The Film at Lincoln Center Podcast is a weekly podcast that features in-depth conversations with filmmakers, actors, critics, and more.
#513 - Lulu Wang on Expats
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Lulu Wang, who’s new Prime Video series Expats is now streaming.
Lulu Wang casts her penetrating gaze on the intersection of race and class in Hong Kong’s milieu of expats, and the migrant domestic workers employed by them, in this vivid adaptation of Janice Y. K. Lee’s widely acclaimed novel, The Expatriates (1998). Across six episodes, Expats shuttles back and forth between the prelude and aftermath of a tragedy that has dramatically reshaped the lives of three women—Margaret (Nicole Kidman), a mother left shattered as she navigates her way through an inconceivable loss; her neighbor Hilary (Sarayu Blue), herself struggling to regain control of her marriage in the face of infidelity; and the twentysomething, free-spirited Mercy (Ji-young Yoo), who finds herself caught in the center of Margaret and Hilary’s anguish. But for the limited series’ feature-length fifth episode, the three women recede into the background with Wang shifting her focus in an entirely different direction, and transforming this rich tapestry of stories into something altogether more complex. In this penultimate episode, “Central,” Margaret and Hilary’s Filipina caretakers, Essie (Ruby Ruiz) and Puri (Amelyn Pardenilla), come to the fore as we follow them on their day off—socializing, corresponding with family abroad, and carving out time to pursue their own dreams, but who nevertheless remain entangled in their employers’ quandaries, and whose own future hangs in the balance of their every decision.
This conversation was moderated by FLC Assistant Programmer Madeline Whittle.
2/22/2024 • 30 minutes, 53 seconds
#512 - Nuri Bilge Ceylan on About Dry Grasses
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with About Dry Grasses director Nuri Bilge Ceylan. An NYFF61 Main Slate selection, About Dry Grasses opens at FLC next Friday, February 23rd. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/grasses.
In a village nestled within the wintry landscape of the East Anatolia region of Turkey, an art teacher named Samet (Deniz Celiloglu) is struggling through what he hopes to be his final year at an elementary school. Already tiring of the unforgiving environment, where he has been assigned by the government’s public education system, Samet is further disillusioned and frustrated after a young girl in his class, Sevim, appears to accuse him of inappropriate behavior. The only light on the horizon for Samet is his growing friendship with—and clear attraction to—a teacher from a nearby school, Nuray (Merve Dizdar), a sharp, politically engaged woman unafraid to put the self-involved Samet in his place for his general apathy and narcissism. Turkey’s official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards, the latest deeply philosophical drama from Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, NYFF49) is a work of elegant, novelistic filmmaking, rigorously unpacking questions of belief versus action, the tangible versus the enigmatic, and who we wish to be versus how we live. A centerpiece conversation between Samet and Nuray—capped off by a provocative metacinematic flourish—ranks with Ceylan’s greatest sequences, and Dizdar, who won the Best Actress prize at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, commands every second she’s on screen. A Sideshow/Janus Films release.
This conversation was moderated by NYFF Advisor Violeta Bava.
2/16/2024 • 27 minutes, 13 seconds
#511 - Serge Daney Talk with Richard Brody, Nicholas Elliott & Madeline Whittle
This week we’re excited to present a panel of critics and programmers to discuss the significance of the late French film critic Serge Daney (1944–1992)'s thought today, with a particular emphasis on how his politically driven analysis and radical enthusiasms of the 1970s might speak to our contemporary moment.
Film at Lincoln Center was proud to recently present Never Look Away: Serge Daney’s Radical 1970s, a series that celebrated French film critic Serge Daney and the films he championed in his book La Rampe, occasioned by its long-awaited English translation under the title Footlights.
Complementing this program was a panel that featured The New Yorker’s Richard Brody, translator of Footlights and series co-programmer Nicholas Elliott, and moderator FLC Assistant Programmer Madeline Whittle. This discussion considered the relation between mise-en-scène and moral perspective, the cinema as an antidote to advertising, and the critic’s role as an ally to filmmakers.
Never Look Away: Serge Daney’s Radical 1970 was sponsored by MUBI.
2/11/2024 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 24 seconds
#510 - Trân Anh Hùng on The Taste of Things
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Trân Anh Hùng to discuss the NYFF61 Spotlight selection, THE TASTE OF THINGS, opening at Film at Lincoln Center on February 9th. The director will appear in person at select screenings opening weekend as well as for a sneak preview on Thursday, Feb. 8. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/taste.
Destined to be remembered as one of the great films about the meaning, texture, and experience of food, this sumptuous, exceptionally well-crafted work, set in late 19th-century France, stars Juliette Binoche and Benoît Magimel (married, decades ago, in real life) as Eugénie, a cook, and Dodin, the gourmet chef she has been working with for 20 years. As they reach middle age, they can no longer deny their mutual romantic feelings, which have so long been concentrated in their passionate professionalism. This simple narrative—based upon Marcel Rouff’s 1924 novel LA PASSION DE DODIN-BOUFFANT, GOURMET—sets the table for a sublime, sense-heightening exploration of pleasure, in which the play of sunlight across a late-afternoon kitchen is as meaningful as the image of a perfectly poached pear or the crisp of a buoyant vol-au-vent. Director Trân Anh Hùng won the Best Director prize at this year’s Cannes Film Festival for his bravura, scrupulously deployed feat of epicurean cinema. France’s official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards. An IFC Films release.
2/1/2024 • 22 minutes, 57 seconds
#509 - Bas Devos and Liyo Gong on Here
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Bas Devos and actress Liyo Gong to discuss the NYFF61 Main Slate selection, HERE, opening at Film at Lincoln Center on February 9th. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/here.
Stefan, a migrant construction worker living in Brussels, is planning a trip home to his mother in Romania. In preparing for his voyage, he reconnects with local family members over gifted bowls of homemade soup, interacts with strangers, and discovers a revivifying commune with nature. This all leads him to an unexpected connection with Shuxiu, a Chinese-Belgian bryologist, who’s studying the local moss. The gradual cultivation of this friendship—beautifully performed by actors Stefan Gota and Liyo Gong—motivates this hushed, emotionally resonant film about the power of observation, of people often deemed socially invisible, and of the larger green world surrounding us. In his lovely and tranquil fourth feature, Belgian filmmaker Bas Devos (GHOST TROPIC) has created a work that finds transcendence in the simplest human encounters and the most radiant of cinematic gestures. Winner of the Best Film prize in the Berlin International Film Festival’s Encounters competition. A Cinema Guild release.
1/29/2024 • 23 minutes, 30 seconds
#508 - Kleber Mendonça Filho on Pictures of Ghosts and a Programmer's Preview of Serge Daney's 1970s
This week we’re excited to present two conversations, the first with programmers Madeline Whittle and Nicholas Elliot about our upcoming retrospective, Never Look Away: Serge Daney’s Radical 1970s, and the second with Kleber Mendonça Filho, director of the NYFF61 Main Slate selection Pictures of Ghosts, opening in our theaters on January 26th.
Beginning Friday, Film at Lincoln Center presents a series celebrating French film critic Serge Daney and the films he championed, occasioned by the long-awaited English translation of the critic’s first book La Rampe, now titled Footlights. The series runs from January 26 through February 4 and will feature a robust selection of works by master filmmakers, with many presented on 35mm or in digital restorations, accompanied by guest introductions. The programmers of the retrospective, Madline Whittle and Nicholas Elliot, spoke with Digital Marketing Manager Erik Luers about how they curated the lineup and the importance of Daney’s writing and views on cinema. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/daney
Never Look Away: Serge Daney’s Radical 1970s is sponsored by MUBI. Learn more at mubi.com/en/flc
The life of a true cinephile is one constantly haunted by the dead, as the history of the movies is a corridor of ghosts. Brazilian filmmaker and unrepentant cinema obsessive Kleber Mendonça Filho’s new documentary—Brazil’s official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards—serves as a poignant testament to the liminal state of movie love. It tells, in three chapters, the story of his cinematic world—namely the city of Recife, where his youthful film education took place. At theaters like the Veneza and the São Luiz, Mendonça discovered a popular art form that would change his life; today, with the landscape of the city altering drastically, he surveys its empty rooms now pregnant with memories. This moving and playful film, as much about the architectural and social structures of a city as about the movies that inspire and haunt us, honors the personal spaces that are also the communal lifeblood of our urban centers. Enjoy the conversation from the New York Film Festival between Kleber Mendonça Filho and FLC Vice President of Programming, Florence Almozini.
Get tickets to Pictures of Ghosts at filmlinc.org/ghosts.
1/20/2024 • 57 minutes, 2 seconds
#507 - The Cast of The Curse and Pham Thien An on Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell
This week we’re excited to present two conversations, the first from the 61st New York Film Festival with Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell director Pham Thien An and the second with Emma Stone, Nathan Fielder, Benny Safdie and Executive Producer Dave McCary of the new Showtime series The Curse.
Winner of the prestigious Camera d’Or for best first film at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, the enthralling Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell from Vietnamese filmmaker Pham Thien An is a reverie on faith, loss, and nature expressed with uncommon invention and depth. It’s a simple tale told with visual complexity: after a car accident claims the life of his sister-in-law and leaves his 5-year-old nephew an orphan, a thirty something man named Thien (Le Phong Vu) leaves Saigon for a trip back to his rural hometown. During his meditative, wandering visit, Thien wrestles with his own agnosticism in the face of others’ religious beliefs, summons memories of his long-disappeared brother, and reconnects with a former girlfriend who now lives as a nun at a Christian church and school. With its drifting camera, evocative use of natural light, and gratifying perambulatory nature, this is a film with the power to readjust one’s perceptions of the world around us. An NYFF61 Currents selection.
In this brilliantly discomfiting collaboration between Nathan Fielder and Benny Safdie, Fielder and Emma Stone play married entrepreneurs (don’t call them gentrifiers!) who flip houses and convert them into eco-friendly homes for the struggling residents of Española, New Mexico—all for an HGTV-style reality show. Following the world premieres of episodes 1–3 at the 61st New York Film Festival, Film at Lincoln Center is pleased to present the remaining seven episodes from this genre-defying, riotously funny series, directed by Fielder and David and Nathan Zellner. An NYFF61 Spotlight selection.
Get tickets to Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell, opening at Film at Lincoln Center on Jan. 19: filmlinc.org/cocoon
1/12/2024 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 22 seconds
#506 - The Craft of Editing All of Us Strangers and Hit Man
This week we’re excited to present a conversation from the 61st New York Film Festival between American Cinema Editor members Sandra Adair (Hit Man) and Jonathan Alberts (All of Us Strangers).
Across genres, styles, and modes of production, the work of the film editor remains one of the least visible but most essential elements of cinematic storytelling. In last year’s NYFF lineup, Main Slate selection All of Us Strangers and Spotlight selection Hit Man were exemplary showcases for the range of expressive effects made possible by the film editor’s contributions, demonstrating how pacing, rhythm, and punctuation can amplify or obscure meaning, accentuate performances, and synthesize precise interactions between comedy, drama, suspense, and eroticism. This talk was organized in collaboration with American Cinema Editors and was moderated by American Cinema Editor member Jeffrey Wolf.
All NYFF61 Talks are sponsored by HBO.
1/5/2024 • 47 minutes, 49 seconds
#505 - Wim Wenders on Anselm
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with Anselm director Wim Wenders moderated by filmmaker Michèle Stephenson. Anselm is now playing at Film at Lincoln Center, in stunning 3D! Get tickets at filmlinc.org/anselm
Oscar-nominated director Wim Wenders traces the life of Anselm Kiefer, one of the most innovative and influential fine artists working today. For more than five decades, Kiefer’s paintings and sculptures have confronted his native Germany’s dark past through a vast network of cultural references in a dazzling mixture of 35mm and 16mm film stocks, with a distinctive focus on physical elements: from lead, glass, and textiles to found and incinerated organic matter. As he did for his sublime portrait of Pina Bausch in 2011, Wenders employs groundbreaking stereoscopic cinematography to transport us to key chapters of Kiefer’s early life in post-Nazi Germany and throughout his 100-acre studio in France. Anselm, which debuted at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, is a portrait of an artist at work like you’ve never seen before—an indelible visual experience and a vivid tour of Kiefer’s imposing yet intricately textured works. A Sideshow/Janus Films release.
12/23/2023 • 25 minutes, 7 seconds
#504 - Jonathan Glazer, Christian Friedel, Sandra Hüller and More on The Zone of Interest
Director Jonathan Glazer, stars Sandra Hüller and Christian Friedel, sound designer Johnnie Burn, and producer James Wilson joined us at NYFF61 to discuss sound design, physicality, and the morality of portraying the Holocaust in The Zone of Interest, a Main Slate selection in this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim. The Zone of Interest is now playing in select theaters.
In his chilling, oblique study of evil, British director Jonathan Glazer (Under the Skin) situates the viewer at the center of frighteningly familiar banality: the domestic routine of a Nazi Commandant, his wife, and their kids, while death and violence occur against those imprisoned in Auschwitz over the wall from their idyllic house. Winner of the Grand Prix at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival.
12/14/2023 • 29 minutes, 56 seconds
#503 - Yorgos Lanthimos, Tony McNamara, and the Creative Team of Poor Things
This week we’re excited to present a panel discussion with the creative team of Poor Things, an NYFF61 Main Slate selection. The discussion features director Yorgos Lanthimos, screenwriter Tony McNamara, production designers James Price & Shona Heath, composer Jerskin Fendrix, costume designer Holly Waddington, and sound designer Johnnie Burn in conversation with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim. Poor Things is now playing in select theaters and will open nationwide on December 22nd.
In his boldest vision yet, iconoclast auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, previously featured in NYFF with The Lobster (NYFF57) and The Favourite (NYFF56), creates an outlandish alternate 19th century on the cusp of technological breakthrough, in which a peculiar, childlike woman named Bella (Emma Stone) lives with her mysterious caretaker, the scientist and surgeon Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). At once poignant and grotesque, Poor Things, based on a 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray, is a punkish update of the Frankenstein story that becomes a deeply feminist fairy tale about women taking back control of their own bodies and minds. A Searchlight Pictures release.
12/8/2023 • 27 minutes, 14 seconds
#502 - The Sweet East Creative Team & a Preview of The Radical Cinema of Kijū Yoshida
This week we’re excited to present two conversations, the first a panel discussion centered around the films of the late Japanese filmmaker Kijū Yoshida, whose films we will be screening beginning this Friday in the new series, The Radical Cinema of Kijū Yoshida, through December 8, followed by a Q&A with The Sweet East director Sean Price Williams, screenwriter Nick Pinkerton, and cast members Talia Ryder, Simon Rex, Jeremy O. Harris, Rish Shah, and Earl Cave from the 61st New York Film Festival.
Get tickets to The Radical Cinema of Kijū Yoshida at filmlinc.org/yoshida
11/30/2023 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 53 seconds
#501 - Alma Pöysti and Jussi Vatanen on Fallen Leaves
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with Alma Pöysti and Jussi Vatanen, the two lead actors of the NYFF61 Main Slate selection Fallen Leaves from director Aki Kaurismäki.
Sweet-souled in story, scalpel-sharp in filmmaking precision, this enchanting love story from Finnish virtuoso Aki Kaurismäki circles around two financially strapped Helsinkians who keep finding and losing one another in a world that seems to be falling apart. Evoking dark-comic romances from his early career such as Shadows in Paradise and Ariel (NYFF27), the sardonic yet exquisitely melancholic Fallen Leaves devotes its wry, humane gaze to grocery clerk Ansa (Alma Pöysti) and construction laborer Holappa (Jussi Vatanen), who commence an on-again, off-again relationship of extreme tentativeness, while seeking employment and stability. As with the greatest of Kaurismäki’s films, everyday details register as grand, meaningful cinematic gestures. This filmmaker has scrupulously carved another fictive universe out of a handful of specific, vivid locations, yet Fallen Leaves very much takes place in the world we’re living in, which makes its surrender to hope all the more affecting. Winner of the Jury Prize at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. Finland’s official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 2024 Academy Awards. A MUBI release.
This conversation was moderated by The Wrap's Tomris Laffly.
11/26/2023 • 29 minutes, 40 seconds
#500 - Wang Bing and Eduardo Williams on Youth (Spring) and The Human Surge 3
This week we’re excited to present an NYFF61 Crosscuts conversation between Wang Bing, the director of the NYFF61 Main Slate selection Youth (Spring), and Eduardo Williams, director of the NYFF61 Currents selection, The Human Surge 3.
If there are two films from 2023 that might be remembered in the years to come as time capsules of life as we live it today, they are Wang Bing’s Youth (Spring), an NYFF61 Main Slate selection, and Eduardo Williams’s The Human Surge 3, which opens this year’s NYFF Currents lineup. Williams follows up on The Human Surge with a playfully misnumbered sequel that captures the ambulations of a group of young people in three countries—Peru, Taiwan, and Sri Lanka—using a 360-degree camera, giving resonant form to the virtual, cacophonous, and borderless (yet bounded) texture of our contemporary existence. In Youth (Spring), Bing returns to his project of documenting a China transformed by the vagaries of industrialization: Shot across five years within privately run textile workshops in Zhili, which employ swathes of underpaid twentysomethings, Youth (Spring) accumulates a monumental portrait of life shaped by the temporality of ruthless, relentless production. This talk will bring together these two masterful chroniclers of the present for a conversation about their inspirations and influences, their form-bending play with the cinematic medium, and their radical approaches to time and space.
All NYFF61 Talks are sponsored by HBO.
11/20/2023 • 56 minutes, 54 seconds
#499 - Todd Haynes on May December
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with Todd Haynes, the director of the NYFF61 Opening Night selection May December, which will be opening at Film at Lincoln Center this Friday exclusively on 35mm film. The conversation was moderated by playwright and actor Jeremy O. Harris.
Elizabeth (Natalie Portman), a popular television star, has arrived in a tight-knit island community in Savannah. Here, she will be doing intimate research for a new part, ingratiating herself into the lives of Gracie (Julianne Moore), whom she’ll be playing on-screen, and her much younger husband, Joe (Charles Melton), to better understand the psychology and circumstances that more than 20 years ago made them notorious tabloid figures. As Elizabeth attempts to get closer to the family, the uncomfortable facts of their scandal unfurl, causing difficult, long-dormant emotions to resurface. From the sensational premise born from first time screenwriter Samy Burch’s brilliant script, director Todd Haynes (Safe, Carol) has constructed an American tale of astonishing richness and depth, which touches the pressure and pleasure points of a culture obsessed equally with celebrity and trauma. It’s a feat of storytelling and pinpoint-precise tone that is shrewd in its wicked embrace of melodrama while also genuinely moving in its humane treatment of tricky subject matter. Boasting a trio of bravura, mercurial performances by Moore, Portman, and Melton, May December is a film about human exploitation, the elusive nature of performance, and the slipperiness of truth that confirms Todd Haynes’s status as one of our consummate movie artists. A Netflix release.
11/12/2023 • 53 minutes, 50 seconds
#498 - Annie Baker and Raven Jackson on Janet Planet and All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt
This week we’re excited to present an NYFF61 Crosscut conversation between Annie Baker and Raven Jackson, the directors of two of the most self-assured debut films of the year (Janet Planet and All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt, respectively). Covering traits of the coming-of-age genre, writing practices, and non-traditional scripts, Baker and Jackson’s conversation was moderated by NYFF Main Slate Committee member Kameron Austin Collins.
Breaking onto the scene with two of the most original and assured feature debuts in recent memory, Baker and Jackson have each crafted tone poems of breathtaking delicacy. With stories that weave together themes of motherhood and coming-of-age with a lush, exquisitely detailed sense of place, Baker and Jackson distill and transpose the singular qualities of their literary work to the cinematic medium.
11/5/2023 • 56 minutes, 36 seconds
#497 - Martin Scorsese on Mean Streets
This week we’re excited to present an archival conversation with director Martin Scorsese, whose new film, Killers of the Flower Moon, is currently playing in theaters worldwide courtesy of Paramount Pictures and Apple Original Films.
In this conversation with Scorsese, the director discusses his early '70s masterpiece, Mean Streets, co-starring his Killers of the Flower Moon supporting actor Robert De Niro. De Niro’s lasting partnership with Scorsese began with the filmmaker’s breakthrough third feature, an electrifying and unforgettable depiction of small-time thugs in Little Italy that established much of what was to come in both artists’ careers. Harvey Keitel, an alum of Scorsese’s student feature Who’s That Knocking at My Door?, is Charlie, an aspirant gangster seeking a middle ground between his profession and his efforts to lead a morally upright life. But his irrepressible friend Johnny Boy (De Niro) complicates matters with his anarchic behavior and debts to loan sharks. Raising hell as soon as he arrives on screen, De Niro is entirely at home as Scorsese’s young id of Mulberry Street—equal parts funny, ferocious, and frightening.
This conversation was moderated by former NYFF Associate Director of Programming, Scott Foundas.
10/29/2023 • 43 minutes, 31 seconds
#496 - Rodrigo Moreno on The Delinquents
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Rodrigo Moreno, whose new film, The Delinquents, made its U.S. Premiere at the 61st New York Film Festival and is now playing at Film at Lincoln Center. Get tickets now at filmlinc.org/delinquents
A heist picture unlike any other, The Delinquents upends genre expectations with a gentle yet deftly constructed existentialist fable. Timid bank clerk Morán , fed up with his dead-end middle-management job, decides one day to simply walk into the vault, pack a bag with enough cash to cover his salary until retirement age, and saunter out. Knowing he has been inevitably caught on security camera, Morán plans on turning himself in, but not before passing the stash along to his coworker Román, now an accomplice who agrees to hold onto the money until Morán gets out of prison. From this gripping premise, Argentinean writer-director Rodrigo Moreno spins an endlessly surprising tale that moves into increasingly idyllic territory, adding layer upon layer to the twinned stories of these two men’s lives, and inquiring what it means to be free in a world of monetary satisfaction.
10/20/2023 • 40 minutes, 9 seconds
#495 - Frederick Wiseman on Menus-Plaisirs Les Troisgros
On the final daily NYFF61 edition of the FLC podcast, director Frederick Wiseman, the United States’s unrivaled maestro of observational nonfiction, joins us to discuss Menus-Plaisirs Les Troisgros, a Spotlight selection in this year’s festival, with FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini.
Wiseman brings his camera into a three-star Michelin restaurant in rural central France, and the result is an expansive, delectable, and provocative portrait of the demand for perfection—a surprising but apt subject in Wiseman’s decades-long inquiries into the inner workings of complicated institutions that function with their own rules and standards. A Zipporah Films release.
All NYFF61 feature documentaries are presented by HBO.
10/16/2023 • 20 minutes, 24 seconds
#494- Michael Mann, Adam Driver, Penélope Cruz & Gabriel Leone on Ferrari
Ferrari director Michael Mann and cast members Adam Driver, Penélope Cruz, and Gabriel Leone discuss diving deep into projects, the complexities of the Ferrari family, and competitive racing with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim at the Closing Night press conference.
Michael Mann (The Insider) brings his astonishing command of technique and storytelling to bear on this emotional, elegantly crafted dramatization of the life of the legendary car manufacturer and entrepreneur Enzo Ferrari at a professional and personal fulcrum. It’s 1957, and the marriage of Enzo (Adam Driver, in an artfully internalized performance) and Laura (Penélope Cruz, a ferocious revelation) has begun to irrevocably fracture as a result of his philandering and the tragic recent death of their young son. Their unsettled domestic world is on a collision course with his work life as Enzo faces a pair of major turning points: financial pressure to increase productivity, which means going against his long-standing desire to only produce race cars, and preparations for the treacherous cross-country open-road Mille Miglia race. Dovetailing these narrative strands, Mann effortlessly shifts gears between elegiac and spectacular, climaxing in an exhilarating and terrifying race across the Northern Italian landscape—a visual and aural wonder of revving machinery against bucolic splendor—that ranks with the greatest set pieces of Mann’s career. Aided by a magnificent cast, which also includes Shailene Woodley, Gabriel Leone, Patrick Dempsey, and Jack O’Connell, and glorious on-location shooting in Ferrari’s hometown of Modena, Mann has constructed a marvel of classical cinema. A Neon release.
NYFF61 Closing Night is presented by Campari.
10/15/2023 • 36 minutes, 51 seconds
#493 - Neo Sora on Ryuichi Sakamoto | Opus
Ryuichi Sakamoto | Opus director Neo Sora discusses the personal nature of the film, the logistics of recording live music, and Sakamoto’s relationship with cinema.
When Ryuichi Sakamoto died in March 2023 at age 71, the world lost one of its greatest musicians: a classical orchestral composer, a techno-pop artist, and a piano soloist who elevated every genre he worked in and inspired and influenced music-lovers across the globe. As a final gift to his legions of fans, filmmaker Neo Sora (Sakamoto’s son) has constructed a gorgeous elegy starring Sakamoto himself in one of his final performances. Recorded in late 2022 at NHK Studio in Tokyo, this filmed concert is an intimate, melancholy, and achingly beautiful one-man show, featuring just Sakamoto and a Yamaha grand, as the composer glides through a playlist of his most haunting, delicate melodies (including “Lack of Love, “The Wuthering Heights,” “Aqua,” “Opus,” and many more). Shot in pristine black-and-white by Bill Kirstein and edited by Takuya Kawakami, this stirring film brings us so close to a living, breathing artist that it feels like pure grace. A Janus Films release.
All NYFF61 feature documentaries are presented by HBO.
10/14/2023 • 16 minutes, 1 second
#492 - Bertrand Bonello on The Beast
Director Bertrand Bonello discusses the timelessness of Léa Seydoux, slashers, and The Beast, a Main Slate selection in this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Using Henry James’s haunting 1903 short story “The Beast in the Jungle” as his film’s provocative inspiration, Bertrand Bonello (Nocturama, Coma) has created a dynamic and disturbing parable that jumps between three different time periods (1910, 2014, and 2044) and tells the story of a young woman (Léa Seydoux) who undergoes a surgical process to have her DNA—and therefore memories of all her past lives—removed. A Sideshow/Janus Films release.
On today’s daily NYFF61 podcast, director Annie Baker and lead actresses Julianne Nicholson and Zoe Ziegler discuss Pulitzer Prize–winning playwright Baker’s superb debut feature Janet Planet with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
It’s 1991 in rural Western Massachusetts, the summer before Lacy (Zoe Ziegler) starts sixth grade, and she is spending the lazy months with her acupuncturist mother, Janet (Julianne Nicholson), in their home in the woods. As the months drift by, the bespectacled, taciturn girl, fiercely observant, watches Janet and three enigmatic adults who drift in and out of their lives, whether romantic interests or reconnected friends. This work of surreal tranquility moves at a different, lost pace of life, and introduces Ziegler as an incredible new talent. An A24 release.
Listen to the Q&A featuring Baker, Nicholson, and Ziegler as they discuss watching the film for the first time, resisting conventions, and the origins of Janet Planet.
10/12/2023 • 26 minutes, 11 seconds
#490 - Jonathan Glazer, Sandra Hüller & Christian Friedel on The Zone of Interest
Director Jonathan Glazer, stars Christian Friedel and Sandra Hüller, sound designer Johnnie Burn, and producer James Wilson joined us at NYFF61 to discuss sound design, physicality, and the morality of portraying the Holocaust in The Zone of Interest, a Main Slate selection in this year’s festival, with FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini.
In his chilling, oblique study of evil, British director Jonathan Glazer (Under the Skin) situates the viewer at the center of frighteningly familiar banality: the domestic routine of a Nazi Commandant, his wife, and their kids, while death and violence occur against those imprisoned in Auschwitz over the wall from their idyllic house. Winner of the Grand Prix at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival.
10/11/2023 • 25 minutes, 39 seconds
#489 - Justine Triet, Arthur Harari & Sandra Hüller on Anatomy of a Fall
On today’s daily NYFF61 edition of the FLC podcast, director Justine Triet, co-writer Arthur Harari, and lead actress Sandra Hüller join us to discuss Anatomy of a Fall, a Main Slate selection in this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
The winner of this year’s Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival, Justine Triet’s drama is a riveting procedural and a delicate inquiry into the impossibility of an ultimate truth in human relationships. When the husband of famous novelist Sandra Voyter (played by Toni Erdmann’s Sandra Hüller) is found dead on the ground outside their chalet in the French Alps, authorities suspect that she might have been responsible, as the impact and position of his body suggest a push rather than a fall. This leads to a murder trial that puts every aspect of their marriage under impossible scrutiny, and whose outcome might hinge on the perspective of their vision-impaired 11-year-old son. Triet’s fiercely intelligent, emotionally devastating film dissects the ways we create subjective narratives for ourselves and others and questions the insufficiency of language to describe the essential mysteries each of us possesses. At its core is the brilliant Hüller, whose Sandra is articulate, open, and utterly inscrutable.
Anatomy of a Fall opens at Film at Lincoln Center on Oct. 18. Tickets are on sale now: filmlinc.org/anatomy
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/10/2023 • 22 minutes, 38 seconds
#488 - Ryûsuke Hamaguchi on Evil Does Not Exist
On today’s daily NYFF61 edition of the FLC podcast, director Ryûsuke Hamaguchi joins us to discuss Evil Does Not Exist, a Main Slate selection in this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
In his potent and foreboding new film, Oscar-winning director Ryûsuke Hamaguchi (Drive My Car) reconstitutes the boundaries of the ecopolitical thriller with the tale of a serene rural village that’s about to be disrupted by the construction of a glamping site for Tokyo tourists. A Sideshow/Janus Films release.
Enjoy this discussion Hamaguchi and don’t forget to subscribe here for more filmmaker conversations. Evil Does Not Exist will be released by Sideshow and Janus Films.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/9/2023 • 20 minutes, 54 seconds
#487 - Cailee Spaeny, Jacob Elordi & the Creative Team of Priscilla
At the North American premiere of Priscilla, our Centerpiece selection, actors Cailee Spaeny & Jacob Elordi, costumer designer Stacey Battat, production designer Tamara Deverell, and producer Youree Henley discussed the film with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
No one knew American pop icon Elvis Presley more tenderly during his superstar years than Priscilla Ann Wagner, whose own story as Elvis’s romantic partner and only wife has rarely been told. Director Sofia Coppola, who in her remarkable filmography has so often returned to intimate portraits of women living complicated lives behind closed doors, has found a subject exquisitely tailored to her interests. As portrayed with extraordinary poise and strength by Cailee Spaeny, Priscilla finally becomes the center of her narrative. Coppola follows her love affair with Elvis (an equally revelatory, larger-than-life Jacob Elordi), from her early years as a teenage army brat stationed in West Germany to her surreal arrival at Graceland, which becomes both her home and prison. With her customarily precise attention to texture and detail, Coppola has created one of her most stirring, vivid films, a tribute to a woman who was living in the public eye before she had truly experienced the world.
Don't forget to mark your calendars: Priscilla opens in theaters on November 3, courtesy of A24.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/8/2023 • 37 minutes, 38 seconds
#486 - Emma Stone & Yorgos Lanthimos on Bleat
We recently welcomed actress Emma Stone and director Yorgos Lanthimos to the New York Film Festival for the U.S. premiere of Bleat, a Spotlight selection in this year’s festival, for a post-screening Q&A with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Director Yorgos Lanthimos and star Emma Stone have worked together before, but never in black-and-white on a remote Greek island with a herd of goats. In this entrancing, wordless collaboration, Stone gives a mesmerizing performance as a young widow who, along with her late husband (Damien Bonnard), embarks on a singularly unclassifiable journey through sex, death, and resurrection. Showing for the first time since its Athens premiere last year and designed never to be presented with a recorded soundtrack, this unique 35mm screening of the silent film featured live accompaniment by an ensemble of musicians and a choir, performing pieces by J.S. Bach, Knut Nystedt, and Toshio Hosokawa.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/6/2023 • 19 minutes, 7 seconds
#485 - Richard Linklater on Hit Man
We recently welcomed back director Richard Linklater for the U.S. premiere of Hit Man, a Spotlight selection in this year’s festival, for a post-screening Q&A with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Richard Linklater’s peppy sunlit neo-noir is a continually surprising delight. Glen Powell, in a wily and charismatic star turn, plays strait-laced philosophy professor Gary Johnson, who moonlights as an undercover hitman for the New Orleans Police Department, inhabiting different guises and personalities to catch hapless criminals hoping to bump off their enemies. It’s based on an improbable true story, with a few wild embellishments.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/6/2023 • 20 minutes, 2 seconds
#484 - The Creative Team of Bradley Cooper's Maestro
We were thrilled to have screenwriter Josh Singer, producer Kristie Macosko Krieger, Leonard Bernstein’s daughter Jamie Bernstein, makeup designer Kazu Hiro, costume designer Mark Bridges, production designer Kevin Thompson, production sound mixer Steve Morrow, and Yannick Nézet-Séguin, the conducting consultant and conductor for new recordings and Music Director of The Metropolitan Opera, discuss their work on Bradley Cooper's Maestro, the Spotlight Gala selection of NYFF61, with NYFF Main Slate committee member Justin Chang.
In his directorial follow-up to A Star Is Born, Bradley Cooper dramatizes the public and private lives of legendary musician Leonard Bernstein with sensitivity, visual ingenuity, and symphonic splendor. Coasting on the boundless energy of its subject’s runaway genius, Maestro transports the viewer back to a vividly re-created postwar New York, when Bernstein (Cooper) began his stratospheric rise to international fame as both a conductor and composer, and also when he first met Felicia (Carey Mulligan), the actress whom he would marry and spend his life with. Maestro is a tender, often intensely emotional film about the different faces one wears when living in the public eye, depicting the complicated yet devoted decades-spanning relationship between Leonard and Felicia. Fueled by Cooper and Mulligan’s perfectly matched duet of towering performances, Matthew Libatique’s balletic cinematography, and, of course, Bernstein’s thrilling music, Maestro is a tour de force for its director. A Netflix release.
