RAMI MALEK TO RECEIVE OUTSTANDING PERFORMER AWARD AT SANTA INTERNATIONAL BARBARA FILM FESTIVAL

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Critically-acclaimed actor Rami Malek will receive the Outstanding Performer of the Year Award for his Academy Award nominated work in FOX’s 2018 release, BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY. Malek will be honored at the Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, CA, tonight, Friday, February 1st.

11162014-Roger-Durling_t479“Rami Malek’s portrayal as Freddie Mercury is humble and full of humanity. No one could of expressed the joy Freddie felt when performing nor the complex reality he lived offstage better than Rami.” says Roger Durling, Executive Director, Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

Malek’s on-screen performances have continued to receive praise including his small screen starring role in USA Network’s psychological drama MR. ROBOT, for which he received an Emmy for “Lead Actor in a Drama Series” and Critics Choice Award, as well as nominations for Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild, People’s Choice, and Television Critics Association Awards. Most recently he can be seen starring in the Queen biopic BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY in which he portrays the iconic Queen front-man Freddie Mercury. For This role, Malek has already received a Golden Globe for “Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama” as well as nominations for his performance for Critic’s Choice, Screen Actors Guild, and the Academy Awards. Malek’s previous credits include PAPILLON opposite Charlie Hunnam, BUSTER’S MAL HEART, THE MASTER opposite Philip Seymour Hoffman, HBO’s miniseries THE PACIFIC, LARRY CROWNE, TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN, NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM 1 & 2, and SHORT TERM 12 with Brie Larson.

The Outstanding Performers of the Year Award recognizes select individuals who have distinguished themselves with exceptional performances in film this past year. Past recipients of the award include Margot Robbie and Allison Janney, Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, Brie Larson and Saoirse Ronan, Steve Carell, Cate Blanchett, Jennifer Lawrence, Viola Davis, James Franco, Colin Firth, Penelope Cruz, Angelina Jolie, Helen Mirren, Heath Ledger, Kate Winslet and Charlize Theron.

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(Source: sbiff.org)

2019 SBIFF Panelists Announced!

Posted by Larry Gleeson

These are some of the hottest tickets in town this weekend in Santa Barbara. Even with the announcement being made this morning finalizing the panelists, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival Writer’s Panel has already been declared SOLD OUT!

Producers Panel

Bill Gerber (A STAR IS BORN)
Raymond Mansfield (BLACKKKLANSMAN)
Nate Moore (BLACK PANTHER)
Ceci Dempsey (THE FAVOURITE)
Jim Burke (GREEN BOOK)
Nicole Grindle (INCREDIBLES 2)
Jonathan King (ROMA)
Kevin Messick (VICE)
Moderated by Glenn Whipp

Saturday, February 2 @ 10:00am
Lobero Theatre presented by Toyota Mirai

Writers Panel

Will Fetters (A STAR IS BORN)
Kevin Willmott (BLACKKKLANSMAN)
Paul Schrader (FIRST REFORMED)
Brian Currie (GREEN BOOK)
Barry Jenkins (IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK)
Tony McNamara (THE FAVOURITE)
Lauren Greenfield (GENERATION WEALTH)
Moderated by Anne Thompson

Saturday, February 2 @ 1:00pm – SOLD OUT
Lobero Theatre presented by Toyota Mirai

Women’s Panel

Nina Hartstone (Sound Editing) – BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
Hannah Beachler (production design) – BLACK PANTHER
Louise Bagnall (writer/director) – LATE AFTERNOON
Lynette Howell (producer) – A STAR IS BORN
Rayka Zehtabchi (director) – PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE
Betsy West (director) – RBG
Ai-Ling Lee (Sound Editor) – FIRST MAN
Domee Shi (director) – BAO
Marina de Tavira (actress) – ROMA
Moderated by Madelyn Hammond

Sunday, February 3 @ 11:00am
Lobero Theatre presented by Toyota Mirai

Click Here For Tickets

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Advocate

Posted by Larry Gleeson

In the blistering new documentary premiering at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival, Advocate, Israeli attorney, Lea Tsemel defends Palestinians: from feminists to fundamentalists, from nonviolent demonstrators to armed militants. Politically and socially engaged filmmakers Rachel Lea Jones and Philippe Bellaïche assemble a comprehensive look into Tsemel’s life work beginning with Tsemel as a firebrand law student who, after the 1967 war, fearlessly distributes flyers on campus warning her fellow Israelis to end the occupation or risk a vicious cycle of violence. In Advocate, Tsemel speaks truth to power before the term became popular and for all intents and purposes will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. She’s spent a lifetime going against the grain of Israeli society, and is as much a product of it as she is an exception to it.

Utilizing archival footage, newsreels, still photographs and primary interviews panning twenty-five years, Jones and Bellaïche bring us into the present as they follows Tsemel’s caseload in real time, including the high-profile trial of a 13-year-old boy — her youngest client to date — while also revisiting her landmark cases and reflecting on the political significance of her work and the personal price one pays for taking on the role of “devil’s advocate.” One thing is still eminently clear – interrogators still infuriate her, prosecutors still madden her, judges still frustrate her, verdicts still disappoint her — and clients still break her heart.

Directing duo Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche have assumed the privileged position of a fly on the wall of Tsemel’s practice, where a year of documenting is like gathering a lifetime of evidence as the two push to bring to light and preserve a mush-needed model of advocacy that balances justice and the system responsible for its administration. This evidentiary mission is a powerful testament to not only the wrongs of occupation but also to the faults of those who try to resist it, the failings of those who try to defend them, and the fundamental flaws of a legal system that purports to serve justice but in fact serves the powers that be.

As a Jewish-Israeli lawyer who has represented political prisoners for five decades, Tsemel, in her tireless quest for justice, pushes the praxis of a human rights defender to its limits. As far as most Israelis are concerned, she defends the indefensible. As far as Palestinians are concerned, she’s more than an attorney, she’s an ally. to put it another way, she’s the little boy calling the Emperor naked, i.e. naming the system’s most fundamental fault – the occupier is judging the occupied – while at the same time she’s the boy with his finger in the dam, doing her utmost to uphold the rule-of-law before the flood of injustice drowns us all. Her rebellious spirit and radical zeal prompted one military court judge to say: “If Lea Tsemel didn’t exist, we’d have to invent her.”

Advocate is an extraordinary film, highly engaging and deeply moving. With a fast runtime of 110 minutes it is highly recommended and required viewing for any cinephile engaged in social justice.