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ILM FESTIVAL: Political dynamite from new directors

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  • ILM FESTIVAL: Political dynamite from new directors

    Newsday, NY
    March 24 2004

    FILM FESTIVAL: Political dynamite from new directors

    BY JOHN ANDERSON
    STAFF WRITER

    The New York film fan's equivalent of spring training and the Final
    Four, New Directors/New Films begins its 33rd year tonight with as
    much international flavor and political volatility as it's probably
    ever shown.

    Presented jointly by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Film
    Department of the Museum of Modern Art, the annual showcase for
    filmmakers and movies fresh to the area kicks off tonight with the
    multiculti, multicharacter "Everyday People" - a touching populist
    portrait of a transitioning Brooklyn neighborhood by returning
    director Jim McKay ("Our Song"). Between now and April 4, the series
    will screen 28 films from 23 countries (including Armenia, Mongolia,
    Israel and Peru) and probably set off more than a couple of
    firestorms, with work topical enough to qualify as news bulletins.

    Most notably among these is "Control Room," (USA-Egypt, 2004), in
    which young Egyptian-American filmmaker Jehane Noujaim explores the
    inner workings of the Arab news agency Al-Jazeera during the onset of
    the current Iraq War. As implied by the title, however, "Control
    Room" is not just about the Arab perspective but the U.S. military's
    carefully crafted dissemination of combat information, the media's
    willingness to swallow it and the general dilemma of news during
    wartime.

    Elsewhere, "Checkpoint" by Israeli filmmaker Yoav Shamir was filmed
    over two years at the dozens of border crossings along the occupied
    West Bank and Gaza Strip and documents the frustrating, humiliating
    and destructive daily encounters between Israeli soldiers and
    Palestinian travelers. Insightful, unflattering and often
    infuriating, "Checkpoint" offers yet another angle on the Byzantine
    relationship between the Israeli and Arab worlds.

    On the lighter side is the ravishing "Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter
    ... and Spring," which will do nothing to diminish the growing
    stature of Korean filmmaking throughout the world. Directed by Kim
    Ki-duk, "Spring ... " is set on a secluded lake and floating
    monastery, where a monk and a young boy traverse the seasons of life.
    Beautifully shot (and metaphorically shameless), the film has been
    getting raves at festivals worldwide.

    Its stylistic counterpoint might be "Le Monde Vivant," a fairy tale
    in blue jeans in which French theater director Eugene Green
    re-imagines a world of medieval chivalry and adventure with
    modern-looking people and a lion played by a golden retriever.
    Alternately whimsical and enchanting, "Le Monde Vivant" is joyful,
    and more than a little thought-provoking.

    "I'm very pleased with ND/NF this year," said Richard Pena, who, with
    Joanna Ney and Marian Masone, composes the selection committee's Film
    Society component (MoMA members are Laurence Kardish, Jytte Jensen
    and Mary Lea Bandy). "It's a nice, broad selection, internationally
    and stylistically."

    And politically. And intellectually. And, perhaps, in the case of
    "Spring, Summer ... " even poetically.

    WHEN&WHERE

    New Directors/New Films, today through April 4. For complete list of
    films and descriptions, go to www.filmlinc.com/ndnf/ndnf.htm.
    Screenings will be held at three venues: Alice Tully Hall, the Walter
    Reade Theater at Lincoln Center and the MOMA Gramercy, 23rd Street
    near Lexington Avenue, Manhattan. Call 212-875-5050.
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