Don’t forget to mark your calendars: Maestro opens in theaters on November 22 and on Netflix December 20.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/5/2023 • 37 minutes, 32 seconds
#483 - Andrew Haigh and Jonathan Alberts on All of Us Strangers
We were happy to have director Andrew Haigh and editor Jonathan Alberts at the New York Film Festival for All of Us Strangers, a Main Slate selection of this year's festival, where they recently discussed the film with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
British director Andrew Haigh, whose 2011 feature breakthrough Weekend is among the most widely beloved queer romances of the 21st century, has returned with an expertly modulated, emotionally overwhelming love story suspended in a metaphysical realm. Adam (Andrew Scott), a melancholy screenwriter living alone in a newly built, nearly empty high-rise on the outskirts of London, meets and tentatively begins a passionate relationship with the more extroverted Harry (Paul Mescal), his apparent only neighbor in the building. At the same time, Adam begins another, parallel journey, venturing out to the city’s suburbs to confront his troubled past and perhaps reconcile his unsettled present. Adapted from a 1987 novel by Taichi Yamada, All of Us Strangers is uncommonly perceptive about the desires, fears, and traumas of a specific generation of gay men while extending into the universal—or perhaps the cosmic—in its depiction of familial love and estrangement. And in a quartet of superb performances, Scott, Mescal, Jamie Bell, and Claire Foy pierce straight to the heart. A Searchlight Pictures release.
Don’t forget to mark your calendars: All of Us Strangers opens in theaters on December 22.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/3/2023 • 14 minutes, 39 seconds
#482 - Garth Davis on Foe
We were happy to have director Garth Davis make his New York Film Festival debut with the World Premiere of Foe, a Spotlight selection of this year’s festival, which he recently discussed with NYFF Main Slate committee member Florence Almozini.
In the year 2065, a married midwestern couple, Hen (Saoirse Ronan) and Junior (Paul Mescal), live in Junior’s weather-beaten ancestral farmhouse. Their relationship seems to be on ground as unsolid as the expansive, desolate landscape that surrounds them, parched and mottled by decades of climate change. One night, a stranger (Aaron Pierre) arrives at their door with a surprising proposal, offering them the chance to change their own futures and perhaps alter the course of human existence. In this superbly rendered, sensationally acted science-fiction drama, adapted from the acclaimed novel by Iain Reid, director Garth Davis (Lion) brilliantly toys with viewers’ perceptions while interrogating essential questions of our time about environmental apocalypse and the rise of artificial intelligence, building in emotional intensity to a devastating climax. An Amazon Studios release.
Don’t forget to mark your calendars: Foe opens in theaters this Friday, October 6.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
10/2/2023 • 18 minutes, 12 seconds
#481 - Yorgos Lanthimos & Team on Poor Things
We were happy to have director Yorgos Lanthimos back at the New York Film Festival to discuss Poor Things, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival, as well as cinematographer Robbie Ryan, costume designer Holly Waddington, composer Jerskin Fendrix, and production designers James Price & Shona Heath, with NYFF programmer Rachel Rosen.
In his boldest vision yet, iconoclast auteur Yorgos Lanthimos, previously featured in NYFF with The Lobster (NYFF57) and The Favourite (NYFF56), creates an outlandish alternate 19th century on the cusp of technological breakthrough, in which a peculiar, childlike woman named Bella (Emma Stone) lives with her mysterious caretaker, the scientist and surgeon Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). At once poignant and grotesque, Poor Things, based on a 1992 novel by Alasdair Gray, is a punkish update of the Frankenstein story that becomes a deeply feminist fairy tale about women taking back control of their own bodies and minds. A Searchlight Pictures release.
Listen to the conversation with Lanthimos and his team as they discuss Poor Things.
Don’t forget to mark your calendars: Poor Things opens in theaters on December 8.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix
10/1/2023 • 36 minutes, 10 seconds
#480 - Todd Haynes, Samy Burch, Christine Vachon & More on May December
The 61st edition of the New York Film Festival kicked off on Friday, September 29 with the North American premiere of May December, directed by Todd Haynes.
From the sensational premise born from first-time screenwriter Samy Burch’s brilliant script, director Todd Haynes (Safe, Carol) has constructed an American tale of astonishing richness and depth, which touches the pressure and pleasure points of a culture obsessed equally with celebrity and trauma. Boasting a trio of bravura, mercurial performances by Julianne Moore, Natalie Portman, and Charles Melton, May December is a film about human exploitation, the elusive nature of performance, and the slipperiness of truth that confirms Todd Haynes’s status as one of our consummate movie artists. A Netflix release. Opening Night of NYFF61 is presented by Campari.
Listen to the press conference featuring Haynes, Burch, and producers Christine Vachon, Pamela Koffler, Jessica Elbaum, and Sophie Mas as they discuss May December.
Don’t forget to mark your calendars: May December opens at FLC on November 17 and on Netflix December 1.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis by visiting filmlinc.org/tix.
9/30/2023 • 26 minutes, 36 seconds
#479 - NYFF61 Programmers Preview
This week we're excited to present a Programmers Preview of NYFF61 with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim, Revivals Programmer Dan Sullivan, Currents & Shorts Programmer Tyler Wilson, and Talks programmers Devika Girish and Madeline Whittle.
Opening with the North American premiere of Todd Haynes’s May December, this year’s festival will feature screenings across New York City’s five boroughs, free talks with your favorite filmmakers, stimulating panel discussions, trivia nights, and much more. Learn more at filmlinc.org/nyff
9/22/2023 • 54 minutes, 32 seconds
#478 - Yui Kiyohara on Remembering Every Night
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Yui Kiyohara, whose new film, Remembering Every Night was a 2023 New Directors/New Films selection that is now playing at Film at Lincoln Center along with the filmmaker’s first feature, Our House. And, if you purchase a ticket to one Yui Kiyohara film, receive a ticket to the other free!
A film that moves on the rhythms of a gentle breeze, Yui Kiyohara’s follow-up to her acclaimed Our House is an evocatively quotidian film that’s as mysterious and beautiful as everyday life itself. Kiyohara immerses viewers in the quiet pursuits of several women, including a wandering university student, a helpful neighborhood meter reader, and a middle-aged gentle soul seeking employment but finding herself agreeably lost instead. Their paths converge or just miss one another over the course of a single sunny afternoon, captured by Kiyohara with calming long takes and the occasional drifting camera that seems to have a perspective all its own. Remembering Every Night is a treasure of unconventional filmmaking that abounds with simple pleasures, reminding the viewer of the fragility of time, happiness, and love.
9/14/2023 • 30 minutes, 37 seconds
#477 - Darcy Paquet, Young Jin Eric Choi, & Goran Topalovic on Aimless Bullet
This week we’re excited to present a conversation which recently took place as part of our new series, Korean Cinema’s Golden Decade: The 1960s, following a screening of Yu Hyun-mok’s 1961 South Korean classic, Aimless Bullet. Film critic, lecturer, and author Darcy Paquet and series co-curators, Korean Film Archive's Young Jin Eric Choi and Subway Cinema's Goran Topalovic, lead a discussion of the film.
Banned in 1961 for its scathing critique of postwar reconstruction but now widely hailed as one of the greatest Korean films ever made, Yu Hyun-mok’s breakout feature was this unrelentingly bleak, noir-tinged melodrama set in the aftermath of the Korean War. The film follows the tragic bond between two brothers living with their surviving family in a Seoul slum called Liberation Village. While Cheol-ho, an accountant suffering from a toothache he can’t afford to treat, struggles to scrape together a meager existence, the senseless consequences of the war gradually tear at the seams of his family and push his younger brother, Young-Ho, to a desperate measure. An on-location tour through the traumatized atmosphere of Korea’s capital, Aimless Bullet artfully blends expressionist and neorealist styles within a grimly introspective portrait of a nation left shattered by hatred and fear—touching on everything from military prostitution and economic inequality to the exploitations of the film industry itself. Restored in 2015 by the Korean Film Archive.
9/11/2023 • 28 minutes, 49 seconds
#476 - Eduardo Williams on The Human Surge
This week we’re excited to present an archival conversation with The Human Surge director Eduardo Williams. Eduardo Williams’s latest film,The Human Surge 3, will make its U.S. Premiere as the Opening Night selection in the Currents section of the 61st New York Film Festival.
A twenty-something in Argentina loses his warehouse job. Boys in Mozambique perform half-hearted sex acts in front of a webcam. A woman in the Philippines assembles electronics in a small factory. The Human Surge, a Projections selection of NYFF54, features Eduardo Williams’s inquisitive camera in constant motion in, as are his rootless characters, who wander aimlessly, make small talk, futz with their phones, and search for a working Internet connection. Unfolding within the unfree time between casual jobs, this wildly original rumination on labor and leisure in the global digital economy seems to take place in both the immediate present and the far horizon of the foreseeable future.
This conversation was moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
9/3/2023 • 30 minutes, 52 seconds
#475 - Bertrand Bonello, Gaspard Ulliel, & Aymeline Valade on Saint Laurent
This week we’re excited to present an archival conversation with Saint Laurent director Bertrand Bonello and cast members Gaspard Ulliel & Aymeline Valade. Bertrand Bonello’s latest film, The Beast, will make its U.S. Premiere at the 61st New York Film Festival in this year’s Main Slate.
Saint Laurent, which had its North American premiere at the 52nd New York Film Festival in 2014, is a different kind of biopic, focusing on a particularly hedonistic time in the life of legendary fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent. The film playfully warps and obscures the passage of time, which results in a delirious viewing experience. Anchored by an enigmatic performance by Gaspard Ulliel, the fashion icon becomes a myth, a brand, and an avatar of his era.
This conversation was moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
8/27/2023 • 28 minutes, 25 seconds
#474 - Ryûsuke Hamaguchi & Min Jin Lee on Drive My Car
This week we’re excited to present an archival conversation between journalist & author Min Jin Lee and Drive My Car director Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, whose new film, Evil Does Not Exist, will make its U.S. premiere as a Main Slate selection of the 61st New York Film Festival.
Inspired by a Haruki Murakami short story, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi spins an engrossing, rapturous epic about love and betrayal, grief and acceptance. With his characteristic emotional transparency, Hamaguchi charts the unexpected, complex relationships that theater actor-director Yûsuke Kafuku (Hidetoshi Nishijima) forges with a trio of people out of professional, physical, or psychological necessity: his wife, Oto (Reika Kirishima), with whom he shares an erotic bond forged in fantasy and storytelling; the mysterious actor Takatsuki (Masaki Okada), whom he’s drawn to by a sense of revenge as much as fascination; and, perhaps most mysteriously, Misaki (Tôko Miura), a plaintive young woman hired by a theater company, against his wishes, to be his chauffeur while he stages Uncle Vanya. Hamaguchi specializes in revelations of the heart, and Drive My Car—a beautiful melding of two distinct authorial sensibilities—consistently steers clear of the familiar in its characters’ journeys towards self-examination. Winner of Best Screenplay at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival.
8/20/2023 • 30 minutes
#473 - Ira Sachs on Passages
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Ira Sachs, whose new film, Passages, is currently playing in our theaters.
A masterful work of psychosexual intensity, the newest film from Ira Sachs offers one of the director’s most cutting variations on desire and intimacy. Co-written by author and longtime collaborator Mauricio Zacharias, Passages follows Tomas (Franz Rogowski), a mercurial German filmmaker living in Paris whose commitment to his husband, Martin (Ben Whishaw), falls short when he pursues a dalliance with a young schoolteacher, Agathe (Adèle Exarchopoulos). Martin begins his own affair soon after, while Tomas swings between both relationships and unleashes a reckless succession of breakups and makeups. With fearless performances from Rogowski, Whishaw, and Exarchopoulos, Sachs crafts a cinematic rarity in which the white-hot pleasures and compulsions of a particularly dysfunctional amour fou are kept on par with ferocious honesty.
This conversation was moderated by film critic, Esther Zuckerman.
8/13/2023 • 27 minutes, 23 seconds
#472 - Sofia Coppola on The Bling Ring
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Sofia Coppola, whose new film, Priscilla, will make its North American premiere as the Centerpiece selection of the 61st New York Film Festival on October 6th.
In this archival conversation with Coppola, the director discusses her 2013 film, The Bling Ring. Co-starring Emma Watson and Leslie Mann, The Bling Ring tells the story of a group of teenagers obsessed with fashion and celebrity that burglarize celebrities' homes in Los Angeles. Tracking their targets' whereabouts online, they break-in and steal their designer clothes and possessions. Reflecting on the naiveté of youth and the mistakes we all make when young, amplified by today's culture of celebrity and luxury brand obsession, we see through the members of the Bling Ring temptations that almost any teenager would feel. What starts out as teenage fun spins out of control and leaves us with a sobering view of our culture today.
This conversation was moderated by former Director of the New York Film Festival, Kent Jones.
This conversation was sponsored by HBO.
8/5/2023 • 44 minutes, 15 seconds
#471 - Todd Haynes on Safe
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Todd Haynes. Haynes's new film, May December, will make its North American premiere as the Opening Night selection of the 61st New York Film Festival on September 29th.
In this archival conversation with Haynes, the director discusses his mid-90s classic, Safe, starring his May December and Far From Heaven leading actress, Julianne Moore. While Haynes shot Safe in 1994, he set it at the height of the AIDS epidemic seven years earlier. The unnamed disease at the center of this indelible, shuddering movie—widely considered one of Haynes’s masterpieces—has taken on new, unexpected meanings since the film’s release, and yet much of what makes Safe revelatory to watch is the uncanny precision of its setting, look, and tone. Carol (Julianne Moore), whose mysterious breakdown from perfect housewife to cloistered invalid drives the movie’s plot, is a character couldn’t live anywhere but suburban L.A. in the late ’80s—a landscape Haynes captures in a strange, piercing, hyperreal light. Jonathan Rosenbaum called Safe “the most provocative American art film of the year” in 1995. It’s hard to imagine any movie topping it were it released now.
This conversation was moderated by NYFF Artistic Director, Dennis Lim.
7/29/2023 • 34 minutes, 26 seconds
#470 - Christian Petzold on Afire
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Christian Petzold about his new film, Afire, now playing in our theaters courtesy of Janus and Sideshow Films.
Set against the backdrop of a seaside town threatened by encroaching wildfires, Christian Petzold’s latest is a breezy, often funny, yet emotionally layered melodrama of creative and romantic insecurities along the German Riviera. The film centers around Leon, a disgruntled novelist struggling to finish his manuscript while traveling with his photographer friend to a vacation home near the Baltic Sea, where they’re met by an unexpected third house guest, Nadja (Paula Beer;, whose presence distracts Leon as much as it cringingly exposes his self-obsessed bubble. Full of sunkissed tints and nocturnal blues, Afire finds the director operating with a deceptively light touch, but what starts as a hangout comedy gradually opens up into something entirely more surprising and psychologically complex. The film is the winner of the Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize at the 2023 Berlin International Film Festival.
This conversation was moderated by Film Comment Co-Deputy Editor, Devika Girish.
7/22/2023 • 33 minutes, 59 seconds
#469 - Paulina Urrutia on The Eternal Memory
This week we're excited to present a conversation with Paulina Urrutia, a film subject in Maite Alberdi's new documentary, The Eternal Memory.
Augusto and Paulina have been together and in love for 25 years. Eight years ago, their lives were forever changed by Augusto’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis. As one of Chile’s most prominent cultural commentators and television presenters, Augusto is no stranger to building an archive of memory. Now he turns that work to his own life, trying to hold on to his identity with the help of his beloved Paulina, whose own pre-eminence as a famous actress and Chilean Minister of Culture predates her ceaselessly inventive manner of engaging with her husband. Day by day, the couple face this challenge head-on, relying on the tender affection and sense of humor shared between them that remains, remarkably, fully intact.
This conversation was moderated by Lucila Moctezuma.
7/15/2023 • 34 minutes, 58 seconds
#468 - Park Chan-wook on Decision to Leave
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with with cult-favorite director Park Chan-wook.
Three decades into his feature filmmaking career, Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook—recipient of the Best Director award at last year’s Cannes Film Festival—made his New York Film Festival debut with Decision to Leave, an intricate Hitchcockian epic that both draws on familiar genres like the crime thriller and the melodrama and takes them in entirely new formal and psychological directions. We were thrilled to welcome Park to NYFF60 last October for a deep-dive conversation delving into his long and acclaimed career, his affinity for genre filmmaking, his artistic influences and inspirations, and the making of his latest feature.
For our event, Deep Focus: Park Chan-wook, the filmmaker spoke with film critic Farran Smith Nehme.
7/8/2023 • 50 minutes, 29 seconds
#467 - Mark Cousins on The March on Rome
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with documentary filmmaker Mark Cousins, who recently joined us for a screening of his latest feature, The March on Rome.
Filmmaking’s role in influencing the political landscape and popular consciousness has been a well-established subject in cinema, but few works have performed as deep an investigation into it as the latest from Mark Cousins, The March on Rome. Using a propagandistic documentary depicting Mussolini and the Black Shirts’ seizure of power as his point of departure, Cousins captivatingly delves into the film’s cinematographic particulars and political context to demonstrate that the rise of fascism in the first half of the 20th century had little to do with its supposed popularity—rather, its ascent was just another spellbinding illusion on the silver screen, albeit one with tragic real-life consequences. Alba Rohrwacher appears periodically in staged interludes as a woman whose initial enthusiasm for fascism tarnishes when she witnesses firsthand the fallout from Mussolini’s rise.
7/1/2023 • 30 minutes, 54 seconds
#466 - Béla Tarr on Werckmeister Harmonies
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with the great Hungarian filmmaker, Béla Tarr, who recently joined us for screenings of four films from his acclaimed filmography, three of which were new restorations, courtesy of Janus Films.
Three years in the making, Werckmeister Harmonies is a sustained, real-time immersion in the universe of weatherbeaten villages and full-contact metaphysics in which co-directors Béla Tarr, Ágnes Hranitzky, and writer László Krasznahorkai specialize. A curiously smart paper carrier named János (Lars Rudolph, in an astonishingly complex performance) observes a mysterious traveling circus—complete with a stuffed whale—that comes to town, and marks a sea change in relationships of all kinds—between families, lovers, peasants and royals. In this movie, voted as one of the best of its decade by Film Comment, each action, however small, carries the weight of revolution. With Fassbinder icon Hanna Schygulla.
6/24/2023 • 39 minutes, 37 seconds
#465 - Françoise Lebrun & Charles Gillibert on The Mother and the Whore
This week we’re excited to present a conversation with actress Françoise Lebrun, who appeared in Jean Eustache’s 1973 masterpiece, The Mother and the Whore, and Charles Gillibert, the producer of the film’s new restoration. The Mother and the Whore will be opening in our theaters in a new 4K restoration as part of “The Dirty Stories of Jean Eustache,” a 12-film retrospective of the French director’s work, from June 23–July 13, courtesy of FLC and Janus Films. Tickets are on sale now at filmlinc.org/eustache.
After the French New Wave, the sexual revolution, and May 1968 came The Mother and the Whore, the legendary, autobiographical magnum opus by Eustache that captured a disillusioned generation navigating the post-idealism 1970s within the microcosm of a ménage à trois. The aimless, clueless, Parisian pseudo-intellectual Alexandre (Jean-Pierre Léaud) lives with his tempestuous older girlfriend, Marie (Bernadette Lafont), and begins a dalliance with the younger, sexually liberated Veronika (Françoise Lebrun, Eustache’s own former lover), leading to a volatile open relationship marked by everyday emotional violence and subtle but catastrophic shifts in power dynamics. Transmitting his own sex life to the screen with startling immediacy, Eustache achieves an intimacy so deep it cuts.
Lebrun and Gillibert spoke with FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini following a screening of the film in the Revivals section of the 60th New York Film Festival.
6/17/2023 • 28 minutes, 18 seconds
#464 - Virginie Efira on Revoir Paris and Her Acting Career
This week we’re excited to present a career-spanning conversation with actress Virginie Efira, who next appears in Alice Winocour’s Revoir Paris, opening in our theaters on June 23rd. Tickets are on sale now at filmlinc.org/revoir
Efira has attracted a dedicated following in recent years with her rigorous, singularly sensitive performances, including star-making turns in NYFF selections Benedetta and Sibyl. In this year’s edition of Rendez-Vous with French Cinema she took center stage, with lead roles in Revoir Paris (the Opening Night selection) and Rebecca Zlotowski’s Other People’s Children.
During the festival, Efira participated in a wide-ranging conversation with FLC Assistant Programmer Maddie Whittle in which Efira discussed the evolution of her craft and approach to portraying profoundly complicated, endlessly compelling characters.
6/12/2023 • 53 minutes, 49 seconds
#463 - Pietro Marcello on Scarlet
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Pietro Marcello about his latest feature, the NYFF60 Main Slate selection, Scarlet, opening in our theaters next Friday, preceded by a special one night only screening of his previous feature, Martin Eden, on June 8th. Tickets are on sale now at filmlinc.org/scarlet.
Marcello, one of contemporary cinema’s most versatile talents, follows his dramatic breakthrough, Martin Eden, with an enchanting period fable based on a beloved 1923 novel by Russian writer Alexander Grin. The film begins as the tale of a sensitive brute who returns home from World War I to his rural French village to discover that his wife has died and he must take care of their baby daughter, Juliette, then blossoms into a pastoral portrait of Juliette as a free-spirited young woman reckoning with a local witch’s prophecy for her future and falling for the modern man who literally drops from the sky. In his first film made in France, Marcello proves again that he is as comfortable in the realm of folklore as he is in creative nonfiction, delicately interweaving realist drama, ethereal romance, and musical flights of fancy.
Following our screening of Scarlet, Marcello spoke with NYFF selection committee member, Florence Almozini.
6/2/2023 • 13 minutes, 57 seconds
#462 - Paul Schrader on First Reformed and The Card Counter
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Paul Schrader about two of his recent features, First Reformed and The Card Counter. We were delighted to have the filmmaker recently join us in anticipation of the opening of his latest feature, the NYFF60 Main Slate selection, Master Gardener, now playing in our theaters.
For nearly half a century, Schrader has crafted a personal and provocative body of work typified by an obsessive focus on moral decay, isolation, and self-redemption across various dispirited pockets of the United States. Rounding out an era-delineating thematic trilogy that began with First Reformed (2017) and The Card Counter (2021), Master Gardener (NYFF60) continues what the writer-director has referred to as his “man in a room” movies with a startling tale of dormant violence and the possibility of regeneration.
Following our screenings of First Reformed and The Card Counter, Schrader spoke with FLC Assistant Programmer Maddie Whittle about his recent trilogy of films.
5/26/2023 • 26 minutes, 7 seconds
#461 - Apichatpong Weerasethakul on Blissfully Yours
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a conversation with director Apichatpong Weeraseth-akul about his 2002 feature, Blissfully Yours. We were delighted to have the Thai director recently join us at FLC as part of our complete retrospective, The World of Apichatpong Weerasethakul.
A mesmerizing and sensuous meditation on love and desire, Apichatpong’s second (and first fully fictional) feature film established him as one of world cinema’s most essential talents. The plot follows a romance between a Thai nurse and her boyfriend who go on a jungle picnic with an older woman (whom they both seem to know) in hot pursuit. The tranquility of their date, enveloping and tender as it may initially seem, slowly recedes to reveal a more complex emotional picture, one marked by Apichatpong’s sophisticatedly low-key and true-feeling approach to rendering human desire.
5/19/2023 • 34 minutes, 6 seconds
#460 - Ari Aster on Beau Is Afraid & New York African Film Festival Programmers Preview
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present two conversations, the first a Programmers Preview with the team behind the New York African Film Festival, currently taking place in our theaters through May 16, followed by a Q&A with writer/director Ari Aster from a recent screening of his latest feature, the Joaquin Phoenix-starring Beau Is Afraid.
Launched in 1993, the New York African Film Festival was one of the first film festivals in the United States to reflect on the myriad ways African and diaspora filmmakers have used the moving image to tell complex nuanced stories of cultural and aesthetic significance. Under the banner title, Freeforms, the festival will present over 50 films from more than 25 countries that explore and embrace the visionary, probing, and fearless spirit of African film and diaspora storytelling. Listen to our discussion with New York African Film Festival's Founder and Executive Director, Mahen Bonetti, Program Manager, Dara Ojugbele, and Curator and Office Manager, Farima Kone Kito.
To view the lineup and get tickets to this year’s festival, please visit filmlinc.org/african.
On the occasion of the release of his latest feature, Beau Is Afraid, Film at Lincoln Center recently presented a curated selection of films handpicked by Ari Aster to complement the director’s highly anticipated new film. This eclectic and unexpected collection of masterworks drawn from seven decades of film history across a range of genres and production contexts shed light on the inspirations and influences behind one of the most compelling directorial voices in Hollywood today. Following a screening of Beau Is Afraid, Aster joined us to speak with FLC Assistant Programmer Maddie Whittle about his inspirations for making the film.
5/11/2023 • 1 hour, 14 minutes, 38 seconds
#459 - Honoring Viola Davis at the 48th Chaplin Award Gala
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a special episode featuring the star-studded speeches from our recent 48th Chaplin Award Gala honoring Viola Davis. Having taken place on April 24 at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, the Gala encompassed a joyful celebration of the actor and producer’s incredible body of work, featuring notable speakers and film clips, and culminating in the presentation of the Chaplin Award, an annual honor bestowed upon cinema’s most outstanding talents.
The evening’s guest speakers included, in order of appearance, Jayme Lawson, who starred in THE WOMAN KING, George C. Wolfe, who directed Davis in NIGHTS IN RODANTHE and MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM, Meryl Streep, who co-starred in DOUBT, Gina Prince-Bythewood, who directed THE WOMAN KING, Jessica Chastain, who co-starred in THE HELP and THE DISAPPEARANCE OF ELEANOR RIGBY with Davis, and, presenting Davis with the Chaplin Award, Steve McQueen, who directed the actor in WIDOWS.
5/5/2023 • 52 minutes, 7 seconds
#458 - Manuela Martelli on Chile '76 and Cyril Schäublin & Clara Gostynski on Unrest
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present two Q&As: the first from Chile '76, a 2023 New Directors/New Films selection, and Unrest, a Main Slate selection of the 60th New York Film Festival. Both Chile '76 and Unrest open in our theaters on May 5 with filmmaker Q&As at select screenings opening weekend.
In Chile '76, Manuela Martelli places the viewer in a historical moment fraught with anxiety: the early years of Augusto Pinochet’s regime in Chile. Her narrative presents Pinochet’s oppressive reign from the unusual and surprising perspective of Carmen (a superb Aline Küppenheim), an upper-middle-class woman whose life begins to unravel after local priest Father Sánchez (Hugo Medina) implores her to use her summer beach house, under renovation, to hide an injured young man (Nicolás Sepúlveda) whom she comes to suspect is a victim of political persecution. As Carmen descends into danger, she experiences a gradual moral awakening. Martelli’s film is a taut, evocative, and impressively assured depiction of the inescapable, ever-tightening noose of patriarchal, governmental dictatorship and how its effects gradually bleed into our everyday experiences. A Kino Lorber release.
A film of immense delicacy and precision, Cyril Schäublin’s complexly woven timepiece, Unrest, is set in the hushed environs of the Swiss watchmaking town of Saint-Imier in the 1870s. In this unlikely place, a youthful Pyotr Kropotkin, who would become a noted anarchist and socialist philosopher, experiences a quiet revolution, finding himself inspired by the buzzing activity of the town’s denizens, from the photographers and cartographers surveying its people and land to the growing anarchist collective at the local watermill raising funds for strikes abroad, to the organizing workers at the watch factory, whose craft is depicted with exacting detail and devotion. Schäublin’s abstracted, geometric visual approach reinforces the singularly contemplative nature of his project: this is a film about time—its tyranny as well as its comforts—and how it relates to work, leisure, and the larger processes that shape history. An NYFF60 Main Slate selection. A KimStim release with support from Swiss Films.
Enjoy these conversations with Martelli & producer Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo & New Directors/New Films Co-chair Florence Almozini and Schäublin & actress Clara Gostynski & NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim. Don't miss Chile '76 and Unrest, opening in our theaters on May 5.
4/28/2023 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 4 seconds
#457 - Sacha Jenkins & Terence Blanchard on Louis Armstrong’s Black and Blues
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a Q&A from the AppleTV+ documentary, Louis Armstrong’s Black and Blues, with director Sacha Jenkins and Oscar-nominated composer Terence Blanchard.
This event recently took place as part of See Me As I Am, Lincoln Center’s year-long celebration of Terence Blanchard in collaboration with seven arts organizations across campus: Film at Lincoln Center, Jazz at Lincoln Center, The Juilliard School, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, The Metropolitan Opera, New York Philharmonic, and The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
A magisterial tribute to a founding father of jazz, Sacha Jenkins’s comprehensive documentary chronicles the life and times of legendary trumpeter Louis Armstrong, from his role in the birth of the musical genre he’d come to epitomize on to his later adventures in Hollywood as an indelible onscreen presence.
Working from a wealth of archival footage, Jenkins constructs a stirring ode to Armstrong that historically situates his achievements and public image, deftly tracing how the cultural figure cut by Armstrong was formulated against a backdrop of unapologetic, systemic racism. And, appropriately, the film is scored by none other than Terence Blanchard, himself a latter-day titan of the trumpet, and the result is an utterly absorbing and moving homage to a true icon of American music.
Enjoy the conversation with Jenkins and Blanchard, moderated by writer Larry Blumenfeld.
4/21/2023 • 53 minutes, 2 seconds
#456 - Rebecca Zlotowski and Virginie Efira on Other People's Children
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a Q&A from the 2023 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema premiere of Other People's Children, with director Rebecca Zlotowski and lead actress, Virginie Efira. Other People's Children opens in our theaters on Friday, April 21.
Acclaimed writer-director Rebecca Zlotowski (An Easy Girl, 2020 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema) draws from her own life to depict the emotional trajectory of Rachel (Virginie Efira), a schoolteacher whose desire for a biological child seems increasingly unlikely to be fulfilled (as she’s informed by her gynecologist in a delightful cameo from Frederick Wiseman). When Rachel enters into a relationship with car designer Ali (Roschdy Zem), he’s slow to let her know that he’s a single father, but once she finds out she quickly grows to love his precocious daughter, Leila (Callie Ferreira-Goncalves).
The stresses and strains of close relationships between adults and children are thoughtfully examined in this drama that’s as romantic in its evocation of new love blossoming in Paris as it is clear-headed about the myriad pressures that societal expectations impose on the lives of middle-aged women. A 2023 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema selection.
Enjoy the conversation with Zlotowski and Efira, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim, and don’t miss Other People's Children, opening in our theaters on Friday, April 21. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/children
4/14/2023 • 32 minutes, 26 seconds
#455 - Laura Citarella on Trenque Lauquen + Saim Sadiq, Ali Junejo & Rasti Farooq on Joyland
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present a Q&A from Trenque Laquen, a Main Slate selection of the 60th New York Film Festival, opening in our theaters on April 21 from director Laura Citarella, with Q&As with Citarella and actor Ezequiel Pierri on April 21 at 6pm and April 22 at 12:15pm and an intro at 6pm.
But first, listen to a special Q&A with the team behind Joyland, a selection of the 52nd edition of New Directors/New Films currently in progress through Sunday, April 9. Director Saim Sadiq and cast members Ali Junejo and Rasti Farooq discuss the film with New Directors/New Films co-chair Florence Almozini. Co-presented by Film at Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art, tickets to New Directors/New Films are available at newdirectors.org
Laura Citarella’s enormously pleasurable Trenque Lauquen takes viewers on a limitless journey through stories nested within stories set in and around the Argentinean city of Trenque Lauquen (“Round Lake”) and centered on the strange disappearance of a local academic named Laura (Laura Paredes).
Through initial inquiries by two colleagues—older boyfriend Rafael and a driver named Ezequiel with whom Laura had grown secretly close—we learn about her recent discoveries, including a new, unclassified species of flower and a series of old love letters hidden at the local library, which may help track her down. Yet as flashbacks and anecdotes pile up, we—and the film’s intrepid investigators—begin to realize that this intricately structured tale is larger and stranger than we could have imagined.
Citarella, a producer of the equally remarkable epic La Flor, has confidently crafted a series of interlocked romantic, biological, and ecological mysteries that create parallels between past lives and present dangers, invoke the rapture of obsessive pursuit, and salute the human need to find personal freedom and happiness.
Enjoy the conversation with Citarella and NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim, and don’t miss Trenque Laquen, opening in our theaters on April 21. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/trenquelauquen.
4/7/2023 • 42 minutes, 3 seconds
#454 - Savanah Leaf, Tia Nomore, and Erika Alexander on Earth Mama
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. This week we’re excited to present Q&A from Earth Mama, the opening night selection of the 52nd edition of New Directors/New Films. The conversation features writer/director Savanah Leaf and cast members Tia Nomore and Erika Alexander, and is moderated by New Directors/New Films co-chair, Florence Almozini.
A devastating and evocative portrait of motherhood refracted through the prisms of race and class, Savanah Leaf’s auspicious, Bay Area–set debut feature follows a pregnant young African American woman (played with immense complexity by Oakland rapper Tia Nomore) as she grapples with whether to give her baby up for adoption amid utterly hostile socioeconomic conditions.
Co-presented by Film at Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art, the 52nd edition of New Directors/New Films runs through April 9th and is made up of 27 features and 11 shorts. We’re excited to announce that this year we are offering the chance to see 5 films for only $50. Simply visit newdirectors.org to add five films to your cart and your discount will automatically be applied.
