Program Archive: The 1998 New Directors / New Films Festival
March 27 - April 12, 1998

The 1998 New Directors/New Films festival is sponsored by Interview Magazine, A | X Armani Exchange, National Geographic Traveler and Julien J. Studley, Inc




SHERMAN ALEXIE'S SMOKE SIGNALS

WESTERN

GOSHOGAOKA

UNDER THE SKIN

LUCKY STAR

Two stories of unlikely friendships open the 27th edition of New Directors/New Films. The first is the engaging SHERMAN ALEXIE'S SMOKE SIGNALS (89 minutes, USA, 1997), directed by 28-year-old Chris Eyre. Adapted by the celebrated Spokane/Coeur d'Alene writer Sherman Alexie from his book The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven and directed by Eyre, a Cheyenne/ Arapaho from Oregon by way of NYU's film school, SMOKE SIGNALS is the first dramatic feature film made by Native Americans. The film, which opens on a crystalline morning on the expansive Coeur d'Alene reservation, is as much about the joy of storytelling as it is about a very good story. This comedy of an unlikely friendship between Thomas Builds-the-Fire (Evan Adams), the bard, and the angry Victor (Adam Beach), whose father just passed away, may be as universal as the drama of estranged fathers and sons, but the idea of home has never been inflected in such a spirited and meaningful way. The film,voted best film by both audiences and filmmakers at the Sundance Film Festival, also stars Gary Farmer, Tantoo Cardinal, and Suzy Song who was the voice of Disney's Pocahontas. A Miramax Films Release.
27A. Friday, March 27 at 6 pm
28B. Saturday, March 28 at 4 pm

Also on opening night is WESTERN (121 minutes, France, 1997), a comic and gentle look at two misfits trying to make it in a foreign land. Set in Brittany, or "western France," -- its rugged locations beautifully shot in CinemaScope -- this contemporary road movie follows Paco, a Spaniard who is very successful with women, and Nino, a humble Russian immigrant who would like to be successful with one woman in particular. Their relationship begins when Paco (Sergi Lopez) picks up Nino (Sacha Bourdo), who is hitchhiking, and Nino takes off with the car and all of Paco's possessions. Not a very auspicious beginning for a lasting friendship, but through twists of fate and circumstances, including the introduction of Marinette (Elisabeth Vitali), a local gift shop operator, Paco and Nino learn to rely on each other. An affectionate portrait of small town life in France, WESTERN, which won the 1997 Jury Prize in Cannes, is a delightful and accomplished work by Manuel Poirier. A New Yorker Films Release.
27B. Friday, March 27 at 9 pm
28A. Saturday, March 28 at 12:30 pm

The renowned American photographer and visual artist Sharon Lockhart makes her debut with GOSHOGAOKA (63 minutes, Japan/USA, 1997), a work that underscores the idea that some of the most exciting films are those that appear the simplest. GOSHOGAOKA is a mesmerizing piece that refreshes the eye and ear as it liberates the mind. Not far outside Tokyo, there is Goshogaoka, a junior high school with a girls' basketball team. The team practices. Lockhart, whose works were included in the most recent Whitney Biennial exhibition, attended practice and recorded straight-on some of the routines that constitute the workout. GOSHOGAOKA may be read as pure ethnography, detached and calibrated, but that would be missing just about everything in this most pleasurable film. Although there is no narrative, there is surprise, expectation, and even the creation of a new entity: out of the synchronous behavior of adolescent girls comes the group. The film invites speculation on the notion of communal achievement, the melancholy of transience, and the beautiful sound of footfalls.
28C. Friday, March 27 at 6 pm in Titus Two
29D. Saturday, March 28 at 6:30 pm in Titus Two

Carine Adler's much-talked-about film UNDER THE SKIN (82 minutes, UK, 1997) features a career- making performance by actress Samantha Morton as Iris, an androgynous 19-year-old, trying desperately to get through a savage rite of passage, triggered by her mother's death. In her journey to get under her own skin, our fierce heroine goes for broke in her search for sexual and emotional selfhood and dives into an increasingly surreal hell of humiliating one-night- stands, alienating friends and family. Morton's dramatic courage is daunting; Adler's assured direction never wimps out; and Barry Ackroyd (Ken Loach's frequent cinematographer) strongly catches the instability and hot colors of Iris's underworld. The film also stars Rita Tushingham, cannily cast as Iris's mother and once the star of coming-of-age movies, such as A TASTE OF HONEY, and Clare Rushbrook (SECRETS AND LIES) as the favorite daughter Rose. An Arrow Entertainment Release. Preceded by Betsy Kalin's ROOF (22 minutes, USA, 1997). In a suburb where the less said, the better an unlikely attachment is formed.
28D. Saturday, March 28 at 6:30 pm
29B. Sunday, March 29 at 3 pm



