Category Archives: VIFF 2015

First Full Day for Both the New York and Vancouver Film Festivals

53rd annual New York and 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festivals

Do you have a hankering to travel to Gotham early in this autumn season?
Thought that, as it would coincide with your sojourn to the city that never sleeps, you might take in a screening or three at this year’s prestigious 53rd annual New York Film Festival? Taking a gander at your bank account, though, you conclude, “New York in the autumn would be good, but perhaps not this year. Too bad I’ll miss out on the great films at NYFF53.”
Fear not avid cinephile, for once again this year our very own homegrown (and equally as prestigious and inviting) Vancouver International Film Festival will share many of the heavily-juried and well-reviewed films that will screen in New York; fifteen out of the NYFF53’s thirty films, to be exact.
Hallellujah, for we are saved, as New York hops on a plane, a bus, a train to arrive weary, but invigorated, along the pristine shores of our west coast paradise. Here, then, is the complete list of the 15 celebrated Festival films that will screen simultaneously in both New York and Vancouver …

Arabian Nights, Volume 1 | The Restless One | Director, Miguel GomesArabian Nights, Vol. 1 | The Restless One | Miguel Gomes | 2015 | Portugal | 125 minutes

A contemporary rethinking of what it means to make a political film, Miguel Gomes’ epic paean to the art of storytelling — filmed during Portugal’s recent plunge into austerity — offers a generous, radical chronicle of our troubled times, one that honours its fantasy life as fully as its hard realities.

Arabian Nights, Volume 2 | The Desolate One | Director, Miguel GomesArabian Nights, Vol. 2 | The Desolate One | Miguel Gomes | 2015 | Portugal | 131 minutes

Unfolding in a more melancholic register, Miguel Gomes’ monumental yet light-footed magnum opus shifts tones and genres at will (deadpan neo-Western, Brechtian courtroom farce, tear-jerking melodrama), all the while treating its fantasy dimension as a path to a more meaningful truth.

Arabian Nights, Volume 3 | The Enchanted One | Director, Miguel GomesArabian Nights, Vol. 3 | The Enchanted One | Miguel Gomes | 2015 | Portugal | 125 minutes

As enthralling as it is eccentric, the final installment of Miguel Gomes’ sui generis epic features a sunny interlude of freedom for the heroine Scheherazade and an affectionate documentary chronicle of Lisbon-area bird trappers and birdsong competitions.

The Assassin | Director, Hou Hsiao-hsienThe Assassin | Hou Hsiao-hsien | 2015 | Taiwan | 105 minutes

Crystalline in beauty and oblique in narrative, this year’s Cannes Best Director winner Hou Hsiao-hsien’s eagerly awaited wuxia stars Shu Qi as a Tang Dynasty assassin, dedicated to the art of killing until memory transforms her course of action.

Brooklyn | Director, John Crowley | Starring Saoirse RonanBrooklyn | John Crowley | 2015 | VIFF Opening Gala | Ireland | 105 minutes

Saoirse Ronan, as vibrantly alive as a silent-screen heroine, plays Eilis, who leaves her native Ireland in the early 1950s, slowly builds a better life for herself, and is then called back home, to another possible future, in this lovely adaptation of Colm Tóibín’s novel.

Cemetery of Splendour | Director, Apichatpong WeerasethakulCemetery of Splendour | Apichatpong Weerasethakul | 2015 | Thailand | 121 minutes

A hospital ward full of comatose soldiers wage war in their sleep on behalf of long-dead feuding kings in the wondrous new film by Palme d’Or winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul, a sun-dappled reverie that induces in the viewer a sensation of lucid dreaming.

Experimenter | Director, Michael Almereyda | Starring Peter SarsgaardExperimenter | Michael Almereyda | 2015 | USA | 108 minutes

Michael Almreyda’s portrait of Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard), the social scientist whose 1961 “obedience study” reflected back on the Holocaust and anticipated Abu Ghraib, is both appropriately uncompromising and surprisingly compassionate.

