Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Contradictory times for documentaries

Silverdocs attendees grapple with how to get films shown





SILVER SPRING, Md. -- Midway through a panel at the documentary festival Silverdocs, producer Julie Goldman offered a succinct thought.


"There are a lot of good movies being made," she said Friday. "And a lot of them aren't going to get a chance to play in theaters."


It was a sound bite so telling it could have been featured in one of the many top-notch docus screening here. As events over the past few days at this AFI/Discovery Channel festival -- which serves as a kind of ground zero for the documentary zeitgeist -- point up, these are strange and contradictory times for the form.


Creatively, the documentary is exploding, with new voices and approaches emerging almost every week. Yet it was hard not to feel a sense of foreboding at and around the host AFI theater during the weekend as docus continue on what is now nearly a two-year commercial dry spell.


Silverdocs, in its sixth year and with an expanded eight-day schedule that wraps Monday, allows for a certain kind of purist enthusiasm; it's where fans even flock to see sober films like the inner-city education meditation "Hard Times at Douglass High" and debate the virtues of vintage Maysles and Wiseman films.


With a concurrent docu confab, it's also where industry heavyweights quietly brainstorm -- where Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney strides the halls planning a distribution or legal strategy, where filmmakers like Spike Lee are feted with retrospectives and where players like former Miramax powerbroker Matthew Hiltzik tout their producing projects screening in the festival.


Delicately mixing premieres and selections from the current fest circuit, Silverdocs' two savvy toppers -- the polished fest director Patricia Finneran and the excitedly passionate programming director Sky Sitney -- seek a balance between the appeal of the proven and the buzz of the new.


That creative ferment was evident everywhere this weekend on this revamped patch of suburban downtown just outside Washington.


Daring subjects were tackled in films like Phie Ambo's "Mechanical Love," a creepy look at a Japanese lab that creates androids and robotic pets, which owes as much to "Blade Runner" as to D.A. Pennebaker. Striking storytelling turned the mundane sublime in Scott Hamilton Kennedy's "The Garden," a surprisingly suspenseful look at a South Central Los Angeles community garden.


Old forms were broken down and recombined into something original in Brett Rapkin and Eric Kesten's "Holy Land Hardball," about a grandiose effort to form a pro baseball league in the Middle East, which blended a rigorous investigation into organizational ineptitude with the aspirational charm of "Hoop Dreams."


Traditional approaches, meanwhile, continue to be deployed effectively. New York Times reporter Andrew Jacobs offered a poignant aging-survivor story in "Four Seasons Lodge." Megumi Sasaki gave festgoers a quirky art-collection docu in "Herb and Dorothy." And docus' classic problem of a moving target -- in this case, a subject who died during shooting -- made Kurt Kuenne's resoundingly well-received "Dear Zachary" that much more powerful.






(It's worth noting that the trend toward first-person documentaries in the Michael Moore and Morgan Spurlock vein seems to have faded, at least for now.)


The films chosen from the recent fest circuit also underscored docus' many new directions. Nanette Burstein's slick and funny high school exploration "American Teen" -- a sort of thinking person's "Laguna Beach" -- played strongly, and the re-enactment methods pioneered decades ago are on the way back if James Marsh's study of quixotic whimsy "Man on Wire" is any indication.


"What's interesting to me is how many more influences there now are in documentaries," Sitney said. "Stylistically, it's completely opening up."


Yet for all the creative energy, the air at the fest at times hung heavy with commercial questions.


Docu-friendly distributors like ThinkFilm are struggling, screens are crowded and audience appetite is low. There's a general feeling of anxiety over whether it's possible to ever get back to the period a few years when movies like "Super Size Me" and "March of the Penguins" proved docus could yield not just solid storytelling but also big business.


There's hope that the digital media will provide some salvation. But that hope is tempered with the awareness that the problem is complicated.


"There's a lot of doom and gloom, and right now no one knows the exact answer," Finneran said. "I happen to think it will be solved, and I don't think there will be only one answer."


In offering tips on how to market effectively, documentarian Sandi Dubowski, whose "Trembling Before God" was a surprise hit five years ago, had his own pithy take. "You have to be lucky the distributor you sign with is going to be around in a few years," he said.



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Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Kevin Spacey to teach at Oxford

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey has accepted a year-long position as a theater professor at Oxford University, the institution said in a posting on its Web site on Friday.


Spacey, 48, who won Academy Awards for supporting actor in "The Usual Suspects" and lead actor in "American Beauty, is following in the footsteps of fellow performers such as Patrick Stewart, star of "Star Trek: The Next Generation."


Others who have occupied the post of Oxford's Cameron Mackintosh Visiting Professor of Contemporary Theater at St. Catherine's College include composer Stephen Sondheim, playwright Alan Ayckbourn, actress Diana Rigg and lyricist Sir Tim Rice.


"It really is an honor for me to have been invited to follow such illustrious names and take up this role at Oxford," Spacey said in a statement. "The university is steeped in tradition and has a great heritage in the arts, and I look forward to working with the students and staff."


The college's master, Professor Roger Ainsworth, called Spacey "a truly international star" who "will bring an enormous wealth of talent and experience in both film and theater to bear on the role."


Spacey has been the artistic director of The Old Vic Theater Company in London since 2003.


He recently was seen in the HBO television movie "Recount," about the race for the U.S. presidency in 2000 between Al Gore and George W. Bush. He also recently starred in movie thriller "21," playing an MIT professor with a team of card-counting poker players who make millions in Las Vegas casinos.


Reuters/Nielsen



Thursday, 12 June 2008

Cleveland Orchestra extends contract of music director Welser-Moest

CLEVELAND - The Cleveland Orchestra has extended the contract of music director Franz Welser-Moest through the 2017-2018 season.

