Showing posts with label Restorations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Restorations. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 February 2022

It's Raining Film Festivals in Sydney - A Quick Guide and a couple of recommendations

Charles Chaplin and Oona O'Neill

Hope springs eternal in the movie trade and some people are still putting on a show directed at cognoscenti and specialist audiences.

A quick guide to what's happening:

Antenna Documentary Film Festival is currently screening and finishes next Saturday 12th. Various venues.

Two films to recommend among the more than 40 programs;

The Real Charlie Chaplin (Peter Middleton & James Spinney, UK/USA, 2021)


Ablaze

Ablaze (Alec Morgan & Tiriki Onus, Australia, 2021)

Alec Morgan,renowned documentarist and a many times contributor to the NFSA's Oral History collection, and Tiriki Onus (with a big assist from producer Tom Zubrycki and others) have assembled an extraordinary story about the life (and film-making career) of Bill Onus, a leader of Australia's First Nations people. Packed house at the first screening. One more to go on Saturday 12th February

Europa! Europa! is currently screening at the Randwick Ritz. Finishes on February 27. (Also in Melbourne)

Hit the link above to explore the 43 titles that will be screened.


Naked

The program includes a new 4K restoration by the BFI of Mike Leigh's searing Naked which won the Best Director and Best Actor prizes at Cannes in 1993. Also screening (once only) are a doco on the formidable British producer Jeremy Thomas The Storms of Jeremy Thomas, a re-edited version of Matteo Garrone's 2008 film Gomorrah You have already missed a feature documentary on Luis Bunuel.


Mardi Gras Film Festival starts on 17 February and runs to 3 March at various locations. Hard to work out the exact number of titles, probably well over fifty, and the festival also has online screenings which can be accessed from anywhere in Australia.

Distant Journey

Jewish Film Festival from 2 March to 3 April at the Randwick Ritz and also in Melbourne. Over seventy programs including shorts, docos and three nights of standup comedy. Among the highlights is Distant Journey directed by Alfred Radok in Czechoslovakia in 1949 which will have the benefit of an introduction by long time Film Alert contributor Barrie Pattison. Described as "One of the first films to confront the horrors of the Holocaust remains one of the most powerful. Suffused with the visceral dread of a waking nightmare, Distant Journey draws from director and Holocaust survivor Alfréd Radok’s own experiences to tell the story of a Czechoslovak Jewish family—including a young doctor and her gentile husband—whose lives are torn apart by the terrors of the Nazi occupation, leading them to a grim fight for survival in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. Blending expressionistic cinematography with archival documentary footage to potent effect, this harrowing vision of human atrocity was banned in its home country for more than forty years, only to remerge as urgent and impactful as ever."


The Light Ahead

Also screening is The Light Ahead made in 1939 by the prolific Edgar G Ulmer. It is described thus: "Made on the eve of WWII, this 1939 Yiddish film classic by Edgar G. Ulmer—adapted from a Mendele Mokher Sforim tale—is a sweetly romantic part-comedy, part-satire. David Opatoshu and Helen Beverley, stars from New York’s Artef and Yiddish Art Theaters, are magnetising as two passionate but impoverished lovers who dream of a better life in Odessa. They want to get married, and they dream of a future that transcends their own limitations.

"Offering a meditation on hope, love, and the Jewish faith, The Light Ahead also reflects a painful awareness of the events that will soon overcome European Jewry".

Maigret

Then there is the big one, the biggest exhibition of new French Cinema outside France, an Australia-wide extravaganza the
French Film Festival. Title numbers are a little down on previous years. There are only forty one films all told. Among the possible pleasures Gerard Depardieu as Maigret and a restored copy (possibly the same one which has screened quite frequently over the last couple of years at Sydney's Golden Age Cinema or maybe it is indeed a 2022 restoration) of Alain Delon as Highsmith's Tom Ripley in Plein Soleil/Purple Noon. In Sydney there are dozens of sessions of most of the films all over town in the Palace cinemas and the Cremorne Orpheum from 1 March to 6 April. Also playing in Melbourne, Canberra, Adelaide, Perth Brisbane and Byron Bay.

Let's hope that the crowds venture out and by the time you have seen at least some of the more than 200 films and programs you get yourselves all prepped for restored cinema classics at Cinema Reborn at the Ritz from 27 April to 1 May.




Sunday, 4 July 2021

Chaplin's great feature films back in restored digital copies in Melbourne and Sydney - Screening times and booking links


Charlie Chaplin Retrospective at
Classic, Lido, Cameo and Ritz Cinemas

Coinciding with the 100th anniversary of Chaplin's first full-length feature, The Kid, in a new 4K restoration.

 

Classic, Lido and Cameo Cinemas in Melbourne and Ritz Cinemas in Sydney are showing ten feature films by one of cinema's greatest comedians, Charlie Chaplin, in brand new 4K and 2K restorations.