We look forward to seeing you at this year’s New Directors/New Films. Visit newdirectors.org to view the schedule and purchase your tickets.
3/31/2023 • 14 minutes, 53 seconds
#453 - Mark Jenkin and Mary Woodvine on Enys Men
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 60th New York Film Festival with Enys Men director Mark Jenkin and lead Mary Woodvine, moderated by FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini.
In 1973, on an uninhabited, windswept, rocky island off the coast of Cornwall in southwest England, an isolated middle-aged woman spends her days in enigmatic environmental study. When she’s not tending to the moss-covered stone cottage in which she lodges, her central preoccupation is a cluster of wildflowers at a cliff’s edge, the blossoms’ subtle changes noted in a daily ledger. She’s also increasingly haunted by her own nightmarish visitations, which seem both summoned from her own past and brought up from the very soil and ceremonial history of this mysterious place. Shot on enveloping, period-evocative 16mm, this eerie, texturally rich experience from Cornish filmmaker Mark Jenkin conjures works of classic British folk horror but remains its own strange being, a genuine transmission from a weird other world.
Enys Men opens next Friday, March 31, with a filmmaker Q&A at 6pm, along with Jenkin's debut feature Bait, which also opens next Friday with a Q&A at 8:45pm. Don’t miss Enys Men on 35mm—only during opening weekend and get tickets at filmlinc.org/enys
3/24/2023 • 43 minutes, 6 seconds
#452 - Academy Award-Winning Composer M.M. Keeravani on RRR
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from our recent screening of S. S. Rajamouli’s RRR with composer M.M. Keeravani, who recently won an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "Naatu Naatu." But first, listen to FLC programmers Maddie Whittle and Tyler Wilson preview our upcoming series, Unspeakable: The Films of Tod Browning, which kicks off tomorrow and runs through March 26. Explore the lineup, including new restorations, 35mm screenings, live musical accompaniment, and get tickets at filmlinc.org/browning.
From an original story by V. Vijayendra Prasad, the historical action epic RRR (short for Rise, Roar, Revolt) follows the fictionalized paths of real-life freedom fighters Alluri Sitarama Raju (Charan) and Komaram Bheem (Rama Rao) as they come together in 1920s Delhi to battle the nefarious British Raj for the rescue of a kidnapped girl from Bheem’s tribe. Enjoy Academy Award-winning composer M.M. Keeravani’s conversation on working on the film’s score, his musical influences, and more.
3/16/2023 • 31 minutes, 16 seconds
#451 - Cauleen Smith on Drylongso
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from the 60th New York Film Festival with Drylongso director Cauleen Smith, moderated by Director and President of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Jacqueline Stewart.
Cauleen Smith’s 1998 feature debut, a landmark in American independent cinema, follows Pica (Toby Smith), a woman in a photography class in Oakland, as she begins photographing the young Black men of her neighborhood, having witnessed so many of them fall victim to senseless murder and fearing the possibility of their becoming extinct altogether. This project serves as a point of departure for Smith to explore Pica’s relationship with her family, as well as her relationship with a friend (April Barnett) who becomes the victim of an enigmatic and elusive serial killer lurking in the background. An enduringly rich work of DIY filmmaking, Drylongso remains a resonant and visionary examination of violence (and its reverberations), friendship, and gender. An NYFF60 Revivals selection. The NYFF60 Revivals presentation of Drylongso was sponsored by Turner Classic Movies.
The new 4K restoration of Drylongso opens next Friday, March 17, in our theaters with a filmmaker Q&A with Smith on opening night. On the occasion of the theatrical release of the NYFF60 selection, we are also showing two Shorts Programs of Smith’s short films on Friday, March 17, with an intro from Smith, and Sunday, March 19.
Get tickets to Drylongso and both shorts programs and receive an automatic discount package of $20 for the general public and $15 for FLC Members. Explore showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org/drylongso
3/10/2023 • 25 minutes, 58 seconds
#450 - Huang Ji & Ryuji Otsuka on Stonewalling + Rendez-Vous with French Cinema 2023 Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcastm we’re featuring a Q&A from the 60th New York Film Festival with Stonewalling (opens March 10!) filmmakers Huang Ji and Ryuji Otsuka, moderated by FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini and interpreted by Vincent Cheng. Before that, listen to a special programmer’s preview of the 28th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema from FLC Assistant Programmer Maddie Whittle.
Our annual festival celebrating the best works in contemporary French film is now taking place through March 12 with filmmaker Q&As, Free Talks, and more. Explore the lineup and get tickets at filmlinc.org/rdvFor more than a decade, Beijing-based wife-and-husband team Huang Ji and Ryuji Otsuka have been making films about the lives of young people in China—in many cases “left-behind children,” or those whose parents are forced to leave their families to find jobs in cities. Expanding their project, their gripping, humane yet uncompromising latest, shot with a precise formal economy by Otsuka (who also serves as cinematographer), focuses on a year in the life of Lynn, a flight-attendant-in-training whose plans to finish college are thrown into doubt when she discovers she’s pregnant. Not wanting an abortion (a decision she hides from her callow, absent boyfriend, away on modeling and party hosting gigs), she hopes to give the child away after carrying it to term, while staying afloat amidst a series of dead-end jobs. As incarnated by the filmmakers’ quietly potent recurring star Yao Honggui, Lynn—whose story continues after being the center of the filmmakers’ acclaimed The Foolish Bird (2017)—is both a fully rounded character and the vessel for an urgent critique of a modern-day social structure that has few options for women in need of care.
Stonewalling opens on March 10 in our theaters, with in-person Q&As with directors Huang Ji and Ryuji Otsuka during opening weekend, and special screenings of Egg and Stone and The Foolish Bird. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/stonewalling
3/2/2023 • 36 minutes, 17 seconds
#449 - Davy Chou and Park Ji-Min on Return to Seoul
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're featuring a conversation with Davy Chou and Park Ji-Min, discussing Return to Seoul at the 60th New York Film Festival with Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Freddie (Park Ji-Min), a young French woman, finds herself spontaneously tracking down the South Korean birth parents she has never met while on vacation in Seoul. From this seemingly simple premise, Cambodian-French filmmaker Davy Chou spins an unpredictable, careering narrative that takes place over the course of several years, always staying close on the roving heels of its impetuous protagonist, who moves to her own turbulent rhythms (as does the galvanizing Park, a singular new screen presence). Chou elegantly creates probing psychological portraiture from a character whose feelings of unbelonging have kept her at an emotional distance from nearly everyone in her life; it’s an enormously moving film made with verve, sensitivity, and boundless energy. A Sony Pictures Classics release.
2/23/2023 • 35 minutes, 1 second
#448 - Daniels on Everything Everywhere All at Once
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Everything Everywhere All at Once Q&A from our recent series ‘Verse Jumping with Daniels with directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, and producer Jonathan Wang, moderated by FLC Programmer Tyler Wilson.
In their second feature-film collaboration, Daniels evoke everyone from Wong Kar Wai, Harmony Korine, and Stephen Chow and everything from video games, YouTube algorithms, wire fu, Japanese anime, late 1990s Hollywood nihilism, and more: Golden Globe® Winner Michelle Yeoh delivers a career-defining performance as Evelyn Wang, a first-generation Chinese-American living above her laundromat business with her aging father (James Hong), her teenage daughter (Stephanie Hsu), and her kind but painfully naive husband (Golden Globe® Winner Ke Huy Quan). Amid an IRS audit (spearheaded by a nearly unrecognizable Jamie Lee Curtis) that reveals the cracks of her family and livelihood, Evelyn plunges into a multiversal war of “’verse jumpers” that puts the fate of every universe in her hands… This hardly describes the gag-a-minute, gleefully maximalist feature, whose high-wire achievement here is precisely in balancing the unwieldy tone promised by its title with a cinematically legible sense of infinity, all while issuing a profoundly emotional warning to our overstimulated present. An A24 release.
2/16/2023 • 44 minutes, 59 seconds
#447 - Albert Serra on Pacifiction & Dance on Camera Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 60th New York Film Festival with director Albert Serra on Pacifiction, moderated by FLC’s Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini, and a special programmers preview with the curators behind the 51st Dance on Camera Festival, taking place through Monday and featuring 30 new films from 35 countries.
Get tickets to the longest-running dance film festival in the world at filmlinc.org/dance.
Catalan filmmaker Albert Serra reconfirms his centrality in the contemporary cinematic landscape with this mesmerizing portrait of a French bureaucrat (a monumental Benoît Magimel) drifting through a fateful trip to a French Polynesian island with increasing anxiety. Pacifiction charts the various uneasy relationships that develop between Magimel’s autocratic yet avuncular High Commissioner, De Roller, and the Indigenous locals (including nonprofessional actor Pahoa Mahagafanau in a hypnotic breakthrough as De Roller’s trusted right hand and maybe lover) who operate essentially under his faux-benevolent thumb, many of whom we meet at a resort that caters to the prurient exoticism of foreign tourists. Serra’s gripping, atmospheric thriller is a slow-building fever dream that lulls before catching us by surprise with the depths of its darkness, a film that allows its incisive social commentary about the remnants of colonialism to surface through quiet observation and aesthetic audacity.
Pacifiction opens February 17th in our theaters with in-person intros and Q&As with Serra on Feb. 17, 18 & 19. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/pacifiction.
2/9/2023 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 44 seconds
#446 - Corey Feldman and Eugenio Mira on The Birthday
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special Q&A that followed the recent U.S. Premiere of The Birthday during our Jordan Peele curated series, The Lost Rider: A Chronicle of Hollywood Sacrifice, with director Eugenio Mira and lead Corey Feldman. Moderated by FLC Programmer Tyler Wilson.
Part comedy of manners by way of Jerry Lewis, part phantasmagorical head trip, Eugenio Mira’s debut has garnered cult status in the years since its premiere at Sitges in 2004, in part for never getting an official home video release or U.S. theatrical premiere—that is, until this January at Film at Lincoln Center. Set in a ruby-red Art Deco hotel in 1987, The Birthday follows hapless protagonist Norman Forrester (Corey Feldman)—whose accent might suggest Brooklyn, New York, but is actually Brooklyn, Baltimore—as he navigates an inhospitable birthday celebration for his scolding girlfriend’s wealthy father (cult icon Jack Taylor) and struggles with the anxieties of his deteriorating romance. The atmosphere turns from tensely awkward to downright sinister as the party wears on, leading Norman to uncover an unimaginable conspiracy implicating the partygoers and staff. With its painstakingly fabricated set design, kinetic camerawork, and bonkers performances, The Birthday is weirdo-horror of the highest order and peers straight into a traumatized headspace of relationship neuroses.
2/3/2023 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
#445 - Lukas Dhont on Close
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a recent conversation with filmmaker Lukas Dhont on his latest film Close, which was recently nominated for Best International Feature at the 95th Academy Awards, and moderator and critic Thelma Adams. This talk was first exclusive for FLC Patrons. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
Leo and Remi are two thirteen-year-old best friends, whose seemingly unbreakable bond is suddenly, tragically torn apart. Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, Lukas Dhont's second film is an emotionally transformative and unforgettable portrait of the intersection of friendship and love, identity and independence, and heartbreak and healing. Close is now playing in theaters.
1/28/2023 • 30 minutes, 23 seconds
#444 - Mia Hansen-Løve on One Fine Morning and Jordan Peele & More on NOPE
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re revisiting a conversation from the 60th New York Film Festival with Mia Hansen-Løve on One Fine Morning, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim, followed by our recent conversation with Jordan Peele, Keke Palmer, and more on the making of NOPE.
Few filmmakers are as adept at exploring the contours of modern love and grief as Mia Hansen-Løve, whose intensely poignant and deeply personal latest drama stars Léa Seydoux as Sandra, a professional translator and single mother at a crossroads. Her father, rapidly deteriorating from a neurological illness, will soon require facility care, and her new lover is a married dad whose unavailability only seems to draw her nearer to him, despite—or because of—the fact that she’s going through an overwhelming time in her life. Hansen-Løve, so finely observant of the small nuances of human interaction, creates, in harmonious concert with a magnificent Seydoux, a complicated portrait of a woman torn between romantic desire and familial tragedy that is a marvel of emotional and formal economy.
One Fine Morning opens Friday, January 27, in our theaters. Get showtimes and tickets: filmlinc.org/morning
Following a special 70mm screening of NOPE during our Jordan Peele curated series, The Lost Rider: A Chronicle of Hollywood Sacrifice, NOPE director Jordan Peele, lead Keke Palmer, producer Ian Cooper, editor Nicholas Monsour & composer Michael Abels joined FLC Programmer Tyler Wilson to discuss the making of the sci-fi-horror.
1/23/2023 • 1 hour, 46 seconds
#443 - Alice Diop & Frederick Wiseman In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a talk from the 60th New York Film Festival with Alice Diop & Frederick Wiseman, whose films Saint Omer (opening Friday at FLC with Q&As!) and A Couple, respectively, were both NYFF60 Main Slate selections. The conversation was moderated by Dessane Lopez Cassell, editor-in-chief of SEEN journal with translation by Nicholas Elliott.
French filmmaker Alice Diop has said that it was the work of Frederick Wiseman that inspired her to become a documentarian. It is fitting, then, that NYFF60's Main Slate featured new films by Wiseman and Diop that speak to each other in extraordinary ways—including in their deviation from documentary into the more delicate terrain between fiction and nonfiction. Both A Couple (Wiseman) and Saint Omer (Diop) take true stories of extraordinary and fraught women as their bases, probing the formal possibilities and limits of cinema in revealing the inner lives of real people. The two directors convened for a conversation about the turn to narrative cinema, the cultural and generational distinctions of filmmaking in France and the United States, their respective approaches to cinema as a mode of systemic critique, and more. NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
Saint Omer, France’s Oscar entry, opens this Friday in our theaters with Q&As on Friday and Saturday. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/saint
1/12/2023 • 35 minutes, 31 seconds
#442 - Carla Simón on Alcarràs And NYFF60 Liberating Lost Films Panel
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring two conversations from the 60th New York Film Festival. The first is with Carla Simón, director of Alcarràs, an NYFF60 Main Slate selection about a family in present-day Catalonia, moderated by former NYFF Executive Director Eugene Hernandez. The second conversation is a deep dive on liberating lost movies with various Missing Movies board members and advisors.
Winner of the Golden Bear at this year’s Berlinale Festival, Carla Simón’s follow-up to her acclaimed childhood drama Summer 1993 is a ruminative, lived-in portrait of a rural family in present-day Catalonia whose way of life is rapidly changing. The Solé clan live in a small village, annually harvesting peaches for local business and export. However, their livelihood is put in jeopardy by the looming threat of the construction of solar panels, which would necessitate the destruction of their orchard. From this simple narrative, pitting agricultural tradition against the onrushing train of modern progress, Simón weaves a marvelously textured film that moves to the unpredictable rhythms and caprices of nature and family life.
Alcarràs, Spain’s official Oscar entry, is now playing in our theaters. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/alcarras
Movies go “missing” all the time, whether due to lapses in preservation and archiving, complexities of copyright and distribution, or technological obsolescence. To address these issues—which can powerfully shape what we know and regard as the cinematic canon— a group of filmmakers, distributors, archivists, and lawyers founded the organization Missing Movies.
We were pleased to welcome Missing Movies board members and advisors Amy Heller, Dennis Doros, Nancy Savoca, Rich Guay, Ira Deutchman, and Maya Cade to NYFF60 for a special conversation aimed at empowering the filmmaking community with the tools to liberate lost films and to ensure that the cinema of the present avoids the same fate. All NYFF60 Talks were presented by HBO.
1/9/2023 • 1 hour, 43 minutes, 37 seconds
#441 - Vicky Krieps and Marie Kreutzer on Corsage
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation from our recent sneak preview screening of Corsage with director Marie Kreutzer and lead Vicky Krieps.
In a perceptive, nuanced performance, Vicky Krieps (Phantom Thread) quietly dominates the screen as Empress Elizabeth of Austria, who begins to see her life of royal privilege as a prison as she reaches her fortieth birthday. Marie Kreutzer boldly imagines Elizabeth’s cloistered, late-19th-century world within the Austro-Hungarian Empire with both austere realism and fanciful anachronism, while staying true and intensely close to the woman’s private melancholy and political struggle amidst a crumbling, combative marriage and escalating scrutiny. Star and director have together created a remarkable vision of a strong-willed political figure whose emergence from a veiled, corseted existence stands for a Europe on the cusp of major, irrevocable transformation.
Corsage, an official selection of the 60th New York Film Festival, is now playing in our theaters. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/corsage
12/30/2022 • 31 minutes, 31 seconds
#440 - Hugh Jackman on The Son
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation with Hugh Jackman on his latest film, The Son, which recently played in our theaters exclusively for FLC Patrons. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, go to filmlinc.org/members. For a limited time, get 30% off Memberships with the promo code HOLIDAY30; available for Contributor-level Memberships and above.
A cautionary tale that follows a family as it struggles to reunite after falling apart. The Son centers on Peter (Hugh Jackman), whose hectic life with his infant and new partner Beth (Vanessa Kirby) is upended when his ex-wife Kate (Laura Dern) appears with their son Nicholas (Zen McGrath), who is now a teenager. The young man has been missing from school for months and is troubled, distant, and angry. Peter strives to take care of Nicholas as he would have liked his own father to have taken care of him while juggling work, his and Beth's new son, and the offer of his dream position in Washington. However, by reaching for the past to correct its mistakes, he loses sight of how to hold onto the Nicholas in the present. Sony Pictures Classics will release The Son on January 20, 2023.
12/19/2022 • 28 minutes, 43 seconds
#439 - Joanna Hogg & Martin Scorsese In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation between The Eternal Daughter director Joanna Hogg and filmmaker Martin Scorsese. The two talked about discovering each other's filmography, Hogg’s lifelong friendship with Tilda Swinton, and the process of creating art out of grief.
The Eternal Daughter follows a middle-aged filmmaker and her elderly mother who take an eerie, emotional trip to the past when they stay at a fog-enshrouded hotel in the English countryside. The great Joanna Hogg uses this Victorian gothic scenario for an entirely surprising, impeccably crafted excavation of a parent-child relationship starring Tilda Swinton in a performance of rich, endless surprise.
The NYFF60 selection plays daily in our theaters. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/eternal.
12/12/2022 • 47 minutes, 8 seconds
#438 - Yoshimitsu Morita Preview and Kelly Reichardt & Joanna Hogg In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmers preview of our Yoshimitsu Morita retrospective and a conversation from the 60th New York Film Festival between filmmakers Joanna Hogg & Kelly Reichardt.
First up, listen to programmers Dan Sullivan and Aiko Masubuchi dive into the career and films of Yoshimitsu Morita, one of the most fascinatingly idiosyncratic and prolific directors in modern Japanese cinema. Our Yoshimitsu Morita retrospective takes place through December 11 with special introductions during opening weekend. Get tickets and All-Access Passes at filmlinc.org/morita.
After the preview, we’re revisiting an NYFF60 conversation with The Eternal Daughter director Joanna Hogg and Showing Up director Kelly Reichardt. Two of the leading auteurs of contemporary cinema, Joanna Hogg and Kelly Reichardt have built acclaimed bodies of work that stand out for their epic existential scope and intimate emotional textures. With The Eternal Daughter and Showing Up, respectively, Hogg and Reichardt take their filmmaking into new territories, exploring the poetic and prosaic imbrications of life and art, particularly in the personal and professional worlds of female artists.
We were pleased to bring Hogg and Reichardt together for a conversation about their singular career trajectories, their distinctive approaches to writing and directing, and the process of translating personal experience into universally resonant stories of women on the verge of creative transcendence. NYFF60 Talks were presented by HBO.
Joanna Hogg’s The Eternal Daughter is now playing in our theaters. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/eternal
12/2/2022 • 1 hour, 20 minutes, 30 seconds
#437 - Jerzy Skolimowski & Ewa Piaskowska on EO and Nikyatu Jusu & Nikkia Moulterie on Nanny
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring two conversations: the first with director Jerzy Skolimowski and co-writer Ewa Piaskowska on the NYFF60 selection, EO, and the second with director Nikyatu Jusu and producer Nikkia Moulterie on the ND/NF51 selection Nanny.
At age 84, legendary director Jerzy Skolimowski has directed one of his spryest, most visually inventive films, following the travels of a peripatetic donkey named EO. After being removed from the only life he’s ever known in a traveling circus, EO begins a journey across the Polish and Italian countryside, experiencing cruelty and kindness, captivity and freedom. Skolimowski imagines the animal’s mesmerizing journey as an ever-shifting interior landscape, marked by absurdity and warmth in equal measure, putting the viewer in the unique perspective of the protagonist. Skolimowski has constructed his own bold vision about the follies of human nature, seen from the ultimate outsider’s perspective.
EO, a New York Times Critic's Pick, is now playing in our theaters. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/eo
Next, we’re revisiting a conversation from the 51st New Directors/New Films with Nanny director Nikyatu Jusu and producer Nikkia Moulterie.
A riveting Anna Diop commands nearly every frame of director Nikyatu Jusu’s feature debut, a breakout at this year’s Sundance, where it won the Dramatic Grand Jury Prize. In this psychologically complex fable of displacement tinged with supernatural horror, Diop plays Aisha, a woman who recently emigrated from Senegal and is hired to care for the adorable daughter of an affluent couple (Michelle Monaghan and Morgan Spector) living in New York’s Tribeca neighborhood. Increasingly unsettled by the family’s volatile home life, though desperate to make enough money to bring over her young son from Senegal, Aisha begins to unravel, finding her life in America to be more nightmare than dream. Mixing domestic melodrama with American genre elements and West African folklore, Nanny is a spellbinding experience that defies expectation.
Nanny, a New York Times Critic's Pick, is now playing in our theaters for one week only, with a special holiday promotion: buy one ticket, get one free for all screenings through November 27. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nanny
11/27/2022 • 58 minutes, 4 seconds
#436 - In Conversation with Nan Goldin
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a talk from the 60th New York Film Festival with photographer, artist, and activist Nan Goldin, moderated by NYFF programmer Rachael Rakes.
In the NYFF60 Centerpiece selection All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, documentarian Laura Poitras takes as her subject Nan Goldin. An era-defining artist who rose from the New York “No Wave” underground to become one of the great photographers of the late 20th century, Goldin put herself at the forefront of the battle against the Sackler family and their pharmaceutical empire, both as an activist at art institutions around the world that had accepted millions from the Sacklers and as an advocate for the destigmatization of drug addiction. This intimate, career-spanning conversation with Goldin dove into the personal and political roots of her creative practice, the radical humanism of her photography, and the defiant intertwinings of her art and activism.
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed opens on November 23 in our theaters. Don’t miss our Q&A with director Laura Poitras and P.A.I.N. activist Harry Cullen on November 26. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/beauty
All NYFF60 Talks are presented by HBO.
11/18/2022 • 41 minutes, 52 seconds
#435 - Martin Scorsese, David Johansen & More on Personality Crisis: One Night Only
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special introduction from Martin Scorsese ahead of the premiere of Personality Crisis: One Night Only at the 60th New York Film Festival, followed by a Q&A with directors Martin Scorsese and David Tedeschi, subject David Johansen, Executive Producer Mara Hennessey, producer Margaret Bodde, and Leah Hennessey, moderated by FLC Programmer Dan Sullivan.
Continuing his vibrant and invaluable documentaries about iconic American artists and musicians such as George Harrison: Living in the Material World, No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, and the Fran Lebowitz portrait Public Speaking, Martin Scorsese turns his camera on another beloved New York institution: the singular David Johansen. Equally celebrated as the lead singer-songwriter of the androgynous ’70s glam punk groundbreakers The New York Dolls and for his complete reinvention as hepcat lounge lizard Buster Poindexter in the ’80s, the chameleonic Johansen has created an entire genre unto himself, combining swing, blues, and rock for something at once mischievous and deeply personal. In Personality Crisis: One Night Only, Scorsese and co-director David Tedeschi (The 50 Year Argument), with the help of cinematographer Ellen Kuras (American Utopia), luminously capture the entertainer’s January 2020 Cafe Carlyle set, where he performs as Poindexter singing the Johansen songbook, bringing downtown irreverence to this storied uptown joint. Presented alongside new and archival interviews, the concert is marvelously intimate and a testament to both a lost New York and a performer who remains as fresh and exciting as ever.
All NYFF60 documentaries were sponsored by HBO.
11/10/2022 • 42 minutes, 56 seconds
#434 - Mia Hansen-Løve & Charlotte Wells In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a conversation from the 60th New York Film Festival, moderated by Film Comment Co-Deputy Editor Devika Girish.
This talk brought together the directors behind two stunning works of autofiction in the NYFF60 lineup. One Fine Morning by leading French filmmaker (and NYFF staple) Mia Hansen-Løve and Aftersun, the debut feature by Charlotte Wells, both center on father-daughter relationships drawn from the directors’ own lives, exploring tenderness and trauma, love and loss with formal ingenuity and emotional force. Both films also feature powerhouse performances—Paul Mescal in Aftersun and Léa Seydoux in One Fine Morning—that challenge and reinvigorate routine cinematic portrayals of femininity, masculinity, and intimacy.
Hansen-Løve and Wells partook in an extended conversation about the process of making art out of one’s life, giving filmic shape to the workings of memory and time, reimagining the contours of “women’s cinema,” and more. NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
Charlotte Wells’s Aftersun is now playing daily in our theaters. For showtimes and tickets, go to filmlinc.org/aftersun.
10/27/2022 • 58 minutes
#433 - Park Chan-wook and Park Hae-il on Decision to Leave
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're revisiting a special conversation from the 60th New York Film Festival with director Park Chan-wook and actor Park Hae-il on the season's biggest hit, Decision to Leave. Moderated by NYFF Executive Director Eugene Hernandez.
Busan detective Hae-joon (Park Hae-il) finds that he’s increasingly obsessed with a puzzling new case: a middle-aged businessman has mysteriously fallen to his death during a rock climbing expedition. Upon discovering photos of his abused wife, a Chinese national named Seo-rae (Tang Wei), Hae-joon begins to suspect it wasn’t an accident, all the while becoming emotionally and erotically drawn to her. From this Hitchcockian situation, director Park Chan-wook (Oldboy) weaves a swelling, expanding, ever more complex tale about a possible black widow and the investigator who just might be fashioning his own web. One of Park’s most enveloping and accomplished thrillers, which earned him the Best Director award at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Decision to Leave is a constantly surprising, elegantly constructed film that builds in power to a truly haunting denouement.
Decision to Leave is now playing in our theaters! Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/decision
10/20/2022 • 18 minutes, 14 seconds
#432 - Elegance Bratton, Jeremy Pope, Gabrielle Union & More on The Inspection
Director Elegance Bratton and cast members Jeremy Pope, Gabrielle Union, and Raúl Castillo, and producers Effie Brown and Chester Algernal Gordon present and discuss The Inspection, the Closing Night selection of this year’s festival, with NYFF Executive Director Eugene Hernandez.
Known for his affecting and dynamic documentary Pier Kids, about homeless queer and transgender youth in New York, and the Viceland series My House, on underground competitive ballroom dancing, filmmaker and photographer Elegance Bratton has made his ambitious narrative debut with The Inspection, a knockout drama based on his own experiences as a gay man in Marine Corps basic training following a decade of living on the streets. In a breathtaking first cinematic starring role, Tony– and Emmy–nominated actor Jeremy Pope is run through an emotional and physical gauntlet as a young man dealing with the intimidation of a sadistic sergeant (Bokeem Woodbine), his desire for a sympathetic superior (Raúl Castillo), and his complicated feelings toward the mother who rejected him (a revelatory Gabrielle Union). Bratton’s film is a nuanced portrait of American masculinity and evocation of the military during the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell era, as well as a forceful, electric work of autobiography. An A24 release.
10/16/2022 • 40 minutes, 21 seconds
#431 - Maria Schrader, Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan & More on She Said
Director Maria Schrader, screenwriter Rebecca Lenkiewicz, cast members Carey Mulligan, Zoe Kazan, and Ashley Judd, and New York Times journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey discuss She Said, a Spotlight selection and World Premiere at NYFF60, with NYFF Executive Director Eugene Hernandez.
In 2017, New York Times reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey broke a story that would change the world. Uncovering decades of sexual harassment and assault in Hollywood, Kantor and Twohey boldly took on an establishment that had too long been allowed to systematically protect abusers. This thrilling new drama based on Kantor and Twohey’s best-selling book about their hard-fought investigation is directed by Maria Schrader (director of I’m Your Man and the acclaimed TV series Unorthodox) from a screenplay by Rebecca Lenkiewicz (Ida). She Said stars Zoe Kazan and Carey Mulligan in wonderful performances as the two intensely committed reporters whose efforts would ultimately help ignite the #MeToo movement. Schrader’s film, in the tradition of All the President’s Men and Spotlight, is a tribute to the art and importance of investigative journalism, as well as a moving portrait of two women whose personal lives couldn’t be put on hold even as they navigated a labyrinth of NDAs, legal double binds, and frightened witnesses. She Said’s remarkable supporting cast includes Patricia Clarkson, Andre Braugher, Samantha Morton, and Jennifer Ehle. A Universal Pictures release.
NYFF60 screenings of She Said were presented by Citi.
10/15/2022 • 22 minutes, 6 seconds
#430 - James Gray, Anne Hathaway, Jeremy Strong & More on Armageddon Time
We welcomed director James Gray and cast members Anne Hathaway, Jeremy Strong, Banks Repeta, and Jaylin Webb to present and discuss Armageddon Time, the 60th Anniversary Celebration and Main Slate selection of this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
The most personal film yet from James Gray (The Immigrant, The Lost City of Z) is also one of his greatest, an exquisitely detailed and deeply emotional etching of a time and place: Queens, 1980. Set against the backdrop of a country on the cusp of ominous sociopolitical change, Armageddon Time follows Paul Graff (Banks Repeta), a sixth grader who dreams of becoming an artist. At the same time that Paul builds a friendship with classmate Johnny (Jaylin Webb), who’s mercilessly targeted by their racist teacher, he finds himself increasingly at odds with his parents (Jeremy Strong and Anne Hathaway), for whom financial success and assimilation are key to the family’s Jewish-American identity. Paul feels on firmest ground with his kind grandfather (a marvelous Anthony Hopkins), whose life experiences have granted him a weathered compassion. Rejecting easy nostalgia for a more difficult, painful form of recall, Gray’s film—shot with intimate naturalism by Darius Khondji—is a perceptive and humane coming of age story that does what only cinema can do, elevating the smallest moments into the greatest drama. A Focus Features release.
10/14/2022 • 40 minutes, 48 seconds
#429 - Robert Downey Jr., Chris Smith & More on "Sr."
We welcomed director Chris Smith and producers Robert Downey Jr., Susan Downey, and Kevin Ford to present and discuss "Sr.", a Spotlight selection of this year’s festival, with NYFF Artistic Director, Dennis Lim.
Rarely do films about artists allow the kind of poignant intimacy seen in this tender yet fittingly irreverent portrait of the life and career of Robert Downey Sr., the fearless, visionary American director who set the standard for counterculture comedy in the sixties and seventies. An inspired collaboration between celebrated documentarian Chris Smith (American Movie); the subject’s son, Robert Downey Jr.; and the man himself, who’s occasionally shown working on his own version of the movie we’re watching, “Sr.” functions both as an elegy for the rule-flouting underground icon, who passed away at age 85 in July 2021, and as a testament to his tireless creative spirit. Capturing its subjects’ refreshing candor about aging, past struggles with addiction, and the ups and downs of working in Hollywood, Smith’s film is an emotional depiction of a father-son bond that remained strong, pragmatic, and deeply loving to the end. A Netflix release.
All NYFF60 Documentaries are presented by HBO.
10/13/2022 • 20 minutes, 9 seconds
#428 - Sarah Polley & Cast on Women Talking
We welcomed director Sarah Polley, cast members Claire Foy, Rooney Mara, Judith Ivey, Sheila McCarthy, Michelle McLeod, Kate Hallett, & Liv McNeil, and producer Dede Gardner to present and discuss Women Talking, a Spotlight selection of this year’s festival, with NYFF Executive Director, Eugene Hernandez.
Sarah Polley brings ferocious honesty and restrained urgency to her screen adaptation of Miriam Toews’s acclaimed novel about of a group of women from a remote religious community dealing with the aftermath of sexual assault perpetrated by the colony’s men. A film of ideas brought to life by Polley’s imaginative direction and a superb, fine-tuned ensemble cast—including Rooney Mara, Claire Foy, Jessie Buckley, Frances McDormand, Ben Whishaw, and Judith Ivey—Women Talking is a deep and searching exploration of self-determination, group responsibility, faith and forgiveness, philosophically engaging and emotionally rich in equal measure. A United Artists release.
10/12/2022 • 36 minutes, 1 second
#427 - Elvis Mitchell and Steven Soderbergh on Is That Black Enough For You?!?
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF60 edition, director Elvis Mitchell and executive producer Steven Soderbergh discuss Is That Black Enough For You?!?, a Spotlight selection of this year’s festival, with NYFF Executive Director Eugene Hernandez.
