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You are here: Home / Theater Buzz

Award-Winning MEDEAS Filmmaker Andrea Pallaoro at the Music Hall for a Q&A Opening Night

March 17, 2015 by Lamb L.

MEDEAS is an intimate portrait of a rural family’s inner lives and their relationship to a harsh and shifting landscape. Ennis, a stern, hard-working dairy farmer struggles to maintain control of his family and surrounding environment, while his wife, Christina, retreats into herself, progressively disconnecting from him and their five children. As tensions increase, each character must confront their yearnings and anxieties, culminating in a dangerous conflict between control and freedom, intimacy and alienation. A journey into the unpredictable boundaries of human behavior, MEDEAS explores the desperate lengths people are driven to by love and self-preservation.

The winner of the New Voices/New Visions Grand Jury Prize at the Palm Springs International Film Festival for MEDEAS , filmmaker Andrea Pallaoro also won the award for Best Director at the Marrakech International Film Festival and the Parajanov Prize for Best Visuals and Aesthetics at the Tbilisi International Film Festival. Additionally, Pallaoro won the UK-Italy Creative Industries Award for Best Innovative Budget at the Venice Film Festival.  Mr. Pallaoro will participate in a Q&A after the 7:30 PM screening at the Music Hall this Friday, March 20.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JzGhcZTN64w

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Filed Under: Music Hall 3, Q&A's

Actor-Writer-Director Pif on his Feature Film Debut THE MAFIA ONLY KILLS IN SUMMER

March 17, 2015 by Lamb L.

THE MAFIA ONLY KILLS IN SUMMER is a subversive, irreverent Italian film about Arturo, a young boy whose obsession with the Mafia’s casual presence in his city surpasses even his passion for Flora, the beautiful schoolmate who remains his main love interest until adulthood. The filmmaker uses Arturo’s unrequited love story as the vehicle to narrate the most tragic events in Italy’s recent history, starting with the Cosa Nostra’s criminal actions in Sicily in the ’70s, including their notorious murders of judges.

THE MAFIA ONLY KILLS IN SUMMER, which we will open at the Royal, Playhouse and Town Center on March 27, was directed, narrated and co-written by Pierfrancesco Diliberto, known as Pif, who also co-stars. He had this to say about his feature film debut:

“You know that feeling when you come across an old photo from the 1980s with a girl you were madly in love with? No matter how beautiful the girl, your eyes, or mine at least, were always drawn to a peculiar element: her shoulder pads. Girls wore horrible shoulder pads, because they were trendy at the time. And now I wonder: how come shoulder pads were such a big part of my life and I never said anything?

“So, I asked myself a similar question with regards to Palermo, the city where I was born and where I grew up. One day, I looked back and asked myself: how is it possible that in Palermo, the Mafia was so forcefully present in people’s lives and yet very few spoke out against it?

“Time makes you more lucid and more detached: you understand the absurd compromises you have to make in life. In the end, you pretend that everything is fine. Including wearing shoulder pads. It’s exhausting to try and stand out from the crowd. However bitter this may be, there and then, your life is easier if you put your head down.

“Thus, it’s sometimes better and easier to just be a child. Because children mimic their role models: the adults. And if adults don’t have any problems, neither do children. Problems start coming when, one day, children realize that the Mafia doesn’t kill only in summer.”

http://vimeo.com/109514848

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Filed Under: Playhouse 7, Royal, Town Center 5

THE HUNTING GROUND Q&A at the Claremont 5 Saturday Night

March 17, 2015 by Lamb L.

From the team behind The Invisible War, comes THE HUNTING GROUND, a startling exposé of rape crimes on U.S. campuses, institutional cover-ups and the brutal social toll on victims and their families. Weaving together verité footage and first-person testimonies, the film follows survivors as they pursue their education while fighting for justice – despite harsh retaliation, harassment and push-back at every level.

Kamilah Willingham and Occidental College professor and activist Caroline Heldman are two of the subjects of THE HUNTING GROUND and both will be participating in a Q&A after the 7:10 PM screening at the Claremont 5 on Saturday, March 21.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBNHGi36nlM

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Q&A's

Lankershim closed Sunday, 3-22-15 for CicLAvia; Use these alternate routes

March 17, 2015 by Lamb L.

CICLAVIA is coming to The Valley on Sunday, March 22 and Lankershim Blvd. in front of our theater will be closed until 4pm.

NOTE: To learn more about CicLAvia and how we’re participating, click here.

There are two alternate ways to enter our parking structure.

  1. From Vineland, head West on Weddington St., or
  2. From Magnolia, head North on Blakeslee, then go West on Weddington St.

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Filed Under: Around Town, NoHo 7

We’ve Partnered with CineLife, the Art House/Indie-Focused Mobile App

March 11, 2015 by Lamb L.

CineLife is a free mobile app that puts art house theaters and independent film first. We are pleased to be official CineLife Launch Partners!

Designed for the film enthusiast, CineLife provides up-to-date information wherever you are. You can easily see what movies are playing, watch trailers, check reviews, find show times, and purchase tickets all in one place. You can even use your Laemmle Premiere Card!

