Ebertfest: Roger Ebert's Film Festival | |
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A view of the Virginia Theatre's marquee in 2014 for Roger Ebert's Film Festival | |
Status | Active |
Genre | Film festival |
Frequency | Annually |
Location(s) | Champaign, Illinois |
Country | United States |
Years active | 1999–present |
Founder | Roger Ebert |
Previous event | 20th Annual Ebertfest April 18–22, 2018 |
Next event | 21st Annual Ebertfest April 10–13, 2019 |
Capacity | 1,463 (Virginia Theatre) |
People | Roger Ebert Chaz Ebert |
Website | ebertfest |
Roger Ebert's Film Festival, originally known as Roger Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival but commonly referred to as simply Ebertfest, is an annual film festival held every April in Champaign, Illinois, United States, organized by the College of Media [1] at the University of Illinois. Roger Ebert, the TV and Chicago Sun-Times film critic, was a native of the adjoining town of Urbana, Illinois and is an alumnus of the University. [2] Founded in 1999, [2] this event is the only long-running film festival created by a critic. [3] Despite Ebert’s death in 2013, [2] the festival continues to operate based on Ebert’s notes [4] and vision for the kinds of films he championed. [5]
A film festival is an organized, extended presentation of films in one or more cinemas or screening venues, usually in a single city or region. Increasingly, film festivals show some films outdoors. Films may be of recent date and, depending upon the festival's focus, can include international and domestic releases. Some festivals focus on a specific film-maker or genre or subject matter. A number of film festivals specialise in short films of a defined maximum length. Film festivals are typically annual events. Some film historians, including Jerry Beck, do not consider film festivals official releases of film.
Champaign is a city in Champaign County, Illinois, United States. The city is 135 miles (217 km) south of Chicago, 124 miles (200 km) west of Indianapolis, Indiana, and 178 mi (286 km) northeast of St. Louis, Missouri. The United States Census Bureau estimates the city was home to 87,432 people as of July 1, 2017. Champaign is the tenth-most populous city in Illinois, and the state's fourth-most populous city outside the Chicago metropolitan area. It is included in the Champaign–Urbana metropolitan area.
Illinois is a state in the Midwestern region of the United States. It has the 5th largest Gross Domestic Product by state, is the 6th-most populous U.S. state and 25th-largest state in terms of land area. Illinois is often noted as a microcosm of the entire United States. With Chicago in the northeast, small industrial cities and great agricultural productivity in northern and central Illinois, and natural resources such as coal, timber, and petroleum in the south, Illinois has a diverse economic base, and is a major transportation hub. Chicagoland, Chicago's metropolitan area, contains over 65% of the state's population. The Port of Chicago connects the state to other global ports around the world from the Great Lakes, via the Saint Lawrence Seaway, to the Atlantic Ocean; as well as the Great Lakes to the Mississippi River, via the Illinois Waterway on the Illinois River. The Mississippi River, the Ohio River, and the Wabash River form parts of the boundaries of Illinois. For decades, Chicago's O'Hare International Airport has been ranked as one of the world's busiest airports. Illinois has long had a reputation as a bellwether both in social and cultural terms and, through the 1980s, in politics.
The festival is a direct descendant [6] of a program put on at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1997 called Cyberfest which used the supposed birthday of HAL (the computer in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey ) to highlight the University's involvement in the history of computers and computing. [7] The film was to be shown as part of Cyberfest, Roger Ebert had agreed to host and actor Gary Lockwood was a special guest. [8]
HAL 9000 is a fictional character and the main antagonist in Arthur C. Clarke's Space Odyssey series. First appearing in the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, HAL is a sentient computer that controls the systems of the Discovery One spacecraft and interacts with the ship's astronaut crew. Part of HAL's hardware is shown towards the end of the film, but he is mostly depicted as a camera lens containing a red or yellow dot, instances of which are located throughout the ship. HAL 9000 is voiced by Douglas Rain in the two feature film adaptations of the Space Odyssey series. HAL speaks in a soft, calm voice and a conversational manner, in contrast to the crewmen, David Bowman and Frank Poole.
2001: A Space Odyssey is a 1968 epic science fiction film produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. The screenplay was written by Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke, and was inspired by Clarke's short story "The Sentinel". A novel also called 2001: A Space Odyssey, written concurrently with the screenplay, was published soon after the film was released. The film, which follows a voyage to Jupiter with the sentient computer HAL after the discovery of a mysterious black monolith affecting human evolution, deals with themes of existentialism, human evolution, technology, artificial intelligence, and the possibility of extraterrestrial life. The film is noted for its scientifically accurate depiction of spaceflight, pioneering special effects, and ambiguous imagery. Sound and dialogue are used sparingly and often in place of traditional cinematic and narrative techniques. The soundtrack incorporates a number of pieces of classical music, among them Also sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss, The Blue Danube by Johann Strauss II, and works by Aram Khachaturian and György Ligeti.
Gary Lockwood is an American actor.
It was suggested that the film should ideally be shown as it was originally, in 70 mm format. The original plan[ citation needed ] was to have the screening at the University's performing arts center but time constraints vs. the need to install projection equipment and elaborate six channel sound made this impossible. Someone suggested looking at the Virginia Theatre, as 70 mm films had been shown there in the past. At this point the theatre was in the hands of a local live theatre group and had not run films since sold by a theatre chain. All concerned were pleasantly surprised to learn the chain had left behind not only what is reputed to be the finest 35/70 mm projector made but also the screen and speakers. The rest of the equipment was brought in for the special showing which went perfectly.
Since its inception in 1999, [2] Ebertfest has been held at the Virginia Theatre, an old-time movie palace in Champaign built in 1921 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [9] The theatre is now owned by the Champaign Park District. Ebert spoke of having attended films at the Virginia while growing up in Champaign-Urbana [10] and attending the University. It was Ebert's intention that all festival attendees see all of the films in a single theatre in order to create a sense of community among film lovers. [11]
The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the United States federal government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation for their historical significance. A property listed in the National Register, or located within a National Register Historic District, may qualify for tax incentives derived from the total value of expenses incurred preserving the property.
The Champaign Park District is the municipality association responsible for the parks in the city of Champaign, Illinois. There are just over 650 acres (2 km²) of parkland within the city limits. As of the fiscal year 2011-2012, the park district had an operating budget of almost $11.5 million. Furthermore, the park district employees about 65 full-time staff and over 400 part-time and seasonal workers.
In 2014, a bronze statue of Roger Ebert was unveiled outside of the Virginia Theatre as tribute to both Ebert and Ebertfest. [12]
Through donations, [13] the Virginia has been able to fully equip its projection and sound system with a second projector, the latest in digital sound equipment and top quality lenses. [14] The theatre's screen is 56 feet wide by 23 feet high, with a viewable image of up to 50 feet wide x 21½ feet high. The main speakers sit directly behind the screen during film presentations and are augmented by 36 surround sound speakers. [15]
Instrumental in these upgrades has been notable Chicago-based projection expert James Bond who doubles as one of the projectionists during the festival. [16]
Since 2013, the Virginia Theatre has a seating capacity of 1,463. [17] The theatre was closed from 2012 until April 2013 for renovations that included replacing all of the seats. Capacity dropped from about 1,550 [18] to 1,463 but the new seats are more comfortable and the theatre offers wheelchair and companion access. [19]
In April 2007 it was announced that beginning in 2008 with the tenth festival "Overlooked" would be dropped from the name and subsequent events would simply be known as "Roger Ebert's Film Festival." [20] This did not necessarily indicate any change in the philosophy or theme [21] but simply eliminated the need to explain when current or even unreleased films were included which had sometimes been the case. They had sometimes been jokingly referred to as "pre-overlooked." [22]
Unlike typical film festivals, Ebertfest does not accept submissions. [23] Roger Ebert selected films for the festival which in his opinion are excellent, but have been overlooked by the public or by film distribution companies. All films were selected from those that Ebert saw in the course of his normal reviewing work. [24] After Ebert's death, all films are selected by the Festival Committee. [23]
The original purpose of the Overlooked Film Festival, as reflected in the name, was to showcase films that had not been given enough attention by the public, film critics, or even distributors. [25] Ebert had cheerfully admitted that he could bend the definition of "overlooked" to accommodate any film that he would like to include, [26] since entire genres and formats can be overlooked as well as individual films. [27] The selection philosophy is expected to continue, but with the name change there will no longer be a need to come up with a pretext for including any film.