American film critic Elvis Mitchell’s kaleidoscopic documentary creates a definitive narrative of the Black revolution in 1970s cinema, from genre films to social realism, from the making of new superstars to the craft of rising auteurs. With Is That Black Enough for You?!? (the title referencing a recurring line from Ossie Davis’s 1970 benchmark Cotton Comes to Harlem), Mitchell takes a personal and panoramic approach, expressing his own experiences as a viewer while detailing the cinematic and political histories that led to this extraordinary flowering of a newly ascendant Black heroism. The Learning Tree, Watermelon Man, Shaft, Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, Cool Breeze, Sounder, Super Fly, Coffy, The Spook Who Sat by the Door, Claudine, Uptown Saturday Night, Cornbread, Earl and Me, Killer of Sheep, and dozens more are analyzed with Mitchell’s customary verve and perspicacity. This is a work of painstaking scholarship that’s also thoroughly entertaining, an essential archival document and testament to a period of American film history unlikely to be repeated. Featuring interviews with Margaret Avery, Harry Belafonte, Charles Burnett, Laurence Fishburne, Whoopi Goldberg, Samuel L. Jackson, Suzanne de Passe, Glynn Turman, Billy Dee Williams, Zendaya, and more. A Netflix release.
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 16 in all five boroughs of NYC, visit filmlinc.org/tix.
10/11/2022 • 27 minutes, 36 seconds
#426 - Charlotte Wells & Frankie Corio on Aftersun
We welcomed director Charlotte Wells and actress Frankie Corio to NYFF60 to present and discuss Aftersun, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director, Dennis Lim.
In one of the most assured and spellbinding feature debuts in years, Scottish director Charlotte Wells has fashioned a textured memory piece inspired by her relationship with her dad, taking place over the course of a brooding weekend at a coastal resort in Turkey. The charismatic Paul Mescal and naturalistic newcomer Francesca Corio fully inhabit Calum and Sophie, a divorced father and his daughter often mistaken for brother and sister, who share a close and loving bond that creates an entire world unto itself. Wells employs an unusual and gorgeous aesthetic that brings us into the interior space of this parent and child, even as she judiciously withholds details, an approach that finally grants the film a singular emotional wallop. Aftersun reimagines the coming-of-age narrative as a poignant, ultimately ungraspable chimera, informed by the present as much as the past. Winner of the French Touch Prize of the Jury at this year’s Cannes Festival. An A24 release.
Aftersun opens at Film at Lincoln Center on Friday, October 21st. Tickets are now on sale.
10/10/2022 • 18 minutes, 48 seconds
#425 - Luca Guadagnino, Taylor Russell & Chloë Sevigny on Bones and All
We welcomed director Luca Guadagnino and actors Taylor Russell and Chloë Sevigny to NYFF60 to present and discuss Bones and All, a Spotlight selection of this year’s festival, moderated by NYFF Executive Director, Eugene Hernandez.
In a startling, star-making performance, Taylor Russell plays Maren, a teenager who has just moved to a small town in Virginia with her father (André Holland). However, it’s only a matter of time before the frightening secret Maren harbors is revealed and she must hit the road again—on her own. Soon, she meets another young drifter, Lee (Timothée Chalamet), who understands her more than anyone she’s ever met, and the two set out on a cross-country journey, satiating their dangerous desires and reckoning with their tragic pasts. Adapting a novel by Camille DeAngelis, director Luca Guadagnino (Call Me by Your Name) has crafted a work of both tender fragility and feral intensity, setting corporeal horror and runaway romance against a vividly textured Americana, and featuring fully inhabited supporting turns from Mark Rylance, Michael Stuhlbarg, Jessica Harper, Chloë Sevigny, and Anna Cobb. A United Artists release.
10/9/2022 • 19 minutes, 27 seconds
#424 - Laura Poitras, Nan Goldin & More on All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
Laura Poitras, artist Nan Goldin, P.A.I.N. activists Harry Cullen & Megan Kapler, and lawyer Mike Quinn discuss their NYFF60 Centerpiece selection All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim, at the press conference.
In her essential, urgent, and arrestingly structured new documentary from Participant, Academy Award®–winning filmmaker Laura Poitras (Citizenfour) weaves two narratives: the fabled life and career of era-defining artist Nan Goldin and the downfall of the Sackler family, the pharmaceutical dynasty Goldin personally took on in her fight to hold accountable those responsible for the deadly opioid epidemic. Following her own personal struggle with opioid addiction, Goldin, who rose from the New York “No Wave” underground to become one of the great photographers of the late 20th century, put herself at the forefront of the battle against the Sacklers, both as an activist at art institutions around the world that had accepted millions from the family and as an advocate for the destigmatization of drug addiction. Illustrated with a rich trove of photographs by Goldin, who mesmerizingly narrates her own story, including her dysfunctional suburban upbringing, the loss of her teenage sister, and her community’s fight against AIDS in the 1980s, Poitras’s film is an enthralling, empowering work that stirringly connects personal tragedy, political awareness, and artistic expression. A NEON release.
All NYFF60 documentaries are presented by HBO.
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed opens on November 23rd at Film at Lincoln Center! Tickets on sale soon.
10/8/2022 • 38 minutes, 27 seconds
#423 - Kelly Reichardt & Hong Chau on Showing Up
This week we welcomed director Kelly Reichardt and actress Hong Chau to NYFF60 to present and discuss Showing Up, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director, Dennis Lim.
Continuing one of the richest collaborations in modern American cinema, director Kelly Reichardt (Certain Women) reunites with star Michelle Williams for this marvelously particularized portrait of a sculptor’s daily work and frustrations in an artists’ enclave in Portland. Lizzy (Williams) struggles to put the finishing touches on her latest pieces for a gallery show, all the while juggling admin work at the local art school; dealing with the neglect of her well-meaning landlord (a funny and nuanced Hong Chau), who also happens to be a rising-star conceptual artist; and tending to the emotional well being of her increasingly fragmented family. Christopher Blauvelt’s patient camerawork, Reichardt’s precise cutting, and Williams’s physically transformative performance coalesce to create something remarkable in Showing Up, a delicately humorous drama of the experience of being a creative person that avoids all clichés that plague films about artists. An A24 release.
Tickets to the 60th New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis at filmlinc.org/tix
10/7/2022 • 18 minutes, 9 seconds
#422 - Todd Field, Cate Blanchett, Nina Hoss & More on TÁR
This week we welcomed writer/director Todd Field, cast members Cate Blanchett, Nina Hoss, and Sophie Kauer, and composer Hildur Guonadóttir to the press conference for TÁR, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director, Dennis Lim.
The charisma and emotional precision of Cate Blanchett are put to astounding use in this deft showcase for the actor’s musical artistry, a stinging portrait of a world-famous orchestra conductor’s gradual unraveling that is the first film in sixteen years from director Todd Field (In the Bedroom, Little Children). A Focus Features release.
Tickets to the 60th New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis at filmlinc.org/tix
10/6/2022 • 38 minutes, 55 seconds
#421 - Frederick Wiseman and Nathalie Boutefeu on A Couple
Last weekend we welcomed writer/director Frederick Wiseman and actress and co-writer Nathalie Boutefeu to NYFF60 to present and discuss A Couple, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival.
Countess Sophia Behrs married Leo Tolstoy when she was 18 and he was 34. They were husband and wife for 48 years, had 13 children, and she outlived him by nine years. Yet their relationship, among the most discussed and written about in literary history, was anything but harmonious, as Sophia, an artist in her own right—a photographer, memoirist, and editor—was constantly forced to negotiate her happiness with her husband’s infidelities. Inspired by Sophia’s story, legendary American documentarian Frederick Wiseman has made a film based on Sophia’s diaries and letters from Leo to Sophia, structured as a series of monologues delivered with magnificent poise and gathering intensity by star and co-writer Nathalie Boutefeu, pillowed by graceful images of natural beauty from the film’s bucolic French setting. Wiseman’s captivating one-woman portrait presents a remarkably contemporary rendering of a marriage. A Zipporah Films release.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis at filmlinc.org/tix
10/5/2022 • 22 minutes, 25 seconds
#420 - Paul Schrader, Joel Edgerton & Sigourney Weaver on Master Gardener
This weekend we welcomed writer/director Paul Schrader and cast members Joel Edgerton and Sigourney Weaver to NYFF60 to present and discuss Master Gardener, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival.
Narvel Roth (Joel Edgerton) takes great care and pride in his work as the longtime head horticulturist at Gracewood Gardens, the historic estate of the demanding, imperious Norma Haverhill (Sigourney Weaver). An enclosed, scrupulously run world of its own, Gracewood has been in the Haverhill family for generations, and Norma trusts no one other than Narvel to continue its traditions. However, a threat of change is harkened by the arrival of Norma’s troubled grand-niece, Maya (Quintessa Swindell), whose presence sets off a chain reaction of events that catalyze Narvel into coming to terms with his own shocking past. Following First Reformed and The Card Counter, Paul Schrader continues his dramatic renaissance with an equally effective, startling tale about dormant violence and the possibility of regeneration.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis at filmlinc.org/tix
10/4/2022 • 20 minutes, 27 seconds
#419 - Ruben Östlund, Dolly de Leon & Zlatko Burić on Triangle of Sadness
This weekend we welcomed writer/director Ruben Östlund and cast members Dolly de Leon and Zlatko Burić to NYFF60 to present and discuss Triangle of Sadness, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival.
Cinematic mischief maker Östlund liberally applies his customary playfulness to the wide canvas of his wildly ambitious, frequently hilarious latest film, which won the Swedish director his second Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. Kicking off as a satirical romance, following the bickering, money-soured relationship between two hot young models (Harris Dickinson and Charlbi Dean), the three-part film escalates into increasing absurdity after they are invited on a luxury cruise, where they rub elbows with the super-rich, as well as a disheveled and disillusioned, Marx-spouting sea captain (Woody Harrelson). To tell more would ruin the Buñuelian twists of this poison-dipped farce on class and economic disparity, which doesn’t skewer contemporary culture so much as dunk it in raw sewage.
Listen below as they discuss Triangle of Sadness, how the film shifted after working with collaborators, capturing beauty as a currency, and more with Dennis Lim. Don’t forget to mark your calendars: Triangle of Sadness opens in select theaters this Friday, October 7th, from NEON.
Tickets to the New York Film Festival are moving fast! Get up-to-date information on all available tickets on a daily basis at filmlinc.org/tix
10/3/2022 • 14 minutes, 23 seconds
#418 - Chinonye Chukwu, Whoopi Goldberg, Danielle Deadwyler & More on Till
The 60th edition of the New York Film Festival, currently in progress through October 16th, recently hosted the World Premiere of Chinonye Chukwu’s powerful new drama, Till, in the festival’s Spotlight section.
Till tells the story of Mamie Till-Mobley, the Chicago woman whose son, Emmett Till, was lynched while visiting cousins in Mississippi and whose body became an indelible image of the horrors of American racism. Employing a direct, unflinching, yet sensitive gaze, Chukwu has created the definitive drama of this woman’s grief and resilience, and in an astonishing performance, Danielle Deadwyler captures both a mother’s indescribable heartbreak and her inspiring ascension to the role of civil rights activist. Till is a momentous reminder of an ever-present tragedy, featuring painstaking production design, subtly expressive camera framing and composition, and a note-perfect supporting cast, including Sean Patrick Thomas, Jalyn Hall, Tosin Cole, John Douglas Thompson, Frankie Faison, and Whoopi Goldberg.
Listen to the press conference below with director Chinonye Chukwu, producer and co-writer Keith Beauchamp, and cast members Danielle Deadwyler, Whoopi Goldberg, Jalyn Hall, John Douglas Thompson, and Sean Patrick Thomas, moderated by NYFF Main Slate selection committee member, Rachel Rosen.
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 16 throughout NYC, visit filmlinc.org/tix
10/3/2022 • 44 minutes, 8 seconds
#417 - Noah Baumbach, Greta Gerwig, Danny Elfman & More on White Noise
The 60th edition of the New York Film Festival officially kicked off on September 30, 2022 with our Opening Night selection: the North American premiere of Noah Baumbach's White Noise, presented by Campari.
At the film's press conference, we welcomed Noah Baumbach and select cast members Greta Gerwig, Raffey Cassidy, May Nivola, and Sam Nivola, composer Danny Elfman, and songwriter James Murphy in conversation with NYFF's Artistic Director, Dennis Lim. Their wide-ranging discussion covers adapting the "unfilmable" Don DeLillo novel, the story's frightening similarities to our current pandemic, working with a very large cast, and shooting in Anamorphic widescreen.
White Noise opens in theaters on November 25th and will premiere on Netflix December 30th.
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 16 throughout NYC, visit filmlinc.org/tix.
9/30/2022 • 39 minutes, 19 seconds
#416 - NYFF60 Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast, we're excited to welcome NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim and FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini for a programmers preview of the 60th New York Film Festival, through October 16th. Moderated by FLC Assistant Director of Marketing Jordan Raup.
The three talked about the standouts and hidden gems of the festival across all five sections—Main Slate, Currents, Revivals, Spotlight, and Talks—along with the general ethos of the curation behind this year's historic edition. Don't miss NYFF60 and attend screenings in all five NYC boroughs! Get up to date information on available tickets at filmlinc.org/tix.
9/29/2022 • 39 minutes, 36 seconds
#415 - Luca Guadagnino on I Am Love
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special archival Q&A from the 39th New Directors/New Films in 2010 on I Am Love, with director Luca Guadagnino.
Luca Guadagnino returns to Film at Lincoln Center for this year’s 60th New York Film Festival with the Spotlight selection, Bones and All, a work of both tender fragility and feral intensity, setting corporeal horror and runaway romance against a vividly textured Americana, featuring Taylor Russell and Timothée Chalamet as lovers with insatiable, dangerous desires.
Tickets to NYFF60, which takes place Sept. 30 - October 16, are now on sale! Don’t miss screenings of Bones and All on October 6th (followed by a Q&A with Guadagnino), 8th, 11th, and 16th. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/27/2022 • 26 minutes, 25 seconds
#414 - Kelly Reichardt on Meek's Cutoff
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special archival Q&A from the 48th New York Film Festival in 2010 on Meek’s Cutoff, with director Kelly Reichardt and moderator Melissa Anderson.
Kelly Reichardt returns to NYFF for this year’s 60th anniversary edition with the North American Premiere of Showing Up, a Main Slate selection, which reunites the director with star Michelle Williams in a marvelously particularized portrait of a sculptor’s daily work and frustrations in an artist’s enclave in Portland.
Tickets to NYFF60, which takes place Sept. 30 - October 16, are now on sale! Don’t miss screenings of Showing Up on October 5th and 6th, followed by Q&As with Reichardt. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/26/2022 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 50 seconds
#413 - NYFF52 Panel on Jean-Luc Godard
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special archival panel discussion on the late filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard from the 52nd New York Film Festival.
Listen to a special panel, including The New Yorker’s Richard Brody, former MoMA curator Lawrence Kardish, Goodbye to Language star Héloise Godet, and critic Max Nelson, discuss Godard’s work and career with moderator Eric Kohn from IndieWire.
Tickets to the 60th New York Film Festival, taking place from September 30 to October 16th, go on sale Monday, September 19 at noon. Don’t miss this anniversary milestone edition and explore the lineup at filmlinc.org/nyff
9/16/2022 • 38 minutes, 48 seconds
#412 - Mathieu Amalric & Vicky Krieps on Hold Me Tight
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re revisiting a conversation from the 27th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema with Hold Me Tight (opens tomorrow!) director Mathieu Amalric and actor Vicky Krieps, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Vicky Krieps (Phantom Thread, Bergman Island) gives another riveting performance as Clarisse, a woman on the run from her family for reasons that aren’t immediately clear. Widely renowned as an actor but less well-known here for his equally impressive work behind the camera, Mathieu Amalric’s sixth feature directorial outing—his most ambitious to date—is a virtuosic, daringly fluid portrait of one woman’s fractured psyche. Alternating between Clarisse’s adventures on the road and her abandoned husband Marc (Arieh Worthalter) as he struggles to take care of their children at home, Amalric’s film keeps viewers uncertain as to the reality of what they’re seeing until the final moments of this richly rewarding, moving, and unpredictable portrait of grief.
Get showtimes and tickets to Hold Me Tight at filmlinc.org/holdme
9/8/2022 • 46 minutes, 47 seconds
#411 - Ricky D’Ambrose on The Cathedral
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re revisiting a conversation from the 51st New Directors/New Films, moderated by FLC Senior Director of Programming Florence Almozini, with filmmaker Ricky D’Ambrose in anticipation of his latest film, The Cathedral, opening in our theaters this Friday with Q&As.
A multigenerational family saga in extreme miniature, the new feature from singular American independent director Ricky D’Ambrose is his most refined, emotionally resonant work yet. Slicing across decades with impressionistic precision, The Cathedral tells the formally economical yet engrossing story of the Damrosch family, whose quiet rise and fall is seen through the eyes of its youngest member, Jesse, born in the late 1980s. Using photographs and archival news footage to buttress his oblique drama, D’Ambrose shows how a family’s financial and emotional wear and tear can subtly reflect a country’s sociopolitical fortunes and follies.
Explore showtimes and Q&As at filmlinc.org/cathedral.
9/1/2022 • 32 minutes, 1 second
#410 - Claire Denis on White Material
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special archival Q&A from the 47th New York Film Festival in 2009 with director Claire Denis and cast members Isaach de Bankolé & William Nadylam on White Material, moderated by Melissa Anderson.
Claire Denis returns to NYFF for this year’s 60th-anniversary edition with two films: the Main Slate selection, Stars at Noon, and the Revivals selection, No Fear No Die.
Based on the 1986 novel by Denis Johnson, Stars at Noon represents a new mode for director Claire Denis, a contemporary thriller suffused with political intrigue and languid eroticism, moving entirely to the tactile rhythms of its actors, especially rising star Margaret Qualley, who gives a live-wire performance of fervid spontaneity and mercurial passion. No Fear No Die, Claire Denis’s rarely screened second feature, is a radically physical cinematic journey into the shadowy (under)world of illegal cockfighting. Isaach De Bankole and Alex Descas star as Dah and Jocelyn, two immigrants (from Benin and French Antilles, respectively) living on the outskirts of Paris who earn money from cockfights.
A very limited amount of NYFF60 Passes are now on sale! Single tickets will go on sale to the General Public on September 19, with pre-sale access for FLC Members and Pass holders prior to this date.
Listen to the discussion on the film below and don’t forget to subscribe on iTunes, Spotify, or Stitcher for more filmmaker conversations.
8/26/2022 • 34 minutes, 38 seconds
#409 - Noah Baumbach on The Squid and the Whale
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special archival Q&A from the 43rd New York Film Festival in 2005 with Noach Boambach on The Squid and the Whale, moderated by Phillip Lopate.
Noah Baumbach returns to NYFF for this year’s 60th-anniversary edition with the Opening Night film, White Noise, a wonderfully abrasive and precisely mounted period piece based on Don DeLillo’s epochal postmodern 1985 novel, which befits our modern, through-the-looking-glass pandemic reality.
NYFF60 Passes are now on sale! Single tickets will go on sale to the General Public on September 19, with pre-sale access for FLC Members and Pass holders prior to this date. Learn more at filmlinc.org/nyff.
Owen Kline, who plays the youngest son in The Squid and the Whale, returns to Film at Lincoln Center with his feature debut Funny Pages on August 26, with in-person Q&As and introductions. The actor-turned-director has also handpicked an assortment of films that influenced the world to which his hilariously dark, pleasantly unexpected debut belongs. Animating Funny Pages features 35mm screenings and plays through August 25 in our theaters. Explore the lineup and get tickets to filmlinc.org/kline.
8/19/2022 • 29 minutes, 50 seconds
#408 - Kiro Russo on El Gran Movimiento
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with director Kiro Russo on his NYFF59 Currents selection, El Gran Movimiento, moderated by NYFF Program Advisor Violeta Bava.
Expanding on the hybrid narrative of his remarkable 2016 film Dark Skull, Kiro Russo has mounted a monumental, gently mystical portrait of the contemporary central South American cityscape and those who work within its bowels and environs. Set in the alternately harsh and beautiful terrain of La Paz, Bolivia and its surrounding rural areas, El Gran Movimiento follows a young miner as he looks for work alongside his friends, even as he begins to descend into a mysterious sickness. With its marvelous long-lens zoom work and increasingly dynamic, rhythmic editing, Russo’s film is a hypnotic journey into a psychological space that touches upon the supernatural.
El Gran Movimiento opens this Friday in our theaters. For showtimes and tickets, go to filmlinc.org/movimiento.
8/12/2022 • 38 minutes, 26 seconds
#407 - King Vidor Retrospective Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special programmers preview of our King Vidor Retrospective, a long overdue series dedicated to the fascinating and prolific filmmaker whose career bridged the silent and sound eras of Hollywood, featuring live musical accompaniments at selection screenings, rare 35mm prints, and more.
Listen to FLC Programmers Dan Sullivan and Thomas Beard as they discuss the trajectory of one of the Hollywood studio system’s enduringly great auteurs, their recommended films in the series, and more.
Our King Vidor Retrospective kicks off Friday and plays through August 14. Explore the lineup and get tickets and All-Access Passes at filmlinc.org/vidor.
8/4/2022 • 37 minutes, 48 seconds
#406 - Sara Dosa on Fire of Love
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 51st New Directors/New Films with Sara Dosa, director of Fire of Love, moderated by FLC Assistant Programmer Tyler Wilson.
World-famous volcanologists and lovers Katia and Maurice Krafft fearlessly observed and studied volcanic eruptions up close across the globe; they were at once intrepid adventurers, committed scientists, and innate filmmakers, capturing destructive earth ruptures with surreal beauty and terror. Tragically, they were killed together at the eruption of Japan’s Mount Unzen in June 1991. Using a trove of the couple’s monumental, almost otherworldly 16mm footage, filmmaker Sara Dosa consummately constructs the narrative of their remarkable lives, making the Kraffts into both vivid movie stars and unknowable figures whose pursuits constantly put them on the crater’s edge of existence. Evocatively narrated by Miranda July, Fire of Love is a transportive work of genuine awe. The NDNF51 selection is now playing in theaters.
7/21/2022 • 28 minutes, 20 seconds
#405 - 2022 New York Asian Film Festival Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmers preview of the 20th Anniversary Edition of the New York Asian Film Festival with NYAFF Executive Director Samuel Jamier and NYAFF Programmer David Wilentz. The two discussed the robust lineup of over 50 films, favorites from various countries, and much more.
The 20th Anniversary Edition of the New York Asian Film Festival kicks off tomorrow and runs through July 31st. Explore the lineup, all-access passes, talks and Q&As with filmmakers, and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyaff.
7/14/2022 • 53 minutes, 53 seconds
#404 - Claire Denis and Jim Jarmusch In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation from the 27th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema with Claire Denis and Jim Jarmusch.
Claire Denis, the singular cinematic visionary behind Beau Travail (NYFF37), Let the Sunshine In (NYFF55), and High Life (NYFF56), returned to Film at Lincoln Center with this year’s Rendez-Vous with French Cinema Opening Night selection Both Sides of the Blade, a searing and unsparing romantic drama. Denis sat down with longtime friend and fellow filmmaker Jim Jarmusch—an icon of the American independent filmmaking landscape, and the official Guest of Honor at the 2022 edition of the festival—for an extended conversation about their decades-spanning careers.
Claire Denis’s Both Sides of the Blade opens this Friday in our theaters. Go to filmlinc.org/blade for showtimes and tickets.
Jim Jarmusch’s Mystery Train, a boozy and beautiful pilgrimage to Memphis, plays for free outdoors in Lincoln Center’s Hearst Plaza on July 14. Go to filmlinc.org/free for more details.
7/7/2022 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 6 seconds
#403 - Mike Leigh on Secrets & Lies
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A on Secrets & Lies with director Mike Leigh from our recent retrospective on the British filmmaker. Moderated by FLC programmer Dan Sullivan. They discussed the making and trajectory of Leigh's "most commercially successful" film, working with actors, and more.
The acclaimed winner of the 1996 Cannes Film Festival’s Palme d’Or, Mike Leigh’s mid-’90s masterpiece cemented his status as the poet laureate of modern family life. The story concerns Cynthia (Brenda Blethyn, awarded Best Actress at Cannes), a working-class white woman whose personal and interpersonal lives are transformed when she learns that a Black optometrist is the child she gave up for adoption 27 years prior. Created, like Leigh’s other films, after long months of intensely collaborative improvisation, Secrets & Lies is remarkable for its lived-in warmth and humor, and above all for its unflinching honesty in capturing the everyday evasions and deceptions that can define our lives.
MUBI is offering a 30-day free trial for all FLC listeners. Get access to the special offer at mubi.com/promos/flc, and be sure to learn more about how you can get a free ticket to a theater each week with MUBI GO, included with your subscription, at mubi.com/go/us.
6/29/2022 • 41 minutes, 19 seconds
#402 - Dario Argento on Deep Red
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A with Dario Argento on Deep Red following the world premiere of the new restoration at our retrospective, underway through June 29. The conversation was moderated by Maddie Whittle with interpretation by Michael Moore.
Get tickets for our retrospective at www.filmlinc.org/argento
Blow–Up’s David Hemmings takes the lead in Argento’s most sophisticated giallo, playing a jazz pianist who struggles to remember a vital piece of evidence after witnessing the murder of Macha Méril’s German psychic. Joined by Argento’s real-life partner Daria Nicolodi in the role of a plucky journalist, Hemmings embarks on a dizzying tour of Rome (with shooting locations in Turin standing in for the capital city) which, through Argento’s roving, suprahuman lens, appears just as haunted and hyper-compartmentalized as the movie’s tortured human protagonists. Ranked among the director’s masterworks, Deep Red is supplemented by Argento’s first score with Italian prog-rock band Goblin and astonishing production design by Giuseppe Bassan.
6/22/2022 • 16 minutes, 15 seconds
#401 - Apichatpong Weerasethakul & Tilda Swinton on Memoria and Dario Argento Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special programmers preview of Beware of Dario Argento, our 20-film retrospective taking place Friday through June 29. Join FLC Programmers Maddie Whittle and Tyler Wilson in an overview of the Master of Giallo’s oeuvre. Explore the lineup, featuring 17 world premieres of new restorations, the North American Premiere of Dark Glasses, 3D and 35mm screenings, and in-person appearances from Argento himself at filmlinc.org/argento.
After the preview, listen to a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with director Apichatpong Weerasethakul and actress Tilda Swinton on their Main Slate selection Memoria, moderated by NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim.
Collective and personal ghosts hover over every frame of Memoria, somehow the grandest yet most becalmed of Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s works. Inspired by the Thai director’s own memories and those of people he encountered while traveling across Colombia, the film follows Jessica (a wholly immersed Tilda Swinton), an expat botanist visiting her hospitalized sister in Bogotá; while there, she becomes ever more disturbed by an abyssal sound that haunts her sleepless nights and bleary-eyed days, compelling her to seek help in identifying its origins. Thus begins a personal journey that’s also a historical excavation, in a film of profound serenity that, like Jessica’s sound, lodges itself in the viewer’s brain as it traverses city and country, climaxing in an extraordinary extended encounter with a rural farmer that exists on a precipice between life and death.
Join our special engagement with Memoria, playing for one week only through June 23! Get tickets at filmlinc.org/memoria.
6/17/2022 • 53 minutes
#400 - Saul Williams & Anisia Uzeyman on Neptune Frost and Open Roads 2022 Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special programmer's preview of the 21st Open Roads: New Italian Cinema, our annual series featuring a diverse and extensive lineup of contemporary Italian films. Join FLC Assitant Programmer Dan Sullivan in an overview of the hidden gems in this year’s festival, taking place June 9 - 15. Explore the lineup and filmmaker Q&As, and get tickets at filmlinc.org/openroads.
After the preview, listen to a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with Saul Williams and Anisia Uzeyman on their Main Slate selection Neptune Frost, moderated by NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez.
Multi-hyphenate, multidisciplinary artist Saul Williams brings his unique dynamism to this Afrofuturist vision, a sci-fi punk musical that’s a visually wondrous amalgamation of themes, ideas, and songs that Williams has explored in his work, notably his 2016 album MartyrLoserKing. Co-directed with his partner, the Rwandan-born artist Anisia Uzeyman, the film takes place amidst the hilltops of Burundi, where a collective of computer hackers emerges from within a coltan mining community, a result of the romance between a miner and an intersex runaway. Set between states of being—past and present, dream and waking life, colonized and free, male and female, memory and prescience—Neptune Frost is an invigorating and empowering direct download to the cerebral cortex and a call to reclaim technology for progressive political ends. Neptune Frost is now playing in select theaters.
6/8/2022 • 38 minutes, 55 seconds
#399 - John Cameron Mitchell and Mike Potter on Hedwig and the Angry Inch
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A on Hedwig and the Angry Inch with co-creator, director, and lead John Cameron Mitchell and makeup artist and hairstylist Mike Potter, moderated by FLC’s President Lesli Klainberg.
After falling in love with a U.S. Army sergeant, an East Berlin boy named Hansel undergoes a sex-change operation so that he can legally marry his beloved. But the operation goes awry, leaving the boy less than a man, but not quite a woman. Deserted in a Kansas trailer park, now Hedwig reinvents themself as a rock star. Based on the hit off-Broadway musical.
Catch Hedwig and the Angry Inch for free this Friday on Governors Island, presented in association with Newfest, with a pre-show DJ set from John Cameron Mitchell and Michael Cavadia starting at 7pm, and an introduction from John Cameron Mitchell before the screening. Ferry ticket reservations are required before the event. Go to filmlinc.org/hedwig for more information.
6/1/2022 • 45 minutes, 11 seconds
#398 - Maureen Fazendeiro and Miguel Gomes on The Tsugua Diaries
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with The Tsugua Diaries directors Maureen Fazendeiro, Miguel Gomes, moderated by FLC Programmer Tyler Wilson.
The rigorous process of moviemaking meets the torpor of pandemic life in this beguiling new film co-directed by Maureen Fazendeiro and Miguel Gomes (Arabian Nights, NYFF53). A daily journal that unfolds in revelatory reverse order, this playful rug-puller begins by surveying the mundane routines of three housemates (Carloto Cotta, Crista Alfaiate, and João Nunes Monteiro) living in rural peace during the COVID lockdown: impromptu dance parties, cleaning, building a backyard butterfly house. Soon, we discover that there’s more going on beyond the limits of the camera frame. Cockeyed, funny, and slyly meta-cinematic, The Tsugua Diaries, lovingly shot on 16mm, demonstrates the possibility of artistic creation out of sheer will.
The Tsugua Diaries opens this Friday in our theaters. For showtimes and tickets, go to filmlinc.org/tsugua
5/26/2022 • 25 minutes, 59 seconds
#397 - Hong Sangsoo on In Front of Your Face & Mike Leigh Retrospective Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A with Hong Sangsoo on his new film In Front of Your Face, moderated by FLC’s Director of Programmer Dennis Lim, and a special programmers preview of Human Conditions: The Films of Mike Leigh.
After years of living abroad, a middle-aged former actress has returned to South Korea to reconnect with her past and perhaps make amends. Over the course of one day in Seoul, via various encounters—including with her younger sister; a shopkeeper who lives in her converted childhood home; and, finally, a well-known film director with whom she would like to make a comeback—we discover her resentments and regrets, her financial difficulties, and the big secret that’s keeping her aloof from the world. Both beguiling and oddly cleansing in its mix of the spiritual and the cynical, In Front of Your Face finds the endlessly prolific Hong Sangsoo in a particularly contemplative mood; it’s a film that somehow finds that life is at once full of grace and a sick joke. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/face.
Before the Q&A, listen to a programmer’s preview of Human Conditions: The Films of Mike Leigh, our upcoming retrospective on the British filmmaker, with FLC programmers Dan Sullivan and Maddie Whittle. Taking place May 27 - June 8, Human Conditions: The Films of Mike Leigh, co-presented with Janus Films, will feature brand new restorations, 35mm print screenings, and in-person Q&As with Leigh himself. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/leigh.
5/19/2022 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 20 seconds
#397 - Eskil Vogt on The Innocents and The 29th New York African Film Festival Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 51st New Directors/New Films with Eskil Vogt, director of The Innocents, moderated by FLC’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim and a programmers preview of the 29th New York African Film Festival.
Perhaps best known as the co-screenwriter of acclaimed Norwegian director Joachim Trier (The Worst Person in the World), Eskil Vogt proves himself to be a filmmaker of astonishing skill and elemental force in his own right with this daring supernatural thriller. Set during the summer at an apartment complex surrounded by an ominous, fairy-tale-like forest, The Innocents follows the sinister, increasingly alarming interactions of a group of prepubescent children: Ida, feeling ignored next to her autistic older sister Anna; the bullied Ben; and the angelic Aisha, who appears to communicate telepathically—and feel through—the nonverbal Anna. With unforgettable, dark images and fleet visual storytelling, Vogt’s film pushes the “evil children” subgenre into more philosophical territory, creating a morally askew universe controlled by a child’s primitive understanding of the world. The Innocents is now playing in our theaters. Go to filmlinc.org/innocents for showtimes and tickets.
Before the Q&A, listen to a programmers preview of the 29th New York African Film Festival, now playing in our theaters and virtually nationwide through May 17. Explore the lineup, Q&As, info on a free digital art exhibition, a free masterclass, and more at filmlinc.org/african.
5/13/2022 • 42 minutes, 17 seconds
#396 - Audrey Diwan & Anamaria Vartolomei on Happening
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 51st New Directors/New Films with Happening director Audrey Diwan and lead Anamaria Vartolomei on their Opening Night selection. The conversation was moderated by The Museum of Modern Art programmer Josh Siegel.
Winner of the Venice International Film Festival’s prestigious Golden Lion, Audrey Diwan’s exceptionally well-observed breakthrough is an unsparing, gripping portrait of a young woman’s attempts to secure an illegal abortion in 1960s France. A student of ambition and promise, hoping to leave her small town and embark on a professional life of the mind, Anne Duchesne (Anamaria Vartolomei in a brave, overwhelming performance) finds her entire future thrown into doubt upon discovering that she’s pregnant. Sure to be one of the most talked-about movies of the year, Happening, based on the semi-autobiographical novel by acclaimed author Annie Ernaux, is a drama that incrementally builds in power, showing the step-by-step process by which an ordinary young woman attempts to establish her freedom and ownership of her body.
