Category Archives: #SBIFF

Santa Barbara Closing Night Film

Posted by Larry Gleeson

This year’s Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s Closing Night Film will highlight a diverse and impressive line-up of documentary shorts – each making their World Premiere at the Arlington Theatre on Saturday, February 10th at 8:00pm. The lineup features local Santa Barbara filmmakers: Chris Price and Casey McGarry’s CASCARÓN, Ryan Slattery’s CROSSING THE CHANNEL, Hallie Brown’s OUT OF THE ASHES, Justin Gunn’s A SOLSTICE IN SANTA BARBARA, John Klein’s SOUL OF THE CITY, and Danielle Cohen’s THE TIPPING POINT.

The selection of films represents the beauty, warmth and vitality that are quintessential Santa Barbara. The films cover a wide range of local events, people, and places, including Fiesta, the Summer Solstice Parade, the East Beach Grill, and Cold Springs Tavern, as well as local activism to combat climate change and an extraordinary swimmer who crosses the Santa Barbara Channel.

Everyone is encouraged everyone to attend this very special evening to gather together and celebrate local filmmakers and the wonderful community of Santa Barbara.

Special thanks to Closing Night Film sponsor Winchester Mystery House for supporting this evening for the 2nd year in a row.

(Source: sbiff.org)

Margot Robbie and Allison Janney Receive Santa Barbara Outstanding Performers of the Year

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Last night at the historic Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, Calif. Alison Janney and Margot Robbie electrified the audience at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s (SBIFF) Outstanding Performers of the Year Tribute. Both Janney and Robbie are nominated for Oscars for their work in the film, I, Tonya. Janney is up for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, while Robbie is up for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role. The evening was sponsored by Belevedere Vodka and was moderated by The Hollywood Reporter Award Columnist, Scott Feinberg.

SBIFF Executive Director, Roger Durling, made introductory remarks thanking the SBIFF Board, Board President Lynda Weinman, and the 700 volunteers who make the festival possible each year. And without further adieu, Mr. Durling turned the evening over to Feinberg, his tenth consecutive year participating in the festival.

Feinberg Allison Robbie-1

Feinberg in his trademark, affable form introduced each actress’s work with a montage of images set to music. A warm Santa Barbara welcome was given and the evening’s main event transpired.

Interestingly, Janney’s father managed an ice rink in Ohio, providing Janney untethered access to skating time. While admitting she was proficient in both ballet and modern dance, Janney jabbed she could not complete the triple axle jump that Robbie did in the film. Janney attended Kenyon College where she was bitten by the acting bug. Fortuitously, she met Joanne Woodward and shared an interesting interaction she had with Paul Newman regarding her experience driving a Volkswagon Scirocco.

Meanwhile, Robbie was on the Gold Coast of Australia working as a “sandwich artist” at a local Subway shop while holding a position at a retail surf shop. A call from a talent agent led to her auditioning for a recurring role in “Neighbors,” a popular daytime television series in her hometown of Melbourne.

From these somewhat humble and inauspicious beginnings, two wildly different and highly successful careers were launched. Janney went on to win six Emmy’s and recently won a Golden Globe for her role as LaVona Golden, Tonya Harding’s mother, in I, Tonya. Robbie, on the hand, left Melbourne to seek fame and fortune in Hollywood. After her initial audition for “Charlie’s Angels Reboot,” fizzled, Robbie scored a coveted spot on the critically-acclaimed though short-lived “Pan-Am,” television series.

As fate would have it, Robbie managed to parlay her early experiences into a reel that first caught the eye of Wolf of Wall Street Casting Director, Ellen Lewis, and then the eye of Director Martin Scorsese for the role of the sexiest blonde on the planet. Robbie got the role. She proceeded to have a similar “hottest blonde” cameo appearance in Adam McKay’s The Big Short. Not wanting to be typecast, Robbie and a few friends started a production company, LuckyChap Entertainment from which I, Tonya is released.

Dreams really do come true.

