Within, Live
A one-night-only participatory live performance launching the final chapter of the acclaimed Highrise digital documentary project, Universe Within, Live takes audiences on a fascinating journey from Brooklyn to Mumbai to Guangzhou through the original portraits of highrise residents and their digital lives from around the globe. Mixing live and recorded images, documentaries and music, this performance is navigated by a live host in conversation with the audience.

Home Cooked Music
Is there anything more Canadian than a moose-antler electric guitar? After a near-death experience, retired machinist Lorne Collie started making whimsical stringed instruments. Filmmaker Mike Maryniuk imaginatively weaves weathered doc footage and handcrafted animation to create an inspired portrait of this playful, musical inventor.

Hot Sugar's Cold World
A modern-day Mozart or a hyped music producer, Hot Sugar is in crisis. He mixes everyday noises into Grammy-nominated beats, but when girlfriend, Internet-phenom “Kitty,” dumps him, he takes off to Paris seeking himself and new sounds in this fantastical road trip.

A House in Fog
For over a hundred years, Soraiia's family has eked out a living on the estate of a wealthy landowner. Now faced with old age and eviction, this shotgun-wielding mountain woman continues to survive off the lush and mysterious landscape around her. Beautiful cinematography frames bitter reality, with stunning results.

How to Change the World
In the early 1970s, a group of young Canadians combined forces to create Greenpeace. Using interviews and previously unseen footage, this is the story of a group of friends who set out to change the world.

How to Cross (From Jiliz to Jiliz)
Though she can see the rooftops of her family’s village in Georgia from her house in Armenia, young Lusine has not seen her relatives in six years. Though the physical distance between them is small, she must travel over 100km to visit; the border is invisible, but intrudes on everyday life.

How to Smell a Rose: A Visit with Ricky Leacock in Normandy
When documentary film giants Les Blank and Richard Leacock convene in Leacock’s kitchen, the conversation is sprightly and the food delicious. The two friends reveal their recipes for good living and great filmmaking.

I Thought I Told You to Shut Up!!
When cartoonist David Boswell debuted Reid Fleming, World’s Toughest Milkman in the 1970s, the no-holds-barred countercultural icon seemed destined for stardom. That is, until everything sputtered awry. This buoyant tribute to the love of cartooning is a heartfelt reminder that true success needn’t hinge on a Hollywood ending.

Imraan, C/o Carrom Club
Eleven-year-old Imraan looks after a carrom club in the slums of Mumbai. He attends to the club’s patrons who waste most days gambling and smoking hash. Though still a boy in body and heart, he is forced to grow up quickly in order to navigate the realities of a man’s world.

In Conversation With Master Filmmaker Frederick Wiseman and Producer Karen Konicek
Prolific and innovative, legendary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman has helmed such classic documentaries as Titicut Follies, High School, Welfare, Crazy Horse, National Gallery and At Berkeley. Join Wiseman and long-time collaborator Karen Konicek in a live on-stage conversation with award-winning CBC journalist and host Piya Chattopadhyay as they discuss their next project, In Jackson Heights, and longevity in an evolving media landscape.

Indian Point
Enter the reactor core of Indian Point, a nuclear power plant situated only 35 miles from New York City. Since the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, the plant has become a battleground for politicians, big business and activists.

It's Me, Hilary: The Man Who Drew Eloise
A deep friendship was struck between the artist behind the beloved Eloise children’s series and Lena Dunham, a long-time admirer—as evidenced by her Eloise tattoo! Together they chronicle his life and work in this delightful and loving documentary.

Jesus Town USA
In this cinematically stylish comedy, the Wichita foothills stand in for Jerusalem as a small Christian community that has re-enacted Christ’s Passion for 88 years grapples with the news that the paperboy playing Jesus is a Buddhist.

Journey with Prabhat
Established in 1929, the legendary Prabhat Film Company broke boundaries, made national stars and gave India a film industry lauded by international audiences. This nostalgic ode shines the spotlight on those pioneers, paying tribute to the origins and art of cinema.

Julio
When 17-year-old Claudia is abandoned by her parents, she is left on her own to care for her severely autistic older brother while living as an illegal immigrant in Brazil. In this beautifully intimate portrait, director Eui Yong Zong tells the story of two siblings whose love for one another underscores a courageous but difficult existence.

Karachi Stories: Graveyard for Giants
Massive freighters line the beach in a shipyard in Pakistan, dwarfing the labourers surrounding them. Dismantling the ships is dangerous work, yet they are willing to risk their lives for the income. Karachi Stories: Graveyard for Giants beautifully portrays the severity of the situation while capturing its allure to photographers and tourists. Shannon Hanmer

Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck
In this first fully authorized cinematic portrait of music legend Kurt Cobain, never-before-seen home movies, striking animation and interviews with those who knew him best take us into the life and mind of an icon.

Lanzmann
On the eve of its 30th anniversary, the filmmaker behind landmark Holocaust documentary Shoah reflects on suicidal thoughts, death threats, political pressure and even a severe beating endured to fulfill creation of his 10-hour masterpiece.

The Last Mogul
The legendary Lew Wasserman has been credited with creating—and later dismantling—Hollywood's studio system in a near-mythic career spanning more than six decades. But what does Lew's legacy mean in the modern media landscape transformed by Kickstarter, Netflix and YouTube?

Last of the Elephant Men
From the awe-inspiring temples of Angkor to the bustling streets of Phnom Penh, three generations of indigenous Bunong elephant owners struggle against industrial development to save these magnificent creatures at the heart of their own and their people’s identity.

The Last Smallholder
Carson Lee is the only farmer left in a once-thriving agricultural community in the Yorkshire Dales. The Last Smallholder observes his fierce commitment to the stewardship of the land and offers a moving elegy for his fading way of life.

Leaving Africa
In Uganda, a Finnish woman shares a deep friendship with her Ugandan housemate, but when they courageously confront religious leaders on women’s rights and sexuality they face a treacherous government backlash that could cost them everything.

Listen to Me Marlon
Legendary actor Marlon Brando recounts his life through his private audio tapes in this beautifully crafted and highly artistic portrait that allows the viewer inside the mind of the elusive and acclaimed movie icon.

The Little Deputy
Filmmaker Trevor Anderson’s remembrance of an awkward father-and-son moment in a kitschy 1980s western photo parlour—crystallized in an old-timey black and white photograph—is endearingly re-imagined by Anderson with 19th-century dazzle and a wry commemorative sense.

Live From New York!
Lorne Michaels couldn’t have guessed that his little sketch comedy experiment would become America’s highest temple of comedy. Saturday Night Live alumni Chase, Curtain, Newman, Samberg, Poehler and countless more, reflect on 40 years of television magic.

The Living Fire
Set in the Ukraine’s breathtaking Carpathian Mountains, three generations of shepherds struggle with change as their simple but laborious way of life becomes harder to sustain when faced with the allure of the modern world.

Love Between the Covers
A guilty pleasure or a disparaged art form? Romance fiction outsells all other genres combined, yet its largely female authors and readers are derided—until now! Nora Roberts and other titans confront the sexism and stereotypes of this multi-billion dollar industry.

Lowdown Tracks
Passion, talent and tragedy combine in the performances of five transient musicians who busk for change on Toronto’s streets. Their songs of survival and stories of life on the margins deeply resonate, with help from The Parachute Club's Lorraine Segato.

Magic Island
In 2005, acclaimed character actor Vincent Schiavelli (One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Amadeus) died in his family’s Sicilian village. Ten years later, his estranged son returns to collect a surprise inheritance and confronts unexpected feelings in this lyrical study of family ties.

Mavis!
Music legends and civil rights icons Mavis Staples and the Staples Singers shine in this powerful film rich with six decades of glorious songs and wonderful stories from the star herself, alongside Bonnie Raitt, Bob Dylan and more.

Mend and Make Do
In this stop-motion stunner, a British household literally comes to life. As the irrepressible Lyn recounts a tale of love, marriage and family bliss, her clothes and furniture begin a lively interpretive dance, revealing the humour and beauty within the very fabric of our lives.

The Messenger
From Turkey’s Mount Ararat to the streets of New York, experts and enthusiasts raise the alarm over the disappearance of populations of glorious songbirds – humanity’s canary in the coalmine signalling ever-worsening environmental devastation.

Milk
A sweeping cinematic investigation across five continents into the politics of birthing and breastfeeding, Milk constellates debates about the medicalization of birth, midwifery and the use—or abuse—of infant formula.

Missing People
An enigmatic New York curator investigates her brother's long-unsolved murder while obsessing over the violent work and life of an outsider artist from New Orleans, but her quest for answers leads to mysteries long buried.

Mom and Me
In this deeply personal film, the director delves into her complicated relationship with her mother, following her painful journey through addiction, prostitution and homelessness on the streets of Toronto, and ultimately shapes a moving testament to love and hope.

Monty Python: The Meaning of Live
Go backstage with the Python troupe as they prepare for their first live performance in 35 years. With never-before-seen footage, candid backstage interviews and new musical numbers, this show will please any fan and convert any uninitiated.

The Moon and the Violin
There’s no business like show business in this award-winning film about a retirement community for artists. Often funny, sometimes bittersweet, the residents reflect on their successes, failures and lives lived with creativity and passion.

Music Lessons
Go behind the scenes with the inspiring children and music teachers at Sistema Toronto and see firsthand how this international movement employs ensemble-based music to build community, confidence and a next generation of talent. To be followed by a live performance by the Sistema Toronto Yorkwoods Orchestra and a special in-conversation session.

Mussa
A 12-year-old mute refugee from Darfur lives in a Tel Aviv slum but is allowed to attend a rich private school. Exposed to two disparate worlds and belonging to neither, he faces a staggering crisis in this heartbreaking study of haphazard immigration policies.

My Enemy, My Brother
A child soldier risked his life to protect an Iraqi enemy during the brutal Iran-Iraq war. Twenty-five years later, these two men are serendipitously reunited as the saviour becomes the saved in this compelling celebration of the resonance of kindness.

My Gal, Rosemarie
Rosemarie is turning 90 years old and all she wants is her favourite treat: In-N-Out Burger. Her husband Ray, who is a bit of a hoarder, is happy to oblige. My Gal, Rosemarie offers us the simple joys of life as this lovely couple dreams of another 10 years together.

My Jules Verne
In this exploration of his literary hero, Guzmán captures the iconic author’s spirit of storytelling and adventure through his far-reaching influence on contemporary explorers charting the centre of the earth and the far reaches of outer space.

My Love Don't Cross That River
A Korean husband and wife known as the ‘100-year-old lovebirds’ inhabit a fairy-tale romance; but with love comes loss, and as death looms over one, the other holds tightly not ready to let go.

Nan Lakou Kanaval
Shot on 16mm, this kaleidoscopic glimpse into the annual Haitian carnival celebration is seen through the eyes of an enchanted young woman. Witness as fantastical costumes and Haitian rara and raboday music take over the city streets in a sensuous reverie where “the dead sing as if they were alive.”

New
After arriving in the Netherlands, an eight-year-old Congolese refugee tries to make sense of his strange new world. He marvels at the whiteness of skin, struggles with the guttural Dutch language and explores his new surroundings with wide-eyed wonder. But not all is rosy in this tender look at the immigrant experience.

News From Home
New York circa 1976 is famed-filmmaker Chantal Akerman's visual backdrop for the letters from her mother since relocating to the city in this visual time capsule and poetic exploration of distance, alienation and disconnection.

Nicola Costantino: The Artefacta
In this stunning and artistically crafted portrait of Nicola Costantino—Latin America’s most controversial and admired visual artist—audiences become completely submersed in her work as she prepares to represent Argentina in the Venice Biennale 2013.

The Nightmare
Director Rodney Ascher (Room 237) crafts a real-life documentary horror film that asks viewers to drift off into the phenomenon of sleep paralysis and the waking reality of those who suffer from visits from the shadow men.

No Place to Hide: The Rehtaeh Parsons Story
Those closest to Rehtaeh Parsons, the Canadian teenager whose suicide due to cyber-bullying shocked the world, recall her brief life, exposing the systems that failed her and the public outcry, led by Anonymous, for justice.

Nostalgia for the Light
In this contemplative exploration of the quest for the unknown, astronomers gaze at the stars from observatories in Chile’s Atacama Desert, while women search the sands below for remnants of their loved ones who “disappeared” under Pinochet.

Nuestro Monte Luna
The deadly risks faced by teenaged matadors-in-training are overshadowed by the threats to their livelihood when the controversial sport of bullfighting, and the values and traditions at its heart, is challenged in Colombia.

Of the Unknown
Set in Hong Kong, where millionaires and the “working poor” live side by side in one of Asia’s wealthiest and most densely populated cities, Of the Unknown explores how social and economic status clips some people’s wings while permitting others to soar.

Omo Child: The River and the Bush
After witnessing the killing of a child as a youth, and then learning of his two older sisters who met the same fate, a young Ethiopian man is determined to one day stop his tribe’s horrific custom of slaying ‘cursed’ children.

On Her Own
When her parents suddenly die, Nancy inherits the fifth-generation family farm on the verge of foreclosure, but with incredible strength and determination she risks it all—including family bonds—to try and save her ancestral home.

On the Bride's Side
With elaborate planning and more than a little nerve, a Palestinian poet and an Italian journalist help a group of refugees travel safely from Italy to Sweden, where they will seek asylum, by staging a fake wedding.

On the Rim of the Sky
When a young idealist arrives with revolutionary ideas for the children of a remote village on the edge of a lush cliff in China’s Sichuan province, conflict mounts between him and the village’s veteran teacher.

Orbis
Orbis captures the circulatory nature of global consumerism and the effects it has on the inhabitants of Umlazi, a town just outside South Africa’s busiest port. From children coming of age to scrap metal collectors making a living, everyone in Umlazi is touched by international capitalist mechanisms that the port brings to the fore.

Original Copy
Bollywood stars shine larger than life in the one-of-a-kind film posters hand painted by Mumbai’s last screen painter, but as his workshop is threatened by demolition and his livelihood by plastic posters, he fights to pass on his craft.

Orion: The Man Who Would Be King
Thrust into the spotlight by a crazy scheme concocted after The King’s death, an obscure singer skyrockets to fame masquerading as Elvis resurrected, but seeking success on his own terms, he quickly discovers his golden voice has become his curse.

Out to Win
The groundbreaking 2014 NFL draft of Michael Sam blew the closet door wide open on the challenges facing LGBT athletes. Trailblazers Martina Navratilova, Billie Jean King and Jason Collins give voice to their pioneering leadership.

Over the Rainbow
Leny discovered her true sexual identity at 68, when she fell in love with another woman. Now in her 80s, she has adopted the gay lifestyle with urgency and pride—pushing determinedly through reminders of her failing body and past regrets.

Panchagavya
Indians worship the cow as “Gau Mata” or Mother Cow. But the cows in Bikaner, Rajasthan are treated as anything but sacred—left to graze on plastic bags and garbage in city streets. An eye-opening look at the taboo tension that exists between human behaviour and belief; practice and preaching; defiling and deifying.

Paris is Burning
Electrifying audiences with a window into the fierce—and fiercely competitive—world of the 1980s New York black and Latino LGBT ball scene, this paradigm-shifting classic is as audacious and profound as the day it was released 25 years ago.

The Pawn
Brutally kidnapped at 14, a young Guatemalan woman survives when many others do not. Now her family and those of other victims are bravely fighting back and demanding justice amidst a chilling climate of violence and impunity.

Peace Officer
Thirty years after establishing Utah’s first SWAT team, a former sheriff looks on in horror as that same unit kills his son-in-law in this timely investigation of the controversies behind recent police shootings and the militarization of American law enforcement.