Board chairman Richard Bogomolny announced the extension Friday.

Welser-Moest, 47, was named the orchestra's seventh music director in 2002. In 2003 his initial five-year contract was extended to 2012.

"Cleveland is my symphonic home and I look forward to at least another decade of working with this wonderful orchestra and serving this extraordinary community," the Austrian conductor said in a statement.

"It is with heartfelt gratitude that I thank the trustees and supporters of this institution for your commitment to excellence and devotion to the art of orchestral music."

In September 2010, Welser-Moest will become general music director of the Vienna State Opera with an initial five-year term.

The orchestra also said it received a $5 million anonymous gift to expand its education programs, including a plan by the city's school district to bring every fifth grader to Severance Hall.










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Friday, 6 June 2008

The Feminists

The Feminists   
Artist: The Feminists

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Anything You Can Do   
 Anything You Can Do

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 10




 





Amy Winehouse tackles Bond theme with Pet Shop Boys - Daily Gossip

Thursday, 29 May 2008

Britney Spears continues to fuel pregnancy rumors

Britney SpearsBritney Spears is continuing to fuel rumors she’s expecting her third child after sneaking to health clinic for a secret check-up.


The troubled star, 26, paid a quick visit to her doctor before she was taken on vacation by her actor pal Mel Gibson.


A source said: “Despite daily workouts, she has put on a lot of weight in recent weeks.




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Friday, 23 May 2008

Jose Feliciano

Jose Feliciano   
Artist: Jose Feliciano

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Easy Listening
   Vocal
   Other
   



Discography:


Mis Mejores Canciones: 17 Super Exitos   
 Mis Mejores Canciones: 17 Super Exitos

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 17


A Tribute to the Beatles   
 A Tribute to the Beatles

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 15


Lo mejor de   
 Lo mejor de

   Year:    
Tracks: 22


I Grandi Successi Originali   
 I Grandi Successi Originali

   Year:    
Tracks: 24


Collection CD1   
 Collection CD1

   Year:    
Tracks: 22




Single of the most spectacular Latin-born performers of the pop geological epoch, singer/guitarist Jose Feliciano was born September 10, 1945 in Lares, Puerto Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act; the victim of congenital glaucoma, he was left permanently blind at giving birth. Five eld afterwards, he and his family unit stirred to Newly York City's Spanish Harlem flying field; there Feliciano began learnedness the accordion, later taking up the guitar and making his sir David Low populace approach into royal court at the Bronx's El Teatro Puerto Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act at the old age of ball club. While in high school he became a habitue of the Greenwich Village coffee browse racing circuit, eventually quitting school in 1962 in order to accept a perm fizgig in Detroit; a take with RCA followed a functioning at Freshly York's Gerde's Ethnic music City, and inside 2 old age he appeared at the Newport Jazz Festival. After bowing with the 1964 freshness person "Everybody Do the Fall into place," he issued his flamenco-flavored debut LP The Phonation and Guitar of Jose Feliciano, trailed too soon the adjacent class by The Fantastic Feliciano.


Distressed with the direction of his music following the release of 1966's A Bag Wax of Soul, Feliciano returned to his roots, releasing three straight Spanish-language LPs -- Sombras...Una Voz, Una Guitarra, Mas Exitos de Jose Feliciano and El Sentimiento, La Voz y La Guitarra de Jose Feliciano -- on RCA International, scaling on the Latin pop charts with the singles "La Copa Rota" and "Cupid Gitana." With 1968's Feliciano!, he scored a breakthrough hit with a soulful reading of the Doors' "Light My Fire" that launched him into the mainstream pop stratosphere; a smash subvention of Tommy Tucker's R&B chestnut "Hi Heel Sneakers" coagulated his success, and shortly Feliciano establish himself playing the national hymn during the 1968 World Series. His idiosyncratic Latin-jazz operation of the birdcall proved highly controversial, and disdain the yell of traditionalists and nationalists, his status as an emerging counterculture hero was secured, with a bingle of his rendition too comely a reach.


In 1969 Feliciano recorded three LPs -- Souled, Alive Alive-O, and Feliciano 10 to 23 -- and north Korean north Korean won a Grammy for Best Freshly Artist; however, he never once more equalled the success of "Lighting My Fire," and only the melodic theme song to the situation comedy Marx and the Man after achieved hit condition, edging into the Top 1 C singles chart in 1974. End-to-end the mid-seventies Feliciano remained an active playacting creative person, however, touring per annum and issuance a number of LPs in both English language and Spanish people, including 1973's Steve Cropper-produced Compartments; he as well appeared on the Joni Mitchell collide with "Release Serviceman in Genus Paris," and guested on a figure of boob tube organization series including Kung Fu and McMillan and Wife. In 1980 Feliciano was the number one home playacting artist signed to the newly Latin division of Detroit, fashioning his articulate debut with an eponymous crusade the pursuit class; his recorded production tapering off during the course of instruction of the decade, although he on occasion resurfaced with LPs including 1987's Tu Immenso Amor and 1989's I'm Never Gonna Alteration. A school day in East Harlem was renamed the Jose Feliciano Performing Humanities School in his accolade; in 1996, he likewise appeared in short in the get in at celluloid Fargo.






TV presenter Cotton gives up alcohol

TV presenter Cotton gives up alcohol



TV presenter Fearne Cotton fiber has revealed that she is straight off teetotal having presumption up alcohol three months ago.
In an interview with Company magazine, the 26-year-old said: "I wasn't a big drinker earlier so I plant it rather soft to give up wholly - and now I feel bloody brilliant."
But Cotton fiber told the powder store that she would non be changing what she eats.
"I've seen pop stars on truly strict diets and you can't help simply wonder how they do it. I rule it so sad. I'd kinda be happy and have a little bay window belly than be skinny and miserable," she said.