Outstanding Group-1.jpg
The 2018 Santa Barbara International Film Festival Outstanding Performers of the Year, Allison Janney and Margot Robbie with award presenter and I, Tanya Director, Craig Gillespie .(Pictured from right to left; Margot Robbie, Craig Gillespie and Allison Janney. Photo credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

 

 

2018 SBIFF Outstanding Performers Award Tonight at the Arlington

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Critics’ Choice Award winners Allison Janney and Margot Robbie will be honored with the 2018 Outstanding Performers of the Year Award, presented by Belvedere® Vodka, for their remarkable performances in I, Tonya. Both actresses have also received nominations at the BAFTAs and SAG Awards for their respective roles, and Allison Janney was awarded with the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress. The tribute, which will take place at Santa Barbara’s historic Arlington Theatre, tonight, Thursday, Feb. 8, 2018, will be moderated by Scott Feinberg, Awards Columnist for The Hollywood Reporter.

“Allison and Margot bring biting humor and an emotional resonance to their real-life characters in I, Tonya,” stated SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling. “We are proud to celebrate them and their incredible contributions to cinema.”

Janney and Robbie will join a recognized group of previous Outstanding Performer Award recipients, including Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, Brie Larson and Saoirse Ronan, Steve Carell, Cate Blanchett, Jennifer Lawrence, Viola Davis, Colin Firth, Penelope Cruz, Angelina Jolie, Helen Mirren, Heath Ledger, Kate Winslet, and Charlize Theron.

Screen Shot 2018-01-29 at 9.00.52 PM

SBIFF American Riviera Awarded to Sam Rockwell

Posted by Larry Gleeson

 

It was a nice evening on the red carpet last night at the 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival presented by UGG. Actors and filmmakers walked the carpet before SBIFF honored Sam Rockwell with its 2018 American Riviera Award. The Riviera Award is presented to recognize actors who have made a significant contribution to American Cinema. Rockwell was fêted with a Tribute celebrating his remarkable performance in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.

While Rockwell is known for creating memorable and iconic character actors, his craft is evolving evidenced by the complexity of his recent work as Officer Dixon in Martin McDonagh’s Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. For his role, Rockwell has garnered a Golden Globe, a SAG Award and is a leading contender for this year’s Oscar from the Academy of Motion Pictures and Arts in the Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role category.

Sam and Krista-1
Left, actor Sam Rockwell, ad libs a response to Krista Smith, right, Vanity Fair’s West Coast Editor, question for at the 2018 Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s American Riviera Award at the historic Arlington in Santa Barbara, Calif., presented by UGG. (Photo Credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

For the first time ever at SBIFF Vanity Fair West Coast Editor, Krista Smith, moderated. Smith was introduced by SBIFF Board President Lynda Weinman and Smith wasted little time getting to the goods opening her SBIFF moderating debut with a montage of Rockwell’s work set to a rock-n-roll classic tune from Queen, “Don’t Stop Me Now.” We were having a good time as Smith playfully led Rockwell down memory lane to his first acting experiences at the age of ten with his actress mother and up to his present roles. To his credit Mr. Rockwell has been in over 60 films to date and shows little sign of slowing down. Rockwell friend, and fellow actor, Clark Gregg, presented the 2018 SBIFF American Riviera Award.

Sam_Award-1
Vanity Fair West Coast Editor, Krista Smith, left, the 2018 Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s American Riviera Award recipient, Sam Rockwell, center, and actor Clark Gregg, right, on stage at the historic Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, Calif., February 7th, 2018. (Photo credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

 

Santa Barbara Film Festival has all 5 Oscar-nominated Directors at once

Posted by Larry Gleeson

The 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF) packed the house and stacked the deck last night at the historic Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, Calif. with all five 2018 Best Director Oscar nominees in what might have been the only time all five have gathered in the same place at the same time.

