Tuesday, August 20, 2013

News: 20th Austin Film Festival Announces First Wave of Films & Retrospectives; Jonathan Demme and Vince Gilligan To Make Appearances

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20th Austin Film Festival Announces First Wave of Films & Retrospectives; Jonathan Demme and Vince Gilligan To Make Appearances
Aug 20th 2013, 20:45, by Nigel M Smith

The 2013 Austin Film Festival had announced its first slate of titles, in addition to retrospectives hosted by the likes of Jonathan Demme, Vince Gilligan and others.

On the film front, Alexander Payne's latest feature, "Nebraska," will screen, as will several world premieres, including the dark comedy "Coffee, Kill Boss," the horror "Innocence," and "Speak Now," a romantic dramedy that was shot in just three days.

Retrospective highlights include "Out of the Vault: Jonathan Demme," which will include a screening of his latest work in progress "Fear of Falling." "Breaking Bad" creator Vince Gilligan will present the classic crime thriller "The French Connection," "Iron Man 3" director will be on hand to show Morrie Ryskind's screwball comedy "My Man Godfrey," while Payne's long-time collaborator Jim Taylor will host a screening of Payne's 1999's satire "Election."

AFF's executive director, Barbara Morgan said, "As the Festival that honors the writer, we are thrilled to continue a program that boasts strong narrative work, eclectic world premieres and retrospectives presented by some of the industry's top filmmakers during this momentous 20th Anniversary."

Below are the first wave of films to be announced, with synopses courtesy of the Austin Film Festival. The 20th Austin Film Festival runs October 24th-31st.

Nebraska, written by Bob Nelson and directed by Alexander Payne. After receiving a sweepstakes letter in the mail, a cantankerous father (Bruce Dern) thinks he's struck it rich, and wrangles his son (Will Forte) into taking a road trip to claim the fortune. Shot in black and white across four states, Nebraska tells the stories of family life in the heartland of America. 

Coffee, Kill Boss (World Premiere), the first feature film from director Nathan Marshall, follows ten executives who secretly meet to sell off their company but instead become victims of an outrageous murder scheme. The script, written by Sigurd Ueland -- a 2010 Austin Film Festival Screenplay Competition Semifinalist -- is a dark comic romp through the halls of corporate America. 

Innocence (World Premiere), written and directed by Hilary Brougher (director, Stephanie Daley), produced by Christine Vachone (Bluebird, Boys Don't Cry), follows a young woman who discovers that her elite private school harbors a dark secret. This suspenseful horror film, based on Jane Medelsohn's 2000 novel, explores themes of loss, love, and the supernatural. Innocence will screen as a part of AFF's Dark Matters Category. 

The Odd Way Home (World Premiere), directed by Rajeev Nirmalakhandan, co-written by Nirmalakhandan and Jason Ronstadt, and produced by Peter Touche. The film follows Maya (Rumer Willis), the product of a neglected childhood, and Duncan (Chris Marquette), a slave to his obsessions of order and pattern, as they journey through the American Southwest, finding happiness in the unlikeliest of places. 

Siren (North American Premiere), Television writer Jesse Peyronel's feature script directorial debut. Starring Vinessa Shaw (3:10 to Yuma, The Hills Have Eyes) and Rob Kazinsky (Pacific Rim), Siren is a dark fairytale about a woman with an unusual curse: an alluring scent. She is irresistible to every man she meets, but when confronted with a man immune to her power, she is presented with the possibility of real love. 

Speak Now (World Premiere), directed by Noah Harald and written by Erin Cardillo, Speak Now is a Romantic Dramedy following high school friends reuniting for a wedding. Old offenses and newly mounting scandal plunge the group back into a pool of high-school drama. Entirely improvised from an outline and character studies, the whole feature was shot in three days. Speak Now will screen as part of Austin Film Festival's new WRITE/REC Series, focusing on the best in low-budget storytelling. 

Take Away One (World Premiere), the first feature film written and directed by seasoned tv editor William Lorton (Face Off, Bridezillas), this documentary film follows Lorton's aunt, Mary Baratta- Lorton, and her mysterious unsolved murder. Mary, in her short 38 years, rose from obscurity to become one of the most famous teachers in the US. Personally inept with math, yet placed as a UC Berkeley student-teacher in one of the roughest inner-city classrooms of the San Francisco Bay Area – Mary's intuitive strategy of teaching arithmetic with hands-on manipulative materials quickly blossomed into a nation-wide career as an author, lecturer, and movement leader. 

Mom, Dad, I'm Muslim, (US Premiere), a documentary film, written and directed by Anat Tel Mendelovich and distributed by Seventh Art Releasing, examines the trials of May Davidovich, a 22- year old devout Muslim searching for equilibrium between her belief in Islam and her parents' devotion to Judaism. The religious conflict between May and her parents makes for a fascinating case study on the balance between pursuing spiritual fulfillment and inherent family expectations. 

Sombras de Azul, (World Premiere), the Spanish-language feature film debut of local Austin writer/director, Kelly Daniela Norris, who re-imagines her own experience of bereavement following the death of her brother by weaving together real memory and personal reflection through the sights and sounds of Cuba.

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