Film Festivals

Raindance 15

Raindance 15 Raindance is the UK’s largest independent film festival, showcasing shorts and features from around the world and specialising in directorial debuts. Distinguishing itself from other festivals with its rock and roll attitude, Raindance runs riot in the West End of London each September/October.

As well as showing independent films from around the world, it hosts a number of special events, 26 in 12 days last year, including masterclasses, Q&A sessions with industry professionals, its renowned pitching event where you could end up selling your idea to a movie exec, one-off versions of the courses they run year-long, and, of course, parties.

In 1993, its first year, Raindance hosted 22 features and 65 short films, and attracted 1300 attendees. For closing night they screened What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?, starring Johnny Depp and featuring the film debut of a 14-year-old Leonardo Dicaprio.

In the following years Raindance premièred, among others, Pulp Fiction, The Blair Witch Project and Memento. Last year, in 2006, the festival showcased over 90 features and 160 shorts from over 40 countries, and in excess of 10 000 people attended

This year’s festival runs from September 25th to October 7th and - reflecting the festival’s strong interest in music - includes Iggy pop and Mick Jones of The Clash are on the jury.

The Festival Trailer

Quicktime: Small Large
YouTube: One size fits all

The Films

The festival will open with Allan Moyle’s Weirdsville and close with Gus Van Sant’s Paranoid Park. The rest of the line-up is as follows:

JEAN-LUC GODARD RETROSPECTIVE
After last year’s successful Stanley Kubrick retrospective Raindance is honouring Jean-Luc Godard at this year’s festival. The films on show have been personally selected by Mr. Godard himself and will be made available on the big screen.
Eloge de L’Amour
Notre Musique
The Old Place

HOMEGROWN (UK)
UK Feature films (excluding Docs) highlighting the best UK indie films
The Inheritance
Exhibit A
The Killing of John Lennon
Summer Scars
Waz

UNITED STATES OF EUROPE
Films from the European Union (excluding Docs)
Uranya
Drink Up!
Children
Parents
Red Like The Sky
One Two Another
Ex Drummer (trailer)
The Cream
Valerie
Kenedi Is Getting Married

JAPAN / S. KOREA
Films from Japan and South Korea (excluding Docs)
Amazing Lives Of The Fast Food Grifters
Prisoner/Terrorist
Uncle’s Paradise
It’s Only Talk
M
What The Snow Brings

GLOBAL CELLULOID
Every other feature film (excluding Docs) that isn’t in one of the strands above. Films from Africa, Argentina, etc
Bunny Chow (trailer)
The Book Of Revelation
La Antena (trailer)
The Devil Dared Me To (trailer)
The Amazing Grace
Turks In Space
Day Watch (trailer)
Bog Of Beasts

NORTH AMERICAN INDIES
Films from the US and Canada (excluding Docs)
Day Zero
Congorama
Being Michael Madsen
The GoodTimesKid
In Search Of A Midnight Kiss
Weirdsville (trailer)
Phantom Love
Paranoid Park

DOCUMENTARY
This Is Nollywood
Oh Saigon! / Bolinao 52
Bakushi: The Incredible Lives of The Rope-Masters
HR Giger’s Sanctuary
Off The Grid: Life On The Mesa
Tovarisch: I Am Not Dead
Manufacturing Dissent
Flames In The Looking Glass
U & Me & Tennessee - an American romance…
Veil Of Ignorance

SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Twenty To Life: The Life And Times Of John Sinclair
Frank & Cindy
Silver Jew
South Coast
This Filthy World

The Jury

Iggy Pop is an influential musician whose career has spanned over thirty years. He broke onto the music scene with The Stooges in 1967, before going solo, releasing albums such as The Idiot and Lust for Life. Films include Jim Jarmusch’s Coffee & Cigarettes (Raindance 2004) and John Waters’ Cry-Baby

Penny Woolcock - Writer / Director whose films include the recent Exodus retelling the story of Moses for our times, Mischief Night, The Principles of Lust and The Death of Klinghoffer. She has also made documentaries for television including The Wet House and Shakespeare on the Estate. She’s currently developing a musical about gangs in Birmingham.

Andrea Arnold was the recipient of the 2005 Oscar for Best Short Film for Wasp. Her feature début, 2006’s Red Road, was the only first feature to be nominated for the Palm D’Or at Cannes and picked up the Cannes Jury Prize, five Scottish BAFTA’s, two BIFAs, The Sutherland Trophy, Best British Newcomer at The London Film Critics Awards and The Carl Foreman Award at the UK BAFTA’s.

