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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
March
'My Fair Lady,' a Cape Town
Carmen and Valentino headline 'Ebertfest'
Craig Chamberlain,
News Editor
217-333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
3/20/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| "Friends"
star David Schwimmer stars in “Duane Hopwood”
(2005), “a wise and realistic portrait”
of alcoholism and one of the best independent films
of last year, according to Ebert. The title character,
played by Schwimmer, is an alcoholic who loves his
wife, played by Janeane Garofalo, and children, but
is losing everything because of the disease. Writer-director
Matt Mulhern will be a guest. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— A fair lady, a “really, really bad” Santa, a Carmen
from Cape Town, and Rudolph Valentino – they’re all part
of the eighth annual Roger Ebert’s
Overlooked Film Festival, coming April 26-30 to Champaign-Urbana.
Also part of the festival: a global thriller from writer-director David
Mamet, “Friends” star David Schwimmer in a portrayal of
an alcoholic, and a family matinee about two brothers attempting to
dispose of money that fell from the sky.
Marni Nixon, the off-screen singing voice of Audrey Hepburn in “My
Fair Lady,” will be on hand when a restored 70mm print of the
film is shown to open the festival. As one of Hollywood’s most
gifted unseen musical stars, Nixon also sang for Natalie Wood in “West
Side Story” and Deborah Kerr in “The King and I.”
Also tentatively scheduled among the festival’s guests are Oscar
nominees Amy Adams and John Malkovich.
Twelve screenings are scheduled for “Ebertfest” over five
days at the 1,500-seat Virginia Theater, a 1920s-era Champaign movie
palace, with other events at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Jon Higgins |
| “Man
Push Cart” (2005), a 2006 entry in the Sundance
Film Festival, is about the life of a former Pakistani
rock star now running a bagel and coffee wagon in
Manhattan. Writer-director Ramin Bahrani and the film’s
star, Ahmad Razvi, will appear as guests. |
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Ebert is a Pulitzer-Prize-winning
critic for the Chicago Sun-Times and co-hosts “Ebert & Roeper
and the Movies,” a weekly televised movie-review program. He also
is a 1964 Illinois journalism graduate and U. of I. adjunct journalism
professor.
The festival is a special event of the College
of Communications at Illinois.
Ebert selects films for the festival that he feels have been overlooked
in some way, either by critics, distributors or audiences, or because
they come from overlooked genres or formats, such as 70mm.
Guests connected with the selected films are invited to attend, and
many appear on stage with Ebert for informal discussions after the screenings.
This year’s schedule of films, with the current lineup of guests:
Wednesday,
April 26
7:30 p.m. – “My Fair Lady” (1964), a Lerner and Loewe
musical starring Hepburn and Rex Harrison. “What distinguishes
‘My Fair Lady’ is that it actually says something,”
according to Ebert. “It says it in a film of pointed words, unforgettable
music and glorious images, but it says it.” Nixon will be a guest
on stage after the screening.
Thursday,
April 27
1 p.m. – “Man Push Cart” (2005), a 2006 entry in the
Sundance Film Festival, about the life of a former Pakistani rock star
now running a bagel and coffee wagon in Manhattan. Writer-director Ramin
Bahrani and the film’s star, Ahmad Razvi, will appear as guests.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| “The
Eagle” (1925), this year’s silent film,
is a comedy and romance starring Valentino. The screening
of the restored print will be accompanied by the three-man
Alloy Orchestra of Cambridge, Mass., making its fifth
straight festival appearance. |
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4 p.m. – “Duane
Hopwood” (2005), “a wise and realistic portrait” of
alcoholism and one of the best independent films of last year, according
to Ebert. The title character, played by Schwimmer, is an alcoholic
who loves his wife and children, but is losing everything because of
the disease. Writer-director Matt Mulhern will be a guest.
8:30 p.m. – “Spartan” (2004), a global thriller written
and directed by Mamet, who is “not only one of the world’s
leading playwrights, but a film director of great distinction,”
Ebert says. The plot, which deals with the kidnapping of a president’s
daughter, is a “a sly, deceptive exercise in the gradual approximation
of the truth.” Michael Barker, co-president of Sony Pictures Classics,
will be on stage afterward to discuss the Warner Bros. film.
