Ebertfest 2016 — Highlights

Ebertfest 2016 — Highlights

Posted on April 18, 2016 at 7:12 am

Copyright Nell Minow 2016
Copyright Nell Minow 2016
Well, really, the entire Ebertfest film festival is a highlight. It truly is unlike any other film festival because it creates such a sense of community, in part because people come back year after year and in part because there is one film at a time, in one venue, so there is a sense of shared experience that deepens over time. We laugh together, we cry together, we gasp together, we feel our spirits expand together.

Roger Ebert memorably said that movies are “an empathy machine.” Like all great art, they give us a chance to see through someone else’s eyes — the eyes of the characters, the eyes of the filmmakers — and thus expand our understanding and compassion. This year, there was a panel on creating empathy onscreen. And, following the Brian Wilson film “Love and Mercy,” there was a discussion of challenging the stigma of mental illness with the goals of acceptance, inclusion, and respect. There was a timely (unfortunately, always timely) discussion of the challenge of racial diversity in Hollywood.

It was followed by a panel on gender diversity in Hollywood. I was delighted to be included.

Unquestionably, one of the greatest films of all time is “The Third Man,” from director Carol Reed and screenwriter Graham Greene, starring Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, Alida Valli, Trevor Howard, and the post-WWII ruined city of Vienna.

We saw the gorgeously restored print, and it was followed by a discussion with Angela Allen, who was a “continuity girl” at age 19 when it was filmed and later worked on movies like “The African Queen” and “Jesus Christ Superstar.” She mesmerized us with inside stories.

I had the honor of conducting a Q&A, along with Shawn Edwards and Gil Robertson, with writer/director Kasi Lemmons about her brilliant first film, Eve’s Bayou. She told us about why it was important to her to restore a key character in her director’s cut.

Every year, Ebertfest has a silent film with live musical accompaniment. This year, we had the strange, wild French film, “L’Inhumaine,” with the Alloy Orchestra, and, for the first time a second silent film, the “race” (made by, with, and for African-Americans) movie “Body and Soul,” starring Paul Robeson in his movie debut, playing twin brothers, one kind, one evil. The Chicago Modern Orchestra Project provided an original soundtrack.

Other films included Paul Cox’s “Force of Destiny,” inspired by his own experience as the recipient of a liver transplant, and two stirring documentaries, “Radical Grace,” the story of nuns working for social justice, and the world premiere of Disturbing the Peace, about a group of Israelis and Palestinians working together in the spirit of Ghandi, Martin Luther King, and Nelson Mandela, to bring peace to the region. The film got a standing ovation and the filmmakers received the festival’s first Humanitarian Award. Actress Nancy Allen spoke about “Blow-Out,” and directors Guillermo del Toro (“Crimson Peak), Paul Weitz (“Grandma”), and Mark Polish (“Northfork”) presented their films and did Q&A sessions to discuss them.

Thanks to Chaz Ebert, Nate Kohn, Casey Ludwig, John Hecker, and everyone at Ebertfest. See you next year!

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Festivals Film History For Your Netflix Queue
First Look at Emma Stone and Steve Carell in “Battle of the Sexes”

First Look at Emma Stone and Steve Carell in “Battle of the Sexes”

Posted on April 17, 2016 at 3:15 pm

In the fall of 1973, there was no biggest story in sports than the challenge from former tennis champ Bobby Riggs to women players. He claimed that at age 55, decades after he retired in 1951, he could still beat the best female players in the world. He had already beat Margaret Court when Billie Jean King accepted his challenge. Their game was watched by 90 million people, and it was known as “The Battle of the Sexes.” A movie based on that game, starring Emma Stone and Steve Carell, is now filming, directed by “Little Miss Sunshine’s” Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris. Carell and Stone played father and daughter in “Crazy Stupid Love.”

Here are Riggs and King at the press conference announcing the match, and Stone and Carell performing in that scene in the film.

Copyright 2016 Fox Searchlight
Copyright 2016 Fox Searchlight
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In Production
Jane Eyre: a New Audiobook Narrated by Thandie Newton

Jane Eyre: a New Audiobook Narrated by Thandie Newton

Posted on April 17, 2016 at 8:00 am

Copyright Audible 2016
Copyright Audible 2016
To celebrate the week of Charlotte Bronte’s 200th birthday, Audible Studios is releasing a new audiobook version of Jane Eyre. It is beautifully performed by Thandie Newton, who brings just the right intimate quality to Bronte’s classic story of the brave, independent, and honest young governess, which had an innovative examination of the lead character’s emotional and moral life that was enormously influential.

The story has been filmed many times. My favorite stars Joan Fontaine and Orson Welles.

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Books

The Jungle Book: Original Versions

Posted on April 16, 2016 at 3:35 pm

This week’s splendid new “Jungle Book” from Disney may inspire families to check out the books that inspired it by Rudyard Kipling. Children may prefer his “Just-So” stories and “Rikki-tikki-tavi,” about a curious mongoose who saves the day.

Families may also want to watch the original live action version of the story, starring Sabu.

Or Disney’s 1994 live action version, starring Jason Scott Lee and “Games of Thrones” star Lena Headey.

And of course there is the classic Disney animated version, the last film personally supervised by Walt Disney himself, with some of the all-time best Sherman Brothers songs. Like the new film directed by Jon Favreau, this version has outstanding voice talent, including Sebastian Cabot (Bagheera the panther), George Sanders (Shere Kahn the tiger), and Sterling Holloway (also the voice of Winnie the Pooh) as Kaa the snake.

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