In most years the festival has opened with a film in the 70 mm format. [28] The films may be major releases, like 2001: A Space Odyssey or Patton , or less well-known, like 2005's showing of the French film Playtime. [29] These films were all chosen primarily due to their use of the 70 mm process, which Ebert felt was overlooked. [27]
Each year a silent film is shown with live orchestral accompaniment. The films selected are generally well-known (for example, Nosferatu ), [29] but Ebert felt that silent films in general are overlooked by the majority of moviegoers. [25] The festival also strives to include a musical film for the same reason. [28] Performers providing live accompaniment have included the Champaign-Urbana Symphony Orchestra and the Alloy Orchestra.
Twelve to fourteen films are presented at each festival, opening with a single film on a Wednesday night and concluding with a single movie the following Sunday. On each day during the interim three or four films are presented.
For the first eight festivals, before each screening Roger Ebert would make a few introductory remarks. After the film was shown he would have a discussion on stage with the filmmakers or others connected with the film, [30] sometimes hosting a brief panel discussion.
After Ebert lost his speaking voice due to cancer, starting with the ninth festival in 2007, his wife Chaz assumed many of the hosting duties. [31] Post-show panels are led by his "Far-Flung Correspondents" or other respected film professionals, such as film historian David Bordwell and film critic Christy Lemire. [32]
On April 4, 2013, Ebert died after a long battle with cancer. [33] Despite his death, the film festival went along as scheduled, simultaneously acting as a tribute to Ebert's legacy. [34] At the opening of the 15th annual Ebertfest, it was announced by Ebert's wife, Chaz, that his alma mater, the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, will be establishing a new Film Studies program within the College of Media in honor of his legacy. The program will be funded in part by a $1 million grant from Ebert and his wife to the University. The non-degree program will be both a collection of film-related seminars and classes as well as a platform for Ebertfest to continue. [35]
Since its inception, many film directors, actors, producers, cinematographers and other crew members, as well as studio executives have been invited to participate in Ebertfest. Examples include Werner Herzog, [18] Spike Lee, [36] and Tilda Swinton. [37]
For the tenth Ebertfest in 2010, many of the international invited guests were unable to attend due to the volcanic eruptions in Iceland that disrupted air travel in Europe. [38]
As a non-competitive film festival, [39] [11] Ebertfest does not have jury or audience awards. But beginning with the sixth festival in 2004, all invited guests have been given an award originally referred to by Ebert as the Order of the Silver Thumb, [18] but subsequently known as the Golden Thumb Award. [40] The Golden Thumb trophy is a casting of Roger Ebert's thumb in the up position, made by the R.S. Owens & Company, which is the same business that makes the Oscar statuette. [38]
The first Roger Ebert Humanitarian Award was presented in 2016 to co-directors Andrew Young and Stephen Apkon for their documentary film Disturbing the Peace. [41] The film focuses on the work of Combatants for Peace, a group of former Israeli soldiers and Palestinian fighters who put down their weapons and began working together for peace in the region.
In 2017, the second Ebert Humanitarian Award was presented to Norman Lear for "a lifetime of empathy". [42] Lear was the first person to receive the award, because the 2016 award was given to the film Disturbing the Peace. Lear was a special guest at the 2017 festival, to screen the documentary about his life.
Co-sponsored by the University of Illinois College of Media, every Ebertfest since its inception has included panel discussions with invited festival guests and scholars from academia, covering a variety of film-related topics. [43] These discussions are free and open to the public, and are held in the mornings during the festival. From 1999–2016, the panels were held on the University of Illinois campus. Beginning in 2017, the panel discussions are held in a hotel close to the Virginia Theatre. [44]
Beginning in 2010, the panel discussions, film introductions, and post-film discussions/question and answer sessions with festival guests have been streamed live, and then archived on Ebertfest's YouTube channel.
Festival goers can purchase tickets to individual shows or full-festival passes. The number of passes sold is limited to 1,000 with the remainder of seats allotted for individual tickets or sponsors. [45] As passholders do not necessarily attend every show, it is often possible to obtain tickets at the last minute after empty seats are counted. At every festival since 2002, all patrons waiting in line for sold-out films were able to gain entry to the theatre. [45]
Passes for the first Ebertfest in 1999 cost $30, and individual film tickets were $5. [25] In 2016, passes cost $150, and individual film tickets were $15. [46] The first sell-out of passes was in 2004. [47]
Festival founder, programmer and host, 1999 [48] –2012: Roger Ebert
Festival producer, 1999 [48] –2006: [49] Nancy Casey
Festival producer and host, 2007 [50] –present: Chaz Ebert
Festival director, 1999 [48] –present: Nate Kohn
The following is a complete list of films presented at Ebertfest.
Festival schedule [51]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Fugitive | Andrew Davis | 1993 | Harrison Ford, Tommy Lee Jones, Sela Ward | Post-film Q&A included Davis |
Interstellar | Christopher Nolan | 2014 | Matthew McConaughey, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain | Post-film Q&A included scientists Miguel Alcubierre and Brand Fortner |
Selena | Gregory Nava | 1997 | Jennifer Lopez, Edward James Olmos | Post-film Q&A included Nava |
Belle | Amma Asante | 2013 | Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Tom Wilkinson, Miranda Richardson, Penelope Wilton, Sam Reid, Matthew Goode, Emily Watson | Post-film Q&A included Asante |
Columbus | Kogonada | 2017 | John Cho, Haley Lu Richardson, Parker Posey | Post-film Q&A included Kogonada and producers Bill Harnisch, Andrew Miano, Ruth Ann Harnisch, and Danielle Renfrew Behrens |
A Page of Madness | Teinosuke Kinugasa | 1926 | Masao Inoue, Ayako Iijima, Yoshie Nakagawa | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included two members of the Alloy Orchestra |
American Splendor | Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini | 2003 | Paul Giamatti, Hope Davis, Judah Friedlander | Post-film Q&A included Berman, Pulcini, and producer Ted Hope |
13th | Ava DuVernay | 2016 | documentary film | Post-film Q&A included DuVernay |
Daughters of the Dust | Julie Dash | 1991 | Cora Lee Day, Barbara O, Alva Rogers | Post-film Q&A included Dash |
Rambling Rose | Martha Coolidge | 1991 | Laura Dern, Robert Duvall, Diane Ladd | Post-film Q&A included Coolidge |
The Big Lebowski | Joel and Ethan Coen | 1998 | Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi | Post-film Q&A included film subject Jeff Dowd |
Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World | Catherine Bainbridge and Alfonso Maiorana | 2017 | documentary film | Post-film Q&A include Maiorana and Pura Fé. Live performance by Pura Fé followed the discussion. |
Festival schedule [52]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hair | Miloš Forman | 1979 | John Savage, Treat Williams, Beverly D'Angelo | Post-film Q&A included Michael Hausman (first assistant director) and Michael Butler (producer) |