THE PERFECT CIRCLE

BUFFALO 66

PI

THIRTEEN

That some see more clearly than others, literally and emotionally, is a preoccupation of Ricardo Franco's finely paced, nuanced film THE LUCKY STAR (105 minutes, Spain, 1997). Thus the unexpected takes quiet turns to deepen and shade love among an unlikely trio. Based on true events, this resonant retelling of passion and devotion is anchored by Antonio Resines as the gentle, soft-spoken butcher Rafa, whose warmth and tenderness transform the bittersweet relationship of Marina, Maribel Verdu's almost lost lady, and her lover, Daniel (Jordi Molla), to create a new family and get the chance to search for their lucky star. Preceded by Debra Solomon's animated view of the current rage for family life, EVERYBODY'S PREGNANT (6 minutes, USA, 1997).
28E. Saturday, March 28 at 9:30 pm
29A. Sunday, March 29 at NOON

Cosmos, the man, is an engaging and philosophical Greek immigrant taxi driver who takes us on a highly entertaining and often hilarious trip through inner- city Montreal, and, COSMOS (100 minutes, Canada, 1996), the film, is a modern mosaic of the urban jungle, an ensemble piece by six talented Canadian filmmakers, who seamlessly interweave their six separate stories, with the taxi driver as the connecting thread. Both comedy and nightmares abound in these tales of the young and disenchanted. The film was shot in brilliant black and white by Andre Turpin, who also directed one of the sequences, along with Manon Briand, Marie-Julie Dallaire, Denis Villeneuve, Jennifer Alleyn, and Arto Paragamian.
29C. Sunday, March 29 at 6 pm
30B. Sunday, March 30 at 9 pm

From one of Iran's foremost filmmakers, Dariush Mehrjui (THE COW, THE CYCLE, PARI), comes LEILA (102 minutes, 1997), a deeply affecting film about a wealthy but childless couple who married for love and who are now confronted by a mother-in-law desperate for an heir. This intricate, penetrating look at contemporary Iranian society throws love and commitment into tricky, potentially devastating competition. The film features a stunning performance by Leila Hatami as the wife and daughter-in-law, set against both families -- strengthening a mesmerizing yet revealing, elegant yet provoking, portrayal of the clash of tradition and modern marriage, of manipulation and the power of love.
29E. Sunday, March 29 at 8:30 pm
30A. Monday, March 30 at 6 pm

Surely one of the most audacious French filmmakers to have recently emerged, François Ozon is in New Directors/New Films with two works. In the harrowing SEE THE SEA (52 minutes, France, 1997), a young backpacker, after getting permission to pitch her tent on a family's lawn, gradually finds a way to move into the house and into the life of her host. In A SUMMER DRESS (16 minutes, France, 1996), a gaily colored, lightweight dress is the connection between the poles of a young man's sexual experiences during a brief vacation. In each film, Ozon masterfully counterpoints drop-dead gorgeous seaside locations and the carefree, holiday atmosphere with the dark, nefarious currents swirling around his characters. Both films are Zeitgeist Films Releases.
31A. Tuesday, March 31 at 6 pm
2B. Thursday, April 2 at 9 pm



SECRETS OF THE HEART

SOMERSAULT IN A COFFIN

JUNK MAIL

MOJO

In her debut feature, THE FIRST TIME (89 minutes, Germany, 1997), director Connie Walther deftly exposes the magic and trauma of being a teenager in love. Fili is fifteen, and in love with Johnny Depp. Granted, they've never met, but she's convinced that when they do, he will know that she's the girl for him. So she composes a series of audio letters to him that have yet to be sent and has imaginary conversations with him (in his various film personae) in the privacy of her room, while she saves up money for a plane ticket to Los Angeles. Meanwhile, the talk among all her friends is of boys and sex. Convinced that Johnny is only interested in girls with some experience, Fili is in a hurry to lose her virginity -- but with whom? THE FIRST TIME is preceded by Laura Bennett's DOUBLE D (12 minutes, USA, 1997), a film about a girl who is still growing, but her parents are falling apart, so she turns to a role model who can really help her.
31B. Tuesday, March 31 at 8:30 pm
1A. Wednesday, April 1 at 6 pm