Pervert Park
Florida Justice Transitions trailer park is home to 120 convicted sex offenders. With unprecedented access, this Sundance winner exposes unspeakable acts and tragedies, and questions whether, even in this sheltered community, freedom can, or should, exist.

Pinocchio
The director's con-artist brother sits imprisoned in Brazil, facing deportation to Canada. He's an elusive world traveller, a skilled liar and manipulator, both charming and charismatic. How do you trust someone who feels no obligation to truth?

The Pinochet Case
Following events in the months after Pinochet’s arrest in London, Guzmán captures the intricacies of the Chilean dictator’s arraignment on charges of crimes against humanity—the first such case against a leader since the Nuremberg trials.

The Place
In the snowblown wilds of an alpine landscape, a team of alchemists runs tests on the elements. But who are these beaker-wielding white coats, and what dark arts are they performing? The Place takes us on a mysterious journey through the borderlands of physics and metaphysics, science and the supernatural.

Placebo
A moment of transitory madness that nearly cost the director’s brother his arm sparks this surreal exploration of life inside India’s most prestigious medical school: a place where isolation and intense academic pressure often drive students to despair.

Planetary
Witness Earth like never before. Combining arresting cinematography with provocative thoughts from the world’s foremost environmentalists, scientists and philosophers, Planetary offers an alternate theory for survival in our planet’s most desperate age.

Pleasant Street
In picturesque St John’s, Newfoundland, three friends are forced to face their mortality when they are diagnosed with cancer. This award-winning firsthand work from the director behind My Left Breast chronicles their funny, gut-wrenching and inspiring stories.

Pleasure at Her Majesty's
Peek behind the curtain as Monty Python, Peter Cook, Alan Bennett and other leading British comedians come together in 1976 for the first of what would become the groundbreaking Amnesty International comedy benefit galas.

Poem of the Day
A boy reads poems on the streets of Medellín, Colombia, hoping to raise money for his family. When he teams up with a mischievous old woman, they transform their gritty city into a place of wonder and discovery. A lyrical and heartbreaking tribute to the power of the imagination.

Polar Sea 360°
The impact of climate change is being acutely observed in the Arctic, where the melting of glaciers and icecaps is causing major transformations in the environment, notably through the Northwest Passage. This breathtaking virtual reality voyage takes users directly into those remote settings, allowing us to personally experience the wonder and scale of these threatened habitats.

Pop-Up Porno: m4m
One man’s foray on gay “dating” app Grindr quickly climaxes from nice to naughty to uncomfortably nasty when a dick-pic triptych reveals his hook up to be too close to home for comfort. Director Stephen Dunn brings new meaning to the word “pop-up” in this hilarious send up of online dating.

Portraits of a Search
As the Mexican drug wars rage on, thousands of mothers ceaselessly search for their children who’ve vanished in the senseless conflict. Choosing different paths, three brave mothers confront the uncertainty of their inquiries in this powerful film.

Positive
A tight-knit group of female film editors—accustomed to toiling behind the scenes at the Ukrainian archives—are thrust in front of the camera in this affectionate tribute to hard work in dark spaces, manual film splices and friendship in the workplace. A celebration of celluloid and the playful, shy and savagely skilled women who preserve it.

Possessed by Djinn
After a Jordanian man tragically kills his four-year-old daughter, convinced she is possessed by evil, the filmmaker launches a disturbing investigation into a controversial Islamic belief in the supernatural forces of “djinn.”

The Queen of Silence
Suffering severe hearing loss, a young Roma girl is an outcast in her community; but when she discovers a Bollywood DVD in the trash, her dark world transforms into an enchanted stage in this extraordinary fairy-tale musical.

Radical Grace
From confronting bishops over the Affordable Care Act to protesting for women’s equality at the Vatican, American nuns have bucked the hierarchy for decades by following a gospel of love, social justice and inclusion to transform their country and the Church.

Raiders!
In 1982, two young friends started a shot-for-shot remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark. After seven years, they finished all but one scene—until now. Twenty-five years and one jaw-dropping twist of fate reunite them for this unmissable final take.

Robinson Crusoe Island
Guzmán embarks on a journey to the real island on which Robinson Crusoe was shipwrecked, where he discovers the truth behind a legend, the beauty of adventure and the interweaving of two very different odysseys.

Rolling Papers
When Colorado legalized marijuana, the Denver Post hired the world’s first marijuana editor. Sit back as he and his pot reviewers, “high” mommy bloggers and grass-preneurs roll establishment and counter-cultures into a strange new canni-business.

Sailing a Sinking Sea
The nomadic seafaring Moken of Myanmar and Thailand keep their unique way of life alive amidst the sweeping changes that encroach upon them. This immersive documentary paints a lush portrait of their daily practices and beliefs through traditional folklore and music.

Sam Klemke’s Time Machine
In 1977, 17-year-old Sam Klemke began to document his life, recording updates annually. Travel through time with over 35 years of personal footage in this intimate and revealing portrait of one man’s self-documentation.

The Sandwich Nazi
Deli owner Salam Kahil is an art collector, former male escort, amateur musician and sandwich maker to the homeless in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside who delights in shocking his customers with outrageously lewd stories.

Scotiabank Big Ideas: Danny
Join us in a discussion with Danny Williams, the outspoken Canadian politician at the centre of Danny, a dynamic portrait laced with humour, political shenanigans and backroom anecdotes. Hear directly from the charismatic premier who stared down two prime ministers and Big Oil to transform the fortunes of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Scotiabank Big Ideas: Deep Web
Following the internatioanl premiere of Deep Web Lyn and Kirk Ulbricht join WIRED senior writer Andy Greenberg (This Machine Kills Secrets) and director Alex Winter to discuss the plight of their son, Ross Ulbricht, the alleged founder of the online black market Silk Road, and the murky world of operating in the darkest corners of the internet.

Scotiabank Big Ideas: Out to Win
From such pioneers as tennis champs Martina Navratilova and Billie Jean King to tomorrow's superstars, Out to Win chronicles the personal stories of the trailblazers whose sacrifices and conflicts have consumed their professional aspirations, and charts the greater path ahead for professional LGBT athletes around the globe.

Scotiabank Big Ideas: Sweet Micky for President
Ex-Fugee Pras Michel joins us to discuss Haitian politics, the future of his home country, and his political campaign supporting controversial musician Michel Martelly for President of Haiti in the pivotal election following the 2010 earthquake, as depicted in Sweet Micky for President.

Scotiabank Big Ideas: Tig
Join comedian Tig Notaro in conversation about the film Tig, which charts her life in the eventful year following her bravely candid 2012 stand-up performance. Opening with "Good evening, I have cancer," her groundbreaking set made her an overnight media sensation.

Seth's Dominion
Made over eight years, this award-winning trip into the imagination of Canadian cartoonist dubbed “Seth” combines animation and stylized live action to imitate the artist’s comic book aesthetic.

The Shore Break
On South Africa’s Wild Coast, two cousins square off—one supports a shady mining proposal, while the other risks everything to preserve her tribe’s land. As royal families are deposed and corrupt officials grandstand, who will triumph in this provocative eco-exposé?

Shoulder the Lion
Three artists’ dramatic experiences of sensory loss—a blind photographer, a musician battling tinnitus and the brain-damaged painter who inspired Million Dollar Baby—are visually rendered into this ravishing essay about art’s singular ability to transform and transcend.

Silent Voices
Three sisters with major musical aspirations give up their dreams, bowing instead to the traditional demands of starting a family. They marry young, face motherhood early and become domestically shackled—prompting an essential dialogue between the generations about female emancipation and education in India.

A Sinner in Mecca
A devout gay Muslim man living in New York risks his life on a perilous pilgrimage to Mecca, hoping to find the answer to a burning question: is it possible for someone like him to be a good Muslim?

Small Things, Big Things
Education is experiential for children attending the alternative Sita School in a small Indian village. A year in the life of the students and teachers showcases its holistic approach to learning that emphasizes creativity and social interaction.

Some Farewells
In a small Quebec hospital, patients smoke cigarettes, sleep under the stars and reap the benefits of a novel approach to palliative care that treats the facility like a home and the patients like family.

Songs of Freedom
Celebrated Canadian opera soprano Measha Brueggergosman takes users with her on a personal voyage through Canada and Cameroon as she performs a beautiful selection of spirituals. This finely crafted film provides a remarkable visual and auditory experience, allowing users intimate access to these powerful performances.

Southern Rites
After her photographs of Montgomery, Georgia’s, racially segregated proms ignite a firestorm that force the town to finally integrate, the filmmaker returns to find a controversial murder trial and historic election that expose the true pace of progress in America.

Spartacus & Cassandra
Two Roma children find belonging under the big top when a young trapezist takes them under her wing. But when the circus folds, they must choose between the custody of their indigent parents or that of the French state.

Spearhunter
The late Gene Morris proclaimed himself “The Greatest Living Spear Hunter in the World”—a legacy he tried to preserve by building a museum in his own honour. But in his megalomaniacal attempts to become legendary, he may not end up being remembered for the reasons he had initially intended.

Speed Sisters
Bold and fearless, the first all-female car racing team in the Middle East is burning rubber and tearing up tracks all over Palestine as they defy the odds and shatter stereotypes of Arab women.

Stand by for Tape Back-up
Reminiscing while grainy fragments from Ghostbusters, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and other childhood touchstones play from an old VHS tape that he and his grandfather frequently used, the filmmaker imparts a poetic and humourous meditation on memory and loss.

Stay Awhile
One of Canada’s first-ever musical sensations to crack the American market, 70s pop group The Bells is the focus of this intimate and loving portrait, directed by the daughter of two of its lead vocalists

Strange Particles
Summer school on the beach might seem like a recipe for fun, but a young physics teacher struggles with finding his place as his quantum approach to the world baffles and sometimes insults his peers and students.

Strangers with Patrick Watson
In this intimate and understated virtual reality project, users are invited to go behind the scenes with the acclaimed Montreal singer Patrick Watson as he works on his music at home in his studio loft. This privileged look at the creative process also provides a nuanced demonstration of how new virtual reality technology can capture the details and atmospherics of everyday environments.

The Strongest Man
From the mountains to the sea, one young bodybuilder is relentless in his pursuit of physical perfection. Working jobs that utilize his strength to save lives, this gentle profile shows how a man’s earnest dream can make him a superhero.

Sugar Coated
As obesity rates skyrocket and doctors treat the first generation of children suffering from fatty liver disease, the sugar industry has adopted the Big Tobacco playbook to sow confusion and doubt—and keep its profits sweet.

The Superstars of Koti
High in the Himalayas, three boys are united as “chosen ones” by the local ancient deity. This coming-of-age tale sees them navigate outside influences, social conditioning and their own identity issues carrying the weight of a god on their shoulders.

Survivors Rowe
Four Anishinaabe men courageously share their stories of abuse, reflecting on hundreds of lives derailed by a predatory minister whose horrific actions left already fragile communities in Northwestern Ontario to suffer in silence.

Sweet Micky for President
Musical strains resound in the pivotal Haitian presidential election following the 2010 earthquake. As ex-Fugee Pras Michel campaigns for controversial musician Michel Martelly, things get heated when former bandmate Wyclef Jean throws his hat into the ring.

Territory
Territory is a compelling and melodic look at the territorial nature of humans and primates. The native Barbary macaques have been staking their claim on the Rock of Gibraltar for over 300 years; humans have attempted in vain to keep them at bay, but the government's next move may be their last.

(T)ERROR
This Sundance award winner exposes the shocking practices and murky justifications driving FBI counterterrorism investigations by following an informant who provides full access on the trail of a new suspect.

Thank You for Playing
When a four-year-old boy is diagnosed with terminal cancer, his father begins working on a new kind of video game to honour the life of his son: a profound and immersive virtual experience of hope.

They Will Have to Kill Us First
Under threat of torture and death, musicians fight to keep their songs alive in northern Mali where Jihadists have ruled with a strict interpretation of sharia law since 2012.

Those Who Feel the Fire Burning
Cameras literally fall overboard when a boat smuggling undocumented people capsizes. Swirling shots and stunning aerials assume one drowned man’s soul in this experimental roving observation of refugees across Europe stuck between dreams and despair.

Thought Crimes
Policeman Gil Valle secretly chatted online about kidnapping and eating women. He never touched anyone, yet “The Cannibal Cop” now faces a life sentence. This sensational court thriller begs a most prescient question: when does virtual fantasy become criminal?

Tig
In 2012, comedian Tig Notaro took to the stage and opened her act with "Good evening, I have cancer." A testament to her defiant spirit and incredible humour in the face of adversity, Tig follows the year after her groundbreaking set.

Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle
This investigative look at the allegedly “non-lethal” TASER gun shows how their initial promise as a safer alternate weapon for law enforcement has proven complicated—even fatal.

Toto and His Sisters
While their mother is imprisoned, young Toto and his teenaged sisters strive to raise themselves in this raw and astonishing look at drug abuse, lost innocence, and the dawning realization of a world of possibilities beyond a Bucharest slum.

Transatlantic
Thirty days at sea showcases powerful rolling Atlantic swells in breathtaking black-and-white as a crew commands a cargo ship between continents. The ocean's vastness and immense power contrasts the routine duties of modern seafarers in this cinematic meditation.

TransFatty Lives
Patrick O'Brien aka TransFatty, an NYC DJ, internet personality and filmmaker, views his ALS diagnosis as “enlightenment by shotgun” and turns his world upside down to document the changes it brings, all with humour and an artist’s eye.

Treasure Island
Welcome to Treasure Island, a former naval base and nuclear dumping ground that now plays home to nearly 2,000 low-income families. Told through the eyes of the island’s youngest residents, the film explores the cost of environmental injustice and provides powerful commentary on the value of human lives.

T-Rex
Seventeen years old, African American and poor, “T-Rex” knows a gold medal in women’s boxing at 2012 Olympics is her only chance of escaping family drama and a dead-end town. Get knocked out by the hype and hypocrisy of the celebrity sports industry.

Tuk-tuk
Amongst the thousands of tuk-tuks zipping through Cairo’s frenetic streets are three child-drivers who maneuver the narrow thoroughfares and slim economic prospects of contemporary Egyptian life, seizing every opportunity to find joy in difficult circumstances.

The Typist
From the archives of the “queer Smithsonian,” San Francisco’s GLBT Historical Society, comes the forgotten history of a gay Korean War veteran tasked with writing the military discharges for over 1,300 outed gay seamen. The Typist details a conflicted clerk’s participation in discrimination and his divided allegiance to homosexuality and heroism.

Unbranded
Four young men embark upon an adventure of a lifetime. Traversing desert to mountain, they ride over 3000 miles from Mexico to Canada on adopted wild mustangs—a journey once a reality for western frontiersmen.

Uncertain
The tiny town of Uncertain, Texas, is the unlikely setting for this arrestingly beautiful Southern Gothic tale of three men grappling with their demons—all under the quiet threat of their water supply being choked by an aquatic weed.

The Visit
What happens if intelligent alien life lands on Earth? You will be glad to know the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs has a team ready for extra-terrestrial contact. See a rare simulation of their response scenario in this cinematic gem.

War of Lies
How did one refugee in Germany become the American government’s justification for the 2003 Iraq invasion? The unrepentant Iraqi “engineer”—the lone source of weapons of mass destruction misinformation—finally reveals how the war based on his lie truly began.

Warriors From the North
This complex and multilayered story of a father desperately trying to make contact with his son who has joined al-Shabaab offers chilling insight into what fuels the current trend of Western Muslim youth joining radical groups abroad.

Welcome to Leith
A real-life horror story unfolds in the near-deserted town of Leith, North Dakota, when a dangerous white supremacist attempts to buy up land in a plot to establish a community of neo-Nazis.

