Sydney Film Festival announces new films, on sale now
The 66th Sydney Film Festival (5-16 June), which opens on Wednesday, announces that nine important new feature films and one outstanding documentary, including seven titles from the recent Cannes Film Festival, will have their Australian Premiere at the Festival.
“Direct from screening at prestigious film festivals across the globe, we have secured ten new incredible films, from both acclaimed master storytellers and exciting up-and-comers,” said Festival Director Nashen Moodley.
“Festival audiences will be the first in the country to see Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut Booksmart, an uproarious high school movie for Generation Z and a hilarious shot of pure cinematic girl power, as well as Ken Loach’s devastating drama Sorry We Missed You, straight from the Cannes Competition, about a working class British family struggling in the gig economy,” he said.
“Also from Cannes are the Un Certain Regard winner The Invisible Life of Eurídice Gusmão, about two sisters forcibly separated by conservatism and fate; Jury Prize winner Les Misérables, Ladj Ly’s explosive feature debut about a routine police patrol gone horribly wrong; Best Screenplay and Queer Palm winner Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Céline Sciamma’s first foray into period drama and Academy Award-winning filmmaker Asif Kapadia’s documentary Diego Maradona, tackling the controversial soccer megastar,” he said.
“We also present the first Cannes selection from a Peruvian woman, Song Without a Name, the true story of a newborn child stolen at a fake clinic; and Critics’ Week selection The Unknown Saint, a charming Moroccan comedy about a criminal whose buried stash has a mausoleum built over it; and thrilling noir film The Whistlers, about a cop who becomes entangled in the crimes he’s investigating,” he said.
“And from Sundance we present political thriller Official Secrets, with Keira Knightley playing the British whistle-blower who leaked information about the Iraqi invasion,” he said.
Already announced are Cannes Palme d’Or winner Parasite, a satire on income inequality by Bong Joon-ho (Okja, SFF 2017 Closing Night Film); Bacurau, which tied with Les Misérables for the Jury Prize; and Pain and Glory, which won Best Actor for lead actor Antonio Banderas’ performance.
Synopsis for these Special Screenings:
BOOKSMART
Two best
friends run amok on the eve of their high school graduation
in this irreverent, intelligent and hilarious shot of pure
cinematic girl power from director Olivia Wilde.
Academic
overachievers Molly (Beanie Feldstein, Lady Bird) and
Amy (Kaitlyn Dever, Short Term 12) are about to
finish high school, but can’t shake the feeling that
they’ve studied too hard and missed out on the fun parts
of adolescence. What can they do, apart from try to fit six
years of partying into one night? With the same
determination they applied to studying, Molly and Amy set
out on an outrageous night of debauchery – what follows is
a fast-paced, riotous buddy comedy tailormade for Generation
Z. “It is a teen movie for the ages,” writes The
Guardian, “mixing elements of Superbad, Dazed and
Confused, perhaps a touch of Lady Bird, but, in
its own unpretentious way, Booksmart is also a tale
about the dangers of labelling people in the first place. It
makes the teen movies of yesteryear look old-fashioned,
because they are.”
SORRY WE MISSED
YOU
Straight from the Cannes Competition,
Ken Loach’s devastating drama is about poverty in
today’s Britain, where a family struggles to get ahead in
the “gig economy”.
Ricky, Abby and their two children
live in Newcastle and are a loving family. Ricky has worked
job after job, often involving manual labour, while Abby is
an overworked but empathetic carer for the aged. Spending a
large proportion of their income on rent, the couple realise
that though they work longer and harder, they will never get
ahead or attain their dream of owning a home. The app
revolution offers Ricky a golden opportunity to buy a van,
start his own business, and become a freelance deliveryman.
But things don’t work out as planned, and Ricky and his
family soon find themselves on the brink. In his follow-up
to the Palme d’Or winning I, Daniel Blake, Loach
masterfully depicts, with compassion and anger, a callous
economic system designed to ignore the humanity of those on
its lowest rung.
