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Telluride Film Festival Tips

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Posted on September 2, 2010 by hart - Comments

With the big SHOW only 24 hours away... here are a few tips to keep handy before you indulge yourself in a Labor Day weekend full of silver screen magic: 

 

  1. Friday at noon, go to Brigadoon (located by the Gondola) and get your program.  Spend lunch reading and planning. Put your name in your program.
  2. Go to films at the bigger theaters (Palm or Galaxy). You’ll never get in to the Sheridan Opera House or Nugget, they fill up VERY fast.
  3. Chuck Jones (located at the Conference Center in Mountain Village) is also a great venue.  BE SURE to pick up a *queue outside of the gondola station in town before going up. This is a big deal.
  4. The honorees shows are always fun.
  5. Don’t try to sit together if there are more than 3 of you.
  6. Decide quickly when you get into the theater where you are targeting to sit.
  7. The TBA’s are usually the big, splashy Best Picture types (Slumdog Millionaire, Juno)
  8. Friday and Saturday movies are more likely to have the directors and stars attend.  Directors usually come with the TBA’s.
  9. Get in line an hour ahead of movie time.  It’s a great place to get buzz, talk about films, and meet strangers. Ask the people around you what they have seen.
  10. Keep your program with you ALL the time. Also, keep a pen handy to make notes.
  11. It is fun to keep a big grid at home with movie names along the left and a place for everyone to put a rating (1-10) across.  We like to rate some things separately like:  Overall enjoyment, Directing, Dialogue, Character Development, whatever you like to judge them on.
  12. Sometimes the question and answer sessions can be a fabulous place to take a sandwich and enjoy some inside scoop.  The program will tell you who attends.  You don’t have to arrive early.
  13. Check out the free films in Elks Park! Bring a blanket, it’s getting chilly at night.
  14. Make sure you get outside and enjoy Telluride’s amazing beauty! (between films, of course…)

 

*What is a Queue?

Q’s are an important part of the Telluride Film Festival. Beforeeach film, a line will begin to form an hour (sometimes more) prior to thestart of the movie. A queue is essentially your “place in line” and allows youto hold your spot, first-come first served, before entering the venue. This isdone as crowd control and to award the early birds with the best theater seats.ALWAYS remember to pick up a queue before viewing a film this weekend!

 

Venues

Palm (High School) – 650 seats

Galaxy – 500 seats

Chuck Jones’ Cinema – 500 seats

Sheridan Opera House – 230 seats

Nugget Theater – 185 seats

Masons Hall Cinema – 150 seats

Le Pierre – 140 seats

The Backlot – 50 seats

Abel Gance Open Air Cinema (Elk’s Park)

 

Telluride Film Festival Lineup Announced!:

THE ‘SHOW’
37th Telluride Film Festival is pleased to present the following new feature films to play in the ‘SHOW’:

  • A LETTER TO ELIA (d. Martin Scorsese and Kent Jones, U.S., 2010)
  • ANOTHER YEAR (d. Mike Leigh, U.K., 2010)
  • BIUTIFUL (d. Alejandro González Iñárritu, Mexico, 2010)
  • CARLOS (d. Olivier Assayas, France, 2010)
  • CHICO AND RITA (d. Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal Spain-Cuba, 2010)
  • THE FIRST GRADER (d. Justin Chadwick, U.K., 2010)
  • THE FIRST MOVIE (d. Mark Cousins, U.K., 2009)
  • HAPPY PEOPLE: A YEAR IN THE TAIGA (d. Dmitry Vasyukov with Werner Herzog, Germany, 2010)
  • IF I WANT TO WHISTLE, I WHISTLE (d. Florin Serban, Romania, 2010)
  • THE ILLUSIONIST (d. Sylvain Chomet, U.K., France, 2010)
  • INCENDIES (d. Denis Villeneuve, Canada, 2010)
  • INSIDE JOB (d. Charles Ferguson, U.S., 2010)
  • THE KINGS SPEECH (d. Tom Hooper, U.K., 2010)
  • LE QUATTRO VOLTE (d. Michelangelo Frammartino, Italy, 2010)
  • NEVER LET ME GO (d. Mark Romanek, U.K./U.S., 2010)
  • OF GODS AND MEN (d. Xavier Beauvois, France, 2010)
  • OKA! AMERIKEE (d. Lavinia Currier, U.S.-Central African Republic, 2010)
  • POETRY (d. Lee Chang-dong, Korea, 2010)
  • PRECIOUS LIFE (d. Shlomi Eldar, Israel, 2010)
  • THE PRINCESS OF MONTPENSIER (d. Bertrand Tavernier, France, 2010)
  • TABLOID (d. Errol Morris, U.S., 2010)
  • TAMARA DREWE (d. Stephen Frears, U.K., 2010)
  • THE TENTH INNING (d. Ken Burns, Lynn Novick, U.S., 2010)
  • THE WAY BACK (d. Peter Weir, U.K., 2010)