Simon Channing Williams has produced more than 30 feature films, notable titles including The Constant Gardner and Brothers of the Head (Opening Night Raindance 2006). He has also enjoyed a long-standing partnership with director Mike Leigh, producing films such as Vera Drake, Secrets and Lies, Naked and All For Nothing

Oli Harbottle was the producer of the Raindance Film Festival for three years from 2003 to 2005. He is now the film release coordinator at Dogwoof Pictures, one of the leading art house distributors of independent film in the UK.

Jonathan Harvey an instructor of Cinematography at the NFTS and is currently in production on Amy Heckerling’s new film

Mick Jones is a musician and music producer. He was the lead guitarist in The Clash, who were among the pioneers of the punk rock movement in the 1970s. He and the rest of the band were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. He has since gone on to perform with General Public and Big Audio Dynamite, while also producing both albums by The Libertines.

Sandy Lieberson was the president of 20th Century Fox from 1979-1980 and MGM International from 1989-1993. He is also a renowned film producer whose credits include Nicolas Roeg and Donald Cammell’s Performance and Terry Gilliam’s Jabberwocky.

Anthony Quinn has been a film critic of The Independent since 1998. Before that he was a film critic of The Mail on Sunday and arts editor of Harpers & Queen. He also writes for The Daily Telegraph and The New York Times.

Jemma Rodgers Founder of Junction films and BAFTA Award winning producer for The League of Gentlemen, Double Take for BBC2 and Murphy’s Law starring James Nesbitt; Jemma has developed several scripts under the Junction Films label across both comedy and drama. These include the first ever produced original screenplay by Irvine Welsh and his screenwriting partner Dean Cavanagh, Wedding Belles.

Tessa Ross has been the Head of Drama for Channel 4 since 2000 and the Head of Film4 from 2002, combining the two roles in 2004 to become Controller of Film and Drama. Projects she has commissioned include This is England, The Last King of Scotland, The Motorcycle Diaries, The Road to Guantanamo and Shameless. Future releases from Film4 include Michael Winterbottom’s Geneva, Harmony Korine’s Mister Lonely and the adaptation of Monica Ali’s Brick Lane.

Davide Scalenghe manages the VC2 (Viewer Created Content) Outreach department at Current TV. He started his career at CNN International, before moving on to work at TimeOut then subsequently MTV International, where he worked on shows such as The Osbournes and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.

Brian Tufano is one of the UK’s leading cinematographers. His work has included such significant films as Quadrophenia, Shallow Grave, Trainspotting and East Is East. More recent projects have included the teen drama Kidulthood and Amy Heckerling’s forthcoming I Could Never Be Your Woman. He is currently filming an adaptation of David Hare’s play My Zinc Bed, starring Uma Thurman and Paddy Considine.

Ed King Content Producer for Film and Video at MySpace UK and Joe Utichi- Editor of Rotten Tomatoes UK.

Festival van de Fantastiche Film 2003

Festival van de Fantastiche Film 2003The 2003 Festival van de Fantastiche Film (FFF) ran from 10th to 16th April in Amsterdam. The main location was the Filmmuseum Cinerama with a secondary location at the Melkweg, which also provided the Festival Café.

Two countries dominated this year’s festival – Japan and Spain. Japan, of course, has always had anime which at its best can provide a beautiful and often hallucinatory experience. More recently, we have also seen a renaissance of Japanese horror, starting with Ring. In the case of Spain, following Alejandro Amenábar’s Abre Los Ojos, the country has seen an explosion in fantastic film making.

Of course, a retrospective dedicated to Jesus Franco also helps.

The festival is split into several parts.

The Main Programme of the festival comprised 21 titles – including the Night of Terror - all of which were shown in the Filmmusem Cinerama. These are the films that compete for the Silver Scream Award (voted for by the public) and the Silver Méliés.

The Anime Programme takes a look at the unique genre of Japanese animation and shows some of the best fantastic anime of recent years, including Miyazaki Hayao’s Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke.

The Jesús Franco Retrospective takes shows a selection of the 150 films that comprise the oeuvre of Jesús Franco.

Completely ignored by mainstream audiences and critics, yet with a devoted following and a far better name within the industry than his reputation would suggest, Jesús Franco has been bringing his often dark and personal visions to the silver screen for five decades. This retrospective is dedicated to bringing him the attention he deserves.

