Spot Videocracy banned from Rai and Mediaset

Both RAI and Mediaset ban spots for ‘Videocracy’
Doc links Italy’s cultural decay to Berlusconi empire

By MICHAEL DAY

Videocracy_posterWhen the Mediaset TV empire controlled by Italo Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi banned spots for Swedish-Italian helmer Erik Gandini’s “Videocracy,” hardly anyone blinked.
After all, the doc, which unspooled at the Venice film fest, links moral and cultural decay in Italy with the rise of Berlusconi’s TV channels.

However, eyebrows began to rise when pubcaster RAI also refused to play the trailers, deeming the pic “offensive to the honor and personal reputation of the prime minister.” The move fueled suspicions that Berlusconi was leaning on the state-run broadcaster, whose governors are his political appointees.

Absent the ability to promote the film on Italy’s main TV channels, Gandini is largely left preaching to the converted rather than drawing in more mainstream auds.

Sei in cerca delle regole delle slots e di consigli per le slot machines? Sulle nostre pagine trovi anche il glossario delle slot machines e tutto sulle slots gratis.

Gandini has said the film was prompted by his experience of foreigners sniggering at Berlusconi’s astonishing degree of control over Italians’ access to information.

Auds will now have to discover for themselves how wide that control really extends.

by VARIETY.COM

Contdown for Biennale’s Award

Countdown to coveted award at Venice film festival
A handful of movies Saturday led the pack of 25 vying for the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice film festival including late-screener “A Single Man” by Tom Ford.
The fashion designer’s first feature film, about a gay man mourning his longtime partner, joined the A-list with “Lebanon” by Israeli Samuel Maoz, Todd Solondz’s dark comedy “Life During Wartime” and miracle story “Lourdes” by Austrian filmmaker Jessica Hausner.
Of those, Maoz’s “Lebanon” may have the edge, according to leading Italian daily Corriere Della Sera and the local paper, Il Gazzetino, as well as Variety magazine.
In the film shot entirely from inside a tank assigned to search a town that had been bombed by Israeli warplanes, four young soldiers play out a tense interpersonal drama as the action unfolds outside, seen through the gunner’s sight.
The intensely personal project tells the story of the first Lebanon war, reliving the director’s own experience as a young Israeli soldier in 1982.
In “A Single Man,” Ford, 48, offers a moving snapshot of life as a homosexual more than four decades ago, at the time of the Cuban missile crisis.
The adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s landmark 1964 novel on Friday won the unofficial Queer Golden Lion for movies with gay themes or content.
Solondz’s “Life During Wartime” reprises the main characters of his 1998 film “Happiness,” exploring tortured consciences and self-destructive lives in a heavily Jewish southern Florida locale where people are peripherally aware that the nation is at war.
In addition to the Golden Lion for best film, the jury headed by Taiwan’s Ang Lee — the Oscar-winning director of “Brokeback Mountain”, about the forbidden love of two gay cowboys — will recognise a best actor and best actress from among the 25 contenders.
Favourites for acting nods include Isabelle Huppert in Claire Denis’ “White Material,” Sylvie Testud in “Lourdes” and Margherita Buy in Francesca Comencini’s “The White Space.”
Dane Viggo Mortensen turned in an impressive performance in John Hillcoat’s “The Road,” as did Michael Shannon in “My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done” by Werner Herzog.
But they could be sidelined by Colin Firth, who played mourning professor George Falconer in “A Single Man.”
Firth’s performance was so warmly received at Friday’s screening that the reviewer in the daily La Repubblica feared “massive protest marches” if he does not win the Volpi Cup for best actor, noting that he speaks Italian well, being married to Italian documentarist Livia Giuggioli.
The awards ceremony was set to begin at 7:00 pm (1700 GMT) at the Lido’s Palazzo del Cinema.
Also Saturday, director, screenwriter and actor Sylvester Stallone was set to be the first American to be awarded the Jaeger-LeCoultre Glory to the Filmmaker Award for artists who have left their mark on contemporary cinema.
by: AFP

Countdown to coveted award at Venice film festival

golden_lionA handful of movies Saturday led the pack of 25 vying for the coveted Golden Lion at the Venice film festival including late-screener “A Single Man” by Tom Ford.

The fashion designer’s first feature film, about a gay man mourning his longtime partner, joined the A-list with “Lebanon” by Israeli Samuel Maoz, Todd Solondz’s dark comedy “Life During Wartime” and miracle story “Lourdes” by Austrian filmmaker Jessica Hausner.

Of those, Maoz’s “Lebanon” may have the edge, according to leading Italian daily Corriere Della Sera and the local paper, Il Gazzetino, as well as Variety magazine.

In the film shot entirely from inside a tank assigned to search a town that had been bombed by Israeli warplanes, four young soldiers play out a tense interpersonal drama as the action unfolds outside, seen through the gunner’s sight.