In keeping with Festival tradition, additional “Sneak Previews” are expected to surprise attendees over the weekend. Sneaks will be announced on the Telluride Film Festival webpage throughout the weekend at www.telluridefilmfestival.org.

MEDALLION AWARDS
TFF is proud to honor the following three recipients with its Silver Medallion awards, given to recognize an artist’s significant contribution to the world of cinema:

  • CLAUDIA CARDINALE – Italian film star Claudia Cardinale (8 ½, THE LEOPARD, THE PINK PANTHER) will receive the Silver Medallion followed by an onstage interview conducted by Hilton Als (Saturday) and Davia Nelson (Sunday). The program will include a screening of Valerio Zurlini’s GIRL WITH A SUITCASE (Italy, 1961).
  • COLIN FIRTH – Telluride audiences will be the first to see British actor Colin Firth’s performance in THE KINGS SPEECH. The film will be preceded by a survey of Firth’s career (PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, GIRL WITH A PEARL EARRING, A SINGLE MAN), the presentation of the Silver Medallion and an onstage interview with Davia Nelson (Sunday) and Todd McCarthy (Monday).
  • PETER WEIR – Filmmaker Peter Weir (WITNESS, THE TRUMAN SHOW, MASTER AND COMMANDER) will be presented with the Silver Medallion followed by an onstage interview with Leonard Maltin (Friday) and Scott Foundas (Saturday). A screening of Weir’s lost classic THE PLUMBER (Australia, 1976) and his latest film, THE WAY BACK, will screen during the Festival.

UCLA Film & Television Archive will receive this year’s Special Medallion award, which honors a hero of cinema – an organization or individual – that preserves, honors and presents great movies. Festival guests will be treated to a special program put together by Archive director Jan-Christopher Horak entitled: TREASURES FROM UCLA. Two films from the Archive will play elsewhere in the program: the 1927 film CHICAGO, recently discovered in Cecil B. DeMille’s vaults and restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive, will screen with a live, original score performed by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra; and Stanton Kaye’s 1968 film, BRANDY IN THE WILDERNESS, a scheduled restoration by UCLA.

For the first time, Telluride Film Festival is presenting digital in all its venues. Dolby’s Digital Cinema server is being used throughout the four-day festival in its three largest venues. Dolby is facilitating a program of 3D featuring rare works from the 1890s through 2010 in RETOUR DE FLAMME IN 3D, curated and performed by Serge Bromberg with live piano and stories. Dolby 3D Digital Cinema technology, in conjunction with BARCO digital cinema projectors provides TFF with an efficient and flexible solution designed to deliver a superior 3D experience. Dolby, together with Cinedigm, Barco and Boston Light and Sound, has moved TFF forward into a completely state of the art film festival.