Western
As cowboy and lawman navigate their rapidly changing hometowns and an ever-growing divide, Western paints a stunning and subtle portrait of two towns straddling the US-Mexico border that previously existed in harmony.

What Happened, Miss Simone?
The legendary Nina Simone is brought back to life in this intimate portrait of her tumultuous life. Deemed the "High Priestess of Soul,” Simone made her mark as a pianist, singer and civil rights icon.

The Wolfpack
Obsessively kept from the outside world by their father in a Manhattan apartment, six remarkable teenage brothers grow up inhabiting a world entirely shaped by movies, but newfound freedom offers a reality much different than what they imagined.

The Wolverine: The Fight of the James Bay Cree
In a Cree territory called Eeyou Istchee, an ancient legend involving the battle between a wolverine (Kuekuatsheu) and toxic-spraying giant skunk (Mishi-zhigaag) serves as a potent allegory against uranium mining development through a cinematic weaving of animation and local nature footage.

A Woman Like Me
When filmmaker Alex Sichel is diagnosed with terminal cancer, her survival instinct resorts to storytelling, conjuring a fictitious version of herself, played by Lili Taylor, to navigate her tumultuous journey in this exceptionally creative, funny and moving documentary-drama hybrid.

http://www.hotdocs.ca/

18th Cinéfranco 2015, April 10–19

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Featuring films from directors such as Micheline Lanctôt, Kaouther Ben Hania, Marie-Castille Mention-Schaar
Starring Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Carré, Agnès Jaoui, Brigitte Pogonat, among many others

Cinéfranco 2015, English Canada’s largest celebration of international Francophone cinema finds a new home at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema in Toronto from Friday, April 10, 2015 to Sunday, April 19, 2015.

In its 18th year, Cinéfranco once again explores the diverse cinemas of the Francophone diaspora, the riches of Francophone cultures and showcases the talents of established as well as rising Francophone filmmakers and artists. With 22 feature films and 7 shorts, including many award-winning and highly acclaimed films from festivals around the world, there is something for all lovers of cinema, from comedy fans to thriller aficionados. Films from Belgium, Canada, France, Tunisia, The United Arab Emirates and Morocco will grace the big screen, including 7 North American Premieres, 9 English Canadian Premieres, 1 Canadian Premiere and 1 Ontario Premiere.

Women are at the forefront of this year’s festival, standing out both behind and in front of the camera. Female filmmakers shine as they tell their stories with undeniable dramatic intensity. A powerful presence in Quebec cinema for decades, Micheline Lanctôt’s Autrui goes straight to the heart of homelessness. Kaouther Ben Hania daring mockumentary (The Slasher of Tunis/ Le Challat de Tunis) denounces the machismo of Tunisian society with skill and humour. Marie-Castille Mention-Schaar (Once In A Lifetime /Les Héritiers) takes us to a multicultural and multiethnic grade 10 class of unruly pupils, who connect with Jewish teenagers of the Holocaust generation, in a film full of surprises and optimism.

Based on a true story, the remarkable Party Girl features Angélique Litzenburger, who plays herself, as the aging nightclub hostess who has to face the prospects of leaving behind her friends and the only life she’s known. Angélique’s real life son, Samuel Theis, one of the three co-directors and writers of the film, has also cast his siblings Mario, Severine and Cynthia in the film which opened Un Certain Regard at Cannes.

Female talent heats up the screen with strong, heroic performances: they fight tooth and nail to save a daughter (In the Name of My Daughter/L’homme qu’on aimait trop), they struggle to keep their dreams alive (Now or Never /Maintenant ou jamais), they defeat adversity (Marie’s Story/Marie Heurtin). Played by Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Carré, Agnès Jaoui, Brigitte Pogonat and so many more, the talent of these women comes through loud and clear.

Marcelle Lean, Founder-Artistic Director of Cinéfranco says of this year’s line-up, “I love this year’s film selection as it features strong characters mostly inspired by true stories or acclaimed novels. The directing and acting are amazing!”


Welcome to Cinéfranco 2015!

Isn’t it Romantic?

Love opens and closes this year’s festival.


Opening night gets underway with romantic comedy, Tokyo Fiancée, where we find 20 year Amélie (Pauline Étienne) returning to her native country, Japan.  She pulls us into the heart of her adventures, her daydreams and her love life (with Rinri to whom she teaches French).  Director Liberski’s dynamic pace energizes the protagonist’s exciting quest for her dreams.

In closing night film The Easy Way Out/L’Art de la fugue, which just opened in France March 4, three brothers face the music of their own drama, worsened by meddling parents. Will Antoine accept his lover’s proposal to buy a house and settle? Will Gérard stop loving his ex-wife? Will Louis be able to tell his father he can’t marry Julie?  Adapted from Stephen McCauley’s novel, the clever and witty script is played out on screen by a cast of unforgettable characters. Director Brice Cauvet will attend Cinéfranco for the film.

Romance continues throughout the festival to move and uplift us.

Patchwork Family/Du Goudron et des Plumes is an endearing love story about the humanity and sincerity of ordinary people, told with humor and originality.  Actress Émilie Dequenne charms with her glowing energy in Not My Type/Pas son genre, Lucas Belvaux’s fable of a philosopher who falls in love with a simple hairdresser.  In Stranger in a Cab/Ceci n’est pas un polar, a bitter and lonely Montreal cab driver (Roy Dupuis) becomes smitten with a woman with a secret.   Tony Gatlif’s film Geronimo is an explosive musical in the style of a gipsy West Side Story where two opposing families are ready to kill each other for honour’s sake.

Comedies

Cinéfranco knows how to put a smile on your face

In Almost Friends/On a failli être amies, Carole attempts to break free from her husband’s shadow, leading to the formation of a complex relationship with Marithé whose help she seeks at an adult training centre.   From the beloved children’s books “Le petit Nicolas” comes a family comedy with old-school charm.  Nicholas on Holidays/Les Vacances du Petit Nicolas takes us on vacation with little Nicholas who suspects his romantic future is being arranged by his parents.   In Eric Lavain’s Barbecue/BBQ, Antoine has a heart attack at nearly 50 despite his healthy lifestyle.  He decides to live life to the fullest and invites his buddies to stay with him at a stunning house in the Cévennes, where eventually old beefs get served on a platter.  Xavier Diskeuve serves up hilarious misunderstandings in his clever comedy Jacques a Vu, featuring the François Maniquet’s incredible silent acting and comedic misdemeanor.   In Memories/ Les Souvenirs, two unusual characters, separated by over 6 decades, unexpectedly end up on a journey together.  Annie Cordy is unforgettable!  Three men battle more than their inner demons in Masters of Suspense/Les Maîtres du suspense, as they travel to Louisiana in an attempt to cure a bad case of writers block.

Who am I?

Films deal with identity struggles in Cinéfranco 2015

In Summer Nights/Les Nuits d’été, Michel, who loves his wife, also loves dressing likea woman.  He must face his right to his own identity in the context of a 60’s prejudiced society.  The Golden Calf /Le Veau d’or , Hassan Legzouli’ s road movie about  a young Franco Moroccan’s quest for identity after being sent to Morocco by his father.  Torn between two cultures, he will do anything to return to France.

Thrillers

Cinéfranco 2015 includes selected thrillers. In Next Time I’ll Aim For The Heart/La Prochaine fois je viserai le cœur inspired by the criminal Lamare affair is awe-inspiring by the dead-on acting of Guillaume Canet as the crime perpetrator/ investigator of murders.  Stranger in a Cab/ Ceci n’est pas un polar marries a love affair with an inquiry with the charismatic, Roy Dupuis well matched with Christine Beaulieu. Seduction, money and betrayal among the French Riviera’s rich and famous propel André Téschiné’s In The Name of My Daughter/L’Homme qu’on aimait trop.  In his second Cinéfranco film, Guillaume Canet stars alongside the magnificent Catherine Deneuve and remarkable Adéle Haenel in this gripping drama based on the infamous 1977 Le Roux Affair.

Short Films and Round-Table Program:

Saturday, April 18 @11:00am at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema (506 Bloor St. W.) will showcase the riches and beauty of Quebec cinema at this year’s Short Films and Roundtable program. With Cinéfranco’s theme, “What is the use of a short film?” The program of Francophone Canadian shorts includes a Q+A with various Quebecois and French filmmakers in attendance. In partnership with of La Tournée du cinéma québécois.

Special program of FREE events on Thursday, April 16 at Alliance Française de Toronto (24 Spadina Road)

Francophone Films From Canada on Thursday, April 16 @ 6:00pm at the Toronto Alliance française (24 Spadina Road), will showcase National Talent, followed by Q+A with various directors in attendance.  In partnership with FRIC, LABO and Alliance française de Toronto.

Guilda - Elle est bien dans ma peau
Director: Julien Cadieux 2014 Canada 52 min 
There doesn’t seem to be enough epithets to describe Jean Guilda: comedian, singer, costume and make-up innovator, transvestite extraordinaire. It seems the best one, however, is the simplest: artist. Elegantly talented and altogether groundbreaking, Guilda – his stage name recalling his real last name, as well as Rita Hayworth’s portrayal of Gilda, that indomitable mame – graced theatrical stages and television screens from France to Québec for decades. Having established himself in Montréal in 1955 where he remained until his death in 2012, he helped introduce Québec to the fabulous world of female impersonation, approaching his craft with dignity and a pioneering spirit. More than just a celebration of this irreplaceable artist, Guilda the film pays homage to the once thriving swirl of cabarets and is a love letter to Montreal and parenthood, a tribute to the majesty of fleet-footed time, and a reminder of the impact of being oneself. A documentary both affecting and triumphant, Guilda traces one spectacular life through the people and places that touched and transformed Guilda so that Guilda could transform and touch us. (Michael Belcher)


Special Guest Directors at Cinéfranco 2015
Micheline Lanctôt (Director), Autrui, (Actress) Stranger in a Cab/Ceci n’est pas un polar
Stéphane Lapointe (Director), Masters of Suspense/ Les Maîtres du suspense
Patrick Gazé (Director), Stranger in a Cab/ Ceci n’est pas un polar
Brice Cauvin (Director), The Easy Way Out/ L’Art de la fugue (Closing Night Film) (April 16-20)

Short Film Directors & Round Table Attendees:
Patrick Bosse (Director), Anatomy/Anatomie
Patrick Aubert (Director), Pepper/ Le Piment
Sophie B. Jacques (Director), Chaloupe
Marie-Eve Juste (Director), The Sands/Plage de sable

*Note: The presence of Guests may be subject to last minute and unexpected changes


Cinéfranco 2015 Box Office Information - Tickets, Passes & Packages:

Advance Tickets, Passes, Packages:
•    ONLINE: CINEFRANCO.COM or BLOORCINEMA.COM
•    IN PERSON: BLOOR HOT DOCS CINEMA, 506 BLOOR ST WEST, TORONTO
    (box office open daily 1 hr before the first screening for day of ticket sales)

         Festival Pass: $60 (only $3 per ticket!)
         Festival 6-Pack: $36 (only $6 per ticket!)
         Regular Single Ticket: $12
         Student & Senior (60+) Tickets (proof of ID required):  $10
         Youth (Under 18) Tickets (proof of ID required): $8
         Bloor Hot Docs Cinema Member Ticket:  $8

FOR ANY QUESTIONS REGARDING YOUR PURCHASE, PLEASE CONTACT: bloorboxoffice@hotdocs.ca

*All prices include HST. $1 per ticket fee applies on all tickets purchased online, $4 for Festival Pass & Package.

**The Cinéfranco 6-Pack of tickets is intended for one person coming to see six films. When you purchase it, you will need to select which six films you would like to attend. When buying online, choose print-at-home tickets (free) or pick them up at the box office ($1 per order). If you are buying in person at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema box office, your 6 tickets will be printed on the spot.

All films at Cinéfranco are screened with English subtitles.   www.cinefranco.com

Full lineup announced for 2015 Osheaga Music and Arts Festival

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This year, the Osheaga Music and Arts Festival celebrates its 10th anniversary at Parc Jean-Drapeau. This morning, they announced their full lineup for this year's festival which will be taking place on the weekend of July 31, August 1 and August 2.

Previously, they had announced headliners including Florence + The Machine, Kendrick Lamar, The Black Keys, The Avett Brothers, St. Vincent, Alt-J, The Decemberists, Hot Chip, Weezer and Nas. Today, they completed their announcement of over 100 bands that will play on six stages during the three-day festival.

http://www.osheaga.com/





2015 Prism Prize goes to director Chad VanGaalen

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On Sunday, March 29, director Chad VanGaalen was announced as the winner of the 2015 Prism Prize for Timber Timbre's Beat The Drum Slowly music video at the Prism Prize Top Ten Screening and Awards Presentation at TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto, Ontario. Chad VanGaalen, who was also nominated for his own song Monster, was on hand to accept the Prism Prize trophy and $5,000 award.

The Prism Prize Audience Award was presented to director Natalie Rae Robison for Kandle's Not Up To Me, based on thousands of online votes collected in collaboration with Noisey Canada.

Also honoured during the eventwas director Jared Raab, who was in attendance to acceptthe Arthur Lipsett Award, established to recognize an innovative and unique approach to music video art. The Prism Prize Special Achievement Award, honouring a Canadian music video artist for their artistic achievements and exceptional contribution to music video art on a world stage, was presented to animator and cinematographer Christopher Mills.

William F. White, Canada's oldest and largest provider of professional motion picture, television, digital media and theatrical production equipment, provided $2000 equipment vouchers for all Prism Prize Award winners including the Grand Prize, Audience Award, Prism Prize Special Achievement Award and the Arthur Lipsett Award.

Plans for the fourth annual Prism Prize will be announced later this year. Prism Prize is proud to host a comprehensive resource for music fans to watch the best Canadian music videos all in one place. Videos and news from Canada’s music video community are available throughout the year at www.prismprize.com.

2015 Prism Prize finalists



18th annual Canadian Radio Music Awards – nominees announced

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Canadian Music Week is pleased to announce nominations for the 18th annual Canadian Radio Music Awards! Kiesza, MAGIC! and Hedley, are among those honoured. This year’s award show will take place on Friday, May 8th at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel. Sponsored by Bell Media, the Canadian Radio Music Awards celebrate first-time charted artists and honour individuals or groups with some of the most played songs on Canadian radio.

This year’s show will feature performances by MAGIC!, Kiesza, Dear Rouge, Andee, Virginia to Vegas and Jess Moskaluke. Full list of nominees below.

The Canadian Radio Music Awards offer an opportunity to honour national and international artists who have gained significant traction on the radio over the past year. Radio has long served as a significant platform for artists to break through and gain mass appeal. This year’s nominees fittingly reflect the power of a songs ability to connect with the public and push artists to the next level.

Other notable nominations include several Canadian acts that have received considerable international success this past year including, Drake for “Hold On, We’re Going Home”, Chromeo for “Jealous (I ain’t with it)” and Death From Above for “Trainwreck 1979”.

This year’s award categories include: AC, Rock, CHR, and Country as well as the SOCAN Song of the Year and Fans’ Choice. Nominees for the Heatseeker Award will be announced at a later date.

Nominees include artists who have hit the Canadian charts for the first time and who have achieved top airplay in different formats based on radio “spins”, as recorded by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems (BDS) in 2014. Votes cast by program directors, music directors, and on-air personalities determine the winners.

Radio listeners from across the country can vote online for the Fans’ Choice Award, at: www.cmw.net.

Two additional non-voting awards will also be presented at this year’s ceremony: the FACTOR Breakthrough Award for top airplay for a new FACTOR supported artist; and the Sennheiser Chart Topper Award for top overall airplay.