THE INVISIBLE LIFE OF
EURÍDICE GUSMÃO
Winner of the Cannes Un
Certain Regard Prize, this irresistible “tropical
melodrama” tells the story of two sisters, forcibly
separated through conservatism and fate.
In Rio de
Janeiro, 1950, Eurídice, 18, and Guida, 20, are two
inseparable sisters living at home with their conservative
parents. Although immersed in a traditional life, each one
nourishes a dream: Eurídice of becoming a renowned pianist,
Guida of finding true love. In a dramatic turn, they are
separated by their father and forced to live apart. They
take control of their separate destinies, while never giving
up hope of finding each other. Brazilian director Karim
Ainouz (Madame Sata, Praia do Futuro, SFF
2014) is known for his sensual, visually resplendent films
and here brings his skillset to a heart-wrenching story,
spanning decades, of two strong women who never give up
hope.
PORTRAIT OF A LADY ON
FIRE
Winner of Best Screenplay at Cannes,
Céline Sciamma's (Water Lilies, Girlhood SFF 2014)
beautifully shot period drama is about the romance between
an artist and her reluctant subject.
Brittany, France,
1760. Marianne, a painter, is commissioned to do the wedding
portrait of Héloïse, a young lady who has just left the
convent. Héloïse is a reluctant bride-to-be and Marianne
must paint her without her knowing. She observes her by day
and secretly paints her at night. Intimacy and attraction
grow between the two women as they share Héloïse’s first
and last moments of freedom, all whilst Marianne paints the
portrait that will end it all. Both Héloïse and Marianne
find themselves in a struggle to defy social conventions and
see in each other a means of escape. With vulnerable and
nuanced performances by its superb leads, Noemie Merlant
and Adele Haenel, Sciamma has created an intimate and
deeply moving period drama about freedom and
desire.
LES MISERABLES
Winner
of the Cannes Jury Prize, this thrilling, explosive feature
debut takes us into Paris’s diverse and tense outer
suburbs as a routine police patrol goes horribly
wrong.
Stephane (Damien Bonnard) has recently joined
the Anti-Crime Squad in Montfermeil, in the suburbs of
Paris, where Victor Hugo set his famed novel Les
Miserables. Alongside his new colleagues Chris (Alexis
Manenti) and Gwada (Djebril Zonga) – both experienced
members of the team – he quickly discovers tensions are
running high between local gangs. When the trio finds
themselves overrun during the course of an arrest, a drone
captures the encounter, threatening to expose the reality of
everyday life. Inspired by the 2005 Paris riots, and
director Ladj Ly’s short film of the same name, Les
Miserables is a thrilling and provocative insight into
the fractures in contemporary France.
DIEGO
MARADONA
Academy Award-winning filmmaker
Asif Kapadia (Amy, Senna) tackles the controversial and
divisive soccer megastar Diego Maradona in this outstanding
Cannes-selected documentary.
Kapadia's film begins with
Maradona's move to Italy in 1984. After being shunned by
Europe's star teams, the charismatic Argentine had been
signed by down-at-heel SSC Napoli. The southern city,
impoverished and in the vice-like grip of the Camorra, was
fighting relegation. Maradona led them to their first-ever
title; it was the stuff of dreams, and the stocky captain
became the people's hero in a town wildly fanatical about
soccer and their city. His image was everywhere, even
pictured in the arms of God. But there was a price to pay
for this rampant adulation, and the fast-living Maradona's
fall from grace was brutal. Not just a film about a soccer
hero, or even the game itself, Kapadia's accomplished
documentary (expertly assembled from found footage) reveals
both halves of this magnetic figure: Diego, the talented boy
from a Buenos Aires slum; and Maradona, the epic hero
brought low by his own hubris and folly.