The Forbidden Room, directed by Guy Maddin and Evan JohnsonThe Forbidden Room | Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson | 2015 | Canada | 132 minutes

In his insane magnum opus, cinema’s reigning master of feverish filmic fetishism embarks on a phantasmagoric narrative adventure of stories within stories within dreams within flashbacks in a delirious globe-trotting mise en abyme, diving deeper than ever.

In the Shadow of Women, directed by Philippe Garrel
In The Shadow of Women
| Philippe Garrel | 2015 | France | 73 minutes

The exquisite new film by the great Philippe Garrel offers a close look at infidelity — not merely the fact of it, but the particular, divergent ways in which it’s experienced and understood by men and women.

The Lobster, directed by Yorgos LanthimosThe Lobster | Yorgos Lanthimos | 2015 | United Kingdom, Greece | 118 minutes

In the future, single people are rounded up and sent to a seaside compound, given a finite number of days to find a match, and turned into animals if they fail. Welcome to the latest dark, dark comedy from absurdist Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos. Winner of a Cannes Jury Prize.

The Measure of a Man, directed by Stéphane BrizéThe Measure of a Man | Stéphane Brizé | 2015 | France | 93 minutes

Dispassionately monitoring the progress of its stoic unemployed everyman (Vincent Lindon, in his finest performance to date, which earned him the Best Actor prize at Cannes) as he submits to a series of quietly humiliating ordeals in his search for work, this powerful and troubling film reveals the realities of our new economic order.

Mountains May Depart, directed by Jia ZhangkeMountains May Depart | Jia Zhangke | 2015 | China | 131 minutes

An epically scaled canvas of life in contemporary China, Jia Zhangke’s new film spans three decades in the lives of its increasingly estranged characters, from the dawn of the capitalist explosion to the near future.

My Golden Days, directed by Arnaud Desplechin
My Golden Days | Arnaud Desplechin | 2015 | France | 123 minutes

Arnaud Desplechin reaches Shakespearean heights with his intimate yet expansive new film, three varied but interlocking episodes in the life of his hero, with the wondrous experience of first love between Paul (Quentin Dolmaire) and Esther (Lou Roy-Lecollinet) at its core.

Right Now, Wrong Then, directed by Hong SangsooRight Now, Wrong Then | Hong Sangsoo | 2015 | South Korea | 121 minutes

A middle-aged art-film director and a fledgling artist meet — she knows he’s famous but doesn’t know his films, he’d like to see her paintings. Every word, pause, facial expression, and movement in Hong Sangsoo’s masterful new film is a negotiation between revelation and concealment.

The Treasure, directed by Corneliu PorumboiuThe Treasure | Corneliu Porumboiu | 2015 | Romania | 89 minutes

A man is approached by his neighbour with a business proposition: lend him some money to look for buried treasure in his family’s backyard and they’ll split the proceeds. Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu’s magical modern-day fable stays continually surprising and funny.

VIFF 2015: Vancouver’s Award-Winning HomeGrown Film Festival

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners

Throughout the year, the Vancouver International Film Festival’s team of programmers travel the globe in search of the very best in world cinema, attending the better-known festivals such as Sundance in January, Berlin in February, Hong Kong and South by Southwest in March, Tribeca in April, Cannes in May, Seattle in late May through mid-June, as well as the myriad smaller but still prestigious film festivals in Rotterdam, Edinburgh, London, Locarno and the Czech Republic, among many, many other Festivals.
In late September of each year for 16 days, world cinema arrives on our shores, providing a window on the world, screenings scheduled once, twice or three times at VIFF, the vast majority of films never to be seen in our cinemas ever again. Either you see that very special, award-winning Turkish or Iranian, Japanese or Romanian, Chilean or Ugandan film as part of the annual Vancouver International Film Festival, or you will have missed out.
And what of those very special, award-winning films you’ll want to place on your VIFF 2015 screening schedule.

