Monday, September 21, 2009

Festival Coverage : 66th VENICE Film Festival (2009)

The 66th annual Venice Film Festival held in Venice, Italy, was opened on September 2, 2009 and culminated on September 12, 2009 .International competition jury was led by Ang Lee and Indian filmmaker Anurag Kashyap .The winners for the 2009 66th Venice Film Festival are:

1.Golden Lion Award:

"Lebanon" by Samuel Maoz

Country :Israel


Synopsis : During the First Lebanon War. A lone tank and a paratroopers platoon are dispatched to search a hostile town - a simple mission that turns into a nightmare. The four members of a tank crew find themselves in a violent situation that they cannot contain. The conflict is seen through the binocular-aided eyes of those inside a tank, with their cramped quarters lending an anxious sense of claustrophobia to their viewpoint.Motivated by fear and the basic instinct of survival, they desperately try not to lose themselves in the chaos of war.


2. Silver Lion Award :

"Zanan Bedoone Mardan"(Women Without Men) by Shirin Neshat


Country :Iran
.
Synopsis : Against the tumultuous backdrop of Iran’s 1953 CIA-backed coup d’état, the destinies of four women converge in a beautiful orchard garden, where they find independence, solace and companionship. Shirin Neshat makes her directorial debut with this incisive reflection on the pivotal moment in history that directly led to the Islamic revolution and the Iran we know today.


3. Special Jury Prize

"Soul Kitchen" by Fatih Akin


Country :Germany

Synopsis : Zinos owns and caters a warehouse restaurant in the Hamburg where the working-class clientele like deep-fried burgers with their beer. Always running behind the eight-ball, Zinos even arrives late for the farewell dinner of his better-off Nadine who's leaving for a job in Shanghai.When Zinos' larcenous younger brother, Illias , is let out of jail on day release, he asks Zinos to give him a fake job so he can get out more often.With a tax inspector and health officer on his back, Nadine nagging himlong-distance to join her, and a real estate shark trying to force him to sell the place , Zinos is in deep trouble .



4. Coppa Volpi for Best Actor

Colin Firth for the film "A Single Man"

Dir: Tom FORD


Country :USA




Synopsis : A Single Man is based on 1964 novel by Christopher Isherwood.Set in Southern California during 1962, it depicts one day in the life of George, a middle-aged gay Englishman
who works as a college professor in Los Angeles and whose lover, Jim, has recently died.










5. Coppa Volpi for Best Actress:

Ksenia Rappoport for the film "La doppia ora" (The Double Hour )

Dir : Giuseppe Capotondi


Country :Italy

Synopsis : Sonia is a Slovenian woman who works as a chambermaid in a Turin hotel. There’s something going on behind her rather wary expression and hesitant manner, but we assume at first that it may just be shyness, and root for her when she meets Guido , an awkward, reticent but romantic former policeman, at a speed-dating session.But about 20
minutes in, the lovebirds find themselves held at gunpoint during a burglary, and shots are fired.
Remaining 75 minutes detail the bumpy road to Sonia's understanding of what really happened, with Capotondi and the screenwriters going through different genres -- horror, mystery, psychodrama -- and their required elements in rapid succession.


6. Osella Award for Best Screenplay

Todd Solondz for the film "Life during Wartime"


Country :USA

Synopsis : the film tells the story of a dysfunctional family, we follow 3 separate stories. The father, who was just released from prison after some paedophilia charges tries to find his son, to make sure he doesn't turn out like him. The son is in college, he has two siblings, a younger brother who is turning 13 and a younger sister who is a karaoke singer. The wife/mother is looking for a new lover in her life and finds this other man . Finally the sister of the mother ,who mixes romance and her work. The problem is that death follows her wherever she goes and it has kind of driven her crazy.

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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Movie of the Month : OFFSIDE (2006)



This Internationally acclaimed award-winning film casually and sometimes caustically uncovers what binds us and blinds us to the differences between our ways of life in the West with modern day Iran. Fascinating funny and tragic it s a gem of comic action that explores the ambiguity between the sexes" - The Hollywood Reporter-




SYNOPSIS:

Several young Iranian women dress as boys and try to get into a World Cup qualifying match between Iran and Bahrain at Tehran’s Azadi Stadium. When they're caught, they're penned in an area where the match remains within earshot, but out of sight.The women soccer enthusiasts cheer for Iran's victory but this does not deter the soldiers from detaining them while they wait for the girls to be transported to the Vice Squad and an uncertain future.

REVIEW:

Iranian cinema is rarely big on plot, preferring to concentrate on character and situation, something it often excels at. Offside is no exception, with the bulk of the film focussed on the argumentative relationship that develops between the girls and the young soldiers guarding them. This is smartly and sometimes delightfully handled, the soldiers' initial position of authority increasingly shaken with the arrival of a fiercely defiant and confrontational girl who challenges her captors on just about every point they make, and another who has cheerfully dressed up in a soldier's uniform and gained entry to the match, but whose over-confidence got her nicked when she sat in the seat reserved for the Chief of Police.

The humour arises largely from the absurdity of the situation the girls find themselves in. When the conversation inevitably moves to the reasons for excluding women from the ground, for example, the soldiers claim that it is because they should not be subjected to the swearing that takes place when men watch the game. In the most bizarrely funny scene, one of the girls is escorted to a male toilet wearing a life-sized poster of a football player's face as a mask in order to disguise her gender, then told to cover her eyes so she will not be corrupted by the graffiti on the toilet walls.

If the film's primary concern is the unequal status of women in their own society, then it is also very much about the unifying nature of the beautiful game. And you really don't have to be a football fan to appreciate this - the sheer passion expressed by both the characters and the film itself for the game is remarkably infectious, leading to a final ten minutes consisting largely of the celebratory joy of victory, and the thrilling sense of community and equality that results. Rarely, if ever, has an Iranian film with serious political concerns ended on a note of such euphoric optimism.

Naturalistically performed and documentary-like in approach, there is a compelling sense that we are watching events very much as they happen, but the narrative is so well structured and individual scenes so effectively executed that you just know this was planned to perfection. It's hard to tell just how much of the dialogue is scripted and how much of it is improvisation, but, in either case, the actors, with their marvelously expressive faces, do a magnificent job making each moment seem utterly real and convincing. Mohammad Kheir-abadi and Shayesteh Irani are notable standouts in a uniformly excellent cast. The structure of the film is also very loose and freeform, as writer/director Jafar Panahi and co-writer Shadmehr Rastin focus for a few brief moments on one or two of the characters, then move smoothly and effortlessly onto others. With this documentary-type approach, we come to feel as if we are witnessing an actual event unfolding in "real time." Very often, it's quite easy for us to forget we're actually watching a movie.



Winner of the Silver Bear Award at Berlin Film Festival "Offside" is obviously a cry for justice, but it is one that is made all the more effective by its refusal to make of its story a heavy-breathing tragedy. Instead, it realizes that nothing breaks down social barriers quite as efficiently as humor and an appeal to the audience's common humanity. And isn't that what true art is supposed to be all about?

Title :Offside

Director :Jafar Panahi

Rated PG for some mature elements

Country:Iran

Language ;Persian

Subtitles; English

DVD features: Interview with Director
photo gallery

Trailer Link: www.metacafe.com/watch/450701/offside_trailer

Torrent File Name;
Offside 2006 LIMITED DVDRip XviD-MESS *** www.NewTorrents.info ***