So, after much hemming and hawing, plotting and planning, I've got my schedule figured out for the 2015 Seattle International Film Festival, one of the great annual pleasures of living in this town. As happens every year, there are far more films I want to see than I have time, money, and energy to actually take in. And as usual, figuring out what to see and what to sacrifice was a big freaking deal. In the end, my usual tastes seem to have won out: there are, in this list, a preponderance of documentaries, a couple of French films, at least one major movie that already has wide distribution--but this way, I get to see it for half the usual box office price. Unusually, I find myself with 5 spare tickets. I figure I'll use them either to share with friends or to add films to my schedule as I hear chatter about what's good and what may suit my schedule. In the meanwhile, here's the roster as it currently stands. Almost all of these films were on the programmers' pick list, so I'm feeling pretty confident about the choices. Click the links for trailers and more information.
Fri, May 15
8:30 PM
Festival 3
Ciudad DelirioTravel! Dance! Salsa!
Wed, May 20
6:30 PM
Festival 3
VirtuosityDocumentary about a piano-playing competition
Sat, May 23
7:00 PM
Harvard Exit 1
The Passion of AugustineFrench comedy about a convent and music
Sun, May 24
9:00 PM
Festival 1
Animation4AdultsAnimation short film program
Mon, May 25
11:00 AM
Festival
Handmade with Love in FranceDocumentary about haute couture accessory makers
Wed, May 27
7:00 PM
Festival 1
The Price of FameFrench comedy based on a true story about two guys who try to ransom the corpse of Charlie Chaplin
Fri, May 29
7:00 PM
Festival 1
Mr. HolmesDrama/mystery about the elder years of Sherlock Holmes, starring Ian McKellan. This one is due for wide release but I couldn't wait to see it.
Sat, May 30
12:00 PM
Festival
The Primary InstinctStephen Tobolowsky concert film
Sun, May 31
1:30 PM
Pacific Place 11
Paper PlanesDocumentary about a paper airplane folding competition
5:00 PM
Festival 1
Very Semi-SeriousDocumentary about the cartoonists at The New Yorker
Tue, Jun 02
7:00 PM
Festival 1
Saved From the Flames - A Trip to the Moon and Other Trips Through Time and SpaceA showing of rare silent movies hosted by one of the foremost experts on the subject. This program's got a lot of good buzz about it and I'm excited to see it.
Sat, Jun 06
3:00 PM
Festival 2
In UteroDocumentay about how the prenatal experience helps shape who we are
7:00 PM
Pacific Place 11
The Great AloneDocumentary about the Iditarod
Sun, Jun 07
4:00 PM
Harvard Exit 1
The Muses of Bashevis SingerDocumentary about Isaac Bashevis Singer's Yiddish-to-English translators--all of whom were women
There are a ton of films I want to see that, for one reason or another, don't work with my schedule. I may try to find a way to fit them in anyway, including (but not limited to):
Phoenix: a post-Holocaust drama about a concentration camp survivor--already getting lots of good chatter
Beach Town: A "beach movie of the mind" directed by a former coworker of mine. Trying hard to figure out how I can see it given work hours and schedule conflicts
Slow West (which may get a limited release): A Kiwi-made historical film set in the American West
The Farewell Party: An Israeli comedy about assisted suicide
Love, Theft and Other Entanglements: A Palestinean dark comedy about being in the wrong place at the wrong time
Romeo is Bleeding: Documentary about a San Francisco poet trying to put on a contemporary version of Romeo and Juliet
Morbayassa: A Guinean move about a woman trying to escape Guinea for a better life
Liza the Fox Fairy: Comedy about a woman who loves all things Japan and who may be a figure out of Japanese myth
Chatty Catties: A comedy about cats who can talk telepathically to their people; looks incredibly silly
Don't Think I've Forgotten: A documentary about Cambodian rock'n'roll nearly lost in the haze of the Vietnam war.
The Glamour & The Squalor: A documentary about a Seattle DJ who helped to put grunge on the map
There are many others; these are the ones I can think of off the top of my head. Too many riches, not enough time (or money). ::sigh::
Films that the programmers were excited about but that I have no desire to see: The Wolfpack (documentary that may be too grim for me), Guidance (a comedy certain to get at least a limited release), Wet Bum, Eisenstein in Guanajuato (new Peter Greenaway film that the programmers were frothing over), Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (another comedy certain to get a wide release; programmers were fond of this one, too), Gemma Bovary, The Little Death, among others