Canadian Music Week is Canada’s leading annual entertainment event dedicated to the expression and growth of the country’s music, media and entertainment industries. Combining three information-intensive conferences; a trade exposition; a film festival; a comedy festival; four awards shows and the nation’s largest new music festival, CMW spans a ten-day period from May 1 to May 10, 2015 at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel and over 60 downtown Toronto venues, attracting participants from across the globe. For more information, visit www.cmw.net.


Nominees for the 18th annual Canadian Radio Music Awards

BEST NEW GROUP OR SOLO ARTIST: AC
ANDEE – NEVER GONE
CHROMEO – JEALOUS
KIESZA – HIDEAWAY
MAGIC! – RUDE
VIRGINIA TO VEGAS – WE ARE STARS

BEST NEW GROUP OR SOLO ARTIST: CHR
ADVENTURE CLUB – WONDER
CHROMEO – JEALOUS
KIESZA – HIDEAWAY
MAGIC! – RUDE
SHAWN MENDES – LIFE OF THE PARTY

BEST NEW GROUP OR SOLO ARTIST: ROCK
CURRENT SWELL – KEYS TO THE KINGDOM
DEAR ROUGE – I HEARD I HAD
DEATH FROM ABOVE 1979 – TRAINWRECK 1979
GAY NINETIES – LETTERMAN
WILDLIFE – LIGHTNING TENT

BEST NEW GROUP OR SOLO ARTIST: COUNTRY
JESS MOSKALUKE – CHEAP WINE & CIGARETTES
LINDSAY ELL – TRIPPIN’ ON US
MADELINE MERLO – SINKING LIKE A STONE
ROD BLACK – KEEPIN’ ON
TRISTAN HORNCASTLE – A LITTLE BIT OF ALRIGHT

SOCAN SONG OF THE YEAR
CHROMEO – JEALOUS (I AIN’T WITH IT)
DRAKE – HOLD ON, WE’RE GOING HOME
GLENN MORRISON – GOODBYE
HEDLEY – CRAZY FOR YOU
MAGIC! – RUDE

FANS CHOICE
CHROMEO
GLENN MORRISON
HEDLEY
MAGIC!
SERENA RYDER






Call for Submissions: Toronto Urban Film Festival 2015

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Submit your silent, one-minute film before June 1st and avoid the $20 entry fee.
Final deadline: June 30, 2015.

Take part in the North America’s largest commuter film festival. The 9th annual Toronto Urban Film Festival (TUFF) returns to subway screens across Toronto from September 12 to 20, 2015.

TUFF accepts all genres of silent, 60-second film, video, and animation of interest to an urban audience. Films screen at 5-minute intervals on 300 digital platform screens across the Toronto subway system and non-stop at a special "Film Zone" station downtown. The audience includes over one million commuters who take the Toronto subway daily.

Now in its second year, “TUFF Local Stories” will appear on digital screens in over 40 shopping centres across Canada. “TUFF Local Stories” will feature film/video/animation by Canadians that explore, critique, or show their love for their own hometowns.

Thousands of dollars in cash and prizes will be awarded, including a $2,500 cash reward to the winner of the Naish McHugh Award for emerging GTA filmmakers, presented by the City of Toronto. Past guest judges have included celebrated Canadian filmmakers Guy Maddin, Jennifer Baichwal, Atom Egoyan, and Deepa Mehta.

Free until: May 31st
Paid Submission: $20 CAD as of June 1st
Final Deadline: June 30, 2015

TUFF is produced by PATTISON Onestop and Art for Commuters, with support from NBCUniversal Canada.

Visit our website for festival information, submission details, and to upload your film submission. www.torontourbanfilmfestival.com

Contact: info@torontourbanfilmfestival.com
Follow us on Twitter: @TUFFest
Like us on Facebook: Toronto Urban Film Festival (TUFF)



28th Images Festival, April 9-18, 2015

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The 28th Images Festival is right around the corner, with 10 days of groundbreaking film screenings, live performances and media-based installations taking place throughout Toronto April 9 - 18, 2015. The Images Festival showcases the innovative edge of international contemporary media art through its ON SCREEN, OFF SCREEN and LIVE IMAGES programming.

The Images Festival continues to embrace new modes of creativity for a radical and unforgettable extravaganza of contemporary moving image culture. More than ever, Images engages audiences through our expanded public programming with more talks, tours, guest writers on our iFBLOG, as well as web-based projects and online screenings on our video player iFPOD. Find out more at www.imagesfestival.com

OPENING and CLOSING NIGHT EVENTS!

The 2015 Images Festival kicks off April 9 at The Royal Cinema (608 College St.) with a channel surfing city symphony for the twenty first century, Tomorrow is Always Too Long. Turner Prize nominee Phil Collins (UK) brings Glasgow to life in his first feature film scored by Mogwai’s Barry Burns with six songs by Welsh singer-songwriter Cate Le Bon. Join us afterwards at Workman Arts where Brooklyn-based Peter Burr’s immersive four-channel multimedia installation Cave Exits will premiere at our Opening Night Party!

Closing Night brings together a variety of LIVE acts at Workman Arts (651 Dufferin Street), including a scoring of several seminal Joyce Wieland 16mm classics by Montréal-based band 10,000 Horses (Alexis O'Hara and Stephen Lawson), as well as a special screening of Erik Van Lieshout's Basement (an ode to the cats living below St Petersburg's Hermitage Museum.) Walter Scott brings to life his fictional character Wendy, whose dreams of contemporary art stardom are perpetually derailed and Stephanie Comilang re-imagines iconic music videos in Karaoke Karaoke with some very special guests. 


Images’ ON SCREEN program brings together local and international artists, with screenings of feature length works, curated shorts, and one 8 hour epic. We are delighted to inhabit the AGO’s Jackman Hall as our main screening venue once again this year. Join us for the movies and stay for conversations and Q & A’s with filmmakers and curators scheduled throughout the festival.

Mga Anak Ng Unos (Storm Children, Book One)– Lav Diaz – April 17 @ 8 PM
Internationally-acclaimed and award winning filmmaker Lav Diaz tells the story of typhoon Yolanda, by following children as they play in the aftermath of one of the most powerful and destructive typhoons in recorded history.

Li Wen at East Lake– Luo Li – April 15 @ 9 PM
In this fascinating documentary fiction hybrid, director Luo Li (Emperor Visits the Hell, Rivers and My Father) takes us on a tour of the rapidly dwindling shores of East Lake in the ever-expanding megacity of Wuhan in Li Wen at East Lake.

2015 Canadian Artist Spotlight – Iris Ng – April 11 @ 7:30 PM
What do Sarah Polley, Jean Paul Kelly, Min Sook Lee, and Luis Jacob all have in common? The answer is cinematographer Iris Ng. With more than fifty productions over the last decade, Iris has been behind the lens for some of the most influential Canadian artists and we are proud to highlight her work as the 2015 Canadian Artist Spotlight.

Park Lanes– Kevin Jerome Everson – April 18 @ 11-7 PM
In March 2014 Kevin Jerome Everson and his crew spent three days shooting in a Virginian factory that produces all the components needed to build bowling alleys. The resulting work consists of a full shift, an 8-hour long portrait of a day in the life of the factory. To be screened at the new Gallery TPW (170 St. Helens Ave)

Wanda– Barbara Loden – April 11 @ 5 PM
One of the great enigmas of American independent cinema, Wanda is written and directed by Barbara Loden, who also starred in the titular role. Wanda was largely ignored after winning the International Critics Award at the 1970 Venice Film Festival. We are thrilled to present a new 35mm print for the first time in Canada.

The Kalampag Tracking Agency– April 10 @ 7 PM
Curated by Merv Espina and Shireen Seno, this program presents some of the most striking moving image works from the Philippines and its diaspora over the past thirty years. With a variety of formats, techniques and textures, The Kalampag Tracking Agency gives attention to the works of John Torres, Miko Revereza, Raya Martin, Rox Lee and many more.

Seeing the Past– Monday April 13 @ 9 PM
Reflecting on the disappearance of agrarian existence, award winning diary filmmaker Philip Hoffman collages inter-connected Ontario histories Slaughterhouse. Bolivian filmmaker Miguel Hilari’s cinematic observations of a remote Bolivian village point to a longing for a deeper connection with the culture of his Indigenous ancestors in The Corral and the Wind.

Answering the Call - April 12 @ 9 PM
La Providence by Emmanuelle Léonard is a series of interviews with retired members of the Sisters of Charity of Montréal, and is followed by Amanda Berg's documentation of a women's tackle football team in Every Body Hit Somebody. The two films in this program offer more than a portrait of nuns and football, exploring issues and expectations around gender, identity, passion and belief.

Peeling Back the Layers– April 14 @ 7 PM
The films and videos in this program look at transformation and documentation, including a remarkably raw and moving video diary of three years in the life of a young migrant worker Guo Lifen (aka, Fenfen). Filmmaker Leslie Tai broadcasts Fenfen’s footage on television monitors in a variety of public contexts, where the intimate and personal become universal as we all share in The Private Life of Fenfen.

The Influence of Anxiety– April 10 @ 9 PM
Every year the Images showcases local talent and this year is no exception as Paulette Phillips and Robert Lee program recent works by Toronto artists including Clint Enns, Eval Kocze, Dona Arbabzadeh, Jean Paul Kelly, Annie MacDonnell, and Blake Williams.


Out of the cinema and into the galleries! Our OFF SCREEN program presents media-based installations by Canadian and international artists at local galleries, artist-run centres and public locations by Isabell Spengler, Luis Jacob, Chris Curreri, Jacqueline Hoang Nguyen and many more.

Rashaad Newsome (USA) - Silence please, the show is about to begin @ AGYU
Rashaad Newsome’s first Canadian solo exhibition brings together a selection of recent video, performance and collage works. Sampling classical music compositions, hip-hop rhythms, and vogue beats, Newsome constructs a bold operatic encounter that challenges what it means to be black and queer. Culminating in a live performance the night of the opening Wednesday April 8 @ 6 - 9PM, there is FREE Performance Bus departing from OCADU at 6 PM for AGYU and returning downtown at 9 PM.

Samuel Beckett, Chris Curreri, Luis Jacob - Phantom Limbs @ Scrap Metal
Imagine the body from outside to inside and you might get Phantom Limbs. This exhibition brings together three distinct artworks by Chris Curreri, Luis Jacob and Samuel Beckett that collectively create an elliptical passage through the human body. The works point to the limits of our bodies, and the ways we transcend these limits through communication.

Postcommodity - A Non-Place in A Space @ ASpace Gallery
New Mexico based collective Postcommodity (Raven Chacon, Cristóbal Martínez, Kade L. Twist and Nathan Young) reconsider our understanding of communities and geographies by connecting Indigenous narratives with the rights of cultural self-determination. Challenging the notion of what “non-place” has historically meant for settlers and colonizers, this exhibition asks what is the connection between land, culture, and community.

Isabell Spengler – Two Days at the Falls @ Trinity Square Video
For over a century Niagara Falls has captured the imaginations of tourists and artists, and the same can be said for Isabell Spengler. Part of Images Festival and Trinity Square Video’s European Media Artists in Residence Exchange (EMARE), this immersive installation presents two panoramic depictions of the iconic Falls–one constructed in her Berlin studio before having visited the Falls, and the other shot over Two Days at the Falls.

Live Images embraces and explores different traditions of performance that relate to the moving image. From happenings at the Chinatown Centre Mall with Casey Wei, to documenting How Many Performance Artists Does it Take to Change a Light Bulb with Jess Dobkin, these programs redefine the live experience.

Casey Wei - Chinatown Happenings @ 222 Spadina Avenue
Taking up residence inside Chinatown Centre Mall, Vancouver-based artist, filmmaker and musician Casey Wei will be the Images Festival’s first-ever artist-in-mall residence. Wei will be activating and filming the lower level mezzanine and stage area with different daily free activities from ballroom dancing, daily screenings, open mics, live music, mah jong tables, tarot card readings, karaoke and much more. All events are free and open to the public.

Jess Dobkin - How Many Performance Artists Does it Take to Change a Light Bulb (For Martha Wilson) @ Enoch Turner Schoolhouse
Jess Dobkin’s newest work, How Many Performance Artists Does it Take to Change a Light Bulb (For Martha Wilson), is at once a question, a joke, and a reflection on the ways we see. Made in response and as an ode to Martha Wilson, one of America’s foremost groundbreaking performance artists and founder of the legendary New York artist run Franklin Furnace, this four hour durational performance takes on the complex and riddled history of performance art, by while changing a light bulb with at least forty people documenting the piece.

2015 SiriusXM Indie Awards – nominees announced

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AWARDS TO BE HANDED OUT MAY 9TH AT THE GRAND BALLROOM, SHERATON CENTRE IN TORONTO

Canadian Music Week is proud to announce the nominees for the 2015 SiriusXM Indies - 15th Annual Independent Music Awards. ALVVAYS, Caribou, Mac DeMarco and Death From Above 1979 are among the nominated artists being honoured across 26 categories on Saturday May 9th, 2015 at the Grand Ballroom in the Sheraton Centre (123 Queen St. West, Toronto). Full list of nominees is below.

Celebrating another year of top independent talent - both Canadian and International - the award show will feature special performances from nominated artists, including The Glorious Sons, Alvvays, Broncho, and Miracles. Multi-platinum selling rock act Billy Talent will be headlining the SiriusXM Indies with an exclusive concert performance.

Hosted by SiriusXM Canada's Jeff Leake, the 2015 SiriusXM Indies will be broadcast live for SiriusXM subscribers in Canada and the U.S. on "Iceberg" (Sirius 161) and "The Verge" (XM 173). English and French winners of the Emerging Artist of the Year categories will each receive a $5,000 bursary from SiriusXM Canada.

Both public and industry votes decide the winners. Fans can vote online for their favourites as of today at http://indies.ca.

Tickets for the show are now available to purchase online at http://indies.ca, Ticketweb, Rotate This and Soundscapes.

Canadian Music Week is Canada's leading annual entertainment event dedicated to the expression and growth of the country's music, media and entertainment industries. Combining three information-intensive conferences; a trade exposition; a film festival; a comedy festival; four awards shows and the nation's largest new music festival, CMW spans a ten-day period from May 1 to May 10, 2015 at the Sheraton Centre Hotel and over 60 downtown Toronto venues, attracting participants from across the globe. For more information, visit www.cmw.net.

Sirius XM Canada Holdings Inc. (TSX: XSR) operates as SiriusXM Canada. SiriusXM Canada, with over 2.6 million subscribers, is the country's leading audio entertainment company and broadcasts more than 120 satellite radio channels featuring premier sports, news, talk, entertainment and commercial-free music. SiriusXM Canada offers an array of content from the most recognized news, entertainment and major sports brands including the NHL, NFL, NBA, NASCAR, CNN, CBC, FOX, BBC, Howard Stern, Disney, Comedy Central and more.