Happening opens in theaters on May 6th.
5/6/2022 • 31 minutes, 18 seconds
#395 - Camilo Restrepo on Los conductos
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 49th New Directors/New Films, with Los conductos director Camilo Restrepo and FLC’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
A former criminal and cult member living under cloak of night in the crevices and corners of the Colombian city of Medellín makes his way back into civilization, yet is gripped by a shadowy past, in this fragmented first feature from Camilo Restrepo. After his memorable shorts Cilaos and La bouche, the director proves his mastery at economical yet expansive storytelling here, taking a complex narrative about the possibility of regeneration within a society all too willing to discard its outcasts and boiling it down to a series of precise shots, sounds, and gestures of off-handed beauty.
Winner of the Best First Feature prize at the 2020 Berlin Film Festival and a New Directors/New Films 2020 selection, Los conductos opens exclusively in our theaters this Friday, with live Q&As with the director and cast during the opening weekend. For showtimes and tickets go to filmlinc.org/conductos.
4/28/2022 • 32 minutes, 15 seconds
#394 - New Directors/New Films 2022 Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special programmers preview of the 51st New Directors/New Films, our annual festival celebrating filmmakers who speak to the present and anticipate the future of cinema, and whose bold work pushes the envelope in unexpected, striking ways, co-presented with the Museum of Modern Art.
Join FLC programmer Tyler Wilson and MoMA programmers La Frances Hui and Rajendra Roy as they highlight films from the 51st edition of the festival. This year’s lineup will introduce 26 features and 11 shorts, a total of 39 directors, 21 of which are women. New Directors/New Films takes place from April 20 - May 1. Explore the films and get tickets at newdirectors.org.
4/19/2022 • 26 minutes, 33 seconds
#393 - Alessio Rigo de Righi and Matteo Zoppis on The Tale of King Crab
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with The Tale of King Crab directors Alessio Rigo de Righi and Matteo Zoppis and NYFF programmer Tyler Wilson.
This rich, engrossing fiction feature debut from documentary filmmakers Rigo de Righi and Zoppis takes storytelling itself as its subject. Based on a legendary figure about whom the filmmakers first heard while making their previous collaboration, 2015’s Il Solengo, this rousing, bifurcated tale follows the improbable adventures of Luciano, played by a bewitching Gabriele Silli, a village outcast in late-19th-century rural Italy. In the film’s first half, set in the countryside near Rome, his life is undone by alcohol, forbidden love, and an escalating quarrel with a local aristocrat; in the second, Luciano is in the distant Argentine province of Tierra del Fuego, hunting for a mythic treasure with the help of a compass-like crab. Rigo de Righi and Zoppis have created a highly unconventional narrative of redemption, alternating images of grandeur and folkloric idiosyncrasy
The Tale of King Crab opens exclusively in our theaters this Friday. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/crab.
4/14/2022 • 25 minutes, 16 seconds
#392 - Silvan Zürcher on The Girl and the Spider
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with Silvan Zürcher, one of the directors of The Girl and the Spider, and NYFF programmer Rachel Rosen.
Everything is in its right place, yet nothing is ever what or where it seems in this alternately droll and melancholy new film from the Zürcher brothers, whose The Strange Little Cat was one of the most striking and original debut features of recent years. Their latest charts a few days in the lives of two young people on the verge of change: Lisa (Liliane Amuat), who is in the process of moving into a new apartment, and her current roommate, Mara (Henriette Confurius), who’s staying behind. Though its setup is simple, the film—and the ambiguous relationship between the women—is anything but. The architectural precision of the filmmaking belies the inchoate longings and desires that appear to course through Lisa and Mara, as well as the various characters who come in and out of their homes. The Girl and the Spider is a minor-key symphony of inscrutable glances and irresolvable tensions.
The NYFF59 Main Slate selection opens this Friday in our theaters! Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/spider
4/7/2022 • 21 minutes, 46 seconds
#391 - Art of the Real Preview and Eva Husson & Odessa Young on Mothering Sunday
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a preview of the ninth Art of the Real, our annual festival highlighting the world’s most vital and innovative voices in nonfiction and hybrid filmmaking, with programmers Dennis Lim, Rachael Rakes, Dan Sullivan, and Almudena Escobar López. Art of the Real is now in full swing and playing through April 7! Get tickets at filmlinc.org/aotr.
We're also featuring a Q&A from a recent patron event with director Eva Husson and star Odessa Young on their most recent film, Mothering Sunday. On a warm spring day in 1924, house maid and foundling Jane Fairchild, played by Odessa Young, finds herself alone on Mother’s Day. Her employers, Mr. and Mrs. Niven (Colin Firth and Olivia Colman), are out and she has the rare chance to spend quality time with her secret lover. Paul (Josh O’Connor) is the boy from the manor house near by, Jane’s long-term love despite the fact that he’s engaged to be married to another woman, a childhood friend and daughter of his parents’ friends. But events that neither can foresee will change the course of Jane’s life forever. Mothering Sunday is now streaming and playing in theaters.
3/31/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 39 seconds
#390 - Paul Thomas Anderson, Alana Haim, Cooper Hoffman & Benny Safdie on Licorice Pizza
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from our one-night only 35mm screening of Licorice Pizza with Paul Thomas Anderson, Alana Haim, Cooper Hoffman, and Benny Safdie, moderated by FLC Senior Vice President Eugene Hernandez.
Licorice Pizza is the story of Alana Kane and Gary Valentine growing up, running around, and falling in love in the San Fernando Valley in 1973. Written and Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, the film tracks the treacherous navigation of first love. PTA's Licorice Pizza is now playing in theaters.
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmer’s preview on our Kinuyo Tanaka Retrospective, and a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with director Nadav Lapid on Ahed’s Knee, moderated by NYFF Programmer Rachel Rosen.
As an actress in over 250 films, Kinuyo Tanaka was one of the most celebrated and wildly popular artists of her time, regularly collaborating with consummate masters like Yasujirō Ozu, Kenji Mizoguchi, and Mikio Naruse. Between 1953 and 1962, Tanaka directed half a dozen films with a determined sense of freedom and touches of provocation, placing women at the forefront of her movies as mistresses, prostitutes, poets, heroines, and victims of social injustice. The Kinuyo Tanaka Retrospective, featuring brand new 4K restorations of her directorial work and 35mm screenings of her collaborations as an actor, takes place March 18 - 27! Listen to an introduction to the filmmaker from Assistant Programmer Tyler Wilson and rediscover the groundbreaking auteur at filmlinc.org/tanaka.
Also opening this Friday, Ahed’s Knee is Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid’s shattering follow-up to his bat-out-of-hell Synonyms (NYFF57). A film of radical style and splenetic anger, Ahed’s Knee accompanies a celebrated but increasingly dissociated director to a small town in the desert region of Arava for a screening of his latest film. Already anguished by the news of his mother’s fatal illness (Lapid’s film was made soon after the death of his own mother, who had worked as his editor for many years), he grows frustrated with a speech-restricting form he is encouraged to sign by a local Ministry of Culture worker. The confrontation ultimately sends him into a spiral of rage aimed at what he perceives as the censorship, hypocrisy, and violence of the Israeli government. This boldly shot and conceived work, which won the Grand Jury Prize at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, feels as though it has welled up from the depths of its maker’s soul.
Ahed’s Knee opens this Friday with filmmaker Q&As at the 6pm screenings on Friday and Saturday, and a special Film Comment Free Talk with Lapid at 8:30pm on Friday. Get showtimes and tickets at filmlinc.org/ahed.
3/17/2022 • 37 minutes, 32 seconds
#388 - In Conversation with Juliette Binoche and Déborah Lukumuena
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk between Juliette Binoche and Déborah Lukumuena from the 27th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema, moderated by FLC programmer Maddie Whittle.
In a Rendez-Vous lineup that features an abundance of extraordinary performances from women, two names stand out: Juliette Binoche, a much-acclaimed icon of French and international cinema, anchoring new films from directors Claire Denis (Fire) and Emmanuel Carrère (Between Two Worlds); and Déborah Lukumuena, a singular talent and rising star who embodies the best of a new generation of young French actors, performing opposite Gérard Depardieu in Constance Meyer’s Robust. Their conversation explores the two women’s professional trajectories and creative influences, their philosophies and priorities in selecting new projects, and their respective relationships with the American film industry.
Rendez-Vous with French Cinema continues to play in our theaters through March 13th. Explore the lineup and get tickets to the best contemporary French films at filmlinc.org/rdv22.
3/10/2022 • 47 minutes, 26 seconds
#387 - Rendez-Vous with French Cinema 2022 Programmers Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmers preview of the 27th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema, the celebrated annual festival that exemplifies the variety and vitality of contemporary French filmmaking, co-presented with UniFrance and taking place now through March 13.
Join programmers Florence Almozini, Maddie Whittle, and Adeline Monzier in a preview of this year's impressive lineup where they discuss their favorite films, hidden gems, and more.
Get tickets, explore the full lineup, filmmaker Q&As, and free live talks at filmlinc.org/rdv22.
3/3/2022 • 36 minutes, 50 seconds
#386 - Neighboring Scenes Preview and The Legacy of Sidney Poitier
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmers preview of the seventh edition of Neighboring Scenes, the annual wide-ranging showcase of contemporary Latin American cinema featuring established auteurs as well as fresh talent from the international festival scene. The preview is led by Cinema Tropical programmers Carlos A. Gutiérrez and Cecilia Barrionuevo. Featuring premieres and filmmaker Q&As, Neighboring Scenes takes place from February 24 - 28. Go to filmlinc.org/NS2022 for showtimes and tickets.
Following the preview is a special conversation from our To Sir, With Love free screening about the legacy of Sidney Poitier and the figure of the Black movie star with scholars Racquel Gates and Michael Gillespie, moderated by filmmaker and critic Tayler Montague.
2/24/2022 • 56 minutes, 55 seconds
#385 - Jonas Mekas Programmer's Preview and Jonas Poher Rasmussen on Flee
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a programmer's preview of our Jonas Mekas Retrospective with FLC Jr. Programmer Dan Sullivan, followed by a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with Flee director Jonas Poher Rasmussen, moderated by NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez.
Few if any figures in the history of New York City film culture have left as large a mark as that of the Lithuanian filmmaker, critic, and poet Jonas Mekas. Rising to notoriety in the 1950s and ’60s as a champion of and mouthpiece for the New American Cinema, he founded and presided over such stalwart fixtures of the underground and avant-garde film scenes as Film Culture magazine, the Filmmakers’ Cinematheque, the Film-Makers’ Cooperative, and Anthology Film Archives. But he was also one of the 20th century’s most vital film artists, a master cine-diarist and something like a present-tense historian who documented the particulars of emigrant life in New York City. Featuring 16mm screenings, our Jonas Mekas Retrospective takes place from February 17th to 23rd.
In the Academy Award-nominated Flee, Amin’s life has been defined by escape from a young age. Forced to leave his home country of Afghanistan with his mother and siblings after the U.S.-supported mujahideen toppled the government, Amin relocated to Russia as an adolescent, only to take part in a dangerous migration to Western Europe as a teenager to break away from the harsh conditions of post-Soviet living. Now that Amin is planning to marry a man he met in his new homeland, Denmark, he begins to look back over his life, opening up about his past, his trauma, the truth about his family, and his acceptance of his own sexuality. Using animation as both an aesthetic choice and an ethical necessity (to hide Amin’s true identity), Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s animated documentary is an illuminating and heartrending true story about the importance of personal freedom in all its meanings. Flee, an NYFF59 selection is now streaming.
2/18/2022 • 36 minutes, 26 seconds
#384 - Joachim Trier, Renate Reinsve, and Anders Danielsen Lie on The Worst Person in the World
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from our sneak preview of The Worst Person in the World with director Joachim Trier and actors Anders Danielsen Lie and Renate Reinsve, moderated by FLC’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
As proven in such exacting stories of lives on the edge as Reprise and Oslo, August 31, Norwegian director Joachim Trier is singularly adept at giving an invigorating modern twist to classically constructed character portraits. Trier catapults the viewer into the world of his most spellbinding protagonist yet: Julie, played by Cannes Best Actress winner Renate Reinsve, who’s the magnetic center of nearly every scene. After dropping out of pre-med, Julie must find new professional and romantic avenues as she navigates her late-twenties, juggling emotionally heavy relationships with two very different men (Trier regular Anders Danielsen Lie and engaging newcomer Herbert Nordrum). Fluidly told in 12 discrete chapters, Trier’s film elegantly depicts the precarity of identity and the mutability of happiness in our runaway contemporary world.
Now nominated for Best International Feature Film and Best Original Screenplay at the Academy Awards, the NYFF59 selection is playing daily in our theaters. This Valentine’s Day, watch The Worst Person in the World with the best person in the world—buy one ticket, and get one 50% off. The discount will automatically be applied in the cart on filmlinc.org/worst.
2/10/2022 • 45 minutes, 9 seconds
#383 - Dana Stevens and Imogen Sara Smith on Buster Keaton
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a talk from Camera Man: Dana Stevens on Buster Keaton, a recent FLC event celebrating the new book from author and Slate film critic Dana Stevens, moderated by writer Imogen Sara Smith and FLC Programming Assistant Maddie Whittle.
The conversation ranged from the two authors’ love of Buster Keaton, the evolution of the filmmaker’s filmography, the perception of masculinity in Charles Reisner’s Steamboat Bill, Jr., and the legacy of Keaton in Hollywood and beyond.
Dana Stevens’s new book Camera Man: Buster Keaton, the Dawn of Cinema, and the Invention of the Twentieth Century and Imogen Sara Smith’s Buster Keaton: The Persistence of Comedy are both available for purchase.
2/3/2022 • 34 minutes, 35 seconds
#382 - Maggie Gyllenhaal and Kira Kovalenko In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk from the 59th New York Film Festival with directors Maggie Gyllenhaal & Kira Kovalenko moderated by Maddie Whittle, NYFF Talks programmer, and translated by Sasha Korbut.
Roiling currents of familial and feminist rebellion connect two extraordinary films in the NYFF59 lineup. In Spotlight selection The Lost Daughter, Maggie Gyllenhaal’s electrifying directorial debut, a reluctant mother is haunted by a crisis in her past, while in Main Slate highlight Unclenching the Fists, the searing sophomore feature from Russia’s Kira Kovalenko, a daughter strains against the domestic tyranny of her father. Featuring powerhouse performances and distinctive visual vocabularies, both films offer a layered yet urgent examination of the societal and patriarchal expectations that constrain their independent-minded protagonists. This special conversation brought the two directors together to discuss their respective forays into filmmaking, the process of realizing their vividly drawn yet enigmatic heroines, and the use of fiction to transcend an untenable status quo. NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
1/28/2022 • 50 minutes, 45 seconds
#381 - Adam Leon on Italian Studies
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A with Italian Studies director Adam Leon, moderated by David Fear, Senior Editor and critic at Rolling Stone.
From award-winning filmmaker Adam Leon, Italian Studies is a lyrical film about dislocation, connection, and the elusive nature of identity. While visiting New York City from her native London, writer Alina Reynolds, played by Academy Award®-nominee Vanessa Kirby, inexplicably loses her memory and suddenly becomes unmoored and adrift on the streets of Manhattan with no sense of time or place — or even her own name. As Alina’s consciousness swings between imagined conversations, fragments of her own short stories and the bustling city around her, she finds an anchor in charismatic teenager Simon (Simon Brickner). Drawn to the lost woman, Simon soon introduces Alina to his free-spirited group of friends, and together they make their way through a disorienting cityscape full of life, beauty, and music. With an evocative score from Nicholas Britell, Italian Studies also stars Simon Brickner, Annika Wahlsten, Annabel Hoffman, Maya Hawke and Fred Hechinger. Italian Studies is now playing in theaters.
This talk was first available to FLC patrons and members, who play such a vital role in all we do. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, visit filmlinc.org/members.
1/19/2022 • 24 minutes, 8 seconds
#380 - Mamoru Hosoda on Belle
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with Belle director Mamoru Hosoda, moderated by NYFF Programmer Rachel Rosen, and translated by Mikey McNamara.
In his densely beautiful, eye-popping animated spectacle, Academy Award–nominated director Mamoru Hosoda tells the exhilarating story of a shy teenager who becomes an online sensation as a princess of pop. Still grieving over a childhood tragedy, Suzu has a difficult time singing in public or talking to her crush at school, yet when she takes on the persona of her glittering, pink-haired avatar, Belle, in the parallel virtual universe known as the “U,” her insecurities magically disappear. As her star begins to rise, Belle/Suzu finds herself drawn to another “U” fan favorite—a scary but soulful monster whose “real” identity, like Belle’s, becomes a source of fascination for legions. Both a knowing riff on the Beauty and the Beast fairy tale and a moving commentary on the duality of contemporary living, Belle is a thrilling journey into the matrix and a deeply human coming-of-age story, packed with unforgettable images and dazzlingly styled characters.
Belle is now playing in theaters.
1/13/2022 • 36 minutes, 7 seconds
#379 - Apichatpong Weerasethakul on Memoria
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk from the 59th New York Film Festival with Memoria director Apichatpong Weerasethakul.
For over two decades, Apichatpong Weerasethakul has been celebrated as one of world cinema’s most original auteurs, with films that constantly refract and reinscribe the contours of narrative, reality, and temporality. His new feature—which comes six years after 2015’s Cemetery of Splendour (NYFF53)—reaffirms his peerless status even as it takes the Thai auteur into uncharted territory: Memoria is Apichatpong’s first film set outside of Thailand, in Colombia; his first English- and Spanish-language venture; and his first outing with a bona fide international star, Tilda Swinton. We were thrilled to welcome the filmmaker for a deep-dive conversation about his extraordinary oeuvre and the elliptical novelties and familiar mysteries of his latest masterwork. Moderated by novelist Katie Kitamura. NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
1/6/2022 • 53 minutes, 56 seconds
#378 - Pedro Almodóvar, Penélope Cruz, and Milena Smit on Parallel Mothers
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring an incredibly special talk from the 59th New York Film Festival with Pedro Almodóvar, Penélope Cruz, and Milena Smit on Parallel Mothers, moderated by NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
In this contemporary melodrama, two women, a generation apart, find themselves inextricably linked by their brief time together in a maternity ward. The circumstances that brought them to the Madrid hospital are quite different—one accidental, the other traumatic—and a secret, hiding the truth of the bond that connects these two, is a powerful story that tackles a deep trauma in Spanish history. Penélope Cruz’s Janis is a uniquely complex, flawed, but ultimately alluring lead character, who finds herself in a morally and emotionally treacherous situation. She’s viewed in contrast with Ana, radiantly portrayed by newcomer Milena Smit, a discovery who brings a palpable innocence, pain, and longing to this interwoven portrait of women and motherhood. These charismatic stars inhabit characters who are singular among those drawn by Almodóvar in a career defined by striking portraits of women.
Parallel Mothers opens in our theaters on December 24, with a sneak preview the night of December 23. For tickets and showtimes, go to filmlinc.org/parallel.
12/21/2021 • 27 minutes, 43 seconds
#377 - Directors E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin on The Rescue
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk with The Rescue co-directors E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin, moderated by Film at Lincoln Center Executive Director Lesli Klainberg.
The Rescue chronicles the enthralling, against-all-odds story that transfixed the world in 2018: the daring rescue of twelve boys and their coach from deep inside a flooded cave in Northern Thailand. Academy Award-winning directors and producers E. Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin keep viewers on the edge of their seats as they use a wealth of never-before-seen material and exclusive interviews to piece together the high stakes mission, highlighting the efforts of the Royal Thai Navy SEALs and US Special Forces and details the expert cave divers' audacious venture to dive the boys to safety. The Rescue brings alive one of the most perilous and extraordinary rescues in modern times, shining a light on the high-risk world of cave diving, the astounding courage and compassion of the rescuers, and the shared humanity of the international community that united to save the boys.
This talk was first available to FLC patrons and members, who play such a vital role in all we do. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, go to filmlinc.org/members.
12/16/2021 • 31 minutes, 54 seconds
#376 - Jane Campion and Sofia Coppola on The Power of the Dog
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk with filmmakers Jane Campion and Sofia Coppola from the 59th New York Film Festival.
Following her Best Director win at this year’s Venice Film Festival, Jane Campion returned to NYFF with her first feature since 2009’s Bright Star: The Power of the Dog, the Centerpiece selection of NYFF59. Known for her incisive portraits of womanhood, Campion turns her lens to masculinity in this new film, which adapts Thomas Savage’s 1967 novel of the same name. The results are thrilling: The Power of the Dog is a mesmerizing, psychologically rich variation on the American western, and a compassionate examination of repressed sexuality and the fragility of patriarchy.
We were thrilled to welcome the legendary New Zealand director for an extended conversation with filmmaker Sofia Coppola about this latest entry in Campion’s masterful, decades-spanning career. The Power of the Dog is now playing on Netflix. NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
12/10/2021 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 9 seconds
#375 - Danny Glover and Joslyn Barnes on 15 Years of Louverture Films
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A with Louverture Films co-producers Danny Glover and Joslyn Barnes, moderated by FLC’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
Following a screening of Abderrahmane Sissako’s Bamako, the opening night film of our week-long Danny Glover and Louverture Films series, the co-producers discussed the history of the production company, collaborating with directors, and how the landscape of international cinema has changed over the years.
Danny Glover and Louverture Films features 14 films from around the world and celebrates the work of the actor, activist, and groundbreaking production company. Now playing through December 7. For tickets, showtimes, and the full lineup, go to filmlinc.org/glover.
12/6/2021 • 32 minutes, 42 seconds
#374 - Ryûsuke Hamaguchi on the Influence of Kiyoshi Kurosawa and John Cassavetes
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk from the 59th New York Film Festival with Drive My Car director, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, moderated by filmmaker Matías Piñeiro.
Making his return to NYFF with not one but two Main Slate selections, Japanese filmmaker Ryûsuke Hamaguchi affirms his stature as a true rising star of world cinema, and one of the foremost chroniclers of the ebbs and flows of human relationships. With Drive My Car and Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy—a pair of vividly realized and ceaselessly surprising emotional epics—Hamaguchi demonstrates his singular talent for tracing the intricate workings of the heart amid the perennial paradoxes of modern life.
Inspired by a Haruki Murakami short story, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi spins an engrossing, expansive epic about love and betrayal, grief and acceptance, charting the unexpected, complex relationships that a theater actor-director forges with a trio of people out of professional, physical, or psychological necessity. Drive My Car is now playing in theaters. For showtimes and tickets go to filmlinc.org/drive.
NYFF Talks were presented by HBO.
11/24/2021 • 36 minutes, 14 seconds
#373 - Radu Jude on Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a remote live Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn director Radu Jude, moderated by NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
Bad Luck Banging or Loony Porn opens Friday, November 19. Get tickets: https://www.filmlinc.org/banging
The targets are wide, the satire is broad, and every hit lands and stings in Romanian filmmaker Radu Jude’s angry, gleefully graceless Golden Bear winner from this year’s Berlin Film Festival. Evoking the unsanitized provocations of the great Dušan Makavejev in his prime, Jude crafts an invigorating, infuriating film in three movements that grows in both power and absurdity, centering around the trials of a teacher (Katia Pascariu) at a prestigious Bucharest school whose life and job are upended when her husband accidentally uploads their private sex tape to the internet for all to see. Jude has no compunction about shocking and skewering in his quest to toy with contemporary society’s religious and political hypocrisy, connecting conservative puritanical outrage to an entire history of violence.
11/18/2021 • 33 minutes, 22 seconds
#372 - Alexandre Koberidze on Football and Fantasy in What Do You See When You Look At The Sky?
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? director Alexandre Koberidze, moderated by NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
Among contemporary cinema’s most exciting and distinctive new voices, Georgian director Alexandre Koberidze has created an intimate city symphony like no other with his latest film. Beginning as an off-kilter romance in which footballer Giorgi and pharmacist Lisa are brought together on the streets of Kutaisi by chance, only to have their dreams complicated when they become victims of an age-old curse, What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? continues to radically and pleasurably shape-shift. Ultimately it becomes a lovely portrait of an entire urban landscape and the preoccupations—and World Cup obsessions—of the people who live there. Koberidze has made an idiosyncratic epic out of passing glances that feels as free and fulsome as a fairy tale.
What Do We See When We Look at the Sky? is now playing in our theaters. For tickets and showtimes go to filmlinc.org/sky
11/10/2021 • 29 minutes, 14 seconds
#371 - Ryûsuke Hamaguchi on the Theme of Coincidence in Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with filmmaker Ryûsuke Hamaguchi, the director of two NYFF59 selections, Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy and Drive My Car. Hamaguchi sat down with Film Comment's Co-Deputy Editor Devika Girish following the premiere of Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy.
In this altogether delightful triptych of stories, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi again proves he’s one of contemporary cinema’s most agile dramatists of modern love and obsession. Whether charting the surprise revelation of a blossoming love triangle, a young couple’s revenge plot against an older teacher gone awry, or a case of mistaken romantic identity, Hamaguchi details the sudden reversals, power shifts, and role-playing that define relationships new and old. Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy is both ironic and tender, a lively and intricately woven work of imagination that questions whether fate or our own vanities decide our destinies.
Hamaguchi’s second 2021 release, Drive My Car, opens at Film at Lincoln Center on November 24th.
11/5/2021 • 21 minutes, 36 seconds
#370 - Joanna Hogg on the Meta Self-Reflexiveness of The Souvenir Part II
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from the 59th New York Film Festival with filmmaker Joanna Hogg and NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
Grieving and depleted from the tragic end of a relationship with a boyfriend who had suffered from drug addiction, young Julie (Honor Swinton Byrne) summons the emotional and creative fortitude to forge ahead as a film student in 1980s London. Continuing the remarkable autobiographical saga she had begun in 2019’s The Souvenir, British director Joanna Hogg (a filmmaker of unceasing visual ingenuity and sociological specificity) fashions a gently meta-cinematic mirror image of part one, cutting to the quick in one surprising, enthralling idea after another. A film about finding one’s artistic inspiration and individuality that avoids every possible cliché, The Souvenir Part II is a bold conclusion to this story of unsentimental education, told with the filmmaker’s inimitable oblique poignancy, and featuring a mesmerizing supporting cast including Tilda Swinton, Harris Dickinson, Ariane Labed, Joe Alwyn, and a scene-stealing Richard Ayoade.
The Souvenir Part II is now playing in our theaters, go to filmlinc.org/souvenirII for showtimes and tickets.
10/29/2021 • 19 minutes, 43 seconds
#369 - Mia Hansen-Løve & Joachim Trier on the Cinematic Exploration of Romance, Creativity, and Self
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk from the 59th New York Film Festival between filmmakers Mia Hansen-Løve & Joachim Trier.
With their respective NYFF59 Main Slate selections Bergman Island and The Worst Person in the World, Mia Hansen-Løve and Joachim Trier achieve new creative heights in their parallel trajectories as the preeminent European filmmakers of their generation. Both artists have spent the last 15 years interrogating, with great compassion, the moral and emotional crosscurrents that undergird human behavior, and their latest films refine these inquiries with an invigorating reflexive frankness.
The two writer-directors came together for a conversation about their influences and inspirations; their distinctively personal and philosophical approaches to cinematic storytelling; and the endlessly generative themes of romantic ambivalence and evolving self-knowledge that animate their new films.
Bergman Island is now playing in our theaters, for showtimes and tickets, go to filmlinc.org/bergman.
NYFF Talks are presented by HBO.
10/28/2021 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 7 seconds
#368 - Denis Villeneuve and Hans Zimmer on Dune
Welcome to the Film at Lincoln Center podcast! On the final episode of our daily NYFF59 edition, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez sits down with director Denis Villeneuve and composer Hans Zimmer to discuss Dune, a selection in the Spotlight section of this year’s festival.
A mythic and emotionally charged hero’s journey, Dune tells the story of Paul Atreides, a brilliant and gifted young man born into a great destiny beyond his understanding, who must travel to the most dangerous planet in the universe to ensure the future of his family and his people. As malevolent forces explode into conflict over the planet’s exclusive supply of the most precious resource in existence—a commodity capable of unlocking humanity’s greatest potential—only those who can conquer their fear will survive. Timothée Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, Oscar Isaac, Josh Brolin, Stellan Skarsgård, Dave Bautista, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Zendaya, Chang Chen, Charlotte Rampling, Jason Momoa, and Javier Bardem lead the all-star ensemble in visionary filmmaker Denis Villeneuve’s adaptation of Frank Herbert’s seminal novel.
Learn more about NYFF59 at filmlinc.org/nyff
10/11/2021 • 25 minutes, 14 seconds
#367 - Céline Sciamma on Petite Maman
Welcome to the Film at Lincoln Center podcast! On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 edition, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez sits down with director Céline Sciamma to discuss Petite Maman, a selection in the Main Slate section of this year’s festival.
Following such singular inquiries into gender as Tomboy, Girlhood, and Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Céline Sciamma proves again that she’s among the most accomplished and unpredictable of all contemporary French filmmakers with the gentle yet richly emotional time-bender Petite Maman. Following the death of her grandmother, 8-year-old Nelly (Joséphine Sanz) accompanies her parents to her mother’s childhood home to begin the difficult process of sorting and removing its cherished objects. While exploring the nearby woods, Nelly encounters a neighbor her own age, with whom she finds she has a remarkable amount in common. Sciamma’s scrupulously constructed jewel uses the most delicate of touches to palpate profound ideas about grief, memory, and the past.
Learn more about NYFF59 at filmlinc.org/nyff
10/10/2021 • 25 minutes, 43 seconds
#366 - Pedro Almodóvar, Penélope Cruz & Milena Smit on Parallel Mothers
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez sits down with director Pedro Almodóvar and cast members Penélope Cruz and Milena Smit to discuss Parallel Mothers, the Closing Night selection of the 59th New York Film Festival.
In this muted contemporary melodrama, two women, a generation apart, find themselves inextricably linked by their brief time together in a maternity ward. The circumstances that brought them to the Madrid hospital are quite different—one accidental, the other traumatic—and a secret, hiding the truth of the bond that connects these two, is a powerful story that tackles a deep trauma in Spanish history. Penélope Cruz’s Janis is a uniquely complex, flawed, but ultimately alluring lead character, who finds herself in a morally and emotionally treacherous situation. She’s viewed in contrast with Ana, radiantly portrayed by newcomer Milena Smit, a discovery who brings a palpable innocence, pain, and longing to this interwoven portrait of women and motherhood. These charismatic stars inhabit characters who are singular among those drawn by Almodóvar in a career defined by striking portraits of women. A Sony Pictures Classics release.
Learn more about NYFF59 at filmlinc.org/nyff
10/9/2021 • 48 minutes, 47 seconds
#365 - Apichatpong Weerasethakul and Tilda Swinton on Memoria
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim sits down with director Apichatpong Weerasethakul and actress Tilda Swinton to discuss Memoria, a selection in the Main Slate section of this year’s festival.
Collective and personal ghosts hover over every frame of Memoria, somehow the grandest yet most becalmed of Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s works. Inspired by the Thai director’s own memories and those of people he encountered while traveling across Colombia, the film follows Jessica (a wholly immersed Tilda Swinton), an expat botanist visiting her hospitalized sister in Bogotá; while there, she becomes ever more disturbed by an abyssal sound that haunts her sleepless nights and bleary-eyed days, compelling her to seek help in identifying its origins. Thus begins a personal journey that’s also historical excavation, in a film of profound serenity that, like Jessica’s sound, lodges itself in the viewer’s brain as it traverses city and country, climaxing in an extraordinary extended encounter with a rural farmer that exists on a precipice between life and death. Winner of the Jury Prize at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/8/2021 • 43 minutes, 5 seconds
#364 - Mike Mills, Joaquin Phoenix & Molly Webster on C'mon C'mon
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez sits down with director Mike Mills and actors Joaquin Phoenix and Molly Webster to discuss C’mon C’mon, a selection in the Spotlight section of this year’s festival.
After gracing audiences with Beginners and 20th Century Women (NYFF54), writer-director Mike Mills returns with another warm, insightful, and gratifyingly askew portrait of American family life. A soulful Joaquin Phoenix plays Johnny, a kindhearted radio journalist deep into a project in which he interviews children across the U.S. about our world’s uncertain future. His sister, Viv (a marvelously intuitive Gaby Hoffmann), asks him to watch her 9-year-old son, Jesse (Woody Norman, in one of the most affecting breakout child performances in years), while she tends to the child’s father, who’s suffering from mental health issues. After agreeing, Johnny finds himself connecting with his nephew in ways he hadn’t expected, ultimately taking Jesse with him on a journey from Los Angeles to New York to New Orleans. Anchored by three remarkable actors, C’mon C’mon is a gentle yet impeccably crafted drama about coming to terms with personal trauma and historical legacies. An A24 release.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/7/2021 • 19 minutes, 34 seconds
#363 - Gaspar Noé on Vortex
Welcome to the Film at Lincoln Center podcast! On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 edition, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim chats with filmmaker Gaspar Noé about his new film Vortex, a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival.
Finding new depths of tenderness without forgoing the uncompromising fatalism that defines his work, Noé’s latest film guides us through a handful of dark days in the lives of an elderly couple in Paris: a retired psychiatrist (Françoise Lebrun) and a writer (Dario Argento) working on a book about the intersection of cinema and dreams.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/6/2021 • 28 minutes, 34 seconds
#362 - Rebecca Hall, Tessa Thompson, Ruth Negga & André Holland on Passing
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez speaks with director Rebecca Hall and cast members Tessa Thompson, Ruth Negga, and André Holland about Passing, a Main Slate selection of the 59th New York Film Festival.
