Lower East Side Film Festival: The Winners, The Parties and 2 Contenders

Expectations were high for this festival, now in its sixth year, which is why increased attention is being paid by the public and distributors. It doesn’t hurt that Ethan Hawke is one of the judges this year. Running from June 9th through the 16th, it showcased 5 features, 16 short films, and a special midnight […]

Read More

Film Review: “The Wailing”

  In its first scenes, this Korean occult-horror film sets up a familiar situation. Sergeant Jong-goo (Do Won Kwak), a cop in the village, is called in to investigate a murder. He is a devoted family man, married, with a young daughter, Hyo-jin (Kim Hwan-hee), he is devoted to. Jong-goo’s mother, watchful and protective, also […]

Read More

Review: “The Other Side”

More than halfway through this odd, fascinating “documentary,” the filmmaker abandons the people that had been its subjects – Mark and his girlfriend, Lisa, both meth and heroin addicts in rural Louisiana – and follows a group of their neighbors, a self-styled militia who are convinced President Obama will impose martial law, and are ready […]

Read More

Film Review: “Love and Friendship”

I’m not familiar with Jane Austen’s posthumously published novel, Lady Susan, retitled here as Love and Friendship, but the film is enjoyable enough for me to want to read it. Still, despite a powerhouse performance from Kate Beckinsale – as gorgeous as ever, especially in that purple gown – there is an “unfinished” quality to […]

Read More

Tribeca 2016: “Detour”

  British writer-director Christopher Smith knows his noir. He knows that when you watch his film, you will also be reminded of other movies when you see: a cop order the (anti)hero to open the trunk of his car: a hooker who is frantically packing to get out of Vegas before her pimp kills her, when there’s a […]

Read More

Tribeca 2016: “The Loner”

In The Loner, his first feature, director Daniel Grove follows the story of Behrouz, starting with his forced service as a child soldier – a “Basiji” – fighting for Iran in the war with Iraq. The story then advances to his life as an adult immigrant in the underworld of Los Angeles, specifically the Persian […]

Read More

A Noteworthy Debut at Tribeca 2016

Simon Dixon sees nothing wrong with starting at the top, and he makes a good case for that with his first film as a director, Tiger Raid, which had its world premiere at Tribeca on April 17th. I interviewed him and his producer, Gareth Evans, soon after the premiere, and it was obvious they were […]

Read More

Tribeca 2016: “Elvis and Nixon”

It is 1970 and Elvis is in deep funk. He sees the kids losing faith in America, defying the law, race- rioting in the streets. He just knows that drugs are the cause, and the country needs his help bad. He conceives of the idea of going undercover as a Federal Agent-at-Large, appointed by the president, […]

Read More

Tribeca 2016: A New Documentary Star

https://filmfestsalon.com/subscribe/ What will surely be one of the strongest contenders in the documentary category is “haveababy”, directed by Amanda Micheli. And, as it happens, it would never have been made if not for the very strong personal connection Amanda had with its subject, IVF, or in vitro fertilization. In our candid interview, she said that she […]

Read More

Tribeca 2016: “Mother”

  The film from Estonia this year is Mother, the third feature directed by Kadri Kousaar, and her first at Tribeca. A serio-comic mystery set in a small town, it stars Tiina Malberg as a woman caring for her comatose adult son, who was shot by an unknown assailant. I sat down with Kadri and […]

Read More