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Park City '08: Don't Overlook the World: 10+ Int'l Films at Sundance

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  • Park City '08: Don't Overlook the World: 10+ Int'l Films at Sundance

    PARK CITY '08: Don't Overlook the World: 10+ International Films to Watch at Sundance '08

    Indiewire
    by Anthony Kaufman
    January 9, 2008

    Next week, the global film industry will turn to Park City, Utah for
    the Sundance Film Festival. But does Sundance, in turn, look back at
    the rest of the globe? The answer, of course, is sort of. While press,
    paparazzi and moviegoers will be tracking the every movement of this
    year's American celebs (Josh Hartnett, Charlize Theron and Jack Black,
    just to name a few), Sundance has increasingly tried to boost its
    international competition sections, with more prizes and more prestige
    value for the festival's global entrants.

    While there are very few international breakouts at Sundance, they do
    exist. Previously, Werner Herzog's "Grizzly Man," critics' favorites
    "Live-in Maid," "I For India," "13 Tzameti," docs "In the Shadow of
    the Moon" and "Manufactured Landscapes," and of course, John Carney's
    $9.5 million Fox Searchlight sleeper success "Once" have all recently
    played in the world cinema sections. (Sundances long ago played host
    to major UK successes such as "Shine" and "Saving Grace.") So what
    global discovery will pop this year?

    Of the 32 international documentary and dramatic features, here are 10
    (plus a couple more) world films and trends that may pull viewers --
    deservedly -- away from this year's over-hyped Amer-indies.

    While cinema from the Middle East has rarely made inroads into the
    U.S. marketplace, a record seven films from the area will screen at
    Sundance this year. Programmers say the healthy Middle East contingent
    wasn't intentional. "We never go out looking for films from a
    particular region, but every year an interesting regional out-cropping
    seems to emerge," says programmer Caroline Libresco. "It seems to have
    something to do with a 'story-telling urgency.'"

    Whether turmoil in the region has inspired filmmakers (the program's
    most prescient selection may be "Dinner with the President," which
    examines life in contemporary Pakistan) or western producers' interest
    and investment in the region (the Sundance Institute has a 4-year-old
    screenwriting lab in Jordan), proof may be in this year's Sundance
    selections.

    If advanced blog-of-mouth is to be believed, AFI grad Amin Matalqa's
    "Captain Abu Raed" is one of the more attractive prospects. A Dubai
    International Film Festival premiere, the rare Jordanian movie
    chronicles an aging airport janitor who is mistaken for a pilot by a
    group of children and tells them fantastical stories of his
    adventures. One online fan of the film wrote, "I would say this movie
    is a bit like 'Monsieur Ibrahim' - only more engrossing. It's an urban
    romance both humorous and melancholic, and a great antidote to
    pretentious art-films and sickly-sweet family dramas." Sounds like
    just what most U.S. distributors are looking for nowadays.

    Also from the region, Erez Tadmor and Guy Nattiv's "Strangers" has
    been called the most hotly anticipated Israeli film of the
    year. Developed out of their award-winning short film of the same
    name, "Strangers" follows a love story between an Israeli man (Amos
    Gitai regular Liron Levo) and a Palestinian woman ("Paradise Now's"
    Lubna Azabal, who won an award for Most Promising Actress at the
    Jerusalem Film Festival). The two meet and fall in love during the
    World Cup finals in Germany in 2006, but their affair is soon
    complicated by the outbreak of war between Israel and Lebanon.

    German original Veit Helmer (whose exquisitely photographed break-out
    feature "Tuvalu" won several international awards, including a best
    cinematography prize at Slamdance 2000) returns to Park City with the
    world premiere of his latest, "Absurdistan," an "inventive and
    allegorical comedy" about two childhood sweethearts in Azerbaijan who
    must contend with a village-wide strike of "Lysistrata"-like
    proportions. Picked up by major German sales company Beta Cinema,
    "Absurdistan" may be too weird to crossover, but it's likely to be on
    critic's watchlists.

    Germany is also presented at this year's festival with the world
    premiere of Dennis Gansel's "The Wave," about a high school teacher's
    experiment-gone-bad, where his students experience life under a
    dictatorship. Recently picked up by top-notch international sales
    company Celluloid Dreams, the film follows Gansel's successful German
    comedy "Girls on Top" and his more recent award-winner "Napola,"
    a.k.a. "Before the Fall," which had a limited theatrical run in the
    U.S. in 2006.

    Another fanciful tale, Russian director Anna Melikyan's slick modern
    fairytale "Mermaid" should also garner buzz, having already received
    strong praise out of Russian fests last year. Reviewing out of the
    Vladivostok Film Festival, Variety's Russell Edwards's wrote the film
    "has abundant charm and digital trickery in the 'Amelie' mold, but
    also a winning personality all its own." As a young woman with
    telekinetic powers making her way through contemporary Russia,
    diminutive star Mariya Shalayeva has already received accolades (a
    Best Actress prize at Sochi) and director Melikyan, a veteran
    commercial filmmaker (whose 2001 short "Poste Restante" won a special
    jury prize at prestigious Clermont-Ferrand film festival) reportedly
    gives the film a breathtaking visual palette.

    With Sundance often strong on Latin American cinema, this year's
    Spanish-language foreign production to watch is Colombian director
    Carlos Moreno's world premiere "Dog Eat Dog," a gritty crime thriller
    about a small-town thug who is sent to collect money on behalf of his
    boss, but decides to keep the cash for himself. Moreno is also an
    experienced commercial director, whose won international awards for
    his music video and ad spots.

    In the documentary competition, British filmmakers dominate. From
    narrative filmmaker Marc Evans ("Snow Cake," "My Little Eye") comes
    "In Prison My Whole Life," an investigation into the arrest and death
    sentence of Mumia Abu Jamal, which received mixed reviews out of
    London, while James Marsh ("The King," "Wisconsin Death Trip") unveils
    the world premiere of his "Man on Wire," a portrait of famed hire-wire
    performer Philippe Petit, and the heist-like plan he and his team
    pulled off to walk a wire suspended between the Twin Towers in
    1974. Cinephiles will also want to check out veteran British director
    Isaac Julien's "Derek," a portrait of another UK director, the
    legendary avant-garde master Derek Jarman.

    Also from the U.K., award-winning music video, commercial and shorts
    filmmaker Chris Waitt's world premiere, "A Complete History of My
    Sexual Failures" chronicles the filmmaker's love-life, via interviews
    with ex-girlfriends, medical practitioners and his mother. Recently
    featured as one of Screen International's "Stars of Tomorrow," Waitt
    has won acclaim for his BBC puppet comedy "FUR TV," while his cloning
    short "Dupe" won a BAFTA best short prize.

    Last, but definitely not least, the world doc section's most
    celebrated film so far is Gonzalo Arijon's "Stranded: I've Come From a
    Plane that Crashed on the Mountains," the harrowing survival tale of
    the 1974 Andes plane crash (later made into the fiction movie
    "Alive"), which recently won the top prize at the IDFA documentary
    festival. Reviewing for Variety, John Anderson called the film a
    "cinematic tour de force" that "packs a knock-out punch." At Sundance,
    Anderson suggested, "the deftly wrought tale will have audiences
    eating out of its hand."

    Indeed, with more than a dozen international films worth checking out,
    on top of the many American must-sees, few moviegoers will be leaving
    Park City hungry for more.
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