MVFF41 Souvenir Guide

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41 OCTOBER 4-14 2018

MILL VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL


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MVFF respects the planet and is working to be a net-zero waste event by 2020. There are many ways you can help: • • • • •

Select Print-at-Home Tickets when buying online, then get your e-tickets scanned from your phone at the theater. Share and recycle this program. Bring your own reusable water bottle. Carpool to screenings and events. Recycle your Festival badge.

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Mayor’s Proclamation Director’s Note CFI Board Sponsors Donor Circle Opening Night Centerpiece Closing Night Mind the Gap Award MVFF Award Spotlight: Carey Mulligan & Paul Dano Tribute: Paweł Pawlikowski Special Presentation: Beautiful Boy Special Premiere: The Parting Glass Spotlight: Joel Edgerton Spotlight: Amandla Stenberg Spotlight: Richard E. Grant Spotlight: Karyn Kusama Spotlight: Maggie Gyllenhaal MVFF Music Behind the Screens: Panels | Master Classes | Workshops Active Cinema ¡Viva el Cine! Mind the Gap Education at MVFF Family Films Focuses Sections | Premieres Films The Tao of Film Calendar Screening Committee Festival Info | Ticketing MVFF | CFI Staff Creative Credits Acknowledgments In Memoriam Print Sources Screening Committee Films by Country Filmmaker Index Advertiser Index Title Index

The Mill Valley Film Festival is presented by the California Film Institute, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that also owns and operates the Smith Rafael Film Center, presents DocLands Documentary Film Festival each May, and offers CFI Education programs throughout the year. © Copyright 2017. All rights reserved. No portion of the Mill Valley Film Festival Souvenir Guide may be duplicated in any form without written consent from the Mill Valley Film Festival and/or the California Film Institute.

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DIRECTOR’S NOTE WELCOME TO THE 41ST MILL VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL! Other US films that speak to our times include our other opening night feature A Private War, which views war through the eyes of correspondent Marie Colvin (an amazing Rosamund Pike); Jason Reitman’s The Front Runner, examining political scandal through the experience of US Senator Gary Hart (Hugh Jackman); Australian director (and Spotlight tributee) Joel Edgerton’s Arkansas-set Boy Erased exposing the horrors of gay conversion therapy; and two films, Beautiful Boy (starring Timothée Chalamet, who will be attending with director Felix van Groeningen) and Ben Is Back, which both grapple with the horrors of addition. Rarely has the adage “May you live in interesting times” seemed as sinister and as tantalizing as in our own. In the year since MVFF put its 40 th anniversary year to bed, in cinema, we’ve seen the rise of #MeToo and #TimesUp, movements that have met head on the film industry’s long history of sexual harassment and gender inequality. We’ve seen families separated at our own southern border and refugees struggle worldwide. We’ve seen the earth’s changing climate continue to wreak havoc and the spread of authoritarian movements. These are situations that could lead to despair, but they are also a call to artists, particularly filmmakers, to try and effect change through their work. And it is a call to the MVFF to celebrate those films, and beyond that, to celebrate what is good in the world. It is not all doom and gloom. Film can help us make sense of our moment or distract us from it. At times, it can do both at once. For me, I love these films that deal with the most remote possible subject matter that is so alien to your individual life, yet resonate universally and have a powerful impact, emotionally and intellectually. These are the stories that not only entertain us, but inspire us, and cause us to reflect our own lives. That’s what we do. That’s what these stories are about. There are so many themes that we can talk about: race, immigration. Three intriguing and very different programs put our own country’s race relations into perspective. George Tillman, Jr. The Hate U Give, featuring a breakout performance by one of the actors in this year’s spotlights, Amandla Stenberg, confronts our current moment in its story of a young woman who witnesses a police shooting. With its true story of African American musician Don Shirley (Oscar ® winner and Oakland native Mahershala Ali) and his white driver (Viggo Mortensen) touring the Deep South in 1962, opening night co-feature Green Book offers a snapshot of conditions only a few years before the passage of the Civil Rights Act. Then the special event, Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait—directed by Bay Area filmmaker Finn Taylor from footage shot during the Depression by photographer H. Lee Waters with a score composed by singer and violinist Jenny Scheinman, and performed live—observes the culture and segregation of southern mill towns in the Jim Crow era.

I am equally proud of our international programming. At a time when fewer foreign-language films receive theatrical releases, MVFF strives to bring our audience the very best of what the world has to offer. This year we have an amazing line-up of titles, among them Capernaum, Nadine Labaki’s Cannes prize winner about a Syrian migrant boy living in horrific circumstances in Lebanon who sues his parents for giving him life; Ali Abbasi’s Border, an exhilarating blend of Scandinavian noir, magic realism, and romance in its tale of a customs agent with a special talent and a murky past; and spotlight honoree Paweł Pawlikowski’s Cold War, a Polish drama inspired by his own parents’ marriage. This year MVFF also embraces Spanish-language and Latin American cinema with our ¡Viva el Cine! showcase that includes our centerpiece film, Alfonso Cuarón’s visually stunning, Golden Lion-winning Roma, which charts the lives of a Mexico City family over a year in the early 1970s. Among the other striking features in the 15-film program are Bay Area filmmaker Richard Levien’s, Collisions, about a 12-year-old San Francisco girl coping with her mother’s detention by ICE; Museo, featuring a fine comic performance by Gael García Bernal as one of the thieves in a notorious 1980s Mexico City art theft; and El ángel, a black humor- and pop music-laced biopic of a notorious Argentinian teen criminal. I hope I’ve whet your appetite for this 41st edition of MVFF. What has been consistent with the festival from its conception is our belief that film is not only the most popular medium in the world but the most powerful. Bringing you the best of what the world has to offer—in international film, independent film, documentary, and even Hollywood film—is what we strive to do year after year. I think we have tons of the most powerful stories in any given year.

Mark Fishkin MVFF Founder/Director

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CFI BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOUNDER/ EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Mark Fishkin FOUNDING BOARD

Rita Cahill Mark Fishkin

EMERITUS BOARD

Rita Cahill Sid Ganis Bruce Katz Gary Meyer Gordon Radley Christopher B. Smith Henry Timnick

ADVISORY BOARD

Barbara Boxer

Robert Greber

Stewart Boxer

Linda Gruber

Drusie Davis

Peggy Haas Jessica Igoe

Jeff Fisher Peter Flaxman

Michael Klein Roxanne Klein

KC Lauck Andrew McGuire Mary Poland Eric Schwartz Michael Schwartz Skip Whitney

Lois Kohl Shore

C A L IF O R NI A FIL M INS TIT U TE Board of Directors

JONATHAN PARKER

JENNIFER MACCREADY

KENNETH BROAD

DR. JOEL SKLAR

RICHARD IDELL

PRESIDENT

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OPENING NIGHT

A PRIVATE WAR Guests: ROSAMUND PIKE and MATTHEW HEINEMAN Four years after her Oscar® -nominated breakthrough role in Gone Girl, Rosamund Pike delivers a breathtaking, career-defining performance in A Private War, transforming herself into the gravel-voiced, eye patch-donning American war correspondent Marie Colvin. Spanning nearly two decades, this powerful drama, which marks the narrative feature debut from Oscar-nominated director Matthew Heineman (Cartel Land), showcases the fearless dedication that pushes Colvin to the top of her otherwise male-dominated field, reporting from the dangerous frontlines of the Sri Lankan civil war and the Arab Spring. But that hyper focused, singular passion isn’t without a price, taking a toll on Colvin’s personal relationships as well as putting her own safety in jeopardy. Co-starring Stanley Tucci, Tom Hollander (In the Loop), and Jamie Dornan as Colvin’s trusted photo journalist partner Paul Conroy, A Private War is a gripping testament to both Colvin’s tenaciousness and Pike’s dedication to her craft. US PREMIERE —Diane de Monx US/UK 2018, 106 min Director Matthew Heineman

Thursday, October 4 | 7:00pm | Smith Rafael Film Center Program & Gala | $125 general | $110 CFI members Program Only | $60 general | $55 CFI members

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OPENING NIGHT

GREEN BOOK Guests: MAHERSHALA ALI and PETER FARRELLY For classically trained Black jazz piano prodigy Dr. Don Shirley and his white chauffeur and bodyguard Tony Lip, a 1962 concert tour of the American South proves an eye-opening experience in unanticipated ways. Peter Farrelly’s sharply observed drama, spiked with wry humor and inspired by real-life events, features the prodigiously gifted Oscar® winner Mahershala Ali (Moonlight, MVFF 2016) as the ultra-sophisticated, polylingual Shirley, an elegant, mannered outsider wherever he goes and a transformed Viggo Mortensen (Captain Fantastic) as his truculent, semi-illiterate lip. Tooling around rural roads in a highly conspicuous turquoise Cadillac and getting into—and barely out of—life-threatening encounters together, each starts to see the real man beyond the other’s surface. The period details are spot-on, and so are the hate and the horror that greet a Black man in the Jim Crow South. Ali and Mortensen are pitch-perfect as an improbably matched pair, often at loggerheads, whose journey reaps unexpected and enduring rewards. US PREMIERE —Pam Grady US 2018, 130 min Director Peter Farrelly

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CENTERPIECE

ROMA Guest: ALFONSO CUARÓN Oscar® winner Alfonso Cuarón (Gravity, Children of Men) returns to his homeland in marvelous style with his first Mexican film since his breakout Y tu mamá también (MVFF 2001). Set in 1970, Roma centers on Cleo (a wonderful Yalitza Aparicio), the indigenous housekeeper to a large Mexico City family. With remarkable attention to detail, Cuarón lovingly captures the energy and textures of his youth, from the movie palaces and slums to the affluent rancheros and crowded hospitals. As Cleo faces her own personal crisis, we also see a country beset with natural disasters and civil unrest. But through it all is the bonding she experiences with three generations of women she works for in a story where compassion, loyalty, and love can transcend differences in class and culture. It’s an emotional epic, filmed (by Cuarón himself) in beautiful black and white with hat tips to Renoir and Fellini. Intensely personal and profoundly moving, Roma is a stunner and deservedly won the Golden Lion at this year’s Venice Film Festival. In Spanish with English subtitles —Sterling Hedgpeth Mexico 2018, 135 min Director Alfonso Cuarón Our Centerpiece program features an onstage conversation with Alfonso Cuarón and a screening of Roma. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at Elks Lodge in San Rafael.

Monday, October 8 | 6:00pm | Smith Rafael Film Center Program & Party | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program Only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

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CLOSING NIGHT

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK Guest: BARRY JENKINS In arguably the year’s most anticipated film, Academy Award ® winner Barry Jenkins follows his iconic Moonlight (MVFF 2016) with a poetic, astonishingly realized adaptation of James Baldwin’s novel, If Beale Street Could Talk. Diving into the world of 1970s Harlem, Jenkins uses Baldwin’s profound and enlightened look at African American life in the US to express a universal tale of the strengths of love and family in an unjust, imperfect world. Newcomers KiKi Layne (in her first feature film) and Stephan James (Selma) play teenage lovers Tish and Fonny, whose lives are turned upside down when Tish discovers she’s pregnant and Fonny is thrown in jail for a crime he didn’t commit. With the help of her mother, played by multiple Emmy ® -winning actress Regina King (American Crime), Tish begins a fight for justice, trying to free her innocent husband from prison. Aunjanue Ellis, Colman Domingo, Dave Franco, Diego Luna, and Pedro Pascal round out the impressive supporting cast. —Joe Bowman US 2018, 117 min Director Barry Jenkins

Sunday, October 14 | 5:00pm | Smith Rafael Film Center Sunday, October 14 | 5:00pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Party | $90 general | $80 CFI members Program Only | $50 general | $45 CFI members

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HEADING AWARDS MIN D THE GA P AWA R D The Mind the Gap Award honors creatives, leaders, and technistas whose work has helped close the gender gap in the film industry and in our lives. Recognizing talents both above and below the line, the Award celebrates their groundbreaking achievements and acknowledges their importance as role models.

The Mind the Gap Award is a custom-designed gold pendant with a moonstone and a diamond accent. Each pendant is individually cast, finished, and numbered. The moonstone symbolizes female power and bridges the gap in the design, the diamond represents aspirations, the chain honors suffragettes who chained themselves to railings as they fought for the right to vote.

Here’s to the film makers who illuminate the screen. And in the process, us. XFINITY is proud to sponsor the 41TH Mill Valley Film Festival. 1-800-XFINITY | www.xfinity.com


AWARDS M I L L VA L L E Y F I L M F E S T I VA L AWA R D Inaugurated in 2007, the Mill Valley Film Festival Award is a specially designed bronze sculpture created by Mill Valley artist Alice Corning, each one individually cast for the recipient in a numbered, limited edition. The MVFF Award is presented to the recipients of Tributes and Spotlights, our special programs honoring and celebrating the work of distinguished artists and innovators in the filmmaking community.

TRIBUTES

SPOTLIGHTS

An MVFF Tribute program celebrates lifetime achievements in the career of a significant film artist.

An MVFF Spotlight program celebrates exceptional work by a film artist in their most current work. Honorees may be in early, mid, or late career.

MVFF AWARD RECIPIENTS

MVFF AWARD RECIPIENTS

2017 Kristin Scott Thomas

2017 Dee Rees (Mudbound)

2017 Rose Marie

2017 Margot Robbie (I, Tonya)

2017 Holly Hunter

2017 Jason Clarke (Chappaquiddick)

2017 Todd Haynes

2017 Andrew Garfield (Breathe)

2017 Sean Penn

2017 Greta Gerwig (Ladybird)

2016 Nicole Kidman

2016 Ewan McGregor (American Pastoral)

2016 Julie Dash

2016 Gael García Bernal (Neruda)

2015 Catherine Hardwicke

2016 Annette Bening, Elle Fanning, Lucas Jade Zumann, Mike Mills (20th Century Women)

2015 Ian McKellen 2015 Marcel Ophüls 2014 Laura Dern 2014 Chuck Workman 2013 Geoffrey Rush 2013 Ben Stiller 2013 Costa-Gavras 2012 Dustin Hoffman 2012 Mira Nair 2011 Glenn Close 2011 Gaston Kaboré 2010 Annette Bening 2010 Edward Norton

2016 Aaron Eckhart (Bleed for This) 2015 Brie Larson (Room) 2015 Carey Mulligan (Suffragette) 2015 Sarah Silverman (I Smile Back) 2014 Eddie Redmayne (The Theory of Everything) 2014 Elle Fanning (Low Down) 2013 Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club) 2013 Steve McQueen (12 Years a Slave) 2013 Chiwetel Ejiofor (12 Years a Slave) 2012 John Hawkes (The Sessions)

2009 Anna Karina

2012 Billy Bob Thornton (Jayne Mansfield’s Car)

2009 Uma Thurman

2011 Michelle Yeoh (The Lady)

2009 Woody Harrelson 2008 Eric Roth

2011 Elizabeth Olsen (Martha Marcy May Marlene)

2008 Harriet Andersson

2011 Ezra Miller (We Need to Talk About Kevin)

2008 Paul Schrader

2010 James Franco (127 Hours)

2008 Alfre Woodard

2010 Alejandro González Iñárritu (Biutiful)

2007 Ang Lee

2009 Clive Owen (The Boys Are Back) 2009 Jason Reitman (Up in the Air) 2008 Sally Hawkins (Happy-Go-Lucky)

“The purpose is to show the power and dignity of a human being… as it is with great work in film.” — Alice Corning

2007 Jennifer Jason Leigh (Margot at the Wedding) 2007 Terry George (Reservation Road)

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SPOTLIGHT

CAREY MULLIGAN and PAUL DANO Carey Mulligan (MVFF Award 2015) exploded onto the independent film scene with her unforgettably tender and moving performance in Lone Scherfig’s An Education (MVFF 2009). and her career has gathered momentum ever since. A constantly in-demand actress, her work in the films Drive, Shame (MVFF 2011), The Great Gatsby, Mudbound (MVFF 2017), and Suffragette (MVFF 2015) has won praise from audiences and critics alike, a trend that has continued with her latest project, Wildlife. Paul Dano is the true Hollywood multihyphenate: actor-director-screenwriter-producer-musician. The extraordinarily talented Dano started out strong on the Broadway stage and won the 2002 Independent Spirit Award for Best Debut Performance in L.I.E. His burgeoning career sky-rocketed in 2007 with back-to-back acclaimed performances in Little Miss Sunshine and There Will Be Blood. Dano continued to receive accolades for his performances in 12 Years a Slave (MVFF 2013), Love & Mercy, Swiss Army Man, and Okja, among several others. Based on the Robert Ford novel, Wildlife, adapted with life and work partner Zoe Kazan, marks Dano’s auspicious directorial debut.

WILDLIFE Amid a trio of great performances in Paul Dano’s assured directorial debut, Carey Mulligan is a standout, brilliantly revealing a woman’s emergence from her husband’s shadow to find her own liberation, potentially wounding those she loves in the process. The focus is on a teenager growing up amid parental strife in small-town Montana in the early 1960s. Patriarch Jerry (Jake Gyllenhaal) has relocated his family again for a menial new job while dissatisfied wife Jeanette (Mulligan) feels trapped by her circumstances and son Joe (Ed Oxenbould) just hopes to stay long enough to make friends. Surely and delicately, the film depicts the growing rift between Jerry and Jeanette—he leaves to go fight fires while she becomes more forthright and impulsive—and how it forces Joe to find his own interests and allegiances. Dano and actor Zoe Kazan (The Big Sick) collaborated on the screenplay of this evocative adaptation of Richard Ford’s acclaimed novel. —Rod Armstrong

US 2018, 104 min Director Paul Dano Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Carey Mulligan and Paul Dano, a screening of Wildlife, and an Award presentation. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Friday, October 5 | 6:30pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members SPOTLIGHT SPONSOR

RECEPTION SPONSOR

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SPOTLIGHT by Leah LoSchiavo Born on opposite sides of the Atlantic almost exactly one year apart, actor-director Paul Dano and actress Carey Mulligan (MVFF Award, 2015) have aligned their considerable talents in harmonious collaboration to bring the film Wildlife vividly to life on the big screen. The correlations between the careers of these future collaborators bear remarkable symmetry. Both Dano and Mulligan knew from an early age that they wanted to perform, and both began their careers as teenagers in theater. Dano first trod the boards at 12 in the 1996 National Actors Theatre Broadway production of Inherit the Wind, while Mulligan debuted at 19 in the Royal Court Theatre production of Forty Winks in London. Both built up strong résumés in television and theater, as well as in small film roles, before each took challenging lead roles in strongly reviewed and universally acclaimed independent films: Michael Cuesta’s L.I.E. for Dano in 2001 and Lone Scherfig’s An Education (MVFF 2008) for Mulligan. Alike as their career paths have been, variations in their trajectories mark distinct tracks uniquely their own. Born in New York in 1984 and primarily raised in Wilton, Connecticut, Dano’s family encouraged his acting aspirations as he became involved in community theater. This road led to his early work on Broadway, and eventually his Independent Spirit Award win for Best Debut Performance in L.I.E. He maintained his career momentum, appearing in the TV movie Too Young to Be a Dad (2002) before garnering a small role in the Angelina Jolie-Ethan Hawke vehicle Taking Lives (2004) and playing key supporting roles opposite Gael García Bernal in James Marsh’s The King (2005) and Daniel Day-Lewis in Rebecca Miller’s The Ballad of Jack and Rose (2005). Dano’s consistently impressive approach came to great fruition in 2006, for the role of Dwayne, a voluntarily mute teenager in the Oscar ®-winning dark comedy Little Miss Sunshine. That same year, Dano’s previous work with Daniel Day-Lewis led to a dual role opposite him in Paul Thomas Anderson’s There Will Be Blood, playing identical twin brothers Eli and Paul Sunday. His outstanding work in the film earned him a BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting Actor and brought him numerous accolades in addition to widespread recognition. Dano continued to pursue challenging work in film and theater, attacking meaty roles in films Gigantic (2008), The Good Heart (2009), Knight and Day (2010), Meek’s Cutoff (2010), Cowboys and Aliens (2011), Ruby Sparks (2012), Looper (2012), Prisoners (2013), and 12 Years a Slave (MVFF 2013), and on stage in the Ethan Hawke-directed Off-Broadway play Things We Want (2007) and at Lincoln Center in A Free Man of Color (2011). His well-received performance as a young Brian Wilson in 2014’s Love & Mercy earned him a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actor. In recent years, Dano has appeared in a diverse array of films such as Youth (MVFF 2015), Swiss Army Man 46

Carey Mulligan

(2016), and Okja (2017), on television in the BBC’s adaptation of War & Peace (2016) and Showtime’s Escape at Dannemora (2018). Next year, he returns to the stage opposite Ethan Hawke in the Roundabout Theatre’s revival of Sam Shepard’s True West. In addition to these accomplishments, Dano lives and works with his partner Zoe Kazan (The Big Sick, Olive Kitteridge) and, until recently, performed in the indie rock outfit Mook, formed with friends from his Connecticut hometown. Across the pond, Carey Mulligan was born in Westminster, London in 1985, and partially raised in Germany before settling into suburban family life in Surrey. Like Dano, her interest in acting began early, and she immersed herself in all aspects of theatrical performance and production, despite her parents’ concerns regarding the stability of her chosen profession. Mulligan’s determination and dedication to the craft led to a fortuitous audition for Joe Wright’s 2005 adaptation of Pride & Prejudice. She won the role of Kitty Bennet just one year after her stage debut at the Royal Court Theatre. This led to her subsequent television debut in the BBC adaptation of Bleak House (2005) as well as supporting roles in telefilms My Boy Jack (2007) and Northanger Abbey (2007) and a 2007 guest role on Doctor Who. She triumphantly concluded 2007 with her performance as Nina in Anton Chekov’s The Seagull opposite MVFF 2017 Tributee Kristin Scott Thomas and MVFF 2013 Spotlight recipient Chiwetel Ejiofor, which garnered her a Drama Desk Award nomination during its American staging on Broadway. Mulligan took the independent film world by storm in 2008 with An Education, earning her nearly every major acting nomination and landing a BAFTA win. She carried on her promising career with dynamic performances in The Greatest (2009),


CAREY MULLIGAN & PAUL DANO Never Let Me Go (2010), Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2010), Drive (2011), Shame (MVFF 2011), Inside Llewyn Davis (2013), The Great Gatsby (2013), Far from the Madding Crowd (2015), Suffragette (MVFF 2015), and Mudbound (MVFF 2017). She has also maintained her commanding stage career, earning raves for her performances in the Atlantic Theatre Company’s production of Ingmar Bergman’s Through a Glass Darkly (2011) and the Wyndham’s Theatre revival of David Hare’s Skylight (2015). Mulligan’s Tony-nominated performance was praised effusively by The New York Times’ Ben Brantley as “extraordinary” and “acting of the highest order.” In addition to her acting career, Mulligan is raising a growing family with husband Marcus Mumford of the band Mumford and Sons and is actively engaged in charity work with the Safe Project, the Alzheimer’s Society, and the War Child organization. In September 2016, Dano and Mulligan’s professional paths converged, with the announcement that Mulligan would star opposite Jake Gyllenhaal in Dano’s feature directorial debut, an adaptation of Richard Ford’s novel Wildlife. Ford’s work was initially published in 1990 and didn’t find its way to Dano until 2011. But once arriving in the mind of the acclaimed actor, the match was set, and Dano couldn’t shake the 1960s-era family drama as the impetus for his first foray into directing. Dano states: “In Richard’s book, I saw myself and many others. I have always wanted to make films—and have always known I would make films about family.” Dano related to the novel’s sensitive exploration of intense familial dynamics, extending the close threads of the intertwining story through his writing collaboration with partner Kazan. Dano conceptualized the film over a course of a few years, daydreaming and making notes on subway rides, eventually pitching the adaptation to Ford, optioning the rights, and drafting the initial script, which was then polished into shape by Kazan. After several more passes—with the couple allowing the script to rest, be reworked, and take new directions—Dano felt his way forward to begin production and bring his cinematic subway daydreams to reality.

bent because it deals with the struggles of the white working class while also exploring the characters’ emotions with great sensibility.” At Sundance, actors Mulligan and Gyllenhaal offered nothing but affection and great pride in the process of working with Dano. “Paul was kind of everything you wanted in a director,” Mulligan said. “He’s encouraging, challenging, and inquisitive about things, understands when you get stuck in a rut or have a moment of self-doubt and knows how to get you out of it because he’s been in those ruts. I just knew he was going to make a brilliant film because he makes brilliant choices in his own work, and I could only imagine he would narrow all those instincts in a film that he made. I think he has.” For his part, Dano credits Ford’s original book as the inspiration for the film’s true power: “I think something he captured that I loved was the feeling that family is one of the greatest loves of our life, and because of that, it’s one of the greatest sources of struggle and possibly pain in our life.” Dano plans to continue directing and sees Wildlife as the first in a series of films he wants to make examining all the unique ways in which dysfunctional families express themselves. For the initial enterprise of Wildlife, he seems quite pleased with the outcome and credits the joint effort of his team for crafting the finished work of art that Wildlife has become: “I couldn’t be happier to have such beautiful collaborators like Carey and Jake leading the way.” Leah LoSchiavo is a marketing coordinator and writer. Between the two, she is pretty certain she’s on a deadline for something right now.

What has emerged is a film nearly a decade in the making, a story centered on the perspective of a teenage boy who witnesses the disintegration of his parents’ marriage after an ill-fated move to Montana. Produced by June Pictures and Nine Stories Productions, Wildlife had its premiere at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, where it was picked up by IFC Films for release in the US in fall 2018. Garnering strong praise at the Cannes’ Semaine de la critique, it has been picking up steam and distinction on the festival circuit at the New York Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, and, in due course, our own 41st Mill Valley Film Festival. At Cannes, the director of Critics Week, Charles Tesson, drew comparisons to the work of Jeff Nichols (Mud, Midnight Special), noting in Variety that the film has “a timeless dimension, as well as a social

Paul Dano

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TRIBUTE

PAWEŁ PAWLIKOWSKI Paweł Pawlikowski has garnered a reputation for doing things his own way. He began his career in 1990, crafting BBC-commissioned documentaries around Eastern Europe. His first two breakthrough films received top accolades at the BAFTA Awards: Last Resort (2000) won the Carl Foreman Award for the Most Promising Newcomer, and My Summer of Love (2004) took home the prestigious Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film. Pawlikowski took a hiatus from filmmaking following My Summer of Love, but he resurfaced with the French production The Woman in the Fifth (2011), starring MVFF 2017 Tributee Kristin Scott Thomas. In 2013, Pawlikowski delved into his past with his first feature in his native Poland, Ida, which would go on to win awards across the globe, including the Oscar® for Best Foreign Language Film. His latest film, Cold War, explores the dynamic of his parents’ star-crossed romance and won the Best Director prize at Cannes.

COLD WAR

(ZIMNA WOJNA)

Based loosely on the lives of his parents—to whom the film is dedicated—Oscar® -winning director Paweł Pawlikowski’s Cold War paints a portrait of complicated love during a period of great peril. This bittersweet drama, shot in luminous black and white, traces the courtship of Wiktor (Tomasz Kot), a composer, and Zula (Joanna Kulig), a singer and dancer, over several years, with their tempestuous relationship mirroring the fear and uncertainty of life during Communism. Much like Pawlikowski’s acclaimed Ida, Cold War examines mid-century Poland with somber specificity, but the actors’ performances bring a fire to this deceptively elegant romance. Pawlikowski tells his story in scattered vignettes, like a faded scrapbook with pages missing, resulting in a dreamy, half-remembered reverie. Winner of the Best Director prize at Cannes, Cold War’s message of how love ebbs and flows—and also how it’s shaped by the trauma of its times—will speak to audiences all over the world. In Polish, French, and German with English subtitles —Tim Grierson

Poland/France/UK 2018, 88 min Director Paweł Pawlikowski Our Tribute program features an onstage conversation with Paweł Pawlikowski, a screening of Cold War, and the presentation of the MVFF Award. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Friday, October 5 | 7:00pm | Smith Rafael Film Center Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

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TRIBUTE 2000 with Last Resort, a vérité kitchen sink drama about a Russian woman and her son seeking asylum in England. With the sort of naturalistic style that would define the works of British masters Ken Loach and Mike Leigh, Last Resort would set Pawlikowski on an impressive award trajectory, claiming prizes at the London Film Festival, the Edinburgh International Film Festival, and the Thessaloniki Film Festival before winning the Carl Foreman Award for the Most Promising Newcomer at the BAFTAs (a prize that would also be awarded to such other talents in British cinema as Lynne Ramsay, Andrea Arnold, and Joe Wright).

by Joe Bowman “In France, crimes of passion are forgiven,” Tamsin (Emily Blunt) tells Mona (Natalie Press) in Paweł Pawlikowski’s My Summer of Love (2004). Tamsin, posh and privileged, utters this line to her less worldly companion while taking liberties in recounting the life of French chanteuse, Édith Piaf, but that single line echoes through not only his exquisite feature—which would go on to win the Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film at the BAFTAs—but nearly all of the Polish-born director’s work in some regard. Passion, destiny, and romantic displacement, intertwined with music and occasionally a bit of danger, are the common threads that run through Pawlikowski’s oeuvre, all of which come together with breathtaking elegance in his latest, Cold War (Zimna wojna). Born in Warsaw in 1957, the young Pawlikowski only spent his first 14 years in communist Poland before relocating to Germany and the UK with his mother. Eventually, he’d settle in London and study literature, before his filmmaking career would begin in British television in the late 1980s. Through the first part of the 1990s, Pawlikowski (then going by the name Paul Pawlikowski) directed a series of hour-long documentaries for the BBC, mostly focused on Eastern Europe. From Moscow to Pietushki: A Journey with Benedict Yerofeyev (1990), Dostoevsky’s Travels (1991), and Tripping with Zhirinovsky (1995) would focus on Russia and the former Soviet Union, while Serbian Epics (1992) took an unorthodox approach to war reporting in the early years of the Bosnian War. Pawlikowski’s background in documentary filmmaking would inform his approach to narrative cinema in a number of ways. The director’s first major breakthrough in narrative cinema came in 52

His subsequent feature, My Summer of Love, would cement Paweł Pawlikowski’s name on the international film circuit and would explore many of the director’s themes and obsessions, as well as crafting his unmistakable visual style. On one level, My Summer of Love depicts a coming-of-age tale alongside the blossoming romance between two young women in the Yorkshire countryside, Cold War but like all of his other features, these elements merely provide the basework for a complex and astonishing examination of character, setting, and self-exploration. Again taking from his years working as a documentarian for the BBC, Pawlikowski began shooting My Summer of Love without a complete script, using Helen Cross’ novel of the same name simply as a jumping off point. Re-enlisting Paddy Considine from Last Resort to play the protagonist Mona’s born-again Christian brother, Pawlikowski cast Press—who had previously appeared in Andrea Arnold’s Oscar ®-winning short Wasp—and Blunt in their first major screen roles, allowing the actors to improvise with one another and shaping the narrative around their exquisite chemistry. Where Last Resort dealt with immigrants immediately landing in a new country, My Summer of Love concerned local Brits with their eyes on the horizon. Romanticizing the pain and art of Édith Piaf while dancing to “La foule,” gawking at the local townsfolk at a dance hall, and lamenting the quietness and stillness of their country setting, Mona and Tamsin fuel one another’s dreams of the future, while nursing the wounds of their own past. With a dreamlike score by the band Goldfrapp, My Summer of Love would also reteam Pawlikowski with Polish cinematographer Ryszard Lenczewski following Last Resort, and together they would craft a sumptuous, sunkissed visual landscape that would move the director’s work into an almost magical realism. In addition to the Best British Film Award at the BAFTAs and other film festival prizes, My Summer of Love would also win the Best European Film category at the Polish Film Awards. Personal tragedy would prevent Pawlikowski from making his next feature for nearly seven years. When his wife fell ill in 2006,


PAWEŁ PAWLIKOWSKI Pawlikowski abandoned an adaptation of Magnus Mills’ novel The Restraint of Beasts starring Rhys Ifans and Ben Whishaw, to care for his wife and children; she died several months later. His return to the director’s chair in 2011 would take him from the UK to Paris for his first French production, a loose adaptation of Douglas Kennedy’s novel The Woman in the Fifth, entitled La femme du Vème. Moody and with an unshakable sense of melancholy, the film centered around a defamed American professor, played by Ethan Hawke, who relocates to the City of Lights to reconnect with his young daughter, crossing paths with a mysterious English woman (Kristin Scott Thomas) and a Polish barmaid (Joanna Kulig). Cryptic and a bit unsettling, The Woman in the Fifth wouldn’t achieve the sort of widespread acclaim and success that his previous and subsequent features would, but it’s still essential viewing for Pawlikowski fans. “It left audiences baffled,” Pawlikowski admitted in an interview in support of Cold War. “It had no cultural identity: a French film, American, British, French actors, a Polish director. Although it came from a book, I ignored the book’s plot and put a lot of my confused self into it.” After over 25 years of working in both the UK and France, Pawlikowski would return to his native Poland to make his first feature there, giving the country its very first Academy Award® for Best Foreign Language Film for Ida (not to mention other top prizes at the European Film Awards, the BAFTAs, the Film Independent Spirit Awards, and the Polish Film Awards). Poland hadn’t been a communist nation for almost the entire duration of Pawlikowski’s filmmaking career, but in a sense, destiny would take Pawlikowski in the footsteps of the generation of great Polish filmmakers who self-exiled during the communist regime. Andrzej Žuławski, Agnieszka Holland, and Andrzej Wajda each found themselves back in Poland after achieving success and acclaim making films in France and Germany.

timeline of when they’re set, but harken back to the visual storytelling of the silent era... though with a key difference: the infusion of music within the films. In Cold War, Tamsin’s anecdote comes fully to life, combining all of that simple phrase’s elements—France, passion, crime, music, and forgiveness—into a truly spellbinding work of cinema. It’s easily his most ambitious work, spanning several decades and numerous countries (France playing a key role), but it retains the sort of intimacy that defined his earlier films. In essence, it’s the story of his parents’ explosive, star-crossed love affair. The characters, Zula (Joanna Kulig in her third feature with Pawlikowski) and Wiktor (Tomasz Kot), share the names and the dynamic of his parents, though several key details—namely their professions in the music industry—were changed to fit the narrative. The two meet while Wiktor and his then-wife begin a talent search for a folk music and dance ensemble. Bolstered by dynamic performances from Kulig and Kot, Cold War crackles with fire and passion onscreen, showcasing Pawlikowski at the height of his artistic talents. His first film to screen in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, Cold War garnered Pawlikowski the coveted Best Director prize, which will surely be the start of a series of festival and industry awards for the film. The Mill Valley Film Festival is proud to present a tribute to the distinguished director and bestow him with the MVFF Award. Joe Bowman is the publications managing editor for MVFF and based in San Francisco.

With Ida, he would take the story of a young Catholic nun, Anna (Agata Trzebuchowska), on the verge of taking her vows in 1960s Poland, and use it as the tool for an exploration of identity and history—for both Poland and Pawlikowski himself. An orphan raised in the convent, Anna is forced to meet her only living relative, her aunt Wanda (Agata Kulesza), where she discovers her family’s Jewish heritage, and the two women set out on a journey to find out what really happened to her parents during the Nazi occupation. Pawlikowski was shocked to discover in his teen years that his paternal grandmother was Jewish and died in a concentration camp at Auschwitz. With little interest in a history lesson of Poland during and after WWII, Pawlikowski foregoes unnecessary exposition as Ida pushed him to the heights of visual storytelling and narrative. With his regular cinematographer Lenczewski and Łukasz Žal (who would take over the production when Lenczewski fell ill), every frame of Ida looks like it belongs mounted in a museum. Though the director would cite functional and budgetary needs when discussing the visual style of Ida and subsequently Cold War—both are shot in black and white in a 4:3 aspect ratio that was commonplace in cinema before the advent of television— these artistic decisions don’t just place the films in the cinematic

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BEAUTIFUL BOY Guests: TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET, AMY RYAN, and FELIX VAN GROENINGEN Culling from the bestselling memoirs of both father and son David and Nic Sheff, Oscar® -nominated director Felix van Groeningen’s (The Broken Circle Breakdown) English-language debut is a kaleidoscopic and moving portrait of an American family coping with addiction. Frequent Rolling Stone contributor David (Steve Carell) sees his teenage son Nic’s (an unforgettable Timothée Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name, MVFF 2017) marijuana use as harmless experimentation until he begins to spiral out of control on heroin and crystal meth. What follows is a alternately inspiring and unflinching look at a family begins the long cycle of rehab and relapse, hope and dread. Filmed in San Francisco and Marin County, Beautiful Boy features a diverse soundtrack which includes John Lennon, Nirvana, and Sigur Rós and outstanding supporting performances from Maura Tierney and Amy Ryan as Nic’s maternal figures. —Joe Bowman US 2018, 111 min Director Felix van Groeningen

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SPECIAL PREMIERE & PARTY

A PARTING GLASS Guests: ANNA PAQUIN, DENIS O’HARE, and STEPHEN MOYER An unexpected death. A family struggling with grief. An apprehensive cross-country road trip in winter. These events set the stage for a powerful, nuanced, and emotionally resonant drama centering on a family pilgrimage to the apartment of Colleen (Anna Paquin) after her demise. The Parting Glass follows siblings Dan (Denis O’Hare), Mare (Cynthia Nixon), and Ally (Melissa Leo) as they reunite with their father (Ed Asner) and Colleen’s estranged husband (Rhys Ifans). The wonderful rapport of the stellar powerhouse cast makes them instantly believable as family—talking over each other, or bickering about something as simple as ordering breakfast, imbuing the film with an aura of honesty and tenderness in a deeply moving portrait of loss. This impressive directorial debut from acclaimed actor Stephen Moyer reunites him with fellow True Blood stars Paquin, who also co-produced, and O’Hare, who wrote the screenplay based on his own experience coping with his sister’s suicide. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE —Elliott Breeden US 2018, 95 min Director Stephen Moyer Join us after the screening to celebrate the North American Premiere of The Parting Glass.

Saturday, October 6 | 5:00pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Party | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program Only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

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SPOTLIGHT

JOEL EDGERTON Actor-director-writer-producer Joel Edgerton has been slowly burning up big and small screens since 1995 in a range of diverse projects (Star Wars: Episodes II and III, Warrior, Zero Dark Thirty, Animal Kingdom, Black Mass, Midnight Special) building to leading man status in recent projects Loving (MVFF 2016), It Comes at Night, and Red Sparrow. His first foray into directing, The Gift, landed him a nomination by the Directors Guild of America for Outstanding Directing. Boy Erased is his second feature as director, already a certain shoo-in for accolades this awards season.

BOY ERASED Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman, and Russell Crowe deliver astonishing performances as a devoted Baptist family whose lives are turned upside down after a malicious phone call outs their teenage son, prompting them to send him to a church-sponsored gay conversion camp. Seventeen-year-old Jared reluctantly agrees to his preacher father’s ultimatum: Fix your same-sex attraction or leave the family. Quickly, Jared realizes that the camp’s aggressive, manipulative methods are doing little to shift his own sexual proclivities or those of his peers (which include Canadian auteur Xavier Dolan and pop superstar Troye Sivan), bringing him to a crossroads that will forever alter his life. In his second directorial outing, actor Joel Edgerton (Loving, MVFF 2016) takes the role of the fiery camp leader. Edgerton’s adaptation of Garrard Conley’s harrowing memoir is a sensitive, elliptical coming-of-age tale that depicts a universal story of personal struggles that threaten to dissolve familial bonds. —Joe Bowman

US 2018, 114 min Director Joel Edgerton Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Joel Edgerton, a screening of Boy Erased, and the presentation of the MVFF Award. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at the Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Sunday, October 7 | 6:00pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

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SPOTLIGHT

Boy Erased

by Pam Grady Joel Edgerton steps into the Mill Valley Film Festival spotlight this year with his new drama Boy Erased, adapted from Garrard Conley’s memoir. The actor and filmmaker avails himself of all his talents in this story of a teenager (Lucas Hedges) sent to a gay conversion camp by his parents: It is his second feature directorial effort. He wrote the screenplay. He is a producer of the movie. And he costars as the head of the camp.

hiding behind God knows what and other people’s opinions, and they’re preventing themselves from allowing the rights and freedoms of two men or two women to be married to each other… You can’t stop change. Flow with it. Don’t put your name on the other side of the river. Love will find a way.”

Edgerton’s fate was probably sealed in 1982, when he was just eight years old. That was the year his father brought home a video camera. Joel and his older brother Nash quickly turned the family home and its five acres of surroundings in the Sydney suburb of Dural into their first movie set, spending their childhood and adolescence in their first baby steps toward their eventual “You can’t stop career as filmmakers. While Nash began his change. Flow with it. professional life as a stuntman, Joel turned to acting, studying drama at the University of Don’t put your name Western Sydney Nepean Drama School.

Two years ago, Edgerton attended MVFF Closing Night in support of Jeff Nichols’ Loving (MVFF 2016). He ultimately would be nominated for a Golden Globe® for his performance as Richard Loving opposite Ruth Negga as his wife Mildred, the plaintiffs in the landmark Supreme Court case that made mixed-race marriage legal throughon the other side of His career launched almost simultaneously out the United States. That he would be in theater, film, and television. He made his the river. Love will back so soon with another film dealing with a debut with the Sydney Theatre Company in hot-button social issue is probably not a co1995 in Nick Enright’s drama Blackrock, playfind a way.” incidence. That he cares about such things ing one of three young men who commit a was evident when he was promoting Loving gang rape. That same year he made his first and making the parallel between Richard and Mildred’s situation TV appearances with guest roles on the Australian series Police and that of the situation in his home country of Australia where Rescue and Spellbinders. In 1996, Edgerton’s first film was a Halgay marriage was still illegal. (The law has since been amended.) le Berry vehicle shot largely in Australia entitled Race the Sun. “Loving reaches out with sort of a vicious grip,” Edgerton said during the Toronto International Film Festival. “It’s a gentle movie, but it has a real vice-like grip on very, very important current topics, the two big ones being questions of racial tension and otherness and the other big one, which can almost be under the same banner in some regards, is the otherness in regard to marriage equality. That is currently a hot debate, still, in Australia, sadly. It’s still not approved, the government is still 64

Two things happened shortly after the turn of the century. In 2000, Edgerton received his first Australian Film Institute award nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Television Drama for his role in the series The Secret Life of Us, winning the award for the role two years later. Then in 2002 came a big break when George Lucas cast him as Owen Lars in Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones, a role he reprised three years later in Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith. He was still building his


JOEL EDGERTON career in his native Australia, earning another Australian Film Institute nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role in 2002 for his turn as a bank robber in The Hard Word, appearing opposite Heath Ledger and Orlando Bloom in the Oz oater Ned Kelly (2003), and playing a promoter who books Frank Sinatra (Dennis Hopper) for an Australian tour in The Night We Called It a Day (2003). But Edgerton’s international career was just about to take off. Among Edgerton’s most valuable tools as an actor is his facility with accents, essaying an English knight Gawain in King Arthur (2004), a Northampton lad (complete with regional accent) and shoe manufacturer Charlie in 2005’s Kinky Boots (where he got into the spirit of the piece about the unlikely friendship between a straitlaced yuppie and a drag performer by donning thighhigh stiletto boots at the climax), American Tom Buchanan in The Great Gatsby (2013), and soft-spoken Virginian working man Richard Loving. For Black Mass (2015), the story of gangster Whitey Bulger (Johnny Depp), Edgerton accepted the challenge of learning not just a Boston accent—one of the most notoriously difficult to get right—but the particular South Boston accent of a living person, former FBI agent John Connolly. He nailed it. “There’s something special about the specificity of different accents, I realized a while ago, if I had one source,” Edgerton said in an interview in Zimbio. “It starts with that for me. I take a passage of someone’s voice—I had all these court conversations of John Connolly (in Black Mass) and daytime TV interviews. I’d literally write them down, have a piece of paper with a minute and a half of John Connolly stuff, listen to it, listen to it, mimic it, mimic it, until it goes beyond.” While Edgerton was building his acting career, he was on a parallel track as a filmmaker. He, Nash Edgerton, and a group of their Australian contemporaries started a collective, BlueTongue Films, to push along their own projects. In an interview in the San Francisco Chronicle, Joel said the name of the company came from the reptiles he and Nash turned into pets when they were children—and also for the amount of swearing in their earliest films. In the first years of Blue-Tongue Films, Joel Edgerton worked on shorts, writing scripts, producing, and acting. In 2010, he won his second Australian Film Institute Award, for Best Supporting Actor, for his turn in the thriller Animal Kingdom, a Blue-Tongue project. But prior to that, in 2008, Nash Edgerton, by now an award-winning filmmaker of shorts, made his feature film directing debut with The Square. The neo-noir about a pair of lovers who steal a gangster’s cash in a bid to start a new life was written by Joel Edgerton with Matthew Dabney, from a story by Joel. In addition to serving as an executive producer, Joel also played the supporting role of an arsonist pulled into the couple’s unraveling world. The Square was nominated for seven Australian Film Institute awards, including Best Film and Best Original Screenplay. Joel Edgerton also received a Best Supporting Actor nod. The collaboration was also a reflection of the Edgerton siblings’ relationship.