The European Fantastic Shorts programme was split into two showings which attempted to bring the best European short films to an appreciative audience.

The Children’s programme. For those that weren’t convinced, Harry Potter has decisively demonstrated the power of the fairy tale and this programme goes to show that children’s fantasy is a rich and vibrant genre.

The awards and the winners

The Silver Scream award is presented to the director of the most popular film, as voted by the audience. This year’s winner was Spirited Away, Hayao Miyazaki’s enchanting tale of a 10 year old girl who wanders into a world of gods and monsters.

The Silver Méliés for best European fantastic film is voted for by the jury. The winner of the Silver Méliés goes on to compete for the Golden Méliés at the final Méliés affiliated festival of the season.

And then there is the Lifetime Achievement award, presented for services to fantastic film. This year Lloyd Kaufman, president of Troma Films has joined the ranks of Wes Craven, Dario Argento and Paul Verhoeven in accepting the award.

Troma Films, ‘the last of the independents’, has consistently shocked, outraged and delighted – admittedly small – audiences with a unique mix of blood, sex, social satire, anarchy and provocation.

Over the course of almost thirty years, Troma gone beyond being just a production company and now also encompasses an attitude and a way of doing things that encompasses the entire filmmaking process from conception to distribution.

Through Tromadance, Troma has also become a philosophy of supporting the small independent filmmaker, rocking the boat and scorning the bland safeness that makes up much of Hollywood’s output.

The award was presented by porn start and occasional cohort, Ron Jeremy and, in a funny and often insightful acceptance speech, Kaufman called for seeking peace through the dropping of celluloid bombs.

The award was followed by a showing of Apocalypse Soon: The Making of Citizen Toxie.

Some of the Films

Since I needed a break, I took some time off work and caught a few of the films. My main intention was to catch some of the better films that aren’t going to be released for a while, if at all.

However, I started with The Castle of Fu Manchu.

The film is an amazing collection of plot contrivances - one convenient coincidence after another, topped off with an ethical debate that completely ignores the idea that cutting the heart out of a live donor might not be entirely ethical.

It’s a terrible, terrible film and one that really needs a few beers to endure.

Ju-On: The Grudge
Ju-On (The Grudge) has to count as one of the most mind-numbingly terrifying cinematic experiences I’ve endured in a long time.

The film revolves around a haunted house and the repercussions of a violent death which we see in the opening sequence.

Rika, a care centre volunteer visits the home of one of the outpatients to check on her condition. Here she finds the house is a mess and the old is woman practically comatose. While cleaning the place up, she hears a noise upstairs and, on investigation, finds a boy in a wardrobe that has been tapes shut. Releasing the boy starts a chain of events, passing the Ju-On curse to everyone who comes into contact with the house.

The rest of the story is told as a series of non-linear, self-contained yet interconnected vignettes each of which expands the story and deepens the horror.

And with no relief, the tension is continually ratcheted up keeping you on the edge of your seat throughout. If only all horror films were half as good as this one.

Deathwatch
British horror film set in the trenches of World War I. Another haunting, although this is more of a ‘haunted trench’ story in which a group of British soldiers get lost in the fog of battle and stumble on a German trench.

The trench is poorly defended - with most of the Germans being already dead - and is easily captured.

Unfortunately, it wasn’t just Germans in the trench…

Well acted throughout - with special kudos going to Andy ‘Gollum’ Serkis as the superbly deranged Quinn – the film ticks along in a reasonably linear fashion. The real star of this film, though, is the trench – murky, muddy and dangerous; there could be anything in there, and often is.

It’s a solid, if very linear, film but lacked any real scares and failed to engage on anything other than a superficial level.

28 Days Later
A group of animal rights activists break into a laboratory and manage to release a rage virus…

28 days later, Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up in a deserted hospital…

The opening scenes of Danny Boyles much anticipated zombie film reminded me a lot of Day of the Triffids with the solitary figure of Jim wandering through the deserted streets of London trying to work out what has happened.

The sense of emptiness, achieved through snatched and grainy shots of deserted landmarks, is both stunning and harrowing.

Before long, he meets the zombies. These are not your common or garden shufflers; infected by the rage virus they are both fast and angry.

Eventually a group of four survivors gather in a tower block. The Britishness of the film comes across very strongly here – rather than collecting an arsenal and going on the warpath, these survivors are reduced to trying to collect rainwater in plastic buckets and living off whatever is still edible – chocolate.

