Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Haiti - Diaspora : Forum «International Meeting South» - Haitilibre.com


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Haiti - Diaspora : Forum «International Meeting South»
Haitilibre.com
On Wednesday, the Ministry of Haitians Living Abroad (MHAVE) will host the Forum "International Meeting South" organized in collaboration with the Franco-Haitian Platform Associations (PAFHA) and the International Solidarity on Migration Organizations ...



From haiti - Google News

Netflix Renews 'Daredevil' For Season 2, But Showrunner Steven DeKnight Departs

Netflix announced this evening in a short press release that their first Marvel collaboration, “Daredevil” has been renewed for a second season just roughly three weeks since the show first premiered on the on-demand streaming service. However, man down: Steven DeKnight the showrunner for season one is departing. In his place will be Doug Petrie (“Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” “American Horror Story”) and Marco Ramirez (“Sons of Anarchy”), who worked closely with DeKnight and executive producer Drew Goddard during the first season.

Season two of Marvel’s “Daredevil” will premiere in 2016, so along with “Luke Cage,” they’ll at least be two Marvel shows on Netflix, and “Iron Fist” is probably waiting in the wings and should be announced soon.

READ MORE: Netflix & Marvel's 'Daredevil': The Pros, The Cons, The Verdict

“Daredevil” focuses on Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox), blinded as a young boy but imbued with extraordinary senses, he fights against injustice by day as a lawyer, and by night as the a super hero in modern day Hell's Kitchen, New York City. Marvel's “Daredevil” co-stars Rosario Dawson, Vincent D’Onofrio, Deborah Ann Woll, Elden Henson, Scott Glenn, Bob Gunton, Toby Leonard Moore, Vondie Curtis Hall, Ayelet Zurer.

I’m personally not a fan of the show so far, and it feels like Marvel’s weakest effort to date; gloomy for the sake of it and extremely repetitive thematically and those flashbacks say the exact same thing about Matt Murdock's life each time. But others on our team feel different. Your thoughts?

READ MORE: Netflix's 'Daredevil' Is An Awesome Achievement And Marvel's Most Graphic & Grounded Effort To Date

From News

Ethiopian Post-Apocalyptic Feature 'Crumbs' + New Work from Ty Hodges, Others, are Los Angeles Film Festival 2015 Selections

And the 2015 film festival beat goes on... 

Announced this afternoon, an eclectic mix of feature films make up lineups of 2 new sections - Zeitgeist and Nightfall - of the upcoming Los Angeles Film Festival (June 10 to 18, 2015), which is produced by Film Independent.

Also the festival's LA Muse section was revealed as well - a competitive section of indies that are "quintessentially Los Angeles." 

“Under the leadership of Roya Rastegar and Jennifer Cochis, the programmers have assembled a slate of films that embody Film Independent’s mission of diversity, innovation and uniqueness of vision with a special emphasis on world premieres, first time directors and, of course, films inspired by Los Angeles,” said Elvis Mitchell, Film Independent Curator.

“Zeitgeist is a curated section of bold films that captures a vital picture of independent storytelling today,” said Roya Rastegar, Associate Director of Programming and Curated Content. “As programmers, we see key trends emerge in the thousands of films we watch every year. Stylish and defiant, the films in our inaugural Zeitgeist lineup are structured around a pivotal juncture in the lives of young people, after which there is no going back.”

And about the Nightfall section, Jennifer Cochis, Senior Programmer, said: “We created Nightfall to celebrate films that will make audiences squirm. Ranging from the creepy to the sinister, homages to 80s and 90s era horror, psychodramas and waking nightmares.”