“Because of what we’d done with our short films and stuff and I love my brother, I just thought it would be cool to make the first one something he wrote,” Nash Edgerton told the San Francisco Chronicle. Joel Edgerton wrote and directed a couple of shorts, The List (2008) and Monkeys (2011), and wrote screenplays for the features Felony (2013) and Jane Got a Gun (2015). Then in 2015, he penned the script for his feature directing debut The Gift. In this smart, critically acclaimed psychological thriller, Edgerton takes the role of Gordo, a bullied kid in high school whose nickname was “Gordo the Weirdo.” “It’s a daily struggle for a lot of people,” Edgerton told the Wall Street Journal of Gordo’s dual nature of victim and victimizer. “I know I have it—an oscillation between ‘Am I a good person?’ or ‘Am I a bad person?’ and the times that you stumble and feel you’ve gone backward. Apart from serial killers and the odd dictator, human beings are fallible, but I don’t think we’re born into the world villains.” Boy Erased made its introductory bow in September at the Telluride Film Festival. Once again, Edgerton has written a story where the characters have dimension and depth. There are no cardboard villains. At the same time, he uses his young protagonist’s story to dramatize the horror of gay conversion therapy. “Edgerton’s career as a filmmaker rises to a whole new level with this sophomore effort,” writes critic Stephen Farber in the Hollywood Reporter. “Boy Erased aims to influence the debate on gay conversion therapy that is still unresolved in many parts of the country, but it deserves praise not as a polemic but as a richly humanistic, emotionally searing drama that sticks in the memory.” For this, and a career beginning with a young boy’s dreams in a Sydney suburb that has risen to the heights of artistic success as a director, writer, and actor, the Mill Valley Film Festival salutes Joel Edgerton. Pam Grady is a San Francisco freelance writer and editor. She is a member of the San Francisco Film Critics Circle and the Alliance of Women Film Journalists.

Boy Erased

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SPOTLIGHT

AMANDLA STENBERG Actress and activist Amandla Stenberg has been on the rise since her impressive turn as Rue in The Hunger Games. All of 19 years, Stenberg has made her mark in movies (Colombiana; Rio 2; As You Are; Everything, Everything), television (Sleepy Hollow, Mr. Robinson), and music (she’s released two albums as half of the group Honeywater and made a cameo in Beyoncé’s Lemonade). This Most Influential Teen, as reported by Time Magazine, is ready to launch with back-to-back performances in The Hate U Give, The Darkest Minds, and Where Hands Touch.

THE HATE U GIVE Starr Carter (a sensational Amandla Stenberg) is the queen of code switching: living one version of herself with her tightknit family and neighbors in their Black community of Garden Heights, and another with her classmates at a predominantly white private high school across town. When she becomes the sole witness to the shooting death of her childhood friend, Khalil, by a white policeman, the two Starrs have no choice but to collide—often explosively. Does she stand up for Khalil and speak her truth? Or does she keep quiet and protect herself from the violent forces within her own community? Based on the bestselling young adult novel by Angie Thomas, George Tillman, Jr.’s (Notorious) powerful drama addresses not just police brutality but the root causes of the racial inequity and injustice that permeates American society. Stenberg (The Hunger Games) leads a stellar cast that also includes Common, Issa Rae, Anthony Mackie, and Russell Hornsby and Regina Hall as Starr’s devoted parents. —Joanne Parsont

US 2018, 130 min Director George Tillman, Jr. Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Amandla Stenberg, a screening of The Hate U Give, and the presentation of the MVFF Award. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at the Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Sunday, October 7 | 5:30pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

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SPOTLIGHT

The Hate U Give

by Laura Berger Amandla Stenberg broke out in 2012 with her supporting role in The Hunger Games, but the actress takes the lead in another dystopian YA adaptation in theaters now. She toplines Jennifer Yuh Nelson’s take on Alexandra Bracken’s The Darkest Minds, which opened August 3. “The character was written white,” she tells Variety in a new interview. “It was exciting for me to have a Black girl at the helm, because we’ve seen these with Jennifer Lawrence and Shailene Woodley, and they’ve done a fantastic job. “As a kid, But we’ve never gotten diverse representation.” impossible Diverse representation is important to Stenberg—so important that she chose not to pursue the role of Shuri in Black Panther, because she believed a darker-skinned actress should play the character.

Heartened by the success of Black Panther and Crazy Rich Asians, Stenberg is hopeful about the future of Hollywood.

it was nearly for me to find roles that felt empowered, that were not victim roles, that were fully dimensional, that didn’t serve any white male plotline.”

“That was not a space that I should have taken up,” the 19-year-old observes. “And it was so exhilarating to see it fulfilled by people who should have been a part of it and who deserved it and who were right for it. I just wasn’t.”

Stenberg is biracial, and as the source notes, she’s often lumped together with two other rising biracial stars, Yara Shahidi (Grownish) and Zendaya (Spider-Man: Homecoming). “Something interesting has happened with me and Yara and Zendaya—there is a level of accessibility of being biracial that has afforded us attention in a way that I don’t think would have 70

been afforded to us otherwise,” Stenberg acknowledges. “Me and Yara and Zendaya are perceived in the same way, I guess, because we are lighter-skinned Black girls, and we fill this interesting place of being accessible to Hollywood and accessible to white people in a way that darker-skinned girls are not afforded the same privilege.”

“As a kid, it was nearly impossible for me to find roles that felt empowered, that were not victim roles, that were fully dimensional, that didn’t serve any white male plotline,” she recalls. “So, I worked less because I had no interest in doing something that would force me to compromise my own power or just make myself subservient to something I didn’t necessarily mesh with.

“I’ve been acting since I was a very little kid, so I have been aware of how the industry works. We’re at a turning point,” she emphasizes, “but we have by no means fixed the misogyny of Hollywood or white patriarchy. But in terms of how we diversify our sets and diversify our on-screen narratives, I definitely think it’s a great time of change.” Stenberg is determined to play a role in making that change happen. “She recently lobbied her agents, successfully demanding that the projects that she signs on to are supported by 50/50 by 2020. That’s the idea that within two years, 50 percent of crew members on sets will be female and nonwhite,” Deadline writes.


AMANDLA STENBERG Up next for Stenberg is The Hate U Give, another adaptation of a YA novel. The Black Lives Matter-inspired drama centers on Starr, a teen who becomes an activist after witnessing a police officer shoot her friend. Stenberg collaborated with screenwriter Audrey Wells on the project. “I would go to sessions with Audrey in order to provide my experience as a Black girl because Audrey is white,” she explains. “Anything that struck me as inauthentic or not accurate to me and Starr’s experience, I would communicate it. From early on, the nature of the project was collaborative. I didn’t feel like I was just fulfilling the role of an actor. I felt like I was doing a lot more.” The resulting film is “a really rich and deep Black contemporary experience,” according to its star. The Hate U Give is just one of two films Stenberg is premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival next month. She also toplines Amma Asante’s Where Hands Touch, a coming-of-age story about a biracial teen living in Nazi Germany. Stenberg tells Variety that she’s interested in writing, directing, and a music career, and refuses to be boxed in by the media or her industry. “I think the media placed a certain label on me,” she says. “It was around the time the word ‘woke’ started being used a lot, and I think the media jumped to placing this label or image on me of being this young, woke activist. Sometimes people act like it’s a self-titled label that I gave to myself, but it’s not. I’m only one person and don’t want to claim to be any sort of savior or representation of all of Black womanhood, which I think the white media has a tendency to oversimplify, when it’s really a complicated experience.”

Television and Film, just 16 percent of female characters with speaking roles were Black.

According to research about the top-grossing films of 2017 from Dr. Martha Lauzen and the Center for the Study of Women in

Originally published on Women and Hollywood on August 28, 2018. Reproduced with permission.

The Hate U Give

The Hate U Give

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SPOTLIGHT

RICHARD E. GRANT With a résumé totaling over 80 films and television programs, there’s very little South African-British actor, screenwriter, director, author, and perfumier Richard E. Grant hasn’t accomplished in his nearly 40-year career. Coming to focus in the public eye in the cult hit Withnail and I in 1987, Grant’s career as a go-to character actor has continued apace in a wide array of both studio and independent films: Henry & June, L.A. Story, The Player, The Age of Innocence, The Portrait of a Lady, Spice World, Gosford Park, Jackie, Logan, Game of Thrones, to name but a few. Can You Ever Forgive Me? is Grant’s most recent release before taking up a lightsaber in the next episode of Star Wars.

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME? When her once-lucrative career as a journalist and celebrity biographer hits hard times, Lee Israel (a marvelous Melissa McCarthy) discovers a new avenue for her literary skills that will help pay her mounting bills: the specialized art form (and criminal enterprise) of forging witty and salacious personal letters from the likes of Noël Coward and Dorothy Parker and selling them to collectors. With a penchant for rubbing people the wrong way and an unmistakable preference for cats over humans, Israel finds kinship in fellow outsider and streetwise British dandy Jack (a resplendently reprobate Richard E. Grant), and together they become partners in crime. Adapted from Israel’s memoir of the same name and co-scripted by Nicole Holofcener (Enough Said), the sophomore feature from Marielle Heller (The Diary of a Teenage Girl) offers a humorous and moving portrait of a dynamic oddball couple and their engaging misadventures in early 1990s New York City. —Joe Bowman

US 2018, 107 min Director Marielle Heller Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Richard E. Grant, a screening of Can You Ever Forgive Me?, and the presentation of the MVFF Award. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at the Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Wednesday, October 10 | 6:30pm | Smith Rafael Film Center Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

SPOTLIGHT SPONSOR

RECEPTION SPONSOR

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SPOTLIGHT By Pam Grady Richard E. Grant, in the Spotlight at this year’s Mill Valley Film Festival, cites luck as one of the reasons behind his success. At the Toronto International Film Festival to promote his latest triumph, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, in which he plays dissolute rake Jack Hock, friend to curmudgeonly celebrity biographer (and forger) Lee Israel (Melissa McCarthy), he credits his success to Daniel Day-Lewis having turned down Withnail & I (1987). Grant took the titular role of unemployed actor for his screen debut and a star was born. But luck had little to do with it, his tremendous talent shining through in that breakthrough and, over the next 30-plus years, in such films as How to Get Ahead in Advertising (1989), Henry & June (1990), L.A. Story (1990), The Player (1991), The Age of Innocence (1993), The Portrait of a Lady (1996), Gosford Park (2001), Bright Young Things (2003), Dom Hemingway (2013), Their Finest (2016), and Logan (2017). As MVFF gets set to celebrate Grant’s illustrious career, he looks back over it. Q: In Can You Forgive Me?, Lee asks Jack what his life plan was, and has it gone the way he thought it would? I’m going to ask Richard E. Grant that same question. A: Well, my best answer that I can give is to quote the late, great John Lennon before he was murdered, where he quipped, “Life is what happens in between your plans.” And I think that considering I grew up in the smallest country in the southern hemisphere [Swaziland], which had a population, when I lived there, of half a million people, and the capital city that I lived in was 15,000 people. There was no television. So, the idea of somebody in the late ‘60s, early ‘70s wanting to become an actor professionally was as pie in the sky as when we were 12 in 1969 and Neil Armstrong stepped on the moon, and all of us wanted to be astronauts. It seemed as fantastical as that. The fact that I’ve been able to earn a living and become a professional actor and writer/director is so beyond the remit of how people thought you could earn a living. That was something that happened in other countries and to other people. Q: Two of your first three movies, Withnail & I and How to Get Ahead in Advertising were made by writer/director Bruce Robinson. Withnail clearly launched you. A: Yeah, and it has this ongoing cult following, 32 years later, which has astonished all of us. And trying to understand why it is so… Everybody has had somebody in their life who’s been a Withnail. You love them, but a combination of self-loathing and self-destruction finally ends the friendship, but they go through a sort of comet-like thing in people’s lives. How to Get Ahead in Advertising was Bruce Robinson’s anti-Thatcherite diatribe, presaging the corporate and advertising-led lives that we’re saturated by. It presaged that by a good two decades. It was the only time I’ve had that, where you work with the same person and the second film he wrote and con76

Richard E. Grant

toured around what he saw as me being capable of giving voice to his particular political biliousness. Q: You wrote and directed a film Wah-Wah, inspired by your own youth. How did that come about? A: That was a situation where Bruce Robinson said to me, “Your childhood is so particular and has enough drama in it, and comedy, that you should write about it.” It took me a long time to get around to the conviction that that was true. He gave me one rule. He said, “Tell it from the 11- and then the 14-year-old boy’s point of view as the discipline of how you shoot everything. And secondly, begin your story with the old script adage of what has happened today has never happened before.” And I knew that witnessing my mother’s adultery while apparently asleep on the backseat of a car, which unraveled my parents’ marriage and plunged my father into alcoholism as a result, that was the beginning of the story, and I knew that my father’s death would be the end of it. Q: And then you had a very fruitful relationship with Robert Altman. What was it like working on those projects? A: He had seen Withnail & I, and I met him in Paris in 1988 when I was doing Henry & June for Philip Kaufman, about Anaïs Nin and Henry Miller. And he asked me to play the young Toscanini. That collapsed because they couldn’t get all the finance. I thought the chance of my working with somebody who I’d admired so much as a teenager and a drama student [was gone]. I’d seen Nashville 27 times, so if you consider that was pre-video or DVD or cable television, that means you’ve gone to the movies 27 times in repertory cinema to see something, which I so loved. And I told him that, and I thought, well, the age that he was, and he was so out of critical and box-office favor, that I


RICHARD E. GRANT thought my chances of working with him would be nonexistent. Then, I was at the premiere of Hudson Hawk, and when I saw the movie, I genuinely believed I would never ever get another job, because it was Hudson Hawk. And just as the movie was beginning, as the lights went down, there was a tap on my shoulder, Altman was sitting with Tim Robbins, and said, “What are you doing next month, E. Grant?” He always called me E. Grant. I said, “I’m never gonna work again, Bob, and when you see this movie, you will know why.” And he said, “Well, I want you to be in a movie called The Player.” True to his word, I was, and we became great friends. He was so loyal to actors and so clearly loved actors. He said, “Would you be in Ready to Wear?” It was right after he’d just had heart transplant surgery, so he was very, very ill, very in bad health, and the movie was pretty much completely unscripted, so as a result, was what it was. And then I got a third time lucky by working on Gosford Park in 2001 with him. Q: And you bought up Henry & June, San Francisco director Philip Kaufman’s Henry Miller/Anaïs Nin drama, in which you play Nin’s husband, Hugo, and that was controversial at the time for its NC-17 rating. A: He’d seen me in Withnail & I, and when I met him in London, he said, “I want you to play this man like Jimmy Stewart. You have to be kind and loving and unthreatening and unmanic, and all that I’ve seen you [not be] in your first movie.” So, I did as best I could. And I loved his wife, Rose. She was incredibly generous and kind, and they were such an extraordinary, creative husband-and-wife writing/directing team. Q: You worked with Scorsese in one of the most un-Scorseselike projects, The Age of Innocence.

A: Yes. I knew, as an English actor, it would be the only opportunity that I might get to be in a Scorsese movie, because it was set in the la-di-dah upper echelons of New York society at the turn of the century. Edith Wharton. He was intense and private and worked in almost monastic silence, compared to Robert Altman, who is like the circus has come to town, it’s very social. And then Francis Ford Coppola (on 1992’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula), again… I talked to him about his cooking skills, and he said he doesn’t know how to cook for two people, he can only cook for 30 people. And that’s essentially a metaphor for how he directs, that family, friends, and the whole panoply of life come to the table when he is directing and making a movie. He’s collaborative and wants everybody’s opinion. Whereas, you feel that Martin Scorsese the auteur, who has a very clear and precise vision, and, again, he’s almost monastic in the way that he worked, which I was very surprised by. And he speaks at bullet speed. Q: You’re in Star Wars: Episode IX. What’s it like to step into something has become part of the cultural fabric of the Western world? A: If you appreciate that when I saw the first one in 1977, when I was still training to be an actor at drama school and university college, the idea that 41 years later, I would be in one and walk onto a set that was amazingly recognizable, or sets, has been literally an out-of-body experience. Every day I’ve worked, I’ve said to J.J. Abrams, “Please pinch me.” So, he ritually just pinches me on the arm, and he said, “I feel the same way too, directing these.” So, that’s what it feels like. It’s extraordinary.. Pam Grady is a San Francisco freelance writer and editor. She is a member of the San Francisco Film Critics Circle and the Alliance of Women Film Journalists.

Can You Ever Forgive Me?

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SPOTLIGHT

KARYN KUSAMA Director-writer-producer Karyn Kusama has steadfastly built a compelling career of remarkable films since she burst on to the festival scene with Girlfight in 2000, taking both the Director’s Prize and Grand Jury Prize at Sundance and the Prix de la jeunesse at Cannes. Since her breakout, she has gone on to explore rich genre territory in sci-fi (Æon Flux) and horror (Jennifer’s Body, The Invitation) and helm many episodes of popular television series (Halt and Catch Fire, Casual, Billions, The L Word). Her new film Destroyer, starring Nicole Kidman, is already setting the festival circuit abuzz.

DESTROYER Karyn Kusama and Nicole Kidman are a match made in cinema heaven: Where Kusama ups the ante on genre, Kidman matches her by delivering one of her most extraordinary, transformative performances to date. Director Kusama (Girlfight, Jennifer’s Body, The Invitation) has a knack for looking genre in the eye and twisting it so we will never quite see it in the same way. In Destroyer, it’s the LA noir cop thriller. And it’s Erin Bell (Kidman) who breaks the mold of our expectations. When we first see Bell, she is gaunt, haggard, haunted. She is at a murder scene that recalls the past, when she and her then-partner Chris (Sebastian Stan, I, Tonya, MVFF 2017) had worked underground amongst a ring of young, violent criminals that ended badly, leaving her scarred and traumatized. In a plot that plays with time and memory, Bell is forced to confront the personal and professional demons that destroyed her past while struggling to, perhaps, right some wrongs. —Zoë Elton

US 2018, 123 min Director Karyn Kusama Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Karyn Kusama, a screening of Destroyer, and the presentation of the MVFF Award. Join us after the program for a celebratory reception at the Outdoor Art Club in Mill Valley.

Wednesday, October 10 | 6:30pm | CinéArts Sequoia Program & Reception | $85 general | $75 CFI members Program only | $45 general | $40 CFI members

RECEPTION SPONSOR

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SPOTLIGHT

Destroyer

By Joe Bowman

Working again from a script by screenwriting team Matt Manfredi and Phil Hay—the latter being Kusama’s husband and the With just five features to her name, director Karyn Kusama has father of her son—Kusama found something remarkable in Erin taken audiences to a lot of different places in a lot of surprising Bell. “When I read the script, I just felt like I hadn’t seen that charways. Over the past two decades, few directors have explored acter before,” the director told Deadline at this year’s Toronto genre in a more deft, fascinating way than Kusama. Turning both International Film Festival. “I was really a feminine and fiercely independent excited to kind of dive in with her.” And lens on the often male-dominated once Kidman was attached to the projHollywood genre pool, Kusama has “There’s a kind of ect, she had a clear image of how she emerged as one of most striking and was going to transform her actress— particular American consistently unpredictable voices in who is in every scene in the film—into American cinema. From the Brooklyn this compelling, unique antiheroine. madness to thinking boxing rings of her debut splash Girl“We always knew that what we wanted fight to the grimy underbelly of Los you’ll be the one who her to look like was a real middle-aged Angeles in her latest triumph Destroywoman with a past that she wears on gets away clean. We er, Kusama has tackled the sports film, her face with sun damage and sleep teenage horror, big budget science were really focusing on deprivation and stress and rage, just fiction, claustrophobic thriller, and in her whole physical body,” Kusama now the neo-noir with an uncomprocharacters who weren’t stated in an interview with Vanity Fair. mising eye and a persistent, resilient Destroyer at its core is a character study criminal masterminds, vision. of an uncompromising, unrelenting For Destroyer, Kusama turns the tradibut fringe dwellers of protagonist, and Kusama threads this tionally masculine noir-cop-bank robthrough familiar genre tropes and a narAmerican society.” bery genres on their head, subvertrative that she perceived to be uniquely ing our expectations while remaining American. faithful to its themes and style. Cast“We’ve all loved bank robbery stories as a place to start, being an almost unrecognizable Nicole Kidman as weathered, uncause they almost never go well,” Kusama stated, speaking for glamorous LAPD officer Erin Bell, she’s found her perfect muse ® herself, Manfredi, and Hay. “There’s a kind of particular Ameriand offered the versatile Academy Award winner one of her can madness to thinking you’ll be the one who gets away clean. meatiest, most challenging roles to date… and as she always We were really focusing on characters who weren’t criminal masdoes, Kidman delivers. “Nothing Nicole Kidman has done in her terminds, but fringe dwellers of American society. Yet they still career can prepare you for Destroyer,” Variety’s Peter Debruge hold out the hope that they’d beat the system.” states in the opening line of his review. 82


KARYN KUSAMA The sort of resilience we see in Erin Bell and the criminals of Destroyer can easily be found in the director herself. Her feature debut Girlfight certainly put her on the map, after she became the only director to win both the Grand Jury Prize and the Directing Award at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival (not to mention later winning the Prix de la jeunesse a few months later at Cannes). But these accomplishments were hard-fought for a young female director fresh out of film school at New York University, especially one who was unwilling to compromise her vision; several producers wanted her to turn her Latinx protagonist—who would eventually be played with a raw vitality by Michelle Rodriguez in her screen debut—into a star vehicle for a young, white Hollywood starlet. Working as an assistant to the great American director John Sayles on his 1996 feature Lone Star, Kusama found a mentor and a champion in Sayles, who played a vital role in getting Kusama’s first feature off the ground. Following the critical success of Girlfight, Kusama knew she wanted to go in a totally different direction with her sophomore feature. Initially, she had written her own science fiction project about a man who finds himself being turned into a woman, but investors balked. Eventually, she took a meeting with Paramount after the screenplay for Æon Flux (2005), a big budget adaptation of the surreal cult MTV TV series co-written by Manfredi and Hay, fell into her lap and was hired to bring the sci-fi action feature to life. With Charlize Theron onboard fresh off her Oscar ® win for Monster, Kusama was given full support by Paramount’s then-studio chief Sherry Lansing, but when Lansing left the studio prior to the film’s release, the new regime retooled and recut Kusama’s work into something she no longer recognized as her own. Audiences stayed away, and Kusama, in a sense, was back to square one. It would take her four years for her next feature to hit theaters. Knowing what it felt like to see your fully-realized vision taken away from you, Kusama demanded final creative control on Jennifer’s Body (2009), a sly, witty comedy-horror written by Diablo Cody (Juno) about the complex and volatile friendship between

two teenage girls (played by Amanda Seyfried and Megan Fox). Though she retained control over the final cut of the film, she again saw interference being run by the studio who marketed the feature as something it clearly wasn’t. While eliciting some critical praise and a modest box office return, Jennifer’s Body has recently received something of a cult status, with the success of her next feature—one produced outside the Hollywood studio system—compelling fans to go back and reassess the film. After two trying experiences with the studios, Kusama made a conscious decision to turn away from Hollywood. It wasn’t until a few years later when her husband asked her to read one of his scripts that Kusama finally found something that piqued her interest enough to make another feature. Shot in just 20 days with a small budget and a single location, The Invitation—a taut horror-thriller about a dinner party that takes a sinister turn— revitalized not only Kusama’s filmmaking passion but also the film industry’s interest in her smart, assured approach to directing. Kusama would contribute a short to the all female-directed horror anthology XX before making her mark on Destroyer. Much can be said about Kusama’s “independent cinema” approach to genre films (not to mention her perseverance and commitment to her own vision), but there’s another key ingredient to the director’s talents and her success. She has the skill and the craft to remain faithful to the genres at hand. Whether it’s explosive action, a boxing match, unnerving suspense, or gruesome horror, Kusama has proven time and again that she has the chops (and the range) to stand with some of cinema’s greatest genre auteurs, like Kathryn Bigelow or Paul Verhoeven. And all of this is on full display in her latest marvel, Destroyer. Kusama’s clear instinct and assuredness has always made her an artist of precision and a director to watch, and we’ll be waiting with bated breath to see where she takes us next. Joe Bowman is the publications managing editor for MVFF and based in San Francisco.

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SPOTLIGHT

MAGGIE GYLLENHAAL Maggie Gyllenhaal’s commanding body of work, including over 30 films and 11 televised movies and series, can be considered nothing less than fearless. Ever since her sexy and outrageous breakout role in 2002’s Secretary, Gyllenhaal has crafted singular and unforgettable characters in Adaptation., Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Mona Lisa Smile, Happy Endings, Sherrybaby, The Dark Knight, her Academy Award ® -nominated turn in Crazy Heart, as well as Hysteria, Frank, HBO’s The Deuce, and many more. Her latest work in Sara Colangelo’s The Kindergarten Teacher is already drawing raves for the actress’s gusty and daring skill.

THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER In one of her finest turns to date, Maggie Gyllenhaal plays Lisa Spinelli, an engaged, slightly bohemian kindergarten teacher who notices an uncanny knack for poetry in Jimmy, one of her young students, in this arresting drama that took home the directing prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Perfectly inhabiting ankle-length skirts, flat shoes, and oversized jewelry, Gyllenhaal taps into fathomless wells of empathy (which border on pathological obsession) as Lisa, whose attempts to nurture and capture on paper Jimmy’s rare gift are met with concern from the child’s family as well as her own. Inspired by Israeli director Nadav Lapid’s 2014 film of the same name, Sara Colangelo’s beautifully realized second feature makes some noteworthy pivots from Lapid’s, while still asking a complex question without easy answers: How do we preserve the natural talents of our generation’s Mozarts amid the spoils of our modern world? —Joe Bowman

US 2018, 97 min Director Sara Colangelo Our Spotlight program features an onstage conversation with Maggie Gyllenhaal, a screening of The Kindergarten Teacher, and an Award presentation.

Friday, October 12 | 6:45pm | Smith Rafael Film Center $75 general | $65 CFI members

SPOTLIGHT SPONSOR

WITH SUPPORT FROM LE COMP TOIR

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SPOTLIGHT By Charles Dickey Maggie Gyllenhaal’s emergence as one of cinema’s most thoughtful and dedicated actors is commonly tied to the Sundance premiere of director Steven Shainberg’s Secretary (2002), a romantic dramedy exploring a BDSM relationship between E. Edward Grey (James Spader), a prickly lawyer, and Lee Holloway (Gyllenhaal), a secretary with extreme self-discipline. Prior to her starring role in that audacious indie hit, she had already appeared in three films helmed by her father Stephen Gyllenhaal (Waterland, A Dangerous Woman, and Homegrown) and played instantly memorable characters like the Kenneth Anger-tattooed Satanist in John Waters’ cinephilic satire Cecil B. Demented (2000), the third and oldest portrayal of Amelia in Penny Marshall’s Riding in Cars with Boys (2001), and, in a bit of sibling verisimilitude, the clever Dukakis-supporting older sister of Jake Gyllenhaal’s time-troubled teen in Donnie Darko (2001). But it was, indeed, Gyllenhaal’s extraordinary work in Secretary, aided by what she describes in an interview with playwright Tony Kushner as a beat-for-beat examination of the screenplay’s finest points with the film’s director, that resulted in her first nominations at the Golden Globes® and Independent Spirit Awards, an award for Best Breakthrough Performance from the National Board of Review, and a bright new position as a star in filmdom’s celestial firmament. Following those breakthrough roles, Maggie Gyllenhaal has worked in top-of-the-line productions in independent cinema, such as her Oscar ®-nominated performance as journalist and single mother Jean Craddock in the 2009 musical drama Crazy Heart. But she is just as comfortable in large-scale blockbusters, such as White House Down (2013) and, most famously, The Dark Knight (2008). While observing the real dynamics of kindergarten classrooms for The Kindergarten Teacher, Gyllenhaal was quickly recognized by students as Batman’s childhood friend from the Christopher Nolan film. To examine some of her most acclaimed starring work since Secretary is to see works pertaining to long-silenced feminine dilemmas. In Laurie Collyer’s 2006 vérité drama Sherrybaby, Gyllenhaal plays Sherry Swanson, a recently released prisoner battling drug addiction, familial alienation, and a failing system of rehabilitation. Sherry’s potentially irreparable relationship with her young daughter allegorizes the violent wedge driven between generations of women in an increasingly unforgiving America. Sherry’s spontaneity and perceived immaturity clashes with the surrounding, street-level punitive culture; her self-destructive behaviors speak to long-unmet needs of the human spirit. Gyllenhaal earned her second Golden Globe nomination for an uncompromising portrayal of a particularly embattled woman striving for the balance, love, and human connectivity denied her. Similarly pinned by a circumstance is Gyllenhaal’s Charlotte Dalrymple in the 2011 Victorian comedy Hysteria from Tanya 88

Secretary

Wexler. A touching work about the history of hysteria diagnoses and the invention of the mechanical vibrator, the film speaks to enduring, harmful encroachment on women’s agency by male power structures and the alliances built to resist such injustices. Gyllenhaal’s characters never fail to exhibit a nuanced outlook—sometimes naïve, sometimes cunning—regarding their perceived circumstances. Her performances offer a keen sense of humor and psychological complexity still rarely attended to by Hollywood’s predetermined spaces for women. Gyllenhaal explains in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, “We’ve gotten used to, as women, going to see a movie or a television show and if we’re lucky, if we’re really lucky, 30 percent of it maybe speaks to our real feminine experience. And we’re pretty good with that often—we’ve gotten used to using our imaginations and twisting ourselves into that 30 percent and taking it to feed us as much as we possibly can.” Gyllenhaal’s most recent work, The Kindergarten Teacher, amplifies the suffocated qualities of her striving, complex (anti)heroines. She was impressed


MAGGIE GYLLENHAAL by how even on the page the story “demanded 100 percent of my feminine experience.” More than a simple remake, The Kindergarten Teacher provides audiences with a contemporary feminine exploration of artistic striving, suffering, and nurturing. Sara Colangelo’s sophomore film, her first since the 2014 West Virginia drama Little Accidents, takes inspiration from Nadav Lapid’s partially autobiographical 2014 Israeli feature. (Lapid was himself a child poet.) Here, the filmic emphasis is on the teacher rather than the pupil. Lisa Spinelli, the titular character, lives at a dizzying remove from self-actualization. She strives to take creative breaths in a toxic, antagonistic atmosphere. Blocked by various forces from becoming conscious with the world and herself, her own writing (provided by poet and Bard College professor Dominique Townsend) fails to garner much acclaim in an evening poetry course overseen by an alluring professor (Gael García Bernal), while a numbing cultural gloom threatens to snuff the last hot embers of artistic education in deference to the cool glow of technological distraction. When one of her students, five-year-old Jimmy (Parker Sevak), begins reciting extemporaneous verses with sensitivity and nuance (poets Ocean Vuong and Kaveh Akbar wrote much of Jimmy’s recitations), Lisa takes it upon herself to mentor the boy she sees as a prodigy of Mozart-level importance. Despite Jimmy’s father’s objection to any specialized treatment, Lisa folds herself further into the young boy’s development. When social norms threaten Lisa’s reframed sense of artistic connectivity, she makes decisions that skirt dangerous lines and—no spoilers here—provided audiences from Sundance to Toronto with plenty to discuss. As Colangelo says of Gyllenhaal’s Lisa in an interview with Monica Castillo of RogertEbert.com, “I think women approach her in

a particular way, that perhaps men don’t, and that’s interesting to me... This is really a film about a woman who is an artist, and who is hungry to create and the only way that she could really do it, is through this boy. She makes a lot of missteps and does it in a completely wrong way, but it’s a woman who is trying to be awakened in the world.” The awakened women in Gyllenhaal’s career have expanded recently and remarkably to the realm of television. Empowered with several hours to tweak and reposition the audience’s understanding of a character, she has delivered a pair of unparalleled performances for television. As Nessa Stein, a philanthropist and inheritor of an arms business pushing for global commitments to Middle Eastern peace in the miniseries The Honourable Woman (2014), she won a Golden Globe. Recently returned to HBO for its second season, The Deuce, created by George Pelecanos and David Simon (The Wire, Tremé) and co-produced by Gyllenhaal, follows a network of characters in the sex industries of 1970s New York. As Eileen “Candy” Merrell, a Manhattan sex worker ascending through the ranks of the pornographic film industry, Gyllenhaal portrays the awakening of a genuine filmmaker resolute in her mission to produce work on her own terms. As a producer on The Kindergarten Teacher and The Deuce, Gyllenhaal has emerged as a mindful creator of stories that empower women to be more complex. In interviews, she has recently broached the topic of adapting written works for a debut directorial project, which, if manifested, would certainly be an invigorating event for screen culture: a new awakening in a time that demands it.. Charles Dickey is a writer and Music Programmer for MVFF. He is based in Pacifica.

The Kindergarten Teacher

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Visitthe the Visit

MarinArt Art & & Garden Garden Center Marin Center Since1945, 1945,our our eleven have inspired artists, Since elevenacres acres have inspired artists, gardeners, and conservationists, and hosted gardeners, and conservationists, and hosted extraordinary memorable events. extraordinary memorable events. Resident groups include the Ross Valley Players, Laurel

Open dawn to dusk, days a week. House Antiques, Pixie7Park, and the Moya Library – Ross Society, a valuable resource for horticulture and 30Historical Sir Francis Drake Boulevard local history. Visit our website for more information. Ross, CA 94957 Open dawn to dusk, 7 days a week. 415-455-5260 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Ross, CA 94957 www.magc.org www.magc.org 415-455-5260


THE FILM FEST CONTINUES YEAR-ROUND AT

THE

SMITH

R AFAEL

FILM

CENTER

Experience the best of contemporary and classic independent film, world cinema, and special event screenings with filmmakers in attendance at Marin’s premier non-profit art house venue. We thank you for your continued support throughout the year.

RAFAELFILM.ORG The Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center is owned and operated by the California Film Institute, a 501(c)3 nonprofit.


CAFÉ • TAKE-OUT • CATERING Hot Tubs Saunas Cold Plunge Sundeck Massage Gift Certificates Available

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CELEBR ATE FILM 24 FR AMES PER SECOND | 365 DAYS A YEAR

THE CALIFORNIA FILM INSTITUTE CELEBRATES FILM YEAR-ROUND AT THE NONPROFIT CHRISTOPHER B. SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER, THROUGH CFI EDUCATION, AND DURING THE ANNUAL MILL VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL.

WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT THROUGHOUT THE YEAR.

supportcfi.org

CALIFORNIA FILM INSTITUTE CHRISTOPHER B. SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER CFI EDUCATION | CFI RELEASING CHRISTOPHER B. SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER | MILL |VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL | CFI EDUCATION MILL VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL | DOCLANDS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL The California Film Institute is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.

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KWMR is REAL FM RADiO for West Marin: building and sustaining community, standing ready to serve in times of emergency, airing locally relevant information and entertainment to listeners, and providing a forum through which every voice can be heard. Our station offers instruction and REAL experience in FM radio production and KWMR is RADiO broadcasting skills to members of all ages. for West Marin: building and sustaining community, standing KWMR isof REAL FM RADiO ready to serve in times emergency, airing locally relevant for West Marin: building and sustaining community, standing information and entertainment to listeners, and providing a ready to serve in times of emergency, airing locally relevant information and entertainment listeners, providing a station forum through which every voiceto can be and heard. Our forum through which every voice can be heard. Our station offers instruction and experience in radio production and offers instruction and experience in radio production and broadcasting skills members of all broadcasting skills totomembers ofages. all ages.

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MVFF Music returns for a fourth year with a diverse series of concerts at the Sweetwater Music Hall. Nine nights of live music include performances by artists featured in MVFF films, as well as local, national, and international musicians. Drop in and discover your new favorite act, or make a night of it and pair a screening about an artist with their corresponding live show!

FREDDY JONES BAND One of America’s premiere roots rock acts, Freddy Jones Band is fronted by founding member, guitarist, and singer/songwriter Marty Lloyd, joined by bassist Rich Ross, guitarist Stu Miller, and drummer Goose LaPoint. Known for its number-one hits “In a Daydream” and “Take the Time,” this long-running act is back with a new release, Never Change. FRIDAY, OCT 5 • DOORS 8:00PM | SHOW 9:00PM ADVANCE TICKETS $27 | DAY OF SHOW $32

JARVIS COCKER

INTRODUCING JARV IS...

Best known as the frontman for acclaimed Britpop act Pulp (Common People, Razzmatazz), musician, actor, and author Jarvis Cocker has been making music for two-thirds of his life, journeying from being the quintessential outsider to being one of the most recognized and cherished figures in British music. He has brought a rare, bookish wit to the pop charts, and cut an original dash in a rock’n’roll world often dominated by reductive cliché. SATURDAY, OCT 6 • DOORS 7:30PM | SHOW 8:30PM ADVANCE TICKETS $37 | DAY OF SHOW $39

HOLLY NEAR

with TAMMY HALL and JAN MARTINELLI Holly Near has been singing for a more equitable world for well over 50 creative years, releasing her 31st album in 2018. One of the most powerful, consistent, and outspoken singers of our time, her concerts elevate spirits and foster activism. An inspiring performer, Holly is an ambassador for peace who brings to the stage a unique integration of world consciousness, spiritual discovery, and theatricality.

BENEFIT PERFORMANCE for CALIFORNIA FILM INSTITUTE | DO IT FOR THE LOVE FOUNDATION

MICHAEL FRANTI

SPONSORED BY

Michael Franti is a musician, humanitarian, and filmmaker who is recognized as a pioneering force in the music industry. Franti believes in using music as a vehicle for positive change and is revered for his energetic live shows, inspiring music, worldwide philanthropy efforts, and connection to his global fanbase. Through his socially conscious work in Spearhead, Bay Area artist Franti has dedicated his life to speaking up for the underrepresented by creating positive energy during chaotic times. Michael Franti appears at MVFF in conjunction with the documentary film STAY HUMAN (see page 152). MONDAY, OCT 8 • DOORS 8:00PM | SHOW 9:00PM ADVANCE TICKETS $125 VIP MEET & GREET with MICHAEL FRANTI $225 (includes film)

BLACK ZEPPELIN Since 2005, Black Zeppelin has been rocking the Bay Area with classic ‘70s and ‘80s hard rock tunes from the catalogues of Led Zeppelin, Bad Company, Black Sabbath, Free, Aerosmith, Ozzy Osborne, Queen, Rush, Ted Nugent, ZZ Top, Tom Petty, Pink Floyd, Deep Purple, and more! These seasoned musicians bring more than 20 years of experience to create live performances that sound just like the originals you know love. TUESDAY, OCT 9 • DOORS 7:00PM | SHOW 8:00PM ADVANCE TICKETS $14 | DAY OF SHOW $16

Holly appears at MVFF in conjunction with the documentary film HOLLY NEAR: SINGING FOR OUR LIVES (see page 140). SUNDAY, OCT 7 • DOORS 5:30PM | SHOW 6:30PM ADVANCE TICKETS $35 | DAY OF SHOW $40

FREDDY JONES BAND

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JARVIS COCKER

HOLLY NEAR, w/HALL & MARTINELLI

MICHAEL FRANTI


PHOTO: JOSH MILLER, COURTESY SWEETWATER MUSIC HALL

MVFF MUSIC

OAKLAND INTERFAITH GOSPEL CHOIR

HONUS HONUS SPONSORED BY

Founded in 1986, the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir was born out of a gospel music workshop led by the exuberant Terrance Kelly at Living Jazz’s Jazz Camp West and became an independent nonprofit organization in 1991. Since then, the awardwinning Choir’s exquisite harmonies and stirring gospel repertoire have led to performances with a wide variety of esteemed groups, such as Joshua Nelson, the Prince of Kosher Gospel; the Blind Boys of Alabama; and the Duke Ellington Orchestra. The Choir also appears on Grammy ®-winning albums by Linda Ronstadt, MC Hammer, Tramaine Hawkins, and others. OIGC appears in conjuction with the documentary film ONE VOICE (see page 146).

Out of the multi-instrumental experimental pop experience of Man Man rises Honus Honus, aka front man Ryan Kattner, on the road as a solo artist with his latest project, Use Your Delusion. Self-described as ‘dystopian pop,’ Honus’ summery avant-synth-rock is upbeat and carefree, even when the lyrics may run against the grain into darker territory. Inspired collaborators on the album range from comedian Jon Daly, actress Mary Elizabeth Winstead, drummer Joe Plummer (Cold War Kids, Modest Mouse) and Oakland’s own Shannon and the Clams. Honus Honus appears in conjuction with the documentary film USE YOUR DELUSION (see page 155). SATURDAY, OCT 13 • DOORS 8:30PM | SHOW 9:00PM ADVANCE TICKETS $32 | DAY OF SHOW $37

WEDNESDAY, OCT 10 • DOORS 8:00PM | SHOW 8:30PM ADVANCE TICKETS $37 | DAY OF SHOW $42

SWEETWATER MUSIC HALL

HALF PINT

19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley

Half Pint’s diminutive stature belies not only his vocal capabilities but also his huge on-stage presence, often described as both explosive and dynamic. Born Lindon Roberts, but affectionately called Half Pint, he is a product of the West Kingston enclave of Rose Lane, a community in adjacent proximity to Trenchtown, which has produced the likes of Bob Marley, Dennis Brown, Peter Tosh, Lee “Scratch” Perry, Toots Hibbert, and a host of other international Reggae superstars. FRIDAY, OCT 12 • DOORS 8:00PM | SHOW 8:30PM ADVANCE TICKETS $32 | DAY OF SHOW $37

Tickets for all MVFF Music shows are available online at mvff.com/music and in person at the Sweetwater Music Hall box office. MVFF Bronze, Silver, Select, Platinum, Investor / Leadership badges have access to MVFF Music shows with advance RSVP per availability (Michael Franti benefit show not included). THURSDAY, OCT 11 • TBA SEE MVFF.COM/MUSIC FOR UPDATES

SPONSORED BY

OAKLAND INTERFAITH GOSPEL CHOIR

BLACK ZEPPELIN

HALF PINT

HONUS HONUS

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BEHIND THE SCREENS BEHIND THE SCREENS Panels | Master Classes | Workshops | VR Panels | Master Classes | Workshops | VR

PANELS + MASTER CLASS

WORKSHOP

MIND THE GAP SUMMIT

FROM SCENE TO SCREEN FOR TEENS

CONSCIOUS INCLUSION IN FILM AND TECH

ACTING & DIRECTING FILM ADAPTATIONS WITH BOY ERASED

Saturday, October 6, 10:00am–6:00pm I Outdoor Art Club $75 full day, includes networking lunch and happy hour $40 morning, includes lunch | $40 afternoon, includes happy hour Registration required* | To register, visit mvff.com/mind-the-gap *Limited number of scholarships available

Join an extraordinary line-up of thought leaders and creatives in the film and tech industries for a full-day intensive session of presentations, discussions, master classes, and networking. During the Summit, guest of honor Dr. Stacy Smith will be presented with the Mind the Gap Award for her groundbreaking research and inspiring advocacy for gender equity in film. Register early as space is limited! Sign up for a morning (lunch included) or afternoon session (includes cocktail reception) or the full day. See page 109 for more info, and visit mvff.com/mind-the-gap for full schedule and speakers.

Sunday, October 7, 2:00-5:00pm The Hivery, 38 Miller Ave. #20, Mill Valley | $50 Ticket to the workshop includes a ticket to the Boy Erased Spotlight program on actor/director Joel Edgerton (see page 63) Scholarships available; to apply, go to mvff.com/behind-the-screens Ages 14–18 only | Limited to 20 students

Participants will workshop scenes from Garrard Conley’s memoir Boy Erased, playing the roles of actors and directors to adapt the scenes as they would envision them represented on film. Following the workshop, they will attend the screening of the film adaptation of Boy Erased at the Sequoia Theatre to see how the films were actually shot. Facilitators:

TOM FRANCO, Producer, (Metamorphosis: Junior Year) IRIS TORRES, Producer, (In Dubious Battle, King Cobra)

PANEL

STATE OF THE INDUSTRY Sunday, October 7, 11:00am | Outdoor Art Club | FREE In 2001 and again in 2008, we discussed the demise of intelligent films for adults. Fortunately for us, smart films continue to be made. Challenges and disruptions still exist, however, and new platforms create fear for theatrical exhibitors; there is a dearth of art house theaters in major markets like New York and San Francisco, and with ancillary markets in flux, sustainability is a challenge. Join our panel of industry experts who will discuss ways to ensure independent cinema’s continued productivity. Please check website mvff.com for updated times for this panel.