SBIFF 2018 Outstanding Directors
All five 2018 Oscar nominated directors were honored, February 6th, 2018, during the 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s Outstanding Director Tribute, at the historic Arlington Thetare. The evening was moderated by The Hollywood Reporter’s Scott Feinberg. Pictured from left to right; Jordan Peele (GET OUT!), Greta Gerwig (LADYBIRD), Paul Thomas Anderson (PHANTOM THREAD), Christopher Nolan (DUNKIRK), and Guillermo del Toro (THE SHAPE OF WATER). (Photo credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

Christopher Nolan, Greta Gerwig, Guillermo del Toro, Jordan Peele, and Paul Thomas Anderson all received the 2018 Outstanding Directors of the Year Award sponsored by The Hollywood Reporter for their films Dunkirk, Lady Bird, The Shape of Water, Get Out, and Phantom Thread, respectively. Gerwig is only the fifth woman to be nominated for a Best Director Oscar since the Oscar’s inception in1929.

The Hollywood Reporter’s Award Columnist Scott Feinberg moderated the evening. Feinberg introduced each director with a film clip from his/her nominated work. Each director shared his/her motivation in making their films then took turns praising one another’s work. The evening never got old and the audience never tired. In closing, SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling, shared his personal connection with each director’s film, the specialness of the evening and his overwhelming feelings of gratitude.

 

Free Documentary Filmmaking Seminar at SBIFF

Posted by Larry Gleeson

The 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s (SBIFF) Documentary Filmmaking Educational Seminar, moderated by SBIFF Program Director Michael Albright, took place this morning in the Santa Ynez Valley Lounge at the Lobero Theatre courtyard. The Educational Seminars are open to the public and highlight key topics that are featured in the SBIFF sidebars and diverse film sections. The Santa Ynez Lounge is an intimate venue allowing for insightful conversations with filmmakers who are screening their films at the festival.

After a brief introduction Albright opened the conversation with a quote from Scottish filmmaker John Grierson, often considered the father of British documentary film, “Documentary film is the creative treatment of actuality.” One simple quote opened the gates for a stream of detailed information on how each panelist made their respective film, what they focused on any obstacles they faced that turned out to make their films better.

The panel included directors from BEARTREK (Chris Morgan ), GET THE WEED (Denny Brechner ), THE ISLAND (Adam Weingrod ), MODIFIED (Aube Giroux), SOUFRA (Thomas Morgan), WE ARE GALAPAGOS (Kum-Kum Bhavnani). Each director spoke at length about their work including how long it took to make the film, who was in the film and why an audience would want to watch the film. Two films were ten years in length from start to finish BEARTREK and MODIFEID, while GET THE WEED. a mockumentary came to fruition in a mere two weeks.

*Featured photo from left to right, Producer, Alfonso Guerrero (GET THE WEED),  Director, Denny Brechner (GET THE WEED),  Director Thomas Morgan (SOUFRA), Director Kum-Kum Bhavnani (WE ARE GALAPAGOS), Director Aube Giroux, (MODIFIED),  Director Chris Morgan (BEARTREK), Director Adam Weingrod (THE ISLAND) and Moderator Michael Albright. (Photo credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

 

 

 

Outstanding Directors Award Tonight in Santa Barbara

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Christopher Nolan, Greta Gerwig, Guillermo del Toro, Jordan Peele, and Paul Thomas Anderson will receive the 2018 Outstanding Directors of the Year Award sponsored by The Hollywood Reporter. The Oscar® nominated directors will be celebrated individually for their films Dunkirk, Lady Bird, The Shape of Water, Get Out, and Phantom Thread respectively. The individual honors will be followed by a joint conversation between the directors on their craft and the landscape of modern day filmmaking. The ceremony will take place tonight, Tuesday, February 6th, 8PM at the historic Arlington Theatre, and will be moderated by Scott Feinberg, Awards Columnist for The Hollywood Reporter.

“These directors have pushed the boundaries in their storytelling and created films that showcase the art of filmmaking at its best,” stated SBIFF Executive Director Roger Durling. “We look forward to honoring them for creating extraordinary cinematic works that redefine what cinema can and should be.”

Last year’s recipients included Ava DuVernay (13th) Barry Jenkins (Moonlight), Damien Chazelle (La La Land), Denis Villeneuve (Arrival), and Kenneth Lonergan (Manchester by the Sea).