Nominees for the 15th Annual Independent Music Awards

ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Alvvays - Alvvays (Royal Mountain Records)
Death From Above 1979 - The Physical World (Last Gang Records)
Mac DeMarco - Salad Day's (Captured Tracks)
Owen Pallet - In Conflict (Secret City Records)
The New Pornographers - Brill Bruisers (Last Gang Records)

SINGLE OF THE YEAR
[SEBELL] - Till the Sun Burns Out ­(Show & Tell: Music)
Chromeo - Jealous (I Ain't With It) (Last Gang Records)
Death From Above 1979 - Trainwreck 1979 (Last Gang Records)
MAGIC! - Rude (Latium)
USS (Ubiquitous Synergy Seeker) - Yin Yang (Coalition Music)

GROUP OR DUO OF THE YEAR
Alvvays (Royal Mountain Records)
Death From Above 1979 (Last Gang Records)
The Glorious Sons (Black Box)
The New Pornographers (Last Gang Records)
Tokyo Police Club (Dine Alone Records)

ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Caribou (City Slang/Merge)
Mac DeMarco (Captured Tracks)
Owen Pallett (Secret City Records)
Tanya Tagaq (Six Shooter Records)
The Weeknd (XO)

FEMALE ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Jenn Grant (Outside)
Lisa LeBlanc (Bonsound)
Lowell (Arts & Crafts Productions)
Steph Cameron (Pheromone Recordings)
Tanya Tagaq (Six Shooter Records)

MALE ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Chad VanGaalen (Flemish Eye)
Jay Malinowski & The Deadcoast (Pirates Blend Records)
Kevin Drew (Arts & Crafts Productions)
Owen Pallet (Secret City Records)
Rich Aucoin (Bonsound)

SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR
July Talk (Sleepless Records)
The New Pornographers (Last Gang Records)
The Weeknd (XO)
Whitehorse (Six Shooter Records)
You+Me (Dine Alone Records)

ALTERNATIVE ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Alvvays (Royal Mountain Records)
Bahamas (Barchords/Brushfire Records)
Dan Mangan + Blacksmith (Arts & Crafts Productions)
Timber Timbre (Arts & Crafts Productions)
You+Me (Dine Alone Records)

COUNTRY ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Dallas Smith (604 Records Inc)
Jess Moskaluke (MDM Recordings)
Kira Isabella (Legend North)
The Road Hammers (Open Road Recordings)
Tim Hicks (Open Road Recordings)

DANCE ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Adventure Club (Adventure Club/BMG Rights Management)
Chromeo (Last Gang Records)
Glenn Morrison (Robbins Entertainment)
Mia Martina (CP Music Group)
TR/ST (Arts & Crafts Productions)

ELECTRONIC ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Art Department (Ultra Music Canada)
Caribou (City Slang /Merge)
Operators (Last Gang Records)
Plastikman (Mute)
Zeds Dead (Ultra Music)

FOLK/ROOTS ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Blackie and The Rodeo Kings (File Under: Music)
Del Barber (True North)
Oh Susanna (Sonic Unyon)
The Bar Brothers (Secret City)
The Bros. Landreth (Maple Music Recordings)

FRANCOPHONE ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Alexandre Désilets (Indica Records)
David Giguère (Audiogram)
Jimmy Hunt (Dare To Care)
Phillippe B (Bonsound)
Radio Radio (Bonsound)

JAZZ ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
BadBadNotGood (Arts & Crafts Productions)
Diana Panton (eOne Music Canada)
Elizabeth Shepherd (Linus Entertainment)
Myriad3 (Alma)
The Souljazz Orchestra (Strut Records)

METAL ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Archspire (Season of Mist)
Culted (Relapse)
Devin Townsend Project (Inside Out Music/eOne)
Protest the Hero (Protest the Hero)
Thantifaxath (Dark Descent)

POP ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
[SEBELL] (Show & Tell: Music)
Allie X (Sleepless Records)
MAGIC! (Latium)
Trevor Guthrie (EB Inc.)
Virginia to Vegas (Wax Records)


PUNK/HARDCORE ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Comeback Kid (Distort Ent./Fontana North)
Fucked Up (Arts & Crafts Productions)
Single Mothers (Dine Alone Records)
The OBGMs (The OBGMs)
White Lung (Domino)


RAP/HIP-HOP ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Cam Smith (Robin Steele Records)
Jazz Cartier (Safe & Sound)
Naturally Born Strangers (Legends League)
Saukrates (Culvert Music)
Tre Mission (Last Gang Records)

ROCK ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Big Wreck (Big Wreck)
Current Swell (Blue Heron Music)
Death From Above 1979 (Last Gang Records)
The Glorious Sons (Black Box)
The Trews (Bumstead Productions)

SOUL/R&B ARTIST OR GROUP OF THE YEAR
Daniel Caesar (Independent)
JRDN (Kuya Productions)
Melanie Durrant (Melanie Durrant)
PartyNextDoor (OVO Sound)
Slakah the Beatchild (BBE Records)

INTERNATIONAL GROUP OR DUO OF THE YEAR
Broncho (Dine Alone Records)
Cloud Nothings (Carpark/Mom+Pop)
Future Islands (4AD)
Run The Jewels (Mass Appeal)
Spoon (Headz Under)

INTERNATIONAL ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Aphex Twin (Warp)
Flying Lotus (Warp)
Hozier (Rubyworks)
Sharon Van Etten (Jagjaguwar)
St. Vincent (Loma Vista)

INTERNATIONAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Against Me! - Transgender Dysphoria Blues (Total Treble)
FKA Twigs - LP1 (XL)
Run The Jewels - Run The Jewels 2 (Mass Appeal)
St. Vincent - St. Vincent (Loma Vista)
The War on Drugs - Lost in the Dream (Secretly Canadian)

INTERNATIONAL SINGLE OF THE YEAR
Future Islands - Seasons (Waiting On You) (4AD)
Hozier - Take Me To Church (Rubyworks)
Jason Aldean - Burnin' it Down (Broken Bow Records)
Mr. Probz - Waves (Robin Shulz Remix) (Ultra Music Canada)
The War on Drugs - Red Eyes (Secretly Canadian)

SIRIUSXM EMERGING ARTIST OF THE YEAR (ENGLISH)
Alvvays (Royal Mountain Records)
BESTiE (Independent)
Close Talker (Nevado Records)
Cousins (Hand Drawn Dracula)
Gay Nineties (Love Letter Recordings/Fontana North)
JPNSGRLS (Light Organ Records)
Royal Tusk (Hidden Pony)
The Barr Brothers (Secret City)
The Dying Arts (Independent)
The Mohrs (Light Organ Records)

SIRIUSXM EMERGING ARTIST OF THE YEAR (FRENCH)
Caravane (Ste-4 Musique)
Fontarabie (Dare To Care)
Genevieve Racette (Independent)
Guillaume Beauregard (La Tribu)
La Bronze (Kartel Musik)
Lubik (117 Records)
Miracles (Music Mansion)
Mordicus (L-A be)
Noe Talbot (Slam Disques)
Phillippe Brach (Independent)

Le MIAFF: Montreal International Animation Film Festival, April 16-19

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Featuring 4 days of animation feature films, shorts workshops, panel discussions and interactive performances, The Montréal International Animation Film Festival, in association with www.filmfestivals.com and Animation World Network is all set to ANIMAZE and entertain Montreal!

At 7pm on Thursday 16th April, the festival will kick off with an exhilarating and groundbreaking live interactive music performance of Mozart’s Magic Flute produced by the German Interactive Media Foundation with music performed live by Montreal sound-artist Philippe Lambert.

Opening night continues with a celebration of the 40th anniversary of X-rated classic Tarzoon: Shame of the Jungle voiced by the pre-Saturday Night Live voices of John Belushi and Bill Murray, alongside Johnny Weissmuller JR, son of the original star of the Tarzan movies. This is the English language version of the original Tarzoon, la honte de la jungle, the French/Belgian animated film directed by cartoonist Picha and Boris Szulzinger.

Further film highlights throughout the festival include a homage to cult classic Heavy Metal with director Gerald Potterton in the house! The world premiere of A Bird in a Cage from the UK is a 19 minute short documentary animation that tells the story of Margaret Mackworth a pioneer of the suffragette society in the UK. Beauty, is an exquisite short, an ode to the Italian renaissance - one of the festival’s Best of Fantasporto Film Festival discoveries. And World of Tomorrow by Don Hertzfeldt, winner of the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance Film Festival / Best Animated Short, and SXSW Best Animated Short.

And le MIAFF will be running a competition with a difference during every major screening! One audience member will be wired up with SENSUM’s wearable technology to take a biometric measurement of their subconscious and emotional response and engagement level to the films. The film that receives the most positive subconscious and emotional response wins!

Alongside all the ANIMAZING films and screenings, le MIAFF is also a festival for professionals. Partnerships with TELETOON and Printemps Numerique present industry panels in animation for cinema, television and gaming with more than a dozen conference and industry networking events at the Concordia University Hall Cinema and deSeve theatres in downtown Montreal.

Conference panels, masterclasses and speakers include: Oscar winning stop motion master Co Hoedeman, Maya Eriksson of the German Interactive Media Foundation producers of The Magic Flute and director Fons Scheidon share the experience of creating the graphic novel.

The NFB on LSD: In Conversation with Christopher Nutter
From musician and filmmaker off the beaten path Chris shares his fascinating perspective of the NFB during the psychedelic era shares stories of Arthur Lipsett who refused Stanley Kubrick’s request to create the title sequence for Dr. Strangelove, Norman McClaren the lion in the hallway and tales of Montreal legendary animator Ryan Larkin and more.

Gerald Potterton: In Conversation
Director of the iconic cult film Heavy Metal, the three-time Oscar nominee shares his stories animating the Beatles Yellow Submarine, directing Buster Keaton and a spin of his rare record collection including a Peter Sellers rare cut and a never heard before soundtrack composed by Ringo Starr.

And, finally, it’s not all work and no play at le MIAFF!! With a host of fab late-night parties - The Opening Night soirée, Reggae Night, Urockaoke, Anime Wine Tasting, and more, all held upstairs at Rosalie’s Restaurant, you’ll be able to party long into the wee small hours every night of the festival!

Buy tickets: http://lemiaff.com/festival/buy-tickets/

http://lemiaff.com/



23rd Annual Toronto Jewish Film Festival; April 30 – May 10

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Anarchists and superheroes, mother-daughter relationships, The Twilight Zone, Canadian archival gems, Robert Redford’s first big role…. All this and much more will be unleashed at the 2015 Toronto Jewish Film Festival (TJFF), running April 30 to May 10, at various venues across the city.

Showcasing 110 films from 18 countries, two International Premieres, four North American Premieres, and 46 Canadian Premieres, this year’s TJFF is a film festival lover’s dream.

TJFF 2015’s exceptional selection of features range from powerful, critically acclaimed dramas, to light-hearted comedies, and dark psychological thrillers. Among them: The Kindergarten Teacher, a complex morality tale on a teacher’s obsession with her student’s extraordinary talent (selected as part of Critics Week series at Cannes); Dough, an endearing comedy starring Jonathan Pryce, set in London’s East End; Bulgaria’s 2015 Oscar® submission Bulgarian Rhapsody, a coming-of-age love story set during the Second World War; You Must Be Joking, a 20-something New Yorker’s quest to find meaning beyond her paralegal job; Atlit, a comical, dramatic and touching story on the bond of sisterhood; and Let’s Go!, the new film from acclaimed director Michael Verhoeven (The Nasty Girl).

TJFF has also lined up a remarkable list of documentaries, including: Irwin and Fran, a loving and hilarious portrait of should-be-legendary comedian and satirist “Professor” Irwin Corey, who Lenny Bruce called “one of the most brilliant comedians of all time”; The Muses of Isaac Bashevis Singer, a look at the complex life of this Nobel laureate, as seen through the eyes of his over 40 female translators, who doubled as sources of inspiration; Forbidden Films, a provocative investigation into the propagandistic content of over 40 banned features produced in Nazi Germany; The Polgar Variant, the fascinating story of the Polgar sisters raised in isolation in communist Budapest to become chess Grandmasters; Look at Us Now, Mother!, director Gayle Kirschenbaum’s endearingly honest exploration into her relationship with her exceptionally critical mother; and Hebrew Superheroes, an energetic cinematic treat that traces the little-known history of Israeli comix.

While best known for his beloved cult sci-fi television series The Twilight Zone, TJFF will offer the unique chance to see some of Rod Serling’s rarely-screened works. These include a 1960 episode from the Playhouse 90 series, In the Presence of Mine Enemies, Serling’s powerful drama set during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, and starring Charles Laughton and Robert Redford in his first major role; and the poignant drama A Storm in Summer, which explores the unexpected friendship between a Jewish Deli owner (played by Peter Ustinov) and an underprivileged black youth. Rod Serling’s daughter, Anne Serling, author of the acclaimed memoir As I Knew Him: My Dad, Rod Serling, will be in attendance to give a talk about her father.

TJFF’s nod to the small screen continues with some exceptional binge watching, including the first 10 episodes of the intensely addictive Israeli series Hostages; as well as four episodes of the hit, award-winning series Transparent, which will be followed by a discussion with Rabbi Susan Goldberg, consultant to the show.

In commemoration of recently lost, beloved artists and icons, TJFF will screen The Go Go Boys: The Inside Story of Cannon Films (Menahem Golan), Bess Myerson: Portrait of an Activist (Bess Myerson), Nichols & May: Take Two (Mike Nichols), It Takes a Shtetl: Leonard Nimoy's Boston (Leonard Nimoy), and Making Trouble: Joan Rivers (the Oscars® didn’t honour this Jewish comedy icon, but TJFF sure will!)

About the Toronto Jewish Film Festival
The Toronto Jewish Film Festival presents the best feature films, documentaries and shorts from around the world, on themes of Jewish culture and identity. The Festival is dedicated to using film for its contemporary popular value and accessibility, in order to reflect the Jewish experience internationally. The TJFF provides an opportunity to heighten awareness of Jewish and cultural diversity, to audiences of all backgrounds, and to present films in their original languages with subtitles, in an effort to break down racial, cultural and religious barriers and stereotypes.

Box office info:
Festival dates – April 30 – May 10, 2015
Full Festival Film Schedule available –online at tjff.com

TJFF Ticket Pricing:
$14.00 – Single Tickets
$9.00 - Matinee Screenings
$10 - Seniors/ Students
$20.00 - Opening Night
Main Number to Call is Festival Box Office: 416-324-9121

Advance Box Office:
ORDER TICKETS ONLINE FROM TJFF.COM

In Person – Toronto Jewish Film Festival Box Office (basement level)* – April 17 – 30
19 Madison Ave.
12pm – 6pm Daily
*no wheelchair access – please call 416-324-9121 for assistance by phone

Cineplex Cinemas Empress Walk Advance Box Office – April 24 - 30
5095 Yonge St. (North York Centre subway stn)
2pm – 6pm Daily

Festival Box Offices:
Toronto Jewish Film Festival Box Office (basement level)*
19Madison Ave.
12pm – 6pm Daily
*no wheelchair access – please call 416-324-9121 for assistance by phone

Cineplex Cinemas Empress Walk* – 5095 Yonge St. (North York Centre subway stn)
Bloor Hot Docs Cinema* – 506 Bloor St W. (Bathurst subway stn)
Alliance Française* - 24 Spadina Rd (Spadina subway stn)
Innis Town Hall * - 2 Sussex Ave. (St. George subway stn)
The ROM Eaton Theatre* - 100 Queen’s Park Circle (Museum subway stn)

*Opens 1 hour before 1st venue screening of the day and closes 30 minutes after last venue screening of the day.


Festival Accès Asie, May 1 – 24

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20 
years 
of 
Asia 
in 
Montréal!

Festival Accès Asie, running from May 1st to 24th, is proud to announce its 20th Anniversary edition! Khosro Berahmandi, General Manager and Artistic Director of the Festival, has prepared an incredible program featuring a wide range of artistic disciplines that will definitely please Asian culture lovers. Festival Accès Asie welcomes actress, Alice Tran (Lance et compte, 30 vies), as its spokesperson for our 20th anniversary celebration.

Included in this edition are 16 artistic events, many of which have been exclusively created for the Festival. To show its appreciation to Accès Asie artist members for their ongoing commitment to the development of the Festival over the years, five artists from the Festival’s Board were invited to create works for this year’s edition. We are very pleased to include these works in our 20th Anniversary program.

