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Films & Schedules
- Sunday, February 28, 2010
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Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 12 PM (C21)
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LETTERS TO FATHER JACOB
DIRECTOR: Klaus Härö - FINLAND
When Leila is pardoned after serving 12 years of a life sentence, she agrees to work as an assistant to Father Jacob, answering the letters of those who write asking for his help. Although she regards the pastor’s correspondence as pointless, the letters ultimately play a role in her redemption.
A simple but transcendent story about faith and human frailty, Letters to Father Jacob achieves a state of grace. Surprised when she is pardoned 12 years into a life sentence, hard-bitten killer Leila (Kaarina Hazard) takes the prison warden’s suggestion and winds up at the ramshackle rural parsonage of Father Jacob. The blind elderly man needs an assistant to pursue his main joy in life: answering the letters of those who write to ask for his help. Although Leila regards the pastor’s correspondence as pointless, it ultimately plays a role in her own redemption and heart-rending self-forgiveness.
Filmography: As If I Didn’t Exist (02), Mother of Mine (05), The New Man (07).
This year’s Finnish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.
85 Minutes
Interests:
Oscar Submissions,
Narrative Feature.
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Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 12:30 PM (WH)
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HEIRAN
DIRECTOR: Shalizeh Arefpoor - IRAN
Heiran and Mahi are in love. He is Afghan, she is Iranian. Her father forbids her to see him, and thus begins a tale of love and prejudice, a modern-day, Middle Eastern Romeo and Juliet.
During the post-Soviet period of Taliban rule in Afghanistan, almost three million Afghans fled across the border into Iran, triggering prejudice and strife among their hosts. Heiran is one such refugee. Mahi, a successful 17-year-old student from a poor family herself, falls in love with Heiran. Her father, however, flies into a violent rage when he learns of their relationship and forbids Mahi to see Heiran. And that is only the beginning of the couple’s problems. When they flee to Tehran together, their hard-won bliss is soon threatened again. Heiran is a timeless tale of star-crossed lovers thrown into turmoil by family differences and cultural circumstances—a modern-day, Middle Eastern Romeo and Juliet.
First Feature Film.
88 Minutes
Digital
Interests:
Narrative Feature,
Global Classroom,
Middle Eastern.
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Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 2:30 PM (C21)
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BAD DAY TO GO FISHING
DIRECTOR: Alvaro Brechner - URUGUAY
This quirky tale pits a scamming hustler and his wrestler sidekick against the inhabitants of a small Uruguayan town.
A combination of quirky dark drama and deadpan satire plays out in this stylish tale of a washed-up wrestler and a smooth conman in a sleepy village in South America. “Prince” Orsini, an impresario, arrives in a small town with his protégé, a one-time German wrestling champion named Jacob Van Oppen. Orsini’s scheme is to use Jacob’s status to lure locals into duels with him, promising a large cash sum to anybody who can pin him in three minutes. In reality, the matches are fixed to protect Jacob’s reputation—and Orsini’s income. The pair’s plan is threatened when an opponent is too drunk to wrestle, and femme fatale Adriana, eying the non-existent $1,000 prize, offers up her muscular husband as the replacement opponent. Jacob, nursing sore muscles, a nasty cough, and an even nastier alcohol habit, is in trouble. “Brechner’s ambitious debut is something like a retro The Wrestler by way of the Coen brothers.”—Variety.
First Feature Film.
This year’s Uruguayan submission for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.
110 Minutes
Interests:
New Directors,
Oscar Submissions,
Narrative Feature,
Spanish Language,
Latino.
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Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 2:30 PM (WH)
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THE REVERSE
DIRECTOR: Borys Lankosz - POLAND
A darkly comic story of three generations of Polish women and the mysterious young man whose presence sparks a series of surprising events that change all of their lives.
Lankosz’s darkly comic film tells the story of three generations of women living together at the peak of Stalinist terror in 1950s Poland. In the middle of the capital, the foundations of the Palace of Culture are being raised. Sabina has just turned 30 and her mother is trying to find her a husband. Her grandmother has rated the candidates, yet Sabina isn’t interested in any of them. One day, under dramatic circumstances, she meets Bronislaw, a young man with the looks of a peasant movie star. Though Bronislaw is vulgar, Sabina can’t help but fall for him, and thus sets in motion a series of surprising events that will change the lives of all three women and reveal the darker side of their natures.
First Feature Film.
Winner of the Best Film and Audience Awards at the Gdynia Polish Film Festival and the FIPRESCI Critics Award at the Warsaw Film Festival. This year’s Polish submission for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.
Sponsored by the Consulate General of the Republic of Poland, Los Angeles.
101 Minutes
Interests:
Oscar Submissions.
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Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 5:15 PM (WH)
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NORA’S WILL
DIRECTOR: Mariana Chenillo - MEXICO
Before dying, Nora devises a plan to make José, her ex-husband, take care of her funeral during the height of Passover celebration. But despite her meticulousness, she misses something—a mysterious photograph left under the bed which leads to unexpected outcomes.
A divorcée plots to reunite family and friends on the eve of Passover in this affecting, understated comedy set in Mexico City’s close-knit Jewish community. José learns that Nora, the woman he was married to for 30 years and then divorced, has committed suicide. Forced to wait five days for the funeral to allow his son to be present and the rabbi to officiate, José in the meantime discovers that Nora had prepared all of the plans and food for a final Passover Seder. But Nora also left something else: a curious photograph that may unlock the mystery of her life and death for the family she left behind. As curmudgeonly José reluctantly prepares for the funeral, a colorful collection of characters assemble in Nora’s apartment, including disapproving rabbis, a devoted housekeeper, a half-blind aunt, and the couple’s grown son. Winner of Audience Awards at festivals in Morelia, Miami, and Moscow, Chenillo’s warm and witty tale speaks to audiences everywhere.
First Feature Film.
Sponsored by the Consulate of Mexico.
92 Minutes
Interests:
Narrative Feature,
Spanish Language,
Latino.
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