Hysteria (2011 film) | Tanya Wexler | 2011 | Maggie Gyllenhaal, Hugh Dancy, Rupert Everett | Post-film Q&A included Wexler and Dancy |
To Sleep with Anger | Charles Burnett | 1990 | Danny Glover, Paul Butler, Mary Alice | Post-film Q&A included Burnett and special guest Robert Townsend |
The Handmaiden | Park Chan-wook | 2016 | Kim Min-hee, Kim Tae-ri, Ha Jung-woo, Cho Jin-woong | Post-film Q&A included a panel of film critics |
July and Half of August (short) | Brandeaux Tourville | 2017 | Annika Marks, Robert Baker | Pre-film introduction included Sheila O'Malley (writer) |
They Call Us Monsters | Ben Lear | 2016 | Post-film Q&A included Lear and Sasha Alpert (producer) | |
Varieté | Ewald Andre Dupont | 1924 | Emil Jannings, Maly Delschaft, Lya De Putti | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included film historian Richard Neupert |
Elle | Paul Verhoeven | 2016 | Isabelle Huppert, Laurent Lafitte, Anne Consigny | Post-film Q&A included Huppert |
Mind/Game: The Unquiet Journey of Chamique Holdsclaw | Rick Goldsmith | 2015 | Chamique Holdsclaw, Ron Artest, Glenn Close | Post-film Q&A included Goldsmith |
Pleasantville | Gary Ross | 1998 | Tobey Maguire, Reese Witherspoon, Joan Allen, William H. Macy, Jeff Daniels | Post-film Q&A included Ross |
Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You | Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady | 2016 | Norman Lear, John Amos, Bea Arthur | Post-film Q&A included Lear, Grady, and Brent Miller (producer). Ewing was scheduled to appear but she was unable to attend. |
Being There | Hal Ashby | 1979 | Peter Sellers, Shirley MacLaine, Melvyn Douglas | Post-film Q&A included Caleb Deschanel (cinematographer) |
De-Lovely | Irwin Winkler | 2004 | Kevin Kline, Ashley Judd | Post-film Q&A included Winkler, his son Charles Winkler (producer) plus special musical guests Jimmy Demers and Donnie Demers |
Festival schedule [53]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Everybody Wants Some!! | Richard Linklater | 2016 | Blake Jenner, Tyler Hoechlin, Ryan Guzman | Free student screening on University of Illinois campus. Post-film Q&A included Stephen Feder (executive producer), Glen Powell (actor), and Juston Street (actor) |
Crimson Peak | Guillermo del Toro | 2015 | Mia Wasikowska, Jessica Chastain, Tom Hiddleston | Post-film Q&A included del Toro |
Grandma | Paul Weitz | 2015 | Lily Tomlin, Julia Garner, Marcia Gay Harden | Post-film Q&A included Weitz and Andrew Miano (producer) |
Northfork | Michael Polish | 2003 | James Woods, Nick Nolte, Daryl Hannah, Anthony Edwards | Post-film Q&A included Polish |
The Third Man | Carol Reed | 1949 | Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles, Alida Valli | Post-film Q&A included Angela Allen (script supervisor) |
Disturbing the Peace | Stephen Apkon, Andrew Young | 2016 | Chen Alon, Sulaiman Khatib | Special premiere. Post-film Q&A included Apkon, Young, Alon, Khatib, and Marcina Hale (story consultant) |
L'Inhumaine | Marcel L'Herbier | 1924 | Georgette Leblanc, Jaque Catelain, Philippe Hériat | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included two members of the Alloy Orchestra |
Eve's Bayou | Kasi Lemmons | 1997 | Samuel L. Jackson, Lynn Whitfield, Jurnee Smollett | Post-film Q&A included Lemmons |
Force of Destiny | Paul Cox | 2015 | David Wenham, Shahana Goswami, Jacqueline McKenzie | USA Premiere. Post-film Q&A included Cox |
Radical Grace | Rebecca Parrish | 2015 | Sister Simone Campbell, Sister Jean Hughes, Sister Chris Schenk | Post-film Q&A included Parrish, Nicole Bernardi-Reis (producer), Heather McIntosh (composer), and Father Michael Pfleger (social activist) |
Love & Mercy | Bill Pohlad | 2014 | John Cusack, Paul Dano, Paul Giamatti, Elizabeth Banks | Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
Blow Out | Brian De Palma | 1981 | John Travolta, Nancy Allen, John Lithgow | Post-film Q&A included Allen |
Body and Soul | Oscar Micheaux | 1925 | Paul Robeson, Mercedes Gilbert, Julia Theresa Russell | Renee Baker and the Chicago Modern Orchestra Project played live accompaniment, composed by Baker. Post-film Q&A included Baker |
Festival schedule [54]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Goodbye to Language | Jean-Luc Godard | 2014 | Héloise Godet, Kamel Abdeli, Richard Chevalier | Post-film Q&A included Godet |
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence | Roy Andersson | 2014 | Holger Andersson, Nils Westblom, Viktor Gyllenberg | Post-film Q&A included Johan Carlsson (producer) |
Moving Midway | Godfrey Cheshire | 2008 | Godfrey Cheshire, Robert Hinton | Post-film Q&A included Cheshire, plus Hinton via video call |
The End of the Tour | James Ponsoldt | 2015 | Jason Segel, Jesse Eisenberg, Ron Livingston | Post-film Q&A included Ponsoldt and Segel |
Girlhood | Céline Sciamma | 2014 | Karidja Touré, Assa Sylla, Lindsay Karamoh | Post-film Q&A included Héloise Godet |
The Son of the Sheik | George Fitzmaurice | 1926 | Rudolph Valentino, Vilma Bánky, George Fawcett | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included two members of the Alloy Orchestra |
A Bronx Tale | Robert De Niro | 1993 | Robert De Niro, Chazz Palminteri, Lillo Brancato, Jr. | Post-film Q&A included Palminteri, Jon Kilik (producer), Richard Roeper (critic) and Leonard Maltin (critic) |
Wild Tales | Damián Szifrón | 2014 | Darío Grandinetti, María Marull, Julieta Zylberberg | Post-film Q&A included Zylberberg, Javier Braier (casting director), plus Szifrón via video call |
Ida | Paweł Pawlikowski | 2013 | Agata Kulesza, Agata Trzebuchowska, Dawid Ogrodnik | Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
The Motel Life | Alan Polsky, Gabe Polsky | 2012 | Emile Hirsch, Stephen Dorff, Dakota Fanning, Kris Kristofferson | Post-film Q&A included Alan Polsky |
99 Homes | Ramin Bahrani | 2014 | Andrew Garfield, Michael Shannon, Laura Dern | Post-film Q&A included Bahrani and Noah Lomax (actor) |
Seymour: An Introduction | Ethan Hawke | 2014 | Seymour Bernstein, Jiyang Chen, Ethan Hawke | Post-film Q&A included Bernstein, Andrew Harvey (activist), and Leonard Maltin (critic) |
Festival schedule [55]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Taking of Pelham One, Two, Three | Joseph Sargent | 1974 | Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw, Martin Balsam | Free student screening on University of Illinois campus. Post-film Q&A included Patton Oswalt |
Life Itself | Steve James | 2014 | Roger Ebert, Chaz Ebert, Gene Siskel | Post-film Q&A included James and Chaz Ebert |
Museum Hours | Jem Cohen | 2012 | Mary Margaret O’Hara, Bobby Sommer, Ela Piplits | Post-film Q&A included Cohen |
Short Term 12 | Destin Cretton | 2013 | Brie Larson, John Gallagher, Jr., Frantz Turner | Post-film Q&A included Larson |
Young Adult | Jason Reitman | 2011 | Charlize Theron, Patton Oswalt, Patrick Wilson | Post-film Q&A included Oswalt |
He Who Gets Slapped | Victor Sjöström | 1924 | Lon Chaney, Norma Shearer, John Gilbert | 2011 restoration. Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included two members of the Alloy Orchestra |
Capote | Bennett Miller | 2004 | Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener, Clifton Collins, Jr. | Pre-film introduction included Michael Barker (Sony Pictures Classics) |
Do The Right Thing | Spike Lee | 1989 | Danny Aiello, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Spike Lee | Post-film Q&A included Lee |
Wadjda | Haifaa Al-Mansour | 2012 | Waad Mohammed, Reem Abdullah, Abdullrahman Al Gohani | Post-film Q&A included Al-Mansour |
A Simple Life | Ann Hui | 2011 | Andy Lau, Deanie Ip, Paul Chun, Fuli Wang | Post-film Q&A included Hui |
Goodbye Solo | Ramin Bahrani | 2008 | Souleymane Sy Savane, Red West, Diana Franco Galindo | Post-film Q&A included Bahrani |
