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  • Edinburgh Film Festival preview

    iofilm, UK
    Aug 17 2004

    Edinburgh Film Festival preview

    Plenty in treat with typically diverse EIFF 2004

    By Rebort



    EIFF opening and closing films: The Motorcycle Diaries (top) and E
    J-Yong's Untold Scandal

    The glam

    Edinburgh is not a big starry event on the level of, say, Cannes, but
    still attracts a fair smattering of famous faces. Obvious places for
    sleb-spotting are the opening and closing galas. The festival starts
    strongly with Walter Salles' The Motorcycle Diaries, a much feted
    adaptation of revolutionary pin-up Che Guevara's autobiographal
    journal about his travels as a young man through South America.

    Wong Kar-Wai's follow-up to his luscious-looking In The Mood For
    Love, 2046, was pulled as the closing film, at the last minute,
    organisers said, because the film is still not finished. EIFF
    artistic director Shane Danielsen quipped it was "one of the pitfalls
    of working with eccentric artistic geniuses'. The organisers have
    fallen back on E J-Yong's Untold Scandal, a lavish period remake of
    Dangerous Liaisons set in Chosun-period Korea.

    The first Saturday of the fest always brings the paparazzi out, with
    the world premiere of former EIFF award-winner Pawel Pawlikowski's My
    Summer of Love given the red carpet treatment at the Cameo on
    Saturday night, 21 August. Pawlikowski uses his vivid cinematic style
    to give a portrait of the blossoming friendship of two 16-year-old
    girls during a languid Yorkshire Summer.

    Hot tickets

    Can't get tickets to see those galas; or Morgan Spurlock chundering
    on his umpteenth McDonald's meal in Super Size Me; or film stars
    puffing away in Jim Jarmusch's eccentric Coffee and Cigarettes; or
    those big waves in Stacy Peralta's thrilling surf doc Riding Giants?
    Don't give up yet. Extra screenings are often scheduled in for
    popular films, tickets for press and guests reallocated and people
    don't pick up tickets. Check with the EIFF box office (full details
    at end of this article) what the state of play is. Alternatively,
    check out iofilm's reviews to see if our team has found any gems that
    you can see instead - we cover the full programme of films.

    Home-grown cinema

    Obvious choices: Ken Loach presents Ae Fond Kiss, a Glasgow based
    tale of inter-racial romance and Shane Meadows' dark and gritty Dead
    Man's Shoes, about two brothers returning home to find the same old
    drug dealing gangs.

    In Hamburg Cell, Antonia Bird dramatises the events leading up to the
    September 11 hijackings through the eyes of a young Muslim who
    evolves from secular student in Germany, to Islamic ideologue,
    jihadist and hijacker. Peter Mullan, a regular at the EIFF, is back
    as a blind and jealous landowner caught in a love triangle of sorts
    in a drama called Blinded.

    Richard Eyre's tantalising Restoration Comedy, Stage Beauty,
    introduces Billy Crudup as the "compleat female actor" until he
    becomes overshadowed by his own former dresser (Claire Danes) after
    King Charles II (Rupert Everett) changes the law to allow women to
    play themselves.

    Other world premieres include Irish director Damien O'Donnell's
    Inside I'm Dancing and Terry Loane's Mickybo and Me.

    Kung fu escapes its Asiatic origins and relocates to Scotland, in the
    not too distant future in Richard Jobson's The Purefiers. The title
    comes from a gang who having rejected a suspicious truce, find
    themselves surrounded on all sides by factions warring to control a
    disintegrating Britain. Chop-socky cinema that is one amongst a
    fistful of Kung-fu films at the EIFF this year.

    Documentary

    Fahrenheit 9/11 has not been the only political documentary making
    headlines in this US election year. Control Room, directed by Jehane
    Noujaim who made the doc Start-up.com, has kept the talk shows stoked
    with this embedded view of Al Jazeera, the Arab news service that has
    been condemned by the Bush administration as "the mouthpiece of Osama
    Bin Laden" and was shut down just days ago by the acting Iraqi
    administration for a month.