The Festival kicks off with our famous Opening Cocktail at which we will reveal the 20th Anniversary Edition program. The first week will feature Kaleidoscope, an exhibition by Kiran Ambwani and Florence So, presenting 20 artists who have appeared in the Festival over the past 20 years. The Festival also invites the public to take part in an open forum Discussion on Asian Heritage in Quebec featuring an exciting panel of Festival artists.

Our second week includes an array of artistic events for audiences to discover. The week begins with the premiere of Tashme : The Living Archives, a play by Julie Tamiko Manning and Matt Miwa, presented in collaboration with the M.A.I. Next, music lovers are invited to take in a fabulous concert of Turkish and Iranian accented music with percussionist Ziya Tabassian among other incredible musicians. This same week will feature two exhibitions – Checkpoints and international exhibition, The State of Origin: REEL & IMAGINED– put together by visual art curators Kakim Goh and Bindu Mehra. The week will wrap up at OM restaurant where Chef Yangchen Lhamo will introduce everyone to the world of Tibetan culinary arts.

In our third week, Tangente and Festival Accès Asie collaborate to present the choreographic works of dancers Ziyian Kwan and Geneviève La. Lady Sylva will also take to the stage this week offering audiences her unique blend of Eastern and Western music and songs. Following its success in our 2014 edition, the famous Middle-Eastern dance competition will return to the Festival. As well, an exchange between visual artists and the public will be on offer at the Côte-des-Neiges Maison de la Culture. Since we are only 20 once, we are excited to shine a spotlight on the Place des Festivals events.

Over three days, Vent d’Asie au Quartier des Spectacles will headline Chinese, Indian, and Persian dance and music performances, and feature a very special new media performance by artist Cheryl Sim. In an event not to be missed, the 20th Anniversary Edition wraps up on Sunday, May 24th with a very special Thank You Closing Cocktail.

20 years of presenting the beauty and richness of Asian culture through the arts in Montreal; 20 years of working hard to dispel all stereotypes and promote greater cultural tolerance; 20 years of sparking amazing encounters between artists of Asian origin with an ever open and adventurous public. Let’s wish ourselves another 20 beautiful years of exchange and discovery. Now, let the party begin!

Alice
 Tran 
‐ Actress ‐ TV
 Host
A
 graduate
 of 
HEC, 
Alice 
has
 participated 
in 
several 
acting 
workshops 
at
 the
 Ivana
 Chubbuk
 Studio
 in
 L.A.
 and
 with
 Danielle
 Fichaud.
 She
 has
 acted
 in
 30
 Vies
 and
 Lance
 et
 Compte.
 She
 has
 won
 the
 Actra
 Short
 Festival
 Audience 
Award 
for 
Eupna,
 a 
short
 film
 which 
she co-produced,
 wrote
 and
 starred
 in.
 Since
 November
 2012,
 she’s
 been
 hosting
 the
 show 
Couleur 
d’Ici 
on
 MAtv, 
a 
documentary 
series 
that 
presents
 profiles
 of
 immigrant
 artists
 and
 an
 opportunity
 to
 encounter
 their
 many
 and
 different
 cultures
 in 
everyday 
life
 in 
Quebec.

---

Cette année, le Festival Accès Asie revêt chapeaux de fête et sentiment de fierté puisqu’il célèbre en grand sa 20ème édition! Ne faisant pas les choses à moitié, Khosro Berahmandi, directeur artistique du Festival, a concocté une programmation des plus festives qui se tiendra exceptionnellement du 1er au 24 mai prochain, à Montréal. Une fois de plus, un large éventail de disciplines artistiques sera proposé pour le plus grand plaisir des amateurs de culture asiatique. C’est à la comédienne Alice Tran (Lance et compte, 30 vies) que revient le plaisir d’être porte-parole de cette 20e édition.

Cette édition anniversaire offrira pas moins de 16 événements artistiques, dont plusieurs créations exclusives au festival. Afin de souligner leur engagement au fil des ans, le Festival a d’ailleurs octroyé une place de choix aux membres de son comité de direction en proposant à cinq d’entre eux de présenter en grande première des œuvres uniques.

La première semaine du Festival s’ouvrira avec le traditionnel Cocktail d’ouverture durant lequel des extraits de la programmation seront dévoilés.

S’ensuivra le vernissage de l’exposition Kaléidoscope préparée par Kiran Ambwani et Florence So, qui mettra en lumière 20 artistes qui ont marqué le Festival lors des 20 dernières années. Puis, les festivaliers auront l’occasion de participer à une discussion sur le patrimoine asiatique au Québec en compagnie des différents acteurs du Festival.

La seconde semaine d’activités débutera avec la première de la pièce de théâtre Tashme project: The Living Archives de Julie Tamiko Manning et Matt Miwa, présentée en collaboration avec le MAI. Les spectateurs pourront par la suite profiter du spectacle Golestan, un concert métissé alliant des musiques de Turquie et d’Iran avec notamment le percussionniste Ziya Tabassian, et visiter les expositions à caractère international Postes de contrôle et L’État d’origine : RÉEL ET IMAGINAIRE proposées par les commissaires en arts visuels Kakim Goh et Bindu Mehra. Pour finir cette deuxième semaine, le restaurant OM accueillera les gourmands pour une initiation aux arts culinaires tibétains.

Pour entamer la troisième semaine de festivités, le Festival en collaboration avec Tangente présentera les œuvres chorégraphiques des chorégraphes et interprètes Ziyian Kwan et Geneviève La. Ensuite, la chanteuse et pianiste Lady Sylva offrira un spectacle de musique et chansons à la croisée de l’occident et de l’orient. Moment phare de l’édition 2014, la fameuse compétition de danse du Moyen-Orient sera de retour cette année, durant cette troisième semaine qui se conclura par une discussion avec les artistes des expositions Postes de contrôle et L’État d’origine : RÉEL ET IMAGINAIRE.

Pour sa dernière semaine, le Festival s’offre la Place des Festivals en cadeau! Durant trois jours, des spectacles de danse et musique chinoise, indienne et perse façonneront l’événement Vent d’Asie au Quartier des spectacles. L’artiste multidisciplinaire Cheryl Sim présentera quant à elle une performance en nouveaux médias. L’édition anniversaire du Festival Accès Asie aboutira le 24 mai avec un cocktail de remerciement.

20 ans à diffuser toute la beauté et la richesse du patrimoine asiatique à Montréal à travers les arts; 20 ans à travailler d’arrache-pied pour dissiper les stéréotypes et promouvoir une plus grande tolérance culturelle; 20 ans à provoquer de magnifiques rencontres entre artistes d’origine asiatique et public curieux et ouvert. Souhaitons-nous vingt autres belles années faites d’échanges et de découvertes. Et que la fête commence!

http://accesasie.com/



Call for submissions: 2015 Air Canada enRoute Film Festival

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Air Canada today announced submissions are open for the ninth annual Air Canada enRoute Film Festival. Emerging Canadian filmmakers are invited to showcase their artistic talent, out-of-the-box thinking and compelling vision in this year's festival that includes a star studded jury, a cash prize and a chance to travel to the Berlin International Film Festival to have their film screened at the European Film Market.

The winner of Best Short Film will receive a $5,000 cash prize courtesy of presenting sponsor Cineplex Entertainment. Other awards include Achievement in Direction, Achievement in Cinematography, Achievement in Animation, Achievement in Documentary and the third annual People's Choice Award. Achievement Award supporters include, the Directors' Guild of Canada, William F. White International Inc., the National Film Board of Canada and the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival.

All Achievement Award winners will receive an all-inclusive trip to the 2016 Berlin International Film Festival, courtesy of Air Canada. Winners will have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to showcase their short films in Telefilm Canada's Not Short on Talent program, which will screen at the European Film Market.

A handpicked jury from the Canadian film industry, consisting of highly prominent celebrities, producers and directors, will select the winning films. Previous jury members include Don McKellar, Guy Maddin, Laura Vandervoort, Alison Pill, Sarah Gadon, Suzanne Clément, Atom Egoyan and Donald Sutherland, among many others. Jury members for this year's festival will be announced in July.

Winning films will be broadcast on Air Canada's enRoute In-Flight Entertainment system, viewed by millions of Air Canada customers around the world each month. Roster events to honour participants will take place throughout the country, including an inaugural industry panel and networking reception held in Calgary in May, presented by TELUS Storyhive, and later events in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto.

Do you think you have what it takes? View full festival rules and regulations and submit your film at www.enroutefilm.com. Submissions will be accepted until May 31, 2015.

Twitter:           @enRoutemag and @AirCanada
Facebook:      Air Canada enRoute Film FestivalenRoute magazine and Air Canada
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The Short Films Selection at the 68th Festival de Cannes

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The announcement of the 2015 Official Selection will begin with the short films In Competition and the Cinéfondation Selection, in the run-up to the press conference for the 68th Festival de Cannes, to be held on Thursday 16th April.

Following their deliberations, the Cinéfondation and Short Films Jury, presided by Abderrahmane Sissako, will decide on the best films both from the Short Films Competition and the Cinéfondation.

THE 2015 SHORT FILMS COMPETITION

This year, the selection committee received 4,550 short films – 1,000 more than in 2014 – from over 100 countries.

The 2015 Short Films Competition comprises nine films (seven works of fiction and two animations), mostly from Asia and Europe, with one representative of Latin America and one from Oceania.
These films are all in the running for the 2015 Short Film Palme d’or, to be awarded by Abderrahmane Sissako, President of the Jury, at the official prize-giving ceremony of the 68th Festival de Cannes on 24th May.

SHORT FILMS IN COMPETITION:

 Ely DAGHER
WAVES ’98
 14’
 Lebanon, Qatar




 Shane DANIELSEN
THE GUESTS

 10’
 Australia




 Ziya DEMIREL
SALI
(Tuesday)
 12’
 Turkey, France   




 Céline DEVAUX
LE REPAS DOMINICAL
(Sunday Lunch)
 13’
 France




 Dan HODGSON
LOVE IS BLIND
 6’
 United Kingdom




 Basil KHALIL
AVE MARIA
 14’
 Palestine, France, Germany




 Jan ROOSENS, Raf ROOSENS
COPAIN
(Buddy)
 14’
Belgium




 Eva RILEY
PATRIOT
 14’
 United Kingdom




 Iair SAID
PRESENTE IMPERFECTO
(Present Imperfect)
 15’
 Argentina


THE 2015 CINÉFONDATION SELECTION

To mark its 18th year, the Cinéfondation Selection has chosen 18 films (14 works of fiction and four animations), from among the 1,600 works submitted this year by film schools from all four corners of the globe. 16 countries from four continents are represented.

Over a third of the films selected come from schools taking part for the first time, and it is also the first time that a Spanish film school has seen one of its films reach the selection stage. There is a strong showing from Europe once again, with 11 out of the 18 films selected.

The three Cinéfondation prizes will be awarded at a ceremony preceding the screening of the prize-winning films on Friday 22nd May in the salle Buñuel.


THE CINÉFONDATION SELECTION:

Behzad AZADI
KOSHTARGAH
(Slaughterhouse)
24’    
 Art University of Tehran
Iran




Mateo BENDESKY
EL SER MAGNÉTICO
(The Magnetic Nature)
 17’
Universidad del Cine (FUC)
Argentina




Pippa BIANCO
 SHARE
11’
AFI’s Directing Workshop for Women
USA




Simon CARTWRIGHT
MANOMAN
11’
National Film and Television School
United Kingdom




Ian GARRIDO LÓPEZ
VICTOR XX
20’
ESCAC
Spain




 Maria GUSKOVA
VOZVRASHENIE ERKINA
(The Return of Erkin)
 28’
High Courses for Scriptwriters and Film Directors
Russia




Félix HAZEAUX
Thomas NITSCHE
Edward NOONAN
Franck PINA
Raphaëlle PLANTIER
LEONARDO
 6’
MOPA (ex Supinfocom Arles)
France




Ignacio JURICIC MERILLÁN
LOCAS PERDIDAS
(Lost Queens)
 28’
Carrera de Cine y TV Universidad de Chile
Chile




Sofie KAMPMARK
TSUNAMI
 7’
The Animation Workshop
Denmark




Tomáš KLEIN
Tomáš MERTA
RETRIEVER
 23’
FAMU Prague
Czech Republic




Aurélien PEILLOUX
LES CHERCHEURS
(The Wheel of Emotions)
 32’
La Fémis
France




Eliza PETKOVA
ABWESEND
(Absent)
 13’
Deutsche Film & Fernsehakademie (dffb)
Germany




Miki POLONSKI
ASARA REHOVOT MEA ETSIM
(Ten Buildings Away)
 25’
Minshar for Art
Israel




Maksim SHAVKIN
14 STEPS
 37’
Moscow School of New Cinema
Russia




Héctor SILVA NÚÑEZ
ANFIBIO
(Amphibian)
 15’
EICTV
Cuba




Salla SORRI
AINAHAN NE PALAA
(To Return Until)
 17’
Aalto University, ELO Film School Helsinki
Finland




Laura VANDEWYNCKEL
HET PARADIJS
(Paradise)
 6’
RITS School of Arts Brussels
Belgium




Qiu YANG
RI GUANG ZHI XIA
(Under the Sun)
 19’
The VCA, Film & TV School, Melbourne University
Australia



2015 Festival de Cannes announces Official Selection

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The Press Conference for the 68th Festival de Cannes, at which the 2015 Official Selection was announced, was held on Thursday 16th April at 11:00 am in Paris.

On Monday morning, the festival announced their opening film to be La Tête Haute (Standing Tall) by Emmanuelle Bercot. However, they strangely erred in claiming that she was to be the first female director to open the Festival de Cannes in history. Many observers pointed out that Diane Kurys opened the Festival de Cannes in 1987 with Un homme amoureux (A Man in Love). The festival later issued a necessary correction to their initial statement.

Announced films in competition this year include Dheepan by Jacques Audiard, Carol by Todd Haynes, Nie yin niang (The Assassin) by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, Shan He Gu Ren (Mountains May Depart) by Jia Zhang-Ke, Umimachi Diary (Our Little Sister) by Hirokazu Kore-eda, Mon roi by Maïwenn, Mia Madre by Nanni Moretti, La giovinezza (Youth) by Paolo Sorrentino, The Sea of Trees by Gus Van Sant, and Sicario (Hitman) by Montreal's own Denis Villeneuve.

The Cannes lineup includes eight first-time filmmakers among the 49 selections announced. The Selection Committee viewed 1,854 movies to make its selection.

The 68th Festival de Cannes takes place from May 13 – 24.