A cornerstone work of Harlem Renaissance literature, Nella Larsen’s 1929 novel Passing is adapted to the screen with exquisite craft and skill by writer-director Rebecca Hall, who envelops the viewer in a bygone period that remains tragically present. The film’s extraordinary anchors are Tessa Thompson and Ruth Negga, meticulous as middle-class Irene and Clare, reacquainted childhood friends whose lives have taken divergent paths. Clare has decided to “pass” as white to maintain her social standing, even hiding her identity from her racist white husband, John (Alexander Skarsgård); Irene, on the other hand, is married to a prominent Black doctor, Brian (André Holland), who is initially horrified at Clare’s choices. As the film progresses, and resentments and latent attractions bristle, Hall creates an increasingly claustrophobic world both constructed and destabilized by racism, identity performance, and sexual frustration, leading to a shocking conclusion. A Netflix release.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/5/2021 • 23 minutes, 37 seconds
#361 - Wes Anderson and Cast on The French Dispatch
Welcome to the Film at Lincoln Center podcast! On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 edition, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez has a conversation with the team behind The French Dispatch: director Wes Anderson, producer Jeremy Dawson, and cast members Adrien Brody, Bill Murray, Steve Park, and Jason Schwartzman Zooming in from Spain, and cast members Anjelica Fellini, Lois Smith, Bob Balaban, Léa Seydoux, and Jeffrey Wright joining in person from New York. The French Dispatch is a selection in the Spotlight section of this year’s festival.
Wes Anderson’s unmistakable cinematic style proves delightfully suited to periodical format in this missive from the eponymous expatriate journal. Brought to press by a corps of idiosyncratic correspondents, the issue includes reports on a criminal artist and his prison guard muse, student revolutionaries, and a memorable dinner with a police commissioner and his personal chef. As brimming with finely tuned texture as a juicy issue of a certain New York–based magazine to which the film pays homage, The French Dispatch features precision work from a full masthead of collaborators (including Bill Murray, Timothée Chalamet, Tilda Swinton, Benicio del Toro, Frances McDormand, and Jeffrey Wright), each propagating inventive dedication to detail.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/4/2021 • 26 minutes, 12 seconds
#360 - Todd Haynes on The Velvet Underground
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez speaks with director Todd Haynes about The Velvet Underground, a Main Slate selection of the 59th New York Film Festival.
The Velvet Underground opens in our theaters on Wednesday, October 13th. Tickets are now on sale.
Given the ingeniously imagined musical worlds of Velvet Goldmine and I’m Not There, it should come as no surprise that Todd Haynes’s documentary about the seminal band The Velvet Underground mirrors its members’ experimentation and formal innovation. Combining contemporary interviews and archival documentation with newscasts, advertisements, and a trove of avant-garde film from the era, Haynes constructs a vibrant cinematic collage that is as much about New York of the ’60s and ’70s as it is about the rise and fall of the group that has been called as influential as the Beatles. Filmed with the cooperation of surviving band members, this multifaceted portrait folds in an array of participants in the creative scene’s cultures and subcultures. Tracing influences and affinities both personal and artistic, Haynes unearths rich detail about Andy Warhol, The Factory, Nico, and others, adding vivid context and texture that never diminish the ultimate enigma of the band’s power. An Apple release.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
10/3/2021 • 17 minutes, 6 seconds
#359 - Jane Campion, Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst & More on The Power of the Dog
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim speaks with director Jane Campion, cast members Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Kodi Smit-McPhee, and cinematographer Ari Wegner about The Power of the Dog, the Main Slate Centerpiece selection of the 59th New York Film Festival.
With The Power of the Dog, her first film in nearly twelve years, Jane Campion reaffirms her status as one of the world’s greatest—and most gratifyingly eccentric—filmmakers. A mesmerizing, psychologically rich variation on the American western, it tells the story a melancholy young widow (played by Kirsten Dunst) who marries a rancher in 1920s Montana, where she and her young son are tormented by her new husband’s sullen and bullying brother (played by Benedict Cumberbatch).
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 10 indoors and outdoors throughout NYC, visit filmlinc.org/nyff
10/2/2021 • 54 minutes, 45 seconds
#358 - Maggie Gyllenhaal, Olivia Colman, Dakota Johnson & More on The Lost Daughter
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by The Lost Daughter writer & director Maggie Gyllenhaal and cast members Olivia Colman, Dakota Johnson, Jessie Buckley, Ed Harris, Paul Mescal, Peter Sarsgaard, and Dagmara Dominczyk to discuss their Spotlight selection of this year’s festival. The NYFF59 screenings of The Lost Daughter are presented by Citi.
Based on the 2006 novel by Elena Ferrante, Gyllenhaal's screen adaptation stars Olivia Colman as Leda, a divorced professor on a solitary summer vacation who becomes intrigued and then oddly involved in the lives of another family she meets there. Our wide-ranging discussion covers everything from hometown filmmaker Gyllenhaal's initial fascination with Ferrante's four Neapolitan Novels to how she eventually assembled her incredible cast. Also discussed are Johnson's breaking down the unique motivations of her character, Nina, as the story progresses, and how Mescal prepared for his role, his very first in a motion picture.
Explore what’s playing at NYFF and get tickets: https://filmlinc.org/nyff
9/30/2021 • 26 minutes, 34 seconds
#357 - Julia Ducournau, Vincent Lindon, and Agathe Rousselle on Titane
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by director Julia Ducournau and lead actors Vincent Lindon and Agathe Rousselle to discuss Titane, a Main Slate selection at NYFF59.
Titane plays at the 59th New York Film Festival Wednesday, September 29 at 3:45pm. Standby only tickets may be available.
The winner of the 2021 Cannes Film Festival’s prestigious Palme d’Or, Titane is a thrillingly confident vision from Julia Ducournau that deposits the viewer directly into its director’s headspace. Moving with the logic of a dream—and often the force of a nightmare—the film begins as a kind of horror movie, with a series of shocking events perpetrated by Alexia (Agathe Rouselle, in a dynamic and daring breakthrough), a dancer with a titanium plate in her skull following a childhood car accident. However, once Alexia goes into hiding from the police, and is taken in by a grief-stricken firefighter (Vincent Lindon), Ducournau reveals her deployment of genre tropes to be as fluid and destabilizing as her mercurial main character. A feverish, violent, and frequently jaw-dropping ride, Titane nevertheless exposes the beating, fragile heart at its center as it questions our assumptions about gender, family, and love itself.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/29/2021 • 26 minutes, 9 seconds
#356 - Mira Nair, Sarita Choudhury, and Ed Lachman on Mississippi Masala
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, we’re joined by the creative team behind Mississippi Masala, a Revivals selection in this year’s New York Film Festival. In this talk sponsored by Turner Classic Movies, writer Jhumpa Lahiri speaks with director Mira Nair, lead actress Sarita Choudhury, and Director of Photography Ed Lachman about this seminal screen romance of the 1990s.
In Mississippi Masala, Sarita Choudhury plays Mina, a Ugandan Indian from Kampala whose family leaves Uganda after the implementation of Idi Amin’s policy of forcefully expelling all Asians from the country. They wind up in Greenwood, Mississippi, living with relatives and trying to reconcile the trauma of their involuntary exile with assimilating to American culture. Some 17 years pass before Mina falls for a self-employed carpet cleaner, Demetrius (played by Denzel Washington), and their romance puts them in conflict with the local Black and Indian-American communities—not to mention Mina’s family. At once a powerful parable and a deeply personal work, Mississippi Masala remains an incisive examination of race relations and the tension between passion and tradition.
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 10 indoors and outdoors throughout NYC, visit filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/28/2021 • 54 minutes, 55 seconds
#355 - Mia Hansen-Løve, Vicky Krieps & Anders Danielson Lie on Bergman Island
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by Bergman Island director Mia Hansen-Løve and two of her lead actors, Vicky Krieps and Anders Danielson Lie, to discuss their Main Slate selection of this year’s festival. Bergman Island opens at Film at Lincoln Center on October 15th.
A masterful blend of the personal and the meta-cinematic, Mia Hansen-Løve’s meditation on the reconciliation of love and the creative process is also delightful cinephile catnip. Vicky Krieps and Tim Roth star as Chris and Tony, married filmmakers who venture to the remote Swedish island of Fårö—where director Ingmar Bergman lived and made many of his masterpieces—as a writing retreat for their new projects. Both inspired and troubled by the isolation and history of the place, Chris gets lost in the lives of her new fictional creations (realized on screen by Mia Wasikowska and Anders Danielsen Lie) while also reckoning with the lines between reality and fantasy. A tribute to a film artist that never crosses over into idolatry, and a sneakily emotional portrait of an artist finding her individual voice, Bergman Island is one of Hansen-Løve’s most gently profound films.
Explore what's playing at NYFF59 and get tickets at filmlinc.org/tix
9/27/2021 • 20 minutes, 58 seconds
#354 - Joachim Trier, Anders Danielsen Lie, and Renate Reinsve on The Worst Person in the World
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by Joachim Trier, Anders Danielsen Lie, and Renate Reinsve. Trier's latest film, The Worst Person in the World, is a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival.
As proven in such exacting stories of lives on the edge as Reprise and Oslo, August 31, Norwegian director Joachim Trier is singularly adept at giving an invigorating modern twist to classically constructed character portraits. Trier catapults the viewer into the world of his most spellbinding protagonist yet: Julie, played by Cannes Best Actress winner Renate Reinsve, who’s the magnetic center of nearly every scene. After dropping out of pre-med, Julie must find new professional and romantic avenues as she navigates her twenties, juggling emotionally heavy relationships with two very different men (Trier regular Anders Danielsen Lie and engaging newcomer Herbert Nordrum). Fluidly told in 12 discrete chapters, Trier’s film elegantly depicts the precarity of identity and the mutability of happiness in our runaway contemporary world.
Explore what's playing at NYFF and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/26/2021 • 22 minutes, 1 second
#353 - Paul Verhoeven on Benedetta
On today’s episode of our daily NYFF59 podcasts, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by Paul Verhoeven, whose latest film, Benedetta, is a Main Slate selection of this year’s festival and will be opening at the Film at Lincoln Center on December 3rd.
Based on true events, Benedetta unearths the story of Benedetta Carlini, a 17th-century nun in Tuscany who believed she saw visions of Christ and engaged in a sexual relationship with a fellow sister at her abbey. Because this is a film by genre auteur par excellence Paul Verhoeven (whose movies include Robocop, Basic Instinct, and NYFF54 selection Elle), the result is anything but a reverent treatment of an odd footnote in Catholic European history. Forgoing the hallmarks of prestige cinema, this delirious, erotic, and violent melodrama is told with a boundless spirit for scandal, and unabashedly courts blasphemy as it unfolds its tale of religious hypocrisy. Wildly entertaining, and featuring standout performances from Virginie Efira as the title character and Charlotte Rampling as the stoic, conflicted Mother Abbess, Benedetta maintains both a feverish pitch and a fascinating ambiguity in its depiction of the miraculous and the mundane, the sacred and the profane.
To learn more and get tickets for this year's NYFF, taking place through October 10 indoors and outdoors throughout NYC, visit filmlinc.org/nyff.
9/25/2021 • 42 minutes, 38 seconds
#352 - 59th New York Film Festival Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special preview in anticipation of the 59th New York Film Festival, taking place September 24 – October 10, 2021.
An annual bellwether of the state of cinema that has shaped film culture since 1963, the festival continues a long-standing tradition of introducing audiences to bold and remarkable works from celebrated filmmakers as well as fresh new talent.
Join NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim, and the programmers of NYFF59 as they discuss their top picks from this year’s festival. Explore the full lineup, see the festival schedule, and get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff.
This talk was first available to FLC members, who play such a vital role in all we do. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
9/22/2021 • 34 minutes, 54 seconds
#351 - Andreas Fontana on the Suspense and Critique of Aristocracy in Azor
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're featuring a Q&A from the 50th New Directors/New Films with Andreas Fontana on his feature debut, Azor.
Swiss director Andreas Fontana brings an astonishingly assured eye to this gripping debut feature set in the cloistered world of high finance in Argentina in the 1970s. With a finely tuned sense of impassive anxiety, Fabrizio Rongione plays a banker who has traveled from Geneva to Buenos Aires with his wife to disentangle the complicated threads left behind by a colleague who has mysteriously disappeared. Once there, he finds himself descending ever deeper into a sinister inner circle, connecting the country’s upper classes to the military junta’s ongoing “Dirty War.”
Azor is now playing daily in our theaters. For tickets and showtimes, go to filmlinc.org/azor.
9/10/2021 • 32 minutes, 3 seconds
#350 - Jessica Beshir on the Importance of Myth, Circularity, and Nostalgia in Faya Dayi
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A from the 50th New Directors/New Films with Jessica Beshir on her hypnotic documentary feature, Faya Dayi.
In Faya Dayi, Beshir returns to her hometown of Harar and explores the coexistence of everyday life and its mythical undercurrents in the city, its rural Oromo community of farmers, and the harvesting of the country’s most sought-after export (the euphoria-inducing khat plant). Faya Dayi is neither a straightforward work of nostalgia nor an issue-oriented doc about a particular drug culture. Rather, she has constructed something dreamlike: a film that uses light, texture, and sound to illuminate the spiritual lives of people whose experiences often become fodder for ripped-from-the-headlines tales of migration.
Faya Dayi is now playing daily in our theaters. For tickets and showtimes, go to filmlinc.org/faya.
9/3/2021 • 31 minutes, 9 seconds
#349 - Screenwriter Tracey Scott Wilson on Respect
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A on Liesl Tommy’s Respect with screenwriter Tracey Scott Wilson, moderated by Emil Wilbekin, former editor of Vibe, Essence and founder of Native Son, a platform created to inspire and empower Black Gay Men.
Following the rise of Aretha Franklin’s career from a child singing in her father’s church’s choir to her international superstardom, Respect is the remarkable true story of the music icon’s journey to find her voice, starring Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Mary J Blige, and more.
This talk was first available to FLC patrons and members, who play such a vital role in all we do. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
Respect is now playing in theaters.
8/26/2021 • 26 minutes, 6 seconds
#348 - Matías Piñeiro on Isabella and Nicolás Pereda on Fauna
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a conversation from the 58th New York Film Festival with filmmakers Matías Piñeiro and Nicolás Pereda.
In Matías Piñeiro’s Isabella and Nicolás Pereda’s Fauna, one never knows where performance ends and life begins. The two films meditate in poignant ways on storytelling as both an artistic and an everyday act: Isabella continues Piñeiro’s wryly quotidian takes on Shakespearean dramas, while Fauna unearths the violence haunting a Mexican village beneath a veneer of fabrications and arch comedy. In a sprawling conversation moderated by NYFF program advisor Gina Telaroli, the two filmmakers chatted about their shared affinities, inimitable idiosyncrasies, and respective approaches to collaboration, color, structure, and more.
Matías Piñeiro’s Isabella opens in our theaters on August 27. For showtimes and tickets visit filmlinc.org/isabella.
8/20/2021 • 54 minutes, 6 seconds
#347 - Leos Carax on Annette, His Need for Chaos, and Adam Driver's Physicality
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring an incredibly special conversation from the opening weekend of Annette. Director Leos Carax sat down with Film Comment’s Co-Deputy Editor Devika Girish, to discuss the making of his much-anticipated follow-up to 2012’s Holy Motors.
A years-spanning musical melodrama drenched in greens and yellows, scored by oddball art-pop duo Sparks and based on their original story, Annette marks the French director’s first English-language film, which revolves around a celebrity couple in present-day Los Angeles. Henry (Adam Driver), a towering stand-up comedian, and Ann (Marion Cotillard), a world-famous singer, are living life happily in the spotlight until their world is upended after the birth of their first child, Annette, a mysterious little girl with a peculiar talent.
Annette is now playing daily in our theaters. For tickets and showtimes, go to filmlinc.org/annette.
8/13/2021 • 30 minutes, 16 seconds
#346 - Tsai Ming-liang on the Making of Days
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a talk from the 58th New York Film Festival with Tsai Ming-liang, the director of Days, moderated by NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim and interpreted by Vincent Cheng.
The great Taiwanese filmmaker Tsai Ming-liang has been directing exquisite examinations of alienation, isolation, and the fleeting beauty of human connection featuring his muse Lee Kang-sheng for decades. His latest film, Days will undoubtedly stand as one of his best, sparest, and most intimate works. Lee once again stars as a variation on himself, wandering through a lonely urban landscape and seeking treatment in Hong Kong for a chronic illness; at the same time, a young Laotian immigrant working in Bangkok, goes about his daily routine.
These two solitary men eventually come together in a moment of healing, tenderness, and sexual release. Among the most cathartic entries in Tsai’s filmography, Days is a work of longing, constructed with the director’s customary brilliance at visual composition and shot through with profound empathy.
Days opens in our theaters on August 13th. For tickets and showtimes, visit filmling.org/days
8/5/2021 • 48 minutes, 27 seconds
#345 - In Conversation with Madeline Anderson
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special talk with the legendary filmmaker, Madeline Anderson. Cited as the first Black woman to direct a televised documentary film, Anderson’s work shines a light on the workers and activists in the civil rights movement.
Originally recorded in 2015, following a screening of I Am Somebody, Integration Report #1, and A Tribute to Malcolm X at Film at Lincoln Center's series 'Tell It Like It Is: Black Independents in New York, 1968 – 1986,' Anderson sat down with moderator Michelle Materre, an Associate Professor of Media Studies and Film at The New School and the producer, host, and founder of the Creatively Speaking Film Series. When asked about her career, Anderson stated, “I was determined to do what I was going to do at any cost. I kept plugging away. Whatever I had to do, I did it.”
Three of Anderson’s films are now playing on the Criterion Channel.
7/29/2021 • 38 minutes, 5 seconds
#344 - The Filmmakers of Ailey on Capturing the Spirit of a Legend
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're featuring a special Q&A on Ailey, an affectionate portrait of the world-renowned dancer and choreographer, Alvin Ailey, with director Jamila Wignot, and producer Lauren DeFilippo. The two filmmakers discussed the new film with Liz Wolff, Co-Curator of the Dance on Camera Festival, following our outdoor screening at Lincoln Center’s Restart Stages.
Ailey poetically examines how its subject’s fascinating life inspired his passion for dance, suffusing rare archival footage with Ailey’s own words, in addition to interviews with celebrated company dancers and choreographers. Beginning with Ailey’s early experiences in the rural South, which would eventually inspire some of his most memorable works, and culminating in the creation of a dance inspired by his life, this documentary captures the artist’s enduring impact on modern dance and the preservation of the African-American cultural experience with fresh insight.
Ailey is now playing in our theaters, with special Q&As with the director, Jamila Wignot, on July 23 & 24 at the 6:15pm screenings. Go to filmlinc.org/ailey for more information.
7/22/2021 • 20 minutes, 53 seconds
#343 - The Directors of Summer of Soul and Eyimofe (This Is My Desire)
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring two Q&As with filmmakers whose debut features are arriving this month. Our first Q&A is with director Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson discussing his first film, Summer of Soul, with NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez, presented after our outdoor screening at Lincoln Center’s Restart Stages. This conversation is followed by a Q&A from the 50th New Directors/New Films with the director duo Chuko and Arie Esiri and their debut film Eyimofe (This Is My Desire), moderated by FLC’s Assistant Programmer Dan Sullivan.
In Summer of Soul, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson presents a powerful and transporting documentary—part music film, part historical record, created around the epic Harlem Cultural Festival, which was filmed in Mount Morris Park in 1969. The footage was never seen and largely forgotten–until now.
Inspired by the legacies of neorealism, the Esiri brothers’ fluid and precise Eyimofe (This Is My Desire) is a tale consisting of two parallel narratives, following a pair of characters trying to transcend their daily struggles in teeming Lagos.
Summer of Soul is now playing on Hulu and in theaters, and Eyimofe (This Is My Desire) is coming to theaters next week.
7/15/2021 • 55 minutes, 59 seconds
#342 - Revisiting Hong Sangsoo's Directors Dialogue
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re revisiting a directors dialogue from the 55th New York Film Festival with Hong Sangsoo in anticipation of the filmmaker’s latest feature, The Woman Who Ran, opening in our theaters. Moderated by Dennis Lim, Director of Programming for Film at Lincoln Center and the New York Film Festival.
Divided into three casually threaded yet distinct sections, Hong Sangsoo’s latest delight follows Gamhee—played by the director’s regular collaborator Kim Minhee—as she travels without her husband for the first time in years, reconnecting with a succession of friends, on purpose and by chance.
The Woman Who Ran is now playing in our theaters. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/womanwhoran
7/8/2021 • 48 minutes, 44 seconds
#341 - Muhammad Ali and James Baldwin: Black Athletes and Artists in the Public Eye
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special roundtable from the 58th New York Film Festival on a pair of intimate, rarely seen portraits of two towering figures of American history: Terrence Dixon’s Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris and William Klein’s Muhammad Ali, the Greatest.
In capturing the tensions experienced by both Baldwin and Ali as outspoken Black public figures in the ’70s, the films raise questions that are strikingly relevant to the present moment. What are the burdens placed on Black artists and athletes in the public eye? Can they act as political—perhaps even revolutionary—agents of change? What place do Black American arts and culture occupy in international movements for justice and equality?
To reflect on these timely themes, Soraya Nadia McDonald (critic, The Undefeated), Rich Blint (professor and writer, The New School), Samantha Sheppard (professor, Cornell University; author, Sporting Blackness), and Kazembe Balagun (project manager, Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung—New York Office) came together for a rich and enlightening roundtable discussion moderated by writer and critic Nicholas Russell.
See Muhammad Ali, the Greatest and Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris, along with over 30 other NYFF58 selections, at Film at Lincoln Center’s theaters during Big Screen Summer. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff58redux
7/1/2021 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 29 seconds
#340 - Rethinking World Cinema With the Filmmakers from NYFF58
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special discussion from the 58th New York Film Festival about filmmakers around the world breaking boundaries and inventing new international canons. Featuring directors Dea Kulumbegashvili (Beginning), Chaitanya Tamhane (The Disciple), Philippe Lacôte (Night of the Kings), and members of The Living and the Dead Ensemble (Ouvertures), moderated by NYFF Talks programmer and Co-Deputy Editor of Film Comment, Devika Girish.
The filmmakers touched upon their varied experiences of cinema while growing up, the particularities of making films in their home countries and navigating the festival circuit in the West, and the importance of both specificity and universality in their cinematic visions.
See Beginning, The Disciple, Night of the Kings, and Ouvertures, along with over 30 other NYFF58 selections, at Film at Lincoln Center’s theaters during Big Screen Summer: NYFF58 Redux. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff58redux
6/24/2021 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 24 seconds
#339 - François Ozon & the Cast of Summer of 85
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation on Summer of 85 from Rendez-Vous with French Cinema 2021 as it begins its theatrical release in our theaters Join director François Ozon, stars Benjamin Voisin and Félix Lefebvre, and FLC’s programming assistant Maddie Whittle in a discussion about the making of the coming of age romance.
After meeting in Normandy in 1985, Alexis and David become fast friends, and Alexis starts working for David’s affectionate but scattered mother. Alexis’s attraction to David soon blossoms into passion, but turns, by the end of the summer, into a deeper meditation on mortality and the unknown. Awash in sun-kissed pastels and period-appropriate tracks from The Cure, Summer of 85 is a cursed romance in the key of Rimbaud and Verlaine that pulls apart the comforts of nostalgia in the heat of the present.
Summer of 85 opens in our theaters this Friday, June 18. Get tickets: https://www.filmlinc.org/85
6/17/2021 • 23 minutes, 47 seconds
#338 - In Conversation with Steve McQueen on Small Axe
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re presenting a conversation with Steve McQueen, the director of Small Axe, and Dennis Lim, Director of Programming for Film at Lincoln Center and the New York Film Festival.
Among the most remarkable achievements in recent world cinema, Steve McQueen’s anthology Small Axe consists of five films that stirringly chronicle the experiences of London’s West Indian immigrant community across a tumultuous period from the 1960s through the 1980s. Each film is a distinct and singular work in its own right; taken together, they form a powerful, complex, immersive, and endlessly rich historical portrait of oppression, resistance, and survival, glimpsed through the prism of the post-colonial experience.
Join Film at Lincoln Center to celebrate McQueen’s accomplishment with a series of screenings of all five films within Small Axe, including a special two-week run of Lovers Rock, the Opening Night Film at the 58th New York Film Festival.
See Steve McQueen's Small Axe, along with over 30 other NYFF58 selections, at Film at Lincoln Center’s theaters during Big Screen Summer. All screenings of Alex Wheatle and Education are free to the general public! Reserve your tickets on our website while they're still available. Get tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff58redux
6/10/2021 • 43 minutes, 58 seconds
#337 - Directors Damiano & Fabio D’Innocenzo on the Making of Bad Tales
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re presenting a special conversation with Damiano & Fabio D’Innocenzo, the directors of Bad Tales, an Open Roads: New Italian Cinema 2021 selection, moderated by FLC’s Assistant Programmer Dan Sullivan and translated by Michael Moore.
Bad Tales is an absorbing, richly traced group portrait of youth on the precipice of puberty, set on the outskirts of Rome. Our protagonists are the children of dysfunctional homes, and we observe them as they go about their daily lives amid the frequently apathetic, at times violent world of adults. An energetic work that is at once a kind of dark fairy tale and a stylish act of sociological inquiry, Bad Tales is a wild ride that captivatingly makes the case that the kids are not, in fact, alright.
Bad Tales is now playing nationwide in our Virtual Cinema. Visit filmlinc.org/badtales for tickets.
6/4/2021 • 18 minutes, 46 seconds
#336 - Revisiting Swimming Out Till The Sea Turns Blue with Jia Zhangke
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re revisiting our conversation with Jia Zhangke from the 58th New York Film Festival, moderated by NYFF programmer K. Austin Collins, in anticipation of the filmmaker’s latest feature, Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue, which is now playing in our theaters.
The preeminent cinematic chronicler of 21st-century China, Jia Zhangke turns his sights to the more distant past in his surprising, complexly wrought new documentary. In Shanxi province, where Jia grew up, the filmmaker gathers three prominent authors to create a tapestry of testimonies about the drastic changes in Chinese life and culture that began with the social revolution of the ’50s. Jia tells a wide-ranging, discursive story that functions as a reminder of the essential power of verbally passing down history to future generations.
Continue the conversation with the filmmaker by tuning into a virtual live discussion on June 2 at 8PM, hosted by the Asia Society. Go to filmlinc.org/swimming for tickets and more information.
5/28/2021 • 36 minutes, 3 seconds
#335 - Robert Machoian and Clayne Crawford on the Making of The Killing Of Two Lovers
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a conversation from the 49th New Directors/New Films with The Killing of Two Lovers director Robert Machoian and star Clayne Crawford.
After a startling opening image of extreme tension, first-time solo director Robert Machoian’s stark, slow-burn drama never quite goes where you expect. An evocative and atmospheric transmission from wintry Utah, The Killing of Two Lovers is a compact, economical portrait of a husband and father and a compassionate depiction of a family in crisis, which moves at the ominous pace of a thriller.
The Killing of Two Lovers is now playing in select theaters.
5/23/2021 • 26 minutes, 51 seconds
#334 - In Conversation with Sara Driver
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a special Q&A from the 50th edition of New Directors/New Films. Founding ND/NF programmer and current FLC board member Wendy Keys sat down for an extended conversation with Sara Driver about her acclaimed first feature, Sleepwalk, a selection from the 16th ND/NF in 1987. The two also discussed Driver’s distinctive and idiosyncratic body of work.
This event was part of the 50th edition of New Directors/New Films, the annual festival that celebrates filmmakers who represent the present and anticipate the future of cinema. Presented by Film at Lincoln Center and The Museum of Modern Art.
Film at Lincoln Center Talks are presented by HBO.
5/14/2021 • 40 minutes, 34 seconds
#333 - Director Theo Anthony on All Light, Everywhere
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation from the 50th edition of New Directors/New Films, with Theo Anthony the director of All Light, Everywhere, this year's closing night selection, and FLC’s assistant programmer Tyler Wilson.
Theo Anthony’s breakthrough sophomore feature uses the increased regularity of body cams in U.S. law enforcement as the anchor point for an ever-expanding exploration on perception, power, and policing. All Light, Everywhere is now playing nationwide in our Virtual Cinema through May 13 during New Directors/New Films.
If you missed a film from the first half of the festival, you can still watch it with our Virtual All-Access Pass. To celebrate this milestone year of ND/NF, use promo code “SAVE40” during checkout in our Virtual Cinema to get 40% off the pass.
5/7/2021 • 33 minutes, 28 seconds
#332 - In Conversation with Youn Yuh-jung
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation between recent Oscar-winner Youn Yuh-jung and FLC’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
Introduced to a wide American audience just last year as a strong-willed grandmother in Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari, Youn Yuh-jung has been a celebrated screen performer in her native Korea for half a century, giving life to a roster of singularly formidable women across genres and generations.
In honor of her historic win for Best Supporting Actress at the 93rd Academy Awards, our retrospective of her recent work has been extended to May 3! Go to filmlinc.org/youn for nationwide tickets in our virtual cinema.
4/30/2021 • 59 minutes, 4 seconds
#331 - The Cast and Crew of French Exit
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation with the cast and crew of French Exit, the closing night selection at the 58th New York Film Festival. Director Azazel Jacobs, writer Patrick deWitt, and actors Michelle Pfeiffer and Lucas Hedges joined NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim to discuss the making of the film
Michelle Pfeiffer is entirely bewitching as Frances Price, an imperious, widowed New York socialite whose once-extreme wealth has dwindled down to a nub. Facing insolvency, she makes the decision to escape the city by cruise ship and relocate to her friend’s empty Paris apartment with her son, Malcolm (played by Lucas Hedges), and their cat, Small Frank (voiced by Tracy Letts). An adaptation of the best-selling novel by Patrick deWitt, French Exit is a rare American film of genuine eccentricity.
The film is now playing in our theaters! For showtimes and our reopening health and safety policies, visit filmlinc.org/frenchexit.
4/23/2021 • 42 minutes, 52 seconds
#330 - New Directors/New Films 2021 Programmers' Preview
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a preview in anticipation of the 50th-anniversary edition of New Directors/New Films, a festival that has celebrated filmmakers who represent the present and anticipate the future of cinema, taking place virtually and in theaters from April 28 to May 8.
In celebration of this year’s milestone, we’re excited to also present ND/NF@ 50, a free virtual retrospective looking back on the festival’s history, available nationwide in our Virtual Cinema from April 16 - 28.
Join the programmers from Film at Lincoln Center, Florence Almozini, Dan Sullivan, Tyler Wilson, and Madeline Whittle, and the Museum of Modern Art, La Frances Hui, as they discuss their top picks from this year’s festival and retrospective, moderated by Wendy Keys.
The 2021 feature committee comprises Florence Almozini (Co-Chair, FLC), La Frances Hui (Co-Chair, MoMA), Rajendra Roy (MoMA), Josh Siegel (MoMA), Dan Sullivan (FLC), and Tyler Wilson (FLC), and the shorts were programmed by Brittany Shaw (MoMA) and Madeline Whittle (FLC).
This talk was first available to FLC members, who play such a vital role in all we do. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member and exploring member benefits, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
This episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast is sponsored by Amazon Studios, presenting Borat Subsequent Moviefilm and Time. Now streaming on Amazon Prime Video. For your consideration. Click here to learn more. https://www.amazonstudiosguilds.com/films.
This episode is also sponsored by Kino Lorber, presenting Charlène Favier's Slalom. Now playing in select theaters and virtual cinemas nationwide: kinomarquee.com/slalom
4/16/2021 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 36 seconds
#329 - Director Martín Rejtman on Silvia Prieto
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast, we’re featuring a special conversation between Cinema Tropical’s Co-founder and Executive Director, Carlos A. Gutiérrez, and Argentine director Martín Rejtman. A key figure of contemporary Argentine cinema, Rejtman discussed his filmography and the landmark deadpan comedy, Silvia Prieto.
Silvia Prieto is a 1999 comedy of details that follows a young woman through a short, precarious stretch of her life in Buenos Aires. The new restoration of the Argentine gem is now playing during Neighboring Scenes.
This talk was part of the 6th edition of Neighboring Scenes, the annual festival celebrating New Latin American Cinema, presented by Film at Lincoln Center and Cinema Tropical, now playing in our Virtual Cinema through April 12.
This talk is presented by HBO. This episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast is sponsored by Amazon Studios, presenting Sound of Metal and One Night in Miami. Now streaming on Amazon Prime Video. For your consideration. Visit the link to learn more: https://www.amazonstudiosguilds.com/films
4/8/2021 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 2 seconds
#328 - Director Jill Li and Producer Peter Yam on Lost Course
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast we’re featuring a special discussion with Lost Course director Jill Li and producer Peter Yam, moderated by Film at Lincoln Center’s Assistant Programmer Tyler Wilson.
Nearly 10 years in the making, Jill Li’s revelatory debut film—a documentary about the struggle against corruption in South China—follows the grassroots movement for justice led by a group of people from the fishing port of Wukan. Lost Course offers a timely and deeply affecting look at government wrongdoing and its infective reach into even the most idealistic minds.
Lost Course is now playing in our Virtual Cinema.
4/2/2021 • 36 minutes, 58 seconds
#327 - Director Thomas Vinterberg and James Gray on Another Round
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation between filmmakers Thomas Vinterberg and James Gray on Another Round, which was recently nominated for two Academy Awards.