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners
2015 Vancouver International Film Festival award winners

VIFF 2015: Bigger, Stronger, Better. A Guide to This Year’s Festival
Everything you need to know about tickets, lines, food, films, and more at the 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festival

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival

The 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festival kicks off Thursday, September 24th with the Opening Gala screening of the probable Oscar contender Brooklyn, at the sumptuous 1800-seat Centre for the Performing Arts (see viff.org for details), offering a dizzying 16-day array of movies — 355 of them to be exact, from 70 countries across the globe.
Here’s some advice on how to navigate the madness.

Wondering what movie to choose? VIFF has conveniently sorted its many offerings into six major themes this year: Deep Time, First Nations, The Great Divide, VIFF Impact, Hidden Past, Digital Futures, and On Comedy.
As has long been the case, you can browse film listings by programme or category: Non-Fiction, Canadian Images, BC Spotlight, Dragons & Tigers, International Shorts, Altered States, and Cinema of Our Time.

VIFF Executive Director Jacqueline Dupuis’ 7-film Style series returns for a second year, as does the annual Spotlight on France series, which in 2015 features 12 outstanding Gallic features. Word out of VIFF has it that the five Romanian films are all excellent, and deserving of cinephile attention.
Wondering about how and where to buy tickets? There’s no one central box office; you can, however, purchase tickets anytime online at viff.org, and print out your tickets at home. Note that there is a service charge for online and phone orders: $1 per single ticket, up to $5 per order. Purchase of the annual $2 membership is required by law before ordering tickets.

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival tickets and passes

Tickets are also available at all of the theatre box offices.
The venues this year are, once again, The Centre for the Performing Arts, on Homer at Robson; Cineplex’s International Village, on Pender Street (the old Tinseltown); the eastside’s Rio Theatre, Commercial Drive at Broadway; SFU’s Goldcorp Theatre for the Arts, at 149 West Hastings, at Abbott; the Vancouver Playhouse, on Hamilton Street at Dunsmuir; The Cinematheque, on Howe; and the always inviting and oh-so-comfy Vancity Theatre, on Seymour (VIFF’s year-round venue!).

VIFF 2015 venue, The Centre for the Performing Arts

Please note: you can buy tickets for any Film Festival screening at any one of the seven Festival venues (during hours of operation). Tickets prices range from $10 for youth to $14 for adults, with Gala screenings priced at $22. There are a range of discount ticket packs, as well as passes that may be acquired, ranging in price from $180 for the Matinee Pass to $330 for the student or senior pass, and the $420 full 16-day Festival pass.
Patrons can find out how busy a screening is expected to be by going online, and checking tickets.viff.org.
Confused? Any questions you may have can be answered by e-mailing the Festival at info@viff.org, or by calling 604-683-FILM (3456), anytime between 10am and 7pm. Most questions can be answered, as well, simply by going online to viff.org/festival, or by taking a gander at the gorgeous, absolutely free booklet, VIFF – The Complete Guide, available almost everywhere across Metro Vancouver.
Once again this year, a VIFF app will be available on Apple’s App store, or through Google Play, for Android phones. Twitter will also prove a good resource for Festival information (@VIFFest).

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival, Vancity Theatre lineup

Wondering about all those lines? Each VIFF screening will have three: a pass-holder line (for those with passes hanging around their necks; you know who you are), a ticket-holders line (for those with tickets in hand), and a rush line. Standby tickets, for screenings that are sold out, go on sale 10 minutes before showtime, at full price (cash preferred). No matter which line you’re in, arriving at least 30 minutes early is a good idea, particularly if you’re picky about where you sit.
Wondering about food and drink? Though most VIFF venues serve standard cinema fare, there are a great many eateries nearby all of the venues where you might purchase a snack, or sit down to a meal. Outside food is officially not allowed, but VIFF-goers have been known to get away with it; be discreet and tidy (absolutely no food to be taken inside at The Centre, though).
Wondering about travel to, and around, the Festival? Transit is best, walking is second best. Parking is spotty, and expensive. All of the venues are located in the downtown core, so getting around shouldn’t prove too much of a challenge.