IN COMPETITION

Opening Film
Emmanuelle BERCOT
LA TÊTE HAUTE
(STANDING TALL)
Out of Competition
2h00
***
Jacques AUDIARD   DHEEPAN (TEMPORARY TITLE)1h49
Stéphane BRIZÉ   
LA LOI DU MARCHÉ
(A SIMPLE MAN)   
1h32
Valérie DONZELLI   
MARGUERITE ET JULIEN
(MARGUERITE AND JULIEN)
1h50
Matteo GARRONE
   
IL RACCONTO DEI RACCONTI
(THE TALE OF TALES)
2h05
Todd HAYNESCAROL1h58
HOU Hsiao HsienNIE YINNIANG
(THE ASSASSIN)
2h00
JIA Zhang-Ke
       
SHAN HE GU REN
(MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART)
2h00
KORE-EDA Hirokazu
       
UMIMACHI DIARY
(OUR LITTLE SISTER)
2h03
Justin KURZEL         MACBETH1h53
Yorgos LANTHIMOSTHE LOBSTER1h58
MAÏWENN    MON ROI2h10
Nanni MORETTI           
MIA MADRE
1h42
László NEMES
   
SAUL FIA
(SON OF SAUL)
1st film   
1h47
Paolo SORRENTINOYOUTH1h58
Joachim TRIERLOUDER THAN BOMBS       1h45
Gus VAN SANT           
THE SEA OF TREES
1h50
Denis VILLENEUVE   SICARIO       1h45


UN CERTAIN REGARD

Neeraj GHAYWANMASAAN
1st film
2h00

Grímur HÁKONARSONHRÚTAR 
(RAMS)
1h30
KUROSAWA KiyoshiKISHIBE NO TABI
(JOURNEY TO THE SHORE)
2h08

Laurent LARIVIÈREJE SUIS UN SOLDAT(I AM A SOLDIER)
1st film
1h36
Dalibor MATANICZVIZDAN 
(THE HIGH SUN)
2h03
Roberto MINERVINITHE OTHER SIDE1h30
Radu MUNTEANUN ETAJ MAI JOS
(ONE FLOOR BELOW)
1h33

OH Seung-UkMU-ROE-HAN
(THE SHAMELESS)
1h58
David PABLOSLAS ELEGIDAS
(THE CHOSEN ONES)
1h45

Ida PANAHANDEHNAHID
1st film
1h44

Corneliu PORUMBOIUCOMOARA
(THE TREASURE)
1h30

Gurvinder SINGHCHAUTHI KOOT
(THE FOURTH DIRECTION)
1h55
SHIN SuwonMADONNA2h01
Alice WINOCOURMARYLAND1h40


OUT OF COMPETITION

Woody ALLENIRRATIONAL MAN1h36
Pete DOCTER
Ronaldo DEL CARMEN
INSIDE OUT1h42
George MILLERMAD MAX : FURY ROAD2h00
Mark OSBORNETHE LITTLE PRINCE1h48


MIDNIGHT SCREENINGS

HONG Won-ChanO PISEU
(OFFICE)
1st film
1h49
Asif KAPADIA AMY2h07


SPECIAL SCREENINGS

Samuel BENCHETRITASPHALTE1h40
Souleymane CISSE
OKA1h50
Elad KEIDANHAYORED LEMA'ALA
1st film
1h45
Natalie PORTMANSIPUR AL AHAVA VE CHOSHECH
(A TALE OF LOVE AND DARKNESS)
1st film
1h35
Barbet SCHROEDERAMNESIA1h36
Pavle VUCKOVICPANAMA
1st film
1h45

The 54th Semaine de la Critique announces lineup

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On the poster of the 54th edition of La Semaine de la Critique, the actress Lou de Laâge embraces the open horizon in front of her. This wonderful energy and the amazing life force it carries embody the strong desire leading us to discover the new breath of fresh air in cinema worldwide.
Key figures

We received 1750 short films and 1100 feature films. Among the 11 feature films in the selection, 9 are first films and 2 are second films.

The 10 short films in competition

The short film committee, coordinated by Fabien Gaffez, selected ten films, ten stunningly diverse cinema promises. Childhood is at the core of Varicella by the Italian Fulvio Risuleo, Command Action by the Brazilian João Paulo Miranda and Everything Will Be Okay by the German director Patrick Vollrath. Ramona by the Romanian Andrei Crețulescu and Too Cool for School by the American Kevin Phillips are brand new visions of the genre film.

Two young women face immigration hardship in Love Comes Later by the American Sonejuhi Sinha, whereas the boys in Boys by the Swedish Isabella Carbonell haven’t got a clue about love. The Fox Exploits the Tiger’s Might by the Indonesian Lucky Kuswandi plays on the association of playful pleasure with lecherous pleasure.

The two French shorts maliciously dialogue through their titles: Monsters Turn Into Lovers by Yann Delattre and The Dragon’s Demise by Marina Diaby. The first delicately opposes the fragility of love to the harsh reality, while the latter elegantly mingles family drama with strangeness generated by a fine touch of burlesque.

La Semaine de la Critique is a hub for emerging directors and it will continue to accompany these 10 talents by offering them to take part in the new program NEXT STEP , a training and supporting workshop which sets the path to feature film.

And talking about feature films, there will be two highlights this year: the opening film of course and a first French film that will be presented as a special screening.

Les Anarchistes by Elie Wajeman will be screened at the Opening night of this 54th edition. The film speaks of engaged rebellious youth. With this very contemporary film and following Alyah, the filmmaker takes us back to the times of the anarchists, amongst the descendants of the Paris Commune. It will be the film’s thrilling leads, Adèle Exarchopoulos and Tahar Rahim, first collaboration.

Louis Garrel’s first movie, Les Deux Amis, seduced us and charmed us with the elegant direction and its freedom, oscillating between light tones and more serious ones. The pleasure of this funny and delicious film irradiates from the wonderful complicity shared by the three actors: Louis Garrel, Vincent Macaigne and Golshifteh Farahani.

7 feature films in competition

Sleeping Giant , the first film by the Canadian director Andrew Cividino, beautifully unfolds the complicated ties connecting three teenagers on holidays on a lake shore. Surrounded by the magnificent and imposing nature, they defy its laws, just like they defy the ones imposed by the other giants, the adults, who they are very suspicious of.

After the highly praised El estudiante, Argentinian director Santiago Mitre comes back with Paulina (Lapatota), the splendid portrait of an dedicated woman, having to face her own beliefs. By following her frantic journey, the film is also a reflexion, both luminous and intelligent, on politics and justice.

The American-Italian filmmaker Jonas Carpignano, last year’s winner of the Sony CineAlta Discovery Prize for his short A Ciambra , comes back with his first feature film, Mediterranea. The film tells the story of two African immigrants who reach the Italian coast. Together, they will attempt to adapt to this new life in which they will have to go different paths in order to achieve their personal goals. The journey of these two friends tackles the exile issue, the hopes and disappointments that come along with it.

Krisha is an American indie gem signed by Trey Edward Shults. This first film from a young wonder director plunges us in the middle of a bitter family conflict, mainly embodied by non professionals actors. Krisha is the caustic portrait of a woman under influence, certainly a new exciting and audacious cinema experience.

Clément Cogitore’s first film is very unique compared to what French cinema usually offers. The WakhanFront is the daily account of French soldiers sent in Afghanistan, isolated in the middle of the desert and experiencing mysterious disappearances. In this strange circumstances, they will acknowledge what the power of faith is. Carried by Jérémie Renier, this bewitching film gathers the raising talents of French cinema Kévin Azaïs, Swann Arlaud and Finnegan Oldfield.

César Augusto Acevedo’s first film Land and Shade takes place in a sugarcane plantation in Colombia. It is a slice of life, torn between the age-old ties to this land and the urge to leave it behind. The sharp sense of the location and the space, driven by the masterful direction, leads us to a time in which the bodies take root.

Dégradé, a black comedy by the two Palestinian brothers Arab and Tarzan Nasser, is shot in the Gaza Strip, where the directors live. The film’s cheery nerve draws an extremely vivid portrait of women trapped in a beauty salon. Outside, the madness of men is raging. This is an offbeat and raw look on people living in an asphyxiated territory. The film is a great opportunity to admire once again the performance of the magnificent Hiam Abbass.

Closing feature film

For the closing ceremony, we fell under the spell of a comedy, enchanted also by the soundness of its vision. Learn by Heart is the first feature film by the French director Mathieu Vadepied, who was previously discovered by La Semaine de la Critique for his short. This mischievous tale set in the suburbs of Paris is the coming-of-age of two children, split between what they are taught in school and their own strange and - to say the least - startling experiences. These two children, personified by staggering actors, will bring their fresh and affectionate breath of air to close the 54th Semaine de la Critique.

The ten short films and the seven feature films in competition will be submitted to the attentive eye of the Jury President of La Semaine de la Critique. The actress and director Ronit Elkabetz will award the Nespresso Grand Prize and the France 4 Visionary Award for feature films and the Sony CineAlta Discovery Prize for short films. La Semaine de la Critique will take place in Cannes, between May 14th and May 22nd.

THE 2015 SÉLECTION

4 Feature films in special screenings, 7 feature films in competition and
10 short and medium-length films in competition

FEATURE FILMS IN SPECIAL SCREENINGS

Opening Film
The Anarchists (Les Anarchistes) Elie Wajeman 2nd

Special Screenings
Coin Locker Girl HAN Jun-hee 1st
Les Deux Amis Louis Garrel 1st

Closing Film
Learn by Heart (La Vie en grand) Mathieu Vadepied 1st

FEATURE FILMS IN COMPETITION

Dégradé Arab et Tarzan Nasser 1st
Krisha Trey Edward Shults 1st
Mediterranea Jonas Carpignano 1st
The Wakhan Front (Ni le ciel ni la terre) Clément Cogitore 1st
Paulina (La patota) Santiago Mitre 2nd
Sleeping Giant Andrew Cividino 1st
La tierra y la sombra (Land and Shade) César Augusto Acevedo 1st

SHORT AND MEDIUM-LENGTH FILMS IN COMPETITION

Alles Wird Gut (Everything Will Be Okay) Patrick Vollrath
Boys (Pojkarna) Isabella Carbonell
Command Action João Paulo Miranda Maria
La Fin du dragon (The Dragon’s Demise) Marina Diaby
The Fox Exploits the Tiger’s Might Lucky Kuswandi
Jeunesse des Loups-Garous (Monsters Turn Into Lovers) Yann Delattre
Love Comes Later Sonejuhi Sinha
Ramona Andrei Crețulescu
Too Cool for School Kevin Philipps
Varicella (Chickenpox) Fulvio Risuleo


SPECIAL SCREENINGS

OPENING FILM
The Anarchists (Les Anarchistes) by Elie Wajeman
2015 l World Premiere l 1h35 | France | 2
nd FILM
Paris 1899. Corporal Jean Albertini, an orphan of humble origins, is chosen to infiltrate a band of anarchists. For him, it's a chance to move up the ranks. But forced to compromise without respite, Jean is increasingly divided. On one hand, he delivers incriminating intelligence reports to his superior, Gaspar. On the other, he feels himself developing genuine feelings for the anarchists.
With: Tahar Rahim, Adèle Exarchopoulos , Swann Arlaud, Guillaume Gouix, Karim Leklou, Sarah Le Picard, Cédric Kahn, Emilie De Preissac
Production: 24 MAI PRODUCTION, Lola Gans
Co-production: FRANCE 2, Valérie Boyer; MARS FILMS, Stéphane Célérier
Distribution: MARS FILMS, Stéphane Célérier
Sales: WILD BUNCH, Esther Devos
Press: André-Paul Ricci, Tony Arnoux (apricci@wanadoo.fr / tony.arnoux@wanadoo.fr)

SPECIAL SCREENINGS
Coin Locker Girl by HAN Jun-hee
2015 l World Premiere l 1h54 | South Korea | 1st FILM
Only after her birth, Il-young gets abandoned in a coin-locker box #10 of a subway station. Eight years later, she is sold off to Chinatown, to a woman named as Mom. Mom rules over Chinatown and has taken in useful children like Il-young as family. Mom is ready to do anything that is profitable but Il-young thinks Mom the only home for her and grows up to become Mom’s most useful child. One
day, when Il-young is sent to collect interest from those who made loan from Mom’s money, she encounters with Suk-hyun who treats her like no other person she’d met before. Suk-hyun who is the son of a heavy debt owner, introduces Il-young to a warm and hospitable world, different from what her Mom has shown her. For the first time, Il-young becomes curious about the outside life of Chinatown.
Avec : KIM Hye-soo, KIM Ko-eun
Production : Pollux Pictures, KIM So-young
Ventes : CJ Entertainment, Hawon KIM

Les Deux Amis by Louis Garrel
2015 l World Premiere l 1h40 | France | 1st FILM
Clément, a cynical and sweet melancholic film extra, is madly in love with Mona, a salesgirl in a sandwich bar. Mona has a secret that makes her mysterious and intangible. When Clément is desperate to win her heart, Abel, his best and only friend, comes to the rescue. The two friends set off in the adventure of conquering her. But 3 is a restless number.
With: Golshifteh Farahani, Vincent Macaigne, Louis Garrel
Production: LES FILMS DES TOURNELLES, Anne-Dominique Toussaint
Co-production : ARTE FRANCE CINEMA, Olivier Père
Distribution: AD VITAM, Alexandra Henochsberg
Sales: INDIE SALES, Nicolas Eschbach
Press: Monica Donati assistée de Cilia Gonzalez-Maurin (monica.donati@mk2.com / cilia.gonzalez@mk2.com)

CLOSING FILM
Learn by Heart (La Vie en grand) by Mathieu Vadepied
2014 l World Premiere l 1h33 | France | 1st FILM
Adama is a 14-year-old boy who lives with his mother in a small two-room flat in Bondy, in the suburbs of Paris. He fails in school, although he is a bright pupil. Because of an unexpected event, he will reverse the situation with Mamadou, who is younger than him.
With: Balamine Touré, Ali Bidanessy, Guillaume Gouix, Joséphine De Meaux
Léontina Fall, Adama Camara, Aristide Tarnagda, Bakary Dramé, Kévin Wamo
Production: UNITE DE PRODUCTION, Bruno Nahon, Caroline Nataf
Co-production: TEN FILMS, Eric Toledano, Olivier Nakache
Distribution: GAUMONT, Françoise Dauvergne
Sales: GAUMONT, Céline Gazet
Press: André-Paul Ricci, Tony Arnoux (apricci@wanadoo.fr / tony.arnoux@wanadoo.fr)
Internationale press: GAUMONT, Sophie Bollotte (sbollotte@gaumont.fr)

FEATURE FILMS IN COMPETITION
7 films selected out of 1100 screened

Dégradé by Tarzan and Arab Nasser
2015 l World Premiere l 1h25 | Palestine - France - Qatar | 1st FILM
Gaza Strip, nowadays. Christine’s beauty salon is heaving with female clients: a bitter divorcée, a religious woman, a lunatic addicted to prescription drugs and a young bride-to-be among others. But their day of leisure is disrupted when gunfire breaks out across the street. A gangland family has stolen the lion from Gaza’s zoo, and Hamas has decided it’s time to settle old scores. Stuck in the salon, the women start to unravel...
With: Hiam Abbass, Maisa Abd Elhadi, Manal Awad, Mirna Sakhla, Dina Shuhaiber, Victoria Balitska
Production: LES FILMS DU TAMBOUR, Marie Legrand, Rani Massalha; MADE IN PALESTINE
PROJECT, Rashid Abdelhamid
Co-production: FULL HOUSE, Laurent Baudens; MILLE ET UNE FILMS, Gilles Padovani; ABBOUT
PRODUCTIONS, Georges Schoucair
Distribution: LE PACTE, Xavier Hirigoyen
Sales: ELLE DRIVER, Eva Diederix, Adeline Fontan Tessaur
Internationale press: Martin Marquet (martin.marquet@me.com)

Krisha by Trey Edward Shults
2015 l International Premiere l 1h23 | USA | 1st FILM
After years of absence, Krisha reunites with her family for a holiday gathering. She sees it as an opportunity to fix her past mistakes, cook the family turkey, and prove to her loved ones that she has changed for the better. Only, Krisha’s delirium takes her family on a dizzying holiday that no one will forget.
With: Krisha Fairchild, Robyn Fairchild, Bill Wise, Chris Doubek, Olivia Grace Applegate, Alex
Dobrenko, Bryan Casserly, Chase Joliet, Augustine Frizzell
Production: HOODY BOY PRODUCTIONS,Trey Edward Shults, Justin R. Chan, Wilson Smith, Chase
Joliet, Jonathan R. Chan, JP Castel
Sales: George Rush
Internationale press: BRIGADE, Adam Kersh (adam@brigademarketing.com)