In the film, four friends, all teachers at various stages of middle age, are stuck in a rut. Unable to share their passions either at school or at home, they embark on an audacious experiment from an obscure philosopher: to see if a constant level of alcohol in their blood will help them find greater freedom and happiness. At first, they each find a new-found zest, but as the gang pushes their experiment further, issues that have been simmering for years come to a head, and the men are faced with a choice: reckon with their behavior or continue on the same course.
Another Round is now playing in theaters and Hulu.
3/25/2021 • 50 minutes, 42 seconds
#326 - Ephraim Asili and Garrett Bradley
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation from the 58th New York Film Festival featuring Ephraim Asili and Garrett Bradley.
Garrett Bradley’s Time, a Main Slate selection, and Ephraim Asili’s The Inheritance, the Opening Night film of the Currents program, were two of NYFF58’s most formally inventive and politically astute films. Combining original and archival material in evocative and unpredictable ways, they engage deeply with radical Black legacies of both cinema and political organizing.
In this free talk, moderated by writer and researcher Yasmina Price, the two directors chatted about their approaches to representing history, working against dominant narrative forms through a focus on the everyday textures of life, and the impulses of activism and education that course through their art.
Ephraim Asili’s The Diaspora Suite and The Inheritance are now playing in our Virtual Cinema, and Garrett Bradley’s Academy Award-nominated Time is now playing on Amazon Prime. This talk was presented by HBO.
3/18/2021 • 57 minutes, 19 seconds
#325 - Borat Subsequent Moviefilm Q&A with Sacha Baron Cohen, Maria Bakalova & Jason Woliner
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation on Borat Subsequent Moviefilm with Sacha Baron Cohen, Maria Bakalova, and director Jason Woliner. Moderated by Variety's Chief Film Critic Peter Debruge.
In this satire on Trump’s America, Borat, a Kazakh journalist, is sent to America to deliver a gift from his government to Vice President Mike Pence. Along the way, his worldview is turned upside down and steadfast beliefs are challenged by his teenage daughter. Borat Subsequent Moviefilm is now playing on Amazon Prime.
3/11/2021 • 32 minutes, 18 seconds
#324 - One Night In Miami... Q&A with Regina King, Kemp Powers & Cast
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a special conversation with One Night in Miami… director Regina King, screenwriter Kemp Powers, and stars Kingsley Ben-Adir, Eli Goree, Aldis Hodge, and Leslie Odom Jr. Moderated by Beandrea July.
On the evening of February 25, 1964, four icons of sports, entertainment and activism celebrated one of the greatest upsets in boxing history in a modest motel room in Miami. After claiming the World Heavyweight title for the first time, Cassius Clay — who would soon change his name to Muhammad Ali — got together with three friends: human rights activist Malcolm X, music superstar Sam Cooke and football legend and emerging action-movie hero Jim Brown. One Night In Miami... is a fictional imagining of the historic night these towering figures spent together. Directed by Regina King and written by Kemp Powers based on his award-winning play, One Night In Miami... is set on the precipice of the momentous political and cultural upheaval of the 1960s. One Night in Miami… is now playing on Amazon Prime.
3/4/2021 • 39 minutes, 48 seconds
#323 - The Cast and Crew of Sound of Metal
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a conversation with Sound of Metal’s writer-director Darius Marder, actors Riz Ahmed, Paul Raci, Olivia Cooke, Chelsea Lee, Domenico Toledo, and actor/ASL coach Jeremy Stone. Moderated by Alison O’Daniel, a visual artist and filmmaker who is currently in production on her feature film, The Tuba Thieves.
In the film, metal drummer Ruben begins to lose his hearing. When a doctor tells him his condition will worsen, he thinks his career and life is over. His girlfriend Lou checks the former addict into a rehab for the deaf hoping it will prevent a relapse and help him adapt to his new life. After being welcomed and accepted just as he is, Ruben must choose between his new normal and the life he once knew.
This talk was first available to FLC members, who play such a vital role in all we do. Memberships start at just $85 and offer year-round discounts to films and festivals, exclusive invitations to sneak previews, filmmaker conversations, Film Clubs, and much more. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
2/25/2021 • 33 minutes, 44 seconds
#322 - Shaka King on Judas And The Black Messiah
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re featuring a Q&A with Shaka King, director of Judas and the Black Messiah, moderated by Eugene Hernandez, Film at Lincoln Center’s Deputy Executive Director of Programs.
Fred Hampton, a young, charismatic activist, becomes Chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party — putting him directly in the crosshairs of the government, the FBI, and the Chicago Police. But to destroy the revolution, the authorities are going to need a man on the inside, enter William O'Neal. Judas and the Black Messiah stars Daniel Kaluuya, LaKeith Stanfield, Jesse Plemons, Dominique Fishback, Ashton Sanders, and Martin Sheen.
This Black History Month special event was organized by Film at Lincoln Center and Warner Bros. Pictures to provide cinema and arthouse audiences with an early preview of this timely and vital film, along with an extended conversation. Judas and the Black Messiah is now available on HBO Max.
2/18/2021 • 32 minutes, 40 seconds
#321 - Lee Isaac Chung and the Cast of Minari
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a Q&A with the director and cast of Minari, moderated by Film at Lincoln Center’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
A tender and sweeping story about what roots us, Minari follows a Korean-American family that moves to a tiny Arkansas farm in search of their own American Dream. Amidst the instability and challenges of this new life in the rugged Ozarks, Minari shows the undeniable resilience of family and what really makes a home. Join director Lee Isaac Chung, and actors Steven Yeun, Yeri Han, Yuh-Joung Youn, Alan Kim & Noel Cho for an insightful conversation about the making of this highly anticipated film.
Special thanks to A24 for partnering with Film at Lincoln Center for the release of Minari.
2/12/2021 • 44 minutes, 8 seconds
#320 - Pete Docter and Dana Murray on Soul
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a conversation about Pixar’s Soul with director Pete Docter and producer Dana Murray moderated by Glenn Kiser, Senior Director of the Dolby Institute.
Soul introduces Joe Gardner, voiced by Jamie Foxx, a band teacher who gets the chance of a lifetime to play at the best jazz club in town. But one small misstep takes him from the streets of New York City to The Great Before – a fantastical place where new souls get their personalities, quirks, and interests before they go to Earth. Determined to return to his life, Joe teams up with 22, a precocious soul voiced by Tina Fey, and discovers the answers to some of life’s most important questions. Disney and Pixar’s Soul is now streaming on Disney+.
This conversation is presented by the Dolby Institute.
2/4/2021 • 55 minutes, 3 seconds
#319 - David Fincher & Kent Jones on Mank
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re presenting a special conversation between filmmakers David Fincher and Kent Jones on Mank. Fincher's first film since his NYFF Opening Night selection Gone Girl follows the 1930s Hollywood screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, played by Gary Oldman, as he develops the screenplay for Citizen Kane. Mank is now available on Netflix.
This talk was first available to FLC members, who play such a vital role in all we do. Memberships start at just $85 and offer year-round discounts to films and festivals, exclusive invitations to sneak previews, filmmaker conversations, Film Clubs, and much more. If you're interested in supporting FLC by becoming a member, visit filmlinc.org/members for more information.
1/27/2021 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 4 seconds
#318 - The Filmmakers of Notturno and Identifying Features
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re presenting conversations on Notturno and Identifying Features, two equally impressive films, both of which are New York Times Critic's Picks and are now playing in our Virtual Cinema.
The first discussion features Oscar-nominated filmmaker, Gianfranco Rosi, in conversation with New York Film Festival’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim on Rosi’s latest immersive work of nonfiction. Shot over the course of three years along the borders of Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria, and Lebanon, Notturno is a nighttime ramble through a region rocked and shattered by catastrophe and violence.
The second conversation centers on Identifying Features and includes director Fernanda Valadez, and co-writer and producer Astrid Rondero in a dialogue with FLC's Assistant Programmer Dan Sullivan at the 49th New Directors/New Films. The film is a suspenseful slow burn, equally constructed of moments of beauty and horror surrounding a mother's search for the truth about her son.
Nationwide tickets to Notturno and Identifying Features are now available: virtual.filmlinc.org
1/22/2021 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 28 seconds
#317 - Sam Pollard and Spike Lee In Conversation
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a conversation between filmmakers and long-time collaborators, Sam Pollard and Spike Lee. Sam Pollard's impressive career boasts collaborations with some of cinema's greatest filmmakers, including Spike Lee who has hailed Pollard as “a master filmmaker.” Timed to our Sam Pollard tribute and the release of his latest, MLK/FBI, join us for an in-depth conversation between the two legendary filmmakers.
Get virtual tickets, available nationwide through 1/22, to our Sam Pollard retrospective: https://virtual.filmlinc.org
The full video of this talk is also available on FLC’s YouTube channel.
1/19/2021 • 25 minutes, 33 seconds
#316 - Errol Morris and Frederick Wiseman on My Psychedelic Love Story
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast we’re featuring a conversation between filmmakers Errol Morris and Frederick Wiseman on Morris’ new documentary My Psychedelic Love Story.
Told through the lens of Joanna Harcourt-Smith, Timothy Leary’s lover, the film examines the possible CIA conspiracy and fascinating love story as Leary, the High Priest of LSD, seemingly sells out and becomes a narc in 1974. Through a series of candid interviews, Morris and Harcourt-Smith reexamine this chaotic period, resulting in a singular snapshot of the early 1970s’ cultural landscape and its profound impact on the trajectory of one woman’s life.
My Psychedelic Love Story is now available digitally, courtesy of Showtime.
1/7/2021 • 56 minutes, 6 seconds
#315 - Wong Kar Wai, Christopher Doyle & Brigitte Lin on Ashes of Time Redux
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, join a conversation with Wong Kar Wai, cinematographer Christopher Doyle, and actress Brigitte Lin from the 46th NYFF in 2008, moderated by J. Hoberman. Watch Ashes of Time Redux in our Wong Kar Wai retrospective, available nationwide: filmlinc.org/wong
A film whose complicated production took such a toll on Wong that he wrote and shot Chungking Express during its editing process, Ashes of Time Redux is a hallucinatory wuxia like no other. First released in 1994 and then re-edited and re-scored in 2008, Wong’s time-slipping picaresque takes loose inspiration from Jin Yong’s novel The Legend of the Condor Heroes, focusing on a lovesick, embittered mercenary (Leslie Cheung), who acts as an agent for other swordsmen of fortune. Working with regular production designer William Chang, cinematographer Christopher Doyle, and a superb ensemble (Brigitte Lin, Maggie Cheung, Tony Leung, and Jacky Cheung), Wong constructs an intricate, enigmatic vision of ancient warriors ensnared by the play of time and memory. An NYFF46 selection.
12/22/2020 • 27 minutes, 57 seconds
#314 - Steve McQueen, Cast & Crew on Small Axe
Join director Steve McQueen, cinematographer Shabier Kirchner, actors Shaun Parkes and Letitia Wright, and co-writers Courttia Newland and Alastair Siddons in a conversation about Small Axe, an anthology of five films.
This talk was moderated by NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim, following the premiere of three films at NYFF58. All five films in the anthology are now available digitally nationwide, courtesy of Amazon Studios.
Film at Lincoln Center Talks are presented by HBO.
12/20/2020 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 26 seconds
#313 - New Directors/New Films Critics' Preview
Join a conversation with your favorite critics in anticipation of New Directors/New Films, a festival that has celebrated filmmakers who represent the present and anticipate the future of cinema, and whose daring work pushes the envelope in unexpected ways. Get tickets to this year’s NDNF, now playing through 12/20 in our Virtual Cinema, at filmlinc.org/ndnf
The New Directors/New Films festival offers yearly proof of cinema's long and bright future—and this year's edition, arriving in virtual form at a fraught time in film culture, is no exception. Dig into the highlights of the 2020 lineup in this critics' preview led by Devika Girish, Assistant Editor of Film Comment and Film at Lincoln Center, featuring Clinton Krute (Digital Editor, Film Comment), Chloe Lizotte (freelance film critic), Vadim Rizov (Managing Editor, Filmmaker Magazine), and Lucía Salas (critic, curator, and filmmaker).
This Film at Lincoln Center Talk is presented by HBO.
12/11/2020 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 40 seconds
#312 - Sean Durkin and Carrie Coon on The Nest with Alex Ross Perry
Join director Sean Durkin and actress Carrie Coon in a conversation about their latest film, The Nest, with fellow filmmaker Alex Ross Perry.
The Nest stars Jude Law and Carrie Coon, who play Rory, an ambitious entrepreneur, and Allison, his American wife. In the film, Rory persuades his wife and their children to leave the comforts of suburban America and return to his native England during the 1980s. Sensing opportunity, Rory rejoins his former firm and leases a centuries-old country manor, with grounds for Allison’s horses and plans to build a stable. Soon the promise of a lucrative new beginning starts to unravel, the couple has to face the unwelcome truths lying beneath the surface of their marriage. The Nest is now available nationwide courtesy of IFC Films.
12/6/2020 • 51 minutes, 17 seconds
#311 - Alexander Nanau on Collective
A New Directors/New Films 2020 selection and the Romanian entry for the Best International Feature Film at next year's Academy Awards, Collective begins as a seeming exposé into a tragic accident and gradually turns into something deeper and more shocking in this revelatory documentary about state neglect.
As Collective continues its run in our Virtual Cinema, director Alexander Nanau sat down with FLC's Deputy Executive Director, Eugene Hernandez, to discuss the nonfiction thriller that uncovers the depths of governmental corruption.
Watch Collective in our Virtual Cinema now at filmlinc.org/collective
Film at Lincoln Center Talks are presented by HBO.
11/30/2020 • 52 minutes, 47 seconds
#310 - Art of the Real 2020 Preview
This week we’re featuring a preview in anticipation of Art of the Real 2020, an essential showcase for the most vital and innovative voices in nonfiction and hybrid filmmaking, rescheduled from its original dates in April for November 13-26. Join the co-programmers of Art of the Real, FLC Director of Programming Dennis Lim, FLC Programmer-at-Large Rachael Rakes and program advisor Almudena Escobar Lopez, along with FLC programmer Dan Sullivan for an in-depth preview of this year's edition, discussing all the envelope-pushing highlights, under-the-radar sleepers, and much more.
Art of the Real is proud to continue its collaboration with curated streaming service MUBI for the fifth consecutive year. This Film at Lincoln Center Talk is presented by HBO.
Get the most out of the festival with an unbeatable offer: access the entire slate for just $50! Start discovering with your All-Access Pass here: https://virtual.filmlinc.org/bundle/aotr-all-access/
11/13/2020 • 38 minutes, 44 seconds
#309 - Laura Dern, Joyce Chopra, and Joyce Carol Oates on Smooth Talk
NYFF58 Revivals highlight Smooth Talk (1985) features the work of three powerhouse women: director Joyce Chopra; actress Laura Dern, in one of her first starring roles; and author Joyce Carol Oates, whose 1966 short story “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” provided the inspiration for the film.
To celebrate the festival premiere of the film’s new restoration, Chopra, Dern, and Oates joined Turner Classic Movies host Alicia Malone for a talk about the creative work of adaptation and the perennially resonant subject matter of a young woman’s early encounter with the powers and perils of her sexuality.
Watch the new restoration of Smooth Talk, starting November 6 in our Virtual Cinema at filmlinc.org/smoothtalk
This Film at Lincoln Center Talk is presented by HBO and sponsored by TCM.
11/5/2020 • 57 minutes, 51 seconds
#308 - Rob Epstein & Jeffrey Friedman on Documenting Decades of LGBTQ+ History
As part of their nationwide virtual retrospective, directors Rob Epstein & Jeffrey Friedman joined FLC programmer Dan Sullivan for a career-spanning conversation. Watch their essential work, featuring new restorations, through November 5 in our Virtual Cinema at filmlinc.org/tellingpics
For more than 30 years, Oscar-winning directors Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman have borne powerful witness to gay life, creativity, and activism — documenting lost aspects of LGBTQ+ history and chronicling unfolding events with humor, compassion, and fierce urgency. In their films, extraordinary interviews make the political personal and unforgettable. With Paragraph 175 and The Celluloid Closet, Epstein and Friedman examined the persecution of gay men in Nazi Germany and Hollywood’s history of hidden homophobia. Their documentaries The AIDS Show, Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt, The Times of Harvey Milk, and Where Are We? have both chronicled and helped change history. Starting October 23, we look at their essential partnership and the endlessly empathetic, consciousness-building films it has yielded.
Film at Lincoln Center Talks are presented by HBO.
10/30/2020 • 52 minutes, 6 seconds
#307 - NYFF58 Festival Report
For the 58th New York Film Festival’s final week, a group of critics gathered together for a spirited discussion with Devika Girish, Assistant Editor of Film Comment and Talks programmer for the NYFF, about the movies they saw in this year's lineup and their tales from the trenches of the pandemic-era festival. Participants included Molly Haskell (author, From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies), Eric Hynes (curator of film, Museum of the Moving Image), Ela Bittencourt (freelance critic & curator), Monica Castillo (arts and culture reporter, CPR News), and Clinton Krute (digital editor, Film Comment). Their discussion covered a wide selection of films, including Steve McQueen's Lovers Rock and Mangrove, Hong Sang-soo's The Woman Who Ran, Victor Kossakovsky's Gunda, Marie-Claude Treilhou's Simone Barbes or Virtue, Dea Kulumbegashvili's Beginning, Chloé Zhao's Nomadland, Philippe Garrel's The Salt of Tears, and many others.
All NYFF58 Free Talks are presented by HBO.
10/23/2020 • 1 hour, 29 minutes, 36 seconds
#306 - Pietro Marcello on Martin Eden
Welcome to a new episode of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, we're featuring a conversation with Pietro Marcello, whose NYFF favorite Martin Eden opens in our Virtual Cinema today along with a weeklong four-film retrospective. This Q&A is from the 57th New York Film Festival, featuring Marcello in conversation with programmer Florence Almozini and interpretation by Michael Moore. Get tickets for Martin Eden and our retrospective here: https://virtual.filmlinc.org/
One of world cinema’s most exciting working directors, he has spent the last 15 years crafting a filmography that straddles past and present, documentary and fiction, folklore and political intervention. His idiosyncratic use of archival materials paired with his penchant for capturing, enlarging, and exalting the sensuous details of the physical world yields films that have distinguished themselves within today’s Italian cinema, or indeed, world cinema at large. In Marcello’s work, history, mythology, and the political situation of today cohere to forward a by-turns neorealist and fabulist image of the modern world as one shaped by invisible metaphysical and economic forces.
On the occasion of the release of his latest feature, we’re proud to present four of the contemporary Italian master’s most striking films to date: Crossing the Line, Lost and Beautiful, The Silence of Pelesjan, and The Mouth of the Wolf. All films are available nationwide and one can see all four and save with a discount bundle.
10/16/2020 • 16 minutes, 23 seconds
#305 - Azazel Jacobs, Michelle Pfeiffer & Lucas Hedges on French Exit
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF Programmer Florence Almozini is joined by director Azazel Jacobs and actors Michelle Pfeiffer and Lucas Hedges to discuss French Exit. In the Closing Night selection, Pfeiffer is entirely bewitching as an imperious, widowed New York socialite who, facing financial insolvency, relocates to a friend’s empty apartment in Paris with her dyspeptic son, Malcolm (Lucas Hedges), and their mercurial cat, and begins to grimly plan for an impossible future. Azazel Jacobs’s adaptation of the best-selling novel by Patrick deWitt is a rare American film of genuine eccentricity, with a brilliant central performance. French Exit is sponsored by Campari.
There's only a few virtual nationwide tickets remaining for tonight's premiere at 8pm ET. Get yours here: https://virtual.filmlinc.org/
10/10/2020 • 35 minutes, 43 seconds
#304 - Christian Petzold on Undine
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim connects with director Christian Petzold to discuss Undine, the latest from the filmmaker behind Phoenix and Transit, among others. In his new film, the German director injects a mythological element into a lush melodrama about a pair of star-crossed lovers—Undine (Paula Beer), a historian and museum tour guide specializing in urban development, and Christoph, an industrial diver—linked by an affinity for the water.
Get nationwide virtual tickets, premiering tonight at 8pm ET: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/undine/
10/9/2020 • 28 minutes, 52 seconds
#303 - Paul Felten, Joe DeNardo & Stephanie Hayes on Slow Machine
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF programmer Tyler Wilson is joined by co-directors Paul Felten & Joe DeNardo and star Stephanie Hayes of the funny and alluring Slow Machine. Featuring an intriguingly eclectic cast—including experimental theater performers Hayes and Scott Shepherd, the musician Eleanor Friedberger, and Chloë Sevigny—Slow Machine follows an actress whose intimate relationship with a shadowy NYPD-affiliated operative ends abruptly and disastrously, leading her to hide out in a country house otherwise occupied by a band preparing their new record. The film explodes and reassembles the thriller genre, producing a work on paranoia, surveillance, and performance.
Get nationwide virtual tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/slow-machine/
10/8/2020 • 23 minutes, 37 seconds
#302 - Tim Robbins & Cast Present Bobbo Supreme at the 58th NYFF
Director/actor/writer/producer Tim Robbins is proud to introduce Bobbo Supreme - originally conceived as a film and adapted for a new realm of aural entertainment in pandemic times. Bobbo Supreme is a hard-hitting, bitingly funny, no holds barred look at the hypocrisy, deception, and danger in the current American political landscape. A satirical fever dream in five parts.
New York Film Festival Director Eugene Hernandez was delighted to welcome Tim Robbins and his all-star cast–including Jack Black, Haley Joel Osment, Kerri Kenney-Silver, Rita Brent, Ray Wise, and Ted Levine, along with composer David Robbins–for a special panel discussion, followed by the premiere of the first episode. The immersive aural entertainment experience debuts today on Patreon. Learn more at patreon.com/TimRobbinsPresents
10/8/2020 • 1 hour, 25 minutes, 59 seconds
#301 - Gianfranco Rosi on Notturno
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, Oscar-nominated documentary filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi joins NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim to discuss Notturno, Rosi’s latest immersive work of nonfiction. Shot over the course of three years along the borders of Iraq, Kurdistan, Syria, and Lebanon, Notturno is a nighttime ramble through a region rocked and shattered by catastrophe and violence. All documentaries at the 58th New York Film Festival are presented by HBO.
Get tickets for tonight’s screening at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/notturno/
10/6/2020 • 43 minutes, 12 seconds
#300 - Michael Dweck & Gregory Kershaw on The Truffle Hunters
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF programmer Rachel Rosen is joined by directors Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw to discuss their revelatory, earthy documentary The Truffle Hunters. This engaging and beautifully shot film immerses the viewer in the forests of Northern Italy where dogs, accompanied by their elderly and often irascible human owners of modest means, seek the precious white Alba truffle. All documentaries at the 58th New York Film Festival are presented by HBO.
Get tickets for tonight’s screening at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/the-truffle-hunters/
10/5/2020 • 31 minutes, 27 seconds
#299 - David Byrne & Spike Lee on American Utopia
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by director Spike Lee and musician David Byrne to discuss American Utopia, Lee’s concert film recording of Byrne’s acclaimed Broadway show. American Utopia is an exhilarating record of a seismic theater event as well as a momentous work of cinema in its own right. Both joyous and politically engaged, it’s a reckoning of these dark times through music and togetherness, with a galvanizing rendition of Janelle Monáe’s “Hell You Talmbout” that’s destined to be one of the year’s most talked-about screen moments. All documentaries at the 58th New York Film Festival are presented by HBO.
Get tickets for screenings of David Byrne’s American Utopia at the Brooklyn and Bronx drive-ins or nationwide virtual tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/david-byrnes-american-utopia/
10/3/2020 • 29 minutes
#298 - Steve McQueen on Red, White and Blue
In this special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim connects with director Steve McQueen to discuss Red, White, and Blue, one of the three entries in McQueen’s Small Axe anthology playing at this year’s NYFF. Red, White, and Blue is a vivid adaptation of a true story set in the early ’80s and features an impassioned yet nuanced performance from John Boyega as Leroy Logan, a member of the London Metropolitan Police force who both witnessed and experienced first-hand the organization’s fundamental racism.
Get tickets for tonight’s screening at the Brooklyn drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets. Through Monday, we will also present virtual encore screenings of McQueen’s Lovers Rock and Mangrove. Learn more: https://virtual.filmlinc.org/page/small-axe-at-nyff-58/
Small Axe at the 58th NYFF is presented by Campari.
10/3/2020 • 26 minutes, 6 seconds
#297 - Heidi Ewing, Ivan Garcia, Gerardo Zabaleta & Armando Espitia on I Carry You With Me
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by director Heidi Ewing, along with subjects Ivan Garcia & Gerardo Zabaleta, and actor Armando Espitia to discuss their film I Carry You With Me. Among the most emotionally resonant and innovatively conceived cinematic love stories in years, I Carry You With Me unexpectedly and brilliantly incorporates documentary elements into the tale of a burgeoning romance between two men who cross the border from Mexico to the U.S.
Get nationwide virtual tickets, screening tonight only in a four-hour window beginning at 8pm ET: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/i-carry-you-with-me/
10/2/2020 • 29 minutes, 3 seconds
#296 - Jia Zhangke on Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF programmer K. Austin Collins is joined by director Jia Zhangke to discuss the filmmaker’s evocative new documentary Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue. Jia Zhangke gathers three prominent authors—Jia Pingwa, Yu Hua, and Liang Hong—in Shanxi province, where he grew up, to create a tapestry of testimonies about the drastic changes in Chinese life and culture that began with the social revolution of the 1950s. Interpretation by Vincent Cheng. All documentaries at the 58th New York Film Festival are presented by HBO.
Get tickets for tonight’s premiere at the Brooklyn drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/swimming-out-till-the-sea-turns-blue/
All documentaries at the 58th New York Film Festival are presented by HBO.
10/1/2020 • 25 minutes, 11 seconds
#295 - Philippe Lacôte on Night of the Kings
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF programmer Rachel Rosen is joined by director Philippe Lacôte to discuss the Ivory Coast filmmaker’s breakout feature The Night of Kings. Paying homage to the tradition of the griot in West African culture, this original vision tells the story of a pickpocket (Koné Bakary), newly arrived at a correctional facility in the Ivorian capital of Abidjan, who, in order to stay alive, must keep his fellow inmates entertained with wild tales over the course of a night.
Interpretation by Isabelle Dupuis.
Get tickets for tonight’s screening at the Bronx drive-in here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/night-of-the-kings/
9/30/2020 • 16 minutes, 34 seconds
#294 - Chaitanya Tamhane on The Disciple
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF programmer Florence Almozini is joined by director Chaitanya Tamhane to discuss The Disciple, the Indian filmmaker’s much-anticipated follow-up to Court. The Disciple is a finely crafted labor of love set in the world of Hindustani classical music, starring singer—and remarkable first-time actor—Aditya Modak as a man living in Mumbai who tries to follow in the footsteps of his father and become a maestro in the Khayal raag music tradition.
Get tickets for Thursday's premiere at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets available through Sunday at 8pm ET here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/the-disciple/
9/30/2020 • 28 minutes, 8 seconds
#293 - Pedro Almodóvar & Tilda Swinton on The Human Voice
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by director Pedro Almodóvar and actor Tilda Swinton to discuss their new short film The Human Voice. In the film, Swinton swallows up the screen as a woman traumatized by the end of a relationship. An impeccably designed yet combustible adaptation of Jean Cocteau’s 1930 play The Human Voice, it marks the Spanish director’s English-language debut.
They discussed the power and perseverance of cinema during tumultuous times, how their collaboration came about, the classic film influences they were inspired by, why the pandemic didn't influence Almodóvar's original design for the film, and more.
Presented by Film at Lincoln Center, the 58th New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema from September 17-October 11. This year’s festival features drive-in screenings in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens and virtual screenings available nationwide. See the complete schedule and get tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/
9/28/2020 • 51 minutes, 3 seconds
#292 - Chloé Zhao on Nomadland
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by filmmaker Chloé Zhao to discuss Nomadland, the director’s richly textured follow-up to her acclaimed The Rider. The NYFF58 Centerpiece selection recounts a year in the life of Fern (Frances McDormand), a stoic, stubbornly independent widow who, having spent her adult life in a now-defunct company town, repurposes an old van and sets off in search of seasonal work. Mixing professionals and non-actors, Nomadland is a road movie for our precarious times. Nomadland is sponsored by Campari.
Presented by Film at Lincoln Center, the 58th New York Film Festival highlights the best in world cinema from September 17-October 11. This year’s festival features drive-in screenings in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens and virtual screenings available nationwide. Get tickets and see more information: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020
9/26/2020 • 26 minutes, 27 seconds
#291 - Steve McQueen on Mangrove & Tsai Ming-liang on Days
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by director Steve McQueen to discuss Mangrove, making its world premiere at the festival. An epic piece of McQueen’s Small Axe anthology, Mangrove tells the true story of Frank Crichlow, the Trinidad-born owner of a café in Notting Hill who was arrested for protesting the police’s intimidation and brutality. This is a vivid and gripping dramatization of these events and the resulting landmark 1970 court case of Crichlow and the other defendants, who came to be known as the Mangrove Nine. Small Axe at the 58th NYFF is presented by Campari.
Then, Lim is joined by Tsai Ming-liang to discuss one of the Taiwanese director’s best and sparest works, Days. In the film, Lee Kang-sheng plays a variation on himself, wandering through a lonely urban landscape and seeking treatment for a chronic illness; at the same time, a young Laotian immigrant working in Bangkok goes about his daily routine. The lives of these two solitary men eventually converge.
Get free tickets for tonight’s community screening of Mangrove at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets. Days premieres tonight at sold-out screenings at the Brooklyn Drive-In and virtually nationwide.
9/25/2020 • 46 minutes, 22 seconds
#290 - Matías Piñeiro on Isabella
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF programmer K. Austin Collins sits down with director Matías Piñeiro to discuss the Argentinian filmmaker’s latest feature, Isabella. Never has Piñeiro’s art been more graceful or structurally complex than in his latest, in which he again uses a Shakespeare text to anchor a loose yet intellectually rigorous examination of life’s loves, labors, and futile pursuits.
Get nationwide virtual tickets through Sept. 29: https://virtual.filmlinc.org/film/isabella/
9/24/2020 • 46 minutes, 25 seconds
#289 - Sofia Coppola, Bill Murray, Rashida Jones & Marlon Wayans on On the Rocks
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by Sofia Coppola, Bill Murray, Rashida Jones, and Marlon Wayans to discuss On the Rocks. A Spotlight selection at NYFF, Coppola’s latest work is a lighthearted but poignantly personal comedy about aging, marriage, and the tenuous bond between parents and grown children. The story follows a New York author and married mother-of-two who has become suspicious that her career-driven husband may be having an affair with a coworker—a speculation encouraged by her caddish, bon vivant father. On the Rocks is sponsored by Campari.
Learn more about NYC drive-in and nationwide virtual tickets for NYFF: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/
9/22/2020 • 31 minutes, 15 seconds
#288 - Sam Pollard on MLK/FBI
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, programmer K. Austin Collins is joined by director Sam Pollard to discuss his new documentary MLK/FBI. Throughout his history-altering political career, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was often treated by U.S. intelligence and law enforcement like an enemy of the state. In this virtuosic documentary, veteran editor and director Pollard lays out a detailed account of the FBI surveillance that dogged King’s activism throughout the 1950s and ’60s.
Get tickets for tonight’s premiere at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/films/mlk-fbi/
9/21/2020 • 47 minutes, 28 seconds
#287 - Garrett Bradley on Time
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, NYFF Director Eugene Hernandez is joined by director Garrett Bradley to discuss her extraordinary new documentary Time. Bradley detailed the process of capturing Fox Rich’s tireless 20-year campaign to secure her husband’s release after he received a 60-year prison sentence for robbery. Delicate yet forceful, the Main Slate selection is an exquisitely stitched-together narrative of the strength and resilience of one mother of six that also functions as a personal perspective on the crisis of Black mass incarceration in America. Bradley also discussed assembling years worth of footage, doing justice to the family's story, how festering systemic issues in the country have now been magnified, and much more.
Get tickets for tonight’s nationwide virtual premiere: https://virtual.filmlinc.org
9/20/2020 • 24 minutes, 24 seconds
#286 - Victor Kossakovsky on Gunda
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, programmer Rachel Rosen is joined by director Victor Kossakovsky to discuss his remarkable, heartbreaking documentary Gunda, which uses natural sound design and crisp, pastoral black-and-white cinematography to immerse the viewer in the compassionate tale of a sow who lives on a farm in Norway. The director discusses respecting nature, ethical considerations, how filmmaking is a powerful tool, the toll humanity has taken on the world, his unique approach to cinematography, and much more.
Get tickets for tonight’s premiere at the Queens drive-in or nationwide virtual tickets at https://www.filmlinc.org
9/19/2020 • 28 minutes, 4 seconds
#285 - Hopper/Welles and The Inheritance
Welcome to a special 58th New York Film Festival edition of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. Today, we’re featuring two conversations from new films screening at the festival. First up, producer Filip Jan Rymsza and editor Bob Murawski joined programmer Rachel Rosen to discuss Hopper/Welles, a Spotlight selection at this year’s festival. In November 1970, two movie mavericks, one already a legend (Orson Welles) and the other on his way to mythic status (Dennis Hopper), met for an epochal conversation, sharing their candid thoughts and feelings about cinema, art, and life. This entertaining and revealing footage, never before seen in full, has been resurrected in the form of this new feature, which premieres tonight at 8pm at the Queens drive-in followed by virtual nationwide screenings beginning September 28.
This conversation is followed by a Q&A from the Opening Night selection of our new Currents section, which complements the Main Slate, tracing a more complete picture of contemporary cinema with an emphasis on new and innovative forms and voices. Ephraim Asili’s first feature, The Inheritance, is a powerfully dynamic hybrid film that documents the history of Philadelphia-based Black liberation group MOVE alongside dramatizations of the filmmaker’s own experiences in an activist collective. Asili joined NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim for a conversation on his debut feature, which premieres tonight at 8pm at the Brooklyn drive-in as well as on our Virtual Cinema, available nationwide.