Room, Audience Award winner at the Toronto Film Festival, and certain Oscar contender

Wondering which movies will be back post-VIFF? Here are just a few VIFF movies that will return soon for regular runs: the Telluride / Toronto Film Festival stunner Room, certain Oscar nominee Brooklyn, I Saw The Light, Youth, Cannes Palme d’Or winner Dheepan, multiple Berlin Film Festival award winner 45 Years, Brazil’s 2015 Best Foreign Film Oscar nominee, The Second Mother, the film that took Cannes by storm Son of Saul, Meru, The Assassin, and doubtless many more. You might, of course, want to see these movies at VIFF because of the possibility of special guests, or the fun of catching something early — but you also might want to wait and see the films without the VIFF crowds.

Most years, VanRamblings presents a list of the 20 must-sees; this year we’ll depart from our usual practice by presenting the favourite, can’t miss films as identified by the Vancouver International Film Festival’s retired Festival Director (who has now taken on the title of Chief Programmer), Alan Franey.

“A central mandate of the Vancouver International Film Festival is to entertain, but more than that we want VIFF films to enlighten,” says Franey. “We’re different than any other film festival because of our commitment to the multi-cultural mosaic. VIFF patrons have told us over the years that they’re not interested in the big Hollywood films, or the presumed Oscar contenders, although we have programmed a handful of those often worthy films, titles that you’ll find in this year’s VIFF Guide.”

“VIFF is a community-based Festival serving the broadest cross-section of the 2.4 million of us who live across Metro Vancouver, in every ethnic community, from every part of the world. No other Canadian festival brings in 355 films, or more, from 70 different countries, with as strong an emphasis on the films of East Asia, and world cinema. Vancouver’s continued dedication to the dynamic of multi-cultural films has contributed greatly to VIFF’s ongoing success.”

Here they are then, Alan Franey’s favourite “under the radar” films screening at VIFF 2015 …

  • France’s The Measure of a Man. Vincent Lindon picked up the Best Actor award at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, in a film the VIFF guide describes as “Stéphane Brizé’s profoundly humanist and exceedingly timely film,” various critics stating that Measure is social drama similar to the work of the Dardennes Brothers (or even Ken Loach), a film that spares no harrowing detail in this working-class chronicle of an unemployed father trying to make ends meet, his unemployment benefits soon to run out, his income so reduced that there is not enough money to pay the mortgage, and maintain his wife and handicapped teenage son. In the film, Brizé seeks to evoke the resistance in the working class to the wave of factory closures and mass layoffs since the outbreak of the global financial crisis in 2008.

Also among Alan’s favourites, there’s New Zealand’s A Flickering Truth, Holland’s Schneider vs. Bax, Iceland’s Rams, Ireland’s One Million Dubliners, the U.S.A.’s 3 1/2 Minutes, 10 Bullets and Experimenter, Lithuania’s The Summer of Sengalié, Poland’s Body, Israel’s Tikkun (a multiple award winner), Brazil’s Absence (which Alan said knocked him out), and all three volumes of Portuguese director Miguel Gomes’ triptych, Arabian Nights (which Alan recommends not be watched back to back, but over a period of days … three screenings of each film in the series has been scheduled).
Commencing Thursday, September 24th, VanRamblings will provide daily coverage of the Festival, which will continue right on through until Festival’s end on Friday, October 9th, as has been the case in past years.

Now you know almost all there is to know about the 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festival, save actually sitting down to watch two dozen or more of the very best in world cinema, a process that offers always a necessary and invaluable window on our ever-changing world.
Happy VIFF-ing!