Ademir Kenovic's Bosnia/France co-production, THE PERFECT CIRCLE (110 minutes, 1997), his third feature, was filmed under exceptionally difficult conditions during the assault on Sarajevo. The film captures the atmosphere of the devastated city and the spirit of the people who chose to remain. Two orphaned boys, fleeing war and ethnic cleansing, find refuge in the apartment of a poet whose family has fled Sarajevo. The three of them, with the addition of a dog wounded by snipers, develop a relationship based on love, friendship and self- discovery which helps them cope with the harshness of daily life in the ravaged city. THE PERFECT CIRCLE is a testimony to the courage and resilience of ordinary people caught in the middle of a war not of their making.Milos Radovic's absurdist comedy, MY COUNTRY (10 minutes, Yugoslavia, 1997), about some recent tragic events in modern Serbia, precedes THE PERFECT CIRCLE.
1B. Wednesday, April 1 at 9 pm
2A. Thursday, April 2 at 6 pm

The dynamic debut feature BUFFALO '66 (110 minutes, USA, 1998) is a dazzlingly innovative film directed, co-written, and composed by actor Vincent Gallo. He also stars as Billy, a grunge who has just been released from prison. After some difficulty finding a bathroom, Billy kidnaps Layla, a kewpie-doll tap dancer, played with all the pubescent allure of Christina Ricci. Layla is forced to pretend to Billy's parents that she is his wife whom he met on CIA business. A dinner with Billy's Buffalo Bills-obsessed mother (Anjelica Huston) and his frustrated singer of a father (Ben Gazzara) is a scene not to be forgotten. Nor is Ricci's performance as Layla, who takes increasing delight in her role in this coerced fantasy. Gallo is a talent to be reckoned with -- he plays brilliantly with depth, cutting and color and even evokes Ozu (as the three letters of the license plate of Layla's car). A Lions Gate Films Release.
3A. Friday, April 3 at 6 pm
4B. Saturday, April 4 at 3 pm

PI, (85 minutes, USA, 1998), the directorial debut of writer/director Darren Aronofsky, tracks math whiz Max, obsessed with divining the meaning of life through numbers while living like a hermit in Chinatown. He's rigged up his own version of a supercomputer and is on the verge of discovering a method to the madness that is the stock market. His solitary quest is intruded upon by two distinctly different types: heavies in Wall Street suits aiming to co-opt this discovery, and a group of Hasidim in a frantic quest to break the code of their religious texts. Pulled in two extremely different directions, Max becomes paranoid in his attempt to make order out of chaos. Aronofsky has created a mind-tripping sci-fi thriller for the new millennium with stunning black and white photography shot on reversal film and with dead-on performances by Sean Gullette as Max, and Ben Shenkman as an orthodox sect member. A Live Entertainment Release.
3B. Friday, April 3 at 9 pm
4A. Saturday, April 4 at 12:30 pm

In David Williams' poignant second feature, THIRTEEN (87 minutes, USA, 1997), love and pain and owning the right car are key to Nina's growing up in Virginia. Nina's mother takes the viewer along on a wryly funny and deeply touching journey of her remarkable daughter, from her thirteenth through her fourteenth birthdays, amid a lively, though fatherless, extended family. Confused yet extraordinarily mature, lonely but much loved, Nina determines her goals. She sees no reason why everyone around town shouldn't pay her fair wages for the odd jobs she carries out so oddly, or why she shouldn't run away for a while to figure out her feelings for her mother. The follow-up to Williams' moving 1989 film LILLIAN, THIRTEEN is a film of gentle wonder and delight, with superb performances by Wilhemena Dickens and Lillian Folley. Preceded by Stephen Leeds' GET THAT NUMBER, (22 minutes, USA, 1997), a film about a wannabe cool dude who learns how not to pick up chicks.
4C. Saturday, April 4 at 6 pm
5B. Sunday, April 5 at 3 pm



MOMENT OF IMPACT

KITCHEN PARTY

TWENTYFOURSEVEN

In the Academy Award-nominated (for Best Foreign Film from Spain) SECRETS OF THE HEART (105 minutes, Spain/France/Portugal, 1997), nine-year-old Javi goes off to spend a vacation at his family's country house in northern Spain. There, he becomes fascinated by a locked room from which, he comes to believe, one can hear the voices of the dead. The truth about that room will be but one of the secrets that will unravel for Javi on that vacation, as he discovers that "growing up" means learning to accept how mysterious so much of the world really is. Directed by Montxo Armendáriz (TASIO, HISTORIAS DEL KRONEN), SECRETS is a delicate, subtle work that captures the terror and pleasure of childhood's end while creating a vivid, revealing portrait of the waning years of the Franco era.
4D. Saturday, April 4 at 9 pm
5A. Sunday, April 5 at NOON

