Av Festival 12: Whole Day Of Films (Slow Cinema Wkend): 11am - 11pm + Directors Q&A

Part of the Av Festival 12: As Slow As Possible
Director: | Ben Rivers, Lav Diaz and Lisandro Alonso |
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Certificate: | Unknown |
Length: | |
Format: | Unknown |
Language: | Unknown |
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11am-12.30pm: Two Years At Sea (Dir. Ben Rivers) + Q&A with the director
1pm-7.30pm: Century of Birthing (Dir. Lav Diaz) + Q&A with the director
9pm - 11pm: Fantasma (Dir. Lisandro Alonso) (instead of the originally programmed LIVERPOOL - sorry for any inconvenience caused)
11am - 12.30pm: Ben Rivers: Two Years At Sea (2011, format: digital, 88 min) + Q&A with the director
Rivers is one of the most distinctive UK filmmakers working today. His films focus on marginal places and individuals, often those who have disconnected from the normal world and taken themselves into wilderness territories. Using an old handheld 16mm camera and film stock, he meticulously processes the work himself.Crossing the boundaries of gallery and cinema presentation, and between documentary and fiction, his work imagines alternative visionary new worlds.
Rivers is present throughout the weekend to introduce and discuss his work.
1pm-7.30pm: Lav Diaz: Century of Birthing (2011, format: HDCam, 360 min) + Q&A with the director
Internationally celebrated as “the ideological father of the New Philippine Cinema”. Diaz has created one of the most compelling bodies of work in contemporary cinema. Peopled by outsiders – failed revolutionaries, filmmakers, artists, criminals and cult members – his work explores society from the margins and the traumatic post-colonial history of South-East Asia. Using extreme duration, it offers a deeply rewarding, immersive and unique experience.
This UK debut focuses on recent work. Diaz is present throughout the weekend for discussion with curator George Clark and critic May Adadol Ingawanij.
9pm - 10.30pm: Lisandro Alonso: Fantasma (2006, 63 min) + Q&A with the director (instead of the originally programmed LIVERPOOL - sorry for any inconvenience caused)
Extract from Neil Young's blog Film Lounge
"Writer-director-producer-editor Alonso quickly established himself as one of the most original, poetic, challenging and uncompromising of current bumper crop of Argentinian filmmakers with his first two features, La Libertad (2001) and Los Muertos (2004) - both of them audaciously slow, meditative, near-wordless affairs, half-fictional and half-documentary, focussing on the quotidian activities of a solitary male. La Libertad chronicled a day in the life of logger Misael Saavedra; Los Muertos followed ex-convict Argentino Vargas as he journeyed downriver to visit family-members.
Though set in the city rather than the country, Fantasma is in some ways more of the same: for roughly an hour, we observe the (non-pro) "stars" of Alonso's previous films, Saavedra and Vargas, wandering (separately) around a near-deserted, multi-level, labyrinthine Buenos Aires theatre-complex where Los Muertos is being shown. Again, it's an audaciously slow, meditative, near-wordless affair, half-fictional and half-documentary, focussing on quotidian activities. One is reminded of Wim Wenders' instructions to Dennis Hopper during the making of The American Friend, when the actor was told to come up with things that one might do "only alone." (…)
But the element which elevates Fantasma to the level of minor masterpiece is Alonso's astonishing use of sound: if there's a "story" to be somehow divined here, it's to be found in the subtle symphony of human, mechanical and even animal (whose is that dog?) noises – which are so diverting that never for a moment notice the fact that there's hardly any dialogue in the movie at all. Alonso meanwhile bookends the "action" with two blasts of loud electric-guitar music which provide suitably mood-enhancing punctuation. The cumulative effect is stunning and spellbinding: a spooky, darkly witty journey around a "cinema" that's also a bold journey around, into – and perhaps even beyond - cinema itself."
More here http://www.jigsawlounge.co.uk/film/reviews/the-phantom-of-liberty-lisandro-alonso-s-fantasma-9-10/
ABOUT LISANDRO ALONSO
One of the most accomplished and original Argentine artists working in contemporary Latin American cinema, Alonso combines fiction and documentary techniques to create meditative, mysteriously atmospheric films. Each film follows a solitary man, signifying a larger journey or inner quest, within exquisite natural landscapes shot on 35mm. Working with non-actors from rural communities, the slow rhythm of everyday life is distinctive and mesmerizing.Alonso is present throughout the weekend to introduce and discuss his work.
+ FOOD THROUGHOUT THE DAY!
Delicious food from la Fiesta will be provided throughout the whole day: Danish pastries, expresso and other great coffees, warm, vegetarian, vegan food - a bit for everyone!
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Part of AV Festival 12: As Slow As Possible, www.avfestival.co.uk
AV Festival Film Loyalty Card - Collect 4 stamps and the 5th film is FREE
WHOLE PROGRAMME OF THE AV AT THE STAR AND SHADOW HERE http://www.starandshadow.org.uk/on/season/111
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Other films in the Av Festival 12: As Slow As Possible:

04
Film: Av Festival 12: Stalker (1979, Russia, Dir. Tarkovsky)
4 Mar 2012, 9 p.m.
One of the most enigmatic films ever made about time, from the widely admired director Tarkovsky.

07
Film: Av Festival 12: Five + Discussion (2003, Iran, Dir. Kiarostami)
7 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Radically minimalist film from the genius Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami.

08
Film: Av Festival 12: Frost (Start Of Slow Cinema Wkend) + Q&A (1997, Germany, Dir. Kelemen)
8 Mar 2012, 8:30 p.m.
Frost is a landmark European film, made on 16mm film by german director Fred Kelemen.

09
Film: Av Festival 12: Whole Evening Of Films (Slow Cinema Wkend): 6pm - 11pm + Directors Q&A
9 Mar 2012, 6 p.m.
Masterpiece from German filmmaker Fred Kelemen + incredible from "the ideological father of the New Philippine Cinema".

10
Film: Av Festival 12: Whole Day Of Films (Slow Cinema Wkend): 11am - 11pm + Directors Q&A
10 Mar 2012, 11 a.m.
Gorgeous film from British superstar Ben Rivers + 10 hour film from Phillipino director Lav Diaz!

14
Film: Av Festival 12: Colossal Youth + Discussion With Samm Haillay (2006, Portugal, Dir. Pedro Costa)
14 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
An intimate epic, where present and past move as one, collaboratively filmed with patience and empathy.

15
Film: Av Festival 12: Honor Of The Knights + Intro From Film Lecturer (2006, Spain, Dir. A. Serra)
15 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Serra’s striking, controversial adaptation of Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote, is a revelatory portrait of the relationship between the frail Quixote and his stout loyal scribe Sancho.

18
Film: Av Festival 12: Finisterrae + Skype Q&A W. Director! (2010)
18 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Two Russian-speaking ghosts leave the Sonar Music Festival, along the pilgrim path to Santiago de Compostela then on to Finisterre: the end of the world, to seek rebirth. Inspired by Garrel’s 1972 film The Inner Scar, this surreal and humorous tale is Caballero’s first feature, with a stunning soundtrack including Nico and Suicide.

21
Film: Av Festival 12: Lung Neaw Visits His Neighbours + Discussion (2011, Thailand)
21 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
This debut feature by visual artist Tiravanija is a portrait of the slow passage of time and simplicity of everyday life in a small village near Chiang Mai. The artist follows old uncle Lung Neaw with a 16mm camera during his daily routines. With compassion and humility, we see him walk, talk, eat, pray, cook, hunt, smoke, drink and visit his neighbours.

22
Film: Av Festival 12: Still Life (2006)
22 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Still Life is set in Fengjie, 150 miles from the Three Gorges Dam, the hydroelectric project on the Yangtze River that submerged thousands of towns and displaced more than a million people. Shot while Fengjie was being demolished, the film has a powerful documentary impact, as two people travel there separately to look for their missing spouses.

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Film: Av Festival 12: Eternity + Discussion (2010)
25 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
This debut feature won the prestigious Tiger Award at Rotterdam 2011. Evoking the traditional Thai belief that the spirit of the dead returns, Eternity follows a man through three stages of being - as a ghost in his childhood home, as a young man falling in love, and absent in the life of his family in the days following his death.

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Film: Av Festival 12: Double Bill: Butterflies Have No Memories + Independencia
28 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Special double bill!

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Film: Av Festival 12: Let Each One Go Where He May (2009)
29 Mar 2012, 7:30 p.m.
Russell’s stunning feature debut is an epic road movie drawing from documentary and ethnography. Set in Suriname and shot almost entirely with 16mm steadicam, in thirteen extended ten-minute shots it follows two brothers as they trek from Paramaribo to rainforest villages of the Maroons. Their journey powerfully mirrors that undertaken by their ancestors escape from slavery 300 years earlier.