Film Festival Season Arrives Much to the Delight of Cinephiles

September film festivals, from Venice, Telluride and Toronto, to Vancouver and New York

The most glorious time of year for cinéastes across the globe occurs in the month of September, as five prestigious film festivals programme films that in the months to come will take the world by storm, set the stage for Oscar season, and for true diehard festival attendees — in evanescent moments of cinematic splendour — allow the screening of hundreds of films spanning the globe in origin, to be seen only within the rarified humanist atmosphere of the film festival, thereafter to vanish forevermore. Sigh.
Only 48 short hours ago, the 72nd annual Venice Film Festival kicked off with the out of competition world première screening of Baltasar Kormakur’s emotionally riveting mountain climbing thriller, Everest, providing bursts of anxiety and cliff-hanging 3D drama in the star-studded Palazzo del Cinema on the Lido. Fortunate for Vancouver’s anticipatory hometown cinephile crowd, a goodly number of the lauded Biennale di Venezia films will find their way to our calming and beatific shores, as the always glorious and transformative 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festival sets about to screen many of the Venice Film Festival award-winners, our very own illustrious Festival-by-sea commencing at 10am, Thursday, Sept. 24th, completing its run late, late on Friday, October 9th.

Earlier this week, the fine folks at the Vancouver International Film Festival announced that their Opening Gala film will be the smash Sundance hit, Brooklyn. One of this autumn’s most anticipated film releases, and a certain Best Picture Oscar nominee, with Saorise Ronan a lock for a Best Actress Oscar nod, in his The Playlist review of Brooklyn, Rodrigo Perez wrote …

Home is where the heart is, and love, longing, and grieving for the departed fragments of our lives we can never return to are lovingly realized in John Crowley’s exquisitely crafted and beautiful Brooklyn. Based on the novel by Irish author Colm Tóibín, and delicately adapted by Nick Hornby, Brooklyn tells the story of Eilis Lacey (Saoirse Ronan), an Irish immigrant who travels to America in the early 1950s for a more prosperous life.

With empathetic specificity, Brooklyn nails the emotional complexity of homesickness beyond mere melancholic nostalgia. It’s a despair for the absence of friends, family, and comforting familiarities that define our lives, but as well a lovesick longing for a past that no longer exists; a tearful goodbye for a moment in time now awash in memory. With a beautiful tenderness that never rings false, Crowley’s graceful film fills in every emotional contour with warmth and sensitivity.

A heartbreaking and poignant story about choices, country, commitments, sacrifice, and love, Brooklyn is a superb, luminous, and bittersweet portrayal of who we are, where we’ve come from, where we’re going, and the places we call home.

Brooklyn makes its Vancouver début at the Centre for the Performing Arts, at 7pm on Thursday, September 24th (the Festival has programmed two additional screenings of this must-see VIFF 2015 première).
Meanwhile, Curtis Woloschuk, Jack Vermee and the editorial members of VIFF’s publication team released this year’s glossy 108-page programming guide to the 2015 Festival, currently available at the Vancity Theatre, but soon to be available at libraries across Metro Vancouver, as well as bookstores, coffee shops, video stores and most any place that people gather. An impressive humanist document, The Complete Guide makes for a compelling read, as it sets about to provides a road map to the singularly most engaging arts event on the autumn calendar.

On Thursday, the Telluride Film Festival programming staff released the up until then secret list of future Oscar nominees set to screen in the southwestern mountainous climes of Miguel County, Colorado. The incomparable list of films that attendees will screen over the four-day Labour Day weekend, kicking off today, represent the very best in cinema that will be released in 2015 (note should be made that every Best Picture Oscar winner over the past 10 years made its début at Telluride).
Several of the films making their début at Telluride are also scheduled to screen at our very own VIFF, including certain Oscar contender, Son of Saul (which took Cannes by storm); Berlin Film Festival award-winner, 45 Years; Jafar Panahi’s Taxi; Lenny Abrahamson’s much-anticipated Room; and, Avishai Sivan’s shocking Festival winner, Tikkun, among many other prestigious award-winning international films of cinematic excellence.
Perhaps the most hotly anticipated film making it’s international début at Telluride is Sarah Gavron’s Suffragette, the film’s star — the luminous Carey Mulligan — a certain Best Actress Oscar contender. Suffragette arrives in Vancouver in late October.

