Saturday, March 7, 2015

2015 Tribeca Film Festival (World Narrative Competition)



The diverse group of filmmakers contending in this year’s World Narrative Competition reflects the best of the best of international cinema. Their films offer fascinating stories set in exotic locales such as Iceland, Costa Rica, South Africa, and Denmark as well as ones taking place in our own backyard, New York City. Take a look at the program below: 


The Adderall Diaries
Directed and written by Pamela Romanowsky
(USA)—World Premiere

Elliott (James Franco), a once-successful novelist inflicted with writer’s block and an Adderall addiction strives to escape his problems by delving into the world of a high-profile murder case. Amber Heard, Ed Harris, and Cynthia Nixon co-star in this adaptation of Elliott's best-selling memoir.


Bridgend
Directed by Jeppe Rønde, co-written by Jeppe Rønde, Torben Bech, and Peter Asmussen
(Denmark)—North American Premiere

Sara (Hannah Murray) and her dad arrive in a town haunted by a spate of teenage suicides. When she falls in love with Jamie (Josh O’Connor), she becomes prey to the depression that threatens to engulf them all. Jeppe Ronde's debut is based on the real-life Welsh county borough of Bridgend, which has recorded at least 79 suicides since 2007.




Dixieland
Directed and written by Hank Bedford
(USA)—World Premiere

In the hot lazy days of a Mississippi summer two star-crossed lovers, a recently released ex-con (Chris Zylka) and an aspiring stripper (Riley Keough), become trapped in a downward spiral of crime and obsessive love, as they try to ditch their small town lives. Featuring an impressive performance by Faith Hill.


Franny
Directed and written by Andrew Renzi
(USA)—World Premiere

Richard Gere delivers a bravura performance as the title character, a rich eccentric who worms his way into the lives of a deceased friend’s young daughter (Dakota Fanning) and her new husband (Theo James). The narrative feature debut of writer-director Andrew Renzi, Franny is a warm and winsome drama about the pangs of the past, and the families we choose.


Meadowland
Directed by Reed Morano, written by Chris Rossi
(USA)—World Premiere

Sarah and Phil’s son goes missing, shattering their life together and forcing each to find their own way to cope. Cinematographer-turned-director Reed Morano presents a masterfully crafted contemplation on a relationship strained to the breaking point. Olivia Wilde and Luke Wilson capture the unraveling emotions with remarkable power, alongside Kevin Corrigan, John Leguizamo, Elizabeth Moss, Giovanni Ribisi, Juno Temple, and Merritt Wever.


Men Go to Battle
Directed and written by Zachary Treitz, co-written by Kate Lyn Sheil
(USA)—World Premiere.

Kentucky, 1861. Francis and Henry Mellon depend on each other to keep their unkempt estate afloat as winter encroaches. After Francis takes a casual fight too far, Henry ventures off in the night, leaving each of them to struggle through the wartime on their own.


Necktie Youth
Directed and written by Sibs Shongwe-La Mer
(Netherlands, South Africa)—North American Premiere

Jabz and September are two twenty-something suburbanites drifting through a day of drugs, sex, and philosophizing in their privileged Johannesburg neighborhood, ill-equipped to handle a tragedy that has interrupted the hollowness of their daily lives. Using rich black and white photography, Sibs Shongwe-La Mer paints a raw, unique portrait of self-obsessed youth facing adulthood in an increasingly divided city. In Afrikaans, English, isiZulu with subtitles.  


The Survivalist
Directed and written by Stephen Fingleton
(Northern Ireland, UK)—World Premiere

Self-preservation takes on a new level of meaning in this organic post-apocalyptic drama, where the only way to get food is to farm it. A man is threatened when two starving women stumble across his cabin and demand to stay. Each new mouth to feed strains the limits of what the farm can produce and diminishes their chance for survival.


Sworn Virgin (Vergine Giurata)
Directed and written by Laura Bispuri, co-written by Francesca Manieri
(Albania, Germany, Italy, Kosovo, Switzerland)—North American Premiere

As a young woman living within the confines of a Northern Albanian village, Hana longs to escape the shackles of womanhood, and live her life as a man. To do so she must take an oath to eternally remain a virgin. Years later, as Mark, she leaves home for the first time to confront a new set of circumstances, leading her to contemplate the possibility of undoing her vow. In Albanian, Italian with subtitles.


Viaje
Directed and written by Paz Fábrega
(Costa Rica)—World Premiere

After meeting at a party, Luciana and Pedro spark up a spontaneous rendezvous when Luciana accompanies Pedro to a national forest on a work trip. Eschewing the fraudulent nature of traditional relationships, the pair explores the beauty in the nature that surrounds them as they indulge in the passions of their encounter and navigate the various meanings of commitment.In Spanish with subtitles.


Virgin Mountain
Directed and written by Dagur Kári
(Iceland, Denmark)—North American Premiere

Fúsi is a mammoth of a man who at 43-years-old is still living at home with his mother. Shy and awkward, he hasn’t quite learned how to socialize with others, leaving him as an untouchable inexperienced virgin. That is until his family pushes him to join a dance class, where he meets the equally innocent but playful Sjöfn. In Icelandic with subtitles.


Wednesday 04:45 (Tetarti 04:45)
Directed and written by Alexis Alexiou
(Germany, Greece, Israel)—World Premiere

A life's work becomes a prison for jazz club owner Stelios when a shady Romanian gangster calls in his debts. This gripping, underworld drama is a parable on the perils of accumulated debt, and a depiction of the descent of a mostly decent man. Director Alexis Alexiou perfectly balances the complex emotions that drive a man to take the most drastic measures available. In Greek with subtitles.

No comments:

Post a Comment