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Home » Theater Buzz » Page 18

“The world is seeing the strength of Iranian women now.” ~ Noora Niasari on her debut film SHAYDA.

February 28, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

Shayda, an subtle, potent story of female empowerment, establishes first-time feature filmmaker Noora Niasari as a remarkably assured talent. She won an Audience Award and was nominated for a Grand Jury Prize last year at Sundance and received a nomination from the DGA for achievements by first-time filmmakers. Film critic Claudia Puig described the film on LAist’s FilmWeek as “one of the most masterful debuts of a filmmaker that I’ve seen in a long time.” We open the film this Friday at the Royal and expand March 8 to the Town Center and March 15 to the Laemmle Glendale.

From a piece about Shayda last year in The Guardian:

When Noora Niasari was five years old, she lived in a women’s shelter with her Iranian mother. They were fleeing family violence in a country that wasn’t entirely familiar, trying to make a new life.

That personal experience has informed Niasari’s debut feature, Shayda, which has been storming the global festival circuit since it premiered at Sundance film festival in January, winning an audience award. Released in Australia on 5 October, the film has already claimed the top prize at CinefestOz, opened the Melbourne international film festival, and been selected to represent Australia in the international film category at the Oscars.

It’s a sensational reception for a first film, particularly given the specificity of its story: Shayda is a dramatisation of Niasari’s early life, set in the Iranian diaspora community of suburban Melbourne. “It was something I had experienced, but I hadn’t really seen on screen before,” Niasari says of the movie she started thinking about straight after finishing film school. “But I first had to ask my mum for her permission and participation, because I had such a blurry memory of that time.”

Niasari asked her mother to write her memoirs, which took six months; that writing formed the basis of the first incarnation of Shayda’s script. Shayda evolved over time – and it’s not always a direct mirror of what happened to them both – but “it is very emotionally true to our experience”.

Executive produced by Cate Blanchett, Niasari’s movie tells the story of Shayda (Zar Amir Ebrahimi), an Iranian immigrant in Melbourne who leaves her abusive husband Hossein (Osamah Sami) with her daughter Mona (Selina Zahednia) in tow. Shayda finds refuge in a women’s shelter where the kindly Joyce (Leah Purcell) protects and guides her through the tough legal process of a custody fight.

It’s a tender and revealing film that balances Shayda’s discovery of inner strength with the sacrifices she makes for her daughter, as she tries to create a new family for her. It’s understated, relatable and drawn from such personal memories that Niasara describes working on it as “long-term exposure therapy”. Even doing interviews to promote the movie is difficult. “I have to sit with it and process it,” she says.

“But the thing is, now that it’s a film, it has a really different energy in the world. People bring their own experiences to it, it’s a very universal experience. We’ve screened it in Europe, North America and Australia and there is a real sense that it connects beyond my mother and I, beyond our experience. It’s not about us any more. That feels liberating and cathartic.”

Read the rest of The Guardian piece here.

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Filmmaker's Statement, Films, Glendale, Royal, Theater Buzz, Town Center 5

“Accepting and recovering from loss, undoubtedly, is the intellectual motor and the emotional reason for making the animated version of ROBOT DREAMS.”

February 28, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

Next Wednesday the 6th we’ll be screening Robot Dreams at four of our seven theaters, offering a chance to see this lovely Academy Award-nominated animated feature on a big screen with an audience before the Oscars. The adventures of Dog and Robot in New York City during the 1980s is appropriate for all but the very young.

Director Pablo Berger’s Decalogue:

ROBOT DREAMS is a reflection on friendship. 

It’s importance and its fragility. The passing of time, loss but also about overcoming it. Why do we constantly put our relationships in danger? 

ROBOT DREAMS is an animated film. 

With ROBOT DREAMS I wanted to explore the infinite narrative possibilities of animation. A medium where everything is possible and there are no formal limits. 

ROBOT DREAMS is a sensorial journey. 

A story written with images, sound and music. A film for daydreaming and accompanying Dog and Robot on their adventures and misadventures. An experience to feel. 

ROBOT DREAMS is our interpretation of the graphic world of Sara Varon. 

Varon is one of the best known illustrators from the United States. Her anthropomorphic world of animals with human behavior who live in New York is a constant in all her books. Her stories, her recognizable style and her expressive use of color, make her an exceptional graphic artist. 