WORKSHOP

CROWDFUNDING TO BUILD INDEPENDENCE Sunday, October 7, 2:15pm I Rafael FREE | Ticket required The Crowdfunding to Build Independence course teaches filmmakers the essentials for engaging their audience at every stage of their project, and how to leverage that for distribution and their next project. This course is taught by Gerry Maravilla, head of crowdfunding for Seed & Spark. Gerry has presented this class at dozens of film festivals, organizations and schools for a reason: class attendees have a 90% success rate funding on Seed & Spark

Invited Guests to date:

JONATHAN KING, President, Narrative Film & Television, Participant Media

ACTIVE CINEMA HIKE

CHAZ EBERT, Producer; President, Ebert Company and Ebert Digital, LLC

Saturday, October 13, 10:00am | Tennessee Valley | FREE

ED ARENTZ, Co-Managing Director, Greenwich Entertainment (Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist)

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NETWORKING IN NATURE See page 107 for details


BEHIND THE SCREENS WORKSHOP

WORKSHOP

THE HEROINE’S JOURNEY ONSCREEN DRAMEDY

GRAPHIC NOVEL WRITING FOR TEENS

WEAVING COMEDY INTO DRAMA Saturday, October 13, NOON | Rafael $16.50 general | $14.00 CFI members What do these renowned films—Lady Bird, Toni Erdmann, and Little Miss Sunshine—have in common? They are all internationally successful Heroine’s Journey screen stories that weave comedy into drama. In this master class, you will learn how to utilize The Heroine’s Journey creative approach; gain storytelling strategies for your projects; connect emotionally to your audience; orchestrate your characters to reveal compelling themes. For writers, directors, producers, editors, film lovers, industry professionals. Facilitator: TOM SCHLESINGER is writing and co-producing two

feature length dramedies—Thief River and Second Line West— for Sunrise Films in Toronto, and is co-writing and producing the documentary, The Beatles in India. He has taught storytelling workshops at Pixar Animations Studios, Lucasfilm, the International Film School, the AFI, the DGA, and the WGA

Sunday, October 14, 2:00-4:00pm | Outdoor Art Club | $20 Ages 14–18 only | Limited to 20 students | Students are encouraged to attend the screening of Virus Tropical (page 156) prior to the workshop (separate ticket required)

This hands-on workshop for teens follows the screening of the film Virus Tropical, based on the graphic memoir by Colombian-Ecuadorian cartoonist Powerpaola, who will introduce students to the work of several cartoonists and guide them through the process of making their own autobiographical cartoon through a series of writing, drawing, and inking exercises. Instructor: POWERPAOLA, author (Virus Tropical)

PANELS + SCREENINGS + CONCERTS

CANNA-PASS The MVFF41 Canna-Pass allows access to all of the programs listed below and to the Netflix Filmmaker Lounges Friday and Saturday, October 12-13 | $59

PANEL

MEDICAL MARIJUANA Saturday, October 13, 3:00pm I Sweetwater | $16.50 Following a screening of Weed the PANEL SPONSORED BY People, this panel will focus on the medicinal uses of marijuana and the many benefits to utilizing cannabis to treat a host of ailments and conditions. In keeping with Weed the People’s focus on alleviating the symptoms of cancer in afflicted children, the director, producer, and main subject of the film will be featured on the panel—as well as industry experts—touching on the hotly contested accessibility, legalities, and burgeoning business opportunities surrounding this controversial approach to healthcare. Facilitator: MITCH MYERS, Variety

PANEL

420: WELCOME THE WALDOS Saturday, October 13, 4:20pm I Sweetwater | $16.50 Widely acknowledged as the coiners of the term ‘420’ back in 1971, San Rafael High’s own The Waldos will illuminate the story behind the origin, popularity, and mythology of generations of canna-philes’ main refrain on this panel podcast.

Friday, October 12 HALF PINT | Concert 8:00pm Sweetwater WEED THE PEOPLE | Screening 9:00pm Sequoia 5@5 DAISY SUMMER PIPER SHORTS | Screening 9:00pm Rafael

Saturday, October 13 WEED THE PEOPLE | Screening 12:15pm Sequoia 5@5 DAISY SUMMER PIPER | Screening 3:00pm Sequoia MEDICINAL CANNABIS | Panel 3:00pm Sweetwater 420 WITH THE WALDOS | Panel 4:20pm Sweetwater 420 MIXER | Reception 4:20pm Julie Zener Gallery, Mill Valley HONUS HONUS | Concert 8:30pm Sweetwater

Followed by FREE mixer at Julie Zener Gallery, 23 Sunnyside, Mill Valley Moderator: SHIRLEY HALPERIN, Variety

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Real Arts Real News Real Culture

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Advertising & Free Classifieds

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Promote your business, product or services with an ad on our website, magazine or booth at our Latino Expo

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!

!

MVFF’s ¡Viva el Cine! initiative showcases prize-winning Spanish-language and Latin American films that seek to engage and embrace our Spanish-speaking and -loving audiences. These screenings create a unique community where history, culture, and identity can be explored through the magic of movies. This year, we kick off the program with extra fanfare on Sunday, October 7 with our first ¡Viva el Cine! Launch Day, featuring a packed day of films for all ages, including a special family-friendly fiesta and screening of Coco in Spanish (with English subtitles). LOS ADIOSES (Mexico)

HARVEST SEASON (US)

AMALIA THE SECRETARY (Colombia)

MUSEO (Mexico)

EL ÁNGEL (Argentina/Spain) BIRDS OF PASSAGE (Colombia)

ROMA (Mexico) SERGIO AND SERGEI (Cuba/Spain) THE SILENCE OF OTHERS (Spain)

COCO (US)

TOO LATE TO DIE YOUNG (Chile)

COLLISIONS (US) ERNESTO (Cuba) FROM MEXICO, CON AMOUR (Mexico) (Shorts Program)

VIRUS TROPICAL (Colombia/Ecuador)

A forum for films that inspire people to take action to create positive change, MVFF’s Active Cinema films are united in their commitment to explore the world and its issues (both local and global), engage audiences, and transform ideas into action. Join us for screenings throughout the Festival, support grassroots activism of the filmmakers, and engage with the admirable work of special guests, co-presenters, and partners. CHARM CITY

TIME FOR ILHAN

In association with Ritter Center

In association with Marin County Young Democrats

FROM BAGHDAD TO THE BAY In association with International Rescue Committee | Horizons Foundation | LGBT Asylum Project | Human Rights Watch

HARVEST SEASON In association with La Luz Center and ALMA-Association of Latiino Lawyers Marin

WHO KILLED LT. VAN DORN? In association with Investigative Reporting Program at the Graduate School of Journalism, UC Berkeley | The Center for Investigative Reporting

WILD DAZE In association with Wildlife Works

STAY HUMAN In association with Do It For The Love

ACTIVE CINEMA HIKE: Networking in Nature Saturday, October 13 | 10:00am | FREE

Jorge Almaguer | Rafael Barragan | Claudia Mendoza-Carruth Isis Gonzalez | Maribel Guevara | Michele Harris Catalina Lozano | Jaime Ortiz | Diana Putterman Rodrigo Reyes | Jose Valera | Delfin Vigil

Come enjoy some fresh air and fresh ideas with filmmakers, friends, Festival staff, and cinephiles during this hourlong hike to the ocean through beautiful terrain. Exchange ideas on filmmaking, filmmaker resources, activism, and strategies for action. Bring water and sunblock, and wear good hiking shoes. All welcome! Meet at Tennessee Valley trailhead parking lot. Info: nps.gov/goga/ planyourvisit/tennessee_valley

MUSEO

TIME FOR ILHAN

A DV ISOR S Cecelia Zamora, Chairperson

MEDIA SUPPORT

V

Look for this icon to identify ¡Viva el Ciné! programs.

A

Look for this icon to identify Active Cinema programs.

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Mind the Gap, our gender equity initiative, amplifies and champions work by women filmmakers, changing the narrative that shapes our culture. We are committed to the goal of 50/50 by 2020—50% women directors across all Festival sections by 2020. We found no shortage of amazing women making terrific films, and incredible female-forward storytelling for this year’s festival: MVFF41 showcases 44% women directors. You’ll find more details at mindthegapinfilm.com.

STACY L. SMITH Mind the Gap Award for Visionary Leadership

MIND THE GAP SUMMIT Conscious Inclusion in Film and Tech Saturday, October 6 10:00am–6:00pm Outdoor Art Club

Stacy L. Smith, Ph.D., is a visionary leader in the movement towards gender equity in the film industry. She is an Associate Professor at USC Annenberg and Founder and Director of the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, the leading think tank globally studying issues of inequality in entertainment. Her work has set the national conversation on employment practices on screen and behind the camera and has inspired the drive towards palpable, solution-driven change. It was Dr. Smith who introduced the idea of the Inclusion Rider, famously invoked by Frances McDormand at the 2018 Academy Awards® and since adopted by many in the film industry. And it was her participation at Mill Valley Film Festival in 2013 that helped inspire the launch of Mind the Gap. We are grateful for her leadership, inspiration, and brilliance. Dr. Smith will receive the Mind the Gap Award during the Mind the Gap Summit on Saturday, October 6, where she will also present some of her most recent work.

This full-day intensive session of presentations, discussions, master classes, and networking will be led by an extraordinary line-up of thought leaders and creatives in the film and tech industries. Addressing tangible ways to engage in change, speakers include Dr. Stacy Smith, singer/activist Holly Near, Chaz Ebert (publisher, RogerEbert.com), Shakti Butler (founder, World Trust), Robin Hauser (filmmaker, bias), and presenters from ReFrame, Seed and Spark, Google, and Lucasfilm. Examining the intersections between film and tech and what each can learn from the other, this is an amazing opportunity to engage, connect—and be inspired. Register early as space is limited! Sign up for a morning (lunch included) or afternoon session (includes cocktail reception) or the full day. See mvff.com/mind-the-gap for full schedule and speakers. ABOVE: CATHERINE HARDWICKE | MIND THE GAP SUMMIT | MVFF 2017

M V FF IS GR ATEFU L FO R THE W I S D O M A N D SU PP O R T O F O U R M IN D THE G A P E X ECU T I V E A DV I S O R S: Lisa Carmel | Sherri Tull A DV I S O R S: Barbara Boxer | Girija Brilliant | Larry Brilliant | Susan Brown | Brenda Chapman | Blye Faust Josh Felser | Robin Hauser | Dawn Lyon | Tiffany Shlain | Osnat Shurer | Valerie Weiss

A N D O U R A L L I E S: Maida Brankman | Louann Brizendine | Jessamy Ross | Sheri Sobrato

OFFICIAL AIRLINE MVFF & MIND THE GAP

LEADERSHIP PARTNER

CHRISTINE A. SCHANTZ

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WE’VE GOT FILM COVERED.

OCTOBER 5, 2017 10:00AM PT

HOME > FILM > FESTIVALS

Dee Rees, Sean Penn Top Mill Valley Fest Tributes and Spotlight

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CALIFORNIA FILM INSTITUTE AND MVFF40. THE EACH FOUNDATION IS PROUD TO SPONSOR THE T HT E H HEEEEA EE C AA H C CHH FHO F FO UO N U UD NN A DD TA IA TOTI O N I ONINSI SIIPS P R RR O UO D UU DTDDO T TOSOPS O SP PO NPOS N O SNSO R ORTRHT T E H HE E TT HC SRPI O P ON A EL AI FC O RFNOI U A N FDI AL TMI OI N NST T UO TU E A TNOD SM V F FS 4O0R. T H E CA LAAIALLFLI IO ROO N A FAIFLFFI M IMNI S TS IS EU VM FV CCC FIFFO RRRINN NI IA IA L N N I UTII TU T TE A AD N DDM II LLMM II N STTTT TU TAEEN A ND NM MFVFV4FF0F4F.4040. 0. .

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15 T H F LO O R / S A N F R A N C I S C O, C A 9 4111


In Honor of Ray Kaliski Senior

NANCY P. AND RICH K. ROBBINS FAMILY FOUNDATION

RESONANCE PHILANTHROPIES

FENWICK FOUNDATION

HORACE W. GOLDSMITH FOUNDATION


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Celebrating our 12 th year of being a 100% Solar Powered and Certified Green Business

Proud to continue our support of the Mill Valley Film Festival

sponsors of the Family Films programs We would like to express our appreciation to the volunteers and Festival staff who work to provide the community with such an enjoyable event each fall. We would not be able to have such rewarding experiences without their dedication.

FAMILy OWNED & OPER ATED

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EDUCATION AT MVFF

FAMILY FILMS

SUPA MODO

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES

CFI Education turns the Festival into a classroom, bringing thousands of Bay Area students to the theater and sending dozens of filmmakers out to local schools.

MVFF41’s selections for family audiences include an abundance of animation, a slew of shorts, a gaggle of girls’ stories, screenings for Spanish speakers—and a party for all!

MVFF EDUCATION SCREENINGS feature weekday matinees of narrative features, documentaries, and shorts programs selected from the general Festival program for school-age audiences, with special guests for post-screening Q&A’s and accompanying curriculum guides. This year’s programs include:

FEATURE FILMS:

SHORTS PROGRAMS:

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES – Special screening followed by The Hoopla! (see below)

5@5 THE WAY IT IS – Films by youth filmmakers

5@5 THE WAY IT IS

FROM MEXICO, CON AMOR

BIAS

THE HATE U GIVE

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES

IT’S A GIRLS’ WORLD MOVING STORIES

COLLISIONS

SUPA MODO

EARTH, OUR HOME: THE NEW ENVIRONMENTALISTS

TIME FOR ILHAN A TON O’ TOONS

FILMMAKERS GO TO SCHOOLS takes local and visiting filmmakers from around the world into Bay Area classrooms to show their films and talk to students about the art, craft and business filmmaking.

COCO – Presented in Spanish for ¡Viva el Cine! Launch Day (see page 107) SUPA MODO ZOOTOPIA – Free outdoor screening in Old Mill Park (see page 162)

FROM MEXICO, CON AMOR – A ¡Viva el Cine! program presented in collaboration with the Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia IT’S A GIRLS’ WORLD – Part of our Mind the Gap gender equity initiative (see page 109) A TON O’ TOONS – Animation for our youngest audience

NEW FOR 2018

THE HOOPLA! Saturday, October 13 | 2:00–4:00pm | Marin Country Mart FREE admission with a ticket to the October 13 screenings of

If you are interested in having your school take part in either of these programs, please contact us at education@cafilm.org.

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES or IT’S A GIRLS’ WORLD

SUPPORTED BY

Join us for family friendly pre- and post-screening festivities, featuring live music, games, crafts, photo booth, bubbles, balloons, henna, and (of course) hula hooping. Plus beverages and food from, Fisher’s Cheese, El Huarache Loco, Three Twins, Johnny Doughnuts, and much more! Sponsored by MARIN COUNTRY MART

FAMILY FILMS SPONSORED BY

In honor of Ray Kaliski, Senior

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© Ecce Films

“Victoria” now playing

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FOCUSES FOCUS | BLACK IS

FOCUS | QUEER-ISH

Emotionally and socially resonant films that explore what it means to be Black in the contempory world

Diverse stories of queer representation found in a wide, genre-twisting array of films

GREEN BOOK

ALIFU THE PRINCE/SS

THE HATE U GIVE

EL ÁNGEL

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

BORDER

LITTLE WOODS

BOY ERASED

LONG TIME COMING: A 1955 BASEBALL STORY

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

OBEY

THE FAVOURITE FROM BAGHDAD TO THE BAY HOLLY NEAR: SINGING FOR OUR LIVES THE PARTING GLASS RAFIKI

FOCUS | TEENS&20s

FOCUS | ANIMATION NATION

Young adult films about that defining—and sometimes challenging—post-adolescent/pre-adult time of our lives

An assemblage of gorgeous, entertaining, and occasionally kooky animated fiction and non-fiction films from around the globe

5@5 THE WAY IT IS ANGST

5@5 CIRCLE GAME

BEAUTIFUL BOY

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES

BEN IS BACK

CHRIS THE SWISS

BOY ERASED

COCO

THE HATE U GIVE

SEDER MASOCHISM

RAFIKI

A TON O’ TOONS

THE SILENT REVOLUTION

VIRUS TROPICAL

TOO LATE TO DIE YOUNG

ZOOTOPIA

VIRUS TROPICAL

VIRUS TROPICAL

RAFIKI

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SECTIONS | PREMIERES SECTIONS WORLD CINEMA Stories from six continents that foster a new understanding of our global neighbors and ourselves

PREMIERES JIM BOYCE TRUST and KRIS OTIS

US CINEMA A showcase of new films by master and emerging American filmmakers who share a talent for independent storytelling

VALLEY OF THE DOCS The latest in documentary filmmaking, from heartfelt stories of activism to historical profiles, current events, and more

ART PAUL OF PLAYBOY: THE MAN BEHIND THE BUNNY …AS IF THEY WERE ANGELS BUSHWICK BEATS COLLISIONS HARVEST SEASON HOLLY NEAR: SINGING FOR OUR LIVES JOSEPH PULITZER: VOICE OF THE PEOPLE ONE VOICE WHO KILLED LT. VAN DORN? WILD DAZE

NORTH AMERICAN EFFORTLESS FRENCH THE PARTING GLASS SOMETHING IS HAPPENING

FAMILY FILMS A sampling of stories, cultures, and adventures for new generations and old that inspire and nurture a love of film

THE WHISTLEBLOWER OF MY LAI

US

5@5 SHORTS Collections of short cinematic gems from every genre including narratives, documentaries, animation, family films, and youth works

BECOMING ASTRID BEN IS BACK CHRIS THE SWISS GREEN BOOK THE GUARDIANS THE LOST CITY OF THE MONKEY GOD NORTHERN WIND A PRIVATE WAR SEDER MASOCHISM SIR THE SWEET REQUIEM WORKING WOMAN

MUSIC FILMS The Festival’s playlist of cinematic portraits of musical artists, featuring internationally renowned musicians and Bay Area favorites

SIR

120

WORLD

SUPPORTED BY

HARVEST SEASON


FILMS FILMS

5@5 BOHO DANCE

5@5 CIRCLE GAME

5@5 COME TO THE SUNSHINE

5@5 SHORTS

5@5 SHORTS

5@5 SHORTS

Total Program 79 min

Total Program 67 min

Total Program 67 min

M “A camera pans the cocktail hour behind a blind of potted palms and finds a lady in a Paris dress with runs in her nylons.” Join us for these tales of fierce and fallible women, told by a fabulous international collection of female storytellers. In Melanie Zoey Weinstein’s soulful Spanko (US 2018, 12 min), a woman finds a new portal of sexual expression. Two young women find their longtime friendship at a crossroads in Emma Weinstein’s poignant Candace (US 2017, 9 min). While on an urban jog, a woman is confronted with a shocking discovery and a dangerous choice in Clare Cooney’s Runner (US 2017, 13 min). In Oskar Rosetti’s Tsar Bomba (Switzerland 2018, 14 min), a single mother is forced to confront the latent toxic masculinity that is under her own roof. On the verge of moving to the west, a wife must confront her personal demons in Nasim Kiani and Mostafa Mostafavi’s disturbing and heartbreaking Oculus (Iran 2018, 18 min). And, finally, in Giovana Olmos’ very sweet and sensitive Silvia in the Waves (Canada 2017, 13 min), a mother and son discuss the funeral details of their husband/father who had transitioned to her female identity. Topical and touching, it’s an assembly of shorts that are all standouts.

FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION “And the seasons they go round and round, and the painted ponies go up and down. We’re captive on the carousel of time.” This year’s animated shorts program contains a diverse set of subjects and whimsical, macabre stories. Tupelo (US 2018, 4 min) and Good Advice (US 2018, 4 min), a pair of shorts from the ever-astounding and prolific Bill Plympton’s latest collection, The Modern Lives, offer the director’s signature animation style set to the music of former Black Crowes member Jackie Greene. Alexandra Lemay’s Freaks of Nurture (Canada 2017, 7 min) dives into the complex, overlooked struggle of mother versus daughter, while Héctor Dávila Cabrera’s Last Stop (Última estación) (Mexico 2017, 6 min) travels by bus to find chili-spiced chicken parts. Ri Crawford’s The Moon’s Milk (US 2018, 14 min) plunders the skies via a motley crew voiced by Tom Waits. Alexandra Castellanos Solís’ Poliangular (Mexico 2017, 8 min) morphs characters and shapes through a surreal spectrum, and in Sofia Carrillo’s Cerulia (Mexico 2017, 13 min), personalities duel through a miniature sweet-yet-sinister landscape. Master animator and Oscar ® winner Phil Tippett rounds out the program by carrying us through his grotesquely gorgeous, monster-laden landscape in the much anticipated third installment of his series, Mad God (US, 2018, 11 min). —Amanda Todd

“Share in the quiet of knowing. No need for telling you sometimes, when all the answers are so plainly showing.” Indulge in these real-life stories of the human spirit on display in all its marvelous variety. Brett Marty’s The Fiddler (US 2017, 10 min) introduces us to a Silicon Valley engineer whose medical diagnosis forces him to reshape his priorities. Ivete Lucas and Patrick Bresnan’s Skip Day (US/UK 2018, 17 min) is an elegiac look at African American high schoolers reveling in their youth in the Florida Everglades. Amy Hill and Chris Riess’ Hula Girl (US 2018, 11 min) offers the inside scoop on one of the 1950s most enduring fads. In Ivan Cash’s Agent of Connection (US 2017, 4 min), one BART employee takes pride in being an ambassador of personal outreach. Gary Weimberg and Catherine Ryan’s Mothers and Daughters: 8 True Stories (US 2018, 6 min) offers a set of intimate portraits of that special family dynamic through all stages of life. Sara Newens’ Footprint (US 2018, 19 min) is a lyrical meditation on The National September 11 Memorial in New York and the people who visit it.

—Sterling Hedgpeth Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

9:15pm 6:15pm

Rafael Larkspur

Fri Oct 5 Thur Oct 11

A Active Cinema

6:15pm 6:15pm

—Sterling Hedgpeth Fri Oct 5 Mon Oct 8

9:00pm 6:15pm

Rafael Larkspur

Larkspur Larkspur

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

121


FILMS

5@5 COYOTE

5@5 DAISY SUMMER PIPER

5@5 EASTERN RAIN

5@5 SHORTS

5@5 SHORTS

5@5 SHORTS

Total Program 69 min

Total Program 72 min

Total Program 76 min

“There’s no comprehending just how close to the bone and the skin and the eyes and the lips you can get, and still feel so alone.” In these powerful shorts, lone protagonists navigate treacherous emotional terrain as they reconcile their need for connection with the world around them. In Andrew Zox’s touching I Am My Own Mother (US 2018, 23 min), an African American woman seeks out her original birth mother, with some unexpected results. Animator Bill Plympton’s The Modern Lives (US 2018, 3 min) uses a Jackie Greene song to depict a man beset by pressures to conform. In Andrés Gallegos’ Shoe Shiner (El limpia botas) (Chile 2018, 17 min), a young street orphan loses his shoeshine business and must prove his resourcefulness in a world of duplicitous adults. In Teal Greyhavens’ creepy Special Day (US 2018, 7 min), a bizarre family secret is revealed to a woman celebrating her 18th birthday. Tatiana Maslany (Orphan Black) stars in Richard Raymond’s Souls of Totality (US 2018, 19 min) as a member of an apocalyptic cult who spends her last day before “ascension” preparing for a momentous eclipse. The ending is a knockout and a perfect close to this unforgettable collection. —Sterling Hedgpeth

“Stare into a mirror pool and laugh so princely vain. The skies become kaleidoscopes with no two turns the same.” Don’t miss this set of hilarious comedic shorts, ranging from broad hijinks to a little ham on wry. In Sharon Everitt’s Brentwood (US 2018, 12 min), Brent Spiner (aka Data) lampoons himself and his post-Star Trek legacy. Did we mention it’s a musical co-starring Peri Gilpin, LeVar Burton, and Doug Benson? A hotly-contested local election proves that sometimes every vote really does count in Fernand-Philippe Morin-Vargas’ Heads or Tails (Pile ou face) (Canada 2018, 15 min). Craig claims he can handle his weed but Craig’s Pathetic Freakout (US 2018, 7 min), directed by Graham Parkes, proves he really, really can’t. In Gillian Barnes’ Are You Still Singing? (US 2018, 12 min), a struggling millennial/singing telegram artist is having a very bad day. Two film noir characters navigate a new landscape of socially conscious behavior in Ilyse Mimoun’s clever homage #metoo gumshoe (US 2018, 6 min). In Timothy Keeling’s surreal Two Puddles (UK 2018, 6 min), a family discovers an incredibly strange phenomenon while on a nature hike. And finally, Emily Mortimer stars as a Hungarian transplant reaching out to help Vietnam war refugees in A.M. Lukas’ warmly funny One Cambodian Family Please for My Pleasure (US 2018, 14 min). Be prepared for a lot of laughs and a lot of heart. —Sterling Hedgpeth

“Shadows by the fire slowly climb and fall. Kisses fade and leave no trace. Whispers vanish into space.” Tales of love highlight these shorts as each one depicts families facing a major turning point. An elderly couple lives a quiet existence, until the husband takes on one major project in Lucas H. Rossi’s The Dress of Myriam (O Vestido de Myriam) (Brazil 2017, 15 min), filmed in stark, stunning black and white. Dorian Tocker’s beautiful The Day That (US 2017, 26 min) is a poetic meditation on grief as the film follows an Islamic family in the US facing a terrible loss. In Machu Latorre’s sweet The Loss (La perdida) (Spain 2018, 16 min), a widower confronts the new challenges of domesticity. Dark humor suffuses a tale of a family united—and fragmented—by the passing of the matriarch in Elizabeth Rose’s The Law of Averages (Canada 2017, 14 min). And Jenna Sofia’s Break the Camera (US 2018, 5 min) is a visually dynamic tribute to the filmmaker’s grandfather, using found photos, home movies, and audio interviews. This incredibly moving collection proves that the emotional underpinnings of the ties that bind us by blood are universal. —Sterling Hedgpeth

Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

9:15pm 6:15pm

Rafael Larkspur

Fri Sat

122

A Active Cinema

Oct 12 Oct 13

9:00pm 3:00pm

Mon Oct 8 Tue Oct 9

Rafael Sequoia

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

9:15pm 6:00pm

Rafael Larkspur


FILMS FILMS

5@5 THE WAY IT IS

3 FACES

22 JULY

(SE ROKH)

5@5 SHORTS/FAMILY FILMS

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Total Program 95 min

Iran 2018 • 100 min

Nor way/Iceland 2018 • 137 min

FOCUS: TEENS&20s “I will show you what I know. Sometimes we will disagree. If we learn at all to grow. Then I have done my small duty.” In this peer-reviewed collection of youth-made films, today’s teen filmmakers show us just how much they know about cinema, storytelling, and the world as they see it. The Look (Max Retik, US 2018, 6 min), Goodbye Sam (Theo Taplitz, US 2017, 5 min), Backyard Bees (Will Noyce, US 2018, 4 min), Āmrikā (Nicole Bahar, US 2017, 4 min), Dance with Me (Isaac Karliner-Li, US 2018, 5 min), Perception (Lola Duenyas, US 2018, 2 min), The Last Straw (Julian Jordan, US 2018, 12 min), Experimenting with Animation (Paige Flaming, US 2018, 1 min), Why, God? (Nathan Ginter, US 2018, 8 min), Davy Jones Can’t Fly (Grant Anderson-Smith, US 2018, 7 min), Censored (Maggie Budzyna, US 2018, 3 min), One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster (Sarah Antabli, Tiffany Chang, Stephanie Cho, Sara Lowin, Gracie Sandman, India Spencer, & Juliet Wiener, US 2017, 6 min), Gray Areas (Kat Swander & Jack Safir, US 2018, 7 min), The Rat (Miranda Autumn Lewis, US 2018, 5 min), The Light of My Life (Erina McSweeny, US 2018, 4 min), The Redwood Grove (Will Noyce & August Mesarchik, US 2018, 10 min), Pop (Ishaan Parmar, US 2018, 6 min). Age 11+ —Joanne Parsont

Director/Producer Jafar Panahi Screenwriters Jafar Panahi, Nader Saeivar Cinematographer Amin Jafari Editors Mastaneh Mohajer, Panah Panahi Cast Behnaz Jafari, Jafar Panahi, Marziyeh Rezaei Print Source Kino Lorber

Director/Screenwriter Paul Greengrass Producers Gregory Goodman, Paul Greengrass, Scott Rudin Cinematographer Pål Ulvik Rokseth Editor William Goldenberg Cast Anders Danielsen Lie, Jonas Strand Gravli, Jon Øigarden, Isak Bakli Aglen Print Source Netflix

Sun Fri

Fri Sat

Oct 7 Oct 12

11:00am Sequoia 12:00pm Larkspur*

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public

M In Persian with English subtitles In this fas-

cinating, tender-hearted road movie, famed Iranian actress Behnaz Jafari, playing herself, journeys from her latest film set to a remote village. She’s responding to a desperate video from a young woman who dreams of becoming an actress, but whose family won’t let her leave home. Encounters that are both whimsical and delightfully curious—an old woman who’s trying out her grave for size; a stud bull, the ultimate symbol of virility, that’s fallen and broken his leg—provide a thematic backdrop for this exploration of women and men, tradition and freedom of choice. And at the helm on this journey is Behnaz’s driver, director Jafar Pahani who, as he did in Taxi (MVFF 2015), takes the wheel as a character in his fourth film since Iran banned him from making movies in 2011. In storytelling that’s deceptively simple, Panahi creates a richly layered and eloquent journey—right down to the last image. —Zoë Elton Oct 5 Oct 6

6:30pm 8:15pm

Rafael Larkspur

Recreating the sweep of history is familiar territory for Oscar ® -nominated director Paul Greengrass, who previously made the riveting United 93 and Bloody Sunday (MVFF 2002). This time he applies his visceral immediacy to the aftermath of an attack—that of July 22, 2011, when a right-wing terrorist killed 77 Norwegians, bombing a government building in Oslo before going on a horrific murder spree at a summer youth camp. Democracy steels its resolve to follow the rule of law while reeling from the terrible loss in this drama told in the director’s signature style of naturalistic intimacy. Greengrass follows a recovering youth’s therapy and PTSD, a prime minister urging transparency, and the defense attorney committed to his client’s rights (but not his cause), meticulously entwining these threads to a powerful climax in a story about a nation dedicated to progress in the face of fear and hope in the shadow of hate. —Sterling Hedgpeth Sat Tue

Oct 6 Oct 9

7:00pm 8:45pm

Rafael Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH PERSIAN CENTER

Added pre-MVFF program:

TRIBUTE to Paul Greengrass on Tuesday, October 2 at 7:00pm at the Smith Rafael Film Center. The program includes a screening of 22 July, an onstage conversation with Paul Greengrass, and presentation of the MVFF Award.

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

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FILMS

LOS ADIOSES

AN AFTERNOON WITH ELEANOR COPPOLA AND ALLIE LIGHT

ALIFU THE PRINCE/SS

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Mexico 2017 • 85 min

Total Program 90 min

Taiwan 2017 • 96 min

Director/Screenwriter Natalia Beristáin Producers Rafael Ley, Maria José Córdova, Gerardo Morán Cinematographer Dariela Ludlow Editor Miguel Schverdfinger Cast Karina Gidi, Daniel Giménez Cacho, Tessa Ia, Pedro de Tavira Egurrola Print Source Lux Box Films

ANY WEDNESDAY

Director Wang Yu-Lin Screenwriters Wang Yu-Lin, Hsu Hua Chien, Hua Bo Rong, Chen Hui Ling Producers Gene Yao, Liu Ji Gang, Wang Yu-Lin Cinematographer Wang Pan Yun Editors Hong Dong Ren, Chang Yi Nian Cast Utjon Tjakivalid, Zhao Yilan, Wu Pengfeng, Chen Zhusheng, Zheng Renshuo Print Source Reel Suspects

M V In Spanish with English subtitles From Mexican filmmaker Natalia Beristáin (She Doesn’t Want to Sleep Alone) comes this riveting biopic of Rosario Castellanos, one of the most important literary voices to emerge from 20th century Mexico. As a young woman in postwar Mexico City, wellread university student Rosario (Tessa Ia, The Burning Plain) transcends the era’s patriarchal society to grow into an influential poet and author. A volatile romance with her college sweetheart, Ricardo Guerra (Daniel Giménez Cacho, Zama), provides a personal avenue for her explorations of feminism and femininity, but the relationship grows tense as Rosario’s career blossoms, leaving her with a difficult choice. Beautifully shot, superbly acted, and immensely thoughtful, Los adioses is an engrossing drama and an insightful portrait of a writer’s life. Actress Karina Gidi (Abel), who plays the older Rosario, deservedly took home the Best Actress trophy at the Ariel Awards, Mexico’s equivalent of the Academy Awards ®, for her astonishing performance. —Nadia Ismail Tue Oct 9 Thur Oct 11

8:45pm Lark 12:00pm Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF ME X ICO

US 2018 • 36 min Director Allie Light & Patrick Stark

MBay Area filmmaker Allie Light wrote and co-directed this sensitive, delicate drama of disparate souls reaching for connection. An octogenarian with dementia, Agnes (Mary Black) meets PTSD-afflicted homeless vet C’Mo (Shane Dean) after choir practice and gives him a ride instead of going home. While her family frets, these two people— separated by age, race, class, and even diagnoses—bond in their frail humanity. TWO FOR DINNER US 2017 • 22 min Director Eleanor Coppola

M Separated by work, a couple arranges a video chat date night in Eleanor Coppola’s bittersweet drama. While Lainie (Joanne Whalley) dines at their favorite LA bistro, film director Jack (Chris Messina), on location, makes do at a rustic Montana eatery. Throughout the effervescent, romantic evening, they flirt, eat, toast, and Jack begs Lainie to join him—but does he mean it? —Pam Grady PRECEDED BY

CAROLEE, BARBARA & GUNVOR BY LYNNE SACHS US 2018 • 8 min Director Lynne Sachs

Traveling from New York to Sweden, director Lynne Sachs visits with cinematic luminaries Carolee Schneemann, Barbara Hammer, and Gunvor Nelson in this compelling portrait. Sat

Oct 13

4:30pm

FOCUS: QUEER-ISH In Taiwanese with English subtitles The struggle between upholding tradition and moving forward in the modern world is beautifully depicted in this heartfelt tale of the only son of an indigenous tribal leader in present day Taiwan. Alifu (newcomer Utjung Tjakivalid, who won a Best New Talent award at the Taipei Film Festival) lives in two worlds: In Taipei, she’s a hairdresser with a chosen family saving up to have sexual reassignment surgery; in rural Taitung, she’s still known as the son of the ailing tribal leader who is unaware of Alifu’s other life and wishes to pass the reigns onto his only son. With high production values and a number of sensational drag performances, Alifu, the Prince/ss intercuts the title character’s story with intersecting tales of romance among her chosen family, painting a diverse portrait of LGBTQ life in Taiwan and capturing the universal feeling of longing for love and connection, whether those feelings are reciprocated or not. —Diane de Monx

M

Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

A Active Cinema

Rafael

M Mind the Gap

Rafael Lark

IN A SSOCIATION WITH FR AMELINE

IN A SSOCIATION WITH SFFILM

124

4:45pm 2:15pm

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

ALL SQUARE

ALL THESE SMALL MOMENTS

AMALIA THE SECRETARY

US CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 93 min

US 2018 • 84 min

Colombia 2017 • 91 min

Director John Hyams Screenwriter Timothy Brady Producers Michael Kelly, Ben Cornwell, Yeardley Smith Cinematographer Yaron Levy Editor Neil Fazzari Cast Michael Kelly, Jesse Ray Sheps, Pamela Adlon, Josh Lucas, Harris Yulin Print Source Mill House Motion Pictures

Director/Screenwriter Melissa Miller Costanzo Producers Lauren Avinoam, Katie Leary, Jed Mellick Cinematographer Adam Bricker Editors Russell Costanzo, Matt Garner Cast Brendan Meyer, Jemima Kirke, Molly Ringwald, Brian d’Arcy James, Sam McCarthy, Harley Quinn Smith Print Source Orion Classics

Director/Screenwriter Andrés Burgos Producer Andrea Marulanda Cinematographer Manuel Castañeda Editor María Vásquez Cast Marcela Benjumea, Enrique Carriazo, Ana María Arango, Patricia Tamayo, Diego León Hoyos, Fabio Rubiano Print Source Habanero Film Sales

John (Michael Kelly, House of Cards) is on the skids. A former pro baseball pitcher who washed out of the majors, he now spends his days as a two-bit bookie chasing down deadbeats who don’t pay up and taking care of his infirm dad (Harris Yulin). Business is not what you’d call good, until John hooks up with an old high school flame (Pamela Adlon, Better Things). It turns out she has a son in Little League, whom he takes under his wing—and suddenly discovers that underage ball games are an untapped market for the degenerate gambling crowd. Part sad-sack character study and part outrageous, hysterical social satire, director John Hyams’ sports gem, which won the Audience Award at the SXSW Film Festival, plays like gangbusters—think Bad Santa meets The Bad News Bears. It’s the sort of beautifully warped father-figure comedy that leaves folks laughing and cringing in equal measures. You can bet on it. —David Fear

M Howie Sheffield’s road to adulthood is off to a rocky start. His arm is in a cast. His parent’s growing tension hangs heavy in their New York brownstone. And he’s infatuated with an alluring mystery woman who rides the same bus as him. As the title suggests, All These Small Moments carefully curates episodes from Howie’s turbulent family life, his precarious dealings at school, and the interactions he manages with the mysterious blonde on the bus. These moments feel innately human and fresh thanks to an understated approach from first-time director Melissa Miller Costanzo. Working from her own script, Costanzo creates an engrossing tale of tumultuous adolescence and self-discovery, aided by a talented cast that includes Molly Ringwald (Riverdale), Jemima Kirke (Girls), Brian d’Arcy James (Spotlight, MVFF 2014), and Brendan Meyer (The OA) as Howie. —Elliott Breeden

M V In Spanish with English subtitles At the

(AMALIA LA SECRETARIA)

PRECEDED BY

Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

8:15pm 3:30pm

Rafael Rafael

RAINBOW BRIDGE US 2018 • 8 min Director Rivkah Beth Medow

crossroads of stoicism and paranoia, a rigid, rather cranky, Type A secretary named Amalia (the hilarious Marcela Benjumea) begins to unravel as carefree repairman Lázaro (Enrique Carriazo) waltzes into her life, introducing her (and effectively filling up her meticulous daily planner) to a world of cumbia, yoga, and spontaneous flirtation. As the CEO she loyally serves weighs the pros and cons of suicide versus reporting failing numbers at an impending board meeting, Amalia must choose whether to invest her high-functioning administrative energy into saving the company or launching a joie de vivre startup for herself and Lázaro, instead. With a close eye for detail, director Andrés Burgos captures the universal language of awkward office passive aggression, complete with clinking pens and shuffling paperwork, while juxtaposing the quotidian Colombian life of caring for elderly parents, commuting to work, and frequenting the local discoteca. —Delfin Vigil Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

6:15pm 3:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

A beloved family member is the center of a poignant ceremony. Sat Sun

A Active Cinema

Oct 6 Oct 7

8:15pm 8:45pm

Lark Lark

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

125


FILMS

EL ÁNGEL

ANGST

ART PAUL OF PLAYBOY: THE MAN BEHIND THE BUNNY

WORLD CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Argentina/Spain 2018 • 126 min

US/UK 2017 • Total Program 100 min

US 2018 • 73 min

Director Luis Ortega Screenwriters Sergio Olguín, Luis Ortega, Rodolfo Palacios Producers Pedro Almodóvar, Agustín Almodóvar, Hugo Sigman Cinematographer Julián Apezteguia Editor Guille Gatti Cast Lorenzo Ferro, Chino Darín, Mercedes Morán, Daniel Fanego, Cecilia Roth Print Source The Orchard

Director Matt Skerritt Producers Scilla Andreen, Karin Gornick Cinematographer Ryan Purcell Editors Christopher S. Johnson, Matt Skerritt Print Source IndieFlix

Director Jennifer Hou Kwong (Jian Ping) Screenwriters Jamie Ceaser, Jennifer Hou Kwong (Jian Ping) Producer Jamie Ceaser Cinematographer Paul Chen Editor Brent Hannigan Cast Art Paul, Hugh Hefner, Christie Hefner, George Lois, Steven Heller, Brand Holland Print Source MoraQuest Media

V FOCUS: QUEER-ISH

In Spanish with English subtitles On the cusp of a sexual awakening, 19-year-old Carlitos (Lorenzo Ferro) meets a handsome classmate (Chino Darín), the son of a gun-toting father, and quickly graduates from adorable burglar to fullon sociopath. The titular “ángel” of Luis Ortega’s fourth feature, a box office smash in its native Argentina, is Carlos Robledo Puch, appearing barely post-pubescent with a soft white belly, golden ringlets, and a ruby-tinged pout—looking at odds with his starring role in a notorious 1970s crime spree. Bearing the artistic mark of Pedro Almodóvar (who co-produced the film), this true-crime tale deploys black humor, exuberant pop music, perfect period details, and some anachronistic art, providing subtle historical context in Argentina’s dictatorship and repressive machismo culture without excusing Carlitos’ behavior. Ferro and Darín deliver sensational turns as the criminal duo, with added support from the great Cecilia Roth (All About My Mother) and Mercedes Morán (La ciénaga, MVFF 2001) as their respective mothers. —Shari Kizirian Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

9:00pm 8:45pm

Rafael Larkspur

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF SPAIN

FOCUS: TEENS&20s Anxiety in teenagers and adolescents is an epidemic on the rise, affecting more youth and families than ever before, yet it is still deeply misunderstood and too often disregarded. Angst is the timely and powerful resource we need to spark important conversations about what we can do about it. Deeply personal interviews with children and young adults facing the challenges of managing their own anxiety—and its effects on their physical, emotional, and social lives—provide critical insight for adults to better understand how to help. Additional perspectives from mental health experts and researchers shed light on the causes and damaging cycles of stress. Eye-opening and empowering, Angst is a must-see documentary that gives voice to those suffering and shares tools for parents, teachers, siblings, medical professionals—truly everyone in the community— to address the anxiety affecting so many people we love. —Deanna Quinones The screening is followed by a community discussion featuring a panel of filmmakers, film subjects, and mental health professionals. This is the first program in CFI Education’s new year-round Teen Wellness Film Series, presented in partnership with Tamalpais Union High School District Wellness. Tue

Oct 9

6:30pm

M For its first 30 years of publication, Playboy magazine’s eye-popping design and illustrations were the work of Art Paul, the graphic artist and trendsetter whose sketch of the iconic tuxedoed bunny came to define the brand. As Playboy’s founding art director, Paul’s visionary ideas and dedication to creative freedom were radical in the conservative 1950s, mixing fine art and pop art, and even experimenting with interactive graphics. Prolific in multiple art forms until his passing in 2018 at age 93, Paul was a renaissance man who, at the height of his influence, commissioned works from the likes of Andy Warhol and Salvador Dalí. Director Jian Ping’s exuberant and heartfelt documentary peels back the curtain on the unsung innovator and visual architect of a national institution, whose creative contributions not only elevated the magazine’s caliber and reputation but helped usher in a new cultural revolution. WORLD PREMIERE —Jesse Knight Fri Sat Tue

Oct 5 Oct 6 Oct 9

9:00pm Sequoia 5:00pm Rafael 12:00pm Sequoia

Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH TAMALPAIS UNION HIGH SCHOOL DIS TRIC T WELLNE SS

SPONSORED BY

YELP 126

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

...AS IF THEY WERE ANGELS

ASH IS PUREST WHITE

BATHTUBS OVER BROADWAY

(JIANG HU ER NV)

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

WORLD CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US 2018 • 87 min

China/France 2018 • 150 min

US 2018 • 87 min

Director/Screenwriter/Producer Terry Strauss Cinematographer Barry Schienberg Editor Lou Wirth Cast Peter Coyote Print Source Health, Education & Videotape Inc.