Of note, with respect to this blog's interests, you'll recognize "Crumbs," a title that excited a lot of you when I profiled it in January - a Spanish-Ethiopian co-production which made its world premiere at the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) earlier this year, directed by Spaniard Llansó, who actually lives in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), and stars Daniel Tadesse. The wholly original tale tells a story of diminutive superhero Gagano (played by Tadesse), a junk collector, who embarks on a "surreal epic journey" that's set against "post-apocalyptic Ethiopian landscapes." He's had enough of collecting "valuable crumbs of a decayed civilization," when a spaceship that has been hovering high in the sky for years, starts showing signs of activity, and Gagano has to overcome his fears - which include a witch, Santa Claus and second-generation Nazis - to find out that the world isn't quite what he thought it was.

It's a film that's been on my must-see list since I first learned of it, and I'm glad that I'm one step closer to checking it out finally, as it makes its North American premiere at the LAFF in June.

Other titles of note, include:

- "The Drew: No Excuse, Just Produce," a documentary from co-directors Baron Davis (yes, the NBA player) and Chad Gordon, making its World Premiere.
- "A Girl Like Grace," from Ty Hodges, making its World Premiere as well.
- "Can You Dig This," directed by Delila Vallot, also making its World Premiere.
- And "French Dirty," from co-directors Wade Allain-Marcus & Jesse Allain-Marcus, making its World Premiere.

These are just the few that I immediately recognized. There might be others which I'll discover later.

In the meantime, check out lineups of all 3 sections below. 

The full Festival line up will be announced on May 5. 

Passes to this year's edition are now on sale to the general public. Visit: http://ift.tt/jhoN3c.

Zeitgeist (6)

Zeitgeist is a competitive section of six curated films that embody key trends. 2015 captures hard knock, coming of age stories.

  • - "Band of Robbers," dir. Aaron Nee & Adam Nee, USA, World Premiere
  • - "A Girl Like Grace," dir. Ty Hodges, USA, World Premiere
  • - "In the Treetops," dir. Matthew Brown, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Manifest Destiny," dir. Michael Dwyer, Kaitlin McLaughlin, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Stealing Cars," dir. Bradley Kaplan, USA, World Premiere
  • - "What Lola Wants," dir. Rupert Glasson, USA, World Premiere
Nightfall (8)

From the bizarre to the horrifying, these are films to watch after dark. Films premiering for the first time in the U.S. are nominated for the Nightfall Award. 

  • - "Caught," dir. Maggie Kiley, USA, World Premiere
  • - "The Confines," dir. Eytan Rockaway, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Crumbs," dir. Miguel Llansó, Spain/Ethiopia/Finland, North American Premiere
  • - "Crush the Skull," dir. Viet Nguyen, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Dude Bro Party Massacre III," dir. Tomm Jacobsen, Michael Rousselet, Jon Salmon, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Plan Sexenal," dir. Santiago Cendejas, Mexico, North American Premiere
  • - "Ratter," dir. Branden Kramer, USA, LA Premiere
  • - "Shut In," dir. Adam Schindler, USA, World Premiere
LA Muse (10)

  • - "Aram, Aram," dir. Christopher Chambers, USA, World Premiere
  • - "A Beautiful Now," dir. Daniela Amavia, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Can You Dig This," dir. Delila Vallot, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Day Out of Days," dir. Zoe R. Cassavetes, USA, World Premiere
  • - "The Drew: No Excuse, Just Produce," dir. Baron Davis, Chad Gordon, USA, World Premiere
  • - "The Escort," dir. Will Slocombe, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Flock of Dudes," dir. Bob Castrone, USA, World Premiere
  • - "French Dirty," dir. Wade Allain-Marcus & Jesse Allain-Marcus, USA, World Premiere
  • - "No Más Bebés," dir. Renee Tajima-Peña, USA, World Premiere
  • - "Weepah Way for Now," dir. Stephen Ringer, USA, World Premiere
 



From News

Review: In ‘Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten,’ Cambodia’s Lost Generation of Pop Stars

Musicians of a thriving pop music scene in Cambodia that was brutally stamped out by the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s reclaim their place in the global youth culture of their era.








From NYT > Movies

Movie Review: Review: ‘1915,’ a Ghostly Evocation of Bygone Slaughter

The film centers on a director preparing a play about the century-old massacres of Armenians, in a theater that is rumored to be haunted.