ROBOT DREAMS is a musical. 

From the first image to the end, music is present, giving voice to the characters and intensifying their emotions. The soundtrack combines original music by Alfonso de Vilallonga with great musical hits, from the legendary September by Earth, Wind & Fire to the 80s Let’s Go by The Feelies. 

ROBOT DREAMS is my “love letter” to New York. 

The spectators will travel back in time to the NYC of the 80s. They’ll live in a little apartment in East Village, they’ll take the subway to go to Chinatown, they’ll eat a hotdog from a street vendor on 5th Avenue or go skating in Central Park. ROBOT DREAMS is my particular homage to New York, the city that took me in for a decade and in which I became a filmmaker. 

ROBOT DREAMS is for all audiences. 

I want to captivate the spectators, the youngest and the oldest, from all around, telling them a story full of fantasy but as real as life itself. A different film for each one. 

ROBOT DREAMS is another twist in my filmography. 

My aim as a writer-director is always to surprise the audience. I try to make each one of my films a journey to the unknown. Torremolinos 73, Blancanieves and Abracadabra were that. Now it is the turn of ROBOT DREAMS. 

Pablo Berger

ROBOT DREAMS is a Spanish-French coproduction with an international focus. We merged our artistic and economic resources with France in order to carry out this project. ROBOT DREAMS had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and it then participated in the Annecy Animation Festival. As with my previous films, it will be released worldwide. 

ROBOT DREAMS is full of emotions. 

A fantastical fable where a glance contains the boldest action. And where emotion comes from the “human” and sincere behavior of our protagonists when faced with adversity.

Director’s Notes 

Origin 

Over ten years ago, when I was embarked on my chimerical, but finally real, endeavor of making the film Blancanieves, I came across the graphic novel Robot Dreams by Sara Varon. I was gripped from the first pages. 

I didn’t read it, I devoured it. Like all good tales, its story took me to an unknown but recognizable place, where I felt at home. I was captivated by its temporal structure, it made me laugh and cry, and most importantly it made me reflect on friendship. While reading it I remembered my great friends, the ones who are still by my side, but above all, those who moved away or whom I lost along the way… I can say that Robot Dreams has reconciled me with my conflicting feelings about the loss of loved ones. Accepting and recovering from loss, undoubtedly, is the intellectual motor and the emotional reason for making the animated version of ROBOT DREAMS. 

The World of Sara Varon 

Sara Varon, the author of the homonymous graphic novel which inspired ROBOT DREAMS, is an artist with a world of her own. Her stories are fables inhabited by the most diverse animals with human behavior, who coexist in a recognizable, nostalgic New York. The diversity of their fauna reflects perfectly the cocktail of races and ethnicities that live in the Big Apple, giving her stories a greater Universality. Our interpretation of the world of Sara Varon has been from a respectful place, but also from a place of total freedom. Fortunately, from the start, Sara gave us “carte blanche” to create “our” particular ROBOT DREAMS and adapt it to a new medium, film. 

The “ligne claire,” A Visual Punch 

The graphic style of both the graphic novel and the film ROBOT DREAMS derives from the “Ligne Claire” style, with origins in the French- Belgian school and Hergé, the author of Tintin as its greatest exponent. It is characterized by a narrative way of representing reality using continuous clean lines, flat colors and limited shadows. A visual punch. A way of drawing that made a comeback with great popularity in the 

80s with the comics by Serge Clerc, Yves Chaland or Floc’h. In Spain, its ambassador was the publication Cairo and its greatest representative Daniel Torres. A style, the ligne claire, which today is again very present in the comic world thanks to Adrian Tomine or Chris Ware. 

A big part of my love for cinema comes from comics. 

ROBOT DREAMS, the film, was thought as a comic turned into animated drawings. To achieve this, we have used the characteristics typical of both media and the “Deep Focus” technique, meaning all elements in every shot. 

Writing with Images 

It has been over a century since the first animation film, Fantamagorie (1908) by Émil Cohl. A short film that retains its magic and its ability to amaze us based only on the power of the line. Of the image. That

is the essence of cinema, writing with images. As a filmmaker it is a challenge and at the same time an enormous pleasure to write stories without using dialog. 

