The AFI DOCS Interview: SAVING BRINTON Filmmakers Tommy Haines, John Richard and Andrew Sherburne

Posted by Larry Gleeson

In his position as small-town Iowa historian and collector, Michael Zahs lucked into the acquisition of one of the rarest collections of turn-of-the-century cinema. Now turning his obsession into purpose, Zahs sets out to restore and exhibit his treasure trove of newsreels, home movies and lost films. He is the subject of SAVING BRINTON, which screens at AFI DOCS on Saturday, June 18, and Sunday, June 19. AFI spoke with the three filmmakers.

AFI: What led you to pursue documentary filmmaking?

TH & AS: We were at Sundance in 2004 watching an amazing wave of new docs — RIDING GIANTS, SUPER SIZE ME, DIG! — and we were stunned by how much documentaries had changed from when we were kids. At that same festival, we talked to [director/writer] Jared Hess after the NAPOLEON DYNAMITE premiere and asked his advice for young filmmakers and he said “do what you know.” Completely inspired by our trip, we returned home to Minnesota, and opened the newspaper to a story about a massive outdoor hockey tournament in Minneapolis. We released our first feature, POND HOCKEY, three years later.

AFI: What inspired you to tell the story of SAVING BRINTON?

TH & AS: The common threads through all of our feature documentaries are notions of community and place and the interplay of tradition and modernity. This story had all of those elements.

TH, JR & AS: On top of all that, we’re film nerds. So here are 130 films, many of them unseen for a century, and we get to be a part of bringing these back into the public consciousness. Of course, we were in from day one.

AFI: How did you find Michael Zahs?

TH & AS: Our last film, GOLD FEVER, was about gold mining in Guatemala, and we were looking for something closer to home. Our eyes lit up when we got a call about a man, in a small town just south of us, who had discovered a basement full of nitrate films from Thomas Edison and Georges Méliès. Our first reaction was the same as most everyone: “In Iowa? Really?” That was the beginning. But in that first visit to Mike’s house, we sensed that the man who had saved these things was the real story — you can see it in the opening scene of the film. I think we left that day and told Mike “you’ll be seeing a lot more of us.”

AFI: What was a particular obstacle you faced while making the film?

TH, JR & AS: From very early on, we knew it would be a challenge to balance five hours of old films, endless stories about the eccentric Frank Brinton and Mike’s remarkable life into a single 90-minute film. All those elements had to be there to create this journey that’s of the past but in the present. We tried a lot of things, but as is often the case, the answer was right there all along: to let Mike’s shows be the glue that held it together. Still, there’s so much rich detail to this story, we had to make a lot of difficult cuts.

AFI: What do you want audiences to walk away with?

TH, JR & AS: We live in a disposable society that clips along at a breakneck pace. Every day there’s a new 140-character missive that consumes our collective consciousness. I think the lesson that Mike embodies is “slow down, look up.” We can all be more thoughtful, connect more deeply, appreciate the place where we live and the history that surrounds us — and, perhaps most of all, find the simple joys in life.

AFI: Why is Washington, DC, a valuable location for your film?

TH, JR & AS: Frank Brinton’s film collection — indeed, his entire life history — was on the verge of going to the dump in 1981. But Mike stepped in and helped ensure its survival and, at the same time, the American Film Institute got wind of these films and brought them back to the Library of Congress for preservation. Those films survive today in the Library of Congress Packard Campus vaults because of that foresight 35 years ago. Without AFI and the Library of Congress, this amazing slice of history would be gone forever.

AFI: Why do documentaries matter today?

AS: Nonfiction film has become increasingly primary as a storytelling medium. Our story is a prime example of one that can’t be fully appreciated in print or radio or still images, it has to be experienced through the multi-sensory vibrancy of moving pictures. Remarkably, Edison and the Lumières realized the power of documentary from day one and this is the same thing that was happening in the 1890s when cinema was born.

 

(Source: blog.afi.com)

 

The AFI DOCS Interview: CHAVELA Director Daresha Kyi

Posted by Larry Gleeson

The dramatic, soulful interpretations of Mexican lesbian singer Chavela Vargas paved the way for women seeking equality in a traditionally male world. A renowned nightclub performer reduced to alcoholic impoverishment, Vargas made a triumphant comeback in her 70s that secured her reputation as an artist of uncompromising passion and independence.