The intensely personal project tells the story of the first Lebanon war, reliving the director’s own experience as a young Israeli soldier in 1982.

In “A Single Man,” Ford, 48, offers a moving snapshot of life as a homosexual more than four decades ago, at the time of the Cuban missile crisis.

The adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s landmark 1964 novel on Friday won the unofficial Queer Golden Lion for movies with gay themes or content.

Solondz’s “Life During Wartime” reprises the main characters of his 1998 film “Happiness,” exploring tortured consciences and self-destructive lives in a heavily Jewish southern Florida locale where people are peripherally aware that the nation is at war.

In addition to the Golden Lion for best film, the jury headed by Taiwan’s Ang Lee — the Oscar-winning director of “Brokeback Mountain”, about the forbidden love of two gay cowboys — will recognise a best actor and best actress from among the 25 contenders.

Favourites for acting nods include Isabelle Huppert in Claire Denis’ “White Material,” Sylvie Testud in “Lourdes” and Margherita Buy in Francesca Comencini’s “The White Space.”

Dane Viggo Mortensen turned in an impressive performance in John Hillcoat’s “The Road,” as did Michael Shannon in “My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done” by Werner Herzog.

But they could be sidelined by Colin Firth, who played mourning professor George Falconer in “A Single Man.”

Firth’s performance was so warmly received at Friday’s screening that the reviewer in the daily La Repubblica feared “massive protest marches” if he does not win the Volpi Cup for best actor, noting that he speaks Italian well, being married to Italian documentarist Livia Giuggioli.

The awards ceremony was set to begin at 7:00 pm (1700 GMT) at the Lido’s Palazzo del Cinema.

Also Saturday, director, screenwriter and actor Sylvester Stallone was set to be the first American to be awarded the Jaeger-LeCoultre Glory to the Filmmaker Award for artists who have left their mark on contemporary cinema.

by: AFP

Venice film fest for Iran

Venice film festival gives voice to Iranian opposition
The Venice film festival is providing a timely forum for Iranian works such as Shirin Neshat’s “Women Without Men” amid crackdowns on opposition groups disputing the June elections in their country.
Thursday saw the screening of “Green Days”, the second feature-length film of Hana Makhmalbaf, 21, the daughter of filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf.
Made since the election, the film uses news footage including the killing of Neda Agha-Soltan, who became a symbol of martyrdom for the cause of freedom and democracy in Iran.
In “Green Days,” the central character Ava is a young woman suffering from depression who fails to catch the spark of enthusiasm for the elections. Rather, she heads out into the streets to seek dialogue with compatriots she sees as mere dreamers.
Neshat made her directorial debut Wednesday with “Women Without Men,” dissecting Iranian society at the time of the 1953 CIA-backed coup that overturned the nationalist government of Mohammed Mossadegh and installed the Shah in power.
Against that backdrop, four women — a prostitute, an activist, a cosmopolitan woman and a traditional young girl — fight for individual freedom and independence, winding up together at an idyllic orchard in the countryside.
“The four characters are who I am — every one of them carries some personal dilemma, though it is not exactly autobiographical,” the young photographer and visual artist told reporters.
Based on a novel by Shahrnush Parsipur, the film vying for the prestigious Golden Lion here is dedicated to “those who lost their lives fighting for freedom and democracy in Iran, from the constitutional revolution of 1906 to the Green Movement of 2009.”
Neshat said: “This film speaks to the Iranian people and the world. We have been struggling for over 100 years, and we will not give up. … We will get there one day.”
In the film, partisans of Mossadegh march in the streets before being crushed on the orders of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.
“Dictators have changed in form and shape and ideology, but the struggle for liberation still goes on,” said Neshat, wearing green, the colour of the Iranian reformist movement.
Amirali Navaee has two short films in the festival, “As I Was Leaving My City” and “My Atomic Beloved.”
In the first, the camera focuses on the legs of a dancing man, passing by those of a beggar, a sweeper, and someone who is being handcuffed by police.
“My Atomic Beloved” shows a young man rushing through the house of his ex-girlfriend 12 hours before an atomic bomb strikes Tehran.
The short films are part of the Venice Days section, which this year paid homage to the “resistance” of Iranian cinema.
The selection also includes “Muli,” a black-and-white animation by Marjon Farsad, about a little girl who dreams of becoming a scientist but lives with the fear of “not being able to play again, one day.”
Other Iranians featured in Venice are Hana Kamkar with “Shahrzad” and dissident Arash Irandoost with “Paper Airplane.”
And for International Critics’ Week, another Venice filmfest programme, Nader T. Homayoun offered his film noir “Tehroun” exploring the underbelly of the Iranian capital.
by: AFP

Venice film festival gives voice to Iranian opposition

neshatThe Venice film festival is providing a timely forum for Iranian works such as Shirin Neshat’s “Women Without Men” amid crackdowns on opposition groups disputing the June elections in their country.