Born on the Fourth of July | Oliver Stone | 1989 | Tom Cruise, Willem Dafoe, Raymond J. Barry, Caroline Kava | Post-film Q&A included Stone |
Bayou Maharajah | Lily Keber | 2013 | James Booker, Dr. John, Harry Connick, Jr. | Post-film Q&A included Keber, Henry Butler |
Festival schedule [56]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Days of Heaven | Terrence Malick | 1978 | Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard, Linda Manz | Post-film Q&A included Haskell Wexler (cinematographer) |
I Remember (short) | Grace Wang | 2012 | Lily Huang, Chris Chang | Pre-film introduction included Wang and June Kim (director of photography) |
Vincent: The Life and Death of Vincent Van Gogh | Paul Cox | 1989 | John Hurt, Marika Rivera, Gabriella Trsek | |
To Music (short) | Sophie Kohn, Feike Santbergen | 2013 | Paul Cox, Roger Glanville-Hicks, Henriett Tunyogi, Tamás Vásáry | Pre-film introduction included Kohn and Santbergen |
In the Family | Patrick Wang | 2012 | Sebastian Banes, Patrick Wang, Trevor St. John | Post-film Q&A included Wang and St. John |
Bernie | Richard Linklater | 2011 | Jack Black, Shirley McLaine, Matthew McConaughey | Post-film Q&A included Linklater and Black (via conference call) |
Oslo, August 31st | Joachim Trier | 2011 | Anders Danielsen Lie | Post-film Q&A included Trier |
The Ballad of Narayama | Keisuke Kinoshita | 1958 | Kinuyo Tanaka, Teiji Takahashi, Yūko Mochizuki | Post-film Q&A included David Bordwell (film historian) |
Julia | Erick Zonca | 2008 | Tilda Swinton, Aidan Gould, Saul Rubinek, Kate del Castillo | Post-film Q&A included Swinton |
Blancanieves | Pablo Berger | 2012 | Maribel Verdú | Post-film Q&A included Berger |
Kumaré | Vikram Gandhi | 2011 | Vikram Gandhi | Post-film Q&A included Gandhi |
Escape from Tomorrow | Randy Moore | 2013 | Roy Abramsohn, Elena Schuber, Katelynn Rodriguez, Annet Mahendru, Danielle Safady, Alison Lees-Taylor | Post-film Q&A included Moore, Soojin Chung (producer), Abramsohn, Schuber, Mahendru |
The Spectacular Now | James Ponsoldt | 2013 | Miles Teller, Shailene Woodley, Brie Larson, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kyle Chandler | Post-film Q&A included Ponsoldt and Woodley |
Not Yet Begun to Fight | Sabrina Lee, Shasta Grenier | 2012 | Navy SEAL Elliott Miller, Sgt. Erik Goodge, Col. Eric Hastings | Post-film Q&A included Lee and Goodge |
Festival schedule [57]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Joe Versus the Volcano | John Patrick Shanley | 1990 | Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan, Lloyd Bridges, Abe Vigoda | Post-film Q&A included Stephen Goldblatt (director of photography) |
The Truth About Beauty & Blogs (short) | Rosalyn Coleman Williams | 2011 | Kelechie Ezie | Post-film Q&A included Kelechie Ezie, also writer and co-producer |
Phunny Business: A Black Comedy | John Davies | 2011 | Raymond Lambert | Post-film Q&A included John Davies, Reid Brody (producer), Raymond Lambert (also writer and producer), Ali LeRoi (comedian featured in film) |
Big Fan | Robert Siegel | 2009 | Patton Oswalt, Kevin Corrigan, Michael Rapaport | Post-film Q&A included Robert Siegel. Patton Oswalt was scheduled to attend, as well as introduce a public screening of Kind Hearts and Coronets, but was detained by filming commitments |
Kinyarwanda | Alrick Brown | 2011 | Hassan Kabera, Edouard Bamporiki, Cassandra Freeman | Post-film Q&A included Alrick Brown, Ishmael Ntihabose (actor and executive producer), Darren Dean (producer), Tommy Oliver (producer), Deatra Harris (producer) |
Terri | Azazel Jacobs | 2011 | Jacob Wysocki | Post-film Q&A included Azazel Jacobs and Jacob Wysocki |
On Borrowed Time | David Bradbury | 2011 | Paul Cox | Paul Cox |
Wild AND Weird: The Alloy Orchestra Plays 10 Fascinating and Innovative Films 1906–1926 | 1906–1926 | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment | ||
A Separation | Asghar Farhadi | 2011 | Peyman Mouadi, Leila Hatami, Sareh Bayat, Shahab Hosseini, Sarina Farhadi | Peyman Mouadi was scheduled to attend but did not. The post-film Q&A, moderated by blogger Nell Minow, included Paul Cox, blogger Omer Mozaffar and distributor Michael Barker of Sony Pictures Classics |
Higher Ground | Vera Farmiga | 2011 | Vera Farmiga, Joshua Leonard, Norbert Leo Butz, Donna Murphy | Post-film Q&A included writer Carolyn S. Briggs, who based the film on her memoir This Dark World, with blogger Nell Minow |
Patang (The Kite) | Prashant Bhargava | 2011 | Seema Biswas, Nawazuddin Siddiqui | Post-film Q&A included Prashant Bhargava, Vijay Bhargava (executive producer), James Townsend (writer), Seema Biswas, Nawazuddin Siddiqui |
Take Shelter | Jeff Nichols | 2011 | Michael Shannon, Jessica Chastain | Post-film Q&A included Jeff Nichols, Michael Shannon, distributor Michael Barker of Sony Pictures Classics |
Citizen Kane | Orson Welles | 1941 | Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Ruth Warrick | The film was shown using Roger Ebert's commentary track, recorded in 2006 (before Ebert lost his voice). The post-show Q&A featured scholar David Bordwell with audio commentary producer Jeffrey Lerner. Chaz Ebert was visibly moved, stating that although she had seen the film, she had never heard the commentary track, and felt lucky to hear her husband's voice again in the Virginia Theatre |
Festival schedule [58]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Metropolis | Fritz Lang | 1927 | Brigitte Helm, Gustav Fröhlich, Alfred Abel, Rudolf Klein-Rogge | 2010 restoration. Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment |
Natural Selection | Robbie Pickering | 2010 | Rachael Harris | Post-film Q&A included Robbie Pickering and Rachael Harris |
Umberto D | Vittorio De Sica | 1952 | Carlo Battisti | Post-film Q&A included Ignatiy Vishnevetsky and Omer Mozaffar |
My Dog Tulip | Paul Fierlinger and Sandra Schuette Fierlinger | 2010 | Christopher Plummer (narrator) | Post-film Q&A included Paul Fierlinger and Sandra Schuette Fierlinger |
Tiny Furniture | Lena Dunham | 2010 | Lena Dunham, Laurie Simmons, Grace Dunham, Alex Karpovsky, David Call | Post-film Q&A included David Call and distributor Ryan Werner |
45365 | Turner Ross and Bill Ross IV | 2009 | Townspeople of Sidney, Ohio | Post-film Q&A included Turner Ross and Bill Ross IV |
Me & Orson Welles | Richard Linklater | 2009 | Christian McKay, Claire Danes, Zac Efron | Post-film Q&A included Richard Linklater |
Only You | Norman Jewison | 1994 | Robert Downey, Jr., Marisa Tomei, Bonnie Hunt | Post-film Q&A included Norman Jewison |
A Small Act | Jennifer Arnold | 2010 | Chris Mburu, Jane Wanjiru Muigai, Hilde Back | Post-film Q&A included Jennifer Arnold, Hilde Back and producer Patti Lee |
Life Above All | Oliver Schmitz | 2010 | Khomotso Manyaka, Keaobaka Makanyane, Harriet Lenabe | Post-film Q&A included Oliver Schmitz, Khomotso Manyaka and distributor Michael Barker |
Leaves of Grass | Tim Blake Nelson | 2009 | Edward Norton, Tim Blake Nelson, Susan Sarandon | Post-film Q&A included Tim Blake Nelson |
I Am Love | Luca Guadagnino | 2010 | Tilda Swinton, Flavio Parenti, Edoardo Gabbriellini, Marisa Berenson | Post-film Q&A included Tilda Swinton and Michael Barker |
Louder Than a Bomb | Jon Siskel and Greg Jacobs | 2010 | Kevin Coval, Adam Gottlieb, Elizabeth Graf, Kevin Harris and other students | Post-film Q&A included Jon Siskel, Greg Jacobs, founder and artistic director Kevin Coval and Steinmetz High School poets Lamar Jorden, Charles Smith, She'Kira McNight, Kevin Harris and Jésus Lark |
Festival schedule [59]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pink Floyd – The Wall | Alan Parker | 1982 | Bob Geldof, Christine Hargreaves, James Laurenson | Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