The singer’s life is examined in the film CHAVELA, co-directed by Catherine Grund and Daresha Kyi (AFI Class of 1991). It screens at AFI DOCS on Friday, June 16, and Saturday, June 17. AFI spoke with co-director Kyi about the film.

AFI: What led you to pursue documentary filmmaking?  

DK: I am a natural born storyteller who firmly believes that each story dictates the medium through which it should be told. I studied filmmaking at NYU and Directing at the AFI Conservatory, and have worked on both narrative and documentary films. The last film I had directed was a short narrative over 25 years ago.

CHAVELA began when [co-director Catherine Gund] asked me to join her and a group of friends to brainstorm ideas for her new film project after she wrapped on BORN TO FLY. She provided paper and pens and we all met at a drag-show bar, which ultimately proved too distracting for many ideas to get transmitted. But I did jot down a few thoughts that jumpstarted an ongoing conversation between us, culminating in Cat saying the magic words, “We should make a film together.”

AFI: How did the story evolve from there?

DK: At first I was producing and Cat was directing a film that would have told Chavela’s life through the lens of a contemporary Latina, lesbian singer who had struggled with addiction. However, after shopping the idea around, we realized that people were deeply intrigued by Chavela and were only interested in learning more about her life. So, we dropped the other woman’s storyline completely. When I approached her with the idea of co-directing, Cat didn’t hesitate to say yes.

AFI: What inspired you to tell this story?

DK: I was moved to share Chavela’s story not only by the profound passion and pain in her voice, but by her strength, courage and amazing life journey.  To find a character who goes from sleeping on street corners in an alcoholic stupor to being Pedro Almodóvar’s muse and selling out Carnegie Hall almost sounds too good to be true, but Chavela accomplished that and much more. I was deeply inspired by her ability to stand in her truth as a lesbian in an extremely macho, patriarchal culture.

AFI: What particular obstacle did we face while making the film?

DK: From the very beginning we wanted to find one of Chavela’s former lovers but because she thought it was crude to kiss and tell, it was really difficult to find anyone — other than Frida Kahlo and Ava Gardner, both deceased — that she claimed to have been with. We did get a lead on one woman in Costa Rica, but she was only willing to let us use her voice and didn’t want to be on camera so that was a “no-go.” We’d pretty much given up on the idea of finding anyone until the day we shot what we thought was our last interview. Marcela Rodriguez, a composer and guitar player who had accompanied Chavela for three years, said she’d be in New York if we wanted to interview her. Marcela talked a while about one of Chavela’s lovers and actually mentioned her by name!  Although I’d seen the woman’s name from the very beginning of our research, no one ever mentioned that she had been Chavela’s lover so we hadn’t reached out to her.  

Funny enough, I missed it during the actual interview and it was actually the woman who transcribed our Spanish-language interviews who brought her to our attention when she wrote to ask if we were interviewing Alicia. After that we tracked Alicia down online and filmed with her on December 5, even though we were supposed to have a complete rough cut by mid-December.  Adding her into the film brought an incredible new dimension to the film. Plus, when I walked into her house for the interview Alicia had two albums full of stunningly beautiful photos of her life with Chavela that she allowed us to scan — every single one!  They added so much beauty to the movie.  Some of them are so beautiful we included them in our press kit!

AFI: Why are docs important today?  

DK: Stories have the power to move people in unexpected ways. When viewers identify strongly with the characters portrayed in movies, they can be inspired to take similar actions in their own lives, especially when those characters are real people. They think, “If she can do it, I can too!”

afidocs

(Source: afi.com)

Tickets to AFI DOCS 2017 Now on Sale

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Tickets to AFI DOCS 2017, happening June 14–18, 2017, in Washington, DC, and Silver Spring, MD, are now available to the public. Highlights from this year’s lineup include AN INCONVENIENT SEQUEL: TRUTH TO POWER; CITY OF GHOSTS; THE REAGAN SHOW; WHITNEY. “CAN I BE ME”; to name a few.

Get tickets here

Screen Shot 2017-05-17 at 1.55.47 PM

About AFI DOCS

AFI DOCS is the nation’s documentary film festival known for showcasing the best in documentary filmmaking from the US and around the world.