You’ll never miss out on news, promotions, and special events like Q&As at your favorite Laemmle Theatres. CineLife also provides the latest indie film news from respected leaders and blogs in the art house community.

Download the CineLife app for your iPhone today and favorite your local Laemmle Theatre… or all Laemmle Theatres!
Download CineLife

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Music Hall 3, News, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Royal, Theater Buzz, Town Center 5

Celebrate Joan Crawford’s Birthday at the NoHo 7 by Seeing “Possessed” & “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?” on the Big Screen!

March 10, 2015 by Lamb L.

Laemmle Theatres and FilmNoirBlonde.com are pleased to present a double feature on Monday, March 23, at Laemmle’s NoHo 7, to mark the birthday of a star from Hollywood’s Golden Age, Joan Crawford.

A gifted actress and the ultimate movie star, Joan Crawford found that by the mid-1940s, her career had stalled. She restarted it with the help of film noir, namely 1945’s “Mildred Pierce,” by director Michael Curtiz, for which she won the Best Actress Oscar. Whether she played a tough broad or a lady in distress, Crawford was especially well suited for the genre’s expressionistic intensity and she starred in many film-noir titles between 1945 and 1962.

On Monday, March 23, Laemmle’s NoHo 7 will pay tribute to her legacy with a special double bill from Warner Bros.: “Possessed” (1947, Curtis Bernhardt) and “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?” (1962, Robert Aldrich).

The program will start at 7:30 p.m, with “Possessed” and “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?”  at 9:55. Tickets are $11 each, $15 for the double feature. There will be a special birthday cake for Ms. Crawford’s fans and Warner Archive will provide select prizes.

Click here to purchase tickets for the double feature (cake included).
Click here to purchase tickets for POSSESSED only.
Click here to purchase tickets for WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE only.

Joining the party will be Jacqueline Fitzgerald, founder and editor of FilmNoirBlonde.com. Fitzgerald will introduce the movies.

In “Possessed” (also starring Van Heflin and Raymond Massey) Crawford gives a memorable performance as a woman who can’t get over a bad relationship. In “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?” she is Blanche Hudson, a once-glamorous Hollywood actress who lives with her demented sister (Bette Davis), a former child star.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qFYjkFCxiE

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Filed Under: NoHo 7

LOVE HUNTER Q&A’s this Weekend at the Music Hall

March 10, 2015 by Lamb L.

In the 1990’s, singer-songwriter Milan Mumin, the lead singer of the hugely influential Serbian rock band Love Hunters, electrified and gave voice to a generation of Serbians fighting an oppressive regime. Now, after ten years, we find Milan in New York City, driving a taxi (long shifts and loopy fares), cobbling together funds for a recording session of his dream album—to be recorded and released in America. When his bass guitar player suddenly quits, he finds a talented but prickly replacement, and a romantic spark, in a free-spirited guitarist named Kim. Just as rehearsals start picking up steam, Milan’s longtime Serbian girlfriend Lela arrives with very different plans for their future—she wants him to come home to Serbia where his reputation will let him be anything he wants—but Milan is determined to make his recording in America, at any cost.

We are pleased to open LOVE HUNTER, which the New York Times recently called “one of the most refreshing New York independent features since Ramin Bahrani’s ‘Man Push Cart,” this Friday at the Music Hall Theater. Filmmakers Nemanja Bala and Brane Bala, along with actress Jelena Stupljanin, will participate in Q&A’s after the 7:30 PM screenings Friday through Sunday, March 13, 14 and 15.

http://vimeo.com/111320885

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Filed Under: Music Hall 3, Q&A's

Twitch Film Interview: “Benoît Jacquot on 3 HEARTS and Being a Women’s Director”

March 10, 2015 by Lamb L.

A touching and tense drama about destiny, connections, and passion, 3 HEARTS presents a headily romantic look at a classic love triangle. One night in provincial France, Marc (Benoît Poelvoorde) meets Sylvie (Charlotte Gainsbourg) after missing his train back to Paris. Instantly and intensely drawn to one another, they wander through the streets until morning in rare, almost choreographed, harmony. A thwarted plan for a second meeting sends each in a separate direction – Sylvie reunites with her ex and leaves France; Marc falls in love and marries. What neither knows is that Marc’s new bride is Sylvie’s sister, Sophie (Chiara Mastroianni). Upon Sylvie’s return to France, the spark between her and Marc is reignited in ways that will forever alter the relationships between sister to sister and husband to wife.

We are pleased to open 3 HEARTS on Friday, March 20 at our Royal, Playhouse and Town Center theaters and on March 27 at the Claremont 5. Twitch Film just published this interview with the filmmaker, Benoît Jacquot: 

Benoit Jacquot started his career as Marguerite Duras’ assistant director in the 70s and went on to direct many films with strong female characters. In doing so, he catapulted the careers of many actresses into leading ladies of French cinema, among them Judith Godreche (Ridicule), Virginie Ledoyen (The Beach, 8 Women), Isild Le Besco (Sade, A tout de suite), Sandrine Kiberlain (Seventh Heaven, Apres Vous) . Lately, he has been keeping himself busy with two films out right now: 3 Hearts opening night film for this year’s Rendez-vous with French Cinema and his Diary of Chambermaid shown in competition at this year’s Berlinale, continuing the international success of Marie Antoinette-intrigue Farewell My Queen (starring Léa Seydoux, Diane Kruger and Ledoyen) a couple years back.