From NYT > Movies

Review: ‘Emptying the Skies’ Follows the Rescue of Songbirds at Most Any Cost

This documentary about bird poaching, based on a Jonathan Franzen article, is less about birds than about a heartening side to human motivation.








From NYT > Movies

CinemaCon: How Tom Cruise Stole the Paramount Show

Arnold Schwarzenegger used his tired routines on the nation's exhibitors at the first CinemaCon studio presentation at the Colosseum at Caesar's Palace Tuesday: "I told you! I'll be back!" But it was Tom Cruise who showed some muscle in customary daredevil mode, hanging by his fingernails off an A400 aircraft in Chris McQuarrie's "Mission: Impossible --Rogue Nation" (July 31).

Cruise obligingly showed real footage of him hanging with a side harness from the aircraft as it took off and the ground receded below. He wore special lenses to protect his eyes from the force of the wind which knocked his feet off the wing as his legs dangled, and submitted to eight very cold takes, banking up to 5000 feet, breathing jet fuel fumes, without any protective padding. "He's crazy," said his costar Rebecca Ferguson, who like comic relief Simon Pegg (along with Ving Rhames and Jeremy Renner) did many of her own stunts as well. Cruise admits, "My body was flapping against the fuselage. I was scared shitless."

McQuarrie is editing now. Even the requisite escape-from-torture and car chase scenes had zing. I can't wait to see this. 

Not so the latest "Terminator" relaunch from "Game of Thrones" director Alan Taylor, "Genisys," starring a returning Schwarzenegger as a graying cyborg (how will they explain that?), Jason Clarke as scarred Skynet fighter John Connor, petite "Game of Thrones" star Emilia Clarke in buff brunette mode as his mother and Lee Byung-hun as a silver morphing T-1000. Paramount is optimistically calling this the first installment of a new trilogy, but it doesn't look like much of an improvement on the last batch of retreads. Paramount vice-chairman Rob Moore talked about needing to be woken up as he introduced a slim 2015 Paramount lineup including summer comedy "Daddy's Home," about a schlub step-dad (Will Ferrell) lamely trying to compete with his new children's charismatic father (Mark Wahlberg), more "Paranormal Activity" and "Ring" sequels for fall, and Christopher Landon family comedy "Scout's Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse" for October.

Of more interest is what's shooting now in New Orleans: upcoming Michael Lewis ("Moneyball," "The Blind Side") adaptation "The Big Short," from New Regency and Plan B (Oscar-winner "Birdman") and writer-director Adam McKay ("Anchorman"), starring Christian Bale, Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, and Brad Pitt --this starry assemblage yielded an audible "ooh" reaction from the theater owners. 

Also coming up in 2016: while he tries to find a new twist on the mighty "Transformers" franchise, Michael Bay tackles the secret soldiers behind the Benghazi rescue with "13 Hours," starring John Krasinski, for Martin Luther King weekend. Timur Bekmambetov's epic take on the novel "Ben-Hur" wraps up shooting at Rome's Cinecitta with Jack Huston in the title role next month (February 2016). The next "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" boasts new villains Bebop and Rock Steady (June 3). "Fast & Furious" graduate Justin Lin monosyllabically joined JJ Abrams for a video greeting to the exhibitors on "Star Trek 3," due in July 2016. Chris Wedge of "Ice Age" fame is directing Paramount Animation's "Monster Trucks" for Christmas release. 

After a clip of Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson parading around Paris Fashion Week, Stiller delivered a polished and hilarious video in character as Derek Zoolander, reminding us of how little money the previous "Zoolander" made 12 years ago, promising theater owners that with a cast including Will Ferrell, Fred Armisen, Kristen Wiig, Bill Hader and Penelope Cruz, the "PSA for 'Zoolander' is going to blow the multi off your plexes," adding, "it will drop like a great bomb!"  



From News