AFI DOCS is also the only film festival in the United States that offers the unique opportunity to connect film audiences with national opinion leaders, filmmakers and intriguing film subjects. With conversations and experiences you won’t experience at any other film festival, AFI DOCS harnesses the power of this important art form and its potential to inspire change.

Screenings during this annual five-day event take place in landmark venues in Washington, DC and the world-class AFI Silver Theatre, the independent film hub of the metropolitan region.

Throughout the year the AFI DOCS FILM SERIES brings audiences in the nation’s capital the best in nonfiction filmmaking.
AFI DOCS Advisory Board
Ken Burns
Davis Guggenheim
Chris Hegedus
Werner Herzog
Rory Kennedy
Barbara Kopple
Spike Lee
Errol Morris
Stanley Nelson
D A Pennebaker
Agnès Varda
Frederick Wiseman

afi_logo_20110611000547

(Source: afi.com)

AFI Names Honorary Degree Recipients

Posted by Larry Gleeson

The American Film Institute (AFI) announced yesterday it will confer Doctorate of Fine Arts degrees honoris causa upon television icon Carol Burnett, and upon acclaimed filmmakers Marshall Herskovitz (AFI Class of 1975) and Edward Zwick (AFI Class of 1975). All three will be recognized for their contributions to the art of the moving image during the AFI Conservatory’s commencement ceremony on June 5, 2017, at the historic TCL Chinese Theatre.

The date of AFI’s commencement exercises marks the 50th anniversary of the American Film Institute’s formation in 1967. The honorees underscore this historic moment, as 2017 also marks the 50th anniversary of THE CAROL BURNETT SHOW, and Herskovitz and Zwick are both prominent alumni of the AFI Conservatory, embodying AFI’s national mandate “to educate the next generation of storytellers.”

Award-winning actress, comedian, playwright and bestselling author Carol Burnett is widely recognized for her comedic and dramatic roles on TV, film and Broadway — most notably for THE CAROL BURNETT SHOW, which lasted for 11 years across 279 episodes. As a legendary entertainer, Burnett has received six Emmy® Awards, five Golden Globe Awards, the 2016 Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Life Achievement Award and many more prestigious accolades. Her film credits include John Huston’s ANNIE, Peter Bogdanovich’s NOISES OFF, Alan Alda’s THE FOUR SEASONS and Robert Altman’s A WEDDING. Her Broadway credits include “Once Upon a Mattress,” Stephen Sondheim’s “Putting It Together” and more. Burnett has also guest-starred on television series including GLEE, HAWAII 5-0, HOT IN CLEVELAND and LAW AND ORDER: SVU. She will next be seen in the ABC pilot HOUSEHOLD NAME, executive-produced by Amy Poehler.

Marshall Herskovitz is a director, writer and producer who has won numerous awards for his work in television and film, including four Primetime Emmys®. Herskovitz graduated from the AFI Conservatory Class of 1975, where he met his longtime creative partner Edward Zwick, with whom he currently runs The Bedford Falls Company. In the years since, he has produced, directed and written such TV series as MY SO-CALLED LIFE, NASHVILLE, ONCE AND AGAIN and THIRTYSOMETHING. Among the films he has produced are BLOOD DIAMOND, THE LAST SAMURAI, LEGENDS OF THE FALL and TRAFFIC, which earned him a Best Picture Oscar® nomination. He also directed the films JACK THE BEAR and DANGEROUS BEAUTY. He will next reunite with Zwick for the Discovery Channel original series THE SUCK, about the American experience in the Vietnam War. He has been on the AFI Board of Trustees since 2003, and is currently Vice Chair of the Board.

Edward Zwick is a director and producer who, like his creative partner Herskovitz, began his filmmaking career at the AFI Conservatory, Class of 1975. He received a Best Picture Oscar® in 1999 for his work as a producer on SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE, and has directed films including BLOOD DIAMOND, COURAGE UNDER FIRE, DEFIANCE, GLORY, THE LAST SAMURAI, LEGENDS OF THE FALL, LOVE & OTHER DRUGS, PAWN SACRIFICE, THE SIEGE and many more. He has produced TV series including MY SO-CALLED LIFE, NASHVILLE, ONCE AND AGAIN and THIRTYSOMETHING. Most recently, Zwick directed Tom Cruise in JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACK. Throughout his career, Zwick has received three Emmy® Awards and many guild prizes. He has been an AFI Trustee since 2003, and is currently Vice Chair of the Board. He runs with the production banner The Bedford Falls Company with Herskovitz.

