Potential awards season contenders Truth from James Vanderbilt and Marc Abraham’s I Saw The Light starring Tom Hiddleston as Hank Williams land world premiere slots, while Paco Cabezas’s Mr. Right will close the festival.
London is the subject of the seventh annual City To City programme that features world premieres of Tom Geens’ Couple In A Hole starring Paul Higgins and Kate Dickie and Michael Caton-Jones’ Urban Hymn with Letitia Wright and Shirley Henderson. Elaine Constantine’s Northern Soul gets a North American premiere.
The world premiere of Catherine Hardwicke’s Miss You Already is among five additions to the galas alongside Mr. Right, an action comedy starring Sam Rockwell and Anna Kendrick.
Matthew Cullen’s Martin Amis adaptation London Fields and David Gordon Green’s Our Brand Is Crisis get first public screenings in the Special Presentations roster with I Saw The Light.
Tiff top brass also unveiled the Contemporary World Cinema section, featuring...
London is the subject of the seventh annual City To City programme that features world premieres of Tom Geens’ Couple In A Hole starring Paul Higgins and Kate Dickie and Michael Caton-Jones’ Urban Hymn with Letitia Wright and Shirley Henderson. Elaine Constantine’s Northern Soul gets a North American premiere.
The world premiere of Catherine Hardwicke’s Miss You Already is among five additions to the galas alongside Mr. Right, an action comedy starring Sam Rockwell and Anna Kendrick.
Matthew Cullen’s Martin Amis adaptation London Fields and David Gordon Green’s Our Brand Is Crisis get first public screenings in the Special Presentations roster with I Saw The Light.
Tiff top brass also unveiled the Contemporary World Cinema section, featuring...
- 8/18/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Ciff’s “New Director’s Competition” entry Wolfskinder is a spare-dialogue observance of psychological extremes forgotten by time, as captured with Terrence Malick-like visuals of nature. With a small film crew between twenty and twenty-five people and a small handful of non-professional child actors, writer/director Rick Ostermann used his research on real lost German children of post-wwii, “wolf children,” to film a striking narrative that captures the atmosphere of a struggle for survival experienced by thousands.
I sat down with Ostermann in an exclusive interview before yesterday’s Q&A to discuss his film, how to direct children in a brutal story, Wolfskinder’s homages to Malick, the difficulty of making a film about Germany’s victims of World War II, and more.
Wolfskinder is playing once more at Ciff on Friday, October 18. Ostermann has been nominated for the Ciff’s “New Director’s Competition.”
In this film you worked with young non-actors,...
I sat down with Ostermann in an exclusive interview before yesterday’s Q&A to discuss his film, how to direct children in a brutal story, Wolfskinder’s homages to Malick, the difficulty of making a film about Germany’s victims of World War II, and more.
Wolfskinder is playing once more at Ciff on Friday, October 18. Ostermann has been nominated for the Ciff’s “New Director’s Competition.”
In this film you worked with young non-actors,...
- 10/17/2013
- by Nick Allen
- The Scorecard Review
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