You, the Living | Roy Andersson | 2007 | Elisabeth Helander, Jugge Nohall, Jessika Lundberg | Lundberg and Johan Carlsson (production manager) were scheduled to appear but did not due to travel problems. Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
Munyurangabo | Lee Isaac Chung | 2007 | Jeff Rutagengwa, Eric Ndorunkundiye, Jean Marie Vianney Nkurikiyinka | Post-film Q&A included Chung, Sam Anderson (co-writer & producer), Jenny Lund (co-producer) |
The New Age | Michael Tolkin | 1994 | Peter Weller, Judy Davis, Patrick Bauchau | Post-film Q&A included Tolkin |
Apocalypse Now/Redux | Francis Ford Coppola | 2001 | Martin Sheen, Marlon Brando, Robert Duvall | Extended version of the 1979 film. Walter Murch (sound design & film editor) was scheduled to appear but did not due to travel problems. Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
Departures | Yōjirō Takita | 2008 | Masahiro Motoki, Ryōko Hirosue, Tsutomu Yamazaki | Post-film Q&A included Takita |
Man with a Movie Camera | Dziga Vertov | 1929 | Mikhail Kaufman | 2010 restoration. Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included two members of the Alloy Orchestra |
Synecdoche, New York | Charlie Kaufman | 2008 | Philip Seymour Hoffman, Samantha Morton, Michelle Williams | Pre-film introduction by Roger Ebert using speech software on computer. Post-film Q&A included Kaufman and Anthony Bregman (producer) |
I Capture the Castle | Tim Fywell | 2003 | Romola Garai, Rose Byrne, Bill Nighy | Nighy was scheduled to appear but did not due to travel problems. Post-film Q&A included panel of film critics |
Vincent: A Life In Color | Jennifer Burns | 2008 | Vincent P. Falk | Post-film Q&A included Burns and Falk |
Trucker | James Mottern | 2008 | Michelle Monaghan, Nathan Fillion, Benjamin Bratt | Post-film Q&A included Mottern and Monaghan |
Barfly | Barbet Schroeder | 1987 | Mickey Rourke, Faye Dunaway, Alice Krige | Post-film Q&A included Schroeder |
Song Sung Blue | Greg Kohs | 2008 | Mike Sardina, Claire Sardina | Post film Q&A included Kohs and Claire Sardina |
Festival schedule [60]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music, The Director’s Cut | Michael Wadleigh | 1994 | Crosby, Stills & Nash, The Who, Jimi Hendrix, Joan Baez | Extended version of the 1970 film. Post-film Q&A included Wadleigh, Dale Bell (producer), Jocko Marcellino (musician) |
My Winnipeg | Guy Maddin | 2007 | Darcy Fehr, Ann Savage, Louis Negin | Post-film Q&A included Maddin |
Chop Shop | Ramin Bahrani | 2007 | Alejandro Polanco, Isamar Gonzales, Rob Sowulski | Post-film Q&A included Bahrani |
Trouble the Water | Tia Lessin, Carl Deal | 2008 | Kimberly Rivers Roberts, Scott Roberts | Post-film Q&A included Lessin, Deal, K. Roberts, and S. Roberts |
Begging Naked | Karen Gehres | 2007 | Elise Bainbridge Hill, Sally Roth | Post-film Q&A included Gehres |
The Last Command | Josef von Sternberg | 1928 | Emil Jannings, Evelyn Brent, William Powell | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included all three members of the Alloy Orchestra |
Frozen River | Courtney Hunt | 2008 | Melissa Leo, Misty Upham, Charlie McDermott | Post-film Q&A included Hunt and Upham |
The Fall | Tarsem Singh | 2006 | Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell | Post-film Q&A included Untaru |
Sita Sings The Blues | Nina Paley | 2008 | Sanjiv Jhaveri, Nina Paley, Deepti Gupta | Post-film Q&A included Paley |
Nothing But The Truth | Rod Lurie | 2008 | Kate Beckinsale, Matt Dillon, Vera Farmiga | Post-film Q&A included Lurie and Dillon |
Let The Right One In | Tomas Alfredson | 2008 | Kåre Hedebrant, Lina Leandersson, Per Ragnar | Post-film Q&A included Carl Molinder (producer) |
Baraka | Ron Fricke | 1992 | n/a | Post film Q&A included Fricke and Mark Magidson (producer) |
Festival schedule [61]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hamlet | Kenneth Branagh | 1996 | Kenneth Branagh, Julie Christie, Derek Jacobi | Post-film Q&A included actors Timothy Spall and Rufus Sewell |
Delirious | Tom DiCillo | 2006 | Steve Buscemi, Michael Pitt, Alison Lohman | Post-film Q&A included DiCillo |
Yes | Sally Potter | 2004 | Joan Allen, Simon Abkarian, Sam Neill | Post-film Q&A included John Penotti (executive producer) |
Citizen Cohl: The Untold Story (short) | Barry Avrich | 2008 | Barry Avrich, Dusty Cohl, Michael Cohl | Post-film Q&A included Avrich |
Canvas | Joseph Greco | 2006 | Joe Pantoliano, Marcia Gay Harden, Devon Gearhart | Post-film Q&A included Greco, Pantoliano, Adam Hammel (producer), Bill Erfurth (producer) |
Shotgun Stories | Jeff Nichols | 2007 | Michael Shannon, Douglas Ligon | Post-film Q&A included Nichols |
Underworld | Josef von Sternberg | 1927 | Clive Brook, Evelyn Brent, George Bancroft, Larry Semon | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include members of the Alloy Orchestra |
The Real Dirt on Farmer John | Taggart Siegel | 2005 | John Peterson, Anna Nielsen, John Edwards | Post-film Q&A included Siegel and Peterson |
Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters | Paul Schrader | 1985 | Ken Ogata, Masayuki Shionoya | Post-film Q&A included Schrader and Eiko Ishioka (costume designer) |
Hulk | Ang Lee | 2003 | Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott | Post-film Q&A included Lee |
The Band's Visit | Eran Kolirin | 2007 | Sasson Gabai, Ronit Elkabetz, Saleh Bakri | Post-film Q&A included Kolirin |
Housekeeping | Bill Forsyth | 1987 | Christine Lahti, Sara Walker, Andrea Burchill | Post-film Q&A included Forsyth and Lahti |
The Cell | Tarsem Singh | 2000 | Jennifer Lopez, Vince Vaughn, Vincent D’Onofrio | Post film Q&A included Singh, Eiko Ishioka (costume designer), and Nico Soultanakis (producer) |
Romance & Cigarettes | John Turturro | 2005 | James Gandolfini, Susan Sarandon, Kate Winslet | Post film Q&A Aida Turturro (actor) and Tricia Brouk (choreographer) |
Festival schedule [62]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gattaca | Andrew Niccol | 1997 | Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman | Post-film Q&A included Michael Shamberg (producer) |
The Weather Man | Gore Verbinski | 2005 | Nicolas Cage, Hope Davis, Michael Caine | Post-film Q&A included Steven Conrad (writer) and Gil Bellows (actor) |
Moolaadé | Ousmane Sembène | 2004 | Fatoumata Coulibaly, Maimouna Hélène Diarra, Salimata Traoré | Post-film Q&A included Coulibaly and Samba Gadjigo (professor) |
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer | Tom Tykwer | 2006 | Ben Whishaw, Alan Rickman, Rachel Hurd-Wood, Dustin Hoffman | Post-film Q&A included Rickman |
Sadie Thompson | Raoul Walsh | 1928 | Gloria Swanson, Lionel Barrymore | Champaign-Urbana Symphony Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included David Bordwell (film scholar), Steven Larsen (conductor), and Joseph Turrin (composer) |
Come Early Morning | Joey Lauren Adams | 2006 | Ashley Judd, Jeffrey Donovan | Post-film Q&A included Adams and Scott Wilson (actor) |
La Dolce Vita | Federico Fellini | 1960 | Marcello Mastroianni, Anita Ekberg, Anouk Aimée | Post-film Q&A included Michael Barker (producer & distributor), Jacqueline Reich (professor) |
Freddie Mercury: the Untold Story | Rudi Dolezal, Hannes Rossacher | 2000 | Freddie Mercury, Jer Bulsara, Kashmira Cooke | Post-film Q&A included Dolezal |
Holes | Andrew Davis | 2003 | Shia LaBeouf, Sigourney Weaver, Jon Voight | Post-film Q&A included Davis |
Man of Flowers | Paul Cox | 1983 | Norman Kaye, Alyson Best, Chris Haywood | Post-film Q&A included Cox and Werner Herzog (actor) |
Stroszek | Werner Herzog | 1977 | Bruno S., Eva Mattes, Clemens Scheitz | Post-film Q&A included Herzog |
Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus | Andrew Douglas | 2003 | Jim White, Harry Crews, Johnny Dowd | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Douglas and White |
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls | Russ Meyer | 1970 | Dolly Read, Cynthia Myers, Marcia McBroom | Post film Q&A included Strawberry Alarm Clock (band) and was scheduled to include McBroom and Peter Sobcynski (critic) |
Festival schedule [63]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
My Fair Lady | George Cukor | 1964 | Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison | 1994 restoration. Post-film Q&A included Marni Nixon (singing voice), Robert A. Harris (film restorer), Jim Katz (restorer/producer) |
Man Push Cart | Ramin Bahrani | 2005 | Ahmad Razvi, Leticia Dolera, Charles Daniel Sandoval | Post-film Q&A included Bahrani and Razvi |
Duane Hopwood | Matt Mulhern | 2005 | David Schwimmer, Janeane Garofalo | Post-film Q&A included Mulhern |
Spartan | David Mamet | 2004 | Val Kilmer, Derek Luke, William H. Macy, Kristen Bell | Post-film Q&A included David Bordwell (film scholar) |
Somebodies | Hadjii | 2006 | Kaira Whitehead, Tyler Craig, Patt Brown, Nard Holston | Post-film Q&A included Hadjii, Whitehead, Nate Kohn (co-producer), Pam Kohn (co-producer) |
The Eagle | Clarence Brown | 1925 | Rudolph Valentino, Vilma Bánky, Louise Dresser | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included a panel of film professors |
Ripley's Game | Liliana Cavani | 2002 | John Malkovich, Dougray Scott, Ray Winstone, Lena Headey | Post-film Q&A included Malkovich and Russell Smith (executive producer) |
Millions | Danny Boyle | 2004 | Alex Etel, Lewis McGibbon, James Nesbitt, Daisy Donovan | Post-film Q&A included a panel of local children |
Claire Dolan | Lodge Kerrigan | 1998 | Katrin Cartlidge, Vincent D’Onofrio, Colm Meaney | Post-film Q&A included Kerrigan |
Junebug | Phil Morrison | 2005 | Embeth Davidtz, Amy Adams, Benjamin McKenzie, Scott Wilson | Post-film Q&A included Morrison, Wilson, and Michael Barker (distributor) |
Bad Santa | Terry Zwigoff | 2003 | Billy Bob Thornton, Bernie Mac, Lauren Graham | Director’s personal print of the film that included unreleased material. Post-film Q&A included Zwigoff |
U-Carmen eKhayelitsha | Mark Dornford-May | 2005 | Pauline Malefane, Andile Tshoni, Lungelwa Blou | Post-film Q&A included Dornford-May and Malefane |
Festival schedule [64]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Playtime | Jacques Tati | 1967 | Jacques Tati, Barbara Dennek | Post-film Q&A included Jonathan Rosenbaum (film critic) |
Murderball | Henry Alex Rubin, Dana Adam Shapiro | 2005 | Joe Soares, Keith Cavill, Mark Zupan | Post-film Q&A included Rubin, Shapiro, Zupan, Soares, and Jeff Mandel (producer) |
The Heart of the World (short) | Guy Maddin | 2000 | Leslie Bais, Caelum Vatnsdal, Shaun Balbar | Post-film Q&A included Maddin and Jonathan Sehring (producer) |
The Saddest Music in the World | Guy Maddin | 2003 | Isabella Rossellini, Mark McKinney, Maria de Medeiros | Post-film Q&A included Maddin and Jonathan Sehring (producer) |
After Dark, My Sweet | James Foley | 1990 | Jason Patric, Rachel Ward, Bruce Dern | Post-film Q&A included Patric |
Yesterday | Darrell Roodt | 2004 | Leleti Khumalo, Lihle Mvelase, Kenneth Khambula | Post-film Q&A included Roodt |
The Phantom of the Opera | Rupert Julian | 1925 | Lon Chaney, Mary Philbin, Norman Kerry | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included members of the Alloy Orchestra and Jonathan Rosenbaum (film critic) |
Baadasssss! | Mario Van Peebles | 2003 | Mario Van Peebles, Nia Long, Joy Bryant | Post-film Q&A included Van Peebles |
The Secret of Roan Inish | John Sayles | 1994 | Jeni Courtney, Eileen Colgan, Richard Sheridan | Post-film Q&A included Sayles and Maggie Renzi (producer) |
Primer | Shane Carruth | 2004 | Shane Carruth, David Sullivan | Post-film Q&A included Carruth |
Map of the Human Heart | Vincent Ward | 1993 | Jason Scott Lee, Anne Parillaud, Patrick Bergin | Post-film Q&A included Ward and Lee |
Me and You and Everyone We Know | Miranda July | 2005 | John Hawkes, Miranda July, Miles Thompson | Post-film Q&A included July and Jonathan Sehring (producer) |
Taal | Subhash Ghai | 1999 | Anil Kapoor, Akshaye Khanna, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan | Post-film Q&A included Ghai and Gerson da Cunha (film journalist) |
Festival schedule [65]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lawrence of Arabia | David Lean | 1962 | Peter O'Toole, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn | 1989 restoration. Pre-film introduction included Jack Valenti (head of MPAA). Post-film Q&A included Robert Harris (film restorer) and Anne Coates (film editor) |
Tarnation | Jonathan Caouette | 2003 | Jonathan Caouette, Renee Leblanc, Adolph Davis | Post-film Q&A included Caouette |
The Son | Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne | 2002 | Olivier Gourmet, Morgan Marinne, Isabella Soupart | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Dan Talbot (art film distributor) |
Once Upon a Time...When We Were Colored | Tim Reid | 1995 | Al Freeman Jr., Phylicia Rashad, Leon | Post-film Q&A included Tim Reid |
Tully | Hilary Birmingham | 2000 | Glenn Fitzgerald, Anson Mount, Bob Burrus, Julianne Nicholson | Post-film Q&A included Birmingham and Mount |
The Scapegoat (short) | Darren Ng | 2003 | Darren Ng, Scott Honey, Cassandra Chan | Post-film Q&A included Ng and Jeffrey Vance (film historian) |
The General | Clyde Bruckman, Buster Keaton | 1926 | Buster Keaton, Marion Mack | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included Darren Ng and Jeffrey Vance (film historian) |
El Norte | Gregory Nava | 1983 | Zaide Silvia Gutiérrez, David Villalpando | Post-film Q&A included Nava and Anna Thomas (producer) |
My Dog Skip | Jay Russell | 2000 | Frankie Muniz, Diane Lane, Kevin Bacon, Luke Wilson | Post-film Q&A included Russell, Enzo (dog actor), and Larry Madrid (dog trainer) |
Gates of Heaven | Errol Morris | 1978 | Floyd McClure, Cal Harberts, Florence Rasmussen | Post-film Q&A included Morris |
People I Know | Dan Algrant | 2002 | Al Pacino, Kim Basinger, Téa Leoni | Post-film Q&A included Algrant, Bobby Zarem (publicist), and Pacino via telephone |
Invincible | Werner Herzog | 2001 | Tim Roth, Jouko Ahola, Anna Gourari | Post-film Q&A included Herzog |
Louie Bluie | Terry Zwigoff | 1985 | Howard Armstrong, Ted Bogan, Jay Lynch | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Barbara Ward Armstrong (wife of subject) |
Sweet Old Song | Leah Mahan | 2002 | Howard Armstrong, Ray DeForest, Bob Frank | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Mahan and Barbara Ward Armstrong (wife of subject) |
Festival schedule [66]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Right Stuff | Philip Kaufman | 1983 | Sam Shepard, Ed Harris, Scott Glenn | Post-film Q&A included Scott Wilson, Veronica Cartwright, and Donald Moffat (actors) |
Stone Reader | Mark Moskowitz | 2002 | Carl Brandt, Frank Conroy, Bruce Dobler | Post-film Q&A included Moskowitz, Dow Mossman (film subject), and Jeff Lipsky (film distributor) |
The Grey Automobile | Enrique Rosas | 1919 | Joaquin Coss, Juan de Homs, Manuel de los Rios | Performance based on the Japanese Benshi tradition of live actors narrating silent films. Post-film Q&A included Claudio Valdés Kuri (theatre director), Irene Akiko Iida (actress), and Ernesto Gómez Santana (pianist) |
Your Friends and Neighbors | Neil LaBute | 1998 | Amy Brenneman, Aaron Eckhart, Catherine Keener | Post-film Q&A included LaBute |
Blood and Wine | Bob Rafelson | 1996 | Jack Nicholson, Stephen Dorff, Jennifer Lopez | Post-film Q&A included Rafelson |
Medium Cool | Haskell Wexler | 1969 | Robert Forster, Verna Bloom, Peter Bonerz | Post-film Q&A included Wexler |