Featured photo: Burnett, Herskovitz and Zwick

afi_logo_official

(Source: blog.afi.com)

AFI DOCS: Award-winning documentary NOWHERE TO HIDE has DC debut

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Nowhere to Hide follows male nurse Nori Sharif through five years of dramatic change, providing unique access into one of the world’s most dangerous and inaccessible areas – the “triangle of death” in central Iraq. Initially filming stories of survivors and the hope of a better future as American and Coalition troops retreat from Iraq in 2011, conflicts continue with Iraqi militias, and the population flees accompanied by most of the hospital staff. Nori is one of the few who remain. When ISIS advances on Jalawla in 2014 and takes over the city, he too must flee with his family at a moment’s notice, and turns the camera on himself.

Screen Shot 2017-05-16 at 2.57.46 PM


“Zaradasht Ahmed’s Nowhere to Hide Takes Top Prize at IDFA…
“An insider’s account of the hellish aftermath of the Iraq war charts the path to today’s unsettled world.”



“Compassionate and poetic documentary, told with unflinching honesty.”


Nowhere To Hide should be required viewing for anyone with an opinion about the refugee crisis.”

AFI DOCS PUBLIC SCREENING
Friday, June 16 at 2:00 PM
Landmark E Street Theatre
555 11th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20004

Director / Writer Zaradasht Ahmed
Producer Mette Cheng Munthe-Kaas
Co-Producers Hans Husum, Stina Gardell
Editor Eva Hillström sfk

Theatrical Runtime 86 minutes

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT – ZARADASHT AHMED

“My ambition is to let the audience reflect on the human consequences of a brutal reality where all taboos are violated. With Nowhere to Hide I want to show that we are all part of this reality – war, explosions, victims, terrorism, they affect us globally, and we are all responsible, despite our geographical whereabouts. Meanwhile, I want to show the human resistance that is growing among these survivors; to show the hope of rebuilding after the breakdown of civilization. In the end, as humans, the only thing that can help us survive is to believe that the will to build will always be stronger than the desire to destroy.”

ABOUT THE DIRECTOR – ZARADASHT AHMED

Director and Photographer Zaradasht Ahmed is a Kurdish/Norwegian filmmaker. He was born and raised in Northern Iraq. His latest work “Nowhere to Hide” has won multiple awards including the IDFA Award for Best Feature Documentary and the One World Human Rights Film Festival Award for Best Documentary. Earlier works include the award-winning documentary Road to Diyarbakir, and Fata Morgana. Zaradasht has many years of experience working with documentary filmmaking in the Middle East, North-Africa, and Asia, as well as training local people in documentation.

(Source: Press materials provided by Adam Segal, the 2050Group)

AFI DOCS: Timely Political Thriller ACORN AND THE FIRESTORM

Posted by Larry Gleeson

FROM AWARD-WINNING FILMMAKERS REUBEN ATLAS AND OSCAR NOMINEE / EMMY WINNER SAM POLLARD; A PRESCIENT FORESHADOWING FOR TODAY’S NEWS & POLITICAL CLIMATE

A POLITICAL THRILLER ABOUT ACORN, America’s Most Controversial Grassroots Community Organization; The Salacious Story Involves an Investigation by a Fake Pimp and Prostitute, Voter Fraud, and the Rise of Breitbart.com

This is the story of what happened when a tiny community group focused on empowering marginalized communities grew into one of the most powerful and effective change movements in the nation – and came under attack by conservative amateur investigative journalists…

Screen Shot 2017-05-16 at 8.33.46 AM

 

AFI DOCS PUBLIC SCREENING
Thursday, June 15 at 3:30 PM
Landmark E Street Theatre
555 11th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20004

Runtime: 84 minutes • USA • English

By the people and for the people, community organizing group ACORN became a major player in the 2008 presidential election that resulted in Barack Obama’s victory. Conservatives took issue with the group, firing accusations of voter fraud and government waste at the left-leaning organization.