Director/Screenwriter Jia Zhangke Producer Shozo Ichiyama Cinematographer Eric Gautier Editors Matthieu Laclau, Xin Xudong Cast Zhao Tao, Liao Fan, Xu Zheng, Casper Liang Print Source Cohen Media Group

Director Dava Whisenant Screenwriters Ozzy Inguanzo, Dava Whisenant Producers Amanda Spain, Dava Whisenant, Susan Littenberg Cinematographers Natalie Kingston, Nick Higgins Editor Dava Whisenant Cast Steve Young, David Letterman, Martin Short, Chita Rivera, Susan Stroman, Jello Biafra Print Source Impact Partners

M Two months after Pearl Harbor and the US entry into World War II, a pair of destroyers escorted a supply ship through the treacherous North Atlantic to a base in Newfoundland. A nasty storm, combined with an officer’s reluctance to trust his experienced navigator and newfangled radar, ran two of the ships aground on the rocks of adjacent coves. More than 200 sailors on the Pollux and the Truxton lost their lives, but nearly as many were rescued by local miners and townspeople. Director Terry Strauss, whose father was one of the survivors, plumbs a trove of photographs, documents, drawings, and interviews to recount a moving story of sacrifice, endurance, and heroism. The film hits an emotional peak with footage of the 1988 reunion between the American survivors and the Canadian townspeople who saved and cared for them. Peter Coyote narrates this remarkable saga with a blend of tender empathy and palpable amazement. WORLD PREMIERE —Michael Fox Sat Oct 6 Thur Oct 11

2:00pm 2:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF C ANA DA , SAN FR ANCISCO

In Mandarin with English subtitles Revered Chinese auteur Jia Zhangke (Mountains May Depart) often chronicles the seismic cultural and political shifts in his homeland through his thoughtful, meticulous dramas. Ash Is Purest White is no different, blending a rich character study with a gangster epic while examining how the passage of time asserts itself on both individuals and societies. The film focuses on Qiao (Zhao Tao, the director’s wife and frequent collaborator), who’s devoted to her gangster boyfriend—so much so that she takes the rap for him on a gun charge. Five years later, Qiao is released from prison and tries to pick up the pieces of her old life, only to discover that much of the outside world has changed. Zhao is superb in the lead, bringing emotional shading and a quiet steeliness to a gangster epic that veers brilliantly from the surreal to the melancholy. You may never hear “Y.M.C.A.” the same way again. —Tim Grierson

M

Sun Sun

Oct 7 Oct 14

7:30pm 11:00am

Larkspur Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH CENTER FOR A SIAN AMERIC AN CINEMA

M This joyous romp through a musical history you never knew existed will have you singing along to discarded musical masterpieces that were, in their time, even bigger than Broadway. Comedy writer Steve Young rarely felt compelled to pursue hobbies outside of his happy 25-year career on The Late Show with David Letterman. Little did he know that the Late Show segment “Dave’s Record Collection” would lead him to discover an almost entirely secret golden age of mid-20th century industrial musicals, an entertaining and engaging world of lavish Broadway-style shows. Dava Whisenant’s directorial debut accompanies Young in his quest to not only build the definitive record collection of these eccentric gems, but also to connect with equally obsessive collectors (Sport Murphy, Jello Biafra, Don Bolles), as well as the talented collaborators, both known (Martin Short, Chita Rivera, Florence Henderson) and unknown, who provided their ample talents to these idiosyncratic theatrical delights. —Leah LoSchiavo Thur Oct 11 Sat Oct 13

2:30pm 5:30pm

Sequoia* Lark

IN A SSOCIATION WITH MARIN THE ATRE COMPAN Y

*This screening is fee to CFI members. Reception to follow. Get your complimentary tickets at mvff.com

SPONSORED BY

XFINITY

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

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FILMS

BEAUTIFUL BOY

BECOMING ASTRID

BEN IS BACK

(UNGA ASTRID)

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

US 2018 • 111 min

Sweden/Germany/Denmark 2018 • 123 min

US 2018 • 103 min

Director Felix van Groeningen Screenwriters Luke Davies, Felix van Groeningen Producers Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner Cinematographer Ruben Impens Editor Nico Leunen Cast Steve Carell, Timothée Chalamet, Maura Tierney, Amy Ryan, Timothy Hutton Print Source Amazon Studios SPECIAL PRESENTATION FOCUS: TEENS&20s Culling from the bestselling memoirs of both father and son David and Nic Sheff, Oscar ® -nominated director Felix van Groeningen’s (The Broken Circle Breakdown) English-language debut is a kaleidoscopic and moving portrait of an American family coping with addiction. Frequent Rolling Stone contributor David (Steve Carell) sees his teenage son Nic’s (an unforgettable Timothée Chalamet, Call Me by Your Name, MVFF 2017) marijuana use as harmless experimentation until he begins to spiral out of control on heroin and crystal meth. What follows is a alternately inspiring and unflinching look at a family begins the long cycle of rehab and relapse, hope and dread. Filmed in San Francisco and Marin County, Beautiful Boy features a diverse soundtrack which includes John Lennon, Nirvana, and Sigur Rós and outstanding supporting performances from Maura Tierney and Amy Ryan as Nic’s maternal figures. —Joe Bowman Sat Oct 6 Mon Oct 8

3:00pm 2:00pm

Rafael Sequoia

Director Pernille Fischer Christensen Screenwriters Kim Fupz Aakeson, Pernille Fischer Christensen Producers Anna Anthony, Maria Dahlin, Lars G. Lindström Cinematographer Erik Molberg Hansen Editors Kasper Leick, Åsa Mossberg Cast Alba August, Maria Bonnevie, Magnus Krepper, Trine Dyrholm, Henrik Rafaelsen Print Source Music Box Films

M In Swedish and Danish with English subtitles Before there was Pippi (Longstocking), there was the talented journalist and aspiring writer, Astrid Lindgren. And prior to her emergence as a beloved, worldrenowned children’s author, there was the free-spirited Astrid Ericsson (Alba August, A Serious Game, MVFF 2016), a small-town teenager bursting with anarchic energy, doing the Charleston by herself at the village dance. This superb coming-of-age narrative connects the dots between Lindgren’s most famous character, Pippi, and her own remarkable defiance of social norms, as a fiercely independent-minded career woman and unwed mother, by choice. Astrid’s restless curiosity leads her into, and out of, an affair with her married boss—and the resulting pregnancy left-turns the film from biopic territory into a taut drama about the struggles of single motherhood in 1920s Sweden. Gorgeously shot (the camera is always hurrying after Astrid, trying to catch up), the storytelling is swift and understated, perfectly suited to the pioneering author and her unforgettable legacy. US PREMIERE —Monica Nolan Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12 Sat Oct 13

6:00pm 2:00pm 2:30pm

Director/Screenwriter Peter Hedges Producers Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, Teddy Schwarzman Cinematographer Stuart Dryburgh Editor Ian Blume Cast Julia Roberts, Lucas Hedges, Courtney B. Vance, Kathryn Newton Print Source Roadside Attractions DIRECTORS NIGHT M FOCUS: TEENS&20s Julia Roberts and Lucas Hedges command the screen in this riveting new film from Oscar ® -nominated writer-director Peter Hedges (Dan in Real Life). As Holly Burns (Roberts) drives home with her children from a Christmas pageant recital, she’s moved to tears at the sight of her eldest child, Ben (Hedges), standing in their driveway. It’s the Christmas present she’s been hoping for, but the return of her prodigal son from his sober living home is met with concern from both her teenage daughter Ivy (Kathryn Newton) and her new husband Neal (Courtney B. Vance). Ben’s unexpected appearance isn’t what it appears to be, which could also be said of the film itself. Unlike his excellent Pieces of April, Hedges isn’t interested in a straight family holiday drama, layering Ben Is Back with its share of surprises and suspense. Lucas Hedges, the director’s own son, continues his streak of stellar performances following Lady Bird (MVFF 2017) and Boy Erased (MVFF 2018), and he’s perfectly matched by a sensational Julia Roberts in her best role in years. —Joe Bowman Fri Sun

Oct 12 Oct 14

Lark Lark Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF S WEDEN AN D THE BARBRO OSHER PRO SUECIA FOUN DATION IN A SSOCIATION WITH MILL VALLE Y BOOK DEPOT & C AFE

SPONSORED BY

KAISER PERMANENTE AND JENNIFER COSLETT MACCREADY 128

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

6:00pm 8:00pm

Sequoia Sequoia


FILMS FILMS

BIAS

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES

BIRDS OF PASSAGE

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

FAMILY FILMS

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 88 min

France 2017 • 83 min

Colombia/Denmark /Mexico • 125 min

Director Robin Hauser Producers Robin Hauser, Christie Herring Cinematographer John Behrens Editor Christie Herring Print Source Finish Line Features, LLC

Directors Benjamin Renner, Patrick Imbert Screenwriters Benjamin Renner, Jean Regnaud Producers Damien Brunner, Didier Brunner, Vincent Tavier Editor Benjamin Massoubre Cast Bill Bailey, Adrian Edmondson, Justin Edwards, Matthew Goode, Celia Imrie, Phill Jupitus Print Source GKids

Directors Cristina Gallego, Ciro Guerra Screenwriters Maria Camila Arias, Jacques Toulemonde Vidal Producers Katrin Pors, Cristina Gallego Cinematographer David Gallego Editor Miguel Schverdfinger Cast Carmiña Martínez, Jhon Narváez, José Acosta, Natalia Reyes, José Vicente Cotes Print Source The Orchard

M A thought-provoking (and blood-pressure-

spiking) documentary precisely matched to this moment of political and social upheaval, bias takes an incisive look at the nature of unconscious human bias and its long-reaching effects on social, professional, and cultural norms. Filmmaker Robin Hauser (CODE: Debugging the Gender Gap, MVFF 2015, Audience Award) dives deep into the science and sociology around implicit bias and searches for answers as to how we can de-bias our brains. Beginning with the personal, Hauser takes—and is stunned by the results of— the Harvard-based Implicit Association Test (IAT). She then casts a wide net to explore how modern science, technology, and woke individuals and businesses are working to reveal, understand, and reshape the forces of bias that have ruled for too long. An energetic mix of interviews, experiments, data, and pop culture clips shed light on a fascinating topic that touches everyone, no matter how free of bias we believe ourselves to be. —Deanna Quinones Sun Sat

Oct 7 Oct 13

2:30pm 2:00pm

Sequoia Lark

IN A SSOCIATION WITH DR AK E S TU DENTS ORGANIZED FOR ANTI - R ACISM

FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION A warmhearted, French charmer with Looney Tunes flair from members of the Oscar ® -nominated team behind Ernest & Célestine (presented here in English and featuring a stellar British vocal cast), The Big Bad Fox delivers a trio of winning comedic tales set on an idyllic country farm. Well, it would be idyllic except for its quirky, perfectly inept assemblage of bickering animals who never met a plan that didn’t go awry. In “Baby Delivery,” Pig, Rabbit, and Duck must deliver a newborn after Stork falls down on the job (literally). The tables also turn—not once or twice but constantly—in “The Big Bad Fox” and “Saving Christmas,” where Fox is the Rodney Dangerfield of predators, and Christmas doesn’t really need saving… until it does. Beneath all the hijinks in The Big Bad Fox lies a heartfelt message: Love and good intentions always triumph over our inevitable limitations and dim-bulb pratfalls. Age 6+ —Jeff Campbell Tue Sat

Oct 9 Oct 13

10:15am Rafael* 12:30pm Larkspur**

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S

(PÁJAROS DE VERANO)

M V In Wayuu, Spanish, and English with

English subtitles Directors Cristina Gallego and Ciro Guerra (the luminous, Academy Award ® -nominated Embrace of the Serpent, MVFF 2015) seamlessly blend gorgeous cinematography in the breathtaking wilderness of the Guajira desert and an atmospheric soundtrack to depict the escalating power struggle between two Wayuu clans in this drama based on an incredible and surprising true story that feels as timeless as a Shakespearean tragedy. During Colombia’s marijuana boom in the 1970s, a Wayuu family is torn between upholding indigenous values of aligned word and deed and amassing money, guns, and power. Prodigal son Rapayet (José Acosta) and seer matriarch Ursula (Carmiña Martínez) try to have it both ways, teetering back and forth between tradition and profits. As the feud escalates and the families grow away from their customs—honoring their ancestors and living a spiritual life—in the increasingly modern world, the film barrels toward an explosive, surprising climax. —Carol Harada Wed Oct 10 Thur Oct 11

3:30pm 8:30pm

Sequoia Larkspur

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public **Followed by The Hoopla! (see page 115)

SPONSORED BY

BELLAM SELF STORAGE & BOXES

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

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FILMS

BORDER

BOY ERASED

BURNING

(GRÄNS)

(BEONING)

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Sweden/Denmark 2018 • 111 min

US 2018 • 114 min

South Korea 2018 • 148 min

Director Ali Abbasi Screenwriters Ali Abbasi, Isabella Eklöf, John Ajvide Lindqvist Producers Nina Bisgaard, Piodor Gustafsson, Petra Jonsson Cinematographer Nadim Carlsen Editors Olivia Neergaard-Holm, Anders Skov Cast Eva Melander, Ereo Milonoff, Viktor Åkerblom, Matti Boustedt, Jörgen Thorsson Print Source Neon

Director/Screenwriter Joel Edgerton Producers Joel Edgerton, Steve Golin, Kerry Kohansky-Roberts Cinematographer Eduard Grau Editor Jay Rabinowitz Cast Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman, Joel Edgerton, Russell Crowe, Xavier Dolan Print Source Focus Features

Director Lee Chang-dong Screenwriters Oh Jung-mi, Lee Chang-dong Producers Lee Chang-dong, Ok Gwang-hee Cinematographer Hong Kyung-pyo Editors Kim Hyun, Kim Da-won Cast Yoo Ah-in, Jun Jong-seo, Steven Yeun Print Source Well Go USA

FOCUS: QUEER-ISH In Swedish with English subtitles Customs agent Tina has a special talent for sniffing out all manner of malfeasance using her extraordinary sense of smell. Subjected to crude comments from co-workers and cruel treatment at home from her sponger boyfriend, Tina has become a target—for all the ways she is different from everyone else. But when she meets the mysterious Vore, the foundations of her universe begin to crumble. Based on a novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist (Let the Right One In, MVFF 2008), Border is a gender- and genre-bending love story combining equal parts magical realism, dark humor, and spoton contemporary social critique, whirled into a jaw-dropping tale in which absolutely nothing—and no one—is who, or what, they seem. Featuring the prodigious acting talents of Eva Melander (Sebbe, MVFF 2010) and Eero Milonoff (The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki, MVFF 2016), director Ali Abbasi won the Un Certain Regard Award at Cannes for this unforgettable film. —K.D. Davis

SPOTLIGHT: JOEL EDGERTON FOCUS: QUEER-ISH | TEENS&20s Lucas Hedges, Nicole Kidman, and Russell Crowe deliver astonishing performances as a devoted Baptist family whose lives are turned upside down after a malicious phone call outs their teenage son, prompting them to send him to a church-sponsored gay conversion camp. Seventeen-year-old Jared reluctantly agrees to his preacher father’s ultimatum: Fix your same-sex attraction or leave the family. Quickly, Jared realizes that the camp’s aggressive, manipulative methods are doing little to shift his own sexual proclivities or those of his peers (which include Canadian auteur Xavier Dolan and pop superstar Troye Sivan), bringing him to a crossroads that will forever alter his life. In his second directorial outing, actor Joel Edgerton (Loving, MVFF 2016) takes the role of the fiery camp leader. Edgerton’s adaptation of Garrard Conley’s harrowing memoir is a sensitive, elliptical coming-ofage tale that depicts a universal story of personal struggles that threaten to dissolve familial bonds. —Joe Bowman

In Korean with English subtitles A brittle romantic triangle powers revered Korean director Lee Chang-dong’s (Poetry) exquisite adaptation of Haruki Murakami’s short story “Barn Burning.” A relationship blossoms between deliveryman Jong-su and his former classmate Hae-mi when they run into each other after many years. Then Haemi returns from a trip to Africa with a new friend, handsome playboy Ben (The Walking Dead ’s Steven Yeun). A critical darling at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Burning expertly explores class, identity, and love as it concocts a mesmerizing mystery. The characters’ motivations are often oblique in a film that blends genres so deftly that it is almost impossible to know exactly where it’s headed. Burning’s ensemble is a master class of nuance, and Lee takes his time revealing his story’s surprises, resulting in a devastating examination of the secrets and lies we all carry around with us. —Tim Grierson

Wed Oct 10 Thur Oct 11

Sun Tue

6:00pm 9:15pm

Rafael Lark

Oct 7 Oct 9

6:00pm 3:00pm

Sequoia Sequoia

Wed Oct 10 Thur Oct 11

2:30pm 11:15am

Rafael Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH KORE AN CENTER, INC .

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF S WEDEN AN D THE BARBRO OSHER PRO SUECIA FOUN DATION

130

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

LUCASFILM, LTD.

CMS

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

BUSHWICK BEATS

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

CAPERNAUM

US CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 83 min

US 2018 • 107 min

Lebanon 2018 • 121 min

Directors A. Sayeeda Moreno, Chloe Sarbib, Brian Shoaf, Sonejuhi Sinha, James Sweeney, Anu Valia Screenwriters A. Sayeeda Moreno, Chloe Sarbib, Brian Shoaf, Sonejuhi Sinha, James Sweeney, Susan Soon He Stanton Producers Aleksey Ageyev, Julie Christeas, Katya Yarotskaya Cinematographers Greg Cotton, Shlomo Godder, Edward Herrera, Gaul Porat, Shane Sigler, Ryan Wick Editor Arielle Sherman Cast Henny Russell, Britt Baron, Ronen Rubinstein, Melanie Nicholls-King, Nadia Dajani, Britne Oldford Print Source Aleksey Ageyev

Director Marielle Heller Screenwriters Nicole Holofcener, Jeff Whitty Producers Anne Carey, Amy Nauiokas, David Yarnell Cinematographer Brandon Trost Editor Anne McCabe Cast Melissa McCarthy, Richard E. Grant, Dolly Wells, Jane Curtin, Anna Deavere Smith Print Source Fox Searchlight Pictures

Director Nadine Labaki Screenwriters Jihad Hojeily, Michelle Keserwany, Nadine Labaki, Khaled Mouzanar Producers Michel Merkt, Khaled Mouzanar Cinematographer Christopher Aoun Editor Konstantin Bock Cast Zain Al Rafeea, Yordanos Shiferaw, Fadi Yousef, Nadine Labaki Print Source Sony Picture Classics

M What do a single mother with ALS, a vampire, and two lovers stuck in separate timelines have in common? What about an aspiring young graffiti artist, a middle-aged widow, and a teenage poet? Though their paths don’t always cross, their lives unfold in Brooklyn’s vibrantly multicultural neighborhood of Bushwick, which becomes a distinctive character that ties these six diverse shorts together. The street art, cramped apartment quarters, and sprawling rooftop views characteristic of Bushwick help give these otherwise stylistically disparate stories a sense of visual continuity, as the characters take on challenges that may otherwise be insurmountable if it weren’t for the power of unconditional love. At times poignant and at others absurd and comical, Bushwick Beats speaks to the resilience of the human spirit. This thrilling omnibus feature boasts a roster of distinct, up-andcoming NYC filmmakers, including Sundance Film Festival award winner Anu Valia (Lucia, Before and After) and Cannes and Tribeca Film Festival alum Sonejuhi Sinha (Love Comes Later). WORLD PREMIERE —Esther Liner Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

4:30pm 9:00pm

SPOTLIGHT: RICHARD E. GRANT M FOCUS: QUEER-ISH When her oncelucrative career as a journalist and celebrity biographer hits hard times, Lee Israel (a marvelous Melissa McCarthy) discovers a new avenue for her literary skills that will help pay her mounting bills: the specialized art form (and criminal enterprise) of forging witty and salacious personal letters from the likes of Noël Coward and Dorothy Parker and selling them to collectors. With a penchant for rubbing people the wrong way and an unmistakable preference for cats over humans, Israel finds kinship in fellow outsider and streetwise British dandy Jack (a resplendently reprobate Richard E. Grant), and together they become partners in crime. Adapted from Israel’s memoir of the same name and co-scripted by Nicole Holofcener (Enough Said), the sophomore feature from Marielle Heller (The Diary of a Teenage Girl) offers a humorous and moving portrait of a dynamic oddball couple and their engaging misadventures in early 1990s New York City. —Joe Bowman Wed Oct 10 Sat Oct 13

6:30pm 11:30am

Rafael Rafael

(CAPHARNAÜM)

M In Arabic and Amharic with English subti-

tles A 12-year-old boy, Zain, sues his parents in court: Asked why, he replies, “For giving me life.” Director Nadine Labaki’s (Caramel, MVFF 2007) deeply moving film opens our eyes—and our hearts—to the plight of the dispossessed, notably children. Zain runs away when his parents sell his beloved sister into marriage; life on the street pushes his resourcefulness to the limits. Meeting Rahil, an Ethiopian woman without papers, he babysits her (adorable) toddler while she works. Until, one day, she doesn’t return. As Zain, real-life Syrian refugee Zain Al Rafeea is extraordinary, an old soul in a wise-child body. Using nonprofessional actors whose personal backgrounds mirror what we see onscreen (think, Salaam Bombay!), Labaki is “trying to understand how the system fails these kids.” In doing so, she addresses one of the most pressing humanitarian issues worldwide, doing so with compassion rather than blame. It’s a profound achievement that received a Jury Prize at Cannes. —Zoë Elton Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

8:15pm 1:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH CINEFEMME

Larkspur Sequoia

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

ANDALOU NATURALS

GORDON RADLEY

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

131


FILMS

CHAINED FOR LIFE

CHARM CITY

CHRIS THE SWISS

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 92 min

US 2018 • 106 min

Director/Screenwriter Aaron Schimberg Producers Daniel Patrick Carbone, Vanessa McDonnell, Matthew Petock Cinematographer Adam J. Minnick Editor Sofi Marshall Cast Jess Weixler, Adam Pearson, Charlie Korsmo, Stephen Plunkett, Sari Lennick Print Source Aaron Schimberg

Director Marilyn Ness Producers Katy Chevigny, Marilyn Ness Cinematographer Andre Lambertson Editor Don Bernier Cast Clayton “Mr. C” Guyton, Alex Long, Captain Monique Brown, Officer Eric Winston, Officer John Gregorio, Councilman Brandon Scott Print Source PBS Distribution

Switzerland/Croatia/Germany/Finland 2018 • 90 min

M “Actors and actresses who are beautiful

start with an enormous advantage, because we love to look at them.” Pauline Kael’s quote opens Chained for Life, which takes place on the set of a campy exploitation flick. In the film-within-a-film, Mabel (Jess Weixler, Teeth) plays the beautiful, blind protagonist who falls in love with a disfigured man (Under the Skin’s Adam Pearson, who himself has neurofibromatosis) while they both await life-changing surgery from a mad scientist. When the director yells “cut,” the exploitation melts away, and we see the film’s cast (made up of actors with a wide variety of genetic physical differences) in circumstances that allow them to be in charge of their own narratives. This deeply original dark comedy, ripe with film references cinephiles will delight in, satirizes the film industry without cynicism; it’s ultimately about inclusion and the power in telling one’s own story—a refreshing rebuttal to Kael’s statement. —Celeste Wong

Baltimore’s Eastern District is best known as the setting of HBO’s fictional series The Wire, but to its inhabitants, high unemployment, drug use, and poverty are all too real. In Marilyn Ness’ intimate, often heart-wrenching documentary, we meet the community leaders, police officers, and city council members who are trying to stem the tide of violence that has engulfed the city in recent years. Clayton “Mr. C” Guyton runs the Rose Street Community Center, providing services the city can’t (or won’t), while his protégé Alex Long coaches kickboxing for kids. Although Alex calls the community a place with “too much police and not enough justice,” the police officers we meet act as social workers, marriage counselors, and more, while Councilman Brandon Scott advocates a holistic approach to the “disease” of gun violence. The humanity of these individuals, who clearly care deeply about their community, offers hope in a place that has little to spare. —Victoria Jaschob

Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

Fri Sat

6:00pm 9:15pm

Rafael Rafael

AM

Oct 5 Oct 6

8:45pm Larkspur 12:00pm Sequoia

Director/Screenwriter Anja Kofmel Producers Heino Deckert, Sinisa Juricic, Samir Cinematographer Simon Guy Fässler Editor Stefan Kälin Cast Megan Gay, Joel Basman Print Source Urban Distribution International

M FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION In Swiss German, German, English, and Spanish with English subtitles After a Swiss journalist is found dead wearing the uniform of a rightwing paramilitary unit during the Balkan Wars in the early 1990s, more questions than answers surface about his murder. Using leftover notebooks, archival news footage, and recollections of colleagues and family members, Anja Kofmel traces her cousin Christian Würtenberg’s mysterious transformation from idealistic war correspondent to doomed mercenary. Animated black-andwhite drawings are cut expertly into the documentary footage, providing a heartfelt portrait of the adventurous young man Kofmel remembers from childhood as well as filling in visuals for the unknowable parts of his story. Kofmel does not flinch from the intensity of the conflagration nor Würtenberg’s dubious role in it, but with deft direction, she pulls her lens wide enough to reveal the hazards of front-line journalism and the irrevocable price of getting too deeply involved in the story. US PREMIERE —Shari Kizirian Fri Sat

Oct 12 Oct 13

2:45pm 7:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH RIT TER CENTER WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF S WIT ZERL AN D

132

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M Mind the Gap

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FILMS FILMS

COCO

COLD WAR

COLLISIONS

(ZIMNA WOJNA)

FAMILY FILMS

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

US 2017 • 105 min

Poland/France/UK 2018 • 88 min

US 2018 • 82 min

Directors Lee Unkrich, Adrian Molina Screenwriters Adrian Molina, Matthew Aldrich Producer Darla K. Anderson Cinematographers Matt Aspbury, Danielle Feinberg Editors Steve Bloom, Lee Unkrich Cast Luis Ángel Gómez Jaramillo, Gael García Bernal, Marco Antonio Solís, Angélica Vale, Angélica María Print Source Walt Disney Pictures

Director Paweł Pawlikowski Screenwriters Paweł Pawlikowski, Janusz Głowacki, Piotr Borkowski Producers Ewa Puszczyńska, Tanya Seghatchian Cinematographer Łukasz Żal Editor Jarosław Kamiński Cast Joanna Kulig, Tomasz Kot, Jeanne Balibar, Borys Szyc, Cédric Kahn Print Source Amazon Studios

Director/Screenwriter/Editor Richard Levien Producers Jesse Garcia, Vincent Cortez, Frazer Bradshaw Cinematographer Frazer Bradshaw Cast Jesse Garcia, Izabella Alvarez, Ana de la Reguera, Jason Garcia Print Source Richard Levien

FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION Únete a nosotros para una gran fiesta para dar comienzo al programa especial de ¡Viva el Cine! del MVFF41 con la primera proyección en Marin de Coco, uno de los favoritos de la familia Pixar en español (con subtítulos en inglés). Ven temprano, habrá: pintura facial del Día de Muertos, churros frescos y chocolate, y un mariachi en vivo. Luego acomódate para disfrutar de la colorida historia de un niño mexicano que viaja a la Tierra de los Muertos para encontrar a sus antepasados y la fuente de su profundo amor—y la razón del desdén de su familia—por la música.

V

Join us for a special fiesta to kick off MVFF41’s ¡Viva el Cine! program, with the first Marin screening of this Oscar ® -winning Pixar family favorite in Spanish (with English subtitles). Come early for Day of the Dead face painting, fresh churros and chocolate, and live mariachi music. Then settle in to enjoy the colorful story of a young Mexican boy’s journey to the Land of the Dead to find his ancestors and the source of his deep love—and his family’s disdain—for music. —Joanne Parsont Sun

Oct 7

11:00am

Rafael*

IN A SSOCIATION WITH MARINARTS

SPOTLIGHT: PAWEŁ PAWLIKOWSKI In Polish, French, and German with English subtitles Based loosely on the lives of his parents—to whom the film is dedicated— Oscar ® -winning director Paweł Pawlikowski’s Cold War paints a portrait of complicated love during a period of great peril. This bittersweet drama, shot in luminous black and white, traces the courtship of Wiktor (Tomasz Kot), a composer, and Zula (Joanna Kulig), a singer and dancer, over several years, with their tempestuous relationship mirroring the fear and uncertainty of life during Communism. Much like Pawlikowski’s acclaimed Ida, Cold War examines midcentury Poland with somber specificity, but the actors’ performances bring a fire to this deceptively elegant romance. Pawlikowski tells his story in scattered vignettes, like a faded scrapbook with pages missing, resulting in a dreamy, half-remembered reverie. Winner of the Best Director prize at Cannes, Cold War’s message of how love ebbs and flows—and also how it’s shaped by the trauma of its times—will speak to audiences all over the world. —Tim Grierson Fri Oct 5 Mon Oct 8

7:00pm 3:00pm

M V The devastating impact of the United

States’ increasingly draconian immigration policy falls on one family in this breathtaking and timely first feature. With her passion for science and going to the mall, Itan Bautista is a typical San Francisco 12-year-old. But she is also responsible for caring for her little brother, Neto, while her mother, Yoana, works one of her four jobs—until the day the children return home to discover their mother missing after an ICE raid. The siblings end up on the doorstep of their estranged uncle Evencio (Jesse Garcia, Quinceñera), a hard-drinking truck driver with little interest in them. As ICE shuffles Yoana between detention centers, Itan is left with the burden of finding her mother, managing Evencio and Neto, and keeping up with her studies. Local writer-director Richard Levien puts the weight of his film in the hands of young Izabella Alvarez as Itan to mesmerizing effect. WORLD PREMIERE —Alexis Whitman Fri Sun

Oct 12 Oct 14

8:45pm Sequoia 12:00pm Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH C ANAL ALLIANCE

Rafael Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH POLISH CULTUR AL INS TITUTE NE W YORK

*Festivities begin at 10:00am

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

BANK OF MARIN

GRUBER FAMILY FOUNDATION

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

133


FILMS

DAUGHTER OF MINE

DESTROYER

EARTH, OUR HOME: THE NEW ENVIRONMENTALISTS

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Italy/Germany/Switzerland 2018 • 97 min

US 2018 • 123 min

Total Program 91 min

Director Laura Bispuri Screenwriters Francesca Manieri, Laura Bispuri Producers Marta Donzelli, Gregorio Paonessa Cinematographer Vladan Radovic Editor Carlotta Cristiani Cast Valeria Golino, Alba Rohrwacher, Sara Casu, Udo Kier, Michele Carboni Print Source Strand Releasing

Director Karyn Kusama Screenwriters Phil Hay, Matt Manfredi Producers Fred Berger, Phil Hay, Matt Manfredi Cinematographer Julie Kirkwood Editor Plummy Tucker Cast Nicole Kidman, Sebastian Stan, Bradley Whitford, Toby Kebbell, Tatiana Maslany Print Source Annapurna Pictures

A WORD TO THE WISE

M In Italian with English subtitles In a dusty, isolated village in Sardinia, two vastly different women and one 10-year-old girl share a secret that threatens to unmoor the family relationships anchoring their lives. Tina (Valeria Golino) is the serious, devoted mother of young blonde Botticellian Vittoria; but when her daughter starts spending more time in the company of reckless Angelica—whom the town dismisses as a boozy tramp—Tina is both wary of and resigned to the unspoken bond that draws her daughter towards this magnetic lost soul. As she weaves the complex loyalties of motherhood, director Laura Bispuri leans again (as in her marvelous debut feature Sworn Virgin) on actor Alba Rohrbacher, who captivates as the dissipated Angelica; and on cinematographer Vladan Radovic, whose intimate, handheld view into these women’s lives reveals a world of emotions hiding behind hardened exteriors, much as their village hides its human dramas from the oblivious tourists basking on its sundrenched beaches. —Peter L. Stein

SPOTLIGHT: KARYN KUSAMA M Karyn Kusama and Nicole Kidman are a match made in cinema heaven: Where Kusama ups the ante on genre, Kidman matches her by delivering one of her most extraordinary, transformative performances to date. Director Kusama (Girlfight, Jennifer’s Body, The Invitation) has a knack for looking genre in the eye and twisting it so we will never quite see it in the same way. In Destroyer, it’s the LA noir cop thriller. And it’s Erin Bell (Kidman) who breaks the mold of our expectations. When we first see Bell, she is gaunt, haggard, haunted. She is at a murder scene that recalls the past, when she and her then-partner Chris (Sebastian Stan, I, Tonya, MVFF 2017) had worked underground amongst a ring of young, violent criminals that ended badly, leaving her scarred and traumatized. In a plot that plays with time and memory, Bell is forced to confront the personal and professional demons that destroyed her past while struggling to, perhaps, right some wrongs. —Zoë Elton

(FIGLIA MIA)

Sun Tue

Oct 7 Oct 9

6:15pm 9:15pm

Rafael Sequoia

Wed Oct 10 Sun Oct 14

6:30pm 1:45pm

Sequoia Rafael

Spain 2017 • 27 min Director Jordi Esgleas Marroi

Stunning photography highlights a view of the Solomon Islands and its inhabitants who are forced to confront the dangerous compromises they make in the name of progress that threaten their idyllic landscape and culture.

EARTHRISE US 2017 • 31 min Director Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee

A wealth of wonderful archival footage accompanies the reminiscences of all three Apollo 8 astronauts as they contemplate their groundbreaking voyage, the philosophical impact the trip had on them, and one very special iconic photograph.

THE NEW ENVIRONMENTALISTS: FROM HANOI TO PARIS US 2018 • 32 min Directors Will Parrinello, John Antonelli, Matt Yamashita

Robert Redford narrates the most recent edition of this Emmy ® -winning series: an annual tribute to six dedicated environmental activists from around the world who take heroic measures to safeguard our precious natural resources. —Sterling Hedgpeth Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

IN A SSOCIATION WITH MUSEO ITALO AMERIC ANO

6:45pm Rafael 10:30am Rafael*

IN A SSOCIATION WITH GOL DMAN EN V IRONMENTAL PRIZE

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public

134

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SPONSORED BY

PIAZZA D’ANGELO

GOOD GREEN MOVING

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FILMS FILMS

EFFORTLESS FRENCH

ERNESTO

EVERYBODY KNOWS

(BITCOIN BIG BANG, L’IMPROBABLE ÉPOPÉE

(TODOS LO SABEN)

DE MARK KARPELÈS)

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

France 2018 • 104 min

Japan/Cuba 2018 • 125 min

Spain/France/Italy 2018 • 132 min

Directors/Screenwriters Xavier Sayanoff, Vincent Gonon Producers Thierry Tripod, Cédric Delport, Damien Le Boucher Cinematographers Raphaël Aupy, Stefano Forlini, Vincent Gonon, Jean-François Lesellier, Xavier Sayanoff Editor Dorian Tabone Print Source Xavier Sayanoff

Director/Screenwriter Junji Sakamoto Producers Naoya Kinoshita, Yukiko Shii Cinematographer Shingo Gima Editor Shin’ichi Fushima Cast Joe Odagiri, Juan Miguel Valero Acosta, Giselle Lominchar Print Source mk2 Films

Director/Screenwriter Asghar Farhadi Producers Álvaro Longoria, Alexandre Mallet-Guy Cinematographer José Luis Alcaine Editor Hayedeh Safiyari Cast Penélope Cruz, Javier Bardem, Ricardo Darín, Bárbara Lennie, Eduard Fernández Print Source Focus Features

In Spanish with English subtitles Japanese-Bolivian medical student Freddy Maemura Hurtado (Japanese superstar Joe Odagiri) travels to Cuba in 1962 to become a doctor, but instead joins Che Guevara’s guerrilla army to fight alongside his hero in this powerful, anti-war biopic. A fascinating Cold War footnote, Freddy’s story resonates with themes that speak sharply to today: from the ongoing threat of nuclear war to the perpetual injustice of poverty, proxy wars, and illegitimate foreign-backed governments. An unusual Japanese-Cuban co-production, shot largely (and evocatively) in Cuba, the film personalizes its politics through Freddy’s transformation from serious, idealistic student into an unlikely revolutionary who idolizes Che and quietly burns with moral outrage. Anger at America is a pulsing vein throughout the drama, but the pointed question the film asks is: What should one do? Is the struggle for freedom, peace, and justice worth risking one’s life? The earnest, uncynical answer is yes. —Jeff Campbell

V In English, French, and Japanese with English subtitles The rise and spectacular fall of Mark Karpelès, CEO of the bitcoin digital currency exchange Mt. Gox, is a lesson in how easily the digital universe can be manipulated and how quickly its promises can come crashing down. This engrossing documentary examines Karpelès’ life and career, providing a fascinating look at a cryptic personality. Often hailed as the future of money, bitcoin became a worldwide sensation, and Mt. Gox, launched in 2010, became the world’s biggest bitcoin exchange. But by early 2014, the company reported the loss of 850,000 bitcoins (currently valued at more than $800 million), “seemingly out of nowhere.” Is Karpelès—a Frenchman living in Tokyo—a con artist or victim, clueless or cunning? Directors Vincent Gonon and Xavier Sayanoff interview the impassive Karpelès (on trial in Japan for embezzlement and other charges), Mt. Gox clients, and financial and tech experts, in a riveting attempt to get to the bottom of the scandal. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE —Margarita Landazuri Sun Oct 7 Wed Oct 10

12:45pm Lark 12:30pm Sequoia

Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

6:00pm 8:45pm

Rafael Lark

In Spanish, English, and Catalan with English subtitles Two-time Oscar ® winner Asghar Farhadi (The Salesman, MVFF 2016) delivers another powerful portrait of family secrets and complicated moral questions with Everybody Knows. Set in Spain, married Laura (Penélope Cruz) has returned to her hometown for the first time in years for her sister’s wedding, only to be reunited with her former lover Paco (Javier Bardem). But when her daughter goes missing, Laura faces a terrible dilemma: Did she run off… or has she been kidnapped? Everybody Knows is a gripping thriller with more than one mystery at its core, investigating not just the disappearance of the daughter but also the unspoken tensions coursing through Laura. Oscar-winning real-life husband and wife Bardem and Cruz give performances full of anguish and regret. But the film’s secret weapon is Bárbara Lennie (The Skin I Live In), who is dynamite as Paco’s wife, and who only slowly comes to understand how little about her spouse she truly knows. —Tim Grierson Fri Sat

Oct 5 Oct 6

6:00pm 9:30pm

Sequoia Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH PL A Z ACUBA

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S CFI FRENCH CINEMA SPONSOR T V5MON DE IN A SSOCIATION WITH ALLIANCE FR ANÇ AISE DE SAN FR ANCISCO

SPONSORED BY

KATZ FAMILY FOUNDATION

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M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

135


FILMS

THE FAVOURITE

FREE SOLO

FROM BAGHDAD TO THE BAY

WORLD CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Ireland/UK /US 2018 • 121 min

US 2018 • 97 min

US 2018 • 68 min

Director Yorgos Lanthimos Screenwriters Deborah Davis, Tony McNamara Producers Yorgos Lanthimos, Deborah Davis, Lee Magiday Cinematographer Robbie Ryan Editor Yorgos Mavropsaridis Cast Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, Rachel Weisz, Nicholas Hoult, Joe Alwyn, James Smith Print Source Fox Searchlight Pictures

Directors/Producers Jimmy Chin, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi Cinematographer Jimmy Chin Editor Bob Eisenhardt Cast Alex Honnold Print Source National Geographic

Director/Cinematographer Erin Palmquist Producers Erin Palmquist, Frances Reid Editors Eli Olson, Andrew Gersh Print Source Erin Palmquist

In the latest audacious offering from world cinema’s leading provocateur Yorgos Lanthimos (The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer), Oscar ® winners Rachel Weisz and Emma Stone vie for the affections of—and influence over— sickly Queen Anne (a gloriously unhinged Olivia Colman, winner of the Best Actress prize at the Venice Film Festival) as England engages in the War of the Spanish Succession. Hardened and loyal Sarah Churchill (Weisz), the Duchess of Marlborough, rests easy knowing her favor with the Queen, but the arrival of her distant cousin Abigail (Stone)—an affable, spirited servant whose ladyship was gambled away by her father— in the castle creates a dangerous triad of lust, jealousy, and power plays. With nods to Peter Greenaway, Lanthimos infuses The Favourite, which also won the Grand Prix at Venice, with his signature brand of hilariously deadpan humor, with the three leads perfectly matched to his bawdy wit in yet another truly unforgettable dissection of the darker side of human nature. —Joe Bowman

M FOCUS: QUEER-ISH

Sat Oct 6 Wed Oct 10

136

4:00pm 2:15pm

Sequoia Sequoia

A Active Cinema

FOCUS: QUEER-ISH Wrongfully accused of being a double agent due to his family ties to the Ba’ath Party, Ghazwan Alsharif, an Iraqi translator for the US Army, winds up detained, tortured, and interrogated by US Military Police. Under great duress, Alsharif confesses to a truth that has been hiding in plain sight for his entire life: He is gay. Unable to stay in Iraq due to the danger his position brings upon himself and his family, he seeks political asylum in the US and lands in San Francisco. Despite newfound liberation and an exciting career as a chef, he acutely feels the loss of his family and his homeland. Utilizing nearly a decade of footage that is vulnerable, candid, intimate, and at times humorous, From Bagdad to The Bay touches upon themes easily recognizable to those who have had to flee their homes to save themselves: alienation, post-traumatic stress, despair, hope, and rebirth. —Esther Liner

AM Free climbing, the mountain climbing subculture which involves scaling sheer vertical walls without the use of ropes or harnesses, has one monolithic goal nobody has ever achieved: ascending the 3200-foot face of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. Sacramento native Alex Honnold wants to be the first, and so begins this hairraising documentary as Alex trains methodically, analyzing every foot in a climb where death is always a fraction of an inch away. But what happens when, beset by injuries and relationship pressures, someone with such phenomenal focus starts to psych himself out? And how does a perfectionist find a semblance of normalcy in his life while still in the thrall of such a dangerous obsession? Using his support system of climber friends and a touch of gallows humor, Honnold must decide if he’s up to the challenge of accomplishing an unbelievable physical feat of mind-blowing intensity. What happens next, you’ll never forget. —Sterling Hedgpeth

M

Sat Oct 6 Mon Oct 8

12:00pm Rafael 11:30am Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH BAY ARE A CLIMBERS COALITION AN D PL ANE T GR ANITE SAN FR ANCISCO

M Mind the Gap

Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

2:00pm 2:15pm

Rafael Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH HORIZONS FOUN DATION AN D INTERNATIONAL RE SCUE COMMIT TEE AN D THE LGBT A S Y LUM PROJEC T AN D HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

FROM MEXICO, CON AMOR

THE FRONT RUNNER

THE GREAT BUSTER: A CELEBRATION

FAMILY FILMS

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Total Program 72 min

US 2018 • 113 min

US 2018 • 102 min

V Nonverbal and in Spanish with English subtitles As part of our ¡Viva el Cine! initiative, this eclectic collection of short films is brought to us by our friends and neighbors in Mexico, in collaboration with the Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia. Join us for a lively medley of animation and live action, curated for audiences of all ages— and for both Spanish and English speakers alike—to enjoy. From music-loving mosquitoes to a boy who loves to draw, it is a lively celebration of curiosity and creativity. A Hole (El agujero) (Maribel Suárez, 2016, 5 min), Lucy vs. the Limits of Voice (Lucy contra los límites de la voz) (Mónica Herrera, 2014, 10 min), Bzzz (Anna Cetti & Guicho Nuñez, 2016, 4 min), Stardust (Polvo de estrellas) (Aldo Sotelo Lázaro, 2017, 14 min), Mateo and the Cinema (Mateo y el cine) (Luis Felipe Hernández Alanis, 2015, 4 min), Tintico’s Afternoons (Las tardes de Tintico) (Alejandro García Caballero, 2016, 11 min), The Teacher and the Flower (El maestro y la flor) (Daniel Irabién, 2014, 9 min), Waves from the Sky (Olas del cielo) (Gildardo Santoyo del Castillo, 2015, 9 min), Ricotta (Requesón) (Luis Téllez, 2015, 6 min). Age 8+

Director Jason Reitman Screenwriters Jason Reitman, Matt Bai, Jay Carson Producers Jason Reitman, Matt Bai, Helen Estabrook Cinematographer Eric Steelberg Editor Stefan Grube Cast Hugh Jackman, Vera Farmiga, J.K. Simmons, Alfred Molina, Sara Paxton Print Source Sony Pictures Classics

Director Peter Bogdanovich Producers Charles S. Cohen, Peter Bogdanovich, Louise Stratton Editor Bill Berg-Hillinger Cast Mel Brooks, Quentin Tarantino, Johnny Knoxville, Carl Reiner, Cybill Shepard, Bill Hader Print Source Cohen Media Group

—Joanne Parsont Sun Oct 7 Thur Oct 11

1:30pm Rafael 10:30am Larkspur*

IN A SSOCIATION WITH FE S TI VAL INTERNACIONAL DE CINE DE MORELIA

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public

A Active Cinema

When the winsome, youthful, and cameraready Senator Gary Hart—the favorite to win the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination—suddenly dropped out of the race, he wasn’t the first US politician to take a nosedive following the bombshell revelation of an extramarital affair. But the Colorado pol’s meteoric descent would set the course for the ongoing media obsession with public officials’ private lives, focused on salacious details rather than policy and public service. More of a thought-provoking and nuanced ensemble drama than a time capsule, writer-director Jason Reitman’s (Up in the Air, MVFF 2009) latest depicts the sometimes surprising, often poignant, and always compelling ripple effects of the scandal upon the people closest to Hart (a superb Hugh Jackman), including his independent-minded wife (a quietly magnetic Vera Farmiga), his flinty campaign manager (Oscar ® winner J.K. Simmons), and the scrambling clutch of journalists who dredged up and disclosed the details. —Joe Bowman Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

6:00pm 11:15am

Sequoia Sequoia

M Mind the Gap

At the age of four, Buster Keaton became a vaudeville star working as a human projectile in his parents’ act. Over the course of his career, he directed 39 films and starred in over 100, becoming an innovator and visionary not just in comedy but in the cinematic arts as well. In The Great Buster, acclaimed director Peter Bogdanovich (Paper Moon, The Last Picture Show) explores Keaton’s legacy, from his prodigious early silent work (Sherlock Jr., The General), his transition to talkies, his disastrous signing to MGM, to his eventual descent into alcoholism. Bogdanovich puts his extensive knowledge of film to use here, utilizing tons of archival footage and conducting a wide-ranging collection of interviews with family, friends, and artists who have been deeply influenced by Keaton. Cybill Shepherd, Richard Lewis, Quentin Tarantino, Mel Brooks, and Johnny Knoxville are among those who offer personal reflections on the cinema legend that is “The Great Stone Face.” —Elliott Breeden Sat Sun

Oct 6 Oct 7

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

2:30pm 5:00pm

Rafael Rafael

137


FILMS

GREEN BOOK

GRIT

THE GUARDIANS

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US 2018 • 130 min

Denmark /Indonesia/US 2018 • 80 min

Canada 2018 • 104 min

Director Peter Farrelly Screenwriters Peter Farrelly, Brian Currie, Nick Vallelonga Producers Jim Burke, Charles B. Wessler, Brian Currie, Peter Farrelly, Nick Vallelonga Cinematographer Sean Porter Editor Patrick J. Don Vito Cast Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini, Sebastian Maniscalco, Dimiter D. Marinov, P.J. Byrne Print Source Universal Pictures

Directors/Screenwriters Cynthia Wade, Sasha Friedlander Producers Sasha Friedlander, Cynthia Wade, Tracie Holder Cinematographers Boaz Freund, Axel Baumann, Bao Nguyen, Peter Mychalchewyz, Alex Ginting Editor Sasha Friedlander Print Source Cynthia Wade Productions, Inc.