However, plots must progress and, in this case one of the survivors, Frank (Brendan Gleeson) has managed to pick up a radio broadcast from a military unit calling on survivors to head to a blockade near Manchester. This sounds like their last best hope so they pack and go …

On the surface, 28 Days Later is a new take on the zombie genre – the zombies are fast, agile and angry – but the core of the film goes right back to the roots laid down by Romero in trying to use the horror genre to make a social statement.

Unfortunately, while Dawn of the Dead was a brilliant satire on consumerism, 28 Days Later lays it all on a little bit too thick so that, instead of exploring the way people try to survive – and the extremes they are willing to go to – in a desperate situation, the film starts to become a parody of itself with the soldiers becoming increasingly unbelievable as the one-note villains.

That said, who knows how any of us would react in a situation as desperate as this.

The Eye
Mun who has been blind since the age of two, receives a cornea transplant. The operation is a success, her sight slowly starts to come back and she can finally see her surroundings.

Unfortunately, it’s not just her physical surroundings that she can see.

Yep, Mun can see dead people.

What follows is a pretty classic ghost story overlaid with a stunning visual style and an incredible score that keeps the tension mounting and dives the story confidently through the minor holes in the plot.

It’s a truly stunning film.

My Little Eye
Five people – three me and two women – sign up for a Big Brother style psychological experiment. If they spend six months together in a house in the middle of nowhere, they win $1 million.

The catch is that if one of them leaves the house they all lose. And, of course, the house is fully wired with webcams – every aspect of their lives in the house is filmed from multiple angles.

The film itself starts in the final month of the experiment, and tensions are clearly frayed when things start to get really weird.

Director, Marc Evans certainly combines form and content effectively, certainly in the first part of the film, with grainy images and green-tinted night scenes effectively giving the film a very Big Brother feel.

And, as things start to go awry, the film also makes a few points about the audience, not only of reality TV but also of this film that are worth taking away with you.

Dark Water
Things aren’t going too well for Yoshimi Matsubara, recently divorced and looking for a job and home so she can support her 5 year old chid, Ikuko. And to make matters worse, her ex husband is trying to gain custody of Ikuko, bringing up her earlier mental instability as cause for concern.

Beggars can’t be choosers and Yoshimi ends up renting an apartment in an aging, and not very well maintained, tower block.

On moving in, she notices a dripping water stain on the ceiling which she reports to the apartment supervisor – and elderly and uninterested man who promises to make a note of it.

Yoshimi also manages to get herself a job. Unfortunately this proves to be something of a double edged sword as the pressures of trying to keep everything together mean that Yoshimi rarely manages to get to the kindergarten in time, leaving Ikuko standing alone in the rain as the other children leave with their mothers.

And things can only get worse as the stain on the ceiling keeps growing, a red bag keeps reappearing and Yoshimi starts to catch glimpses of another little girl…

Dark Water is another ghost story, directed by Hideo Nakata and based on a novel by Koji Susuki – both of whom were also responsible for Ring. But this film isn’t a patch on Ring.

The location of the ghost’s physical remains are pretty obvious, to say the least and, although it tackles an interesting theme – that of parental responsibility – the story has a less coherent feel than either Ring or the other Asian films I’ve seen this week.

Whereas Ring’s Sadako was indiscriminately vengeful, Dark Water’s ghost appears to be more discriminating in that she has lain silent for two years, yet there is no real sense to Yoshimi being the target of the ghost’s attention – she is effectively being punished for failing to cope with her new single parent status.

Certainly the film has plenty of creepy images, just glanced from the corner of the eye, and some highly effective jumps. Unfortunately, it just doesn’t hang together as well as it could.

House of 1000 Corpses
House of 1000 Corpses has been described as “The Film That Some People Didn’t Want You to See.”

There is a very good reason for not seeing this film. It’s boring. In fact it goes beyond boring into a place that is so mind numbingly dull that watching paint dry is a thrill ride of epic proportions in comparison.

Rob Zombie’s tribute to 70s horror films and roadside attractions has no humour, no suspense and not a single character with which the audience can identify.

What it does have is four unbelievably unlikeable teenagers in a car who, even before the obvious clichés are established, are kidnapped by a bunch of rednecks who, because they’re rednecks, proceed to torture and kill said teenagers.

It also has an unbelievable number of gimmicky negative shots and cuts to a black and white Halloween show, ostensibly being shown at the same time as the kids go missing. It’s a move that screams “look at me, I’m a director” and jerks you right out of the film ensuring that nothing that happens on the screen will scare you, disturb you or keep you awake.