The burgeoning conservative opposition found unexpected allies in James O’Keefe and Hannah Giles. The pair of amateur journalists posed as a pimp and prostitute to try to expose ACORN via hidden camera. The ensuing political drama spawned the now-omnipresent Breitbart Media, drove an even deeper wedge between Democrats and Republicans, and served as a prescient foreshadowing for much of today’s political climate.This non-polemic political thriller reaches beyond the choir and encapsulates the conflicts and contradictions of our political present.

About Directors Reuben Atlas and Sam Pollard:

Reuben Atlas is an award-winning filmmaker who recently co-directed (with Jerry Rothwell), Sour Grapes for Netflix. He also directed and produced the Independent Lens film, Brothers Hypnotic, which Sam Pollard was the supervising producer on. Sam Pollard produced the Academy Award®-nominated documentary Four Little Girls as well as HBO’s When the Levees Broke, and If God is Willing and Da Creek Don’t Rise, amongst his filmmaking credits as a producer, director, and editor spanning over 40 years of legendary work, and include the seminal, Eyes on the Prize.

(Source: Press materials provided by Adam Segal)

 

 

RUMBLE: THE INDIANS WHO ROCKED THE WORLD TO SCREEN AT AFI DOCS

Posted by Larry Gleeson

AFI DOCS – PUBLIC SCREENING
Friday, June 16 at 6:30 PM
Landmark E Street Cinema

555 11th St NW, Washington, DC 20004

Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 4.11.54 PM

WASHINGTON, DC  – This summer, Kino Lorber will release in U.S. and Canadian movie theaters the award-winning Rezolution Pictures’ music documentary RUMBLE: THE INDIANS WHO ROCKED THE WORLD, a powerful movie about the role of Native Americans in contemporary music, featuring some of the greatest music stars of our time. Ahead of the theatrical release, the documentary will have its DC premiere at AFI DOCS on Friday, June 16 at 6:30 PM at Landmark’s E Street Cinema.

As described by Justin Lowe of the Hollywood Reporter, it’s a film “Brimming with revealing first-person interviews, tantalizing audio clips and dynamic concert footage, Rumble evinces the enviable potential to appeal to a broad range of audiences in a variety of formats.”

The film had its world premiere at the 2017 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the festival’s World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Masterful Storytelling.

Following its world premiere, RUMBLE received the Best Music Documentary Film Award at the Boulder International Film Festival and will play at several key film festivals nationwide.

A New York theatrical premiere is set for July 26, 2017, at New York’s Film Forum – before a national expansion during the summer, including a full awards-qualifying release at Landmark’s NUART Theatre in Los Angeles starting August 25, 2017. DC region theatrical release info TBA.

Written and directed by Catherine Bainbridge (Reel Injun), written and co-directed by Alfonso Maiorana, and Executive Produced by Stevie Salas and Tim Johnson, RUMBLE exposes a critical missing chapter of Rock history, revealing how Indigenous musicians helped shape the soundtracks of many generations.

The film stars Link Wray, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Robbie Robertson, Jesse Ed Davis, Jimi Hendrix, Randy Castillo, Taboo, Martin Scorsese, Quincy Jones, Steven Tyler, Steven Van Zandt, Iggy Pop, Tony Bennett, George Clinton, Slash, Taylor Hawkins, Robert Trujillo, and many more.

The deal for RUMBLE was negotiated between Kino Lorber CEO Richard Lorber and Diana Holtzberg, President of East Village Entertainment.

“Catherine Bainbridge & Alfonso Maiorana’s RUMBLE brings back the contributions of Native Americans and indigenous musicians to their rightful place in music history. The film is also a thrilling and beautifully constructed documentary, so it’s bound to appeal to audiences of all ages and backgrounds, nationwide.” – Richard Lorber, CEO Kino Lorber

“This whole film happened because I was playing sold out arenas and stadiums with Rod Stewart and while on the road across America I started to wonder why there were no other Native Americans in the biz. Then I discovered there were indeed others who, for reasons unknown to me, people didn’t know about.” – Stevie Salas, Executive Producer

Written and directed by Catherine Bainbridge (Reel Injun) and written and co-directed by Alfonso Maiorana

Produced by Catherine Bainbridge, Christina Fon, Linda Ludwick and Lisa M. Roth

Executive Producers: Stevie Salas and Tim Johnson

Executive Producers for Rezolution Pictures: Catherine Bainbridge, Christina Fon, Linda Ludwick, Jan Rofekamp and Ernest Webb

Canada • 2017 • 103 Minutes

ABOUT KINO LORBER:

With a library of 1,600 titles, Kino Lorber Inc. has been a leader in independent art house distribution for over 30 years, releasing over 25 films per year theatrically under its Kino Lorber, Kino Classics, and Alive Mind Cinema banners, with six Academy Award nominated films in the last eight years, including this year’s nominated documentary FIRE AT SEA, directed by Gianfranco Rosi.