Director/Screenwriter Billie Mintz Producers Billie Mintz, J.B. Sugar Cinematographer Sasha Moric Editor Michele Francis Print Source Billie Mintz

OPENING NIGHT FOCUS: BLACK IS For classically trained Black jazz piano prodigy Dr. Don Shirley and his white chauffeur and bodyguard Tony Lip, a 1962 concert tour of the American South proves an eye-opening experience in unanticipated ways. Peter Farrelly’s sharply observed drama, spiked with wry humor and inspired by real-life events, features the prodigiously gifted Oscar ® winner Mahershala Ali (Moonlight, MVFF 2016) as the ultra-sophisticated, polylingual Shirley, an elegant, mannered outsider wherever he goes and a transformed Viggo Mortensen (Captain Fantastic) as his truculent, semi-illiterate lip. Tooling around rural roads in a highly conspicuous turquoise Cadillac and getting into—and barely out of—life-threatening encounters together, each starts to see the real man beyond the other’s surface. The period details are spot-on, and so are the hate and the horror that greet a Black man in the Jim Crow South. Ali and Mortensen are pitch-perfect as an improbably matched pair, often at loggerheads, whose journey reaps unexpected and enduring rewards. US PREMIERE —Pam Grady Thur Oct 4 Thur Oct 4

7:00pm 7:30pm

Sequoia Larkspur

M In Indonesian with English subtitles How to radicalize a teenage girl and fire her ambition to become a human-rights lawyer? Destroy her family’s home and over a dozen neighboring villages in a 2006 mud volcano that killed 16 and displaced 60,000 in East Java, Indonesia. Expected to continue until at least 2030, this ongoing eruption was probably caused by faulty drilling for natural gas by the Lapindo Company. But the corporation’s own paid researchers cast the blame on an earthquake 180 miles away, absolving Lapindo of responsibility, along with the obligation to compensate victims for their losses. In response, teenage Dian studies diligently, determined to win compensation for her buried village and her father, a Lapindo employee who died a year after the explosion from cancer linked to toxins in the mud. This grandly poetic documentary serves both as a memorial to the disaster’s victims and as the story of a young activist battling a formidable alliance of big business and corrupt politicians. —Frako Loden Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

8:00pm 6:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

A society is judged by how it treats its most vulnerable members, including its elders. Investigative filmmaker Billie Mintz joins family members, activists, and journalists in Las Vegas to expose a nefarious system designed to defraud and abuse senior citizens—and get away with it. A scheme targets wealthy retirees, coercing them into leaving their homes and surrendering to the custody of rigged, for-profit, court-appointed guardians. The victims lose control of their finances, living situations, medical records, and healthcare. Their very lives are stolen. Exhausted families who want to care for and protect their kin are desperately trying to stop this waking nightmare. Despite continual stonewalling by corrupt judges, doctors, and guardians, the families win some small justice. Yet this Vegas-style racketeering is just the tip of the iceberg, a cautionary tale. Be informed, be enraged, and keep your elders close. US PREMIERE —Carol Harada Fri Sat

Oct 5 Oct 6

IN A SSOCIATION WITH SAN FR ANCISCO GREEN FILM FE S TI VAL

SPONSORED BY

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

Sequoia Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH JE WISH COMMUNIT Y CENTER OF SAN FR ANCISCO AN D WHIS TLE S TOP

WELLS FARGO 138

3:00pm 5:15pm

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

HARVEST SEASON

THE HATE U GIVE

THE HI DE HO SHOW

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US CINEMA

MUSIC

US 2018 • 82 min

US 2018 • 130 min

US 2018 • 100 min

Director/Screenwriter Bernardo Ruiz Producers Lauren Rosenfeld Capps, Bernardo Ruiz Cinematographer Victor Tadashi Suarez Editor Fiona Otway Cast N/A Print Source Quiet Pictures

Director George Tillman, Jr. Screenwriter Audrey Wells Producers Marty Bowen, George Tillman, Jr., Angie Thomas Cinematographer Mihai Malaimare, Jr. Editors Alex Blatt, Craig Hayes Ca,st Amandla Stenberg, Anthony Mackie, Regina Hall, Common, Issa Rae Print Source Twentieth Century Fox

Director John Goddard

A M V In English and Spanish with Eng-

lish subtitles Meet the people who prune, bud, harvest, sample, press, and blend grapes from wood vine to bottle and bring together the extraordinary tastes of some of the world’s great wines produced in our neighboring Napa Valley. Director Bernardo Ruiz explores all the stages of wine production as seen and sensed by the individuals who contribute to the journey of these grapes from vine to vintage. Three storylines illustrate the passions of harvesters and winemakers in search of “the heart of the grape:” A migrant worker travels to Napa from Mexico to work the fields; Sonoma-born Vanessa Robledo embodies a proud heritage of three generations of Latino viticulturists through her leadership of Robledo, Black Coyote, and Mi Sueno wineries; and veteran winemaker Gustavo Brambila—whose story, in part, inspired the film Bottle Shock—produces his own label. Their stories converge during the all-important harvest season, dramatically affected by the 2017 wildfires in Napa and Sonoma counties. WORLD PREMIERE —Leah LoSchiavo PRECEDED BY

LUCINA US 2018 • 5 min

SPOTLIGHT: AMANDLA STENBERG M FOCUS: BLACK IS | TEENS&20s Starr Carter (a sensational Amandla Stenberg) is the queen of code switching: living one version of herself with her tight-knit family and neighbors in their Black community of Garden Heights, and another with her classmates at a predominantly white private high school across town. When she becomes the sole witness to the shooting death of her childhood friend, Khalil, by a white policeman, the two Starrs have no choice but to collide—often explosively. Does she stand up for Khalil and speak her truth? Or does she keep quiet and protect herself from the violent forces within her own community? Based on the bestselling young adult novel by Angie Thomas, George Tillman, Jr.’s (Notorious) powerful drama addresses not just police brutality but the root causes of the racial inequity and injustice that permeates American society. Stenberg (The Hunger Games) leads a stellar cast that also includes Common, Issa Rae, Anthony Mackie, and Russell Hornsby and Regina Hall as Starr’s devoted parents. —Joanne Parsont Sun Oct 7 Thur Oct 11

Director Gerardo Rueda

5:30pm 2:00pm

Swing, swing, swing, swing: John Goddard’s personally curated, impeccably hosted foray into the annals of popular music this year lands on the greats of the Swing Era. Tapping into his earliest memories—and proving that it don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing—Goddard will veejay his way through the ’30s and ’40s, that time of remarkable orchestrations and unforgettable lyrics that launched some of the greatest talents of American popular music. He’ll explore the sonorous sophistication of youngster Frank Sinatra, honing his pipes as frontman for Tommy Dorsey; the highfalutin’ harmonizing of the inimitable Andrews Sisters; the soulful innovation of Billie Holiday; the foot-tapping orchestravaganzas (sic!) from the likes of Cab, Duke, and Benny—all of which will be sure to have you dancing in the aisles. Whether your preference is hi de hi or ho de ho, just know t’ain’t watcha do, it’s the way that you do it: And be prepared for some stompin’ at the Sequoia. —Zoë Elton Sun Sat

Oct 7 Oct 13

9:15pm 8:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

Sequoia Rafael

The day in the life of a woman who’s worked 28 years in farm labor in California’s Central Valley. Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

2:00pm 2:45pm

Sequoia Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH L A LUZ CENTER AN D ALMA - A SSOCIATION OF L ATINO L AW Y ERS MARIN

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

COLDWELL BANKER

MARIN SUITES HOTEL

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

139


FILMS

HOLLY NEAR: SINGING FOR OUR LIVES

I AM MARIS: PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG YOGI

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

MUSIC

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US CINEMA

US 2018 • 70 min

US 2018 • 54 min

US 2018 • 117 min

Director Jim Brown Producers Donna Korones, Jim Brown, Heather A. Smith Cinematographers Peter Pilafian, Jenni Morello, Gabriel Caso, Jim Brown Editors Pat Murphy, Bruce Connors, Ryan Kupchik, Alexander Tolmachyov Cast Holly Near Print Source Jim Brown Productions

Director/Cinematographer Laura VanZee Taylor Producers Ariana Garfinkel, Laura VanZee Taylor Editors Laura VanZee Taylor, Eli Olson Print Source ro*co films

Director/Screenwriter Barry Jenkins Producers Barry Jenkins, Brad Pitt, Megan Ellison Cinematographer James Laxton Editors Joi McMillon, Nat Sanders Cast KiKi Layne, Stephan James, Regina King, Dave Franco, Diego Luna Print Source Annapurna Pictures

Singer, songwriter, and social activist Holly Near has been performing for well over 40 years and in the process created what Gloria Steinem called, “the first soundtrack of the women’s movement.” From small-town Northern California to sold-out shows on some of the most iconic stages to million-person peace marches, Singing for Our Lives documents the story of the activist and her art. It also serves as an important testament to a time—a time of protest and coalition building, and the weaving of a multicultural consciousness always rooted in contemporary activism. Featuring Gloria Steinem, Jane Fonda, Ronnie Gilbert, and Tom Hayden with appearances by Pete Seeger and others, this film, directed by Jim Brown (The Weavers: Wasn’t That a Time), elevates Near to her deserved status of iconic artist and activist, and speaks to anyone who believes in peace, justice, feminism, and humanity. WORLD PREMIERE —Melissa Howden

M FOCUS: QUEER-ISH

Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

3:00pm 3:15pm

Sequoia* Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH FR AMELINE

*Live music event to follow at Sweetwater. Separate ticket required. See page 98 for details.

M Finding herself instantly drawn to the healing power of yoga, teenage Maris finds ways to combat the once-crippling mental health issues that defined her adolescence as she begins her studies to become a yoga instructor at only 16 years old. After a childhood of mounting anxiety, depression, and eating disorders, Maris’ parents check her into a hospital to help her confront her illness. Still struggling to cope after being released, Maris begins exploring various methods of therapy, beginning with art and poetry before discovering the life-changing effects that yoga has on both her body and mind. Through her teaching and her blog, Maris strives to inspire others by speaking openly about her struggles and promoting self-acceptance. —Cindy Lou Peeples PRECEDED BY

PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE. US 2018 • 25 mins Director Rayka Zehtabchi

Banding together to help destigmatize menstruation, a number of determined women and girls install a sanitary pad machine in their rural village in India. Manufacturing and selling the pads, they work to help educate and to improve feminine hygiene in a country where the subject is still incredibly taboo. Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

11:30am 11:30am

CLOSING NIGHT FOCUS: BLACK IS In arguably the year’s most anticipated film, Academy Award ® winner Barry Jenkins follows his iconic Moonlight (MVFF 2016) with a poetic, astonishingly realized adaptation of James Baldwin’s novel, If Beale Street Could Talk. Diving into the world of 1970s Harlem, Jenkins uses Baldwin’s profound and enlightened look at African American life in the US to express a universal tale of the strengths of love and family in an unjust, imperfect world. Newcomers KiKi Layne (in her first feature film) and Stephan James (Selma) play teenage lovers Tish and Fonny, whose lives are turned upside down when Tish discovers she’s pregnant and Fonny is thrown in jail for a crime he didn’t commit. With the help of her mother, played by multiple Emmy ® -winning actress Regina King (American Crime), Tish begins a fight for justice, trying to free her innocent husband from prison. Aunjanue Ellis, Colman Domingo, Dave Franco, Diego Luna, and Pedro Pascal round out the impressive supporting cast. —Joe Bowman Sun Sun

Oct 14 Oct 14

5:00pm 5:00pm

Rafael Sequoia

Sequoia Larkspur

SPONSORED BY

ALICE@97.3 & KCBS ALLNEWS 106.9/740AM 140

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

JACKSON SQUARE PARTNERS

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

IN THE AISLES

THE INDEPENDENTS

IT’S A GIRLS’ WORLD

WORLD CINEMA

MUSIC

FAMILY FILMS

Germany 2018 • 125 min

US 2018 • 97 min

Total Program 73 min

Director Thomas Stuber Screenwriters Clemens Meyer, Thomas Stuber Producers Jochen Laube, Fabian Laubach Cinematographer Peter Matjasko Editor Kaya Inan Cast Franz Rogowski, Sandra Hüller, Peter Kurth, Henning Peker, Matthias Brenner Print Source Music Box Films

Director/Screenwriter Greg Naughton Producers Dorottya Mathe, Greg Naughton, Jonathan Burkhart Cinematographer Piero Basso Editor Jon Vesey Cast Rich Price, Brian Chartrand, Richard Kind, James Naughton, George Wendt, Kelli O’Hara Print Source RGB Film Inc.

M In the spirit of MVFF’s Mind the Gap gen-

In German with English subtitles Gentle comedy and touching melancholia suffuse this nuanced exploration of affection and camaraderie in the workplace. When the heavily tattooed Christian (Franz Rogowski, Transit, MVFF 2018) gets a job at the local warehouse supermarket, little does he know about the lessons in love, friendship, and forklift operation that will ensue. One day in the break room, he meets Marion (Sandra Hüller, the sublime star of Toni Erdmann, MVFF 2016) and is immediately smitten. But Marion has a complicated home life, and their romance progresses less smoothly than Christian’s aptitude with a forklift. Never rushing the plot, In the Aisles carefully tracks the couple’s relationship alongside a perfectly thought-out presentation of workplace life and personalities. Though the store itself is described as bereft of daylight, Stuber’s film offers an unforgettable group of characters who may not have found their dream job, but who nevertheless try to find ways to make each day brighter. —Rod Armstrong

Pulsing with musical goodness, this engaging, offbeat film asks the age-old question: When do you hang up the guitar and become an adult? Rich is a New York graduate student tormented by an unfinished dissertation. He’s happiest writing songs on his guitar. Life takes a turn for the weird when he meets Greg (played by director Greg Naughton), a free-spirited musician who urges Rich to follow his dreams. When brusque Brian wanders into the frame, a power trio is born. These three musicians, who are members of the real-life group The Sweet Remains, sputter through an unexpected and hilarious road trip in search of fame and fortune. Filled with gorgeous tunes, the journey leads them to where dreams go to die: Los Angeles. Will they make it? Can they get a record deal? Will the van start? Delving into the emotional realities of all struggling musicians, this funny, feel-good flick captures what it means to be an artist at a crossroad. —Brendan Peterson

(IN DEN GANGEN)

Tue Fri

Oct 9 Oct 12

8:45pm 12:15pm

Larkspur Rafael

Fri Sat

Oct 5 Oct 6

3:00pm 11:45am

Rafael Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF GERMAN Y

der equity initiative, these short stories all feature fun, fascinating, and feisty young female characters—both real and fictional. For young Milly, in Natalie van den Dungen’s Sherbert Rosencrantz, You’re Beautiful (Australia 2018, 11 min), having a guinea pig as a best friend seems perfectly normal; her mother, however, begs to differ. In Scott Hamilton Kennedy’s Two Medusas (US 2017, 12 min), the ultimate Halloween horror unfolds when two girls both decide to dress as Medusa for the school costume contest. Some people think girls should not be boxers, but in Emily Sheskin’s documentary JessZilla (US 2017, 7 min), 10-year-old Jesselyn Silva is already proving them wrong. In Matthew Sandager’s live action/animation hybrid Dear Henri, (US 2017, 13 min), Henrietta finds an imaginative way to stay connected with her recently deceased namesake grandfather. In Tilda Cobham-Hervey’s A Field Guide to Being a 12-Year-Old Girl (Australia 2017, 20 min), a dozen titular pre-teens create a Wes Anderson-style performance to explain this critical juncture in female adolescence. After moving to a new town, homesick Maria finds friendship with the unlikely help of a chicken in João Pedro Pereira’s Galinha (US 2018, 12 min). The fear of her undocumented parents being deported is all too real for Sophie Cruz in Paola Mendoza’s timely documentary Free Like the Birds (US 2016, 10 min)—but this young girl is fearless in her fight for their freedom. And in Kerry Skinner’s action-packed The Bicycle Thief (UK 2018, 8 min), another spunky young girl takes chase to recover her stolen bike. Age 10+ —Joanne Parsont Sat Oct 6 Wed Oct 10 Sat Oct 13

IN A SSOCIATION WITH GOE THE- INS TITUT/ BERLIN & BE YON D FILM FE S TI VAL

11:00am 11:00am 3:45pm

Sequoia Larkspur* Larkspur**

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public **Preceded by The Hoopla! (see page 115)

SPONSORED BY

A PARTY CENTER

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

141


FILMS

JOSEPH PULITZER: VOICE OF THE PEOPLE

KANNAPOLIS: A MOVING PORTRAIT

THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

MUSIC

US CINEMA

US 2018 • 84 min

US 2018 • 63 min

US 2018 • 97 min

Director Oren Rudavsky Screenwriters Robert Seidman, Oren Rudavsky Producers Oren Rudavsky, Andrea Miller Cinematographer Wolfgang Held Editor Ramon Rivera Moret Cast Liev Schreiber, Adam Driver, Hugh Dancy, Lauren Ambrose, Tim Blake Nelson Print Source Oren Rudavsky Productions

Director Finn Taylor Cinematographer H. Lee Waters Editor Rick LeCompte Cast Jenny Scheinman, Robbie Fulks, Robbie Gjersoe Print Source Bernstein Artists

Director Sara Colangelo Screenwriters Sara Colangelo, Nadav Lapid Producers Maggie Gyllenhaal, Celine Rattray, Trudie Styler Cinematographer Pepe Avila del Pino Editors Lee Percy, Marc Vives Cast Maggie Gyllenhaal, Parker Sevak, Gael García Bernal, Anna Baryshnikov, Michael Chernus Print Source Netflix

If you’ve ever experienced history through a punchy headline or simply picked up a newspaper to find out about the world, you have Joseph Pulitzer to thank. A Hungarian immigrant, the young Pulitzer was hired as reporter in St. Louis in the late 1800s; he’d eventually move into publishing, purchase the New York World, and set the pace for covering news in the 20th century. Narrated by Adam Driver (and featuring Liev Schreiber as the voice of Pulitzer), this portrait from director Oren Rudavsky (The Treatment, MVFF 2006) recounts the life and times of modern journalism’s founding father as he evolves into both a crusader for the common man and a wealthy, influential political donor. Voice of the People presages today’s fight for truth in the “fake news” era as seen through the eyes of an American legend who helped shape our nation, one 36-point headline at a time. WORLD PREMIERE —David Fear

In this remarkable visual and musical time capsule and collaborative work from Bay Area director Finn Taylor (Unleashed, MVFF 2016) and multi-instrumentalist Jenny Scheinman, layers of historical footage, contemporary filmmaking, and accompanying live performance weave together a mesmerizing and vivid portrait of bygone community life, memorializing the resilience of extraordinary people during an uncompromising chapter of America’s 20th century past. At the height of the Great Depression, photographer and filmmaker H. Lee Waters traveled the textile factory boroughs of central North Carolina to record the lives of workers and families, bringing his cameras to black and white neighborhoods in segregated towns, documenting the humble dignity, vivacious joy, and gentle amusements of a place and people now much changed by the persistence of time. Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait, a one-of-a-kind multimedia event with live musical accompaniment, was commissioned by Duke Performances and premiered at the Smithsonian and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. —Leah LoSchiavo

PRECEDED BY

THE CENTER OF A BOOK US 2018 • 5 min Directors Joshua Moore, Liz Payne

A wealth of creative devices are used in this vibrant short to celebrate the traditions of a beloved analog craft. Fri Sat Tue

Oct 5 Oct 6 Oct 9

3:30pm 8:00pm 12:15pm

Wed Oct 10 Wed Oct 10

6:30pm 8:45pm

Lark Lark

SPOTLIGHT: MAGGIE GYLLENHAAL M In one of her finest turns to date, Maggie Gyllenhaal plays Lisa Spinelli, an engaged, slightly bohemian kindergarten teacher who notices an uncanny knack for poetry in Jimmy, one of her young students, in this arresting drama that took home the directing prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Perfectly inhabiting ankle-length skirts, flat shoes, and oversized jewelry, Gyllenhaal taps into fathomless wells of empathy (which border on pathological obsession) as Lisa, whose attempts to nurture and capture on paper Jimmy’s rare gift are met with concern from the child’s family as well as her own. Inspired by Israeli director Nadav Lapid’s 2014 film of the same name, Sara Colangelo’s beautifully realized second feature makes some noteworthy pivots from Lapid’s, while still asking a complex question without easy answers: How do we preserve the natural talents of our generation’s Mozarts amid the spoils of our modern world?

—Joe Bowman Fri Sat

Oct 12 Oct 13

6:45pm 11:30am

Rafael Lark

IN A SSOCIATION WITH SAN FR ANCISCO SILENT FILM FE S TI VAL AN D MARIN MUSEUM OF CONTEMPOR ARY ART

Rafael Larkspur Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH JE WISH FILM INS TITUTE

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

BIOMARIN PHARMACEUTICAL INC.

142

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

LEMONADE

LITTLE WOODS

LONG TIME COMING: A 1955 BASEBALL STORY

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Romania/Canada/Germany/Sweden 2018 • 88 min

US 2018 • 105 min

US 2018 • 87 min

Director/Screenwriter Nia DaCosta Producers Rachael Fung, Gabrielle Nadig, Tim Headington Cinematographer Matt Mitchell Editor Catrin Hedstrom Cast Tessa Thompson, Lily James, Luke Kirby, James Badge Dale, Lance Reddick Print Source Neon

Director/Cinematographer Jon Strong Screenwriters Jon Strong, Ted Haddock, John King, Mike Quinn, Jr. Producers Ted Haddock, John King, Tighe Arnold Editors Jon Strong, Drew Walkup, Mike Quinn, Jr. Cast Hank Aaron, Cal Ripken, Jr., Gary Sheffield, Davey Johnson, Andrew Young, Stewart Hall Print Source Jon Strong

Director Ioana Uricaru Screenwriters Tatiana Ionascu, Ioana Uricaru Producers Eike Goreczka, Yanick Létourneau, Cristian Mungiu Cinematographer Friede Clausz Editor Mircea Olteanu Cast Mălina Manovici, Steve Bacic, Dylan Scott Smith, Milan Hurduc, Ruxandra Maniu Print Source Mongrel

M In English and Romanian with English subtitles Writer-director Ioana Uricaru gives voice to many that face the harsh and often unfair realities of the immigration process with this drama drawn from real-life events. Mara (Mălina Manovici, Graduation), an immigrant nurse from Romania waiting for her green card, is doing everything she can to live out her part of the American Dream. She’s working towards having a home, helping her new husband recuperate from illness, and teaching her son English so he can get a good education. But following the rules has only led to bitter setback after setback: The US immigration officer overseeing her case tries to exploit her, she is counting on insurance money that may never arrive to pay for her child’s education, and her spouse is a loose cannon. Feeling helpless as she tries to fight the system while still operating within it, Mara must navigate American culture while managing to save her dignity in the process. —Angelique Smith Fri Sun

Oct 12 Oct 14

8:45pm 2:00pm

Larkspur Rafael

FOCUS: BLACK IS She “forgot to be scared”—that’s how Ollie (rising superstar Tessa Thompson) got caught the first time, for being a drug dealer of Canadian meds in the North Dakota oil and gas boomtown she calls home. Since going straight and switching to dealing hot coffee, clean laundry, and quips with the lonely local roustabouts, Ollie’s gotten plenty scared—of losing the house her mother left her, about making it through her probation, of blowing a job interview. When her estranged sister Deb (a shape-shifting Lily James) comes to her with a desperate plea, Ollie talks herself into one last big score. First-time writer-director Nia DaCosta shapes a taut anti-western about sisterly bonds within a gray landscape of men and industry. Though the villains are intractable—opiate addiction, the broken US healthcare system, exploitation of the land and people—the performances of Thompson and James blaze through the bleakness. —Lucy Laird

M

Fri Oct 5 Sat Oct 6 Thur Oct 11

4:00pm 8:00pm 11:45am

Sequoia Rafael Sequoia

FOCUS: BLACK IS This stirring, deeply emotional documentary explores how one ball game transformed a group of kids and offered hope for a country struggling with racial tensions and inequality. In 1955, two Florida teams squared off in a contest with historic ramifications. One of the first integrated Little League games, the Pensacola Jaycees vs. the Orlando Kiwanis wasn’t just a simple battle on the diamond; it offered hope that a color-blind world might be right around the corner. Of course, that didn’t happen. Six decades later, players from both dugouts talk about the impact of that game and their complicated journeys, as filmmaker Jon Strong puts human faces on the festering problem of American racism. Beautiful, tragic, and optimistic, Long Time Coming features diverse voices of civil rights leaders; Hall of Fame ballplayers, including Hank Aaron and Cal Ripken, Jr.; and a handful of men who’ve lived through turbulent times and found hope. —Brendan Peterson Wed Oct 10 Fri Oct 12

8:45pm 3:00pm

Larkspur Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH MILL VALLE Y LIT TLE LE AGUE

SPONSORED BY

CPi DEVELOPERS

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M Mind the Gap

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143


FILMS

THE LOST CITY OF THE MONKEY GOD

MARIA BY CALLAS

MOVING STORIES

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US 2018 • 100 min

France 2017 • 113 min

US 2018 • 85 min

Director Bill Benenson Screenwriters Jenny Hollowell, Doug Preston Producers Bill Benenson, Laurie Benenson Cinematographer Lucian Read Editor Sam Lee Print Source Benenson Productions

Director Tom Volf Producers Gaël Leiblang, Emma Lepers, Tom Volf Editor Janice Jones Cast Maria Callas Print Source Sony Pictures Classics

Director Rob Fruchtman Screenwriter Cornelia Ravenal Producers Mikael Södersten, Cornelia Ravenal, Wendy Sax Cinematographers Lex Fletcher, Shakeb Ahmed Editors Rob Fruchtman, Mikael Södersten Print Source Argot Pictures

For centuries, rumors of a lost ancient city in the jungles of Honduras have circulated, suffused in folklore and piquing the interest of anthropologists and adventurers alike. For decades, Steve Elkins has been one such explorer, whose efforts to unearth such a momentous find have been hampered time and again by politics, hurricanes, drug cartels, and finances. Will this mystery remain as impenetrable as that dense expanse of jungle terrain? Newly armed with a film crew and cutting-edge laser mapping technology, Elkin’s most recent attempt at uncovering this fabled Mayan kingdom is documented in director Bill Benenson’s real-life epic of relentless drive and elusive archeology. But the closer the team gets, the greater the stakes… and the bigger the snakes. Is this all in the name of academic inquiry, or are there heavier ethical implications at play? For every twist and turn, this tale is centuries in the making. US PREMIERE —Sterling Hedgpeth Mon Oct 8 Tue Oct 9

8:45pm 6:15pm

Sequoia Larkspur

M In English, French, and Italian with English subtitles The story of Maria Callas, one of the 20th century’s greatest sopranos, is a revelation. Drawing on a lifetime of interviews, first-time director Tom Volf allows Callas to speak for herself, unencumbered by other perspectives or the gossip that painted her colorful life. The New York-born daughter of Greek immigrants, Callas says of her early days: “Children should have a wonderful childhood, and I didn’t.” In 1937, at 13, she moved to Greece, enrolling in the Conservatoire of Athens. Smiling, Callas says, “I was supposed to be 17. This was my first lie.” Soon, Maria became Callas, and that phenomenal voice inspired the world. She speaks of her struggles with exhaustion and depression, of canceled performances. Of love: “My affair with [Aristotle] Onassis was a failure, but my friendship with him was a success.” And, as much as the film is in her own words, it’s also in her own voice. And oh, that voice... Where words cease, music begins. —Zoë Elton Thur Oct 11 Sun Oct 14

6:30pm 8:15pm

Rafael Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S IN A SSOCIATION WITH FRENCH HERITAGE SOCIE T Y OF NORTHERN C ALIFORNIA AN D MARINARTS

In English, Arabic, Hindi, Korean, and Romanian with English subtitles Six dancers break through culture and language barriers to inspire at-risk youth across the world in award-winning filmmaker Ron Fruchtman’s (Sweet Dreams, MVFF 2012) compelling documentary. “Dancing to Connect” is a project of New York’s Battery Dance Company that takes the universal language of dance to India, Romania, and South Korea. Week-long workshops culminate in heartfelt performances before the young students’ communities. Beyond the workshops, members of the dance company foster a potent mentorship with a hip hop dancer in Iraq, further testimony to the uplifting power of movement. Candid interviews in this well-paced documentary grant audiences an intimate view of the project through the eyes of teachers and students. In the current climate of world events, there is no more perfect prescription to soothe the soul than Moving Stories. —Jennie Adler PRECEDED BY

THE SCHOOL OF HONK US 2018 • 11 min Director Patrick Johnson

Join the fun as this boisterous film profiles a lively community street band that has room for everyone. Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8 Wed Oct 10

11:45am 10:15am 6:00pm

Sequoia Rafael* Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH ROCO DANCE

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public

144

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SPONSORED BY

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FILMS FILMS

MUG

MUSEO

NON-FICTION

(TWARZ)

(DOUBLES VIES)

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Poland 2018 • 91 min

Mexico 2018 • 115 min

France 2018 • 108 min

Director Małgorzata Szumowska Screenwriters Michal Englert, Małgorzata Szumowska Producers Małgorzata Szumowska, Jacek Drosio, Michal Englert Cinematographer Michal Englert Editor Jacek Drosio Cast Mateusz Kościukiewicz, Agnieszka Podsiadlik, Małgorzata Gorol, Roman Gancarczyk Print Source Memento Films

Director Alonso Ruizpalacios Screenwriters Manuel Alcalá, Alonso Ruizpalacios Producers Gael García Bernal, Brian Cox, Manuel Alcalá Cinematographer Damián García Editor Yibran Asuad Cast Gael García Bernal, Leonardo Ortizgris, Alfredo Castro, Simon Russell Beale Print Source Vitagraph Films

Director/Screenwriter Olivier Assayas Producer Charles Gillibert Cinematographer Yorick Le Saux Editor Simon Jacquet Cast Juliette Binoche, Guillaume Canet, Vincent Macaigne, Christa Théret, Pascal Greggory Print Source IFC Films

M In Polish with English subtitles A giant statue of Christ—”bigger than the one in Rio,” chortles the parish priest—serves as the symbolic lookout for the manifold smalltown hypocrisies on view in Małgorzata Szumowska’s Mug, winner of the Silver Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival. Jacek (Mateusz Kościukiewicz, Walesa: Man of Hope, MVFF 2013), a cheerfully shaggy, Metallica-loving construction worker, has just proposed to his girlfriend when a devastating accident results in facial reconstruction that renders him almost unrecognizable, even to himself. Szumowska (Body, MVFF 2015) uses this tragedy as the jumping-off point for exposing the shortcomings of the people who surround the suffering Jacek. Alongside a trenchant (and often darkly funny) cultural critique of a rapidly modernizing society that is only concerned with surface appearances, Mug offers a memorably iconoclastic protagonist who faces down the various indignities thrust upon him, refusing to let his altered appearance change who he is inside. —Rod Armstrong

V In Spanish and English with English sub-

Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

8:00pm 8:15pm

Lark Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH POLISH CULTUR AL INS TITUTE NE W YORK

titles With choruses of charm and suspense, director Alonso Ruizpalacios (Güeros) steals the muse from museum in this mesmerizing thriller, the Best Screenplay award winner at the Berlin International Film Festival. Inspired by a notorious 1985 art heist that resulted in the theft of more than 100 Mesoamerican and Mayan artifacts from Mexico’s National Museum of Anthropology, Museo follows perpetual students Juan (Gael García Bernal) and Wilson (Leonardo Ortizgris), the unlikely culprits behind the scandal that rocked a nation. Are they acting on behalf of the Mayan gods, or just acting out? Who gets to decide if it’s preservation or if it’s plundering? Clarity and objectivity are obscured with precision through Ruizpalacios’ lucid dreamlike camera as we hear the poetic reminiscing of a wiser Wilson’s narration and joyfully cringe at the magnetism of García Bernal at his most devilishly comedic as a moody bandito. —Delfin Vigil Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

2:00pm 8:30pm

Rafael Lark

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF ME X ICO IN A SSOCIATION WITH ALMA A SSOCIATION OF L ATINO L AW Y ERS MARIN

In French with English subtitles The thorny relationship between art, literature, and commerce has never been more seductive than in French auteur Olivier Assayas’ latest comedy of manners. Having explored the worlds of stage and screen in Clouds of Sils Maria (MVFF 2014) and fashionista celebrity culture in Personal Shopper (MVFF 2016), Assayas turns his sly gaze to the fantasies and foibles of publishing in Non-Fiction. As the bed-hopping, charmingly opinionated Parisians at the heart of the film analyze the future of digital media (often in flagrante), they express their grief—in spirited (and spirit-drenched) discussion—over the death of the printed word. Featuring the ever-luminous Juliette Binoche, as a pasther-prime primetime TV star, alongside magnificent Guillaume Canet as a suave book publisher and philandering husband; and the show-stealer Vincent Macaigne as a hilariously obsequious has-been author whose self-pitying demeanor belies a rapscallion of the lowest order. Funny, wry, and sophisticated, Non-Fiction is essential viewing for bibliophiles and cinephiles of all stripes. —Joe Bowman Wed Oct 10 Fri Oct 12

8:15pm 3:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S CFI FRENCH CINEMA SPONSOR T V5MON DE

A Active Cinema

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145


FILMS

NORTHERN WIND

OBEY

ONE VOICE

WORLD CINEMA

MUSIC

(VENT DU NORD)

WORLD CINEMA France/Tunisia 2017 • 91 min

Director Walid Mattar Screenwriters Leyla Bouzid, Claude Le Pape, Walid Mattar Producers Saïd Hamich, Imed Marzouk, Anthony Rey Cinematographer Martin Rit Editor Lilian Corbeille Cast Philippe Rebbot, Mohamed Amine Hamzaoui, Corinne Masiero, Kacey Mottet Klein, Abir Bennani Zarouni, Khaled Brahni Print Source Be For Films In French and Arabic with English subtitles A tale of two relatable working stiffs in the 21st century, this debut film breaks global capitalism down into its component human truths and consequences with lucid clarity and gentle humor. In France, hangdog Hervé loses his factory job when the work moves overseas. Young Foued in Tunisia nabs a spot stamping leather in the relocated factory, but quickly realizes the job is still just work—boring and underpaid. The narrative crisscrosses the ocean separating the two men, weaving patterns and parallels that bind them together. Hervé starts a fishing business with his son, but gets bogged down in French bureaucracy; Foued dreams of becoming shop manager, but finds the job’s real benefit is commuting with comely co-worker Karima. As the intercutting quickens, the two lives start to blend. The film backs up its ideas with strong performances and inventive camerawork, portraying bluecollar life without sentimentality. “It’s total crap,” Hervé exclaims in the opening scene; and yet he and Foued keep dreaming and trying nonetheless. US PREMIERE —Monica Nolan Thur Oct 11 Sat Oct 13

6:00pm 11:15am

UK 2018 • 96 min

Director/Screenwriter Jamie Jones Producers Emily Jones, Ross Williams Cinematographer Albert Salas Editor Agnieszka Liggett Cast Marcus Rutherford, Sophie Kennedy Clark, Sam Gittens, T’Nia Miller, Jay Walker Print Source Wide Management FOCUS: BLACK IS Adjusting to life outside the foster care system proves challenging for 19-year-old East Londoner Leon, whose aimless friends are a toxic influence, while his tippler mum seems to need mothering even more than he does. Unable to find steady work, his sole comfort is time spent at the boxing gym. When he meets the free-spirited and high-minded Twiggy (Sophie Kennedy Clark, Nymphomaniac), Leon sees a viable escape from his dead-end existence. But as tensions mount after an unarmed Black man is murdered by police, the streets descend into a war zone, and Leon must choose where his allegiances lie. In his first feature film, writer-director Jamie Jones balances a powerful coming-of-age story with a fiery recreation of the class and racial divide that led to the 2011 London riots. As Leon, newcomer Marcus Rutherford is a knockout, mixing imposing intensity with raw-nerve vulnerability in this unforgettable film. —Jesse Knight Fri Oct 5 Mon Oct 8

6:00pm Larkspur 12:30pm Rafael

Larkspur Rafael

US 2018 • 64 min

Director/Cinematographer Spencer Wilkinson Producers Mark DeSaulnier, Jed Riffe Editors Jesse Andrew Clark, Angela Reginato Cast Terrance Kelly, Nicolia Gooding, Dan Strauss, Vernon Staggers, Isa Chu Print Source Jed Riffe Films Black gospel singing lives at the heart of the church experience, an expression of spirit and the deliverance of a message of faith, hope, and joy. There is a place for everyone in the song, a place in which harmony is not just the simultaneous playing or singing of notes to produce chords, but also a place of concord, the sound of one. No place is this more evident than with the Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir. One Voice is a joyous expression of this oneness, exploring the lives of four members of the choir and its artistic director Terrance Kelly. In existence for three decades, the choir is composed of singers from diverse faiths, races, socioeconomic backgrounds, genders, and lifestyles, creating a place of inclusion and acceptance for singers and audience alike. The choir is a radiant manifestation of what is possible when people come together, a balm for our times. WORLD PREMIERE —Melissa Howden Wed Oct 10 Sat Oct 13

6:00pm 2:15pm

Sequoia* Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH OAK L AN D INTERFAITH GOSPEL CHOIR AN D OAK L AN D MUSEUM OF C ALIFORNIA

*Live music event to follow at Sweetwater. Separate ticket required. See page 99 for details.

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S CFI FRENCH CINEMA SPONSOR T V5MON DE

SPONSORED BY

FOUR POINTS BY SHERATON 146

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FILMS FILMS

THE PARTING GLASS

PET NAMES

PETERLOO

US CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 95 min

US 2018 • 76 min

UK /US 2018 • 154 min

Director Stephen Moyer Screenwriter Denis O’Hare Producers Cerise Larkin, Stephen Moyer, Anna Paquin Cinematographer Guy Godfree Editor Todd Sandler Cast Denis O’Hare, Melissa Leo, Cynthia Nixon, Anna Paquin, Ed Asner, Rhys Ifans Print Source Dark Star Pictures

Director Carol Brandt Screenwriter Meredith Johnston Producers Carol Brandt, Suzanne Jurva, Chris James Thompson Cinematographer Dana Shihadah Editors Carol Brandt, Chris James Thompson Cast Meredith Johnston, Rene Cruz Print Source Simple DCP

Director/Screenwriter Mike Leigh Producer Georgina Lowe Cinematographer Dick Pope Editor Jon Gregory Cast Rory Kinnear, Maxine Peake, Pearce Quigley, David Moorst, Rachel Finnegan Print Source Amazon Studios

SPECIAL PREMIERE M FOCUS: QUEER-ISH An unexpected death. A family struggling with grief. An apprehensive cross-country road trip in winter. These events set the stage for a powerful, nuanced, and emotionally resonant drama centering on a family pilgrimage to the apartment of Colleen (Anna Paquin) after her demise. The Parting Glass follows siblings Dan (Denis O’Hare), Mare (Cynthia Nixon), and Ally (Melissa Leo) as they reunite with their father (Ed Asner) and Colleen’s estranged husband (Rhys Ifans). The wonderful rapport of the stellar powerhouse cast makes them instantly believable as family—talking over each other, or bickering about something as simple as ordering breakfast, imbuing the film with an aura of honesty and tenderness in a deeply moving portrait of loss. This impressive directorial debut from acclaimed actor Stephen Moyer reunites him with fellow True Blood stars Paquin, who also co-produced, and O’Hare, who wrote the screenplay based on his own experience coping with his sister’s suicide. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE

M With a quiet, meditative sensibility, this

—Elliott Breeden Sat Sun Fri

Oct 6 Oct 7 Oct 12

6:45pm 3:30pm 9:00pm

contemplative favorite from the SXSW Film Festival follows twentysomething grad school dropout Leigh as she escapes to the woods on a camping trip, taking a break from caring for her ailing mother. With no one else to join her, her ex-beau Cam tags along with his guitar and greying pug, and together they traverse the leafy environs on a whiskey-fueled weekend. Written by and starring Meredith Johnston as Leigh, and based on her own life experience, the film’s dialogue crackles with emotional authenticity as Leigh and Cam philosophize and confront old wounds, navigating the ghosts of their pasts. Shot amidst the dusks, rivers, and cornfields of director Carol Brandt’s native Wisconsin, Pet Names tracks a strong but confused young woman’s struggle for serenity while managing the pressures of complex relationships with her friends and family.

—Natalie Mulford Fri Sat

Oct 5 Oct 6

6:15pm 5:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

Writer-director Mike Leigh (MVFF Tributee 2004) delivers a masterful epic with this sweeping panoramic journey through a little-known moment of England’s inglorious past that melds the stunning visual artistry of Mr. Turner (MVFF 2014) with the gritty realism of his earlier, committed social dramas like Secrets & Lies (MVFF 1996). Food shortages, diminishing wages, and chronic unemployment dog 19th century Manchester, England, despite its importance as a hub of the Industrial Age. In frustration, thousands of men, women, and children gather at the city’s St. Peter’s Field on August 16, 1819 to hear orator Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) demand reforms—only to be met by violent force. Leigh gracefully juggles multiple viewpoints: those of the powerful in London and Manchester, everyday Mancunian families struggling to survive, newspapermen trying to sway opinion, and the activists and radicals demanding change. Dick Pope’s expressive cinematography, Gary Yershon’s haunting score, and a brilliant cast of character actors bring history to vivid life.

