Gary Dretzka
Leonard Klady
David Poland
Ray Pride

 








Mario de la Vega
Robbing Peter
by Leonard Klady

Mario de la Vega has one of those smiles that draws people in like a magnet. He also has the sort of name that carries with it the suggestion of old world charm and demands a resonant Banderas accent.

Instead one of his producers is berating him for using the long signature and he simply shrugs and says off hand that it just means "of the." Though he sports a three day stubble, Vega looks and sounds like just another American kid. Though born in Mexico, he grew up in the States and attended business school at the University of Colorado.


Yasuaki Nakajima
After the Apocalypse

by Leonard Klady

It took Yasuaki Nakajima almost five years to complete his debut feature After the Apocalypse but even a brief encounter with the Japanese-born, Manhattan-based filmmaker suggests resolve more than obsession in his working methods. He said notions of survival and communication (the apocalypse has rendered the last people on Earth mute) formed the basis of the film but adds the fact that there's a limited number of things one can say about the end of the world.


The Hunting of A President
by Gary Dretzka

The Hunting of the President can stand alone both as a cautionary political thriller and as an indictment of the media pawns who allowed themselves to be played like a fiddle, first by a handful of anti-Clinton good ol’ boys with too much time on their hands and, then, by a cabal of rich and powerful right-wing thugs. The President, of course, didn’t do himself any favors by succumbing to his basest instincts with a chubby intern in the anteroom of the Oval Office, or, for that, matter lying about it to his wife and constituency.


Michael Mann's L.A.: Realizing Collateral
by Andrea Gronvall

"I'll be watching you." The speaker was Tom Cruise.

And so began IFP/Los Angeles Film Festival first weekend kick-off tribute: a thoughtfully constructed, artfully paced and well produced evening boasting one of the biggest marquee names on the planet, honoring the vision of one of America's top directors of crime thrillers, and saluting the city that is the mecca of movie-making. "Michael Mann's L.A.: Realizing Collateral" cut right to the chase.


Tarnation
by David Poland

I will tell you this… it is a true-life fairy tale. There is a beautiful princess trapped in the castle tower of her fate. There is the child who is being raised by kind, but non-royal parents, barely aware of the existence of his fairy tale mother. And there is the handsome prince who wants to make it all right… though in this story, the prince has to save himself first, evolving from another one of the story’s “characters”, and may or may not be able to live up to our fairy tale expectations… or his own.


Up for Grabs
by Leonard Klady

"I'm a lifelong baseball fan and the day after it happened I saw this article in the paper with the headline: Fan Loses Fortune at Bottom of Pile," recalls Wranovics. "I thought this would make an interest movie."

The wrinkle in this yarn was that he had never made a film. He'd never evened picked up a movie camera though he'd taken one film history course as an elective when he attended Stanford University. But earlier that year he'd been a victim of the dot.com bust and when he considered a new career decided he'd like to write and direct movies.


 

 

 

 





 



 


Features: Yasuaki Nakajima, Tarnation, Collateral, Up for Grabs, The Hunting of A President
Preview: The Clearing
Trailers: Maria Full of Grace, Before Sunset, The Hunting of a President, Men Without Jobs
Review: Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, Garden State, The Hunting of A President

JU-ON: THE GRUDGE (Dark Wave) - While Asian cinema has a long and distinguished tradition of horror movies - particularly "ghost" stories - the latest series that's include The Ring, Phone and The Grudge have a special edge that's proving highly influential. They are stylish contemporary tales of paranoia that have reinvented genre convention to reflect modern anxiety. In The Grudge, it centers on the malevolent spirits that inhabit a house where a brutal murder occurred and are unrelenting in seeking out vengeance on anyone that crosses the threshold. Chill out. (9:45 p.m. Laemmle Sunset 5)

MARIA FULL OF GRACE (Special Screenings) - The Audience Award winner at Sundance 2004 is hardly what one would call a warm bath. The saga of a young Colombian woman forced by circumstance to run drugs to the United States is a gritty, cautionary tale leavened by extraordinary attention to detail and character. Writer-director Joshua Marston displays considerable skill in maintaining nail-biting tension and humanizing the nightmare environment. (7:15 p.m. Laemmle Sunset 5)

THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR (Special Screenings) - Far more than a time capsule from the Blaxploitation era, the film touched a sensitive nerve when it was briefly released in the mid-1970s. It both embraced and took a critical eye at the often mindless, macho fare directed at African Americans audiences in its tale of a token CIA employee frustrated by the system and ready to subvert it by force. Sam Greenlee adapted his novel and Ivan Dixon directed. (7:30 p.m. DGA 1)

UNKNOWN SOLDIER (Narrative Competition) - The quietly powerful debut feature by Ferenc Toth centers on a Harlem teenager left homeless after his father's fatal heart attack. Adrift and not particularly self-motivated Ellison nonetheless has good basic survival instincts. While the social commentary is there, Unknown Soldier has a moody, poetic quality that's unforced and a haunting central performance by newcomer Carl Louis. (7:15 p.m. Pasadena Playhouse 7)

A TASTE OF MURDER (International Showcase) - While the films of Paris-based Raul Ruiz tend to have a rag-tag quality, they are never dull or lacking in invention. His latest is set among the coffee house intelligentsia in 1958. And amid the existential trappings a modern day Jack the Ripper is dispatching comely young blondes and looking for someone in the Gauloise crowd to immortalize his exploits. The collision course of these two worlds is chilling and darkly comic.

Yesterday's Tip Sheet

Two Brothers' Guy Pearce Finds His Rhythm And Learns To Love Hollywood

Imelda Stamps Her Foot And Says A Film Has Taken Away The Dignity Of The Charged-With-Stealing-Billions-But Not-Convicted Marcos Reign

"When the Berlin wall fell, the perpetual right in America, which always needs an enemy, didn't have an enemy any more, so I had to serve as the next best thing,"
The Reactions Of A Documented President

Imelda Sues: She Doesn't Look Like A Good Person In The Documentary

The Last of the First: Much like "Buena Vista Social Club" and "Standing in the Shadows of Motown," "The Last of the First" shines a spotlight on musicians' musicians who have been forgotten or overlooked.

``I think Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 911 will bury us. But... I think his film will take in enough at the box office that it probably might even help us some too.''
The Hunting Of A President Premieres To The Home Crowd

Imelda & She

Next Year, Straight Outta Compton?
LAFF Announces "Straight Out Of Cannes" Section, Featuring Sundance Premieres Mean Creek, Tarnation And Others

LA Film Fest Co-Chair Honors To Halle & Samu L.

 


 

 

 



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