In addition, the company brings over 250 titles each year to the home entertainment market through physical and digital media releases under its five house brands. It also now distributes a growing number of third party labels in all ancillary media and is a direct digital distributor to all major digital platforms including iTunes, Netflix, HULU, Filmstruck, Tribeca Shortlist, Amazon, Vimeo, VHX, Fandor, Mubi and Others.

Next from Kino Lorber are the theatrical releases of Vanessa Gould’s OBIT., opening April 26 at Film Forum and Lincoln Plaza Cinema, and Bruno Dumont slapstick comedy SLACK BAY, starring Juliette Binoche and set for an April 21 New York release at Quad Cinema and the Film Society of Lincoln Center.

About Rezolution Pictures

Rezolution Pictures is an award-winning film, television and interactive media production company, founded by Catherine Bainbridge and Ernest Webb, which plays a vital role in bringing cultural diversity to the North American broadcasting landscape. Since 2001 it has built itself a reputation for creating acclaimed series and one-of-a-kind productions, working with many of Canada’s best new and established talents to create unique comedy, dramatic, and non-fiction films, as well as video game programming, through its sister company Minority Media. The company produced the multiple-Gemini and Peabody Award-winning film, Reel Injun, as well as several award-winning documentaries and television series including the CSA-nominated Mohawk Girls, the Rockie-Award winning The Oka Legacy, Smoke Traders, Club Native, and Down The Mighty River.

Late-night talk show favorite Jimmy Kimmel will return to host the Oscars

Posted by Larry Gleeson

For a second consecutive year, late-night talk show favorite Jimmy Kimmel will return to host the Oscars® telecast and Michael De Luca and Jennifer Todd will produce, Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs announced today. The 90th Academy Awards® will air live on the ABC Television Network and broadcast outlets worldwide on Oscar® Sunday, March 4, 2018.

“Jimmy, Mike and Jennifer are truly an Oscar Dream Team,” said Boone Isaacs. “Mike and Jennifer produced a beautiful show that was visually stunning. And Jimmy proved, from his opening monologue all the way through a finale we could never have imagined, that he is one our finest hosts in Oscar history.”

“Hosting the Oscars was a highlight of my career and I am grateful to Cheryl, Dawn and the Academy for asking me to return to work with two of my favorite people, Mike De Luca and Jennifer Todd,” said Kimmel. “If you think we screwed up the ending this year, wait until you see what we have planned for the 90th anniversary show!”

“It’s not often you get two chances to have a once-in-a-lifetime experience and even more rare to be handed the keys to a party 90 years in the making,” said De Luca and Todd. “We always thought the idea that anything can happen on the Oscars was a cliché until we lived it.”

“Our Oscars team this year delivered a show that hit every high note,” said Academy CEO Dawn Hudson. “Jimmy brought back the essence and light touch of the greatest hosts of Oscars’ past. Mike and Jennifer’s love of movies is infectious and touched every aspect of the show. This is the perfect team to lead us into the ninth decade.”

“After just one year, we can’t imagine anyone else hosting The Oscars. Jimmy’s skillful command of the stage is invaluable on a night when anything can happen – and does,” said Channing Dungey, President, ABC Entertainment. “With Mike and Jennifer at the helm, we’re ready for another unforgettable show that will dazzle, delight and, most importantly, honor 90 years of Hollywood’s most prestigious award.”

Kimmel serves as host and executive producer of the Emmy®-winning “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” ABC’s late-night talk show. Now in its 15th season, “JKL” has earned six Emmy nominations in the Outstanding Variety Series Talk category, the Writing for a Variety Series category, and the Variety, Music or Comedy Series category.