Mediterranea by Jonas Carpignano
2015 l World Premiere l 1h47 | Italy - France - USA - Germany | 1st FILM
Ayiva recently left his home in Burkina Faso in search of a way to provide for his sister and his daughter. He takes advantage of his position in an illegal smuggling operation to get himself and his best friend Abas off of the continent. Ayiva adapts to life in Italy, but when tensions with the local community rise, things become increasingly dangerous. Determined to make his new situation work he attempts to weather the storm, but it has its costs.
With: Koudous Seihon, Alassane Sy
Production: MEDITERRANEA FILM, Jonas Carpignano, Jon Coplon, Gwyn Sannia, Jason Michael
Berman, Chris Columbus, Christoph Daniel, Andrew Kortschak, John Lesher, Ryan Lough, Justin
Nappi, Alain Peyrollaz, Marc Schmidheiny, Victor Shapiro, Ryan Zacarias

The Wakhan Front (Ni le ciel ni la terre) by Clément Cogitore
2015 l World Premiere l 1h40 | France - Belgium | 1st FILM
Afghanistan 2014. While troops are on the verge of withdrawal, Captain Antarès Bonassieu and his section are assigned a control and surveillance mission in a remote valley of the Wakhan, on the Pakistan border. Despite their determination, Antarès and his men gradually lose control of what is supposedly a calm sector. Then one September night, soldiers in the valley mysteriously disappear.
With: Jérémie Renier, Swann Arlaud, Kévin Azaïs, Marc Robert, Finnegan Oldfield, Clément Bresson, Sâm Mirhosseini
Production: KAZAK PRODUCTIONS, Jean-Christophe Reymond, Amaury Ovise
Co-production: TARANTULA, Joseph Rouschop, Valérie Bournonville
Distribution: DIAPHANA, Alicia Hernanz
Sales: INDIE SALES, Nicolas Eschbach
Press: Marie Queysanne assitée de Charly Destombes (marie@marie-q.fr/ charly@marie-q.fr)

Paulina (La patota) by Santiago Mitre
2015 l World Premiere l 1h43 | Argentina - Brazil - France | 2nd FILM
Paulina, who is 28, gives up a brilliant lawyer career, in order to dedicate herself to teaching in a depressed region in Argentina. In a rough environment, she sticks to her teaching mission and to her political engagement, accepting to sacrifice her private life. Upon her arrival, she is violently attacked by a gang of young people, some of them being her own students. Despite the trauma, Paulina will strive to stand for her convictions.
With: Dolores Fonzi, Oscar Martinez, Esteban Lamothe, Cristian Salguero
Production: LA UNION DE LOS RIOS, Agustina Llambi Campbell, Fernando Brom, Santiago Mitre, Lita Stantic, Laurent Baudens, Gaël Nouaille, Walter Salles, Ignacio Viale
Co-production: FULL HOUSE, Didar Domehri
Distribution: AD VITAM, Grégory Gajos
Sales: VERSATILE, Violaine Pichon
Press: Marie Queysanne assitée de Charly Destombes (marie@marie-q.fr/ charly@marie-q.fr)

Sleeping Giant by Andrew Cividino
2015 l World Premiere l 1h29 | Canada | 1st FILM
Teenager Adam is spending his summer vacation with his parents on rugged Lake Superior. His dull routine shatters when he befriends Riley and Nate, smart aleck cousins who pass their ample free time with debauchery and reckless cliff jumping. The revelation of a hurtful secret triggers Adam to set in motion irreversible events that test the bonds of friendship and change the boys forever.
With: Jackson Martin, Reece Moffett, Nick Serino, David Disher, Erika Brodzky, Rita Serino, Katelyn McKerracher, Kyle Bertrand, Lorraine Philp
Production: FILM FORGE PRODUCTION INC., Karen Harnisch
Co-production: HAWKEYE PICTURES, Aeschylus Poulos

La tierra y la sombra (Land and Shade) by César Augusto Acevedo
2015 l World Premiere l 1h37 | Colombia - France - Netherlands - Chile - Brazil | 1st FILM
Alfonso comes back to his home after 17 years of absence because of the serious sickness his son is suffering. When he arrives he discovers that everything he once knew is no longer there, as the single crop planting of sugar cane took over all the farms of the region. The only thing that is almost as intact as his memory of it is his home. Alfonso must face that he returns much like a stranger, as his family long before stopped waiting for his return.
With: Haimer Leal (ALFONSO), Hilda Ruiz (ALICIA), Edison Raigosa (GERARDO), Marleyda Soto (ESPERANZA), José Felipe Cárdenas (MANUEL)
Production: BURNING BLUE, Jorge Forero
Co-production: CINE SUD PROMOTION, Thierry Lenouvel; TOPKAPI FILMS, Frans Van Gasel;
RAMPANTE CINE, Giancarlo Nazi; PRETA PORTÊ FILMES, Juliana Vicente
French press: CINE SUD PROMOTION, Claire Viroulot (claire@cinesudpromotion.com)

SHORT AND MEDIUM-LENGTH FILMS IN COMPETITION
10 films selected out of 1750 screened

Alles Wird Gut (Everything Will Be Okay) by Patrick Vollrath
2015 l International Premiere l 30’ | Germany - Austria
Everything Will Be Okay begins qui harmless. A weekend-father picks up his eight-years-old daughter Lea. It pretty much seems like every second weekend. But after a while Lea can‘t help but feeling that something is just not right. So begins a fatal journey, leading to an inevitable catastrophe.
With: Simon Schwarz, Julia Pointner, Marion Rottenhofer, Daniel Keberle
Production: Patrick Vollrath
Sales: Patrick Vollrath

Boys (Pojkarna) by Isabella Carbonell
2015 l International Premiere l 19’ | Sweden
Markus is a boy in an institution for young sex offenders. There is no physical intimacy to be found there so the inmates violently grab and punch one another instead. Markus's only friend inside is the unpredictable Tobias. Markus's trial approaches and he won't be able to keep his actions secret much longer.
With: Sebastian Hiort af Ornäs, Markus Lindgren, Rainer Gerdes, Kristoffer Trigell
Production: DOPPELGANGER AB, Jörgen Andersson, Kjell Åhlund
Co-production: FILM I VÄST, Am Ekström; PONYTAILSOUND, Calle Budde Roos
Distribution: SWEDISH FILM INSTITUTE, Theo Tsappos

Command Action by João Paulo Miranda Maria
2015 l World Premiere l 14’ | Brazil
A boy is buying vegetables for his family in a street market but suddenly something changes in the way.
With: David Martins, Cláudio Lopes, João de Lima Neto, Luana Menezes
Production: GRUPO KINO-OLHO, Fernanda Tosini, Claudia do Canto

La Fin du dragon (The Dragon’s Demise) by Marina Diaby
2015 l World Premiere l 26’ | France
In ten days, the treatments that keep the mother of Marianne, Mike and Angèle artificially alive will be over. Ten days? Marianne never grasped the fact that it would take so long. Luckily, Angèle works hard to wrap everything up and Mike is trying especially hard not to rub anyone the wrong way. Even the dog has never been so affectionate.
With: Émilie Caen, Noémie Rosset, Alban Guyon, Lamine Diaby
Production / Distribution / Sales: 10:15!PRODUCTIONS, Sebastien Haguenauer

The Fox Exploits the Tiger’s Might by Lucky Kuswandi
2015 l World Premiere l 25’ | Indonesia
Two preteen boys discover their sexuality and the relation between power and sex, in the awkward social setting of a sleepy small town with a military base. David is the big-shot boastful son of a highranking officer, while Aseng's family is an ethnic minority tobacco merchant who sells bootleg liquor.
With: Atreyu Artax Moniaga, Kemas Fauzan, Stefanny Marcelina Sugiharto, Surya Saputra, Christine
Harsojo, Haris Zuhri
Production: BABIBUTAFILM, Meiske Taurisia, Edwin, Tunggal Pawestri

Jeunesse des Loups-Garous (Monsters Turn Into Lovers) by Yann Delattre
2015 l World Premiere l 22’ | France
Between her work, boyfriend and Japanese flatmate, Julie’s life just runs its course. Without her noticing Sébastien even though he puts all his timidity and awkwardness into charming her. They may get together one night without knowing what tomorrow morning will bring.
With: Nina Meurisse, Benoit Hamon, Mathieu Barbet, Akihiro Hata
Production: STROMBOLI FILMS, Juliette Sol, Alice Bégon
Sales: AGENCE DU COURT MÉTRAGE, Florence Keller

Love Comes Later by Sonejuhi Sinha
2015 l World Premiere l 10’ | USA
America, the land of opportunity, attracts immigrants from every corner of the world. An ambitious immigrant, Riz, works at a small motel in pursuit of her American dream. When an unexpected discovery confronts Riz with the consequences of being undocumented, she is forced to make a life changing decision.
With: Vega Tamotia, Diane Guerrero, Sarita Choudhury, Samrat Chakrabarti
Production: Sonejuhi Sinha, Charlotte Rabate
Co-production: FINAL CUT USA INC., Stephanie Apt

Ramona by Andrei Crețulescu
2015 l World Premiere l 20’ | Romania
One girl. One car. One night. No coincidence.
With: Rodica Lazăr, Dorian Bogută, Andi Vasluianu, Serban Pavlu, Ana Ularu
Production: KINOSSEUR PRODUCTIONS, Andrei Crețulescu; DEFILM, Radu Stancu ; WE ARE
BASCA, Claudiu Mitcu
Distribution: KINOSSEUR PRODUCTIONS, Codruța Crețulescu
Sales: KINOSSEUR PRODUCTIONS, Codruța Crețulescu

Too Cool for School by Kevin Philips
2014 l World Premiere l 11’ | USA
An apathetic teenager with sex on his brain decides to ditch school. The decisions he makes culminate into something of a waking nightmare, tearing apart any facade he has put on and revealing his true youth.
With: Tristan Leabu, Ester Zyskind
Production: NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH FILMS, Richard Peete
Co-production: WAYS & MEANS, Jett Steiger

Varicella (Chickenpox) by Fulvio Risuleo
2014 l World Premiere l 14’ | Italy
Chickenpox is a very small thing if you’re young. But if you’re a grown-up it can be very dangerous. When Mommy finds out, she starts worrying about Carlo, her son, who still isn’t sick. He’s growing fast, something must soon be done. She needs to find a way to ‘make him’ sick. But does Daddy agree?
With: Giordana Morandini, Edoardo Pesce, Enea De Angelis
Production: REVOK S.r.l., Donatello Della Pepa, Loretta Isotton, Fulvio Risuleo




2015 Montréal International Animation Film Festival (Le MIAFF) – awards

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LE MIAFF 2015 CLOSING GALA AND AWARDS

4 days of animation feature films, shorts workshops, panel discussions, interactive performances and parties at The Montréal International Animation Film Festival, in association with Teletoon, www.filmfestivals.com and MTL Digital Spring (Printemps Numerique) has just wrapped up with its closing gala and award ceremony.

Festival director Laurie Gordon said, "with such a great line-up it was tough to pick out any winners. Every screening was a highlight and any number of films could have won their respective categories. Congratulations to all of our winners. The preparations for Le MIAFF 2016 are already underway – see you next year!"

Fighting off the weather and playoff hockey, the inaugural Le MIAFF was a great success, attracting hardcore film fans, casual viewers and industry representatives alike. The festival will be back in 2016 with another Ani-mazing selection of films, parties and industry panels, plus lots more surprises and events. The Le MIAFF team thanks everybody involved for helping to make this year’s festival such a fun weekend!


MIAFF 2015 Winners

Best Feature in Competition
Anima Buenos Aires by Maria Veronica Ramirez

Best Short in Competition
Aubade by Mauro Carraro

Student Film Contest
Edgar by Marie-Ève Bélanger, Jonathan Grondin, Maude Fournier, Cédric Queland ( Cegep de Matane)

Audience Award for Best Short Film Competition
World of tomorrow by Don Hertzfeldt

Sensum Award
Manieggs: the revenge of the hard egg by Zoltan Miklosy

2015 Quinzaine des réalisateurs announces complete lineup

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La Société des réalisateurs de films (French Directors Guild) has announced the full selection for the 47th edition of the Quinzaine des réalisateurs (Directors' Fortnight). It is one of the two sidebars at the Festival de Cannes along with the Semaine de la critique announced yesterday.

Previously, they had announced In the Shadow of Women by Philippe Garrel to be the opening night film. The film is about Pierre and Manon, low-budget documentary filmmakers, and the ensuing complication when Pierre meets a young trainee Elisabeth whom he then takes as his mistress.

Also previously announced were My Golden Daysby Arnaud Desplechin and the triptych As mil e uma noites (Arabian Nights) by Miguel Gomes.

The 2015 Quinzaine des réalisateurs runs from May 11-24 in Cannes.


The Directors' Fortnight 2015 selection

FEATURE FILMS

A Perfect Day by Fernando León de Aranoa / 1h46
Worldwide Premiere

Beyond My Grandfather Allendeby Marcia Tambutti / 1h37
Worldwide Premiere – First film

Arabian Nights by Miguel Gomes
Worldwide Premiere
Volume 1, The Restless One– 2h05
Volume 2, The Desolate One– 2h11
Volume 3, The Enchanted One– 2h05

Les Cowboys by Thomas Bidegain / 1h54
Worldwide Premiere – First film

Dope by Rick Famuyiwa / 1h45
International Première – Closing Film

Embrace of the Serpent by Ciro Guerra / 2h05
Worldwide Premiere

Fatimaby Philippe Faucon / 1h18
Worldwide Premiere

Yakuza Apocalypse : The Great War of the Underworld by Takashi Miike / 1h55
Worldwide Premiere – Special Screening

Green Roomby Jeremy Saulnier / 1h34
Worldwide Premiere

Much Lovedby Nabil Ayouch / 1h45
Worldwide Premiere

Mustang by Deniz Gamze Ergüven / 1h40
Worldwide Premiere – First film

In the Shadow of Women by Philippe Garrel / 1h10
Worldwide Premiere – Opening film
Preceded by an unseen short film by Philippe Garrel made in 1968, Actua 1

Peace to Us in Our Dreamsby Sharunas Bartas / 1h42
Worldwide Premiere

Songs My Brothers Taught Me by Chloé Zhao / 1h34
International Première – First film

The Here After by Magnus von Horn / 1h42
Worldwide Premiere – First film

The Brand New Testamentby Jaco Van Dormael / 1h43
Worldwide Premiere

My Golden Daysby Arnaud Desplechin / 2h
Worldwide Premiere

SHORT FILMS

Blue Thunderby Jean-Marc E. Roy & Philippe David Gagné / 21 min
International Premiere

Calme ta joieby Emmanuel Laskar / 24 min
Worldwide Premiere

The Broken Pastby Martín Morgenfeld & Sebastián Schjaer / 17 min
Worldwide Premiere

Kung Fury by David Sandberg / 30 min
Worldwide Premiere

Pitchouneby Reda Kateb / 23 min
Worldwide Premiere

Trials, Exorcisms by Susana Nobre / 25 min
Worldwide Premiere

Puebloby Elena Lopez Riera / 30 min
Worldwide Premiere

A Few Secondesby Nora El Hourch / 16 min
Worldwide Premiere

Backyardby André Novais Oliveira / 18 min
Worldwide Premiere

Rate Meby Fyzal Boulifa / 15 min
Worldwide Premiere

The Exquisite Corpus by Peter Tscherkassky / 18 min
Worldwide Premiere



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