By turns darkly comic and unsettling, writer/director Dervis Zaim (ROCK AROUND THE MOSQUE, 1993) focuses his camera on a rarely seen side of Turkish life with SOMERSAULT IN A COFFIN (76 minutes, Turkey, 1997). Mahsun, unemployed and homeless, steals cars to keep warm in winter and sponges off his friends for food. A sympathetic fisherman tries to help by paying Mahsun's tab at a local café, and arranging a job for him there. But Mahsun's attention soon drifts to Rumelihisar Castle, a tourist attraction of this very old neighborhood, and the fifty peacocks that occupy the grounds. These beautiful birds symbolize prosperity, fertility, and protection from evil. To Mahsun they symbolize all that and more. Shot in a cinema verité style, SOMERSAULT is a compassionate portrait of a man who just can't get it right, and a gritty look at those left behind when the economy booms.
5C. Sunday, April 5 at 6 pm
6C. Monday, April 6 at 9 pm

Beto Brant's auspicious fast-moving feature debut BELLY UP (90 minutes, Brazil, 1997) is an imaginative mixture of genres which never stops surprising -- and amusing -- by deftly turning cliches upside down. Set in a seedy Brazil-Paraguay border town, the protagonists are murderers, or murderers-in- waiting, killing time (pun intended) in a sleazy bar while waiting for their next assignment. To motivate a young thief on his way up the assassin's ladder, his mentor (in flashbacks) tells him the saga of Mucio, a legendary Paraguayan hit-man. The characters of these cowboy-gangsters are so impressively drawn that even the ruthless Mucio ends up with an all-too-human face. Brant's entertaining and dazzling film introduces a filmmaker whose insights display an assured and original talent.
5D. Sunday, April 5 at 9 pm
6B. Monday, April 6 at 9 pm

The accomplished, promising feature film debut by documentary filmmaker Dominique Cabrera, THE OTHER SHORE (89 minutes, France, 1997), is infused with Cabrera's understanding of the importance of place, roots and the complexity with which political reality manifests itself in the lives of individuals. In Paris, during the summer of 1994, a small-time industrialist, Georges Montero, played with understated intensity by the beloved French actor Claude Brasseur, arrives for the first time in France for a cataract operation to be performed by an assimilated Arab surgeon who has cut himself off from his Algerian roots. Montero is an Algerian-born Frenchman (a pied noir) who chose to remain in Algeria after its 1962 independence. The meeting between these two men becomes a catalyst for the unsolved problems in their individual lives and their connection to the larger political questions. The film will be preceded by SILENCE (11 minutes, UK, 1997), an inventive animated film by Orly Yadin and Sylvie Bringas that tells the true story of one of the few child survivors of the Holocaust.
7A. Tuesday, April 7 at 6 pm
8B. Wednesday, April 8 at 8:30 pm

JUNK MAIL (83 minutes, Norway, 1997) is the story of Roy, the postman from Hell. Pity his unfortunate clients: if their mail isn't read, then it's covered in his favorite food -- spaghetti. One day, Roy, true to character, takes advantage of keys left dangling, and his life suddenly changes. But it is not clear whether this is for the better or for the much worse. First time filmmaker Pal Sletaune, whose hilarious short film EATING OUT was in the 1994 New York Film Festival, makes a neat comedy in Oslo, that famously polite city, about people behaving not at all well. Full of cool narrative surprises, JUNK MAIL is suspenseful and hilarious, romantic and mysterious, and proof positive that even slobs can become heroes. A Lions Gate Films Release.
7B. Tuesday, April 7 at 9 pm
8A. Wednesday, April 8 at 8 pm in Titus Two

London, summer of 1958, and British kids hurl themselves into the glittering culture of rock 'n' roll. In Jez Butterworth's MOJO (90 minutes, UK, 1997), the place to be is Ezra's Atlantic, where handsome Silver Johnny's nightly performances have won him a throng of adoring teenagers. Yet perhaps Johnny and Ezra's are getting too successful. The fledgling British pop scene is soon transformed into a brutal battleground for rival power brokers. Butterworth's acclaimed play has been brilliantly brought to the screen by the playwright himself. His film version, which stars Ian Hart and Ricky Tomlinson and features a remarkable performance by playwright Harold Pinter, maintains the theatrical sense of the original, with each new encounter charged with an almost mythic quality.
9A. Thursday, April 9 at 6 pm
11D. Saturday, April 11 at 9 pm