De Luca earned Best Picture Oscar nominations for producing “Captai” Phillips,” “Moneyball” and “The Social Network.” He is credited on more than 60 films, including the “Fifty Shades of Grey” trilogy, “Blow,” “Magnolia,” “American History X” and “Boogie Nights.” He is a former president of production at Columbia Pictures, DreamWorks and New Line Cinema.

Todd is currently president of Pearl Street Films, the production company founded by Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, where she produced “Live by Night” and executive produced last year’s “Jason Bourne.” Her other credits include such films as “Alice through the Looking Glass,” “Celeste and Jesse Forever,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Across the Universe,” “Prime,” “Memento,” “Boiler Room” and the “Austin Powers” films. Todd earned an Emmy nomination for her work on the HBO television movie “If These Walls Could Talk 2.”

The 90th Oscars will be held on Sunday, March 4, 2018, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

Screen Shot 2017-05-16 at 11.33.47 AM

(Source: oscars.org)

SAVING BRINTON TO HAVE WORLD PREMIERE AT AFI DOCS

Posted by Larry Gleeson

A JOURNEY TO DISCOVER AMERICA’S CINEMATIC TREASURES – THE FIRST SHOWREELS THAT INTRODUCED SMALL TOWN AMERICA TO THE MOVIES

SAVING BRINTON TO HAVE WORLD PREMIERE AT AFI DOCS IN WASHINGTON, DC & SILVER SPRING, MD JUNE 17-18

saving_brinton_still_1_mike_outside

In a farmhouse basement on the Iowa countryside, eccentric collector Mike Zahs makes a remarkable discovery: the showreels of the man who brought the moving picture to America’s Heartland. Among the treasures: rare footage of President Teddy Roosevelt, the first moving images from Burma, a lost relic from magical effects godfather Georges Méliés. These are the films that introduced movies to the world. And they didn’t end up in Iowa by accident.

Amid the old nitrate reels are the artifacts of William Franklin Brinton. From thousands of trinkets, handwritten journals, receipts, posters and catalogs emerges the story of an inventive farmboy who became America’s greatest barnstorming movieman.

As Mike uncovers this hidden legacy, he begins a journey restore the Brinton name and return the films to big screen glory in the same small-town movie theater where Frank first turned on a projector over a century ago.

By uniting community through a pride in their living history Mike embodies a welcome antidote to the breakneck pace of our disposable society. “Saving Brinton” is a portrait of this unlikely Midwestern folk hero, at once a meditation on living simply and a celebration of dreaming big.

Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 2.27.38 PM

Public Screenings at AFI Docs

Saturday, June 17 at 4:15 PM
AFI Silver Theatre – Theater 2
8633 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, MD 20910
In-person: Directors Tommy Haines, John Richard and Andrew Sherburne and film subject Mike Zahs

Sunday, June 18 at 4:15 PM
Landmark E Street Theatre – Theater 7
555 11th Street NW, Washington, DC 20004
In-person: Directors Tommy Haines, John Richard and Andrew Sherburne and film subject Mike Zahs

 

 

(Source: Press release provided by Adam Segal, the 2050 Group)

 

Building a Dream with Charles Guggenheim

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Charles Guggenheim (1924-2002) was a master of the documentary form. Celebrated for such notable films as Robert Kennedy Remembered and Nine from Little Rock, the scope of his prolific career stands as a testament to his deep interest in committing the American experience to film.

Starting in 1962, Guggenheim focused his attention on the American landscape, producing several documentaries that demonstrated the deftness of his touch and the inherent humanity in his work.

In these productions – Monument to the Dream (1967), A Place to Be (1979) and America by Design (1987) – Guggenheim documents more than just architectural significance. Instead, he deliberately turns the attention to the workers, separating man from monolith and weaving surprisingly intimate narratives throughout each film.

Originally from Cincinnati, Guggenheim relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, where he founded Guggenheim Productions on the eve of his thirtieth birthday. It was there that he received an important early commission from the National Park Service to document the construction of the Gateway Arch at the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial site.

The resulting film, Monument to the Dream, would be nominated for an Academy Award.

During production, Guggenheim made an editorial decision to parallel the drama of the construction process with the westward expansion of the pioneers. Construction of the 630-foot-tall steel-clad structure spanned more than two and a half years (1963-1965), and Guggenheim’s cameras followed the raw steel from its Pennsylvania origins where it was shaped on the factory floor to its journey by rail “moving westward at a pace the pioneers could not imagine, but on a path they had carved themselves.”

