STF Winter Season Line-Up Announced


image STF’s Winter Season features sneak previews of new films such as SNOWBLIND and THE ART OF THE STEAL combined with classic revivals such as the RUNNING FENCE (1978) and DAVID HOLZMAN’S DIARY (1967). The revelations begin with two pre-season screenings of films honored on “the shortlist”, WHICH WAY HOME about child migrants traveling through Mexico on freight trains (on Jan 5); and VALENTINO: THE LAST EMPEROR, chronicling the end of an era in fashion (on Jan 11). As always at STF, the directors will be in attendance for a Q&A and the conversation continues afterward at a nearby bar.

The official 10-week Winter Season begins on Jan 12 with the Opening Night presentation of SNOWBLIND, directed by Vikram Jayanti, following its audience-pleasing premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. Jayanti has a long and diverse documentary career with credits as co-producer of WHEN WE WERE KINGS and director of JAMES ELLROY’S FEAST OF DEATH and GAME OVER: KASPAROV AND THE MACHINE. In this new work, he follows Rachel Scdoris, a 23-year-old adventurer who competes in the grueling Iditarod dogsled race despite her handicap of being legally blind. Jayanti, who normally divides his time between London and Los Angeles, will join us to recount the incredible stories behind the making of this film.

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Paying tribute to Allan King with A MARRIED COUPLE


image When Allan King died at the age of 79 last May, I was struck by how difficult it was to find opportunities to screen his films. MoMA curator Laurence Kardish gave him an excellent retrospective in 2007, but other opportunities are hard to come by – at least in the United States. (In Canada, King’s native country, he has a more prominent reputation). After his death, I was contacted by the Canadian filmmaker Astra Taylor (EXAMINED LIFE) who graciously offered to help coordinate a King tribute for Stranger Than Fiction. We chose his breakthrough title A MARRIED COUPLE (1969) that looks at the lives of a middle class pair trying to muddle through the social upheavals of their times. The film is a significant precursor to other documentary observations of domestic life such as AN AMERICAN FAMILY; SECOND TIME AROUND and so much of reality television.

For the post-screening discussion, Taylor was joined by film critic Dennis Lim who contributes to the New York Times and edits the indispensable on-line magazine Moving Image Source. In his remarks, Lim placed A MARRIED COUPLE in the context of John Cassavetes’ FACES which came out the year before. As for the ever vexing documentary question of whether the camera causes subjects to “perform,” Lim felt it was irrelevant since people are always performing whether its for a camera or each other.

Prior to the screening, I was concerned whether such an old film could attract an audience in the midst of holiday party season. Those fears were allayed by an enthusiastic crowd that filled nearly all of the seats in the IFC Center’s Theater 2. Audience members included Nancy Gerstman (Zeitgeist Films), David Sampliner (director of DIRTY WORK), and Michel Negroponte (whose latest film I’M DANGEROUS WITH LOVE will screen at STF on Dec 15).

STF’s house photographer Joshua Weinstein (director of FLYING ON ONE ENGINE) pronounced A MARRIED COUPLE “one of the best films screened this year.”

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BIG RIVER MAN swims through STF


image Molly Lynch, the co-director and editor of BIG RIVER MAN, made an impromptu trip from her home in Berkeley, California last Wednesday to fill in at the STF Q&A for her collaborator John Maringouin, who had been called away for a film shoot with Mick Jagger (that old excuse). To say that BIG RIVER MAN impressed the STF crowd would be an understatement. The audience included filmmakers such as Jasmine Dellal (WHEN THE ROAD BENDS: TALES OF A GYPSY CARAVAN) and Laurie Gwen Shapiro (KEEP THE RIVER ON YOUR RIGHT), who lingered to discuss the film. Eventually the faithful moved to STF’s usual bar 99 Below where the night’s drink special was $5 caipirinhas in honor of the film’s Brazilian locale. The bar’s television screens played Werner Herzog’s thematically appropriate epic FITZCARRALDO late into the night.

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STF Fall Season closing night goes head-to-head with Obama


image The STF Fall Season came to a close with a sneak preview of the profound film about American veterans of the Iraq war HOW TO FOLD A FLAG. The filmmakers Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein, who showed their previous film THE PRISONER OR: HOW I PLANNED TO KILL TONY BLAIR at STF in 2007, were joined for the Q&A by Jon Powers, one of the soldiers featured in FLAG, who ran for Congress in upstate New York last year. Today, Powers works for the Truman Project, a policy center on national security in Washington, DC. He noted the symbolism of the night’s STF show taking place at the same time President Obama was declaring his intention to send 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan. Powers said he hoped the film would make audiences better understand the consequences of what soldiers endure.

The audience was populated with many STF alumni including Margaret Brown (ORDER OF MYTHS), David Schisgall (VERY YOUNG GIRLS), Nina Davenport (OPERATION FILMMAKER), Lucia Small (THE AXE IN THE ATTIC), Andrew Rossi (A TABLE IN HEAVEN), Hamid Rahmanian and Melissa Hibbard (filmmakers behind THE GLASS HOUSE) as well as Oscar nominee Carl Deal (TROUBLE THE WATER), who all had high praise for Tucker and Epperlein in discussions after the film.

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Stuntwomen at STF


image Director Amanda Micheli gave STF goers a special treat during the Q&A on Tuesday by phoning up the stunt woman-turned actress Zoe Bell. In Micheli’s film DOUBLE DARE, she follows the New Zealand native Bell in her early days as the stunt double for Lucy Lawless in XENA, then transitioning to a career in Hollywood under the mentorship of Jeannie Epper (best known for her stunts in WONDER WOMAN). Micheli reached Bell on the west coast and put her on speaker phone to participate in the Q&A. Recently, Bell has been transitioning to more acting roles, appearing in Quentin Tarantino’s GRINDHOUSE, Drew Barrymore’s WHIP IT!, and a new film with Wesley Snipes that just finished production. As part of this new phase of her career, Bell has been put in the unexpected position of having to use a stunt double, as she explained, to satisfy the “insurance” concerns of producers.

(Photos courtesy of Joshua Z Weinstein )

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