SONG
WITHOUT A NAME
Selected for Cannes
Directors’ Fortnight, this powerful feature, bearing
striking similarities to Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma, is
based on the true story of a stolen newborn in 1980s
Peru.
The first film by a Peruvian woman to be selected
at Cannes, Song Without a Name is set in the 1980s
during a political crisis in the country and is based on
true events. Georgina is a woman from the Andes whose
newborn daughter is stolen at a fake health clinic that
promised free treatment to the poor. Increasingly desperate,
she heads to a major newspaper where an investigative
journalist becomes determined to discover the truth, despite
mysterious figures threatening to use his sexuality against
him. Soon, they discover that Georgina is not alone in
having her child taken from her. With beautiful and
affecting music, and a meticulous visual aesthetic, this
lyrical film is all the more poignant and personal given
that director Melina Leon’s father was one of the
journalists who broke this disturbing story decades
ago.
THE UNKNOWN SAINT
This
Cannes Critics’ Week selection is a charming Moroccan
comedy about a criminal who buries his stash only to find,
years later, that a mausoleum has been built over
it.
Amine steals a big bag of money and – with the cops
hot on his trail – buries the money in a rudimentary grave
before being arrested. Years later, he’s released, and his
first priority is to retrieve his treasure. To his surprise,
he finds that the non-descript fake “grave” he created
now lies under a mausoleum to “The Unknown Saint”. The
tomb has spawned a village catering to pilgrims from far and
wide to worship at the shrine. Amine has no option but to
move into the village and plot to be reunited with his cash,
with much hilarity to follow. In his confident debut
feature, Alaa Eddine Aljem delicately crafts a village of
fascinating characters, ranging from the vindictive barber
who also practices rudimentary dentistry, to the bored
doctor whose surgery serves as the hangout place for the
women of the village. The Unknown Saint is a
delightfully funny look at greed, spirituality and
superstition.
THE
WHISTLERS
Maverick Romanian director
Corneliu Porumboiu (Police, Adjective SFF 2010;
The Treasure, SFF 2016) returns with an off-beat noir
in which a cop becomes embroiled in a high-stakes
heist.
Cristi is a police inspector in Bucharest, who is
one day approached by the beautiful Gilda. She entreats
Cristi to help free her boyfriend from prison and retrieve
millions of euros of secreted-away cash. Cristi, already
under surveillance by his fellow cops, is seduced by Gilda
and unable to resist her increasingly outlandish demands on
him. Soon he is on the Spanish island of La Gomera, learning
a secret whistling language to ensure that the criminal gang
can communicate without detection. But in this strange world
of Porumboiu’s creation, nobody can be trusted and those
doing the investigating could well have ulterior motives. An
entertaining thriller that’s wryly amusing and filled with
twists and turns, The Whistlers is a marked departure
for Porumboiu yet retains his trademark dark humour.
OFFICIAL SECRETS
Keira
Knightley is superb in this true-life political thriller
about the British whistle-blower who leaked information
about the Iraqi invasion and faced prison as a
consequence.
It’s 2003 and British and American
politicians are pressing the case for the invasion of Iraq.
Katharine Gun (Knightley) is a secret service employee who
comes across an incendiary email containing a US directive
to spy on UN Security Council members so as to coerce them
into supporting the war on Iraq. Mindful of the potential
repercussions of this illegal directive, Gun takes the brave
and risk-filled decision to leak the information. With a
stellar cast including Ralph Fiennes (The White Crow
at SFF), Adam Bakri (Slam at SFF) and Rhys Ifans,
Oscar-winning director Gavin Hood (Tsotsi, Eye in
the Sky) moulds an intense film about a reluctant
heroine who risks it all in trying to prevent a war and save
the lives of thousands.
The full Sydney Film Festival 2019 program can be found online at sff.org.au.
Sydney Film Festival runs 5 – 16 June 2019. Tickets for Sydney Film Festival 2019 are on sale now. Please call 1300 733 733 or visit sff.org.au for more information.