The iconic design by architect Eero Saarinen was a marvel of modern engineering, but for Guggenheim, it was the ironmen and welders who made this story an extension of an earlier American saga: “…men who were closer kin to the trappers and pioneers than they knew – they, too, were a mixed and scattered breed – men given to roaming and reshaping the face of the land.

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 11.08.51 PM
Eero Saarinen sketch of Jefferson National Expansion Memorial site

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 10.55.33 PM

This approach to humanizing larger-than-life subjects would serve Guggenheim throughout his career. And while he would soon move his production offices to Washington, D.C., his early experiences in St. Louis would continue to impact his future work.

More than a decade after Monument to the Dream, Guggenheim was commissioned to make A Place to Be, a film documenting the design and construction of the National Gallery of Art’s East Building. In transcripts of interviews conducted with architect I.M. Pei, Guggenheim compared the challenges of this narrative to his experience with Monument: “Our struggle is going to be to try to find some kind of concept in this picture. We’re more inclined to feel that maybe it’s based on our experience in St. Louis – where we had something very dramatic.”

 

Using footage he shot over six years for A Place to Be, Guggenheim crafted a short film called National Gallery Builds, to be shown at the opening of the East Building. Workers are once again the central concern in National Gallery Builds; the majority of the film features shots of quarrymen, cabinetmakers and concrete pourers, along with montages of their faces and hands “working in tonnages, crafting in inches.” Footage of Pei and artists Henry Moore and Alexander Calder, who were commissioned to create artworks for the building, appear alongside the workers, but their contributions to the project are not elevated above them. The clink of a stone carver’s chisel etching the name of the building aptly echoes over the final credits.

Watch a video of the building process here.

In the 1980s, Guggenheim Productions was awarded an unprecedented grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to produce America by Design, a five-part educational series that aired on PBS. This series, hosted and written by architectural historian Spiro Kostof, was approached as an opportunity to engage Americans to think proactively about their relationship to the built environment by explaining its evolution in a socio-historical context.

Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 12.12.31 AM

Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 12.13.09 AM
PBS announcement card for America by Design, front and back.

 

 

 

Each episode featured a different aspect of our landscape: “The House,” “The Workplace,” “The Street,” “Public Places and Public Monuments” and “The Shape of the Land.” Civic responsibility is evident in the concluding on-camera narration script for “The Street,” which reads:

“We’re the ones who fill buildings and roads with life and so give value to these abstractions of architects and engineers. In the ways we use what is built and designed, in the demands we make and the changes we bring about, we’re all designers of America. On all of us falls the blame for what is ugly in our surroundings, what is inhumane and derelict. To us all belongs the credit for the beauty we fashion and the love, the excitement, the grace we put inside.”

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 11.16.05 PM
Contact sheet of America by Design production photographs with selected images circled

The script of “Public Places and Public Monuments” called Guggenheim back to St. Louis again. This time, two decades after Monument to the Dream, the Gateway Arch was used as an example of how times had changed to the extent that drew into question whether such a memorial would still be constructed.

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 11.15.38 PM
America by Design: “Public Places and Public Monuments” script page annotated by Charles Guggenheim

But the Arch was built and now stands as an indelible part of the American story. Monument to the Dream made it possible for every American to share in the love, excitement and grace of its construction. The film was recently digitally restored and continues to be screened daily at the Gateway Arch.

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 11.15.16 PM

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 11.10.42 PM

The Margaret Herrick Library’s Special Collections is proud to house the Charles Guggenheim papers, currently being processed under the auspices of a two-year grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission. This manuscript collection documents works for film, television and other media that were directed and produced by Guggenheim Productions between 1954 and 2003. The files encompass more than 400 linear feet and consist largely of scripts, research materials, production materials and correspondence.

Screen Shot 2017-05-14 at 9.43.08 PM
Charles Guggenheim

In 2004, the Academy Film Archive acquired the vast majority of Guggenheim’s collection, including prints of most of his films, as well as original negatives, outtakes and production materials. Read “The Charles Guggenheim and Robert F. Kennedy Story” to learn more about the Charles Guggenheim papers.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ preservation efforts are made possible in part by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.

(Source: oscars.org)