Screen Shot 2018-01-29 at 9.00.52 PM

Saoirse Ronan Honored at Santa Barbara

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Three-time Oscar nominee Saoirse (“Ser-Scha”) Ronan received the prestigious Santa Barbara Award at the 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF) tonight at the historic Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, California.

Arlington-1

The Santa Barbara Award, presented by UGG®, went to Ronan for her critically acclaimed and Oscar-nominated (Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role) portrayal of leading character, Lady Bird McPherson, in Greta Gerwig’s Lady Bird, an A24 release.

screen-shot-2017-09-05-at-7-57-03-am
Actress Saoirse Ronan, above, portrays leading character, Lady Bird McPherson, in Greta Gerwig’s critically-acclaimed, Lady Bird, an A24 release.

 

The Santa Barbara award is given to a person in the entertainment industry who has made a great contribution to film. Ronan began acting at the age of six and landed her first Oscar nomination, Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role, in the Joe Wright (Darkest Hour) film, Atonement (2007), at the age of thirteen.

Ronan is no stranger to Santa Barbara having garnered the Outstanding Performer Award In 2016 for her role as Eilis in John Crowley’s Brooklyn (2015). A role she also received an Oscar nomination, Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role. Moreover, in 2010 she received a Virtuoso Award for her role as Susie Salmon in the Peter Jackson-directed film, The Lovely Bones (2009).

Anne Thompson, IndieWire Editor-At-Large, moderated the evening’s tribute.

Screen Shot 2018-02-04 at 5.05.51 PM

*Featured photo of Saoirse Ronan, left, and SBIFF Executive Roger Durling. (Photo credit: Larry Gleeson/HollywoodGlee)

 

Virtuosos shake, rattle and roll in Santa Barbara

Posted by Larry Gleeson

 

Last night the 33rd annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBIFF) hosted its biggest Virtuosos Awards presented by UGG® in recent memory at the historic Arlington Theatre in Santa Barbara, Calif. The Virtuosos Awards is an honor created to recognize a select group of talent who have distinguished themselves through breakthrough performances in film. This year’s honorees were Daniel Kaluuya (Get Out), Hong Chau (Downsizing), John Boyega (Detroit), Kumail Nanjiani (The Big Sick), Mary J. Blige (Mudbound), and Timothée Chalamet (Call Me by Your Name).

 

 

 

Excitement was abuzz outside the Arlington with the arrivals of this year’s talent. But it Dania Ramirez, lead actress in Jay Silverman’s Off The Menu, who was the doll of the red carpet with Hong Chau, being the evening’s debutante – and that’s not taking anything away from Mary J. Blige, Daniel Kaluuya, Timothy Chalamette, John Boyega, Kumail Nanjiani and wife, Emily Gordon or the evening’s presenter, Christopher Lloyd.

 

Inside Dave Karger led a panel discussion and one on one Q&A with the honorees. Blige, who made Oscars history by becoming the first person ever to be nominated for an acting performance and an original song in a single year, shared with the audience what went through her mind the morning of the announcement. “I didn’t even watch. I tried to sleep completely through the whole thing and my channel wasn’t on any of the channels that were announcing anything,” she said. “Things like this just don’t happen. I was so grateful. The grace of God is just everything because this is all the grace of God. I can’t even give it to anyone else.”

Boyega explained the unique casting process the actors went through for “Detroit” as they didn’t know who they would play until after being cast. “When they gave us the description for the audition, they told us to read a particular scene and it was from “In the Heat of the Night.” I was confused for a second, but it was about tone, it was about the message. And after the audition and getting the part, then I found out who I was playing”

Chalamet, one of the youngest actors to be nominated for an Academy Award, talked about striving to be authentic in acting. “’Call Me by Your Name’ is based on a book and there were already a lot of fans of that book, so the idea of acting in it was just to be as faithful to the adaptation as possible,” he said. “As an actor it becomes your chief responsibility staying as faithful to that and just being true.”

Chau shared with the crowd her experience of reading the script for “Downsizing” for the first time and her strong desire to be selected for the role. “I was blown away because it was such a creative story that had so much going on,” she said. “I was ready to cage fight somebody for this role.”

