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For the fourth year in a row, a week of new French films
will be presented at the City of Lights, City of Angels Film Festival,
April 25-29,2000 at the Director's Guild Theater is Los Angeles,
California. This year the festival will showcase six films including
Venus Beauty Institute (Venus Beaute), the
1999 winner of four Cesar Awards (France's equivalent of the Oscars)
including the award for Best Film, the critically acclaimed Claire
Denis film Beau
Travail, and a period film entitled Time
Regained based on French novelist Marcel Proust's
"Remembrance of Things Past."
The five day event, which screens one film each evening
plus an additional film on Saturday afternoon, is produced and
funded by the Franco-American Cultural Fund, a collaborative which
includes the Director's Guild of America, the Motion Picture Association
of America (a Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles-based office which
lobbies on behalf of the distribution of U.S. films worldwide),
SACEM (France's Society of Authors, Composers and Editors), and
the Writer's Guild of America West. The films will be co-presented
by France's L'ARP (Auteurs, Realisaeurs, Producteurs - a group
of directors, producers and screenwriters), the French Film and
Television Office of the French Consulate in Los Angeles, and
the UCLA Film and Television Archive. The film program and its
notes have been compiled by David Pendelton of the UCLA Film and
Television Archive.
"We are very proud to participate in this biggest of French
cultural events in Los Angeles which gives us an opportunity to
present to the American public and American film industry professionals,
French talent and artistic development," said Francois Truffart
of the French Film and Television Office. "For a long time, New
York was the main gate for the screening of European and French
movies, and now with the advent of 60 new multiplex screens in
the Los Angeles area for independent and foreign films, such as
the Laemmle and Landmark Theaters, our films have a chance for
more visibility."
Venus Beauty Institute, the opening night film,
was directed and written by Tonie Marshall and stars French film
favorite Nathalie Baye as a pretty middle-aged beautician who
discovers that her one-night stands become meaningless when she
is pursued by a man whom she ignores but who pays attention to
her anyway.
1999 Madeleine is the first in a series of 10 films
from director-writer Laurent Bouhnik which will focus on 10 characters,
one at a time, in a set group of people. The protagonist in this
film is a young seamstress who looks for love in the personal
ads. The style is spare, reflecting the emptiness of modern suburban
life, and the humor subtle and black. There is a cameo performance
by French film great Anouk Aimee at the girl's estranged troubled
mother.
Claire Denis' Beau
Travail, is a mood movie with virtually no narrative,
set at a legionnaire's outpost overlooking the quiet aquamarine
sea on the coast of Djibouti. The story, a tense triangle between
a senior officer, a young sergeant and a new recruit, is loosely
on the Herman Melville novel "Billy Budd." The film
has met with critical success at the Toronto International Film
Festival, the New York Film Festival, and this year's Sundance
Film Festival.
Of
Women and Magic (La Chambre des Magiciennes)
is a Claude Miller
film which focuses on a graduate student who's been suffering
six months of headaches and her experiences in a hospital room
with two other women. This dark comedy about suffering and redemption
won the FIPRESCI (Federation of Film Critics) Award at this year's
Berlin International
Film Festival.
A Monkey's Tale (Le Chateau des Singes),
an animated feature film from director Jean-Francois Laguionie
focuses on a universe inhabited by two races of monkey.
Time Regained
(Le Temps Retrouve) is director Raul Ruiz' interpretation
of Proust's story about a writer, part of Parisian high society,
who confronts his own failing health as World War I will forever
change the world. The film stars Emmanuelle Beart, Catherine Deneuve,
John Malkovich and Vincent Perez.
French directors Laurent Bouhnik, Claire Denis, Tonie Marshall
and Claude Miller will be present following the screenings of
their films for a question and answer session moderated by an
American filmmaker.
With the exception of The Monkey's Tale,
which is presented in its English language version, all the films
will be in French with English subtitles.
This
event, often sold-out ahead of time, drew an audience of over
4,000 industry executives and film fans last year.
The Director's Guild of America is located at 7920 Sunset
Blvd. at the corner of Hayworth Avenue just west of Fairfax. Parking
is free. Ticket information is available at (310)206-FILM.
Contributor/festival
specialist
Wendy Carrel
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