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Film Fest: Telluride's signature role is introducing "the new"

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  • Film Fest: Telluride's signature role is introducing "the new"

    The Denver Post
    September 3, 2004 Friday
    FINAL EDITION

    Telluride's signature role is introducing "the new"

    Lisa Kennedy Denver Post Film Critic

    Smitten. Beguiled. Blissed out. Pick your adjective to describe the
    person who has experienced the Telluride Film Festival.

    Telluride, which begins its 31st outing today, is the most beloved of
    film festivals.

    "The people that are there, whether they're exhibitors, journalists,
    whether they're filmmakers or distributors, they're there because
    they love movies," said Michael Barker, co-president of Sony Pictures
    Classics. "Otherwise they would be on the beach or on holiday
    somewhere with the rest of America. There's a genuine quality to film
    fanaticism there, which is pretty pure."

    Cannes has glitz and the Meditteranean going for it. Toronto, with
    its hundreds of movies and influx of talent grinding through the
    junket juggernaut, is nearly all things to all filmgoers. Sundance
    has indie cred and a hip, burgeoning music scene - not to mention
    insta-celebs like Paris Hilton wandering Park City's Main Street.

    But Telluride proves there's a gold standard in them thar hills.

    "Telluride for us is the best festival in the U.S. in which to
    discover films that are fresh and challenging," Sony's Barker said
    when asked why Telluride matters. He went on to do what everyone does
    when pondering the fest: He slipped into a reverie that had more to
    do with seeing movies than selling them.

    "I remember seeing 'Blue Velvet' there the first time, "River's Edge'
    there the first time," he said. "It is known as the festival that
    introduces the new."

    This year's slate again features Telluride's trademark mix of U.S.
    and world premieres; tributes that honor the past and lay claim to
    the future, and special presentations. This year's offerings include
    George Lucas' screening of "THX 1138" and a conversation between
    "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" director and music-video whiz
    Michel Gondry and film critic Elvis Mitchell.

    Sony Classics has three films in the festival that hint at the
    festival's breadth: Pedro Almodovar's "Bad Education," starring
    Mexican actor Gael García Bernal; Istvan Szabo's "Being Julia"; and
    Zhang Yimou's "House of Flying Daggers," which stars Zhang Ziyi as a
    blind revolutionary during the waning of the Tang Dynasty.

    "You could not get a more eclectic group of films," Barker said.
    "Each one is directed by a film master." Szabo's "Being Julia" stars
    Annette Bening. "It reminds me of those Bette Davis movies," said
    Barker, "like 'Mr. Skeffington' - where the actress is at the center
    and there all these characters at the periphery."

    This year, women aren't pushing men to the outskirts, but they have
    emerged as the festival's theme.

    "Both women in front of the screen and women behind the screen are a
    major happening at Telluride this week," said Bill Pence, who, along
    with wife Stella and Tom Luddy, began this cinema love fest.

    "We don't set quotas," he said. "We judge everything on its own
    merits. But this year we've seen some of the best work by women and
    performances by women that are really knockout."

    Bening, as well as Joan Allen (Sally Potter's "Yes"), Ellen Barkin
    (Todd Solondz's "Palindromes"), Zhang Ziyi and Laura Linney, will be
    in Telluride this weekend.

    Linney, famed screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière ("The Discreet Charm
    of the Bourgeoisie"and "That Obscure Object of Desire") and Greek
    director Theo Angelopoulos are honorees at this year's tributes.
    Linney's "P.S." and "Kinsey" get their premieres this weekend.

    Pence confided that his favorite two films in the festival are by
    female directors. Since festival directors are notoriously
    egalitarian parents about their festival children, he then offered,
    "I would only tell you because they're shorts and they'd be underdogs
    and underseen.

    "One is by a British woman named Andrea Arnold called 'Wasp,' " he
    said. "The the other is by a young Armenian woman named Maria
    Saakyan. She has made a 27-minute film called 'Proshanie.' To me it
    represents the best thing (Andrei) Tarkovsky did in his prime. And if
    you know any Telluride lore at all, you know Tarkovsky is our idol,
    our god." For the uninitiated, the late Tarkovsky was a legendary
    Russian filmmaker ("Andrei Rublev," "Solaris") who was honored at the
    festival in 1982.

    Cinema's brightest history and its best future - that sums Telluride.

    "The films just interact with each other," says film critic Howie
    Movshovitz, who teaches in Telluride's weekend program. "You see
    something old then you see something new, and over the course of four
    days you realize they're connected."

    Festival passes are sold out, but there are still ways to participate
    in Telluride's immersion therapy. (Check out tellu

    ridefilmfestival.com for info.)

    Festival co-director Bill Pence promises, "by the end of four days,
    you're sort of burned out if you do it right." Here's to doing it
    right.

    Film critic Lisa Kennedy can be reached at 303-820-1567 or
    [email protected].
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