Each year for the past 30 years and more, media from across the globe travel to the centre of the universe, as a calvacade of A-list Hollywood stars converge on Canada’s largest metropolitan centre for the Toronto Film Festival, where the movie industry is afforded the opportunity to present cinema’s (read: Hollywood’s) very best, where the prestige films on offer at TIFF will garner critical and, some months down the road, Oscar attention, where films reviewed in the hothouse atmosphere of Toronto to rapturous acclaim capture the public’s imagination (how could they not?), pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into Hollywood’s already overladen coffers, gifting Hollywood’s woebegotten producers with the Oscar hardware that says, “You done good Hollywood. We forgive you for the plethora of cynical CGI-infected comic book movies. Thank you. You’ve done yourself proud.”

53rd annual New York Film Festival

Last but certainly not least, there’s the heavily juried New York Film Festival, the 53rd version of which commences September 25th, the day after our very own festival by the sea, la-la-land’s always wonderful Vancouver International Film Festival, gets underway.
Can’t travel to New York for NYFF53? Not to worry. Although it drives VIFF print traffic mavens Kathy Evans and Selina Crammond absolutely bonkers, a goodly number of NYFF53’s finest also screen in Vancouver (Kathy and Selina on the phone with New York hourly to ensure the one and only “print” of the film makes it to Vancouver following the New York screening).
In 2015, New York and Vancouver share Miguel Gomes’s monumental yet light-footed magnum opus, Arabian Nights, Volumes 1, 2 & 3; Cannes Best Director winner Hou Hsiao-hsien’s, The Assassin; Brooklyn, Saoirse Ronan’s vibrantly alive emigré epic; Cemetery of Splendour, the wondrous new film by Palme d’Or winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul; Experimenter, Michael Almreyda’s portrait of Stanley Milgram (Peter Sarsgaard), the social scientist whose 1961 “obedience study” reflected back on the Holocaust and anticipated Abu Ghraib.
The Forbidden Room, Guy Maddin’s insane and phantasmagorical magnum opus; In the Shadow of Women, the exquisite new film by the great Philippe Garrel, who takes a close look at infidelity, and the divergent ways in which it’s experienced and understood by men and women; The Lobster, absurdist Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos’ acclaimed Cannes Jury Prize winner; and The Measure of a Man, Stéphane Brizé’s powerful and troubling new film, which earned Vincent Lindon the Best Actor prize at Cannes.
Mountains May Depart, Jia Zhangke’s newest epic, spanning three decades in the lives of the film’s increasingly estranged characters, from the dawn of China’s capitalist explosion to the near future; My Golden Days, Arnaud Desplechin’s triptych exploration of first love; Right Now, Wrong Then, Hong Sangsoo’s wry comedy of manners, laced with heavy drinking & regret; and, The Treasure, Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu’s magical modern-day fable, which Variety called, “a deadpan gem.”
Count ’em. Fifteen of the New York Film Festival’s 30 heavily juried films will screen in Vancouver, virtually simultaneously with the Big Apple.

Film festivals offer a window on our world, and an intimate exploration of the lives of folks just like us, who reside in every far flung country across our globe. The Vancouver Film Festival: 16 days, 70 countries, 355 films.

2015 Vancouver International Film Festival

Tickets (and passes) are on sale now for the 34th annual Vancouver International Film Festival at the Vancity Theatre, and soon at these listed locations. When I dropped by the Vancity on Thursday to pick up my hot-off-the-press copy of VIFF’s wonderfully gorgeous and expansive The Complete Guide (it’s free folks — pick up a copy, and schedule a dozen films, or three) ticket sales were brisk. A heartening sight to see, indeed.
Today’s Festival column constitutes the first of many such columns that will focus on the Vancouver International Film Festival. Commencing September 24th, VanRamblings will take a 17-day break from coverage of the federal election, VIFF winning out over Stephen Harper, Tom Mulcair and Justin Trudeau. Last year, VanRamblings covered Vancouver’s municipal election, and in consequence our usual VIFF coverage suffered — not this year!