GUEST DIRECTOR PROGRAMS
Previously announced Guest Director Michael Ondaatje presents six films spanning the last four decades of the 20th century:

  • THE ASCENT (d. Larisa Shepitko, U.S.S.R., 1977, archive print)
  • CONFIDENCE (d. István Szabó, Hungary, 1980, archive print)
  • FAT CITY (d. John Huston, U.S., 1972, archive print) followed by an interview with author Leonard Gardner
  • HERE’S YOUR LIFE (d. Jan Troell, Sweden, 1966, restoration print from the Swedish Institute)
  • THE HUSTLER (d. Robert Rossen, U.S., 1961, archive print)
  • MOTHER DAO, THE TURTLELIKE (d. Vincent Monnikendam, Netherlands, 1995, archive print)

ADDITIONAL FILM REVIVALS

  • ROTAIE (d. Mario Camerini, Italy, 1930) – Pordenone Presents with live music performance by Judith Rosenberg.
  • MOANA: A STORY OF THE SOUTH SEAS (d. Robert Flaherty, U.S., 1926) – With the 1970s soundtrack Flaherty’s daughter Monica created to honor her father’s original intentions and a restored print by his great-grandson Sami van Ingen. With special guest documentarian Richard Leacock who worked with Flaherty.

BACKLOT
Backlot, Telluride’s intimate screening room with behind-the-scenes movies and portraits of artists, musicians and filmmakers will screen the following documentary programs:

  • BERGMAN: featuring two films by Stig Björkman …BUT FILM IS MY MISTRESS (Sweden, 2010) and IMAGES FROM THE PLAYGROUND (Sweden, 2009)
  • CAMERAMAN: THE LIFE AND WORK OF JACK CARDIFF (d. Craig McCall, U.K., 2010)
  • CHEKHOV FOR CHILDREN (d. Sasha Waters Freyer, U.S., 2010)
  • DANIEL SCHMID: LE CHAT QUI PENSE (d. Pascal Hoffmann, Benny Jaberg, Germany, 2010)
  • DOCUMENTARIST (d. Harutyun Khachatryan, Armenia, 2003)
  • HURRICANE KALATOZOV (d. Patrick Cazals, France, 2010)
  • THE MAGNIFICENT TATI (d. Michael House, U.K.-U.S.-France, 2009)
  • MOGULS AND MOVIE STARS (d.Jon Wilkman, U.S., 2010, two episodes, TCM television documentary series)
  • MUSIC MAKERS OF THE BLUE RIDGE (d. David Hoffman, U.S., 1965)
  • ON “BEING THERE” WITH RICHARD LEACOCK (d. Jane Weiner, U.S., 2010)
  • PYGMIES IN PARIS (d. Mark Kidel, U.K., 1992)
  • THE WORLD ACCORDING TO ION B. (d. Alexander Nanau, Romania, 2010)

SHORT FILMS
SHOWcase for Shorts features seven short films chosen to precede select feature films. Filmmakers of Tomorrow includes three shorts programs: Great Expectations, Calling Cards and Student Prints, from eighteen emerging filmmakers.

EDUCATION PROGRAMS
The Student Symposium provides 50 graduate and undergraduate college students a weekend-long immersion in cinema. The City Lights Project offers fifteen high school students and five teachers from three divergent schools the opportunity to participate in a concentrated program of screenings and discussions.

TALKING HEADS
Seven Conversations between Festival guests and the audience about cinema and culture, and three outdoor Seminars featuring a panel of Festival guests, offer a rare opportunity for film lovers to interact with directors, actors and writers. These programs are free and open to the public.

ADDITIONAL FESTIVITIES

  • Spotlight on Harutyun Khachatryan – Screening two of the Armenian director’s works, BORDER and RETURN OF THE POET. DOCUMENTARIST also plays in the Backlot program.
  • Ralph Eggleston Poster Signing – Previously announced 37th TFF poster artist (http://telluridefilmfestival.org/press/releases) in person.
  • Pix-Art: The Creations of Ralph Eggleston – Personal artwork from the Pixar and TFF poster artist.
  • Michael Ondaatje Booksigning – Signing copies of The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing.
  • Kazuo Ishiguro Booksigning – Signing his novel Never Let Me Go, adapted for Mark Romanek’s film.
  • Serge Bromberg and Mont Alto Orchestra signing – Signing DVDs of silent classics.
  • Millions –Danny Boyle will present his 2005 family film to the Telluride audience.

The Festival’s program will be posted in its entirety on Friday, September 3. Please visit www.telluridefilmfestival.org

 

 

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