What's Cooking? | Gurinder Chadha | 2000 | Joan Chen, Juliana Margulies, Mercedes Ruehl, Kyra Sedgwick, Alfre Woodard | Post-film Q&A included Chaz Ebert |
The Black Pirate | Albert Parker | 1926 | Douglas Fairbanks, Billie Dove, Tempe Pigott | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. |
L.627 | Bertrand Tavernier | 1992 | Didier Bezace, Jean-Paul Comart, Charlotte Kady | Post-film Q&A included Tavernier |
The Golden Age of Silent Comedy | Presented by the Silent Movie Theatre Co. | n/a | Harold Lloyd in Never Weaken, The Little Rascals in Saturday's Lesson, Buster Keaton in The Scarecrow, Charley Chase in Mighty Like a Moose, Charlie Chaplin in Kid Auto Races, and the Felix the Cat cartoon Felix Finds ‘Em Fickle | Presentation included a vaudeville opening act, followed by six comedy short films. Dena Mora played organ and piano. Post-film Q&A included Charlie Lustman (theatre owner) and Mora |
Shall We Dance? | Masayuki Suo | 1996 | Kōji Yakusho, Tamiyo Kusakari, Naoto Takenaka | Post-film Q&A included David Bordwell (film historian) |
Charlotte Sometimes | Eric Byler | 2002 | Jacqueline Kim, Eugenia Yuan, Michael Idemoto | Launch festival release. Post-film Q&A included Byler, Kim, Idemoto, and John Manulis (executive producer) |
13 Conversations About One Thing | Jill Sprecher | 2001 | Alan Arkin, John Turturro, Matthew McConaughey, Clea DuVall | Post-film Q&A included Jill Sprecher and Karen Sprecher (writer) |
Singin' in the Rain | Stanley Donen, Gene Kelly | 1952 | Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor, Debbie Reynolds | Post-film Q&A included O'Connor |
Festival schedule [67]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Patton | Franklin J. Schaffner | 1970 | George C. Scott, Karl Malden | Post-film Q&A included Dr. Richard Vetter (developer of optical system for 70 mm photography and projection) |
Hyènes | Djibril Diop Mambéty | 1992 | Ami Kiakhate, Djibril Diop Mambéty, Mansour Diouf | |
George Washington | David Gordon Green | 2000 | Candace Evanofski, Donald Holden, Damian Jewan Lee | Post-film Q&A included Green and Curtis Cotton III (actor) |
Wonder Boys | Curtis Hanson | 2000 | Michael Douglas, Tobey Maguire, Frances McDormand | Post-film Q&A included Michael Chabon (novelist) |
A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries | James Ivory | 1998 | Kris Kristofferson, Barbara Hershey, Leelee Sobieski | Post-film Q&A included Kristofferson and Kaylie Jones (novelist) |
Kwik Stop | Michael Gilio | 2001 | Michael Gilio, Lara Phillips, Rich Komenich | Post-film Q&A included Gilio |
Two Women | Tahmineh Milani | 1999 | Niki Karimi, Mohammad Reza Forutan, Merila Zarei | Post-film Q&A included Milani |
Innocence | Paul Cox | 2000 | Julia Blake, Bud Tingwell, Kristine Van Pellicom | Post-film Q&A included Cox and Paul Grabowsky (composer) |
Grand Canyon | Lawrence Kasdan | 1991 | Danny Glover, Kevin Kline, Steve Martin | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Alfre Woodard (actor) |
Paperhouse | Bernard Rose | 1988 | Charlotte Burke, Ben Cross, Glenne Headly | Post-film Q&A included Rose |
Diamond Men | Dan Cohen | 2000 | Robert Forster, Donnie Wahlberg | Post-film Q&A included Cohen and Forster |
Metropolis | Fritz Lang | 1927 | Brigette Helm, Alfred Abel, Gustav Fröhlich | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment |
Metropolis | Rintaro | 2001 | Yuka Imoto, Kei Kobayashi, Kōsei Tomita, | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Drew McWeeny (film critic) |
Say Amen, Somebody | George T. Nierenberg | 1982 | Willie Mae Ford Smith, Thomas A. Dorsey, DeLois Barrett Campbell | Post-film Q&A included Nierenberg and The Barrett Sisters |
Festival schedule [68]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2001: A Space Odyssey | Stanley Kubrick | 1968 | Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood | Post-film Q&A included Dullea and Sir Arthur C. Clarke (writer, via telephone from Sri Lanka) |
Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures | Jan Harlan | 2001 | Katharina Kubrick, Malcolm McDowell, Stanley Kubrick | U.S. premiere. Post-film Q&A included Harlan |
Maryam | Ramin Serry | 2002 | Mariam Parris, David Ackert, Shaun Toub | Post-film Q&A included Serry and Shauna Lyon (producer) |
Such a Long Journey | Sturla Gunnarsson | 1998 | Roshan Seth, Soni Razdan, Om Puri | Post-film Q&A included Gunnarsson |
Songs from the Second Floor | Roy Andersson | 2000 | Lars Nordh, Stefan Larsson, Bengt C.W. Carlsson | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Nordh |
Panic | Henry Bromell | 2000 | William H. Macy, Neve Campbell, Donald Sutherland | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Bromell, but he was unable to attend due to illness |
Girl on the Bridge | Patrice Leconte | 1999 | Vanessa Paradis, Daniel Auteuil | Post-film Q&A included Edwin Jahiel (film critic) |
Dragonflies, the Baby Cries (short) | Jane Gillooly | 2000 | Jillian Wheeler, Jessy Rowe | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Gillooly |
Nosferatu | F. W. Murnau | 1922 | Max Schreck, Gustav von Wangenheim, Greta Schröder | Alloy Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A included members of the Alloy Orchestra |
3 Women | Robert Altman | 1977 | Shelley Duvall, Sissy Spacek, Janice Rule | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Rule |
The King of Masks | Wu Tianming | 1996 | Zhu Xu, Zhou Renying, Zhao Zhigang | Post-film Q&A included Wu |
On the Ropes | Nanette Burstein, Brett Morgen | 1999 | Sam Doumit, Martin Goldman, Harry Keitt | Post-film Q&A included Morgen and Tyrene Manson (subject, via telephone) |
Jesus' Son | Alison Maclean | 1999 | Billy Crudup, Samantha Morton, Denis Leary, Holly Hunter, Dennis Hopper | Post-film Q&A included Crudup, and was scheduled to include Maclean, Elizabeth Cuthrell (producer and writer), and David Urrutia (producer and writer) |
A Simple Plan | Sam Raimi | 1998 | Bill Paxton, Billy Bob Thornton, Bridget Fonda | Post-film Q&A included Paxton |
Everyone Says I Love You | Woody Allen | 1996 | Alan Alda, Goldie Hawn, Julia Roberts | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Jean Doumanian (producer) and Billy Crudup |
Festival schedule [69]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sidewalk Stories | Charles Lane | 1989 | Charles Lane, Nicole Alysia, Tom Alpern | Post-film Q&A included Lane |
Grave of the Fireflies | Isao Takahata | 1988 | Tsutomu Tatsumi, Ayano Shiraishi, Akemi Yamaguchi | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Richard J. Leskosky and Greg Dean Schmitz (film critics) |
American Movie | Chris Smith | 1999 | Mark Borchardt, Mike Schank, Tom Schimmels | Post-film Q&A included Smith, Sarah Price (producer), and Borchardt |
Coven (short) | Mark Borchardt | 2000 | Mark Borchardt, Tom Schimmels, Miriam Frost | Post-film Q&A included Borchardt |
Legacy | Tod Lending | 2000 | Alaissa Collins, Marquis Collins, Nickcole Collins | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Lending and Nickcole Collins (film subject) |
The Terrorist | Santosh Sivan | 1998 | Ayesha Dharker, K. Krishna, Sonu Sisupal | Post-film Q&A included Dharker and Mark Burton (executive producer) |
The Castle | Rob Sitch | 1997 | Michael Caton, Anne Tenney, Stephen Curry | Post-film Q&A included Sitch and Michael Hirsh (producer) |
A Woman's Tale | Paul Cox | 1991 | Sheila Florance, Gosia Dobrowolska, Norman Kaye | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Cox |
Children of Heaven | Majid Majidi | 1997 | Amir Farrokh Hashemian, Bahare Seddiqi | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Godfrey Cheshire III (film critic) |
The Last Laugh | F. W. Murnau | 1924 | Emil Jannings, Maly Delschaft, Max Hiller | Concrete Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Edwin Jahiel (film critic) |