After my film Blancanieves, I wanted to go back with ROBOT DREAMS to the essence of pure cinema. But this time from another angle, that of animation. A form of representation and storytelling that has no limits. 

The films by Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd have been mandatory viewings for the ROBOT DREAMS crew. The wisdom, humanity and humor present in their work have been a great source of inspiration. 

The World of Dreams 

An essential part of this film are the dreams of our protagonist, Robot. Cinema is daydreaming. Robot’s dreams are a delirious, Freudian, amazing expression of his most intimate desire to meet his friend Dog again. It’s his “return to Ithaca”. 

One of my reference comics, and graphic oracles, is Little Nemo in Slumberland (1905). A comic strip where the imagination of its author, Winsor McCay, takes us along with little Nemo on his journey to the “World of Dreams”, Slumberland. A place where everything is possible and in which the unexpected narrative twists follow on endlessly. With ROBOT DREAMS our aim has been the same: to put the spectator on a rollercoaster of continuous surprises. 

Art Direction 

As a fan of comics and illustration I have been an admirer of the work of José Luis Ágreda for over twenty five years. 

He has an impeccable technique and a unique sense of color. His exceptional work in the animation film Buñuel in The Labyrinth of the Turtles (2019) and his experience in the prestigious animation studio Cartoon Saloon, made him my first option as Art Director for ROBOT DREAMS. 

A great team of over twenty artists under José Luis’ direction developed concepts, characters, backgrounds, props, color script… the Robot Dreams world. Particular mention for the person in charge of character design, Daniel Fernández Casas. A young designer of enormous talent who has worked on some of the most important films in recent animation such as Klaus or the latest film by Benjamin Renner for the Illumination studio. His first mission on ROBOT DREAMS was to “redraw” our protagonists from the comic to a new medium, cinema. He gave them a fabulous make-over. Then, along with his team, he had to design the most varied jungle of New Yorkers. Hundreds. Sorry, thousands of extras. Be on the lookout. 

The Dreamed Film 

In preparing all my previous projects, I’ve always made a detailed storyboard of the entire film. For me, the storyboard is the treasure map. “The dreamed and edited film” as Hitchcock said. That is what I felt

my move to animation as something natural. Without being aware of it, my previous work process was perfect for the dynamics of animation. 

I used my experience in live action cinema to visualize the story in animated images. A cinematic language where the editing, the composition, the point of view, the visual poetry, the ellipsis and off-screen were essential elements when it came to telling the story of Dog and Robot. 

The process of doing the storyboard and the animatics of the film took a full year. We were fortunate in having the storyboard artist Maca Gil, who had just worked on My Father’s Dragon. Maca is a great artist who with two strokes is capable of expressing a range of emotions or representing very complex shots with precision. The team was completed by the editor Fernando Franco and the music editor Yuko Harami. 

Fernando and I had worked together on Blancanieves, and our experience had been so incredible that we were looking for an opportunity to repeat it. For a director his editor is like his dance partner, and Fernando and I dance wonderfully together. 

Yuko Harami has been the music editor of all my films. There is no making them without her. In ROBOT DREAMS she established the musical concept, looking for and manipulating pre-existing music or “temps” to give emotion and melodic unity to the animatics. Yuko has a unique sensitivity in the selection of this music, which later is of great use for inspiring the composers in their final musical pieces. 

Something particular of animation is the Animation storyboard or animatic. The “almost” final edited film. As a writer and director, this is, undoubtedly, the time that the final result is closest to “my dreamed film”. 

The Animation 

ROBOT DREAMS is a film that looks at the past, at traditional animation, but it is conceived for today’s audience. The film doesn’t exclude any kind of spectator. Classic animation, in two dimensions, drawn frame by frame, has its own 8 expressiveness, humanity and empathy. In ROBOT DREAMS, we have sought a fluidity and a line that reflect the story and its characters with simplicity. And coming from working with actors, I have given maximum importance to the eyes. Our animated characters’ gaze has been the essential element in obtaining performances full of life. In an animation film, in some way, the animators are the actors, they are the ones who give life to each character. Working with them has, definitely, been one of the most gratifying experiences on this long journey. 