    Filmmakers also aimed their cameras into the darkest corners of human
    existence to find stories such as Checkpoint by Yoav Shamir, which
    follows the mutual insanity of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and
    A Social Genocide (Fernando E. Solana), an angry look at the
    squandering of Argentina's national resources. Guerrilla: The Taking
    of Patty Hearst (Robert Stone) offers viewers a chance to step back
    in time and re-examine the events surrounding the kidnapping of
    Hearst by the Symbionese Liberation Army, an American 1970's
    terrorist militia.

    It will be fascinating to see how Thomas Riedelsheimer, who made such
    an evocative film about artist Andy Goldsworthy in River of Tides,
    conveys the visual and aural harmony of Evelyn Glennie in Touch the
    Sound - A Sound Journey. It just won an International Critics Award
    at Locarno.

    In a similar vein is Armenian filmmaker Harutyun Khachatryan's
    Documentarist where he paints a black-and-white, cinematic mosaic of
    life in his ruined homeland.

    In Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, the real life hard rockers give
    Spinal Tap a run for their money.

    The Horror, the Horror

    The EIFF has successfully carved out a spot with horror fans with
    edgier, late night films. This year includes the world premiere of
    American director Chuck Parello's Hillside Strangler, a true tale of
    two "tag-team' Seventies serial killers (in the Late Night Romps
    section of the programme). And Colin Firth wakes from a coma to find
    his wife dead and himself implicated in a celebrity murder in
    psychological drama Trauma.

    Retrospective

    The eye in the back of the EIFF head is cast upon Italian director
    Valerio Zurlini. "Who's he?' You might ask. Between 1955 and 1976,
    Zurlini made eight feature films, looking at men and women in crisis.
    The retrospective is aptly called "Il Ritrovato: the Rediscovered."

    Commemorating the tenth anniversary of the death of director Lindsay
    Anderson, the EIFF will be screening two of his features, O Lucky
    Man! (1973) and the Whales of August (1987), and hosting a panel
    discussion with a number of Anderson's creative associates. Actor
    Malcolm McDowell, pays tribute to Scottish director Lindsay Anderson
    (he made his screen debut in Anderson's If...(1968) by performing a
    one-man show consisting of his personal stories and anecdotes.

    Short life

    As always, the EIFF programme is chocker with short films, from the
    McLaren animation programme to short docs and short form drama,
    usually of 5-20 minutes.

    Recommendations? Always difficult, but we will have a keen eye on
    this year's three Tartan Shorts - directors often go on from these
    prestigious Scottish short fiction pieces to greater things. The EIFF
    shorts programmer, who whittled the programme down from 1000 has
    these recommendations:

    (1) Mona Lisa (Antipodean Shorts Programme)- "A guy lives with his
    mother- very low key performances, so simple but well written and
    beautifully shot."

    (2) Headway (Nordic Shorts Programme)- "The director (Jens Jonsson)
    has done lots of short films. I think he is destined to be the next
    big European features director."

    (3) Who Killed Brown Owl (UK Shorts Programme)- "One long take shot
    in a summer park. Simply fantastic, everything a short film should
    be."

    And there's more: Mirrorball is back this year with "a mad mix of
    music videos, rock documentaries, live events, promos, ads and
    animations". Mirrorball programmers David Drummond and David Ladd
    have lined up music videos from Sweden to Australia in Global
    Selection, toured to Japan for some commercials, and gathered "the
    best of Britain' (including Basement Jaxx, The Streets and LFO) in
    Fresh Tracks.

    Latest Edinburgh International Film Festival reviews

    Edinburgh International Film Festival Box Office and Information
    Edinburgh International Film Festival,
    88 Lothian Road,
    Edinburgh,
    EH3 9BZ,
    Ticket hotline +44 (0) 131 623 8030
    Information line +44 (0) 131 229 2550
    Telephone +44 (0)131 228 4051
    Fax +44 (0)131 229 5501

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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