Un Chien Andalou | Luis Buñuel | 1929 | Pierre Batcheff, Simone Mareuil, Luis Buñuel, Salvador Dalí | Concrete Orchestra played live accompaniment. Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Edwin Jahiel (film critic) |
Déjà vu | Henry Jaglom | 1997 | Stephen Dillane, Victoria Foyt, Vanessa Redgrave | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Jaglom and Foyt |
Dark City | Alex Proyas | 1998 | Rufus Sewell, Kiefer Sutherland, Jennifer Connelly | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Proyas (via telephone) |
Oklahoma! | Fred Zinnemann | 1955 | Gordon MacRae, Shirley Jones, Gloria Grahame | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Tim Zinnemann (son of film director) |
Festival schedule [70]
Title | Director | Year | Starring | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dance Me to My Song | Rolf de Heer | 1998 | Heather Rose, John Brumpton, Joey Kennedy | Post-film Q&A included Rose |
Thirteen | David D. Williams | 1997 | Hermine Douglas, Brandon Flynn Wells, Alan Douglas | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to include Williams |
Household Saints | Nancy Savoca | 1993 | Tracey Ullman, Vincent D'Onofrio, Lili Taylor | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to Savoca and Richard Guay (producer and co-writer) |
Battleship Potemkin | Sergei Eisenstein | 1925 | Aleksandr Antonov, Vladimir Barsky, Grigori Aleksandrov | Concrete Orchestra played live accompaniment |
Maborosi | Hirokazu Koreeda | 1995 | Makiko Esumi, Takashi Naitō, Tadanobu Asano | |
Surrender Dorothy | Kevin DiNovis | 1998 | Peter Pryor, Kevin DiNovis, Jason Centeno | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to DiNovis |
Shiloh | Dale Rosenbloom | 1996 | Michael Moriarty, Scott Wilson, Blake Heron | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to Rosenbloom, Wilson, and Carl Borack (producer) |
Hamsun | Jan Troell | 1996 | Max von Sydow, Ghita Nørby | |
Autumn Tale | Éric Rohmer | 1998 | Béatrice Romand, Marie Rivière, Alain Libolt | |
Tron | Steven Lisberger | 1982 | Jeff Bridges, Bruce Boxleitner, David Warner | Post-film Q&A was scheduled to Lisberger and Warner |
Roger Joseph Ebert was an American film critic, historian, journalist, screenwriter, and author. He was a film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, Ebert became the first film critic to win the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.
The Daily Illini, commonly known as the DI, is a student-run newspaper that has been published for the community of the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign since 1871. Weekday circulation during fall and spring semesters is 20,000; copies are distributed free at more than 250 locations throughout Champaign–Urbana.
The Champaign–Urbana metropolitan area, also known as Champaign–Urbana and Urbana–Champaign as well as Chambana, is a metropolitan area in east-central Illinois. It is the 191st largest metropolitan area in the U.S. It is composed of three counties, Champaign, Ford, and Piatt. The Office of Management and Budget has designated the three-county Champaign–Urbana area as one of its metropolitan statistical areas, which are used for statistical purposes by the Census Bureau and other agencies.
The Illini Media Company is a nonprofit, student media company based in Champaign, Illinois. The company owns several student-run media outlets associated with the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign: the general newspaper, the Daily Illini; the entertainment paper, Buzz Magazine; the engineering quarterly, Technograph; the U of I yearbook, the Illio; and the commercial radio station, WPGU.
John McNaughton is an American film and television director, originally from Chicago, Illinois, known for his first film Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (LAS) is the largest college in the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, created in 1913 through the merger of the College of Literature and Arts and the College of Science.
Romance & Cigarettes is a 2005 American musical romantic comedy film written and directed by John Turturro. The film stars an ensemble cast which includes James Gandolfini, Susan Sarandon, Kate Winslet, Steve Buscemi, Bobby Cannavale, Mandy Moore, Mary-Louise Parker, Aida Turturro, Christopher Walken, Barbara Sukowa, Elaine Stritch, Eddie Izzard, and Amy Sedaris. The film was nominated for a Golden Lion at the 2005 Venice Film Festival.
The College of Media is a college at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, United States. The college name changed from College of Communications to the College of Media in 2008.
Nina Paley is an American cartoonist, animator and free culture activist. She was the artist and often the writer of the comic strips Nina's Adventures and Fluff, but most of her recent work has been in animation. She is perhaps best known for creating the animated feature film Sita Sings the Blues, loosely based on the Ramayana, with parallels to her personal life. In 2018, she completed her second animated feature, Seder-Masochism, a retelling of The Book of Exodus as patriarchy emerging from goddess worship.
Urbana High School is the only public high school in Urbana, Illinois and was established in 1872.
The Champaign-Urbana Symphony Orchestra (CUSO) is a professional orchestra located in the Champaign-Urbana metropolitan area in central Illinois. The Orchestra is the Professional Orchestra in Residence at the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The CUSO is led by Music Director and Conductor Stephen Alltop.
The Murder of Fred Hampton is a 1971 documentary film which began with the intention of portraying Fred Hampton and the Illinois Black Panther Party. During the film's production, Hampton was assassinated by the Chicago Police Department.
The Virginia Theatre is a live performance and movie theatre in downtown Champaign, Illinois. It has been providing theatrical and cinematic entertainment to the Champaign-Urbana community since its doors opened in 1921. Each year, the Virginia Theatre is host to movies from film reels, plays from various acting troupes, concerts, and Ebertfest, presented by the UIUC College of Media. It is currently owned by the Champaign Park District.
Don Gerard is the former mayor of the city of Champaign, Illinois.
Suburban Express is a bus service that provides transport services to students at six universities in the American Midwest, primarily to and from the Chicago area. Airport shuttles are operated under the name "Illini Shuttle". The company contracts buses from other carriers, and is based in Champaign, Illinois.
Amy Elizabeth Stoch, also known as Amy Stock and Amy Stock-Poynton, is an American actress and academic.
The Champaign-Decatur CSA, also known as East Central Illinois CSA, is a combined statistical area in Illinois. It is the 104th largest combined statistical area in the U.S. It is composed of four counties, Champaign, Ford, Piatt and Macon.
Will Blake is an American painter best known for his representations of American Civil War reenactment. He studied at the Florence Academy of Art in the summer of 2012, the Glasgow School of Art in the spring of 2013 and graduated from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign BFA painting program in 2014. His exhibition with artist Sean Tierney at Figure One, titled "Between the States" was his first showing of his Civil War reenactment work.
Francis T. Bacon was the supervising architect of the Illinois Central Railroad system from the mid-1890s until 1907. Bacon died in Chicago on June 18, 1909, at the age of 43, after having been in private practice for two years.