During the animation stage of the project I relied on the great artist and animation director Benoît Feroumont. When I saw his last short film Le Lion et le Singe I immediately thought that he would be the ideal collaborator for ROBOT DREAMS. Le Lion et le Singe is a wonderful short film full of truth, tenderness and humor. And in addition, also without dialogue. Benoît has great experience as director of animation and has worked on outstanding films such as The Triplets of Belleville by Sylvain Chomet, or

The Book of Kells by Tom Moore. His know-how and sensitivity have been essential to successfully lead a team of over sixty animators. 

Music and Sound 

Collaborating again with Alfonso de Vilallonga, music composer for my films Blancanieves and Abracadabra, has been, once again, an enormous pleasure. Alfonso is an eclectic, surprising composer, with a prodigious capacity for creating music full of emotion, feelings and rhythm. In ROBOT DREAMS he has done it again thanks to the delicate piano melodies and the cool jazz, a very New York urban sound. 

The film’s sound design is a jungle of sound. From domestic environments and noises to the loud, bustling streets of the different neighborhoods in NYC. The sound design for ROBOT DREAMS is the third dimension. Fabiola Ordoyo, with whom I worked on my previous film, Abracadabra, is an alchemist of sound, capable of achieving the perfect color for any atmosphere or sound effect. But unlike in live action film where the base and backbone is the “location sound” recorded on set, in an animation film the designer has to create absolutely all the sounds. A challenge.

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Director's Statement, Featured Films, Featured Post, Filmmaker's Statement, Films, Glendale, News, NoHo 7, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz

Spend the week talking with filmmakers!

February 21, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

We host filmmaker Q&As all the time but we may set a record this week, we have so many. Come participate! Just don’t say, “my question is more of a comment, really.”
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Thursday, 2/22: Io Capitano writer/director Matteo Garrone (Gomorrah) will participate in a Q&A after the February 22 screening at the Royal. Los Angeles Times film critic Robert Abele will moderate.
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Also: The Omicron Killer actors Paugh Shadow, Bai Ling, Felissa Rose, Kianna Skye and Tony Diaz will participate in a Q&A following the February 22 screening at the Monica Film Center. Richard Bernstein will moderate.
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Also: Seagrass actress Ally Maki will participate in a Q&A after the February 22 screening at the Royal.
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Friday, 2/23: The Arc of Oblivion executive producer Werner Herzog and filmmaker Ian Cheney will participate in a Q&A at the Laemmle NoHo following the 7:20 PM screening on Friday, February 23. Joseph Gordon-Levitt will moderate.
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February 23-26: The following Veselka screenings will feature filmmaker Q&As: Fri. 2/23 7:10p, Sat. 2/24 7:10p, Sun. 2/25 4:10p, Mon. 2/26 7:10p.
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Friday, 2/23-28: Multiple Drugstore June screenings will feature cast & crew Q&As. Click here to learn more.

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Saturday, 2/24: Ingress producer Sienna Beckman, writer-director-actor Rachel Noll James and actor Johnny Ferro will participate in a Q&A following the 4 PM screenings at the Laemmle Glendale on Saturday & Sunday, February 24 & 25.

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Monday, 2/26: Shayda writer-director Noora Niasari will participate in a Q&A after the February 26 screening at the Royal (via Zoom). Film critic Stephen Farber will moderate.
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February 26-29: In Tribute to Norman Jewison: Jesus Christ Superstar actors Ted Neeley and Yvonne Elliman will attend all screenings to speak about Mr. Jewison, answer questions, sign autographs, and take photos with fans at the February 26-29 screenings.
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Wednesday, 2/28: All February 28 screenings of Origin will feature a pre-recorded introduction by and post-screening Q&A with filmmaker Ava Duvernay. Also: The February 28 screening Mambar Pierrette will feature an introduction by Jordan Cronk, film critic, programmer and founder of Acropolis Cinema.

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Thursday, 2/29: Mad Props director Juan Reinoso and the film’s host, Tom Biolchini, will participate in a Q&A after the February 29 screening at the Royal.
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Cherry on top: Dune: Part Two opens February 29.

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Filed Under: Actors in Person, Filmmaker in Person, Glendale, News, Q&A's, Royal, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz

APOCALYPSE NOW: THE FINAL CUT 45th Anniversary Screening Sunday, March 3.