Kaluuya touched on overcoming the challenge which was Jordan Peele’s want to cast an American actor for his thriller “Get Out” which focused on racism. “He had reservations because, for him, it felt like an African-American story,” said Kaluuya. “But then I opened up to him about my experience as a black man. I just talked to him about my experiences and my life. I get it, I understand it. That’s my life.”

Nanjiani, who wrote the screenplay for “The Big Sick” with wife Emily Gordon, hilariously expressed how strongly they felt about the project. “Emily and I just really wanted to tell this story. I was like, “I want to see this movie and no one else can make this movie.” You know you when you get old ketchup and you have to slam the back of it and then the congealed piece comes out? And then the rest of it can come out? To me, this story was the congealed piece. If I don’t get this out, nothing else will come out.”

Screen Shot 2018-01-29 at 9.00.52 PM

 

Variety Artisan Awards at SBIFF

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Screen Shot 2018-02-04 at 5.05.51 PM

The 33rd Santa Barbara International Film Festival is excited to announce the recipients of the fourth annual Variety Artisans Awards, which celebrates those essential to the filmmaking process and who have exhibited the most exciting and innovative work of the year in their respective fields. The Tribute evening will take place on Monday, February 5th, at the Lobero Theatre and will be moderated by Variety’s Sr. VP Awards Editor, Tim Gray.

The Variety Artisans Award will be presented to the following 2017 Oscar nominees:

Paul D. Austerberry for Production Design in Fox Searchlight’s “The Shape of Water” directed by Guillermo del Toro. This marks Paul’s first Academy Award nomination. Paul won the Critics Choice Award and received a BAFTA nomination for his work on the film.

Mark Bridges for Costume Design in Focus Features’ “Phantom Thread”, written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. Mark previously won an Academy Award for “The Artist”, and has been nominated three times. He has received the Critics Choice Award and has been nominated for a BAFTA for his work on “Phantom Thread”.

Alexandre Desplat for Original Score for the Fox Searchlight film “The Shape of Water,” directed by Guillermo del Toro. Desplat previously won the Academy Award for “The Grand Budapest Hotel”, and throughout his career has received a total of nine nominations. His work on “The Shape of Water” has already been recognized with wins at both the Critics Choice & Golden Globe Awards and a nomination for the upcoming BAFTA ceremony.

Rachel Morrison for Cinematography in the Netflix film “Mudbound,” directed by Dee Rees. Morrison’s nod marks the first time a female has been nominated for Best Cinematography at the Academy Awards. She won the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Cinematography and earned nominations from the Critics’ Choice Awards and American Society of Cinematographers for her work on the film.

John Nelson for Visual Effects in the Alcon Entertainment and Warner Brothers’ film “Blade Runner 2049,” directed by Denis Villeneuve. This is John’s fourth Academy Award nomination, having won for “Gladiator”.

Tatiana S. Riegel for Editing the NEON/30WEST film “I, Tonya,” directed by Craig Gillespie. This is Tatiana’s first Academy Award nomination. Her previous credits include “The Way Way Back”, “Lars and the Real Girl”, and “The Finest Hours”.

Julian Slater, for Sound Mixing in the TriStar Pictures film “Baby Driver”, written and directed by Edgar Wright. He is a first time Oscar nominee, receiving nominations in both sound categories. The sound mixing nomination is shared with Mary H. Ellis and Tim Cavagin. He has also received a BAFTA nomination for his work on the film.

Arjen Tuiten for Makeup and Hairstyling in the Lionsgate film “Wonder” directed by Stephen Chbosky. This marks Tuiten’s first Academy Award nomination. He has also received a BAFTA nomination for his work on the film. His previous credits include “Maleficent”, “Unbroken”, and “Pan’s Labyrinth”.

Matthew Wood for Sound Editing in the Disney/Lucasfilm production “Star Wars: The Last Jedi,” directed by Rian Johnson. This is Matthew’s fourth Academy Award Nomination. His previous credits include “Star Wars: The Force Awakens”, “Wall-E”, and “There Will Be Blood”.

Screen Shot 2018-01-29 at 9.00.52 PM