Over a century after he rose to fame, Chaplin remains one of cinema's most enduring icons, especially in the guise of his popular character the Little Tramp, with his trademark bowler hat, bamboo cane and toothbrush moustache. He had a unique ability to combine slapstick comedy with deeply-felt pathos, and even ventured into bold political themes, satirising Adolf Hitler and fascism in the midst of World War Two in his film The Great Dictator (1940). 

The retrospective coincides with the 100th anniversary of Chaplin's first full-length feature, The Kid (1921), restored to a stunning 4K presentation. The Circus (1928) is also presented in 4K and the remaining titles have been restored to 2K presentations. There will be one film shown each month (except December) from July 2021 until May 2022, starting with five silent films and then five 'talkies'. Each film will have three sessions only at Classic and Lido, and two sessions only at Cameo and Ritz – see the program below for all dates and session times.

The cinemas will be mixing 'Charlie Chaplin' cocktails for these screenings, which will be available to purchase from their bars. The 'Charlie Chaplin' is a classic cocktail made with equal parts sloe gin, apricot brandy and lime juice.

Chaplin was a notorious perfectionist and he wrote, directed, produced, starred in, edited, and composed the music for most of his films. He co-founded the distribution company United Artists in 1919, allowing him complete control over his films. He was the recipient of three Academy Awards in his life: two Honorary Awards (in 1929 and 1972) and one for Best Score (for Limelight in 1973). His first Honorary Academy Award was for "versatility and genius in acting, writing, directing, and producing The Circus" and the second was for "the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century."

CHARLIE CHAPLIN RETROSPECTIVE PROGRAM – CLASSIC AND LIDO
The Kid (1921), 4K presentation – Saturday 17 July, 1.30pm // Monday 19 July, 1.30pm // Wednesday 21 July, 7pm
A Woman of Paris (1923), 2K presentation – Saturday 21 August, 1.30pm // Monday 23 August, 1.30pm // Wednesday 25 August, 7pm
The Circus (1928), 4K presentation – Saturday 18 September, 1.30pm // Monday 20 September, 1.30pm // Wednesday 22 September, 7pm
City Lights (1931), 2K presentation – Saturday 16 October, 1.30pm // Monday 18 October, 1.30pm // Wednesday 20 October, 7pm
Modern Times (1936), 2K presentation – Saturday 20 November, 1.30pm // Monday 22 November, 1.30pm // Wednesday 24 November, 7pm
The Great Dictator (1940), 2K presentation – Saturday 8 January, 1.30pm // Monday 10 January, 1.30pm // Wednesday 12 January, 7pm
The Gold Rush (1942), 2K presentation – Saturday 5 February, 1.30pm // Monday 7 February, 1.30pm // Wednesday 9 February, 7pm
Monsieur Verdoux (1947), 2K presentation – Saturday 5 March, 1.30pm // Monday 7 March, 1.30pm // Wednesday 9 March, 7pm
Limelight (1952), 2K presentation – Saturday 9 April, 1.30pm // Monday 11 April, 1.30pm // Wednesday 13 April, 7pm
A King in New York (1957), 2K presentation – Saturday 7 May, 1.30pm // Monday 9 May, 1.30pm // Wednesday 11 May, 7pm

Tickets available at Classic here.
Tickets available at Lido here.


CHARLIE CHAPLIN RETROSPECTIVE PROGRAM – CAMEO AND RITZ
The Kid (1921), 4K presentation – Saturday 17 July, 1.30pm // Monday 19 July, 1.30pm
A Woman of Paris (1923), 2K presentation – Saturday 21 August, 1.30pm // Monday 23 August, 1.30pm
The Circus (1928), 4K presentation – Saturday 18 September, 1.30pm // Monday 20 September, 1.30pm
City Lights (1931), 2K presentation – Saturday 16 October, 1.30pm // Monday 18 October, 1.30pm
Modern Times (1936), 2K presentation – Saturday 20 November, 1.30pm // Monday 22 November, 1.30pm
The Great Dictator (1940), 2K presentation – Saturday 8 January, 1.30pm // Monday 10 January, 1.30pm
The Gold Rush (1942), 2K presentation – Saturday 5 February, 1.30pm // Monday 7 February, 1.30pm
Monsieur Verdoux (1947), 2K presentation – Saturday 5 March, 1.30pm // Monday 7 March, 1.30pm
Limelight (1952), 2K presentation – Saturday 9 April, 1.30pm // Monday 11 April, 1.30pm
A King in New York (1957), 2K presentation – Saturday 7 May, 1.30pm // Monday 9 May, 1.30pm


Tickets available at Cameo here.
Tickets available at Ritz here.

Please note: dates are subject to change depending on COVID-19 related lockdowns and restrictions.