—Pam Grady Thur Oct 11 Sun Oct 14

8:45pm 8:00pm

Sequoia Rafael

Sequoia Rafael Larkspur

SPONSORED BY

MARIN MAGAZINE

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M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

147


FILMS

PITY

A PRIVATE WAR

RAFIKI

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Greece/Poland 2018 • 99 min

US/UK 2018 • 106 min

Director Babis Makridis Screenwriters Efthimis Filippou, Babis Makridis Producers Amanda Livanou, Christos V. Konstantakopoulos, Klaudia Śmieja Cinematographer Konstantinos Koukoulios Editor Yannis Chalkiadakis Cast Yannis Drakopoulos, Evi Saoulidou, Nota Tserniafski, Makis Papadimitriou, Georgina Chryskioti, Evdoxia Androulidaki Print Source New Europe Film Sales

Director Matthew Heineman Screenwriters Arash Amel, Marie Brenner Producers Matthew Heineman, Charlize Theron, Basil Iwanyk Cinematographer Robert Richardson Editor Nick Fenton Cast Rosamund Pike, Jamie Dornan, Stanley Tucci, Tom Hollander, Alexandra Moen Print Source Aviron Pictures

Kenya/South Africa/France/Nor way/ Netherlands/Germany 2018 • 82 min

(OIKTOS)

In Greek with English subtitles There are grief-stricken men, and then there’s the hero of Greek filmmaker Babis Makridis’ biting satire, Pity: an unnamed lawyer (Yannis Drakopoulos, Chevalier) whose wife is comatose. Between trips to the hospital to visit his unconscious spouse, he spends his days taking care of his son in their lavish apartment, enjoying the Mediterranean seaside, and accepting tea and sympathy from concerned friends. Soon, he realizes that he’s starting to enjoy the kind of attention and gifts that his wife’s ailment is bringing to him, and that’s when the black comedy really kicks into gear. Birthed from the same cinematic new wave that’s given us Yorgos Lanthimos (The Lobster) and Athina Rachel Tsangari (Attenberg), this deadpan take on the addictive qualities of the sorrow and the pity—which Makridis co-wrote with Lanthimos’ regular screenwriting collaborator Efthymis Filippou—is the perfect introduction to a bold new cinematic voice. —David Fear Sun Tue

Oct 7 Oct 9

3:30pm 3:30pm

Lark Rafael

OPENING NIGHT M Four years after her Oscar ® -nominated breakthrough role in Gone Girl, Rosamund Pike delivers a breathtaking, career-defining performance in A Private War, transforming herself into the gravel-voiced, eye patchdonning American war correspondent Marie Colvin. Spanning nearly two decades, this powerful drama, which marks the narrative feature debut from Oscar-nominated director Matthew Heineman (Cartel Land), showcases the fearless dedication that pushes Colvin to the top of her otherwise male-dominated field, reporting from the dangerous frontlines of the Sri Lankan civil war and the Arab Spring. But that hyper focused, singular passion isn’t without a price, taking a toll on Colvin’s personal relationships as well as putting her own safety in jeopardy. Co-starring Stanley Tucci, Tom Hollander (In the Loop), and Jamie Dornan as Colvin’s trusted photo journalist partner Paul Conroy, A Private War is a gripping testament to both Colvin’s tenaciousness and Pike’s dedication to her craft. US PREMIERE —Diane de Monx Thur Oct 4 Thur Oct 4

7:00pm 7:45pm

Rafael Larkspur

Director Wanuri Kahiu Screenwriters Jenna Cato Bass, Wanuri Kahiu Producer Steven Markovitz Cinematographer Christopher Wessels Editors Isabelle Dedieu, Ronelle Loots Cast Patricia Amira, Muthoni Gathecha, Jimmy Gathu, Nice Githinji, Charlie Karumi, Patricia Kihoro Print Source Film Movement

M FOCUS: QUEER-ISH | TEENS&20s

In English and Swahili with English subtitles Life in Nairobi is pretty simple for Kena: Make good marks in school, help her father as he runs for local office, take care of her forlorn mother, and play football with her guy friends. Though the lanky, androgynous teenager is more likely to be seen skateboarding around her housing estate than donning dresses like a “proper lady,” somehow no one ever questions her sexuality…possibly not even Kena herself. But when the beautiful pink-dreadlocked Ziki, the daughter of her father’s political rival, catches Kena’s eye, a world of possibilities opens up. As they share dreams of breaking free of familial and cultural expectations, it’s not long before local gossips’ tongues start wagging. And in a place where homosexuality is blamed on demon possession, being true to yourself can have dangerous consequences. Banned in Kenya for “legitimizing lesbianism,” this sweet, coming-ofage love story—the first Kenyan film to ever play at Cannes—is a revelation and an inspiration for all ages and genders. —Angelique Smith Fri Sat

Oct 12 Oct 13

6:00pm 8:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF GERMAN Y IN A SSOCIATION WITH FR AMELINE

148

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SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

WELLS FARGO

JIM BOYCE TRUST AND KRIS OTIS

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FILMS FILMS

ROMA

SAINT JUDY

SEDER MASOCHISM

WORLD CINEMA

US CINEMA

US CINEMA

Mexico 2018 • 135 min

US 2018 • 106 min

US 2018 • 78 min

Director/Screenwriter/Cinematographer Alfonso Cuarón Producers Gabriela Rodriguez, Alfonso Cuarón, Nicolas Celis Editors Alfonso Cuarón, Adam Gough Cast Yalitza Aparicio, Marina de Tavira, Marco Graf, Daniela Demesa, Carlos Peralta, Nancy García Print Source Netflix

Director Sean Hanish Screenwriter Dmitry Portnoy Producers Sean Hanish, Paul Jaconi-Biery Cinematographer Richard Wong Editor Anita Brandt Burgoyne Cast Michelle Monaghan, Leem Lubany, Common, Alfred Molina, Mykelti Williamson, Alfre Woodard Print Source Cannonball Productions

Director/Screenwriter/Producer/Editor Nina Paley Cast Hiram Paley, Nina Paley, Barry Gray Print Source Nina Paley

CENTERPIECE M V In Spanish with English subtitles Oscar ® winner Alfonso Cuarón (Gravity, Children of Men) returns to his homeland in marvelous style with his first Mexican film since his breakout Y tu mamá también (MVFF 2001). Set in 1970, Roma centers on Cleo (a wonderful Yalitza Aparicio), the indigenous housekeeper to a large Mexico City family. With remarkable attention to detail, Cuarón lovingly captures the energy and textures of his youth, from the movie palaces and slums to the affluent rancheros and crowded hospitals. As Cleo faces her own personal crisis, we also see a country beset with natural disasters and civil unrest. But through it all is the bonding she experiences with three generations of women she works for in a story where compassion, loyalty, and love can transcend differences in class and culture. It’s an emotional epic, filmed (by Cuarón himself) in beautiful black and white with hat tips to Renoir and Fellini. Intensely personal and profoundly moving, Roma is a stunner and deservedly won the Golden Lion at this year’s Venice Film Festival. —Sterling Hedgpeth Mon Oct 8

6:00pm

M An incredibly timely story celebrating te-

nacity and hope in the face of adversity, Saint Judy stars Michelle Monaghan (Mission: Impossible - Fallout) in a tender performance as a real-life immigration attorney who helped change US law to include women as a protected class. After having a vision of arms reaching through the bars of a cell pleading for help, Judy Wood decided to devote herself to immigration law to aid those in need. A single mother in her thirties, Wood started her own firm and, in one of her very first cases, found herself battling established law. Representing an Afghan immigrant who had been persecuted for opening a school for girls, Wood fought her way up to the Ninth Circuit Court and changed asylum law nationwide, finally allowing women to be included as a protected class. Saint Judy effectively recounts Wood’s story in this absorbing biopic, co-starring Alfred Molina, Alfre Woodard, Leem Lubany, and Common. —Elliott Breeden Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

5:30pm 5:30pm

M FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION

In English, French, Bulgarian, Hebrew, and Aramaic with English subtitles A disco-dancing Pharaoh, a crooning Angel of Death, Moses and his chorus line of dancing rams. This isn’t your bubbe’s Passover Seder. The long-awaited second feature from visionary director and animator Nina Paley (Sita Sings the Blues) is an irreverent musical telling of the Book of Exodus, reimagining the freedom of the slaves from Egypt as an eclectic mixtape of funk, rock, and Motown, featuring songs from Pat Boone to Led Zeppelin to Oingo Boingo. With acerbic wit and a resplendent variety of animation styles, Paley’s vision is Schoolhouse Rock by way of Adult Swim, filtered through a feminist prism that derides the patriarchal tenets of the Passover story still rippling through the world today. Hilarious and razor-sharp, Paley’s latest is also achingly personal, incorporating candid conversations with her late father at the end of his life, lending the film a poignant emotional grounding amidst all the Passover madness. US PREMIERE —Jesse Knight Mon Oct 8 Tue Oct 9

6:00pm 8:45pm

Lark Rafael

Rafael Larkspur

Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF ME X ICO

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

MARIN COMMUNITY FOUNDATION

BSSP

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149


FILMS

SERGIO AND SERGEI

SHOPLIFTERS

THE SILENCE OF OTHERS

(MANBIKI KAZOKU)

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Cuba/Spain 2017 • 93 min

Japan 2018 • 121 min

Spain 2018 • 96 min

Director Ernesto Daranas Serrano Screenwriters Ernesto Daranas Serrano, Marta Daranas Producers Jaume Roures, Joel Ortega, Ramón Samada Cinematographer Alejandro Menéndez Editor Jorge Miguel Quevedo Cast Tomás Cao, Héctor Noas Uriza, Ron Perlman Print Source West End Films

Director/Screenwriter/Producer/Editor Hirokazu Kore-eda Cinematographer Kondo Ryuto Cast Franky Lily, Matsuoka Mayu, Jyo Kairi, Ando Sakura, Kiki Kilin, Sasaki Miyu Print Source Magnolia Pictures

Directors/Producers Robert Bahar, Almudena Carracedo Cinematographer Almudena Carracedo Editors Kim Roberts, Ricardo Acosta Cast n/a Print Source Cinephil

V In Spanish, Russian, and English with Eng-

lish subtitles Based on a true story, this whimsical and lighthearted tale remains grounded in human struggles and emotions through the eyes and ears of Sergio (Tomás Cao, Viva), a young Cuban art professor and ham radio operator. Opening with a long zoom from outer space down to Earth, a lone figure rides his bicycle on the streets of Havana circa 1991 as Fidel Castro proclaims the continuation of the Cuban Revolution over the radio, even as the Soviet Union collapses. Sergio eagerly reaches out to the wider world, making friends on both sides of the Cold War, including Sergei, a Soviet cosmonaut orbiting alone on the Mir space station, and Peter (Ron Perlman), an American journalist in New York. Though the special effects are low-budget, they are terrific in recreating the interstellar world. Back on Earth, the film depicts Havana continuing to glow in gorgeous light and colors even as electrical blackouts, government surveillance, and goods shortages leave many Cubans restless and longing for escape. —Brian Karl Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

In Japanese with English subtitles Master filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda (Like Father, Like Son; After the Storm, MVFF 2016) often focuses on the tenuous bonds of family in his intimate dramas, but that theme has rarely been expressed as beautifully as it is in this quietly devastating gem. The winner of the Cannes Film Festival’s Palme d’Or, Shoplifters concerns Osamu (Kore-eda regular Lily Franky), a kindly, elderly patriarch living in poverty who steals to make ends meet. When he and his son stumble upon a scared, abused little girl, Osamu decides to take her into his makeshift home—but is it a kidnapping or a rescue? Shoplifters wrestles with that question as it explores each member of Osamu’s extended family, showing how no two characters’ relationship is the same. Fans of Kore-eda’s hushed storytelling style will find a movie that’s uncommonly lovely and bittersweet, and for the uninitiated, Shoplifters is a marvelous place to become acquainted with one of international cinema’s most compassionate voices. —Tim Grierson

M V In Spanish with English subtitles Since the death of Spain’s General Franco in 1975, the victims of his 40-year dictatorship have been awaiting justice for the crimes committed against them and their families. The 1976 “Pact of Forgetting,” an amnesty law meant to erase the county’s troubled history, did little to bridge the divide between victims and perpetrators, as it absolved both political prisoners and fascist henchmen of any wrongdoing. This award-winning and poignant documentary, executive produced by Pedro and Agustín Almodóvar, illustrates how a grassroots effort to bring those guilty of crimes against humanity to justice blossomed into a national movement of remembrance and, ultimately, forgiveness. Aided by human rights lawyers and the now-elderly plaintiffs, an Argentine judge battles the Spanish government and time itself to undo decades of state-imposed amnesia. The testimonies of the victims, set against the starkly beautiful Spanish countryside, are a powerful indictment of the country’s dark past of tyranny and oppression. —Victoria Jaschob

Sat Tue

Fri Sat

Oct 6 Oct 9

5:00pm 3:00pm

Lark Rafael

6:00pm Lark 12:00pm Rafael

Oct 5 Oct 6

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

SOL FOOD

JIM BOYCE TRUST AND KRIS OTIS

A Active Cinema

Lark Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF SPAIN

IN A SSOCIATION WITH PL A Z ACUBA

150

8:15pm 7:30pm

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

THE SILENT REVOLUTION

SIR

SOFIA

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Germany 2018 • 111 min

India/France 2018 • 96 min

France/Qatar 2018 • 80 min

Director/Screenwriter Lars Kraume Producers Miriam Düssel, Susanne Freyer Cinematographer Jens Harant Editor Barbara Gies Cast Leonard Scheicher, Tom Gramenz, Lena Klenke, Isaiah Michalski, Jonas Dassler, Ronald Zehrfeld Print Source Pyramide Films

Director/Screenwriter Rohena Gera Producers Rohena Gera, Brice Poisson Cinematographer Dominique Colin Editor Jacques Comets Cast Tillotama Shome, Vivek Gomber, Geetanjali Kulkarni, Rahul Vohra, Divya Seth Shah, Chandrachoor Rai Print Source mk2 Films

Director/Screenwriter Meryem Benm’Barek Producer Olivier Delbosc Cinematographer Son Doan Editor Céline Perreard Cast Maha Alemi, Lubna Azabal, Sarah Perles, Faouzi Bensaïdi, Hamza Khafif, Nadia Niazi Print Source Be For Films

FOCUS: TEENS&20s In German and Russian with English subtitles Director Lars Kraume (The People vs. Fritz Bauer) crafts another poignant and gripping portrait of mid-1950s Germany with The Silent Revolution. Two teenage boys sneak into a West German movie theater hoping to get a glimpse of their favorite pin-up, but come away bowled over by a newsreel depiction of Hungarian students taking to the streets in an effort to drive out the Soviet forces occupying their country. The actions of youth not much older than themselves inspires the teens and their classmates to make their own gesture of solidarity—two minutes of silence during class. To their surprise, this small act of defiance precipitates a chain of events that will test their friendships, their principles, the bonds of family, and the power structures that underlie the post-Nazi Soviet occupation. Remarkable performances by a new generation of German talent animate this powerful period drama with haunting parallels to our own era of creeping fascism. —Michael LoPresti

M In Hindi, English, and Marathi with English subtitles Movie romance doesn’t have to be all steamy clinches and sweep-youoff-your-feet orchestral crescendos. Sometimes, as in Rohena Gera’s first fiction feature about the growing affection between a live-in maid and her well-off employer, it can be nothing more fervid than private moments of mutual understanding and shy, sweet looks of longing and desire. Sir follows tender-aged widow Ratna from rural India as she moves to the big city with dreams of becoming a fashion designer. Working hard as a housekeeper in Ashwin’s swanky Mumbai high-rise apartment, Ratna sends money home for a younger sister’s studies while warding off criticism from in-laws as she seeks to develop her skills through an apprenticeship with a tailor. Meanwhile, Ashwin is trapped in a box of privilege’s making. Delicately observed, Sir limns the social and economic chasm between these two unlikely hearts. Whether or not they are united in the end is less important than each one’s quiet determination to break free from the narrow bounds of their class and gender-based expectations. US PREMIERE —Shari Kizirian

M In French and Arabic with English subtitles Sofia is a confident, assured, and naturalistic debut from Moroccan-born, Belgian-educated writer-director Meryem Benm’Barek. At her parents’ comfortable, middle class home in Casablanca, 20-yearold Sofia leaves the table, doubled over in pain. When her cousin Lena, a medical student, comes to check on her, she asks Sofia the loaded question: “When was your last period?” Suffering from pregnancy denial, Sofia has been completely oblivious to her own state. Thinking quickly, Lena discreetly takes Sofia to a hospital and uses her connections to get her checked in to give birth. Under Moroccan law, having a baby out of wedlock is punishable by up to a year in jail, and the hospital gives Sofia twenty-four hours to name the father. Sofia finds herself forced to weigh the grave consequences of telling the truth, not only to authorities but to her family. Benm’Barek took home the Best Screenplay award in the Un Certain Regard section at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. —Elliott Breeden

(DAS SCHWEIGENDE KLASSENZIMMER)

Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

2:30pm 6:15pm

Sequoia Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF GERMAN Y

Wed Oct 10 Thur Oct 11

9:00pm 3:00pm

Rafael Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH GOE THE- INS TITUT/ BERLIN & BE YON D FILM FE S TI VAL

Thur Oct 11 Sun Oct 14

8:45pm 11:30am

Larkspur Rafael

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S CFI FRENCH CINEMA SPONSOR T V5MON DE IN A SSOCIATION WITH ALLIANCE FR ANÇ AISE DE SAN FR ANCISCO

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

151


FILMS

SOMETHING IS HAPPENING

STAY HUMAN

SUPA MODO

WORLD CINEMA

MUSIC

FAMILY FILMS/WORLD CINEMA

France 2018 • 101 min

US 2018 • 94 min

Germany/Kenya 2018 • 78 min

Director Anne Alix Screenwriters Anne Alix, Alexis Galmot Producer Thomas Ordonneau Cinematographer Aurélien Py Editor Anna Riche Cast Lola Dueñas, Bojena Horackova Print Source Shellac

Director/Producer Michael Franti Cinematographers Anthony Thoen, John Roderick Editors John Roderick, Anthony Thoen Print Source Michael Franti

Director Likarion Wainaina Screenwriters Wanjeri Gakuru, Silas Miami, Kamau Wa Ndung’u, Mugambi Nthiga Producers Sarika Hemi Lakhani, Marie SteinmannTykwer Cinematographer Enos Olik Editor Charity Kuria Cast Stycie Waweru, Marrianne Nungo, Nyawara Ndambia Print Source Juno Films

(IL SE PASSE QUELQUE CHOSE)

M In French with English subtitles Aquama-

rine seas, tucked-away beaches, pink salt lagoons, lavender-covered roundabouts— this is the dreamy stuff of the gay-friendly guidebook that free-spirited Dolores (frequent Almodóvar collaborator Lola Dueñas) is struggling to write as she drives through Provence. Enter the bereft, middle-aged Irma, with a splash… her suicide thwarted when Dolores pulls her out of the water. The two hit the road together, meandering through a southern France much more complex than its postcard picturesqueness. Through the prism of this tenuous new friendship between outsiders, we are offered glimpses of something happening in this sunny landscape, but what? A meditation, a transformation, an initiation? Director Anne Alix’s beautiful, mysterious film is all of those things. Immigrants pick fruit and tend sheep, can sardines and weld pipes, swim and dance, but they are also trying to make something happen, to survive, to find happiness, to connect. Dolores’s GPS exhorts, “Take the exit. Take the exit.” Yes, do. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE —Lucy Laird Fri Sat

Oct 5 Oct 6

8:30pm 2:30pm

Larkspur Lark

WITH SUPPORT FROM THE CULTUR AL SERV ICE S OF THE FRENCH EMBA SS Y IN THE UNITED S TATE S

A What does it mean to be human? What connects people around the globe? How can we celebrate the beauty of love and life in a world turned upside down? These are just a few of the questions world-renowned musician Michael Franti explores in this captivating and stirring documentary. Through his socially conscious work in Spearhead, Bay Area-based artist Franti has dedicated his life to speaking up for the underrepresented by creating positive energy during chaotic times. This striking film shines a glowing light on people around the world who embrace hope amidst overwhelming challenges. Through stories and songs, Franti captures the energy and drive of a diverse group of inspirational modern-day heroes. From an Indonesian midwife to a young couple battling the ravages of ALS, Franti uncovers the love and humanity possible in dire conditions and exposes his own struggles, creating an emotional resonance that is moving and motivating at once. —Brendan Peterson Mon Oct 8 Fri Oct 12

6:00pm Sequoia* 12:30pm Sequoia

IN A SSOCIATION WITH DO IT FOR THE LOV E

*Live music event to follow at Sweetwater. Separate ticket required. See page 98 for details.

M In English, Kikuyu, and Swahili with English subtitles Superhero dreams are the same in every language: rise, fly, vanquish, triumph! In this utterly charming and beautifully crafted family drama—which won awards at both the Berlin and Edinburgh International Film Festivals—these dreams color the days with joy and hope for a terminally ill girl in coastal Kenya. Home from the hospital, Jo (Stycie Waweru, in a brilliant debut) obediently takes her medicine and bundles herself in layers of blankets, even as the invisible foe she’s battling gains advantage. When left alone, she summons her mind’s powers, creating small bursts of supermagic. Her sister, Mwix, realizes what Jo needs most and sets about transforming their village into Jo’s own superhero realm. With brightly humorous homage to Hollywood and a wonderful view into vibrant community-strong village life, Supa Modo makes you believe–as the greatest tales do– in the superest power of all: love. Age 10+ —Deanna Quinones Thur Oct 11 Sun Oct 14

6:15pm 2:30pm

Sequoia Sequoia

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF GERMAN Y IN A SSOCIATION WITH CHIL DREN FOR CHANGE

CFI FRENCH CINEMA SPONSOR T V5MON DE

SPONSORED BY SPONSORED BY

COMPASS REAL ESTATE 152

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

JIM BOYCE TRUST AND KRIS OTIS AND RESONANCE PHILANTHROPIES

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

THE SWEET REQUIEM

SWIMMING WITH MEN

TIME FOR ILHAN

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

India/US 2018 • 91 min

UK 2018 • 96 min

US 2018 • 89 min

Directors Ritu Sarin, Tenzing Sonam Screenwriter Tenzing Sonam Producers Ritu Sarin, Shrihari Sathe Cinematographer David McFarland Editor Jabeen Merchant Cast Tenzin Dolker, Jampa Kalsang Tamang Print Source White Crane Films

Director Oliver Parker Screenwriter Aschlin Ditta Producers Stewart Le Marechal, Anna Mohr-Pietsch, Maggie Monteith Cinematographer David Raedeker Editor Liana Del Giudice Cast Rob Brydon, Rupert Graves, Jane Horrocks, Daniel Mays, Thomas Turgoose Print Source IFC Films

Director Norah Shapiro Producers Chris Newberry, Norah Shapiro, Jennifer Steinnman Cinematographer Chris Newberry Editors Jen Bradwell, Eli Olson Cast Ilhan Omar Print Source The Film Sales Company

(KYOYANG NGARMO)

In Tibetan with English subtitles A vivid story of exile and memory, Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam’s follow-up to Dreaming Lhasa centers on Dolkar, a young woman living and thriving in North Delhi’s Tibetan refugee colony. Her life is disrupted when a mysterious activist and refugee arrives, invoking recollections and long-suppressed questions about her childhood escape across the Himalayas. Dolkar is thriving. She attends pop dance classes, works a steady job, and celebrates her 25th birthday with a loving group of friends, mostly fellow immigrants from Tibet who also live in Majnu ka Tila, the Tibetan refugee colony in North Delhi. But Dolkar’s deepening friendship with the sweet mustachioed Dorjee takes an unexpected turn when he introduces her to a man he calls Gyatso-La, an alleged political activist and recent escapee from Tibet, triggering haunting memories of Dolkar’s childhood journey through the Himalayas as she left her home in Tibet. As Dolkar gets to know Dorjee and Gyatso-La, parallel stories of past and present begin to unfold, complete with Chinese spies, soldiers on the prowl, and the yearning for family left behind. US PREMIERE —Alexis Whitman Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

5:00pm 2:15pm

Sequoia Larkspur

In the irreverent spirit of The Full Monty, Swimming with Men follows a gang of hardluck misfits who form a men’s synchronized swimming team and then seek redemption the only way they know how: by courting humiliation and competing in the world championships. In truth, the competition is irrelevant, as the film truly celebrates the enduring salve of male companionship in the face of aging, loneliness, failure, death, midlife crisis, and existential ennui. And its central pleasure is watching its bevy of beloved British character actors have a hilarious time bickering, melting down, and ultimately caring for one another while flapping, vanity-free, in the pool. Evocative underwater photography and some genuinely impressive swimming add to the delight as Rob Brydon (The Trip), Daniel Mays (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story), Rupert Graves (Sherlock), Jane Horrocks (Absolutely Fabulous), and more more don their trunks and goggles, making like pudgy mermaids as they learn to swim together. —Jeff Campbell Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10 Fri Oct 12

6:15pm 2:45pm 3:15pm

Sequoia Rafael Sequoia

Navigating multilayered prejudice with grace and grit, Ilhan Omar serves as a voice for the voiceless and an inspiration to the global new wave of women running for public office as she seeks to unseat a 43year incumbent from the Minnesota House of Representatives. If Omar wins the election, she will be the first Somali American elected to a legislature in the United States. A skillful community organizer and young wife and mother, Omar reaches out to those in her district being left behind: Somali and other East African refugees and immigrants dealing with poverty and high unemployment; college students bearing crushing loan debt; and voters seeking more social and environmental justice. This intimate, riveting account of Omar’s 2016 run reflects the national Democratic Party’s chasm between entrenched moderates and younger, more progressive candidates, often female and people of color. The twists and turns of Omar’s trailblazing career amplify the message at this sea change in US politics: Stop asking permission to run. —Carol Harada

A M

Sun Tue

Oct 7 Oct 9

5:30pm 8:30pm

Rafael Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH MARIN COUNT Y YOUNG DEMOCR ATS

IN A SSOCIATION WITH BU D DHIS T FILM FOUN DATION

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

MARIN CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU

THE MARIN INDEPENDENT JOURNAL – NORTH BAY WOMAN MAGAZINE

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

153


FILMS

A TON O’ TOONS

TOO LATE TO DIE YOUNG

TRANSIT

(TARDE PARA MORIR JOVEN)

FAMILY FILMS

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

Total Program 73 min

Chile/Brazil/Argentina/Netherlands/ Qatar 2018 • 110 min

Germany/France 2018 • 101 min

FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION Nonverbal and in English This baker’s dozen of short films from all corners of the globe showcases the incredible imagination and inspiration of today’s talented animators. Bats that live in libraries? Lemurs that fly dirigibles? Posters that come to life? A little girl who lives in a zoo? Lions that need more exercise to catch their prey? A princess who hates royal life? Water buffaloes that give you a ride to school? They’re all here—and so much more: Coin Operated (Nicholas Arioli, US 2017, 5 min), Rouff (Benjamin Brand, Johannes Engelhardt, Markus Eschrich, Johannes Lumer, & Julius Rosen, Germany 2017, 7 min), Dark Dark Woods (Emile Gignoux & Mik Løvenbalch Kirchheiner, Denmark 2017, 6 min), Awaker (Probouzec) (Filip Diviak, Czech Republic 2017, 9 min), Undiscovered (Sara Litzenberger, US 2017, 3 min), A Priori (Maïté Schmitt, France 2017, 6 min), I Want to Live in the Zoo (Evgenia Golubeva, UK 2017, 6 min), Painted (Olivia Derie, Belgium 2017, 4 min), Two Balloons (Mark Smith, US 2017, 9 min), Post No Bills (Robin Hays & Andy Poon, Canada 2017, 5 min), Lion (Löwe) (Julia Ocker, Germany 2018, 4 min), Superperson (Philip Watts, Australia 2017, 2 min), Outdoors (Sarah Chalek, France 2017, 7 min). Age 6+ —Joanne Parsont Sat Fri Sun

Oct 6 Oct 12 Oct 14

11:30am Rafael 10:30am Rafael* 11:45am Lark

*CFI Education screening open to school groups and general public

154

A Active Cinema

Director/Screenwriter Dominga Sotomayor Producers Dominga Sotomayor, Rodrigo Teixeira, Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo Cinematographer Inti Briones Editor Catalina Marín Duarte Cast Demian Hernández, Antar Machado, Magdalena Tótoro, Matías Oviedo, Antonia Zegers Print Source Stray Dogs

M V FOCUS: TEENS&20s In Spanish with English subtitles On the cusp of her blooming sexuality, 16-year-old Sofía (Demian Hernández in an arresting screen debut) relies upon on her younger peers for youthful exploration and companionship. Set during Chile’s tenuous post-dictatorship transition to democracy, Too Late to Die Young follows a group of artistic and bohemian cosmopolitans who have fled the cities and relocated to a mountainous enclave outside Santiago. While the adults focus on daily necessities of life like electricity and plumbing, Sofía oscillates between a need to reconnect with her mother and the powerful discovery of her own allure. Writer-director Dominga Sotomayor (Thursday Till Sunday, MVFF 2012) makes excellent use of the beauty of nature with sunkissed images of the rivers and the forests in the lush surroundings. Too Late to Die Young earned Sotomayor the Best Director prize at this year’s Locarno Film Festival. As the first female director to receive this coveted prize, Sotomayor represents a growing surge of female talent emerging from Chile. —Janis Plotkin Sun Tue Fri

Oct 7 Oct 9 Oct 12

11:15am 3:15pm 3:15pm

Rafael Larkspur Rafael

M Mind the Gap

Director/Screenwriter Christian Petzold Producers Florian Koerner von Gustorf, Michael Weber Cinematographer Hans Fromm bak Editor Bettina Böhler Cast Franz Rogowski, Paula Beer, Godehard Giese, Lilien Batman Print Source Music Box Films In German and French with English subtitles A refugee who has escaped from a prison camp in wartime France, Georg assumes the identity of a dead writer in a desperate attempt to flee to safer shores from the transit port of Marseilles. The ruse brings Georg (Franz Rogowski, In the Aisles, MVFF 2018) into a complicated triangle with the writer’s wife and her lover, all caught in the narrowing noose of a hostile occupation. Despite this classic thriller set-up—the story is based on Annea Seghers’ 1942 novel of the same name, and the film at times selfconsciously echoes Casablanca—savvy director Christian Petzold (Phoenix) boldly resists telling his story as a standard period intrigue. Instead, by shooting Transit in contemporary Marseilles, dressing his characters and sets in a modern idiom, and narrating Georg’s story through an after-the-fact voiceover, Petzold brilliantly creates a kind of timeless purgatory where the plights of refugees, from all eras and lands, start to overlap and blur. —Peter L. Stein Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

8:30pm 11:45am

Sequoia Sequoia

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF GERMAN Y IN A SSOCIATION WITH GOE THE- INS TITUT/ BERLIN & BE YON D FILM FE S TI VAL

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

TWO PLAINS & A FANCY

USE YOUR DELUSION

VIPER CLUB

US CINEMA

MUSIC

US CINEMA

US 2018 • 89 min

US 2017 • 86 min

US 2018 • 109 min

Directors/Editors Lev Kalman, Whitney Horn Screenwriters Lev Kalman, Whitney Horn, Sarah Dziedzic Producers Annalise Lockhart, Nathan Silver, C. Mason Wells Cinematographer Whitney Horn Cast Benjamin Crotty, Laetitia Dosch, Marianna McClellan, Andre Frechette III, Travis Nutting, Michael Murphy Print Source Two Plains & a Fancy, LLC

Directors Jamie Vega Wheeler, Justin Carlton Producers Rolin Jones, Adam O’Byrne, Laurel Miller Cinematographer Ruben Contreras Editor Ryan Johnson Cast Ryan Kattner, Cyrus Ghahremani, Casey Butler, Yuumi Suzui, Kevin Riggin Print Source Cartwheel Films

Director Maryam Keshavarz Screenwriters Maryam Keshavarz, Jonathan Mastro Producers J.C. Chandor, Neal Dodson, Anna Gerb Cinematographer Drew Daniels Editor Andrea Chignoli Cast Susan Sarandon, Matt Bomer, Lola Kirke, Edie Falco, Julian Morris, Adepero Oduye Print Source Roadside Attractions

M Welcome to Colorado 1893, home to friendly small towns with world-famous hot springs—the kind of attraction perfect for big city visitors like a New York dandy (Benjamin Crotty), a former confidence woman (Marianna McCellan), and a Parisian geologist (Laetitia Dosch, Keeper, MVFF 2015). These curious tourists hope to sample the local healing waters, but along the way, horny fashion-forward yokels, ghostly belle du jour spirits, and your run-of-the-mill time travelers from the future keep dropping detours into their path. Blessed with gorgeous Super 16mm cinematography and campy, deadpan dialogue (“What these horses need is a taste of the pistol!”), this fractured frontier tale from lo-fi filmmaking duo Lev Kalman and Whitney Horn (L for Leisure) is one strange trip through the old, weird American West, an absurdist horse opera in the spirit of Hal Hartley. —David Fear Fri Sun

Oct 5 Oct 7

8:45pm 7:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

M Eccentric musician Ryan Kattner has traveled the world as the frontman of Man Man, playing in front of enormous crowds at Coachella, his songs showcased in Nike commercials and TV shows like Weeds. After all this success, what could be next? Maybe one giant step backwards is just what he needs. With his former bandmates settling down with kids, wives, and mortgages, it’s back to square one for Kattner, leaving Man Man behind for a tour with his new musical venture Honus Honus—fully equipped with dingy hotel rooms, diminished crowds, and a group of young musicians. This immersive doc is a real band adventure. Viewers embark on a one-of-a-kind journey with Kattner to experience the true highs and lows of the road, as one artist redefines what it means to be successful. —Alexis Whitman PRECEDED BY

THE MODERN LIVES: BACK OF MY MIND US 2018 • 4 min

Academy Award ® winner Susan Sarandon offers a riveting performance as Helen, an emergency room nurse whose journalist son on foreign assignment is held for ransom by the Islamic State. When the US government proves to be as much of a threat to her son’s survival as his ISIL captors, Helen makes contact with a covert network of donors and journalists working independently, beyond the reaches of American law, to aid in the release of her son. Featuring a starstudded cast which includes Matt Bomer (Magic Mike), Lola Kirke (Mistress America), Adepero Oduye (Pariah, MVFF 2011), and the always exceptional Edie Falco as a wealthy and well-connected activist who comes to Helen’s aid, Iranian American filmmaker Maryam Keshavarz follows her 2011 Sundance Film Festival award-winning Circumstance with this heart-wrenching and urgent portrait of our times. —Nadia Ismail

M

Sat Sun

Director Bill Plympton

Oct 13 Oct 14

7:15pm 5:00pm

Rafael Lark

Oscar ® nominee and cult animator Plympton marries his distinctive style to the music of former Black Crowes member Jackie Greene in this stylish short, part of his Modern Lives song cycle. Sat Sun

Oct 13 Oct 14

5:30pm 7:45pm

Sequoia* Lark

*Live music event to follow at Sweetwater. Separate ticket required. See page 99 for details.

A Active Cinema

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

MARIN HOTELS

DOLBY LABORATORIES

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

155


FILMS

VIRUS TROPICAL

VISION

WEED THE PEOPLE

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

Colombia/Ecuador 2017 • 96 min

Japan/France 2018 • 109 min

US 2018 • 94 min

Director Santiago Caicedo Screenwriter Enrique Lozano Producers Carolina Barrera, Santiago Caicedo Cinematographers Powerpaola, Santiago Caicedo Editors Simón Hernández, Jorge Vallejo, Santiago Caicedo Cast María Cecilia Sánchez, Martina Toro, Alejandra Borrero, Diego León Hoyos, Mara Gutiérrez, María Parada Print Source Stray Dogs

Director/Screenwriter Naomi Kawase Producers Satoshi Miyazaki, Marianne Slot, Naomi Kawase Cinematographer Arata Dodo Editor Yoichi Shibuya, François Gédigier Cast Juliette Binoche, Masatoshi Nagase Print Source Elle Driver

Director Abby Epstein Producers Ricki Lake, Giancarlo Canavesio, Sol Tryon Cinematographers Christopher Gallo, Clare Major, Paulo Netto, Richard Pearce, Jenna Rosher Editor Kristen Nutile Print Source Abramorama

M V FOCUS: ANIMATION NATION | TEENS&20s In Spanish with English subtitles This exquisitely animated coming-ofage tale, based on the graphic novel memoir by Colombian-Ecuadorian artist Power Paola, follows Paola from her conception to the trials and tribulations of young adulthood. In Quito, Ecuador, Paola navigates life as the baby of the family, constantly at odds with her older sisters and her loving but stern parents—her father an ex-priest who gives them communion at home, her mother a fortune teller. The film charts their family dysfunction in a frank and refreshing manner thanks to the distinct voice of Paola, imbuing Virus Tropical with an intimacy that renders it funny, tender, and moving all at once. The beautiful black-and-white animation style stays true to the film’s origins, capturing both the nostalgia and anguish of growing up. The first feature of video artist and animator Santiago Caicedo, Virus Tropical won audience awards at the SXSW and BAFICI Film Festivals. —Elliott Breeden Fri Sun

Oct 12 Oct 14

6:00pm 11:30am

Lark Sequoia*

M In English, French, and Japanese with Eng-

lish subtitles In the latest work from Naomi Kawase (The Mourning Forest), French journalist Jeanne (an ever-radiant Juliette Binoche, who can also be seen in Non-Fiction at the Festival this year) travels to Japan in search of ‘Vision,’ a rare healing herb that appears once every 1000 years. Arriving in the magical Yoshino Mountains she encounters Aki, a wise woman who prophesies the greatly anticipated time of this mysterious arrival. Tomo the forest keeper (frequent Kawase collaborator Masatoshi Nagase, Radiance, MVFF 2017) takes Jeanne in and intuitively feels the subtle changes occurring in the cloudshrouded woodland. New connections are forged while past events are evoked. With the spores of ‘Vision’ soon to be released, time itself slips from logical order, and nature presides over the sun-dappled trees swaying in the cacophonous wind. Laced with spectacular cinematography, Kawase commendably translates spiritual inquiry into exquisite cinema. The spirit of wonder and awe, uttered in whispered tones, is anchored by the film’s beautiful premise: “The time is now for the triumph of happiness that lies in each of our hearts.” —Janis Plotkin

M This bold documentary from Abby Epstein (The Business of Being Born) follows five children with cancer and their parents as they desperately try to move past marijuana’s reputation as a recreational joyride and embrace its centuries-old history as an effective medicine, and one that offsets the negative side effects of chemotherapy and may even shrink tumors. Several of the subjects begin a concentrated cannabinoid regimen with Mara Gordon of medical marijuana purveyor Aunt Zelda’s, but will the drug be the miracle they seek? How much can we know about dosage and impact when the government has blocked significant medical testing for 80 years? Pediatricians, drug policy experts, and herbalists weigh in on the history and science of marijuana. Most persuasive of all are the patients and their families as they convincingly argue that it’s time to rethink marijuana on a national scale and move past the cloud of fog that follows this herb. —Alexis Whitman Fri Sat

Oct 12 Oct 13

9:00pm 12:15pm

Sequoia Sequoia

Visit mvff.com for screening information

*Screening followed by Graphic Novel Writing Workshop for teens. See page 103 for details.

SPONSORED BY

NICE GUYS DELIVERY 156

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

WHAT THEY HAD

WHEN THE TREES FALL (KOLY PADAYUT DEREVA)

THE WHISTLEBLOWER OF MY LAI

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

MUSIC

US 2018 • 101 min

Ukraine/Poland/Macedonia 2018 • 100 min

US 2018 • 65 min

Director/Screenwriter Elizabeth Chomko Producers Keith Kjarval, Bill Holderman, Albert Berger Cinematographer Roberto Schaefer Editor Tom McArdle Cast Hilary Swank, Michael Shannon, Robert Forster, Taissa Farmiga, Josh Lucas, Blythe Danner Print Source Bleecker Street Media

M After her mother Ruth (Blythe Danner) is seized by a bout of dementia that jeopardizes her physical well-being, Bridget (Hilary Swank) arrives in Chicago, joining her brother Nicky (Michael Shannon) and father Burt (Robert Forster) as they grapple with the effects of Ruth’s deteriorating mental health. While cramped together under the same roof over Christmas, the family attempts to navigate an unthinkable predicament, facing impossible decisions and inevitable consequences. Expertly traversing the minefield of fraught connections and buried resentments of a family in crisis, writer-director Elizabeth Chomko’s stirring and slyly funny debut feature is also a twilight-age love story about two people determined to stay together despite nature’s best effort to tear them apart. Leading a pitch-perfect ensemble that also includes Taissa Farmiga and Josh Lucas, Swank delivers her best work in years, and Danner is devastating as the matriarch whose slipping memory transports her throughout different stages of her life at any given moment. —Jesse Knight Sun

Oct 7

9:00pm

Sequoia

A Active Cinema

Director/Screenwriter Marysia Nikitiuk Producers Igor Savychenko, Roman Klympush, Volodymyr Filippo Cinematographers Michal Englert, Mateusz Wichlacz Editors Ivan Bannikov, Milenia Fiedler, Blazhe Dulev Cast Sonya Halaimova, Anastasiia Pustovit, Maksym Samchik, Mariia Svizhynska Print Source Latido Films

M In Ukrainian with English subtitles Lush cinematography, deft art direction, and impressive performances round out a genreblending tapestry, punctuated with healthy doses of sex and adventure. Against the wishes of her grandmother and her recently bereaved mother—who want her to stay put in their small hometown of Lozova and marry a pig farmer—teenage Larysa plots to run away with handsome young rebel Scar. Only her young cousin Vitka seems to understand Larysa, as village gossip and her family’s wrath follow her wherever she goes. While interweaving the stories of three generations of women coping with loss, When the Trees Fall focuses on the passionate tale of amour fou at its center. Larysa longs for Scar to sweep her away, but he has business to settle before he can give her the life she desires. First-time director Marysia Nikitiuk deftly entwines symbolic and narrative elements, crafting a magical tale of youthful rebellion. —Emelie Mahdavian Fri Sat

Oct 12 Oct 13

6:00pm 6:30pm

Larkspur Larkspur

M Mind the Gap

Director/Cinematographer Connie Field Producers Connie Field, Gregory Scharpen Editor Gregory Scharpen Cast The Kronos Quartet, Rinde Eckhert, Van Ahn Vo, Jonathan Berger, Harriet Chessman Print Source Clarity Films

M Hugh Thompson was more than a whistleblower. The 24-year-old major was a hero to most, a traitor to some, and a veritable angel to those whose lives he saved when, on March 16, 1968, he landed his Army observation helicopter to intervene at the site where US soldiers were murdering hundreds of Vietnamese civilians. Fifty years later, a group of artists with diverse connections to the Vietnam War collaborate on a chamber opera exploring the agitated soul of the 67-year-old Thompson during his final hours, as he reckons with his life and the disgraceful treatment he received at the hands of his army and government in the aftermath of the My Lai Massacre. Vivid archival images frame the rehearsals of the Kronos Quartet, composer Jonathan Berger, librettist Harriet Scott Chessman, renowned tenor Eckert, and virtuoso Vietnamese instrumentalist Van-Anh Vo as they proceed toward a premiere through deeply stirring yet musically and emotionally challenging terrain. NORTH AMERICAN PREMIERE —Rob Avila Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

6:30pm 6:30pm

Sequoia Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH BERK ELE Y FILM FOUN DATION AN D THE CENTER FOR A SIAN AMERIC AN MEDIA

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

157


FILMS

WHO KILLED LT. VAN DORN?

WIDOWS

WILD DAZE

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

US 2018 • 78 min

US/UK 2018 • 128 min

US 2018 • 102 min

Director/Producer/Cinematographer Zachary Stauffer Editor Eli Olson Print Source Zachary Stauffer

Director Steve McQueen Screenwriters Gillian Flynn, Steve McQueen Producers Iain Canning, Steve McQueen, Arnon Milchan Cinematographer Sean Bobbitt Editor Joe Walker Cast Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Liam Neeson, Colin Farrell, Daniel Kaluuya Print Source Twentieth Century Fox

Director/Screenwriter Phyllis Stuart Producers Phyllis Stuart, Cecilia DeMille Presley, Andrew Sugerman Cinematographers Kosmos Mwongela, Meryem Ersoz, Gilbert Maina Editors Yumeng Chen, Ting Yu, Laura Lacy Cast Dame Dr. Jane Goodall, Keith David, Will Travers, Holly Dranginis, Koko Print Source Phyllis Stuart

M In visionary director Steve McQueen’s hotly anticipated follow-up to the Best Picture-winning 12 Years a Slave (MVFF 2013), Widows offers a compelling glance into class, gender, and racial struggles in America under the guise of a riveting, hugely entertaining heist film. When a $2 million robbery ends in disaster, four very different women are left with a debt none of them can afford. With less than a month to retrieve the cash, the women—exceptionally played by Oscar ® winner Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, and Carrie Coon—band together to try to pull off their late husbands’ next big score. McQueen and co-screenwriter Gillian Flynn (Sharp Objects) brilliantly bring to life Lynda La Plante’s British crime novel of the same name, substituting the South Side of Chicago for the mean streets of London. Widows also features a breakout performance from Cynthia Erivo alongside star-studded support from Liam Neeson, Colin Farrell, Daniel Kaluuya, and Robert Duvall. —Joe Bowman

A M In her compelling documentary, Phyl-

A The married father of two young sons with a degree from the United States Naval Academy, 29-year-old Navy Lt. Wes Van Dorn died when the helicopter he was piloting crashed off the coast of Virginia Beach, VA, during a 2014 training exercise. Motivated by her grief, his wife Nicole seeks an explanation for the cause of the disaster. Her efforts spur a local reporter’s investigation, which uncovers a long history of negligence and institutional failings around the MH-53 helicopter—the model Van Dorn was piloting when he was killed, and among the deadliest aircraft in the US military fleet. Through incisive reporting and interviews with Van Dorn’s colleagues and family, Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? is at once a poignant picture of one family’s tragedy and a revelatory inquiry into the murky inner-workings of the American defense establishment. WORLD PREMIERE —Michael LoPresti Sun Tue

Oct 7 Oct 9

4:00pm 3:15pm

Larkspur Rafael

IN A SSOCIATION WITH IN V E S TIGATI V E REPORTING PROGR AM AT THE GR A DUATE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM AT UC BERK ELE Y AN D THE CENTER FOR IN V E S TIGATI V E REPORTING

Sat Oct 6 Mon Oct 8

158

A Active Cinema

7:00pm 2:15pm

Sequoia Rafael

lis Stuart explores African wildlife on the brink as human activity takes its toll. Humans are tied to animal welfare in ways both ethical and existential. Through interviews with a wide swath of experts from Dame Jane Goodall to trophy hunters, Stuart offers a multifaceted view of African ecosystems as they relate to global animal rights, human rights, and the environment. Rampant corruption that allows poaching, the ivory trade, and the illicit bush meat market to flourish complicates animal rights activists’ fight to save species that are nearing extinction. With passion and conviction, Wild DaZe invites us to take on the role of protector in response to the widespread exploitation of our environment and the animals who call it home. WORLD PREMIERE —Nadia Ismail Mon Oct 8 Wed Oct 10 Sat Oct 13

6:30pm 8:30pm 5:30pm

Rafael Larkspur Larkspur

IN A SSOCIATION WITH WIL DLIFE WORK S

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

WAREHAM DEVELOPMENT AND NANCY P. AND RICHARD K. ROBBINS FAMILY FOUNDATION

WAREHAM DEVELOPMENT AND NANCY P. AND RICHARD K. ROBBINS FAMILY FOUNDATION

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!


