Sunday, June 19, 2016

Film: P.S. Jerusalem, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016



http://www.filmlinc.org/films/ps-jerusalem/

Directed By Danae Elon

Danae Elon began filming her three young sons the moment she and her partner Philip chose to leave New York City and return to Jerusalem. The decision was prompted by the death of her father, leading Israeli intellectual and writer Amos Elon, whose dying wish was that Danae never go back. But her attachment to the place proves stronger, and on the journey there, Danae’s camera captures her boys growing up, asking endless questions and confronting the reality around them, while the place she once called “home” challenges her relationship with Philip and the future of her children. Through the prism of parenthood, P.S. Jerusalem exposes a complex and painful portrait of Jerusalem today.

“It’s a great film. It makes a compelling point about the difficulties of finding one’s place, identity, co-existence, and how fractured Jerusalem is. The coverage of settlements, home demolitions and confiscations, and ethnic displacement sends a strong message and highlights human-rights violations.” – Sari Bashi, Israel/Palestine director, Middle East and North Africa Division

Film: When Two Worlds Collide, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016



http://www.filmlinc.org/films/when-two-worlds-collide/

What happens when the thirst for power and riches takes priority over human life? The Amazon Rainforest, one of the planet’s most valuable natural resources, is being auctioned off, and its people condemned. Alberto Pizango, a young indigenous leader fighting to make the voices of indigenous Peruvians heard, stands up to politicians and is accused of conspiracy and inciting violence. Set against the backdrop of a global recession and climate crisis, When Two Worlds Collide, winner of a World Cinema Documentary special jury prize for Best Debut Feature at Sundance, reveals the human side to the battle of conflicting visions and political wills working to shape the future of the Amazon, and of an already debilitated global ecosystem.

Directed By Heidi Brandenburg, Matthew Orzel  2016 Peru Spanish with English subtitles 103 minutes

Film: The Crossing, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016



http://www.filmlinc.org/films/the-crossing/

A first-hand account of the perilous journey made by a group of Syrian refugees. Fleeing war and persecution; traversing land and sea on an old fishing boat manned by smugglers, the nail-biting trek leads to Europe, where the refugees learn that the hardest part still lies ahead. Each must battle to stay sane and create an identity among the maze of regulations and refugee hostels. Months of uncertainty and waiting and living in one center after another takes a toll on their spirits, as they confront what being a “refugee” means and try to rekindle the greatest thing they have lost—hope. The Crossing takes us along on one of the most dangerous journeys of our time, and shows the lengths to which people go to find safety and forge their own destiny.

Directed By George Kurian

Film: Almost Sunrise, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016



http://www.filmlinc.org/films/almost-sunrise/

Suicide among military veterans has reached epidemic proportions and is often the result of what mental-health professionals call “moral injury”—lasting wounds to the soul caused by participation in events that go against one’s deeply held sense of right and wrong. Two young veterans, haunted by their own combat experiences, take a 2,700-mile trek on foot across America seeking redemption, acceptance, and a way to close the moral chasm opened by war. This intimate, vérité film documents their journey and the healing lessons they learn along the way.

Directed By Michael Collins  2016 USA

Film: Sonita, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016

Winner of the 2016 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award for World Cinema Documentary, Sonita is about a determined and animated Afghan teen living in Tehran, who dreams of being a famous rapper. But in Iran, the government doesn’t let girls sing solo. And in her Afghan home she is expected to become a teenage bride. With her family keen to marry her off to receive her dowry, tradition bears down on Sonita. Armed with nothing but passion and persistence, she must turn obstacle into opportunity.
Courtesy of Women Make Movies - Closing Night in New York

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Film: Starless Dreams, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016

From the web site: http://www.filmlinc.org/films/starless-dreams/

Starless Dreams Trailer final from Siavash Jamali on Vimeo.

Murder, drug addiction, hijacking cars, running away from home: these are just a few of the crimes that the girls from the rehabilitation center for juvenile delinquents in Tehran have committed. After fighting the Iranian authorities for seven years, director Mehrdad Oskouei was finally granted permission to film an imprisoned population, otherwise hidden from the public eye. The result is an incredibly personal documentary about the dreams, nightmares, and hopes of the 18-year-olds in this all-female facility. Their individual stories show their desire to return to freedom and live normal lives, but also the fear of what is waiting for them on the outside. Starless Dreams won prizes at the Berlinale, Full Frame, and the True/False Film Fest.
  • Directed By Mehrdad Oskouei 
  •  
  • 2016
  •  
  • Iran
  •  
  • Farsi with English subtitles
  •  
  • 76 minutes

Film: The Uncondemned, Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2016

From the web site: http://www.filmlinc.org/films/the-uncondemned/




Both a real-life courtroom thriller and a moving human drama, The Uncondemned tells the gripping story of a group of young lawyers and activists who fought In Rwanda to have rape recognized as a war crime. Between the ages of 27 and 34, making up international criminal law as they went along, they probably had no business leading the first genocide trial in history, but there was no one else to do it. Even their decision to tie sexual violence into the charges—the case at hand involved a small-potatoes mayor who hadn’t raped anyone himself—was something no one was sure would stick. But when three women came forward to testify in the hopes of winning justice for the crimes committed against them, the result was a crucial trial that changed the world of criminal justice forever.

  • Directed By Michele MitchellNick Louvel 
  •  
  • 2015
  • USA/Congo/Netherlands/Rwanda
  •  
  • English, French, and Kinyarwanda with English subtitles
  •  
  • 82 minutes

https://youtu.be/TKGFWAT2WME

Radiant Vermin at 59E59 Theaters

RADIANT VERMIN

By Philip Ridley
Directed by David Mercatali
With Debra Baker, Scarlett Alice Johnson, and Sean Michael Verey

Ollie and Jill want to tell you about their dream home. Some of the things they did to get it, you might find... shocking. But they want you to know they did it all for their baby.

http://www.59e59.org/moreinfo.php?showid=245