February 21, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a screening of Francis Ford Coppola’s epic Vietnam War movie, ‘Apocalypse Now,’ in the director’s approved version restored in 2019: ‘Apocalypse Now: The Final Cut.’ When it was originally released in 1979, it scored at the box office and earned eight Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay. It won two Oscars, for the striking cinematography by Vittorio Storaro and for Best Sound.

The screening is at the Royal on Sunday, March 3, and will start promptly at 6:00 PM with an introduction by actress Colleen Camp, who played Miss May in the film. Afterward we’ll have a special Q&A with Ms. Camp and author Sam Wasson, who just published The Path to Paradise: A Francis Ford Coppola Story. He will also be selling and signing copies of his book.

Loosely inspired by Joseph Conrad’s enthralling novel ‘Heart of Darkness,’ the ‘Apocalypse Now‘ screenplay was by Coppola, John Milius, and Michael Herr (a journalist who wrote the acclaimed book about the war, ‘Dispatches’). The main character, Captain Willard (played by Martin Sheen), is ordered to travel through Vietnam and track down Colonel Kurtz (played by Marlon Brando), who has gone rogue and established his own savage regime in Cambodia. Willard’s orders are to assassinate Kurtz to save the military from disgrace.

The supporting cast includes Robert Duvall (who earned an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the surf-loving Colonel Kilgore), Laurence Fishburne, Frederic Forrest, Scott Glenn, Sam Bottoms, Dennis Hopper, Harrison Ford, and Colleen Camp. Although the troubled production went way over budget on location in the Philippines, it won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1979 and earned strong reviews from many critics. Kathleen Carroll of the New York Daily News wrote, “Certainly no movie in history has ever presented stronger proof that war is living hell.” Amy Taubin of the Village Voice added, “’Apocalypse‘ has the expressive extravagance of a Wagner opera—and not merely because the swooping helicopter scene is set to the ‘Ride of the Valkyries.’” Roger Ebert considered it one of the greatest films ever made.

Author Sam Wasson did extensive research, with special access to Coppola’s private papers, to write his new book, ‘The Path to Paradise: A Francis Ford Coppola Story.’ The New York Times praised it as “a marvel of unshowy reportage,” and Publishers Weekly declared, “Movie buffs won’t want to miss this.” Wasson has also written the acclaimed books, ‘The Big Goodbye’ (about the making of ‘Chinatown’), ‘Fifth Avenue 5 AM’ (about ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’) and ‘Fosse.’ He will be selling and signing his book at the screening.

Colleen Camp has an extensive list of credits over the last 50 years, including ‘Valley Girl,’ ‘Clue,’ ‘Wayne’s World,’ ‘Die Hard With a Vengeance,’ Peter Bogdanovich’s ‘They All Laughed,’ Alexander Payne’s ‘Election,’ David O. Russell’s ‘American Hustle’ and ‘Joy,’ and many TV series as well.

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Filed Under: Actor in Person, Anniversary Classics, Featured Post, Films, News, Q&A's, Repertory Cinema, Royal, Theater Buzz

“Brevity is the soul of wit” and much more: the 2024 Oscar-nominated shorts open this Friday.

February 12, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

As usual, Shakespeare put it best (with, of course, a touch of irony, putting the words in the mouth of the long-winded Polonius). We open the animated shorts this Friday at the NoHo and Newhall; February 23 at the Town Center, Glendale, and Claremont; and March 1 at the Monica Film Center. We open the live action shorts this Friday at the Glendale and Newhall; February 23 at the NoHo and Claremont; and March 1 at the Town Center and Monica Film Center. We open the short documentaries Friday at the Royal and Town Center; we’ll also screen them Saturday and Sunday mornings at the Newhall, Glendale and Claremont starting the next day.