Friday, April 28
1 p.m. – “Somebodies” (2006), a human comedy about
the life, friends and eccentric relatives of an African-American college
student in Georgia. The film was an entry in the Sundance Film Festival
and was co-produced by Nate Kohn, the director of Ebertbest, with his
wife, Pam. Both will be guests, along with writer-director Hadjii and
one of the stars, Kaira Whitehead.
4 p.m. – “The Eagle” (1925), this year’s silent
film, a comedy and romance starring Valentino. The screening of the
restored print will be accompanied by the three-man Alloy Orchestra
of Cambridge, Mass., making its fifth straight festival appearance.
8 p.m. – “Ripley’s
Game” (2002), a thriller in which Tom Ripley, played by Malkovich,
persuades a man to commit murder for a large sum. It is the best of
all the films inspired by novelist Patricia Highsmith’s amoral
villain, says Ebert, and yet it was never released theatrically in the
U.S. Malkovich, a two-time Oscar nominee, is tentatively scheduled to
appear as a guest, along with Russell Smith, the film’s executive
producer.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Deon Robertze |
| "U-Carmen
e-Khayelitsha” (2005), a version of Bizet’s
opera “Carmen,” was filmed near Cape Town,
South Africa, and is sung in Xhosa. The musical was
the Golden Bear Winner at the 2005 Berlin International
Film Festival and an official selection at the Cannes
and Toronto film festivals. Pauline Malefane, above,
the South African diva who plays Carmen, will be a
guest, along with director Mark Dornford-May. |
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Saturday,
April 29
Noon – “Millions” (2004), “a family film of
limitless imagination and surprising joy,” according to Ebert,
who had it on his 10-best list for 2005. The plot follows two English
brothers as they deal with a windfall of British currency that seemed
to fall from the sky, later found to be robbery loot. One boy is a realist,
and the other seeks advice from imaginary saints. The film is this year’s
free family matinee.
3 p.m. – “Claire Dolan” (1998), about a Manhattan
prostitute “whose knowledge of men encompasses everything except
how to trust them and find happiness with them,” Ebert says. The
film’s director, Lodge Kerrigan, whose films often explore lives
on the margin, will be a guest.
7:30 p.m. – “Junebug” (2005), a film about family
secrets and eccentricities, and small towns, starring Adams in an Oscar-nominated
role. “Of all the performances I saw last year, hers was the most
heart-warming,” Ebert says. Adams is tentatively scheduled to
appear, along with director Phil Morrison, co-star Scott Wilson, and
distributor Michael Barker.
10:30 p.m. – “Bad Santa” (2003), starring Billy Bob
Thornton as an alcoholic department store Santa who uses his job as
a cover for robberies. The R-rated version of the film shown in theaters
was a “demented, twisted, unreasonably funny work,” according
to Ebert. Terry Zwigoff, the director, will be bringing his own print
of what he calls “Really, Really Bad Santa,” with material
not even included in the unrated DVD.
Sunday,
April 30
Noon – “U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha” (2005), a version
of Bizet’s opera “Carmen” filmed near Cape Town, South
Africa, and sung in Xhosa. The musical was the Golden Bear Winner at
the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival and an official selection
at the Cannes and Toronto film festivals. Pauline Malefane, the South
African diva who plays Carmen, will be a guest, along with director
Mark Dornford-May.
Other festival events, including panel discussions held on the U. of
I. campus, will be announced soon. Updates on the festival will be posted
on the festival Web site.
Tickets for individual films will go on sale April 3, at $9 each, through
the theater box office; phone 217-356-9063; fax: 217-356-5729.
The 1,000 festival passes, covering all 12 screenings, were sold out
on Jan. 20, marking the second year in a row that passes were sold out
before the films were announced.
Those seeking additional information and updates on films, guests and
festival events should contact either Mary
Susan Britt, at 217-244-0552, or festival director Nate
Kohn, at 706-542-4972.
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