On April Fool's Day, 1989, a man crossing the road between garage sales was struck by a car, causing traumatic brain injury that left him unable to perform even the simplest physical tasks. That man was filmmaker Julia Loktev's father, Leonid; eight years later, she went home to Colorado to document -- and discover -- the lives of her parents since the accident in her documentary MOMENT OF IMPACT (117 minutes, USA, 1998), a film which garnered her the Best Director (documentary category) prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. A profoundly moving experience, MOMENT OF IMPACT powerfully captures the anger, the frustration, as well as the love and occasional glimmers of hope. Moreover, the film blossoms into a remarkable portrait of Larisa Loktev -- wife, mother, and former program analyst, now dedicated to her husband's constant care while struggling for some semblance of a life of her own.
9B. Thursday, April 9 at 9 pm
12A. Sunday, April 12 at NOON

From Canada comes Gary Burns' delightfully cynical second feature, KITCHEN PARTY (87 minutes, 1997). Scott's mother vacuums her living room rug into patterns, which is just a symptom of her totally obsessive-compulsive personality. Scott's brother lives in the basement and will socialize with no one. Scott is leaving for college and decides to throw an unauthorized party for a few friends while his parents are visiting elsewhere, but any disruption of the decor means he will be forced to go to the local university instead of an out-of-town campus where he can escape from his oppressive, dysfunctional home. Frightening and frightfully funny, Burns (THE SUBURBINATOR) takes audiences into his disquieting, nightmarish vision of middle-class suburbia.
10A. Friday, April 10 at 6 pm
12B. Sunday, April 12 at 3 pm

Another talented Briton to debut stateside is the raw-and-edgy shorts filmmaker Shane Meadows (WHERE'S THE MONEY, RONNIE?, NYFF 1997) with his first feature film TWENTYFOURSEVEN (96 minutes, UK, 1997). In a performance equal to his portrayal of the chauffeur in MONA LISA, Bob Hoskins plays a middle-aged visionary, a nice bloke who sets out to resurrect his old boxing club to provide a safe haven for a group of wayward lads in a working-class English town. His diaries chart their often comic efforts to build not only their physical prowess but also to regain their lost identities in a dysfunctional landscape of brutish fathers, casual drugs, and a general sense of futility. TWENTYFOURSEVEN is a work of impressive cinematic intelligence, breathtakingly shot in remarkably beautiful black and white. An October Films Release.
10B. Friday, April 10 at 9 pm
11A. Saturday, April 11 at 1 pm

While the Cold War heated the world on Wednesday, July 7, 1961, 101 babies were born and added to the population of the Russian metropolis of Leningrad. Filmmaker Viktor Kossakovsky, a noted cameraman who works mostly in Germany, was one of these. At 35 he returned to his native city, since rechristened its pre-Soviet name St. Petersburg, to find his contemporaries. In WEDNESDAY (93 minutes, Russia/Germany/UK/Finland, 1997), he documents meetings, some abrupt and some welcoming, and films men and women of all personalities, sizes, and strata. What emerges from these very human encounters is a richly revealing, affectionate and invaluable mosaic of a society whose basic coordinates were suddenly reversed. Preceding WEDNESDAY is Loren-Paul Caplin's HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN EIGHT MINUTES (8 minutes, USA, 1998). On a Manhattan street corner, recorded history is acted out, perhaps every day, in under 10 minutes.
11B. Saturday, April 11 at 3:30 pm
12C. Sunday, April 12 at 6 pm

This "ode to youth" as director Lin Cheng-sheng calls his film, MURMUR OF YOUTH (106 minutes, Taiwan, 1997), beautifully evokes the feelings and overwhelming confusion which characterize puberty. Two girls, both named Mei- li ("Pretty"), come from vastly different backgrounds. Fate brings them together at their first "adult" job as cashiers in the box office of a movie theater, where they gradually learn to confide in each other. Director Lin (A DRIFTING LIFE) visualizes with great subtlety and sensitivity each girl in relation to her family and the shifting tones in the development of their friendship. One of the main themes of Taiwanese cinema, the interaction of family, society and individual that seems to steer fate, is given a particularly incisive and original treatment by a director of unique vision.
11C. Saturday, April 11 at 6 pm
12D. Sunday, April 12 at 8:30 pm