FILMS FILMS

WILDLIFE

WOMAN AT WAR

WORKING WOMAN

(KONA FER Í STRID)

(ISHA OVEDET)

US CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 104 min

Iceland/France/Ukraine 2018 • 101 min

Israel 2018 • 93 min

Director Paul Dano Screenwriters Paul Dano, Zoe Kazan Producers Paul Dano, Jake Gyllenhaal, Zoe Kazan Cinematographer Diego García Editors Louise Ford, Matthew Hannam Cast Carey Mulligan, Jake Gyllenhaal, Ed Oxenbould, Bill Camp Print Source IFC Films

Director Benedikt Erlingsson Screenwriters Benedikt Erlingsson, Ólafur Egill Egilsson Producers Benedikt Erlingsson, Carine Leblanc, Marianne Slot Cinematographer Bergsteinn Björgúlfsson Editor Davíð Alexander Corno Cast Halldóra Geirhardsdóttir, Jóhann Sigurðarson, Juan Camillo Roman Estrada, Jörundur Ragnarsson, Haraldur Stefansson Print Source Magnolia Pictures

Director Michal Aviad Screenwriters Sharon Azulay Eyal, Michal Vinik, Michal Aviad Producers Amir Harel, Ayelet Kait Cinematographer Daniel Miller Editor Nili Feller Cast Liron Ben Shlush, Menashe Noy, Oshri Cohen Print Source M-Appeal

SPOTLIGHT: CAREY MULLIGAN and PAUL DANO M Amid a trio of great performances in Paul Dano’s assured directorial debut, Carey Mulligan is a standout, brilliantly revealing a woman’s emergence from her husband’s shadow to find her own liberation, potentially wounding those she loves in the process. The focus is on a teenager growing up amid parental strife in small-town Montana in the early 1960s. Patriarch Jerry (Jake Gyllenhaal) has relocated his family again for a menial new job while dissatisfied wife Jeanette (Mulligan) feels trapped by her circumstances and son Joe (Ed Oxenbould) just hopes to stay long enough to make friends. Surely and delicately, the film depicts the growing rift between Jerry and Jeanette—he leaves to go fight fires while she becomes more forthright and impulsive—and how it forces Joe to find his own interests and allegiances. Dano and actor Zoe Kazan (The Big Sick) collaborated on the screenplay of this evocative adaptation of Richard Ford’s acclaimed novel. —Rod Armstrong Fri Tue

Oct 5 Oct 9

7:00pm 9:00pm

Sequoia Rafael

M In Icelandic with English subtitles A congenial village choir director with a secret life as a renegade eco-activist is the unlikely subject of Benedikt Erlingsson’s (Of Horses and Men) suspenseful, impassioned, and soaringly uplifting film imbued with the devilish delights of Nordic humor (think of The 100 Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, MVFF 2014). For starters, heroic Halla (the unforgettable Halldóra Geirharðsdóttir), in Valkyrie pose, aims her bow and downs the lines of a local power plant with a single arrow. Victorious, she bounds across the stunning Icelandic landscape, deftly dodging an army of pursuing officers. But back in the village, she practices tai chi and dreams of adopting a Ukrainian orphan girl. As the net tightens around her, Halla’s life and future are on the line. Besides the breathtaking locales, Erlingsson employs a brilliant concept with the score, with Icelandic and Ukrainian musicians appearing onscreen and providing superbly sonorous commentary on the action. —Rod Armstrong Fri Sat Sun

Oct 12 Oct 13 Oct 14

6:15pm 3:00pm 5:15pm

M In Hebrew with English subtitles A young mother reentering the workforce discovers she must navigate more than a new career in this searing portrait of sexual harassment. Orna (the fiercely compelling Liron Ben Shlush) lands a plum job in real estate and, under the tutelage of charismatic, predatory CEO Benny (Menashe Noy), quickly climbs from executive assistant to sales manager of luxury apartments. With her innate capacity to seal a deal, she is destined for sky-high commissions, and with three children, her family could use the economic boost. As Orna’s confidence and experience grow, so does her discomfort. Does she have actual talent? Are the late hours necessary or does Benny simply want her under his thumb? Orna gamely keeps working for him, summoning all her wiles to rediscover her self-worth. With this, her 10th film and second narrative feature, director Michal Aviad once more casts her insightful gaze on a woman’s life within Israel’s patriarchal society. US PREMIERE —Lucy Laird Sun Oct 7 Mon Oct 8

6:00pm 8:30pm

Lark Larkspur

WITH SUPPORT FROM CONSUL ATE GENER AL OF ISR AEL

Sequoia Larkspur Larkspur

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

SPONSORED BY

DELTA AIR LINES

STRAWBERRY VILLAGE

EQUATOR COFFEES & TEAS

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

159


FILMS

WORLD OF FACTS

WORLDS OF URSULA K. LE GUIN

YOMEDDINE

US CINEMA

VALLEY OF THE DOCS

WORLD CINEMA

US 2018 • 97 min

US 2018 • 67 min

Egypt 2018 • 97 min

Director/Producer/Cinematographer/ Editor Mike Gibisser Screenwriters Mike Gibisser, Gretchen Akers, Frank V. Ross, Bryan Saner, Rebecca Spence, Jim Snitzer Cast Gretchen Akers, Frank V. Ross, Bryan Saner, Rebecca Spence, Jim Snitzer, Alex Stein Print Source Mike Gibisser

Director/Producer Arwen Curry Cinematographers Andrew Black, John Kiffmeyer, Lincoln Else Editors Juli Vizza, Andrew Gersh Cast Ursula K. Le Guin, Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman, Michael Chabon, David Mitchell, Annalee Newitz Print Source Arwen Curry

Director/Screenwriter A.B. Shawky Producer Dina Emam Cinematographer Federico Cesca Editor Erin Greenwell Cast Rady Gamal, Ahmed Abdelhafiz, Shoq Emara, Hany El-Tabei Print Source Strand Releasing

Take a deep breath. Feel the world around you. Hear the sounds. Now you’re ready to experience this visual tour-de-force and meditative exploration of love and loss. After Maureen’s boyfriend falls into a sudden coma, she returns to her Midwestern hometown to care for him. Alongside her sister and her father, who is also dealing with a partner’s illness, Maureen faces a gloomy reality of sterile hospitals and dramatic uncertainty that makes her ponder her own existence. Filmmaker Mike Gibisser captures the fragility of life in a profoundly poetic and straightforward way. Pulsing with a stripped-down Terrence Malick-like energy, this captivating film focuses on the sights and sounds of everyday existence amid questions of mortality and memory. Vivid performances, bursts of startling emotion, and breathtaking camera work fuel the intimate and intense action. Focused on the little moments that have the most meaning, Gibisser creates a human-fueled, hypnotic vibe that just might alter how you experience the world. —Brendan Peterson Thur Oct 11 Fri Oct 12

9:00pm 2:00pm

Rafael Larkspur

M Well before certain wondrous wizarding

worlds were established in popular fiction, Berkeley-born Ursula K. Le Guin (A Wizard of Earthsea, The Dispossessed) was building fantastical future worlds and adeptly sorting out issues like religion, sexuality, gender, politics, and the natural world. Le Guin’s writing not only paved the way for future Harrys and Hermiones, she also influenced multitudes of writers and readers with the scope and depth of her world-building and her comprehensive elevation of science fiction and fantasy to new levels of artistry, accessibility, and excellence. In Bay Area native Arwen Curry’s fascinating documentary, Le Guin’s worlds live beyond the 22 novels she wrote, explored in the words of the celebrated author herself, bolstered by endearing tributes from fellow fantasy authors and devotees Neil Gaiman, Michael Chabon, David Mitchell, Margaret Atwood, and more. Pioneer, feminist, mother, wife, literary giant, Ursula K. Le Guin’s own story is one of triumph and a world unto itself. —Leah LoSchiavo Fri Oct 5 Mon Oct 8

6:00pm Lark 12:00pm Sequoia

In Arabic with English subtitles Beshay is a resident (and “Mr. Charisma”) at one of Egypt’s remaining leper colonies, earning his living selling salvageable dross from the village dump. Grieving the recent death of his wife, he hitches his donkey to his cart and embarks on a desert journey to find the family that abandoned him in childhood. Never one to miss out on an adventure, Beshay’s sidekick and assistant, a 10-year-old Nubian orphan nicknamed “Obama” jumps in for the ride, seeking his own roots, as well. With a remarkable nonprofessional cast featuring Rady Gamal (an actual resident of the Abu Zaabal leper colony), Yomeddine —literally “Day of Judgment” in Arabic—is an uplifting, magical film filled with compassion and respect for difference in a world increasingly bereft of these qualities. With gentle humor and startling moments of grace, A.B. Shawky’s first feature is a life-affirming tale of human dignity and the resilience of the human spirit. —K.D. Davis Tue Oct 9 Wed Oct 10

IN A SSOCIATION WITH BOOK PA SSAGE AN D C ALLIFORNIA HUMANITIE S

SPONSORED BY

KQED 160

A Active Cinema

M Mind the Gap

V ¡Viva el Ciné!

12:30pm Rafael 3:00pm Rafael


161


CALENDAR THURSDAY OCT 4

FRIDAY

SEQUOIA 7:00pm Green Book 155 min

page 32

R A FA E L 7:00pm A Private War 131 min

page 32

OCT 5

7:30pm Green Book 130 min 7:45pm A Private War 106 min

FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA FACEBOOK:

@MillValleyFilmFestival TWITTER:

@MVFilmFest INSTAGRAM:

@millvalleyfilmfest

ACCESS! 2 CONCERTS FEATURE FILMSee page 13 MIXER 2 PANELS SHORTS PROGRAM

OCT 6

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

3:00pm The Guardians 104 min

11:00am It’s a Girls’ World 92 min

4:00pm Little Woods 105 min

12:00pm Charm City 106 min

6:00pm Everybody Knows 132 min

2:00pm ...As If They Were Angels 87 min

7:00pm Wildlife 134 min

page 45

9:00pm Art Paul of Playboy: The Man

Behind the Bunny

LARKSPUR

SATURDAY

73 min

6:45pm The Parting Glass 120 min

page 59

7:00pm Widows 128 min 9:30pm Everybody Knows 132 min

R A FA E L 3:00pm The Independents 97 min 3:30pm Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the

People

4:00pm The Favourite 121 min

89 min

11:30am A Ton o’ Toons 73 min 11:45am The Independents 97 min

6:15pm Pet Names 76 min

12:00pm Free Solo 97 min

6:30pm 3 Faces 100 min 7:00pm Cold War 118 min

R A FA E L

page 51

8:45pm Two Plains & a Fancy 89 min 9:00pm 5@5 Come to the Sunshine 69 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 6:00pm Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin 67 min 8:15pm The Silence of Others 96 min

LARKSPUR 6:00pm Obey 96 min 6:15pm 5@5 Circle Game 69 min 8:30pm Something Is Happening 101 min 8:45pm Charm City 106 min

O L D M I L L PA R K 7:00pm Zootopia 108 min

2:30pm The Great Buster 102 min 3:00pm Beautiful Boy 136 min

page 57

5:00pm Art Paul of Playboy: The Man

Behind the Bunny

73 min

7:00pm 22 July 137 min 7:30pm The Silence of Others 96 min 8:00pm Little Woods 105 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 2:30pm Something Is Happening 101 min 5:00pm Shoplifters 121 min 8:15pm All These Small Moments 92 min

LARKSPUR 5:00pm Pet Names 76 min 5:15pm The Guardians 104 min 8:00pm Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the

People

89 min

8:15pm 3 Faces 100 min

OUTDOOR ART CLUB 10:00am PANEL: Mind the Gap Summit

pt. 1

240 min

2:00pm PANEL: Mind the Gap Summit

pt. 2

DOCLANDS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL

MAY 2-5 | 2019 CALL FOR ENTRIES OPENS NOVEMBER 1 DOCLANDS.COM

162

SPECIAL EVENT (see indicated page)

240 min


CALENDAR SUNDAY

OCT 7

MONDAY

OCT 8

TUESDAY

OCT 9

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

11:00am 5@5 The Way It Is 95 min

11:30am Free Solo 97 min

12:00pm Art Paul of Playboy: The Man

11:45am Moving Stories 98 min

12:00pm Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin 67 min

2:30pm Bias 88 min

2:00pm Beautiful Boy 111 min

3:00pm Holly Near: Singing for Our Lives

3:00pm Cold War 88 min

70 min

5:30pm The Hate U Give 155 min

page 69

6:00pm Boy Erased 139 min

page 63

9:00pm What They Had 101 min 9:15pm The Hi De Ho Show 100 min

11:15am Too Late to Die Young 110 min 1:30pm From Mexico, Con Amor 72 min 2:00pm Museo 115 min 2:15 pm WORKSHOP: Crowdfunding to

Build Independence

120 min

6:00pm Stay Human 94 min 8:45pm The Lost City of the Monkey God 100 min

3:30pm The Parting Glass 95 min 5:00pm The Great Buster 102 min 5:30pm Time for Ilhan 89 min 6:15pm Daughter of Mine 97 min 8:00pm Grit 80 min

R A FA E L 10:15am The Big Bad Fox... 88 min

2:15pm Widows 128 min 3:15pm Holly Near: Singing for Our Lives 70 min

3:30pm All Square 93 min

12:30pm Yomeddine 97 min 3:00pm Shoplifters 121 min 3:15pm Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? 78 min

page 36

6:30pm Wild DaZe 102 min 9:15pm 5@5 Eastern Rain 77 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 6:00pm Seder Masochism 78 min

LARKSPUR L A R K T H E AT E R

6:00pm Grit 80 min

12:45pm Effortless French 104 min

6:15pm 5@5 Come to the Sunshine 69 min

6:00pm Working Woman 93 min

6:00pm The Front Runner 113 min

9:15pm Daughter of Mine 97 min

R A FA E L

9:00pm El รกngel 126 min

3:30pm Pity 99 min

3:00pm Boy Erased 114 min

8:45pm 22 July 137 min

8:30pm Museo 115 min

8:15pm All Square 93 min

89 min

6:15pm Swimming with Men 96 min

9:00pm Bushwick Beats 83 min

6:00pm Roma 160 min

12:15pm Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the

People

12:30pm Obey 96 min

11:00am Coco 105 min

73 min

2:30pm The Silent Revolution 111 min

10:15am Moving Stories 98 min

R A FA E L

Behind the Bunny

8:30pm Working Woman 93 min 8:45pm El รกngel 126 min

8:45pm All These Small Moments 92 min

3:30pm Pity 99 min 6:00pm Chained for Life 92 min 6:30pm Angst 100 min 6:45pm Earth, Our Home: The New

Environmentalists

91 min

8:45pm Seder Masochism 78 min 9:00pm Wildlife 104 min 9:15pm 5@5 Coyote 69 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 6:00pm Sergio and Sergei 93 min 8:45pm Los adioses 85 min

LARKSPUR 3:15pm Too Late to Die Young 110 min 6:00pm 5@5 Eastern Rain 77 min

LARKSPUR

6:15pm The Lost City of the Monkey God

4:00pm Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? 78 min

100 min

4:30pm Bushwick Beats 83 min

8:30pm Time for Ilhan 89 min

7:00pm Two Plains & a Fancy 89 min

8:45pm In the Aisles 125 min

7:30pm Ash Is Purest White 150 min

OUTDOOR ART CLUB 11:00am PANEL: State of the Industry

THE HIVERY 2:00pm WORKSHOP: From Scene to

Screen for Teens

180 min

SPECIAL EVENT (see indicated page)

163


CALENDAR WEDNESDAY

OCT 10

THURSDAY

OCT 11

FRIDAY

OCT 12

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

11:15am The Front Runner 113 min

11:15am Burning 148 min

11:45am Transit 101 min

12:30pm Effortless French 104 min

11:45am Little Woods 105 min

12:30pm Stay Human 94 min

2:15pm The Favourite 121 min

2:30pm Bathtubs Over Broadway 87 min

2:45pm Chris the Swiss 90 min

3:30pm Birds of Passage 125 min

6:15pm Supa Modo 78 min

3:15pm Swimming with Men 96 min

6:00pm One Voice 64 min

6:30pm The Whistleblower of My Lai

6:00pm Ben Is Back 103 min

6:30pm Destroyer 148 min

page 81

8:15pm Non-Fiction 108 min

10:30am Earth, Our Home: The New 91 min

12:00pm Los adioses 85 min 2:30pm ...As If They Were Angels 87 min

2:30pm Burning 148 min 2:45pm Swimming with Men 96 min 3:00pm Yomeddine 97 min 6:00pm Border 111 min 6:15pm The Silent Revolution 111 min 132 min

R A FA E L 2:00pm The Hate U Give 130 min

12:00pm Sergio and Sergei 93 min

6:30pm Can You Ever Forgive Me?

8:30pm Transit 101 min 8:45pm Peterloo 154 min

R A FA E L Environmentalists

65 min

page 75

3:00pm Sir 96 min

9:15pm Chained for Life 92 min

6:30pm Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait

63 min

6:00pm Moving Stories 98 min 6:15pm 5@5 Coyote 69 min

12:15pm In the Aisles 125 min 3:00pm Long Time Coming: A 1955

Baseball Story

87 min

3:30pm Non-Fiction 108 min 6:00pm Rafiki 82 min

9:00pm World of Facts 97 min

6:30pm The Whistleblower of My Lai

9:15pm 5@5 Boho Dance 79 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 9:15pm Border 111 min

LARKSPUR 6:00pm Northern Wind 91 min

11:00am It’s a Girls’ World 92 min

10:30am A Ton o’ Toons 73 min

6:30pm Maria by Callas 113 min

10:30am From Mexico, Con Amor 72 min

LARKSPUR

R A FA E L

3:15pm Too Late to Die Young 110 min

63 min

8:45pm Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait

9:00pm Weed the People 94 min

6:15pm Amalia the Secretary 91 min

6:00pm Becoming Astrid 123 min

L A R K T H E AT E R

8:45pm Collisions 82 min

6:00pm Ernesto 125 min

9:15pm Bodied 120 min

9:00pm Sir 96 min

6:15pm Woman at War 101 min

6:15pm 5@5 Circle Game 69 min 8:30pm Birds of Passage 125 min 8:45pm Sofia 80 min

65 min

6:45pm The Kindergarten Teacher 127 min

page 87

8:30pm TBA 9:00pm 5@5 Daisy Summer Piper 74 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 2:00pm Becoming Astrid 123 min 6:00pm Virus Tropical 96 min 8:45pm Ernesto 125 min

LARKSPUR 12:00pm 5@5 The Way It Is 95 min 2:00pm World of Facts 97 min

8:30pm Wild DaZe 102 min

3:00pm Amalia the Secretary 91 min

8:45pm Long Time Coming: A 1955

6:00pm When the Trees Fall 100 min

Baseball Story

87 min

6:15pm 5@5 Boho Dance 79 min 8:45pm Lemonade 88 min 9:00pm The Parting Glass 95 min

164

SPECIAL EVENT (see indicated page)


CALENDAR SATURDAY

OCT 13

SUNDAY

S W E E T W AT E R MUSIC HALL

OCT 14

SEQUOIA

SEQUOIA

11:30am I Am Maris 80 min

11:00am Ash Is Purest White 150 min

12:15pm Weed the People 94 min

11:30am Virus Tropical 96 min

2:00pm Harvest Season 87 min

2:15pm From Baghdad to The Bay 68 min

3:00pm 5@5 Daisy Summer Piper 74 min

2:30pm Supa Modo 78 min

5:00pm The Sweet Requiem 91 min

5:00pm If Beale Street Could Talk

5:30pm Use Your Delusion 90 min

142 min

8:00pm TBA

8:00pm Ben Is Back 103 min

8:15pm Capernaum 121 min

8:15pm TBA

R A FA E L

R A FA E L

11:15am Northern Wind 91 min

11:00am TBA

11:30am Can You Ever Forgive Me? 107 min

11:15am TBA

12:00pm MASTER CLASS: The Heroine’s

11:30am Sofia 80 min

Journey Onscreen

90 min

2:00pm From Baghdad to The Bay 68 min 2:15pm One Voice 64 min 2:30pm Becoming Astrid 123 min 4:30pm An Afternoon with Eleanor 4:45pm 5:30pm 7:15pm 7:30pm 8:30pm

Coppola and Allie Light 90 min Alifu the Prince/ss 96 min Saint Judy 106 min Viper Club 109 min Chris the Swiss 90 min The Hi De Ho Show 100 min

L A R K T H E AT E R 11:30am The Kindergarten Teacher 97 min 2:00pm Bias 88 min 5:30pm Bathtubs Over Broadway 87 min 8:00pm Mug 91 min

LARKSPUR 12:30pm The Big Bad Fox... 83 min 3:00pm Woman at War 101 min 3:45pm It’s a Girls’ World 92 min 5:30pm Wild DaZe 102 min 6:30pm When the Trees Fall 100 min 8:00pm Rafiki 82 min 9:00pm TBA

T E N N E S S E E VA L L E Y T R A I L 10:00am Active Cinema Hike 120 min

FRIDAY OCT 5

page 37

Doors open – 8:00pm Show starts – 9:00pm

SATURDAY OCT 6

CONCERT - Jarvis Cocker Doors open – 7:30pm Show starts – 8:30pm

SUNDAY OCT 7

CONCERT - Holly Near Doors open – 5:30pm Show starts – 6:30pm

1:30pm Capernaum 121 min

MONDAY OCT 8

1:45pm Destroyer 123 min 2:00pm Lemonade 88 min 5:00pm If Beale Street Could Talk 142 min

CONCERT - Michael Franti page 37

8:00pm Peterloo 154 min 8:15pm Maria by Callas 113 min 8:15pm Mug 91 min

Doors open – 8:00pm Show starts – 9:00pm

TUESDAY OCT 9

CONCERT - Black Zeppelin Doors open – 7:00pm Show starts – 8:00pm

L A R K T H E AT E R 11:45am A Ton o’ Toons 73 min 2:15pm Alifu the Prince/ss 96 min 5:00pm Viper Club 109 min 7:45pm Use Your Delusion 90 min

LARKSPUR

WEDNESDAY OCT 10 CONCERT - Oakland Interfaith Gospel Choir Doors open – 8:00pm Show starts – 8:30pm

THURSDAY OCT 11

11:30am I Am Maris 80 min 12:00pm Collisions 82 min 2:15pm The Sweet Requiem 91 min 2:45pm Harvest Season 87 min 5:15pm Woman at War 101 min 5:30pm Saint Judy 106 min 7:45pm 5@5 Festival Faves 100 min 8:00pm TBA

OUTDOOR ART CLUB 2:00pm WORKSHOP: Graphic Novel

Writing for Teens

CONCERT - Freddy Jones Band

120 min

FILM - Evolutionary Blues – 6:00pm CONCERT - Faye Carol Show starts – 8:00pm

FRIDAY OCT 12

CONCERT - Half Pint Doors open – 8:00pm Show starts – 8:30pm

SATURDAY OCT 13

3:00pm PANEL: Medical Marijuana 4:20pm PANEL: The Waldos 420

Cannabis - Podcast

MARIN COUNTRY MART

CONCERT - Honus Honus Doors open – 8:30pm Show starts – 9:00pm

2:00pm The Hoopla! 120 min

SPECIAL EVENT (see indicated page)

165


PRE-SCREENERS Jaden Alexander

Emily Hoover-Finnigan

Kenn Rabin

Ralph Berets

Joanna Ke

Devin Ross Richey

Jordon Briggs

Nancy Kelly

Carlos Rodriguez

Frank Chan

Hossein Khosrowjah

Corey Rosen

Teresa Concepcion

Thor Klippert

Shaheen Sayani

Tom Corwin

Carolyn LaHorgue

Grace Pearl Shaw

Anna Cosentine

Britta Leijonflycht

John Slattery

Jeremy De Forge

Alexandra Lexton

Joseph Smith

Frieda de Lackner

Angie MacKenzie

Dale Sophiea

Charles Dickey

Berta McDonnell

Lincoln Spector

Jackie Dobson

Claudia Mendoza-Carruth

Jesse Spencer

Emma Penaz Eisner

Becky Mertens

Cathy Summa-Wolfe

Daniel Reed Eisweirth

Isabella J Miller

Ellen Thomas

Suzanne Engelberg

Marilyn Mulford

Benjamin Thornton

Sarah Escalante

Alisha Nieh

Regina Tsasis

Romina Alexandra Garcia

Katie Norby

Sophia Verbiscar

Dianne Griffin

Rachel Olson

Grace Williamson

Natalia Guecheva

Venus Oriane

Lori Wright

Sandy Handsher

Radica Ostojic-Portello

Kenji Yamamoto

Aaron Hansen

Tom Pankratz

Abas Zadfar

Hilary Hart

Cynthia Pepper

Sydney Zahradka

Kramer Herzog

Mark Phillips

Hayden Hicks

Emily Porter

And we’ll give you some. Up to $600,000 in rebates when you film in SF.

Visit FilmSF.org Call 415.554.6241


DOCLANDS DOCUMENTARY FILM FESTIVAL

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NAVIGATING THE FESTIVAL THEATERS CENTURY LARKSPUR 500 Larkspur Landing Cir, Larkspur

FESTIVAL HUB at the

OUTDOOR ART CLUB

CINÉARTS SEQUOIA 25 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley

LARK THEATER

1 W. Blithdale Ave., Mill Valley

549 Magnolia Ave, Larkspur

HANG OUT | MEET UP | RELAX

SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER

BEFORE & AFTER YOUR MOVIE

1118 Fourth St, San Rafael

GUIDELINES & RULES ARRIVE EARLY To guarantee admittance, ticket and pass holders must be in the appropriate line 30 minutes prior to published showtime. Doors typically open 30 minutes before showtime.

BEER & WINE SALES & TASTINGS OPEN DAILY TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC (excluding special events)

n Entry to theaters occurs in the following order:

n While waiting in line, please be considerate of our neighbors and local businesses, and do not block merchant doorways. n Seat saving is not allowed. n Outside food and beverages are not permitted. n All cell phones and devices must be turned off prior to program introduction. n The use of cameras and other recording equipment is strictly prohibited during all screenings and programs. n Take personal items and trash with you as you exit.

RESERVED SEATS Please DO NOT sit in a reserved seat unless it has been arranged for you. Please DO NOT stand near the reserved seats in hopes that they will be released. MVFF staff and volunteers will release reserved seats whenever possible, but it is not guaranteed, and the aisles need to remain clear while the theater is being seated.

ACCESSIBILITY MVFF is excited to partner with the Marin Center for Independent Living (MCIL) to continually improve our efforts to ensure you have access to all Festival amenities. Please ask on-site staff if you need assistance with early seating and/or assisted-listening devices. If you require effective communication in the form of an ASL Interpreter, please contact us at info@cafilm.org at least 10 days prior to the screening you will be attending. 170

NETFLIX FILMMAKER LOUNGES MILL VALLEY

OUTDOOR ART CLUB, 1 West Blithedale Ave Oct 5–13 Oct 14

10:00am—9:00pm 10:00am—5:00pm

SAN RAFAEL

MARK FISHKIN ROOM, 1112 Fourth St Oct 5–13 Oct 14

10:00am—9:00pm 10:00am—5:00pm

FILMMAKER CHECK-IN (Mill Valley only): Oct 4–13 Noon—5:00pm FILMMAKER HAPPY HOUR: 5:00–7:00pm (both lounges) FILMMAKER LOUNGE ACCESS: All badges with an “L”

OUTDOOR ART CLUB Join us at the Outdoor Art Club in downtown Mill Valley for: Special programs Festival merchandise Beer, wine and snacks for sale Filmmaker check-in Filmmaker Lounge (badge holders with Lounge access only) Open daily to the general public (excluding special events)


TICKETING MVFF.COM | 877.874.MVFF (6833) | BOXOFFICE@CAFILM.ORG SAN RAFAEL

BOX OFFICES

SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER, 1118 Fourth St Sept 9

12:00–6:00pm Premier Patron and above

Sept 10

4:00–8:00pm Director’s Circle and above

Sept 11-12

4:00–8:00pm Gold Star and above

Sept 13–14

4:00–8:00pm All CFI members

Sept 15–Oct 3

4:00–8:00pm General public

Oct 4–14

One hour before first screening each day to 15 min after last show starts

MILL VALLEY

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, 85 Throckmorton Ave Sept 15–Oct 3

11:00am–3:00pm

Oct 4–14

One hour before first screening each day to 15 min after last show starts

OTHER BOX OFFICE VENUES

WILL CALL You must bring a valid photo ID that corresponds with the name on the credit card used to purchase the tickets. All ticket orders are final. No refunds, exchanges, substitutions, or reprints. MVFF is not responsible for lost, stolen, forgotten, or damaged tickets, or tickets misdirected by the post office.

PRINT-AT-HOME TICKETS Save time and skip Will Call! Select the Print-atHome option when purchasing tickets online, and then either print your ticket at home or show it on your mobile device at the theater for scanned entry. Tickets are the property of the California Film Institute/Mill Valley Film Festival, which reserves the right to admit or refuse access to the theater at the discretion of an authorized representative. Tickets are NOT for resale.

Open one hour before first screening each day:

RUSH TICKETS

LARK THEATER | CENTURY LARKSPUR

Rush tickets for sold out shows often become available after advance tickets have sold out.

TICKET PRICES

The Rush line forms outside each venue one hour before showtime.

General admission

$16.50

CFI members

$14.00

Rush tickets are sold on a first-come, first-served basis approximately 15 minutes prior to showtime.

Seniors (65+)

$15.00

No discounts

Students $15.00

(Purchase online or in person. Present student ID at box office)

5@5 Programs

$10.50

Youth (12 & under)

$8.00

Convenience Fees: (All fees are nonrefundable) Mail Phone In-person

$3.75 per order $10.00 flat fee per order No service fee

H H H H H H H H H H H H H NEW THIS YEAR No online service fees

H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Patrons have a 90% success rate of getting into shows through the Rush Line. Line up early!

PLATINUM DONOR EVENTS Platinum Donor Events are accessible to Platinum, Investor and Leadership level donors. To find our more about these private events, please go to cafilm.org/donor. CONSENT TO BE PHOTOGRAPHED/FILMED: California Film Institute and its representatives may photograph, film, and/or otherwise record attendees at all festival activities. By attending, you consent to such photography, filming and/or recording and to any use in any and all media throughout the universe in perpetuity and without compensation for the use of your appearance, voice, and name for promotional and/or advertising, or any other purpose by California Film Institute and its affiliates and representatives. 171


Proud Supporter of the Mill Valley Film Festival

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MVFF | CFI STAFF OPERATIONS COORDINATOR

Sarah Poppitz VOLUNTEER MANAGER

Faridah Gbadamosi VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR

Douglas Flint FRONT DESK PRODUCTION ASSISTANT

Stephanie Lytle CFI EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/FOUNDER MVFF FOUNDER/DIRECTOR

Mark Fishkin DIRECTOR OF PROGRAMMING

Zoë Elton

PROGRAMMING SENIOR PROGRAMMERS

Karen Davis Janis Plotkin PROGRAMMER

Kelly Clement US INDIES PROGRAMMER

Ilya Tovbis PROGRAMMING MANAGER / SHORTS PROGRAMMER

Sterling Hedgpeth PROGRAMMING ASSOCIATE

Dominique O’Neil PROGRAMMING ASSISTANT

Celeste Truffaut-Wong FAMILY FILMS PROGRAMMER

Joanne Parsont MUSIC FILMS PROGRAMMER

Charles Dickey ANIMATION PROGRAMMER

Amanda Todd PANELS MANAGER / ACTIVE CINEMA COORDINATOR

Maribel Guevara MIND THE GAP PROJECT MANAGER

Susan Murdy CLIPS EDITOR

Marcus Pun PROGRAMMING RESEARCHERS

Jordan Briggs Margherita Ghetti Kasey James Claudia Mendoza-Carruth Isabella Miller

FESTIVAL OPERATIONS DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS

Jeromy Zajonc OPERATIONS MANAGER

Dave Feiferis

176

TECHNICAL OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION TECHNICAL DIRECTOR

Dan Zastrow ASSISTANT TECHNICAL DIRECTOR

Ryan Hastie EXHIBITION MEDIA MANAGER

Jesse Dubus PRODUCTION MANAGER

Paul Hegarty PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS

Daniel Freeman Paul Kellogg

THEATER OPERATIONS THEATER OPERATIONS MANAGER

Christa Lynn Luckenbach THEATER OPERATIONS COORDINATOR

Miriam Benezra THEATER OPERATIONS ASSISTANT

Amanda Gallegos VENUE MANAGERS

David Corry Cola Engel Drew Highlands Alex Mills Emily Shurtz HOUSE MANAGERS

Cassady Brown Alana Davis Christopher Dodge Lluvia Fernandez Piper Hanson Willita Mahone Andrea Nilosek Derek Petrillo Caitlyn Pozerski LINE MANAGERS

Romina Alexandra Dylan Boom Kristian Corpuz Katy Darr Eileen Level Michael Mcllraith Jaclyn O’Grady Brian Patterson Lauren Skager

PROJECTIONISTS

Addie Backus-Place Griffin Couillard Cody Gehret Ryan Hastie Phil Hoffman-Harris Cody Silva Colton Silvers Josh Stithem Sophia Verbiscar Josh Wakeland Steve Yamane

GUEST & TRANSPORTATION SERVICES GUEST SERVICES MANAGER

Joanny Rivera GUEST SERVICES COORDINATORS

Brenda Berliner Ali Giordani TRANSPORTATION MANAGER

Albert Chow TRANSPORTATION COORDINATOR

Grace Shaw

FESTIVAL BOX OFFICE TICKETING SERVICES PROVIDED BY BOX CUBED

Ben Armington Mitch Vaughn BOX OFFICE STAFF

Tatiana Bookbinder Tiffany Collins Mark Curran Adam Cuttler Lucy Laird Ashlyn Perri Kendra Robinson Jacob J Rodriguez Ian Stewart Daniela Weinreich

SPECIAL EVENTS SPECIAL EVENTS MANAGER

Yvonne Fox OPENING & CLOSING NIGHT MANAGER

Mimi Cunningham EVENTS COORDINATOR

Michele Tharp OUTDOOR ART CLUB COORDINATOR

Aileen Fowler FILMMAKER LOUNGE COORDINATOR

Bobby Pin SAN RAFAEL FILMMAKER LOUNGE ASSISTANT

Alec Estes


MVFF | CFI STAFF MILL VALLEY FILMMAKER LOUNGE ASSISTANT

Derrick Dover

MARKETING AND PUBLICITY DIRECTOR OF MARKETING & PUBLICITY

Shelley Spicer CFI MARKETING COORDINATOR

Leah LoSchiavo PHTOS BY TOMMY LAU PHOTOGRAPHY

SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR

Chris Markisz MVFF MARKETING, PUBLICITY, & PROMOTIONS COORDINATOR

Laura Barber WEB & DIGITAL MEDIA MANAGER

Courtney Buffington GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Brian Lehman PRODUCTION ARTIST

Richard Denney PUBLICATIONS MANAGING EDITOR

Joe Bowman PUBLICATIONS PRODUCTION, PREPRESS

Richard Repas COPY EDITOR

Pam Grady PUBLICISTS

Stephanie Clarke Clara Franco Vince Johnson Karen Larsen HOUSE PHOTOGRAPHER

Tommy Lau HOUSE VIDEOGRAPHER

Mike Van Metre MARKETING INTERNS

Dario Apodaca Colin Galeste Keith Turnage Jane Williams

DEVELOPMENT AND MEMBERSHIP DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT

Liana Bender CORPORATE DEVELOPMENT MANAGER

Beau Blanchard MAJOR GIFTS AND FOUNDATIONS MANAGER

Katy Hogan CORPORATE DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE

Nick Friedman MEMBERSHIP MANAGER

Doreen Aviv

MEMBERSHIP ASSOCIATE

Alyssa Cox SPONSORSHIP ACTIVATION COORDINATOR

Catherine Stanley DEVELOPMENT DONOR COORDINATOR

Annette Lindemann DEVELOPMENT INTERNS

Julia Apffel Jack Flynn Anna Gregory Eislyn Snyder Elise Todaro Dillen White

CFI EDUCATION DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION

Joanne Parsont MVFF EDUCATION MANAGER

Melanie Nichols MVFF FILMMAKERS GO TO SCHOOL COORDINATOR

Shakira Refos EDUCATION ASSISTANT

Catherine Anderson

EXECUTIVE OFFICE EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT

Maureen Galliani CFI RELEASING STRATEGIST

Jonathan Marlow

FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION DEPUTY DIRECTOR

Dane Callihan

FINANCE MANAGER

Connie Chang FINANCE ASSOCIATE

Laura Austin IT & OPERATIONS MANAGER

Norman Mello

CHRISTOPHER B. SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER DIRECTOR OF PROGRAMMING

Richard Peterson GENERAL MANAGER

Dan Zastrow RAFAEL PROGRAM ASSOCIATE

Alexandra Cantin PROGRAM CONSULTANT

Jan Klingelhofer ASSISTANT MANAGER

Jordan Jones SHIFT MANAGERS

Melina Christensen Vincent Lucido SMITH RAFAEL FILM CENTER STAFF

Brianna Cady Myles Cohen Dante Cokinos Cailan Ferguson Nick Ginwala Brandon Llamas Thalia Loppies Luis Reyes Zack Shinnick Eli Torgensen Fresca Varagnolo Mia Yun

177


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GIRAF F EX

CREATIVE | CONCEPT | PASSION | RELIANCE

415 . 3 4 6 . 916 6

W W W. G I R A F F E X . C O M


CREATIVE CREDITS PRINTED MATERIAL

Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners

PUBLICATIONS

Design & Print Production

Brian Lehman

Digital Media Maven

Courtney Buffington

Production, Digital Prepress

Giraffex, Inc. - Richard Repas

Managing Editor

Joe Bowman

Advertising Sales

Winifred MacLeod

FESTIVAL PUBLICITY

AGENCY

Larsen Associates

Principal

Karen Larsen

Publicist

Vince Johnson

AGENCY

Hamilton Ink

Principal

Stephanie Clarke

Publicist

Clara Franco

MVFF41 THEATRICAL TRAILER | Spoiler Alert

AGENCY

Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners

Co-Chariman

John Butler

Co-Chariman

Greg Stern

ACD/Writer

Ralf De Houwer

Art Director

Mary Wuensch

Designers

Mike Hughes, Lori Kayko

Producer

Tyler Stubbs, Tyler Neely

Account Executive

Chelsie Earl

Production Co

Cleaver Content

Directors

John Butler, Jason Apple

Director of Photography

Jason Apple

Editors

Jason Apple, Nico Litonjua

Motion Graphics

Tom Yaniv

Audio and Sound Effects

Nate Beltz

Talent

Mark Lewis, Kelsey Honz, Lauren Chatman, Gabi Da Silva, Tyler Stubbs, Mick Laugs, Doug Gawoski

MVFF, The County of Marin, Jeanette at Core Pilates – Sausalito

Thanks

MVFF41 THEATRICAL TRAILER | Compilation Reel

The Understory

Fabián Aguirre & Maya Pisciotto

SPECIAL THANKS

Highway 1 Creative

Christopher Markisz

Deluxe Technicolor Digital Cinema

Scott Kulander, Kayla Myers

l-inc Design

Lisa Berghout, Ed Apodaca

Mill Valley Chamber of Commerce

Jim Welte

181


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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Betsy Abendroth

Focus Features

Allison Levenson

Helen Russell

Fabián Aguirre

Karen Folger Jacobs

Alexandra Lexton

John Sanborn

Allied Global Marketing

Kate Fox

Erin Lim

Kevin Schaub

Gunnar Almer

Melinda Fox

Meredith Lipsky

Tom Schlesinger

Forrest Alvarez

Fox Searchlight Pictures

Jacqui Lopez

Martin Schwartz

Amazon Studios

Frameline

Tom Luddy

Donna Seager

Ed Arentz

Tom Franco

Monique Luddy

SFFILM

Zoe Arthur

Elizabeth Gabler

Becky MacDonald

Alireza Shahrokhi

Amy Astley

Sid Ganis

Misha MacLaird

Norah Shapiro

Michal Aviad

Renée Gasch

Magnolia Pictures

Lynnette Shaw

Krissy Bailey

John Goddard

Tano Maida

Tiffany Shlain

Jerry Barrish

Goethe Institut

Gerry Maravilla

Lucy Shiels

BAWIFM

Jill Golden

Sue Maslin

David Shultz

Andrea Bertolini

Brian Gordon

Niall McKay

Osnat Shurer

Aleksandra Biernaka

Suzanne Gray

Gary Meyer

Melissa Silverstein

Tim Bird

Nancy Gribler

Laura Minorsky

Wendy Slick

Judy Bloch

Robin Gurland

Bente Mirow

Stacy Smith

Adrienne Bowles

Lynne Hale

Chris Morgan

Tomek Smolarski

Jordon Briggs

Cerise Hallam Larkin

Brighde Mullins

Jennifer Steinman

Girija Brilliant

Melanie Hamburger

Holly Near

Ricki Stern

Larry Brilliant

Catherine Hardwicke

Russell Nelson

Ray Stone

BSSP

Courtney Harrell

Sierra Nguyen

Jennifer Stott

Shakti Butler

Hilary Hart

Norwegian Film Institute

Strand Releasing

Megan Butler

JoAnn Hastings

Mike Olcese

Isabelle Sugimoto

Rita Cahill

Robin Hauser

Emiko Omori

Anne Sundberg

California Newsreel

Aude Hesbert

Marilyn Ortiz

Laura Swanbeck

Michelle Cameron

John Hessler

Shurer Osnat

Swedish Film Institute

Brenda Chapman

Brook Holston

Megan Moss Pachon

Sweetwater Music Hall

Robert Chevara

Jörn Horaczek

Anna Paquin

Lisa Taback

Chicago Film Festival

Melissa Howden

Paramount Pictures

Angela Tabora

Laurence Christen

Marcus Hu

Sabryna Phillips

Danielle Taormina-Keenan

Jessica Colvin

Ericka Huggins

Maya Pisciotto

Telluride Film Festival

Joni Cooper

John Hulls

Pixar

Bev Thorman

Noah Cowan

Julie Huntsinger

Mimi Plauché

Kyle Thorpe

Graziella Danieli

Icelandic Film Centre

Polish Film Institute

Corey Tong

Dave Altizer Photography

IFC

Natacha Pope

Iris Torres

Ninfa Dawson

IMCINE

Sue Priolo

Gary Traverso

Janae Desire

Ernie Johnston

David Proctor-Bonbright

François Truffart

Michelle Devereaux

Michelle Kantor

Elaine Proctor-Bonbright

The Understory

Annie Easton

James Kasey

Lucia Proctor-Bonbright

Mike Van Metre

Chaz Ebert

Deborah Kaufman

Marcus Pun

Dana Vasquez

Stacy Egide

Aaron Kayce

Mariell Rahmani

Gustavo Vazquez

Michael Ehrenzweig

Ralph Kaywin

Richard Repas

Delfin Vigil

Alison Emilio

Pat Keaney

Rodrigo Reyes

Warner Bros. Pictures

Amir Esfandiari

Nancy Kelly

Roadside Attractions

John C. Weaver III

Allison Essoyan

Laura Kim

Chris Robbins

Valerie Weiss

Farabi Cinema Foundation

Kino Lorber

Stuart Robertson

Judith Williams

Blye Faust

Vivian Kleiman

Daniella Robinson

Paul Wright

Josh Fesler

Jan Klingelhofer

Chloe Roddick

Cecilia Zamora

Film Fatales

Grace Kraaijvanger

Diana Rodgers

Betsy Zeger

Finnish Film Foundation

Machu Latorre

Rachel Rosen

Sue Zemel

Nancy Fishman

Tommy Lau

Gary Rubin

185


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IN MEMORIAM DEAR FRIENDS OF THE FESTIVAL WE LOST IN 2017–2018

MILOš FORMAN

The iconic Czech-American director and screenwriter Miloš Forman had a particular resonance for the Bay Area: both of his Academy Award ® -winning films, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) and Amadeus (1984), were produced here. He was recipient of a Tribute at MVFF in 2002.

MURIEL HAMMOND

Our beloved volunteer with a generosity of spirit and a saucy sense of humor, Muriel Hammond and her husband Murray regularly plied festival staff with support, wisdom, and a non-stop supply of cookies.

MAL KARMAN

Screenwriter, author, and film writer for the Pacific Sun, Mal Karman annually wrote comprehensively about Mill Valley Film Festival with a depth and thoughtfulness that is unrivalled. We miss his passion for film and filmmakers.

JEANNE MOREAU

Jeanne Moreau, the legendary French actress, director, and doyenne of the New Wave, was MVFF’s first international tributee in 1982. As she entered the Sequoia, “Le tourbillon,” the song she sang in Jules et Jim, was playing. During her visit, she went shopping at Cost Plus: A limo took her there.

JUDY STONE

Judy Stone’s intellect, passion, insight, and drive made her one of the world’s great film critics. A tenacious seeker of the truth, she championed filmmakers from across the globe. She was renowned for her mango chutney and for getting people to feed her parking meter when she was watching films.

ROSE MARIE

Rose Marie’s extraordinary career spanned nine decades and multiple disciplines on screen, on stage, and on air, frequently in the vanguard as her early days in vaudeville led to radio, film, and then—television. Most widely known as Sally Rogers, the comedy writer on The Dick Van Dyke Show, it’s only in recent years that her importance as a role model has become evident. We honored her with an Opening Night Tribute in 2017.

SAM SHEPARD

Playwright and actor Sam Shepard lived in Mill Valley for several years, near the 2AM Club. Many of his groundbreaking, career-defining plays launched at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco, where he was artist-in-residence. The Pulitzer-winning writer was on a writing panel at MVFF in the early 1980s with soon-to-become screenwriting guru Syd Field. After Field expounded his theories, there were gasps when Shepard completely dismissed them. Both inspired a generation of writers.

HARRY DEAN STANTON

In 1984, Harry Dean Stanton was honored as an MVFF Tributee in conjunction with the screening of Paris, Texas (written by Sam Shepard). Paris, Texas was a turning point in a career notable for indie and cult classics like Two-Lane Blacktop and Repo Man. Legend has it that the live show he did at the Sweetwater that year was his first public performance as a singer and musician.