Jacquot was in town for Rendez-vous and I had a chance to ask him about having a reputation as go-to director for women’s roles, his remake of Diary of Chambermaid and his upcoming adaptation of Don Delillo’s The Body Artist (Son Corps).

TwitchFilm: You’ve been making films since the 70s and worked with many of the France’s leading actresses. In fact, you’ve made some of these leading ladies where they are right now. What is it that these actresses interests you more than actors?

Benoit Jacquot: Well because they are women. (laughs) And as far as I know, I’m not one of them.

When you start a project, do you always start with certain actresses in mind first then build a story around them?

Benoît Jacquot

 

For most of the time, the key or the determining factor in what process I’m going to use depends on my desire to work with certain actresses or actors. They usually fall into two categories: there are actresses who are already very well known – Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Huppert, for example, but also actresses who are young and just starting out and who hope to evolve to their level. It’s either people who are very new or actresses who are very accomplished. But it also varies depending on economics and financing of a particular project, because they may not be necessarily the same.

What prompted you to make 3 HEARTS in particular? Obviously you haven’t worked with Charlotte Gainsbourg or Chiara Mastroiani before. Did you have those actresses in mind?

For me, the first thing that happened here, even before sketching what the silhouette of the film would be, was my wish to work with Charlotte Gainsbourg. The second factor was after making several period films, I wanted to make something contemporary. And of course the third which may contradict the first, in this particular film, the central character to be a male. Because number of my previous films it was the female characters in the center.

Did you have Benoit Poelvoorde in the role of Marc?

Not exactly. Benoit Poelvoorde was somebody I had in mind for a while but really didn’t know in advance that Marc would be the role that I would have him in.

So characters are specifically assigned. It’s not like Gainsbourg would play Sophie, not Sylvie and Mastroianni would  play Sylvie and not Sophie.

No. But I once suggested Charlotte play both of the characters.

Hmm, that’s interesting.

We discussed it but we quickly saw that it’s something that wouldn’t work in a realistic setting.

In the film, it is Mme. Berger, played by Catherine Deneuve, knows that there is something going on between Sylvie and Marc. How does she know their secret?

I know Catherine pretty well and despite her image of this ultra sophisticated woman, she also has a very animal quality in her. I think what was interesting was to have her play this role of almost an animal mother. In a sense that she intrinsically knows that danger is approaching, as if she smells it. That’s really how she plays it, with the way she throws glances and in intonation of her voice.

You seem very busy with two films coming out. As you mentioned, you’ve done period piece before this and you do something small, but now you are doing another period piece, DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID. I am wondering about the process of choosing your next project. Do you do project after project as it comes your way or do you always prepare for your next project while working on the current one?

More recently it seems the case that I am always planning my next film while working on the current one. Sometimes it happens that I have all these different ideas and I throw out many ideas and some of them will float and some won’t. Curiously, at this particular time, all of them seem to float. So it seems like these are all happening at the same time. Sometimes it happens and things don’t work. It happened once or twice and I had to stop everything in the middle of it.

Does it mean you are at your prime as an artist, creatively?

I don’t tend to think of any time frame as the peak of my career or anything because what I’m trying to do with my career is to continue making films that responds to some inner requirement that I have.

Why DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID, since it was made twice before?

I think that in this case, you have a book that was adapted by two very great filmmakers (Jean Renoir and Luis Buñuel). What I thought was interesting was why this book had motivated two filmmakers of that stature to make it into a film. So I went back to the novel to see. Also those two films are very different from each other, so making a third film which would be invariably different also, I had no pressure of embarrassing myself. (laughs)

Did you see Léa Seydoux as the main character from the beginning?

Yes. There is not a scene in Diary of a Chambermaid that she isn’t in.

Can you tell me about the adaptation of Don Delillo’s THE BODY ARTIST?

It was actually the suggestion of producer, Paolo Branco (who also produced David Cronenberg’s Delillo adaptation, Cosmopolis) that it would be a good book to adapt. I have an idea on how to approach it and I have the script written already. But at this point I don’t know when it will happen. I think perhaps 2016.

If it happens would it be an English language production?

No. Half and half perhaps.

I mean, obviously there’s going to be another strong female role.

Yes. And most likely I will make it with an unknown actress. But as much as possible, I’d prefer a well known actor for the male character.

So hopefully another star making role perhaps?

I hope for the actress, yes.

What about THE BODY ARTIST attracted you?

I think what attracted me is an idea of this woman who is a very strong character, who is able to bring back a dead man from her past. And I think in many ways, this is a reflection of what cinema is. It’s that evocation of a phantom, a ghost.

Dustin Chang is a freelance writer. His musings and opinions on the world can be found at www.dustinchang.com 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B27hHQRP8yA

 

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Featured Films, Playhouse 7, Royal, Town Center 5

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