The animated nominees:

Our Uniform – Yegane Moghaddam, 7 min., Iran (in Farsi); Letter to a Pig – Tal Kantor and Amit R. Gicelter, 17 min., France/Israel (in Hebrew); Pachyderm– Stéphanie Clément and Marc Rius, 11 min., USA (in English); Ninety-Five Senses – Jerusha Hess and Jared Hess, 13 min., USA (in English); War is Over! Inspired by the Music of John & Yoko – Dave Mullins and Brad Booker, 11 min., USA; Also screening: Wild Summon – Karni Arieli and Saul Freed, 14 min., UK (in English, narrated by Marianne Faithfull); nominated for a BAFTA and a Cristal Award at the Annecy International Animated film Festival; and I’m Hip – John Musker, 4 min., USA; nominated for a Cristal Award at the Annecy International Animated film Festival.

From ‘Letter to a Pig.’

The live action nominees:

The After – Misan Harriman and Nicky Bentham, 18 min., UK (in English); Red, White and Blue – Nazrin Choudhury and Sara McFarlane, 23 min., USA (in English); Knight of Fortune – Lasse Lyskjær Noer and Christian Norlyk, 25 min., Denmark (in Swedish/Danish); Invincible – Vincent René-Lortie and Samuel Caron, 29 min., Canada (in French); The Wonderful World of Henry Sugar – Wes Anderson and Steven Rales, 40 min., US/UK (in English).

From ‘The After.’

The documentary nominees:

Nǎi Nai and Wài Pó – Sean Wang and Sam Davis, 17 min., USA (in Mandarin); The Barber of Little Rock – John Hoffman and Christine Turner, 35 min., USA (in English); Island in Between – S. Leo Chiang and Jean Tsien, 20 min., Taiwan (in English/Mandarin); The ABC’s of Book Banning – Sheila Nevins and Trish Adlesic, 27 min., USA (in English); The Last Repair Shop – Ben Proudfoot and Kris Bowers, 39 min., USA (in English).

From ‘The ABCs of Book Banning.’

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Featured Films, Featured Post, Films, Glendale, Newhall, NoHo 7, Royal, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz, Town Center 5

Cynthia Erivo and Alia Shawkat in the mesmerizing DRIFT, opening Friday at the Monica Film Center.

February 11, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

From the producers of Call Me By Your Name and Nomadland, Drift follows Jacqueline (Cynthia Erivo), a refugee on a Greek island. As she tries to survive, cope with her past and gather  strength, she begins a healing friendship with a rootless tour guide (Alia Shawkat). We open the film this Friday at the Monica Film Center.
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“Erivo’s screen debut as a producer and one of her most impressive screen performances to date.” ~ David Canfield, Vanity Fair
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“Drift, a patient character study set on a craggy Greek island, proves a mesmerizing showcase for the actress Cynthia Erivo’s talents.” ~ Natalia Winkelman, New York Times
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“Drift is measured, sensitive and devastating, and works just the way it is.” ~ Alexandra Heller-NicholasAWFJ.org

“Erivo is such an intuitive and understated performer, and Chen so nuanced in his own approach, that Drift never feels didactic.” ~ Peter Debruge, Variety

“Erivo’s full-bodied commitment to the role, capturing how even the worst experiences can become a part of you, results in a performance so powerful that it’s occasionally too difficult to watch.” ~ Siddhant Adlakha, indieWire

“Solemn and stirring.” ~ David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter
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“Not only has Singapore director Anthony Chen set himself a tough task in this ambitious adaptation, he has also notably succeeded in making viewers see the world through very different eyes.” ~ Todd McCarthy, Deadline Hollywood Daily

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Featured Post, Films, News, Press, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz

“Bold, creative and unflinching…alive with unpredictable political energy,” DISCO BOY with Rogowski opens Friday in Glendale and Santa Monica.

February 7, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

Italian director Giacomo Abbruzzese’s debut feature Disco Boy follows Aleksei (Franz Rogowski), a young Belarusian on the run from a past he must bury. In a form of Faustian pact, he becomes a member of the French Foreign Legion in exchange for the promise of French citizenship. Far away, in the Niger Delta, Jomo is a revolutionary activist, engaged in armed struggle to defend his community. Aleksei is a soldier, Jomo a guerrilla fighter. Because of one more senseless war, their destinies will intertwine. We opens Disco Boythis Friday at the Laemmle Glendale and Monica Film Center.
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“In its final scenes, Disco Boy echoes the troop and solo dance movements from the much revered Beau Travail, a mad and nervy move a young director would only dare when he has a lead as riveting and emotionally daring as Franz Rogowski.” ~ Chuck Wilson, Village Voice

