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NEWS
INDEX
2001
2002
March
Fourth Roger Ebert
Film Festival to run April 24-28
Craig
Chamberlain, News Editor
(217) 333-2894; cdchambe@illinois.edu
3/11/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. The
opening night of the fourth annual Roger Ebert's Overlooked Film Festival
will feature a newly remastered 70mm print of "Patton," the
1970 Oscar-winner that opens with a famous monologue by George C. Scott
as Gen. George S. Patton before a huge American flag.
Also on Ebert's list for this years festival April 24-28 in Champaign-Urbana
and at the University of Illinois are films that focus on family, crime,
psychological drama, race relations, coming of age and youthful passion
rediscovered in old age. The free family matinee will be a visually
stunning film for all ages, a fable about a young girl and her imaginary
friend. Among the foreign films will be entries from Australia, Iran
and Senegal.
In a unique double feature during the festival, a live orchestra will
accompany the classic 1927 German silent film "Metropolis,"
to be followed by a 2001 Japanese animated film of the same name. A
documentary about gospel music will be followed with a live performance
by Chicago's Barrett Sisters, a group featured in the film.
In making his 14 selections for the festival, Ebert, a Pulitzer Prize-winning
film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, looks for films he feels have
been overlooked by critics, distributors, audiences (or some combination
thereof), and therefore deserve a second look. Ebert co-hosts "Ebert
& Roeper and the Movies," a weekly televised movie-review program,
and is a 1964 UI journalism graduate and adjunct professor.
The films are screened in the 1,500-seat Virginia Theater, 203 W. Park
St., Champaign, a movie palace built in the 1920s. This is the third
year in which Ebert has taken advantage of the Virginias 70mm
projection system, in previous years screening 70mm prints of "2001:
A Space Odyssey" and "Oklahoma!"
The festival is a special event of the UI's College of Communications.
Filmmakers, actors and producers connected with the featured films are
invited to the festival, and many appear on stage with Ebert for informal
discussions after the screenings. The festival also includes four panel
discussions held on the UI campus, one of them moderated by Ebert. The
panelists include scholars and others connected with the film industry.
This year's schedule of films and guests, subject to change:
Wednesday, April 24
8 p.m. "Patton" (United States, 1970), directed by
Franklin J. Schaffner, the festivals 70mm opening night epic,
with the George C. Scott performance as the successful, brilliant and
controversial World War II U.S. general. Richard Vetter, developer of
the Dimension 150, the optical system for 70mm photography and projection
as used in the film, will be a guest.
Thursday, April 25
1 p.m. "Hyenes" (Senegal, 1992), directed by Djibril
Diop Mambety, a retelling of Friedrich Durrenmatt's 1956 play "The
Visit," about a rich woman who returns to a village with old scores
to settle.
4 p.m. "George Washington" (United States, 2000), directed
by David Gordon Green, tells the story of some slow summer days in a
decaying Southern town, where children meet to negotiate the bridge
into adulthood. Green will be a guest, along with Curtis Cotton III,
one of the film's stars.
7 p.m. "Wonder Boys" (United States, 2000), directed
by Curtis Hanson, starring Michael Douglas as a college professor. Its
a funny and touching story about people and especially about trying
to be a good teacher.
10 p.m. "Grand Canyon" (United States, 1991), directed
by Lawrence Kasdan and featuring Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, Alfre Woodard,
Mary McDonnell and Steve Martin in a film about the gulf between the
races that may be timelier than ever. Woodard is scheduled as a guest.
Friday, April 26
1 p.m. "Kwik Stop" (United States, 2001), an adventuresome
independent film made in Chicago, which starts out to be a road picture
and then detours into a psychological drama. Director Michael Gilio
and producer Rachel Tenner will be guests.
4 p.m. "Two Women" (Iran, 1999), directed by Tahmineh
Milani, about a woman who is allowed the independence to go to university,
up to a point. Milani will be coming from Teheran to be a guest.
7 p.m. "Innocence" (Australia, 2000), directed by Paul
Cox, who will be attending his second festival as a guest. It's a glowing
love story about two older people who find that youthful passion has
not faded. Scheduled to attend along with Cox are star Julia Blake and
composer Paul Grabowsky.
10 p.m. "A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries" (United
Kingdom/United States, 1998), directed by James Ivory, from a Kaylie
Jones' novel inspired by her relationship with her parents, one of them
the novelist James Jones. Kaylie Jones will be a guest.
Saturday, April 27
1 p.m. "Paperhouse" (United States, 1988), directed
by Bernard Rose, a fable about a sick girl who imagines a friend. Its
a visually captivating film for all ages and the festivals free
family matinee. Rose will be a guest.
4 p.m. "Diamond Men" (United States, 2000), directed
by Daniel M. Cohen, with Robert Forster as a diamond salesman whose
journey into retirement includes love, crime and unexpected twists.
Cohen and Forster are scheduled as guests.
7 p.m. "Metropolis" (Germany, 1927), the Fritz Lang-directed
silent classic, accompanied by a live performance by the Alloy Orchestra
of Cambridge, Mass.
10 p.m. "Metropolis" (Japan, 2001), the new Japanese
animated film of the same title, directed by Taro Rin, which springboards
from the original into a fable about a city of the future. Drew "Moriarity"
McWeeny, west coast editor of "Aint It Cool News," will
be a guest.
Sunday, April 28
1 p.m. "Say Amen, Somebody" (United States, 1983),
George Nierenberg's joyous documentary about gospel music, followed
by a live performance by a group featured in the film, Chicago's Barrett
Sisters. Nierenberg will be a guest.
Other scheduled festival guests include Michael Barker, president of
Sony Classics; Paul Speaker, president of Madstone Films; Lorr Kramer,
director of Special Technical Projects at Digital Theater Systems (DTS);
and Indian filmmaker Mitra Sen, whose short film "Just a Little
Red Dot" will be screened by a UI cinema studies class. George
Walton and Tyrene (Manson) Walton, stars from "On the Ropes,"
screened at the 2001 festival, will be guests again this year.
Festival passes are $50 and tickets for individual films at $6. Both
are on sale at the theater box office, (217) 356-9053. Passes also may
be purchased online at www.ebertfest.com.
On April 26, from 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., Ebert will sign copies of
his new book, "The Great Movies," on the second floor of the
Illini Union Bookstore, 809 S. Wright Street, Champaign.
For more information, visit the Web site at www.ebertfest.com or contact
Mary Susan Britt, the festival's assistant director, at marsue@illinois.edu
or (217) 244-0552; Nickie Dalton, the festival manager, at n-dalton@illinois.edu
or (217) 333-2350; or Nate Kohn, the festival director, at n-kohn@illinois.edu
or (706) 542-4972.
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