Thursday saw the screening of “Green Days”, the second feature-length film of Hana Makhmalbaf, 21, the daughter of filmmaker Mohsen Makhmalbaf.

Made since the election, the film uses news footage including the killing of Neda Agha-Soltan, who became a symbol of martyrdom for the cause of freedom and democracy in Iran.

In “Green Days,” the central character Ava is a young woman suffering from depression who fails to catch the spark of enthusiasm for the elections. Rather, she heads out into the streets to seek dialogue with compatriots she sees as mere dreamers.

Neshat made her directorial debut Wednesday with “Women Without Men,” dissecting Iranian society at the time of the 1953 CIA-backed coup that overturned the nationalist government of Mohammed Mossadegh and installed the Shah in power.

Against that backdrop, four women — a prostitute, an activist, a cosmopolitan woman and a traditional young girl — fight for individual freedom and independence, winding up together at an idyllic orchard in the countryside.

“The four characters are who I am — every one of them carries some personal dilemma, though it is not exactly autobiographical,” the young photographer and visual artist told reporters.

Based on a novel by Shahrnush Parsipur, the film vying for the prestigious Golden Lion here is dedicated to “those who lost their lives fighting for freedom and democracy in Iran, from the constitutional revolution of 1906 to the Green Movement of 2009.”

Neshat said: “This film speaks to the Iranian people and the world. We have been struggling for over 100 years, and we will not give up. … We will get there one day.”

In the film, partisans of Mossadegh march in the streets before being crushed on the orders of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.

“Dictators have changed in form and shape and ideology, but the struggle for liberation still goes on,” said Neshat, wearing green, the colour of the Iranian reformist movement.

Amirali Navaee has two short films in the festival, “As I Was Leaving My City” and “My Atomic Beloved.”

In the first, the camera focuses on the legs of a dancing man, passing by those of a beggar, a sweeper, and someone who is being handcuffed by police.

“My Atomic Beloved” shows a young man rushing through the house of his ex-girlfriend 12 hours before an atomic bomb strikes Tehran.

The short films are part of the Venice Days section, which this year paid homage to the “resistance” of Iranian cinema.

The selection also includes “Muli,” a black-and-white animation by Marjon Farsad, about a little girl who dreams of becoming a scientist but lives with the fear of “not being able to play again, one day.”

Other Iranians featured in Venice are Hana Kamkar with “Shahrzad” and dissident Arash Irandoost with “Paper Airplane.”

And for International Critics’ Week, another Venice filmfest programme, Nader T. Homayoun offered his film noir “Tehroun” exploring the underbelly of the Iranian capital.

by: AFP

Akin’s film in Venice Film Fest

Akin brings comedy to Venice with `Soul Kitchen’
Prize-winning German-Turkish director Fatih Akin is turning to comedy in his latest film “Soul Kitchen,” which showed at the Venice Film Festival on Thursday.
The film, which is in competition for the top Golden Lion prize, represents a departure from the more serious tones set in Akin’s 2004 Berlin Golden Bear winner “Head On” and 2007′s “The Edge of Heaven,” which won the screenplay award at the Cannes film festival.
“Soul Kitchen” is a comedy set in a locals-only joint in Hamburg. While the food isn’t great, the customers are loyal to the German-Greek chef Zinos (Adam Bousdoukos). When he hires a more talented chef to upgrade his repertoire, the locals’ revolt is just one of many troubles to come Zinos’ way.
Akin said the shift to comedy was intentional.
“As a director I want to make experiments, and I get bored with directors that make one style. I want to change and go on testing my style,” he said.
With “Soul Kitchen,” Akin is participating for the first time in the Venice Film Festival, which wraps up Saturday.
by: AP

Akin brings comedy to Venice with `Soul Kitchen’

akinPrize-winning German-Turkish director Fatih Akin is turning to comedy in his latest film “Soul Kitchen,” which showed at the Venice Film Festival on Thursday.

The film, which is in competition for the top Golden Lion prize, represents a departure from the more serious tones set in Akin’s 2004 Berlin Golden Bear winner “Head On” and 2007′s “The Edge of Heaven,” which won the screenplay award at the Cannes film festival.

“Soul Kitchen” is a comedy set in a locals-only joint in Hamburg. While the food isn’t great, the customers are loyal to the German-Greek chef Zinos (Adam Bousdoukos). When he hires a more talented chef to upgrade his repertoire, the locals’ revolt is just one of many troubles to come Zinos’ way.

Akin said the shift to comedy was intentional.

“As a director I want to make experiments, and I get bored with directors that make one style. I want to change and go on testing my style,” he said.

With “Soul Kitchen,” Akin is participating for the first time in the Venice Film Festival, which wraps up Saturday.

by: AP