“Bold, creative and unflinching, Disco Boy is alive with unpredictable political energy.” ~ Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, AWFJ.org
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“This is bold film-making: a movie that wants to dazzle you with its standalone setpieces, but also to carry you along with its storytelling.” ~ Peter Bradshaw, Guardian

“Getting in, getting down, and getting out as a style-hopping sizzle reel, Disco Boy heralds a promising new talent who totally has the moves.” ~ Ben Croll, indieWire

“Disco Boy doesn’t want for boldness or surprise — Abbruzzese’s hot, fluxional command of sound and image keeps us curious.” ~ Guy Lodge, Variety
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“A sensuous, striking film experience.” ~ Leslie Felperin, Hollywood Reporter

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Filed Under: Featured Films, Films, Glendale, News, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz

Featuring “a shattering performance and made all the more devastating because it’s so subtle,” HOW TO HAVE SEX opens Friday in Glendale and Santa Monica.

February 7, 2024 by Jordan Deglise Moore

Winner of the Un Certain Regard prize at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, How to Have Sex is a vibrant and authentic depiction of the agonies, ecstasies and ride-or-die glory of young female friendship, from rising British filmmaker Molly Manning Walker. Three British teenage girls go on a rites-of-passage holiday, drinking, clubbing and hooking up in what should be the best summer of their lives. As they dance their way across the sun-drenched streets of Malia, they find themselves navigating the complexities of sex, consent and self-discovery. We open the film this Friday at the Laemmle Glendale and Monica Film Center.

In a recent interview with Film Inquiry, Walker spoke about the film’s potent impact on audiences: “We didn’t really know the scale of it when we were making it. We kind of felt like it was quite personal. And then as we put it out into the world, we saw that.”

“Walker often lets the camera linger on McKenna-Bruce’s face and eyes that convey all the things she can’t find the words for. It is a shattering performance and made all the more devastating because it’s so subtle.” ~ Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press

“Described by its director as loosely autobiographical, How to Have Sex is built around a subtle but devastating rug-pull that exposes the culture of sex and consent in the same way F Scott Fitzgerald put the Jazz Age on blast in The Great Gatsby.” ~ Clarisse Loughrey, Independent (UK)
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“McKenna-Bruce’s fearless lead is both emotionally exposing and very finely calibrated, slipping from exuberance to anxiety to desperation sometimes in a single shot.” ~ Jonathan Romney, Financial Times

“As enthralling as it is important, How To Have Sex neatly depicts the joy and pain of teenage girlhood.” ~ Sophie Butcher, Empire Magazine

“Manning Walker’s film lays out the minefield of sexual education and consent for a post-#MeToo generation, with a precision to its ambiguities that will draw gasps from its characters’ contemporaries and elders alike.” ~ Guy Lodge, Variety

“In its frankness and often frightening candor, How to Have Sex is of a piece with coming-of-age dramas like Thirteen and The Diary of a Teenage Girl, with a dash of the lascivious, neon-colored bacchanalia of Spring Breakers thrown in for good measure.” ~ Ann Hornaday, Washington Post

“How to Have Sex is a stressful and infuriating watch because its arc isn’t reserved for fictional characters. Instead, it serves as the jumping point for bigger conversations that are all too common, timely as they are heartbreaking.” ~ Anne T. Donahue, Globe and Mail
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“[It] could easily have become a simplistic cautionary tale, a racier version of an after-school special. Instead, Walker’s delicate eye and feel for rhythm lend the movie an ominous cadence.” ~ Bilge Ebiri, New York Magazine/Vulture

“A different kind of Greek tragedy — no grand myth, just a heart-sore, everyday observation of what the world does to girls and what the world makes girls do to themselves.” ~ Jessica Kiang, Los Angeles Times

“Glimpses into a very specific corner of girlhood’s ups and downs and the unshakeable beams of sisterhood make Walker’s How To Have Sex unforgettably relatable.” ~ Peyton Robinson, RogerEbert.com

“It’s a coming-of-age story centered on a sexual awakening—an almost hackneyed premise, but one that, in Walker’s hands (as both writer and director), produces results of unusual emotional intensity.” ~ Richard Brody, New Yorker
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