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New Film Programs Abuzz In L.A. Print E-mail
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Film - Indies
Written by BRAD SCHREIBER   
Thursday, April 24, 2008

New Film Programs Abuzz In L.A.

 



There is something in the air and it’s more than Spring pollen. The film programming that has currently reared its head in the Los Angeles area seems more than usually compelling. One can begin with the always inventive and cutting edge American Cinematheque (www.AmericanCinematheque.com), programming at both the Egyptian Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard and the Aero Theatre in Santa Monica.

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The Girl Who Swallowed Bees

At the Egyptian, the Oh, the Animation program recently took the most macabre of subjects and transmogrified them into filmic whimsy. Australia’s Paul McDermott had his marvelous animated short The Girl Who Swallowed Bees on display. Using cut-outs, paint, pen and ink and live action, this astounding work tells the tale of a girl who wishes to end it all but when the aforementioned insects take refuge in her body, things strangely become euphoric. McDonald uses perfectly the honey-smooth voice of Hugo Weaving (The Matrix) and charming, evocative music from Adrian Van De Velde.

Also impressive in the program was Argentinian Juan Pablo Zaramella’s Lapsus, a deceptively simple looking black and white animation about a tiny nun who loses her head, literally, as she enters a symbolic area of the unknown. Zaramella (www.Zaramella.com.ar) brilliantly creates humorous but profound sight gags that speak to life versus death, faith versus doubt and our ever-curious flirtation with the dark side of life.

Where else but at the Egyptian would a cineaste find a series like “Velvet Hustlers and Weird Lovemakers: Japanese 60s Action Films,” running April 25-27? One also looks forward in May to a week of films from the British consulate and, at both the Egyptian and Aero, a 70-millimeter film festival.

Speaking of the latter format, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills (www.Oscars.org) has a sold-out screening April 26 of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, with Tom Hanks hosting and special guests star Keir Dullea and effects wizard Douglas Trumbull. But ongoing is their Great to Be Nominated series of Oscar noms, each Monday at 7 PM, through August 25. It spans films from 1993-2007 and this is the fifth and final year of the program, so don’t say you were told too late to participate in what is turning into a golden Spring of film exhibition.





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Abregaza IP:123.243.232.xxx | 2008-04-25 18:17:41
Australia’s Paul McDermott had his marvelous animated short The Girl Who Swallowed Bees on display. Using cut-outs, paint, pen and ink and live action, this astounding work tells the tale of a girl who wishes to end it all but when the aforementioned insects take refuge in her body, things strangely become euphoric. McDonald uses perfectly the honey-smooth voice of Hugo Weaving (The Matrix) and charming, evocative music from Adrian Van De Velde.

Do you mean McDermott where you speak of McDonald using Hugo Weaving as narrator?

BRAD SCHREIBER
About the author:

BRAD SCHREIBER has worked as a writer in all media, as an executive, producer, director, teacher, consultant and actor. He has sold and optioned screenplays, was nominated for the Kingman Films KASA Award for his script The Couch and has won awards from the Edward Albee Foundation, the California Writers Club, the National Press Foundation, the National Audio Theatre Festivals and others. He has written for Entertainment Today since 1995 and national credits include Daily Variety and Script Magazine. His personal Web site is Brashcyber.com and his arts journalism blog is ACriticalMoment.com. Schreiber is Vice President of Storytech Literary Consulting at TheWritersJourney.com. His fifth book is Stop the Show!: A History of Insane Incidents and Absurd Accidents in the Theater (Thunder's Mouth/Avalon). He founded the international Mona Schreiber Prize for Humorous Fiction and Nonfiction in 2000.

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