189


Season

JOY

of

WINE TIME Five Under-theRadar Makers

HAWAII CALLS Your Guide to Island Adventure

MVFF GUIDE

Teaching, Giving, Celebrating: Stories of Inspiration and Community

Celebrating 40 Years of Film

PRIVATE SCHOOL GUIDE 2017

FALL FASHION

Going

GR EN

FLORALS, STATEMENT REDS AND LEATHER DAYWEAR

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8/14/17 1:17 PM

ello

“I look back and think, ‘Shoot, I should’ve done this 20 years ago.’” (p. 30)

2018 “After our first date I knew I wanted someone like him in my life.” (p. 40)

“Overall, I think we are going to be OK as long as we keep adapting and evolving.” (p. 26)

WEDDING GUIDE

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12/5/17 9:54 AM

Groundbreaking Tech Debuts in Mill Valley

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9/5/17 10:17 AM

HO-HUM ATIVE TO

RKO GYM WO

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10/9/17 2:48 PM

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11/6/17 2:42 PM

HOME ISSUE 2018

UP, UP AND AWAY Hang Gliders Soar Over Marin

EVER DANCE F AN ALTERN

ENTERTAINING 101

Perfect Holiday Party Platters

MODERNIZING A MIDCENTURY HOME

SUMMER CAMPS GUIDE

UTS

169 Ideas for Fun and Adventure

SPORTY SPRING FASHION

LUST FOR LIKE Current Research on Social Media Addictions

PLAY BALL NEW IN WINE COUNTRY Little League Life Lessons Cans, Castles and Coravin

[415] TOP DOCTORS

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ART MEET OUR COVER CONTEST WINNER AND FINALISTS

MAKING WAVES New Rules for Anchor-Outs

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SUMMER GUIDE 2018

48-Page Supplement

4/9/18 10:24 AM

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Outdoor Spaces The Best Room in the House Is Outside

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Chilling Grilling

&

4 CHEF-INSPIRED RECIPES

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HIT THE ROAD Can't-Miss Summer Destinations 2018 TOP DOCTOR SPECIALISTS

MVFF Marin Magazin e’s

Ultimate Guide to the

40th

MIL L VAL LE Y FIL M FE STI VAL

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PRINT SOURCES 3 FACES

ASH IS PUREST WHITE

BZZZ

Kino Lorber www.kinolorber.com

Cohen Media Group Debbie Acosta cohenmedia.net

Anna Cetti annaccetti@gmail.com

AWAKER

Fox Searchlight Pictures www.foxsearchlight.com

22 JULY Netflix 
 netflix.com

A PRIORI Maïté Schmitt maite.schmitt@gmail.com

LOS ADIOSES Lux Box Films www.luxboxfilms.com

AGENT OF CONNECTION Cash Studios Evan Neff www.cashstudios.co

ALIFU THE PRINCE/SS

Kurz Film Verleih verleih.shortfilm.com/en

BATHTUBS OVER BROADWAY Impact Partners Dan Cogan www.impactpartnersfilm.com

BEAUTIFUL BOY Amazon Studios studios.amazon.com

BECOMING ASTRID Music Box Films www.musicboxfilms.com

CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME?

CANDACE Emma Weinstein emma.weinstein@yale.edu

CAPERNAUM Sony Pictures Classics www.sonyclassics.com

CAROLEE, BARBARA & GUNVOR BY LYNNE SACHS Lynne Sachs lynnesachs@gmail.com

THE CENTER OF A BOOK

Reel Suspects Alberto Alvarez Aguilera www.reelsuspects.com

BEN IS BACK Roadside Attractions roadsideattractions.com

Muckle Mouth Joshua Moore jsmoore09@gmail.com

ALL SQUARE

BIAS

CERULIA

Mill House Motion Pictures www.mhmp.tv

Finish Line Features, LLC Tierney Henderson www.finishlinefeaturefilms.com

IMCINE Gloria Mascorro festivals@imcine.gob.mx

THE BICYCLE THIEF

CHAINED FOR LIFE

Kerry Skinner info@parkbenchpictures.co.uk

Aaron Schimberg tokyochorus@gmail.com

THE BIG BAD FOX AND OTHER TALES

CHARM CITY

GKids Ryan Kane gkids.com

PBS Distribution Erin Owens pbsdistribution.org

BIRDS OF PASSAGE

CHRIS THE SWISS

The Orchard www.theorchard.tv

Urban Distribution International Arnaud Bélangeon-Bouaziz www.urbandistrib.com

ALL THESE SMALL MOMENTS The Film Sales Company www.filmsalescorp.com

AMALIA THE SECRETARY Habanero Film Sales Alfredo Calvino www.habanerofilmsales.com

EL ÁNGEL The Orchard www.theorchard.tv

ANGST IndieFlix Ann Skrobut www.indieflix.com

BORDER

ANY WEDNESDAY

BOY ERASED

Hilder Productions David Lundstedt lumpatx@gmail.com

Focus Features www.focusfeatures.com

ARE YOU STILL SINGING?

Second Seed Productions boss@secondseedproductions.com

Gillian Barnes gillianleighbarnes@gmail.com

ART PAUL OF PLAYBOY: THE MAN BEHIND THE BUNNY MoraQuest Media Jennifer Hou Kwong moraquest.com

...AS IF THEY WERE ANGELS Health, Education & Videotape, Inc. Terry Strauss strauss.terry@gmail.com

194

Neon neonrated.com

BREAK THE CAMERA

BRENTWOOD

COCO Walt Disney Pictures movies.disney.com

COIN OPERATED Nicholas Arioli nick.arioli@gmail.com

COLD WAR Amazon Studios studios.amazon.com

Filmsignal Sharon Everitt www.filmsignal.com

COLLISIONS

BURNING

CRAIG’S PATHETIC FREAKOUT

Well Go USA www.wellgousa.com

Graham Parkes grhmparkes@gmail.com

BUSHWICK BEATS

DARK DARK WOODS

Aleksey Ageyev ageyeff@gmail.com

Emile Gignoux e.gignoux@laposte.net

Richard Levien richard.levien@gmail.com


PRINT SOURCES DAUGHTER OF MINE

FROM BAGHDAD TO THE BAY

I WANT TO LIVE IN THE ZOO

Strand Releasing strandreleasing.com

Erin Palmquist erin@erinpalmquist.com

Evgenia Golubeva jane.golubeva@gmail.com

THE DAY THAT

THE FRONT RUNNER

IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK

Dorian Tocker doriantocker@gmail.com

Sony Pictures Classics www.sonyclassics.com

Annapurna Pictures annapurna.pictures

DEAR HENRI,

GALINHA

IN THE AISLES

Matthew Sandager matthew@matthewsandager.com

Joรฃo Pereira-Webber jpereirawebb@wesleyan.edu

Music Box Films www.musicboxfilms.com

DESTROYER

THE GREAT BUSTER: A CELEBRATION

THE INDEPENDENTS

Annapurna Pictures annapurna.pictures

Cohen Media Group Debbie Acosta cohenmedia.net

RGB Film, Inc. Greg Naughton gnaught2@gmail.com

GREEN BOOK

JESSZILLA

Universal Pictures www.universalpictures.com

Emily Sheskin emilysheskin@gmail.com

GRIT

JOSEPH PULITZER: VOICE OF THE PEOPLE

THE DRESS OF MYRIAM Lucas H. Rossi ovestidodemyriam@gmail.com

EARTHRISE Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee evaughanlee@globalonenessproject.org

EFFORTLESS FRENCH Xavier Sayanoff sayanoff@gmail.com

ERNESTO mk2 films mk2films.com

EVERYBODY KNOWS Focus Features www.focusfeatures.com

THE FAVOURITE Fox Searchlight Pictures www.foxsearchlight.com

THE FIDDLER Brett Marty bret@speculativefilms.com

A FIELD GUIDE TO BEING A 12-YEAR-OLD GIRL Closer Productions Katrina Lucas closerproductions.com.au

FOOTPRINT Sara Newens sara.newens@gmail.com

FREAKS OF NURTURE National Film Board of Canada Jane Butteridge www.nfb.ca

FREE LIKE THE BIRDS joeyngloria LLC Gloria La Morte www.joeyngloria.com

FREE SOLO National Geographic www.nationalgeographic.com

Cynthia Wade Productions, Inc. www.cynthiawade.com

THE GUARDIANS Billie Mintz billie@billiemintz.com

HARVEST SEASON

Oren Rudavsky Productions orenrudavskyproductions.com

KANNAPOLIS: A MOVING PORTRAIT Finn Taylor finnt@pacbell.net

Quiet Pictures Bernardo Ruiz bernardoruiz.com

THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER

THE HATE U GIVE

LAST STOP

Twentieth Century Fox www.foxmovies.com

IMCINE Gloria Mascorro www.imcine.gob.mx

HEADS OR TAILS

Netflix netflix.com

H264 Distribution Jean-Christophe J. Lamontagne www.h264distribution.com/en

THE LAW OF AVERAGES

A HOLE

LEMONADE

Maribel Suรกrez marisubel@hotmail.com

Mongrel www.mongrelmedia.com

HOLLY NEAR: SINGING FOR OUR LIVES

LION

Elizabeth Rose ebr2125@columbia.edu

Jim Brown jimbrownproductions@gmail.com

Studio FILM BILDER Bianca Just www.filmbilder.de

HULA GIRL

LITTLE WOODS

Snap Pictures, Inc. Amy Hill riesshill@icloud.com

Neon neonrated.com

I AM MARIS: PORTRAIT OF A YOUNG YOGI ro*co films Ariana Garfinkel rocofilms.com

I AM MY OWN MOTHER Zox Project zoxproject@gmail.com

LONG TIME COMING: A 1955 BASEBALL STORY Jon Strong jon@strongfilms.com

THE LOSS una+one films Machu Latorre unaplusonefilms@gmail.com

195


PRINT SOURCES THE LOST CITY OF THE MONKEY GOD

NON-FICTION

A PRIVATE WAR

Benenson Productions Wendy Wager benensonproductions.com

IFC Films Matt Landers Matt.Landers@ifcfilms.com

Aviron Pictures aviron.com

LUCINA

NORTHERN WIND

Gerardo Rueda grueda95@outlook.com

Be For Films Claire Battistoni www.beforfilms.com

Film Movement Maxwell Wolkin www.filmmovement.com

LUCY VS. THE LIMITS OF VOICE IMCINE Gloria Mascorro www.imcine.gob.mx

OBEY

MAD GOD, PART 3

OCULUS

Tippett Studio Corey Rosen crosen@tippett.com

Behrooz Qiassi oculus-shortmovie@gmail.com

Wide Management www.widemanagement.com

MARIA BY CALLAS

ONE CAMBODIAN FAMILY PLEASE FOR MY PLEASURE

Sony Pictures Classics www.sonyclassics.com

Shatterbox www.tntdrama.com/shows/shatterbox

MATEO AND THE CINEMA

ONE VOICE

Luis Felipe Hernández Alanis animatitlan@gmail.com

Jed Riffe Films jedriffe@gmail.com

#METOO GUMSHOE

OUTDOORS

Ilyse Mimoun imimoun1@aol.com

Yummy Films François Heiser francois@yummy-films.com

THE MODERN LIVES: BACK OF MY MIND THE MODERN LIVES: GOOD ADVICE THE MODERN LIVES: MODERN LIVES THE MODERN LIVES: TUPELO Plymptoons www.plymptoons.com

THE MOON’S MILK Ri Crawford ritransactionary@gmail.com

MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS: 8 TRUE STORIES Gary Weimberg gary@lunaproductions.com

MOVING STORIES

PAINTED Olivia Derie oliviaderie@hotmail.com

THE PARTING GLASS Dark Star Pictures Mike Repsch darkstarpics.com

Mill Valley Film Group Will Parrinello willmvfg@gmail.com

196

Canal 22 Melina Diazmercado Delfin www.canal22.org.mx

ROMA Netflix netflix.com

ROUFF Lucia Scharbatke Film.wildboar@gmail.com

RUNNER Clare Cooney cooneycm@gmail.com

SAINT JUDY Cannonball Productions Derek Beamer derek@cannonballproduction.com

THE SCHOOL OF HONK Patrick Johnson johnson_patrick@wheatoncollege.edu

SEDER MASOCHISM

SERGIO AND SERGEI

PET NAMES Simple DCP Julia Colbert Ruiz julia@simpledcp.com

PITY

THE NEW ENVIRONMENTALISTS: FROM HANOI TO PARIS

RICOTTA

Rayka Zehtabchi raykazehtabchi@gmail.com

MUG

Vitagraph Films www.vitagraphfilms.com

Rivkah Beth Medow rivkahbeth@gmail.com

Nina Paley nina_paley@yahoo.com

PETERLOO

MUSEO

RAINBOW BRIDGE

PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE.

Argot Pictures Jim Browne www.argotpictures.com Memento Films www.memento-films.com

RAFIKI

Amazon Studios studios.amazon.com New Europe Film Sales Ewa Bojanowska ewa@neweuropefilmsales.com

POLIANGULAR IMCINE Alexandra Castellanos Solis www.imcine.gob.mx

POST NO BILLS Robin Hays haysr@me.com

West End Films Alex Pye www.westendfilms.com

SHERBERT ROZENCRANTZ, YOU’RE BEAUTIFUL Natalie van den Dungen natalie.vandendungen@gmail.com

SHOE SHINER Lux Visual Storytelling Andrés Gallegos andresgallegos.y@gmail.com

SHOPLIFTERS Magnolia Pictures Martin Wendel www.magnoliapictures.com

THE SILENCE OF OTHERS Cinephil Shoshi Korman cinephil.com


PRINT SOURCES THE SILENT REVOLUTION

THE TEACHER AND THE FLOWER

WAVES FROM THE SKY

The Festival Agency ed@thefestivalagency.com

Daniel Irabién daniel@estudiocarabas.com

SILVIA IN THE WAVES

TIME FOR ILHAN

IMCINE Gloria Mascorro www.imcine.gob.mx

Giovana Olmos olmos.gio@gmail.com

The Film Sales Company Graham Fine www.filmsalescorp.com

SIR mk2 Films Anne-Laure Barbarit mk2films.com/en

TINTICO’S AFTERNOONS

WEED THE PEOPLE Abramorama Karol Martesko-Fenster www.abramorama.com

IMCINE Gloria Mascorro www.imcine.gob.mx

WHAT THEY HAD

Some Shorts Wouter Jansen info@someshorts.com

TOO LATE TO DIE YOUNG

WHEN THE TREES FALL

KIMSTIM kimstim.com

SOFIA

TRANSIT

Latido Films Marta Hernando www.latidofilms.com

Be For Films Claire Battistoni www.beforfilms.com

Music Box Films www.musicboxfilm.com

SOMETHING IS HAPPENING

aug&ohr medien augohr.de

SKIP DAY

Shellac Félicie Roger www.shellac-altern.org

TSAR BOMBA

TWO BALLOONS

SOULS OF TOTALITY

Mark Smith twoballoonsfilm@gmail.com

Richard Raymond richard@may13films.com

TWO FOR DINNER

SPANKO

Eleanor Coppola eleanor_coppola@ffcnotes.com

Melanie Zoey Weinstein melaniezoey@gmail.com

TWO MEDUSAS

SPECIAL DAY Nikolai von Keller nickvonkeller@gmail.com

STARDUST IMCINE Gloria Mascorro www.imcine.gob.mx

STAY HUMAN ACTIVIST Cielo Alano www.activist.co

SUPA MODO Juno Films junofilms.com

Black Valley Films Scott Hamilton Kennedy www.blackvalleyfilms.com

TWO PLAINS & A FANCY Lev Kalman lev.and.whitney@gmail.com

TWO PUDDLES Ian Bignell submissions@festivalformula.com

UNDISCOVERED Sara Litzenberger sara.litzenberger@gmail.com

USE YOUR DELUSION

SUPERPERSON

Cartwheel Films Jamie Vega Wheeler jamievwheeler@gmail.com

Philip Watts pwatts@me.com

VIPER CLUB

THE SWEET REQUIEM

Roadside Attractions roadsideattractions.com

White Crane Films whitecranefilms.com

VIRUS TROPICAL

SWIMMING WITH MEN

Stray Dogs www.stray-dogs.biz

IFC Films www.ifcfilms.com

VISION Semira Hedayati semira@elledriver.eu

Bleeker Street Media bleeckerstreetmedia.com

THE WHISTLEBLOWER OF MY LAI Clarity Films Connie Field www.clarityfilms.org

WHO KILLED LT. VAN DORN? Investigative Reporting Program Zachary Stauffer investigativereportingprogram.com

WIDOWS Twentieth Century Fox www.foxmovies.com

WILD DAZE Phyllis Stuart infg@enthusetv.com

WILDLIFE IFC Films www.ifcfilms.com

WOMAN AT WAR Magnolia Pictures www.magnoliapictures.com

A WORD TO THE WISE Gangway Media Jordi Esgleas Tarifa marroi3@gmail.com

WORKING WOMAN M-Appeal Torsten Schulze www.m-appeal.net

WORLD OF FACTS Mike Gibisser mike.gibisser@gmail.com

WORLDS OF URSULA K. LE GUIN Arwen Curry arwencurry@gmail.com

YOMEDDINE Strand Releasing strandreleasing.com

197


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FILMS BY COUNTRY * Denotes country of interest

CROATIA Chris the Swiss

AFGHANISTAN Saint Judy*

ARGENTINA El ángel Too Late to Die Young

AUSTRALIA A Field Guide to Being a 12-Year-Old Girl Sherbert Rozencrantz, You’re Beautiful Superperson

BELGIUM Painted

BRAZIL The Dress of Myriam Galinha* Too Late to Die Young

BULGARIA Seder Masochism*

CAMBODIA One Cambodian Family Please for My Pleasure*

CANADA ...As If They Were Angels* Freaks of Nurture The Guardians Heads or Tails The Law of Averages Lemonade Post No Bills Silvia in the Waves

CHILE Shoe Shiner Too Late to Die Young

CHINA Ash Is Purest White

COLOMBIA Amalia the Secretary Birds of Passage The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris* Virus Tropical

200

CUBA Ernesto Sergio and Sergei

CZECH REPUBLIC Awaker

DENMARK Becoming Astrid Birds of Passage Border Dark Dark Woods Grit One Voice*

ECUADOR Virus Tropical

Lion Rafiki Rouff The Silent Revolution Supa Modo Transit

GREECE Pity

ICELAND 22 July Woman at War

INDIA Moving Stories* Sir The Sweet Requiem

INDONESIA Grit

EGYPT Yomeddine

FRANCE A Priori Ash Is Purest White The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales Cold War Effortless French Everybody Knows Maria by Callas The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris* Non-Fiction Northern Wind Outdoors Rafiki Seder Masochism* Sir Sofia Something Is Happening Transit Woman at War

FINLAND Chris the Swiss

GERMANY Becoming Astrid Chris the Swiss Daughter of Mine In the Aisles Lemonade

IRAN 3 Faces Oculus

IRAQ

MEXICO Los adioses Birds of Passage Bzzz Cerulia Collisions* Harvest Season* A Hole Last Stop Mateo and the Cinema Museo Poliangular Ricotta Roma Stardust The Teacher and the Flower Tintico’s Afternoons Waves from the Sky

NETHERLANDS Rafiki Too Late to Die Young

NORWAY 22 July One Voice* Rafiki

Moving Stories*

IRELAND The Favourite

ISRAEL Seder Masochism* Working Woman

ITALY Daughter of Mine Everybody Knows Lucy vs. the Limits of Voice

JAPAN Ernesto Shoplifters

KENYA Rafiki Supa Modo

LEBANON Capernaum

MACEDONIA When the Trees Fall

PHILIPPINES The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris*

POLAND Cold War Mug Pity When the Trees Fall

QATAR Sofia Too Late to Die Young

ROMANIA Lemonade Moving Stories*

RUSSIA The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris*

SOMALIA Time for Ilhan*


FILMS BY COUNTRY SOUTH AFRICA The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris* Rafiki

SOUTH KOREA Burning Moving Stories*

SPAIN El ángel Everybody Knows The Loss The Silence of Others A Word to the Wise

SWEDEN Becoming Astrid Border Lemonade

SWITZERLAND Chris the Swiss Daughter of Mine One Voice* Tsar Bomba

TAIWAN Alifu the Prince/ss

TUNISIA Northern Wind

UK Angst The Bicycle Thief Cold War The Favourite I Want to Live in the Zoo Obey Peterloo A Private War Skip Day Souls of Totality Swimming with Men Two Puddles Widows

UKRAINE When the Trees Fall Woman at War

US Agent of Connection All Square All These Small Moments Āmrikā Angst Any Wednesday Are You Still Singing? Art Paul of Playboy: The Man Behind the Bunny ...As If They Were Angels Backyard Bees Bathtubs Over Broadway Beautiful Boy Ben Is Back bias Boy Erased Break the Camera Brentwood Bushwick Beats Can You Ever Forgive Me? Candace Carolee, Barbara & Gunvor by Lynne Sachs Censored The Center of a Book Chained for Life Charm City Coco Coin Operated Collisions Craig’s Pathetic Freakout Dance with Me Davy Jones Can’t Fly The Day That Dear Henri, Destroyer Earthrise Experimenting with Animation The Favourite The Fiddler Footprint Free Like the Birds Free Solo From Baghdad to The Bay The Front Runner Galinha Goodbye Sam Gray Areas The Great Buster: A Celebration Green Book Grit Harvest Season The Hate U Give

The Hi De Ho Show Holly Near: Singing for Our Lives Hula Girl I Am Maris: Portrait of a Young Yogi I Am My Own Mother If Beale Street Could Talk The Independents JessZilla Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the People Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait The Kindergarten Teacher The Last Straw The Light of My Life Little Woods The Look Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story The Lost City of the Monkey God Lucina Mad God, Part 3 #metoo gumshoe The Modern Lives: Back of My Mind The Modern Lives: Good Advice The Modern Lives: Modern Lives The Modern Lives: Tupelo The Moon’s Milk Mothers and Daughters: 8 True Stories Moving Stories The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris One Cambodian Family Please for My Pleasure One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster One Voice The Parting Glass Perception Period. End of Sentence. Pet Names Peterloo Pop A Private War Rainbow Bridge The Rat The Redwood Grove Roma Runner

Saint Judy The School of Honk Seder Masochism Skip Day Souls of Totality Spanko Special Day Stay Human The Sweet Requiem Time for Ilhan Two Balloons Two for Dinner Two Medusas Two Plains & a Fancy Undiscovered Use Your Delusion Viper Club Weed the People What They Had The Whistleblower of My Lai Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn? Why, God? Widows Wild DaZe Wildlife World of Facts Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin

VIETNAM The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris* The Whistleblower of My Lai*

201


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FILMMAKER INDEX Abbasi, Ali

Cash, Ivan

Erlingsson, Benedikt

Border. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130

Agent of Connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Woman at War. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159

Alexander, Stewart

Castaldo, Anne

Eschrich, Markus

Outdoors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Rouff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Castellanos Solis, Alexandra

Esgleas Marroi, Jordi

Poliangular. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

A Word to the Wise. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Cetti, Anna

Everitt, Sharon

Bzzz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Brentwood. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Chalek, Sarah

Farhadi, Asghar

Outdoors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Everybody Knows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135

Chang-dong, Lee

Farrelly, Peter

Burning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130

Green Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33, 138

Chang, Tiffany

Field, Connie

One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

The Whistleblower of My Lai. . . . . . . . . . . . 157

Chin, Jimmy

Fischer Christensen, Pernille

Free Solo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

Becoming Astrid. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128

Cho, Stephanie

Flaming, Paige

One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

Experimenting with Animation. . . . . . . . . . 123

Chomko, Elizabeth

Franti, Michael

What They Had. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157

Stay Human. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

Cobham-Hervey, Tilda

Friedlander, Sasha

A Field Guide to Being a 12-Year-Old Girl. 141

Grit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138

Colangelo, Sara

Fruchtman, Rob

The Kindergarten Teacher. . . . . . . . . . . 87, 142

Moving Stories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144

Cooney, Clare

Gallego, Cristina

Runner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Birds of Passage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129

Coppola, Eleanor

Gallegos, Andrés

Two for Dinner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Shoe Shiner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Crawford, Ri

García Caballero, Alejandro

The Moon’s Milk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Tintico’s Afternoons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Cuarón, Alfonso

Gera, Rohena

Roma. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34, 149

Sir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151

The Bicycle Thief. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Alix, Anne Something Is Happening. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

Anderson-Smith, Grant Davy Jones Can’t Fly. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Antabli, Sarah One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

Antonelli, John The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Arioli, Nicholas Coin Operated . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Assayas, Olivier Non-Fiction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145

Aviad, Michal Working Woman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159

Bahar, Nicole Āmrikā . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Bahar, Robert The Silence of Others. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150

Barnes, Gillian Are You Still Singing? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Benenson, Bill The Lost City of the Monkey God. . . . . . . . 144

Benm’Barek, Meryem Sofia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151

Beristáin, Natalia Los adioses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Bispuri, Laura Daughter of Mine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Curry, Arwen

Gibisser, Mike

The Great Buster: A Celebration. . . . . . . . . 137

Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin. . . . . . . . . . . . . 160

World of Facts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160

Brand, Benjamin

DaCosta, Nia

Gignoux, Emile

Rouff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Little Woods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143

Dark Dark Woods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Brandt, Carol

Dano, Paul

Ginter, Nathan

Pet Names. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147

Wildlife. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45, 159

Why, God?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Bresnan, Patrick

Bogdanovich, Peter

Daranas Serrano, Ernesto

Goddard, John

Skip Day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Sergio and Sergei. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150

The Hi De Ho Show. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139

Brown, Jim

Dávila Cabrera, Héctor

Golubeva, Evgenia

Holly Near: Singing for Our Lives . . . . . . . . 140

Last Stop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

I Want to Live in the Zoo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Budzyna, Maggie

Derie, Olivia

Gonon, Vincent

Censored. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Painted. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Effortless French. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135

Burgos, Andrés

Diviak, Filip

Greengrass, Paul

Amalia the Secretary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

Awaker. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

22 July. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Caicedo, Santiago

Duenyas, Lola

Greyhavens, Teal

Virus Tropical. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156

Perception. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Special Day . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Carlton, Justin

Edgerton, Joel

Guerra, Ciro

Use Your Delusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155

Boy Erased. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63, 130

Birds of Passage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129

Carracedo, Almudena

Engelhardt, Johannes

Hanish, Sean

The Silence of Others. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150

Rouff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Saint Judy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149

Carrillo, Sofía

Epstein, Abby

Hauser, Robin

Cerulia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Weed the People. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156

bias. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129

204


FILMMAKER INDEX Hays, Robin

Kwong, Jennifer Hou (Jian Ping)

Moore, Joshua

Post No Bills. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Art Paul of Playboy: The Man Behind the Bunny. . . . . . . . . . . 126

The Center of a Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142

Ben Is Back. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128

Labaki, Nadine

Heads or Tails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Heineman, Matthew

Capernaum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Hedges, Peter

A Private War. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32, 148

Lanthimos, Yorgos

Heller, Marielle

The Favourite. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

Can You Ever Forgive Me?. . . . . . . . . . . 75, 131

Latorre, Machu

Hernández Alanis, Luis Felipe

The Loss. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Mateo and the Cinema. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Leigh, Mike

Herrera, Mónica

Peterloo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147

Lucy vs. the Limits of Voice . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Lemay, Alexandra

Hill, Amy

Freaks of Nurture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Hula Girl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Levien, Richard

Horn, Whitney

Collisions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133

Morin-Vargas, Fernand-Philippe Mostafavi, Mostafa Oculus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Moyer, Stephen The Parting Glass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59, 147

Naughton, Greg The Independents. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Nesme, Elsa Outdoors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Ness, Marilyn Charm City. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132

Newens, Sara

Two Plains & a Fancy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155

Lewis, Miranda Autumn

Hyams, John

The Rat. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Nikitiuk, Marysia

All Square. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

Light, Allie

When the Trees Fall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157

Imbert, Patrick

Any Wednesday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Noyce, Will

The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales. . . . . . . . 129

Litzenberger, Sara

Irabién, Daniel

Undiscovered. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Backyard Bees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 The Redwood Grove. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Løvenbalch Kirchheiner, Mik

Nuñez, Guicho

Dark Dark Woods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Bzzz. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

If Beale Street Could Talk. . . . . . . . . . . . 35, 140

Lowin, Sara

Ocker, Julia

Johnson, Patrick

One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

Lion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

The School of Honk. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144

Lucas, Ivete

Olmos, Giovana

Jones, Jamie

Skip Day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Silvia in the Waves. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Obey. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

Lukas, A.M.

Ortega, Luis

Jordan, Julian

One Cambodian Family Please for My Pleasure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

El ángel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126

Paley, Nina

Lumer, Johannes

Seder Masochism. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149

Rouff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Palmquist, Erin

Makridis, Babis

From Baghdad to The Bay. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

Pity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148

Panahi, Jafar

Marty, Brett

3 Faces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

The Fiddler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Parker, Oliver

Mattar, Walid

Swimming with Men . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

The Teacher and the Flower . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Jenkins, Barry

The Last Straw. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Kahiu, Wanuri Rafiki. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148

Kalman, Lev Two Plains & a Fancy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155

Karliner-Li, Isaac Dance with Me. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Kawase, Naomi Vision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156

Keeling, Timothy Two Puddles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Kennedy, Scott Hamilton Two Medusas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Keshavarz, Maryam Viper Club . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155

Kiani, Nasim Oculus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Kofmel, Anja Chris the Swiss. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132

Kore-eda, Hirokazu Shoplifters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150

Kraume, Lars The Silent Revolution. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151

Kusama, Karyn Destroyer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81, 134

Footprint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Northern Wind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

Parkes, Graham

McQueen, Steve

Craig’s Pathetic Freakout. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Widows. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158

Parmar, Ishaan

McSweeny, Erina

Pop. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

The Light of My Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Parrinello, Will

Medow, Rivkah Beth Rainbow Bridge. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Mendoza, Paola

Pawlikowski, Paweł

Free Like the Birds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Cold War . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51, 133

Mesarchik, August

Payne, Liz

The Redwood Grove. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

The Center of a Book. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142

Miller Costanzo, Melissa

Pereira-Webber, João

All These Small Moments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

Galinha. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Mimoun, Ilyse

Petzold, Christian

#metoo gumshoe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Mintz, Billie The Guardians. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138

Molina, Adrian Coco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133

Transit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Plympton, Bill The Modern Lives: Back of My Mind. . . . . . The Modern Lives: Good Advice . . . . . . . . The Modern Lives: Modern Lives . . . . . . . . The Modern Lives: Tupelo. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

155 121 122 121

205


FILMMAKER INDEX Poon, Andy

Schmitt, Maïté

Tillman, Jr., George

Post No Bills. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

A Priori. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

The Hate U Give . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69, 139

Raymond, Richard

Shapiro, Norah

Tippett, Phil

Souls of Totality. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Time for Ilhan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

Mad God, Part 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Reitman, Jason

Shawky, A.B.

Tocker, Dorian

The Front Runner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Yomeddine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160

The Day That. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Renner, Benjamin

Sheskin, Emily

Unkrich, Lee

The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales. . . . . . . . 129

JessZilla . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Coco. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133

Retik, Max

Shoaf, Brian

Uricaru, Ioana

The Look. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Lemonade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143

Riess, Chris

Sinha, Sonejuhi

Valia, Anu

Hula Girl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Rose, Elizabeth

Skerritt, Matt

van den Dungen, Natalie

The Law of Averages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Angst . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126

Sherbert Rozencrantz, You’re Beautiful. . . 141

Rosen, Julius

Skinner, Kerry

van Groeningen, Felix

Rouff. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

The Bicycle Thief. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Beautiful Boy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57, 128

Rosetti, Oskar

Smith, Mark C.

VanZee Taylor, Laura

Tsar Bomba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Two Balloons. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

I Am Maris: Portrait of a Young Yogi. . . . . . 140

Rossi, Lucas H.

Sofia, Jenna

Vasarhelyi, Elizabeth Chai

The Dress of Myriam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Break the Camera. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

Free Solo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136

Rouquié, Adrien

Sonam, Tenzing

Vaughan-Lee, Emmanuel

Outdoors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

The Sweet Requiem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

Earthrise. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Rudavsky, Oren

Sotelo Lázaro, Aldo

Volf, Tom

Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the People . . . . . 142

Stardust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Maria by Callas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144

Rueda, Gerardo

Sotomayor, Dominga

Wade, Cynthia

Lucina. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139

Too Late to Die Young . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Grit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138

Ruiz, Bernardo

Spencer, India

Wainaina, Likarion

Harvest Season. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139

One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

Supa Modo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

Ruizpalacios, Alonso

Stark, Patrick

Watts, Philip

Museo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145

Any Wednesday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Superperson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154

Ryan, Catherine

Stauffer, Zachary

Weimberg, Gary

Mothers and Daughters: 8 True Stories . . . 121

Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158

Mothers and Daughters: 8 True Stories . . . 121

Sachs, Lynne

Strauss, Terry

Weinstein, Emma

Carolee, Barbara & Gunvor by Lynne Sachs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

...As If They Were Angels. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127

Candace. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Safir, Jack

Strong, Jon

Weinstein, Melanie Zoey Spanko. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

Gray Areas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143

Sakamoto, Junji

Stuart, Phyllis

Use Your Delusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155

Ernesto. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135

Wild DaZe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158

Sandager, Matthew

Stuber, Thomas

Dear Henri,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

In the Aisles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141

Sandman, Gracie

Suárez, Maribel

One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

A Hole. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Santoyo, Gildardo

Swander, Kat

Waves from the Sky. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Gray Areas. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Sarbib, Chloe

Sweeney, James

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134

Sarin, Ritu

Szumowska, Małgorzata

Yu-Lin, Wang

The Sweet Requiem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153

Mug. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145

Alifu the Prince/ss. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124

Sayanoff, Xavier

Taplitz, Theo

Zehtabchi, Rayka

Effortless French. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135

Goodbye Sam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123

Period. End of Sentence.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147

Sayeeda Moreno, A.

Taylor, Finn

Zhangke, Jia

Bushwick Beats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131

Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait. . . . . . . . . . . 142

Ash Is Purest White. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127

Schimberg, Aaron

Téllez, Luis

Zox, Andrew

Chained for Life. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132

Ricotta . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

I Am My Own Mother. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122

206

Wheeler, Jamie Vega Whisenant, Dava Bathtubs Over Broadway. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127

Wiener, Juliet One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster. . . 123

Wilkinson, Spencer One Voice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146

Yamashita, Matt


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1099 4th Street, Suite F | Downtown San Rafael | 415.459.4939

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ADVERTISER INDEX Green Chile Kitchen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73

Nordstrom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Acqua Hotel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168

Highway 1 Creative. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

O’Hanlon Center for the Arts. . . . . . . . . 42

Alexander’s Artisan Rugs. . . . . . . . . . . . 72

Hillside Tavern. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173

Ongaro & Sons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

A Party Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183

Alice @ 97.3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78

ICB Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Pacific Sun . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104

Allison Levenson Photography . . . . . . 118

ICG Magazine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202

Pacific Gas & Electric. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

Almanac Beer Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . 79

iHeartMedia San Francisco . . . . . . . . . 178

Piazza D’Angelo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50

Andalou Naturals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74

Il Davide Cucina Italiana. . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

Pizza Antica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191

Aroma Cafe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100

Il Fornaio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179

Porsche Marin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Auberge Resorts Collection. . . . . . . . . 210

Incavo Wine & Tasting Collective . . . . 209

Rafael Floors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80

Bartender’s Unlimited. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184

Intrepid Studios. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62

Red Dragon Yoga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

Belcampo Restaurant & Butcher Shop. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187

Jackson Square Partners . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Rims & Goggles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

Kaiser Permanente . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56

Bellam Self Storage & Boxes . . . . . . . . 114

Robert Federighi. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104

Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant. . . . . . . . . 80

Best Western Corte Madera Inn . . . . . 178

SAG-AFTRA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60, 61

KQED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

BevMo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94

San Francisco Chronicle . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

KRCB. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84

BioMarin. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86

San Francisco Film Commission . . . . . 166

Kris Brewer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

Blanc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

San Francisco Magazine. . . . . . . . . . . . . 58

Body Kinetics Health Club. . . . . . . . . . 100

KWMR - West Marin Commmunity Radio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

San Rafael Chamber of Commerce. . . . 34

Bohemian. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104

L.inc Design. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184

Bossa Nova Fashion Concepts . . . . . . . 72

La Ginestra Restaurant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners. . . . . . . 192

Le Comptoir. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

Buzz Photo Booths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80

Linda Walsh Real Estate. . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

Canna Angels, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118

The Lodge at Tiburon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193

Cavallo Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

Lucasfilm, Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . back cover

Chambers + Chambers Architects . . . . 14

Margaret OLeary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Coldwell Banker. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23, 68

Marin Art & Garden Center. . . . . . . . . . 90

Comforts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92

MarinArts.org. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86

Compass Real Estate . . . inside front cover

Marin Center for Independent Living. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84

Courtyard Mariott San Francisco Larkspur Landing . . . 175

Marin Community Foundation. . . . . 18, 19

CPi Developers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68

Marin Convention & Visitors Bureau. . 188

Delicious! Catering. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

Marin Country Mart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

Delta Air Lines. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

Marin General Hospital. . . . . . . . . . . . . 101

DigIn Magazine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96

Marin Honda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Dolby Laboratories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Marin Independent Journal. . . . . . . . . . 21

EACH Foundation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112

Marin Joe’s. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Edible Marin & Wine Country . . . . . . . 118

Marin Magazine. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190

EO Products. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169

Marin Suites Hotel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207

Equator Coffees & Teas . . . . . . . . . . . . 108

Marin Theatre Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Flow Kana. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105

San Rafael Pacifics Baseball Club . . . . 208 Seager Gray Gallery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Simple DCP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178 Sol Food. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Speedpro Imaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202 State Room. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Stephan-Hill Jewelry Designers. . . . . . . 22 Strawberry Village. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Sufferfest Beer Company. . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Suite Treatments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186 Sutton Suzuki Architects. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Sweetwater Music Hall & Café. . . . . . . . 97 TacoList.com Latino Classifieds. . . . . . 106 Tamalpais Paint & Color. . . . . . . . . . . . 100 Tanji. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 The Magic Flute. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 The Redwoods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 Tivoli Decor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Town Center at Corte Madera. . . . . . . . 27 TV5Monde. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Variety. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Vin Antico Restaurant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Fort Docs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92

Maroevich, O’Shea & Coghlan Insurance, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

Four Points by Sheraton San Rafael. . . 182

McRoskey Mattress Company. . . . . . . . 84

Frame Crafters Gallery. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84

Meritage Medical Network . . . . . . . . . 172

Frogs Hot Tubs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92

Mill Valley Inn. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198

Giraffex Graphic Design. . . . . . . . . . . . 180

Montecito Shopping Center Seagate Properties, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . 54

Where Traveler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199

Mountain Home Inn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186

Wowe Lifestyle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118

Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District . . . . . . . . . . . . 80

Vintage Oaks Shopping Center. . . . . . . 29 Wareham Development. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Waters Edge Hotel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203 Wells Fargo Bank. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 World of Sound. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92

Good Green Moving. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117

MW General Contracting, Inc.. . . . . . . . 72

XFINITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38

The Grateful Dog, Doggy PlayCare & Wellness Center. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100

Netflix. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . inside back cover

Yelp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174

Nice Guys Delivery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

Yet Wah Restaurant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

211


TITLE INDEX 5@5 Boho Dance...................... 121 5@5 Circle Game...................... 121 5@5 Come to the Sunshine..... 121 5@5 Coyote............................... 122 5@5 Daisy Summer Piper......... 122 5@5 Eastern Rain...................... 122 5@5 The Way It Is..................... 123 3 Faces....................................... 123 22 July........................................ 123 A Priori....................................... 154 Los adioses............................... 124 An Afternoon with Eleanor Coppola and Allie Light........ 124 Agent of Connection............... 121 Alifu the Prince/ss.................... 124 All Square.................................. 125 All These Small Moments........ 125 Amalia the Secretary................ 125 Āmrikā....................................... 123 El ángel...................................... 126 Angst......................................... 126 Any Wednesday........................ 124 Are You Still Singing?............... 122 Art Paul of Playboy: The Man Behind the Bunny.................. 126 ...As If They Were Angels........ 127 Ash Is Purest White.................. 127 Awaker....................................... 154 Backyard Bees.......................... 123 Bathtubs Over Broadway........ 127 Beautiful Boy........................57, 128 Becoming Astrid...................... 128 Ben Is Back................................ 128 bias............................................. 129 The Bicycle Thief...................... 141 The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales............................. 129 Birds of Passage....................... 129 Border........................................ 130 Boy Erased.......................... 63, 130 Break the Camera.................... 122 Brentwood................................ 122 Burning...................................... 130 Bushwick Beats......................... 131 Bzzz............................................ 137 Can You Ever Forgive Me?..................... 75, 131 Candace.................................... 121 Capernaum............................... 131 Carolee, Barbara & Gunvor by Lynne Sachs............................ 124 Censored................................... 123 The Center of a Book............... 142 Cerulia....................................... 121 Chained for Life........................ 132 Charm City................................ 132 Chris the Swiss.......................... 132 Coco.......................................... 133 Coin Operated......................... 154 Cold War............................. 51, 133 Collisions................................... 133

212

Craig’s Pathetic Freakout........ 122 Dance with Me.......................... 123 Dark Dark Woods..................... 154 Daughter of Mine..................... 134 Davy Jones Can’t Fly................ 123 The Day That............................. 122 Dear Henri,................................ 141 Destroyer............................ 81, 134 The Dress of Myriam................ 122 Earth, Our Home: The New Environmentalists. 134 Earthrise.................................... 134 Effortless French...................... 135 Ernesto...................................... 135 Everybody Knows..................... 135 Experimenting with Animation............................... 123 The Favourite............................ 136 The Fiddler................................ 121 A Field Guide to Being a 12-Year-Old Girl.................. 141 Footprint................................... 121 Freaks of Nurture..................... 121 Free Like the Birds................... 141 Free Solo................................... 136 From Baghdad to The Bay...... 136 From Mexico, Con Amor......... 137 The Front Runner..................... 137 Galinha...................................... 141 Goodbye Sam........................... 123 Gray Areas................................. 123 The Great Buster: A Celebration........................ 137 Green Book......................... 33, 138 Grit............................................. 138 The Guardians.......................... 138 Harvest Season......................... 139 The Hate U Give................. 69, 139 Heads or Tails........................... 122 The Hi De Ho Show.................. 139 A Hole........................................ 139 Holly Near: Singing for Our Lives................................ 140 Hula Girl.................................... 121 I Am Maris: Portrait of a Young Yogi.......................... 140 I Am My Own Mother.............. 122 I Want to Live in the Zoo.......... 154 If Beale Street Could Talk........................ 35, 140 In the Aisles .............................. 141 The Independents.................... 141 It’s a Girls’ World...................... 141 JessZilla..................................... 141 Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the People............... 142 Kannapolis: A Moving Portrait.................. 142 The Kindergarten Teacher..............................87, 142 Last Stop................................... 121

The Last Straw.......................... 123 The Law of Averages................ 122 Lemonade................................. 143 The Light of My Life ............... 123 Lion............................................ 154 Little Woods............................. 143 Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story............ 143 The Look................................... 123 The Loss.................................... 122 The Lost City of the Monkey God.......................... 144 Lucina........................................ 139 Lucy vs. the Limits of Voice..... 137 Mad God, Part 3....................... 121 Maria by Callas......................... 144 Mateo and the Cinema............ 137 #metoo gumshoe..................... 122 The Modern Lives: Back of My Mind.................... 155 The Modern Lives: Good Advice.......................... 121 The Modern Lives: Modern Lives......................... 122 The Modern Lives: Tupelo....... 121 The Moon’s Milk....................... 121 Mothers and Daughters: 8 True Stories......................... 121 Moving Stories.......................... 144 Mug............................................ 145 Museo........................................ 145 The New Environmentalists: From Hanoi to Paris............... 134 Non-Fiction............................... 145 Northern Wind......................... 146 Obey.......................................... 146 Oculus....................................... 121 One Cambodian Family Please for My Pleasure...................... 122 One in Thirty: The Story of Henry Oster............................ 123 One Voice.................................. 146 Outdoors................................... 154 Painted...................................... 154 The Parting Glass................59, 147 Perception................................. 123 Period. End of Sentence.......... 140 Pet Names................................. 147 Peterloo..................................... 147 Pity............................................. 148 Poliangular................................ 121 Pop............................................. 123 Post No Bills.............................. 154 A Private War...................... 32, 148 Rafiki.......................................... 148 Rainbow Bridge........................ 125 The Rat...................................... 123 The Redwood Grove................ 123 Ricotta....................................... 137 Roma.................................... 34, 149 Rouff.......................................... 154

Runner....................................... 121 Saint Judy.................................. 149 The School of Honk.................. 144 Seder Masochism..................... 149 Sergio and Sergei..................... 150 Sherbert Rozencrantz, You’re Beautiful...................... 141 Shoe Shiner............................... 122 Shoplifters................................. 150 The Silence of Others.............. 150 The Silent Revolution............... 151 Silvia in the Waves.................... 121 Sir............................................... 151 Skip Day.................................... 121 Sofia........................................... 151 Something Is Happening........ 152 Souls of Totality........................ 122 Spanko....................................... 121 Special Day............................... 122 Stardust..................................... 137 Stay Human............................... 152 Supa Modo............................... 152 Superperson............................. 154 The Sweet Requiem................. 153 Swimming with Men ................ 153 The Teacher and the Flower... 137 Time for Ilhan............................ 153 Tintico’s Afternoons................. 137 A Ton o’ Toons.......................... 154 Too Late to Die Young............. 154 Transit........................................ 154 Tsar Bomba............................... 121 Two Balloons............................. 154 Two for Dinner.......................... 124 Two Medusas............................ 141 Two Plains & a Fancy................ 155 Two Puddles.............................. 122 Undiscovered............................ 154 Use Your Delusion.................... 155 Viper Club................................. 155 Virus Tropical............................ 156 Vision......................................... 156 Waves from the Sky.................. 137 Weed the People...................... 156 What They Had......................... 157 When the Trees Fall................. 157 The Whistleblower of My Lai................................. 157 Who Killed Lt. Van Dorn?......... 158 Why, God?................................. 123 Widows...................................... 158 Wild DaZe................................. 158 Wildlife................................ 45, 159 Woman at War.......................... 159 A Word to the Wise.................. 134 Working Woman....................... 159 World of Facts.......................... 160 Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin.... 160 Yomeddine................................ 160


NETFLIX

PROUDLY CONGRATULATES OUR SELECTIONS FOR THE

ROMA

DIR. ALFONSO CUARÓN THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER

DIR. SARA COLANGELO



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