9/18/2020 • 55 minutes, 48 seconds
#284 - Steve McQueen on Lovers Rock
Welcome to the Film at Lincoln Center podcast. On a special NYFF58 Opening Night edition, NYFF Director of Programming Dennis Lim is joined by Steve McQueen to discuss Lovers Rock, which makes its world premiere tonight at the festival. A movie of tactile sensuality and levitating joy, Lovers Rock is part of Steve McQueen’s Small Axe anthology of decades-spanning films that alight on various lives in London’s West Indian community. Here, McQueen, in an ecstatic yet no less formally bold mode, charts the growing attraction between Martha (newcomer Amarah-Jae St. Aubyn) and a brooding stranger (played by Micheal Ward) over the course of one night at a house party. Lovers Rock is presented by Campari.
Tickets for Brooklyn and Queens drive-in screenings and nationwide virtual tickets for Lovers Rock are available, along with two more films in the anthology, Mangrove and Red, White, and Blue. Get yours: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2020/guide
Enjoy this conversation with director Steve McQueen on his remarkable, ambitious new project and how his Opening Night selection is his first musical.
9/17/2020 • 22 minutes, 30 seconds
#283 - 58th New York Film Festival Preview
Welcome to the return of the Film at Lincoln Center podcast! This Thursday, the New York Film Festival returns for a reimagined 58th edition that continues through October 11. This year’s festival offers the chance for moviegoers all around the country to experience the best in world cinema at drive-in screenings in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens as well as virtual screenings available nationwide. The New York Film Festival has always been about bringing the community together to celebrate cinema and, whether you are joining us in our Virtual Cinema or at one of our drive-in venues, on behalf of everyone at Film at Lincoln Center we want to thank you for being a part of this historic edition. Learn more about the festival and purchase tickets here: https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff
To celebrate the launch of this year’s festival, we are kicking off our series of free talks with a special preview from the 58th New York Film Festival programming team. Programmers Devika Girish and Maddie Whittle led a discussion with Eugene Hernandez, Dennis Lim, Florence Almozini, Rachel Rosen, Aily Nash, Tyler Wilson, and Dan Sullivan about curating the historic festival in an unprecedented year and the must-see films in this year’s lineup.
As the festival continues, we’ll be sharing Q&As and talks timed with our drive-in and virtual premieres, so whether you are on your way home from the drive in, or sitting on your couch, you’ll be able to hear from filmmakers from around the world about their latest work. To kick off the festivities, enjoy this overview from our programming team.
9/16/2020 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 4 seconds
#282 - Eliza Hittman & Talia Ryder on Never Rarely Sometimes Always
Today, we’re sharing a special conversation with filmmaker Eliza Hittman and actress Talia Ryder following a patron screening of Never Rarely Sometimes Always at Film at Lincoln Center.
Opening this weekend, the Sundance and Berlinale winner is an intimate portrayal of two teenage girls in rural Pennsylvania. Faced with an unintended pregnancy and a lack of local support, they embark across state lines to New York City on a fraught journey of friendship, bravery, and compassion.
This Monday, March 16, Hittman will return to Film at Lincoln Center for a free talk, presented by Film Comment magazine, in which she’ll discuss her new film and already rich body of work.
See free RSVP details: www.filmlinc.org/free
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
3/11/2020 • 26 minutes, 34 seconds
#281 - The Directors of Bacurau and Sônia Braga
Today on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation following the 57th New York Film Festival premiere of Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles’s rollicking thriller Bacurau, which is now playing at Film at Lincoln Center. The film follows the community of a vibrant, richly diverse Brazilian town who fight back when they become the targets of a group of armed mercenaries.
The directors and legendary actress Sônia Braga will return to FLC this Sunday for a Q&A at the 6:15pm screening. The directors will also be back next week on March 10, 12, and 13 for Q&As at the 6:15pm screenings.
From March 13-24, we’re also proud to present Mapping Bacurau, an explosive 13-film series featuring influences hand-picked by the directors of Bacurau. From spaghetti westerns to horror and sci-fi gems to Brazilian classics, the series features John Carpenter’s Starman in 70mm, the 4K restoration of Robin Hardy’s folk horror classic The Wicker Man, Sergio Leone’s western epic Duck, You Sucker! in 35mm, and much more.
See showtimes and get tickets: www.filmlinc.org/bacurau
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
3/6/2020 • 30 minutes, 29 seconds
#280 - Corneliu Porumboiu on The Whistlers
Today on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation following the 57th New York Film Festival premiere of Corneliu Porumboiu’s The Whistlers.
Opening this Friday at Film at Lincoln Center, the leading Romanian director’s first all-out genre film is a clever, swift, and elegant neo-noir with a wonderfully off-kilter central conceit. Following the adventures of a police detective who arrives on a mysterious island, the crime drama furthers the director’s explorations of the intricacies and limitations of language, but is also his most playful, even exuberant, film.
See showtimes and get tickets: www.filmlinc.org/whistlers
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
2/26/2020 • 16 minutes, 39 seconds
#279 - Pedro Costa on Vitalina Varela
Today on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation following the 57th New York Film Festival premiere of Pedro Costa’s masterful new drama Vitalina Varela.
Opening this Friday exclusively at Film at Lincoln Center, the film follows a Cape Verdean woman who returns to Fontainhas for her husband’s funeral after being separated for decades. The grief of the present and the ghosts of the past commingle in Costa’s ravishing film, which might be the director’s most visually extraordinary work.
See showtimes and get tickets: https://www.filmlinc.org/newreleases
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
2/20/2020 • 25 minutes, 58 seconds
#278 - Kantemir Balagov on Beanpole
Today we’re sharing a conversation following the 57th New York Film Festival premiere of Kantemir Balagov’s Beanpole. Now in select theaters, his second feature follows two women in post-WWII Leningrad as they attempt to readjust to a haunted world. The 28-year-old director joined programmer Florence Almozini and translator Sasha Korbut to discuss the trauma of war, capturing human connection, and more.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
2/12/2020 • 25 minutes, 35 seconds
#277 - Angela Schanelec on I Was at Home, But...
Today, we’re sharing a conversation with German master Angela Schanelec from the 57th New York Film Festival, where she presented her radical new film I Was at Home, But…
Starting this Friday at Film at Lincoln Center, join the director in person for her first complete New York retrospective. The series will kick off with a sneak preview of her new film, which opens next Friday, February 14, at FLC. See showtimes & get tickets, plus see 3 or more films during the retrospective and save: https://www.filmlinc.org/schanelec
Likely the most singular and underappreciated among the contemporary German filmmakers collectively known as the Berlin School (which also includes Christian Petzold, Thomas Arslan, and Valeska Grisebach), Schanelec makes films that achieve nothing less than the rendering of the human soul on screen.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
2/5/2020 • 26 minutes, 11 seconds
#276 - Kitty Green on The Assistant
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation following a special screening of The Assistant with writer-director Kitty Green and producer Scott Macaulay. The film, which opens in theaters this week, follows one day in the life of Jane (Julia Garner), a recent college graduate and aspiring film producer, who has recently landed her dream job as a junior assistant to a powerful entertainment mogul. As Jane follows her daily routine, the film explores the abuse that insidiously colors every aspect of her work day.
Moderated by Madeline Whittle, Programming Assistant at Film at Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
1/31/2020 • 24 minutes, 23 seconds
#275 - Bertrand Bonello on Zombi Child
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation following the U.S. premiere of Bertrand Bonello’s Zombi Child at the 57th New York Film Festival. Opening this Friday at Film at Lincoln Center, the film is an unconventional plunge into horror-fantasy that feverishly dissolves boundaries of time and space as it questions colonialist mythmaking. Moderated by programmer Florence Almozini, they discussed voodoo, Haitian history, boarding schools, the two-part shoot, and more.
See showtimes & get tickets for Zombi Child, which is a New York Times Critic's Pick, at filmlinc.org/zombi
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
1/23/2020 • 30 minutes, 23 seconds
#274 - Steven Soderbergh, Cast & Crew Celebrate 20 Years of The Limey
Today, we’re sharing a conversation following our special screening of the new 4K restoration of The Limey. Steven Soderbergh, Luis Guzmán, Lesley Ann Warren, editor Sarah Flack, and cinematographer Ed Lachman joined Film at Lincoln Center to discuss their radical, fragmentary take on the film noir. Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, the team talked about the shooting and editing process for the movie, which endures as a seminal work of American film modernism and a love letter to the art cinema of the sixties. Moderated by Film Comment Editor-in-Chief Nicolas Rapold.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
1/14/2020 • 43 minutes, 58 seconds
#273 - Bong Joon Ho & Song Kang Ho on Parasite
Today, we’re sharing a conversation with Parasite director-writer Bong Joon Ho and actor Song Kang Ho, who joined us for a special Q&A following a screening of their Palme d'Or and Golden Globe winner, which continues playing daily at Film at Lincoln Center. They discussed the worldwide acclaim for the film, the twists beyond the first act, and the future of their long-running collaboration.
Starting this week at Film at Lincoln Center and underway through January 14, join us for The Bong Show, a complete Bong Joon Ho retrospective featuring his brilliant debut Barking Dogs Never Bite, his hugely entertaining monster movie The Host, his genre-defying drama Mother, his star-studded English-language debut Snowpiercer, rarely-screened shorts, and more. The series also includes Bong's hand-picked influences with films by John Carpenter, Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Kim Ki-young, and more. See more films during the retrospective and save with a 3+ film package!
See showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org/thebongshow
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
1/7/2020 • 32 minutes, 30 seconds
#272 - Karim Aïnouz on Invisible Life
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're sharing a conversation from our recent series Veredas: A Generation of Brazilian Filmmakers, which put a spotlight on the radical recent films from the country. Writer-director Karim Aïnouz joined us for the New York premiere of his tropical melodrama, Invisible Life, which opens at Film at Lincoln Center this Friday, January 3.
The winner of the Un Certain Regard award at this year’s Cannes Film Festival and Brazil’s submission for this year’s Oscars, it tells the tale of two inseparable sisters in 1940s Rio de Janeiro. The conversation was moderated by Mary Jane Marcasiano from Cinema Tropical.
See showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
1/2/2020 • 46 minutes, 53 seconds
#271 - Agnès Varda on the Beginning of the French New Wave
This Friday, our career-spanning Agnès Varda retrospective kicks off here at Film at Lincoln Center and continues through January 6 with Rosalie Varda in person. To celebrate the series, we’re sharing a conversation with the French New Wave pioneer from our archives. In 2015, she joined us for our annual Art of the Real festival and participated in a special Q&A with programmer Rachael Rakes.
They discussed her enormously influential feature debut La Pointe Courte, directed when she was just 25 years old, and which many critics and scholars now consider as the first proper entry in what would become the Nouvelle Vague. Besides sharing fascinating anecdotes from the making of the film, Varda also told stories of her interactions with other icons of French cinema like Alain Resnais, Francois Truffaut, and André Bazin.
See showtimes and get tickets for the retrospective at filmlinc.org/varda
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
12/18/2019 • 36 minutes, 28 seconds
#270 - Alla Kovgan on Cunningham
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we're sharing a conversation with Cunningham director Alla Kovgan from the 57th New York Film Festival. Her breathtaking new film, opening this Friday at Film at Lincoln Center, pays tribute to one of the most visionary choreographers of the 20th century, Merce Cunningham. The director will return to FLC for opening weekend Q&As this Saturday and Sunday! Get tickets at filmlinc.org
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
12/12/2019 • 20 minutes, 38 seconds
#269 - Trey Edward Shults & Cast on Waves
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing a conversation on the emotional, vibrant new drama Waves. Writer-director Trey Edward Shults and cast members Kelvin Harrison, Jr., Alexa Demie, and Renée Elise Goldsberry joined Film at Lincoln Center following a sneak preview. They discussed the personal history of the story, the kinetic filmmaking on display, the casting process, and much more.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
12/5/2019 • 31 minutes, 10 seconds
#268 - Mati Diop on Atlantics
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we’re sharing an extensive conversation with Mati Diop. The French-Senegalese director earned the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival for her debut film Atlantics, which is now in theatrical release and arrives on Netflix this Friday. At the 57th New York Film Festival, Diop was on hand at a Directors Dialogue to discuss her first feature, which is a hypnotic yet grounded ghost and love story, with FLC Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
11/27/2019 • 1 hour, 15 minutes, 33 seconds
#267 - New Korean Cinema and Varda by Agnés
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we preview our new series Relentless Invention: New Korean Cinema, 1996–2003, starting this Friday at Film at Lincoln Center and continuing through December 4. Grady Hendrix of Subway Cinema and FLC programmer Tyler Wilson discuss how a generation of filmmakers, from Bong Joon Ho to Park Chan-wook, created homegrown blockbusters that imbued the pleasures of pop cinema with a subversive, gleefully inventive approach to genre and a sharp sociopolitical edge. See showtimes and get tickets, plus save with 3+ film package or All-Access Pass, at filmlinc.org/newkorean
Then, our season of Agnès Varda kicks off with her final film, Varda by Agnès this Friday, followed by the most comprehensive retrospective to date, beginning December 20. During the 57th New York Film Festival, Agnès’ daughter and producer Rosalie Varda joined us for a Q&A, moderated by programmer Florence Almozini, following a sold-out screening of her swan song. She discusses the emotional journey of making the film and how it's a fitting farewell to the legendary filmmaker, told in her own words. See showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
11/20/2019 • 52 minutes, 20 seconds
#266 - Todd Haynes and Mark Ruffalo on Dark Waters
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we preview our upcoming Patricia Mazuy retrospective with programmer Madeline Whittle. She discusses the French director's singular filmography, which will be presented starting this Friday with free screening of Travolta and Me followed by The King’s Daughters, starring Isabelle Huppert, and continuing through Sunday with the director in person. See showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org/mazuy, plus save with 3+ film package.
Then we go to a special conversation from our members-only sneak preview of Dark Waters, featuring writer-director Todd Haynes and actor-producer Mark Ruffalo. In the thrilling drama, inspired by a shocking true story, Ruffalo plays a tenacious attorney who uncovers a dark secret that connects a growing number of unexplained deaths to one of the world’s largest corporations. They duo discuss not over-dramatizing this true story, challenging systems of power, Ed Lachman's cinematography, and more.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
11/14/2019 • 29 minutes, 5 seconds
#265 - Martin Scorsese on Hereditary, Joanna Hogg, and Hugo Haas
This week on the Film at Lincoln Center podcast, we preview our upcoming Jessica Hausner retrospective with programmer Dan Sullivan. He discusses the Austrian director's eclectic filmography thus far, which will be presented starting this Friday with a sneak preview of her Cannes winner Little Joe (featuring a Q&A with Hausner and actress Emily Beecham) and continuing through Sunday. See showtimes and get tickets at filmlinc.org/hausner, plus save with 3+ film package.
Then we go to a special conversation with Martin Scorsese. Following the world premiere of The Irishman at the 57th New York Film Festival, the director sat down with NYFF director Kent Jones for the annual event On Cinema. During the discussion the filmmaker talked about influences and recent favorites, illustrated with film clips. During the discussion the legendary filmmaker talked about influences and recent favorites, illustrated with film clips, specifically a pair of Hugo Haas features, Ari Aster’s Hereditary, and Joanna Hogg’s Archipelago.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
11/6/2019 • 48 minutes, 42 seconds
#264 - Lily Tomlin & Jane Wagner Reflect on Comedy and Their Careers
Today, we’re sharing a special conversation from our Lily Tomlin & Jane Wagner retrospective this past September at Film at Lincoln Center. The duo joined writer Hilton Als for a lively, wide-ranging discussion of their work across film, television, and theater. They discussed how their lasting and fruitful partnership has reshaped the art of American comedy and expanded its feminist imagination.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/31/2019 • 46 minutes, 7 seconds
#263 - Steven Zaillian, Paul Schrader, Gillian Robespierre, Geoffrey Fletcher & JC Chandor
Thank you for tuning into our daily podcasts from the 57th New York Film Festival, featuring conversations with the filmmakers behind The Irishman, Marriage Story, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Pain and Glory, Uncut Gems, and more. We also featured extensive talks about two favorites from the festival now playing at Film at Lincoln Center, Parasite and Synonyms.
Today on our weekly podcast, we’re featuring a special NYFF Live discussion presented by the Writers Guild of America, East. At the festival, five screenwriters gathered to discuss writing New York City on the page and how it goes beyond the quintessential urban landscape. Panelists include JC Chandor, Geoffrey Fletcher, Gillian Robespierre, and Steven Zaillian, with moderation by Paul Schrader. They discussed the screenwriting process and capturing NYC in their films, including The Irishman, Taxi Driver, Precious, Obvious Child, and Margin Call
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/24/2019 • 59 minutes, 21 seconds
#262 - NYFF57 Day 17: Kent Jones, Catherine Wyler, Melanie Wyler & Kenneth Lonergan on Dodsworth
On Day 17 and the final episode of our 57th New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Kent Jones, the director of NYFF. They discuss his history and vision for the festival, as well as saying goodbye in his final year as director. Introducing the main discussion on this podcast, Jones also reflects on William Wyler's Dodsworth, which was presented at the festival in a brand-new 35mm restoration.
Following the film, Jones moderated a conversation with Catherine Wyler, Melanie Wyler, and Kenneth Lonergan. They talk about the making and reception of this worldly, richly layered adaptation of Sinclair Lewis’s 1929 novel, which is one of the triumphs of the storied career of director William Wyler. The film was gorgeously restored by the Academy Film Archive and The Film Foundation, in association with The Samuel Goldwyn Jr. Family Trust, with funding provided by the George Lucas Family Foundation.
The 57th NYFF concludes today! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/13/2019 • 27 minutes, 52 seconds
#261 - NYFF57 Day 16: Edward Norton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw & Willem Dafoe on Motherless Brooklyn
On Day 16 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Anne Thompson, Editor At Large at IndieWire. They discuss her early days at Film Comment magazine and how NYFF fits into the fall season landscape.
Then we go to yesterday's press conference with Edward Norton, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, and Willem Dafoe who discuss their Closing Night selection Motherless Brooklyn. The trio talk about the bold adaptation process; how Norton balanced writing, acting, and directing; the uncertainty and risk of the project; how the film captures a changing New York City; working with cinematographer Dick Pope; and more.
The 57th NYFF continues through Sunday! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/12/2019 • 42 minutes, 40 seconds
#260 - NYFF57 Day 15: Rosalie Varda Reflects on the Life & Career of Agnès Varda
On Day 15 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Rajendra Roy, the Celeste Bartos Chief Curator of Film at the Museum of Modern Art. They discuss film culture in New York City, as well as the history of NYFF, leading to a special NYFF Live talk celebrating Agnès Varda.
When Varda died earlier this year at age 90, the world lost one of its most inspirational cinematic radicals. Her final film, the documentary Varda by Agnès, sheds light on her experiences as a director, photographer, and installation artist, bringing personal insight into the method she called “cinécriture” (“cinematic writing”). Her daughter and frequent collaborator Rosalie Varda and other special guests–including Rajendra Roy, Caryn James, and Madeline Whittle–joined Eugene Hernandez for an in-depth conversation. They paid tribute to Varda before the film had its New York premiere in NYFF’s Main Slate and ahead of the most comprehensive retrospective to date of her career, beginning December 20 at Film at Lincoln Center. See more details at filmlinc.org/varda
The 57th NYFF continues through Sunday! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/11/2019 • 1 hour, 18 minutes, 33 seconds
#259 - NYFF57 Day 14: Bong Joon Ho on Parasite
On Day 14 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Matt Bolish, FLC'S Director of Operations, Producer of the New York Film Festival, and Convergence Programmer. They discuss what goes into pulling off the 17-day festival as well as what to look forward to at Convergence, which delves into innovative modes of storytelling via interactive experiences, featuring Virtual Reality, Immersive Cinema, game play, and more. See this year's lineup, which includes two free talks and the world premiere of Holy Night, playing for free through Sunday: filmlinc.org/convergence
Then we go to a special Directors Dialogue with Bong Joon Ho. The South Korean filmmaker, whose unpredictable and diverse filmography has taken us from the gonzo monster movie The Host to the intense, bloody melodrama of Mother to the graphic novel action of Snowpiercer, has created perhaps his masterpiece with this year’s Palme d’Or–winner Parasite. Bong discussed his spring-trap-loaded comedy-drama-thriller with a social conscience and kept things spoiler-free.
Parasite opens Wednesday, October 16 at Film at Lincoln Center! Get tickets here: filmlinc.org/bonghive
The 57th NYFF continues through Sunday! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/10/2019 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 31 seconds
#258 - NYFF57 Day 13: Ben Barenholtz Tribute with Ethan Coen, John Turturro & More
On Day 13 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Alexandra Siladi, FLC's Membership Manager, to discuss NYFF favorites and her work in developing our membership program, including New Wave. Learn more about becoming a member here: filmlinc.org/members
If you join during NYFF, you will receive an exclusive Pedro Almodóvar tote bag and save 15% at the Contributor, Friend, Angel, and New Wave levels of membership. Join today on-site or online with code LOVEFILM.(Offer valid for new members only; while supplies last.)
Then we go to yesterday's tribute to exhibitor, producer, and distributor Ben Barenholtz, a titan of independent cinema who died earlier this year. A panel of New Yorkers who knew him well–Columbia University film professor Annette Insdorf, and collaborators Ethan Coen, John Turturro, and film distributor Eamonn Bowles–discussed their memories working with Barenholtz and more.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/9/2019 • 53 minutes, 15 seconds
#257 - NYFF57 Day 12: The Booksellers
On Day 12 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, Film at Lincoln Center's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Dan Stern, Film at Lincoln Center Board President, to discuss Stern's history with the organization and how the festival flourishes in a competitive global cinema landscape.
Then we go to yesterday's Q&A following the world premiere of The Booksellers, D.W. Young’s elegant and entertaining documentary. The film takes a lively tour of New York’s book world, past and present, from the Park Avenue Armory’s annual Antiquarian Book Fair; to the Strand and Argosy book stores, still standing against all odds; to the beautifully crammed apartments of collectors and buyers. Young was joined by producers Judith Mizrachy and Dan Wechsler following the screening.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/8/2019 • 26 minutes, 17 seconds
#256 - NYFF57 Day 11: Making Uncut Gems with Josh & Benny Safdie and Crew
On Day 11 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we explore the making of the festival's surprise screening, Uncut Gems. In the introduction, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Eric Kohn, IndieWire’s Executive Editor & Chief Critic, to discuss NYFF and the importance of film festivals, and the evolution of the Safdies.
Then we go to yesterday's NYFF Live talk on the making of Uncut Gems, moderated by Kohn. Josh and Benny Safdie (Heaven Knows What, Good Time) were on hand to detail the process of making this electrifying New York City-set thriller, joined by co-writer and editor Ronald Bronstein, producer Sebastian Bear McClard, composer Daniel Lopatin, and casting director Jen Venditti.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/7/2019 • 1 hour, 7 minutes, 53 seconds
#255 - NYFF57 Day 10: Francis Ford Coppola on The Cotton Club Encore
On Day 10 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, shares an overview of two free tributes happening at the festival this Tuesday: at 2pm, we honor Ben Barenholtz, titan of independent cinema, with Annette Insdorf, Ethan Coen, John Turturro, and Eamonn Bowles in person; then at 7pm, Rosalie Varda and other special guests join us to reflect on the legacy of Agnès Varda. We dedicated the 57th NYFF to the legendary director and ahead of a comprehensive retrospective this winter, join us for this in-depth conversation on her unwavering spirit and radical body of work. See more details on these events and all free events at Film at Lincoln Center here: filmlinc.org/free
Then we go to yesterday's Q&A following The Cotton Club Encore. Director and co-writer Francis Ford Coppola was joined by Maurice Hines and James Remar as they discussed their restored and "reawakened" version of the stylish throwback to 1930s Hollywood. They talked about the ambitious production and the response to the film upon its release, as well as what's been added to this new cut.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/6/2019 • 22 minutes, 24 seconds
#254 - NYFF57 Day 9: Noah Baumbach & Cast on Marriage Story
On Day 9 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we begin with an introduction to our Projections section, which is underway through Sunday. Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by curator Aily Nash in a discussion about the evolving definition of avant-garde and her picks for what to see during Projections.
Then we go to yesterday's Marriage Story press conference featuring Noah Baumbach, Scarlett Johansson, Adam Driver, Laura Dern, Ray Liotta, Alan Alda, and producer David Heyman. They discuss the influences on the film–from Hitchcock to Persona–Robbie Ryan's cinematography, the duality of marriage, the importance of adding humor to the narrative, the different personalities of the lawyers, and much more.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/5/2019 • 54 minutes, 31 seconds
#253 - NYFF57 Day 8: Michael Apted on the Incredible Journey of the Up Series
On Day 8 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we begin with an introduction to our annual NYFF57 Shorts programs. Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by programmers Tyler Wilson and Madeline Whittle to discuss the four shorts programs this year. While tickets are currently at capacity for the programs, we encourage one to try the standby line!
Then we go to last night's NYFF Live discussion featuring Michael Apted and the incredible journey of the Up series. Those of us who have devotedly followed Apted’s one-of-a-kind British film series for the past several decades anticipate with great warmth—and more than a little poignant anxiety—returning every seven years to the lives of Tony; Nicholas; Suzy; Symon and Paul; Jackie, Sue, and Lynn; Andrew and John; Neil and Peter; and Bruce. The series’ ninth installment, 63 Up, has its New York Premiere at NYFF, and its committed, eclectic director discussed it and the series as a whole in this on-stage discussion moderated by Eugene Hernandez.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/4/2019 • 1 hour, 13 minutes, 46 seconds
#252 - NYFF57 Day 7: Joaquin Phoenix & Todd Phillips on Joker
On Day 7 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we begin with an introduction to our annual Artist Academy and Film in Education program. Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Christine L. Mendoza, FLC's Director of Education, and Brian Brooks, who has helped to develop the Artist Academy program, which is now in its ninth year. Artist Academy is an immersive four-day program for filmmakers early in their careers, sponsored by Dolby and Participant. Learn more about these programs at filmlinc.org/home
Then we go to last night's discussion following the New York premiere of Joker featuring Todd Phillips, Joaquin Phoenix, producer Emma Tillinger Koskoff, production designer Mark Friedberg, and cinematographer Lawrence Sher. They discussed vividly bringing to life a reimagined Gotham City, their cinematic influences, Phoenix's preparation for the role, and the importance of real-world implications of violence in the film.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/3/2019 • 42 minutes, 32 seconds
#251 - NYFF57 Day 6: Nadav Lapid on Synonyms
On Day 6 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Israeli director Nadav Lapid to discuss the experience of film festivals, protecting cinema, and two recent favorite films: Bacurau and Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood.
Then we go to last night's NYFF Live discussion with Lapid, moderated by FLC programmer Dan Sullivan, in which they explore his Main Slate selection and Golden Bear winner Synonyms, which will open at Film at Lincoln Center on October 25. They discuss the personal history of both the basis of the narrative and the filmmaking process, as well as creating a space for spontaneity and the importance of language.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/2/2019 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 6 seconds
#250 - NYFF57 Day 5: Portrait of a Lady on Fire
On Day 5 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Film Comment Editor-in-Chief Nicolas Rapold to discuss Portrait of a Lady on Fire, which the magazine is presenting at the festival. They also talk about the trio of Film Comment free talks, which one can learn more about here: filmlinc.org/free
Then we go to last night's Q&A for Portrait of a Lady on Fire, featuring writer-director Céline Sciamma and stars Adèle Haenel and Noémie Merlant. Moderated by Amy Taubin, they discuss a David Lynch-esque approach to sound design, the similarities between directing and painting, how art consoles the soul, the costume design, and (spoilers!) the film's final scene.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
10/1/2019 • 42 minutes, 52 seconds
#249 - NYFF57 Day 4: Documentary Talk
On Day 4 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we're exploring the Spotlight on Documentary section. In the introduction Eugene Hernandez, FLC's Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Lesli Klainberg, FLC's Executive Director as well as a documentary filmmaker and producer. They discuss highlights from this year's non-fiction lineup, presented by HBO.
Then we go to an NYFF Live talk moderated by Klainberg, who sat down with Ric Burns (Oliver Sacks: His Own Life), Tania Cypriano (Born to Be), Ivy Meeropol (Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn), and Lynn Novick (College Behind Bars) to discuss their NYFF57 selections.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/30/2019 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 58 seconds
#248 - NYFF57 Day 3: Cinematography Now with Rodrigo Prieto, Ashley Connor & Chris Teague
On Day 3 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, we're exploring the craft of cinematography. In the introduction Eugene Hernandez, FLC Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by programmer Dan Sullivan to discuss NYFF's Retrospective selections this year, dedicated to the American Society of Cinematographers's centennial. We pay tribute to the society with a selection of historically significant and brilliantly photographed films shot by some of its most notable members past and present. Sullivan and Hernandez also dive into the Revivals lineup, featuring brand-new restorations of rarities and classics.
Then, we feature our first NYFF Live talk: Cinematography Now. In this show-and-tell session, some of the greatest working cinematographers discussed their craft, offering an insider’s view of the field today. The special guests are Rodrigo Prieto, whose credits include Martin Scorsese’s The Irishman, Silence, and The Wolf of Wall Street, as well as Brokeback Mountain and Amores Perros; Ashley Connor, one of the best emerging cinematographers, whose films include Josephine Decker’s Madeline’s Madeline, Thou Wast Mild and Lovely, and Butter on the Latch, and Sundance-winner The Miseducation of Cameron Post; and Chris Teague, whose work includes the TV series Russian Doll, GLOW, and Broad City, and the independent films The Mend and Obvious Child. Moderated by David Schwartz, former Chief Curator, Museum of the Moving Image.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/29/2019 • 1 hour, 26 minutes, 42 seconds
#247 - NYFF57 Day 2: Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino & Joe Pesci Discuss The Irishman
Get ready for an epic conversation on Day 2 of our New York Film Festival daily podcast, featuring Martin Scorsese's NYFF57 opener The Irishman. Eugene Hernandez, FLC Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, is joined by Steven Zeitchik of The Washington Post to discuss the long-awaited crime epic.
Then, we go to the press conference featuring Martin Scorsese, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, and producers Emma Tillinger Koskoff and Jane Rosenthal. They discuss pulling off the decades-spanning production, getting the momentous cast together, finding the film's emotional center in the adaptation process, the testing process of the digital effects, and much more.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/28/2019 • 46 minutes, 17 seconds
#246 - NYFF57 Day 1: Pedro Almodóvar & Antonio Banderas on Pain and Glory
We're excited to announce the launch of New York Film Festival daily podcasts as part of the Film at Lincoln Center Podcast! Tune in every day for special guests, festival highlights, filmmaker chats, and more.
On the first dispatch from NYFF57, Eugene Hernandez, FLC Deputy Director and Co-Publisher of Film Comment, sits down with Florence Almozini, Associate Director of Programming at FLC and a member of the NYFF selection committee, to discuss their history with the festival and picks to see this year.
Then, we go to a conversation with Pedro Almodóvar and Antonio Banderas at the press conference for Pain and Glory as they discuss the creative process, mixing truth and fiction, and much more.
The 57th NYFF continues through October 13! See all available tickets and more info at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/27/2019 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 54 seconds
#245 - Villains and Bloodline
Today, we’re sharing a pair of Q&As from two horror gems at our annual Scary Movies film festival: Villains and Bloodline. Both films open in theaters this week.
First up, Villains star Maika Monroe and directors Dan Berk and Robert Olsen discussed their darkly funny home invasion thriller. Then, Henry Jacobson, co-writer Avra Fox-Lerner, and composer Trevor Gureckis explored their blood-spattered portrait of a serial killer, starring Seann William Scott. Both Q&As were moderated by programmer Madeline Whittle.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/19/2019 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 41 seconds
#244 - 57th New York Film Festival Preview with Kent Jones, Dennis Lim & Michael Koresky
The 57th New York Film Festival is right around the corner, coming to Film at Lincoln Center on September 27 through October 13. On this week's podcast, we're looking ahead to this year's rich and diverse lineup with an in-depth conversation with the festival's programmers.
NYFF Editorial Director Michael Koresky sat down with programmers Kent Jones and Dennis Lim to discuss this year's Main Slate, from Martin Scorsese's Opening selection The Irishman to Noah Baumbach's Centerpiece selection Marriage Story, as well as Liberté, Synonyms, Vitalina Varela, To the Ends of the Earth, Atlantics, First Cow, Pain and Glory, Varda by Agnès, and more. Their discussion also touches on the festival's expansive sidebars, including Projections, Revivals, Retrospective, Special Events, and Spotlight on Documentary sections.
See more information and buy tickets at filmlinc.org/nyff
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/12/2019 • 50 minutes, 48 seconds
#243 - Ready or Not Directors & Cast on Crafting Adrenaline-Fueled Horror Thrills
Today we’re sharing a Q&A from the 12th edition of our annual Scary Movies film festival: the Closing Night selection Ready or Not, which is now in wide release.
Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, producer Chad Villela, along with actors Samara Weaving, Mark O’Brien, and Andie MacDowell, discussed crafting their adrenaline-fueled horror delight with programmer Madeline Whittle.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
9/5/2019 • 31 minutes, 59 seconds
#242 - J. Hoberman and Dennis Lim on Pop Culture & Politics in the 1980s
Today, we’re sharing a Film at Lincoln Center free talk which was presented on the occasion of our new series Make My Day: American Movies in the Age of Reagan. Director of Programming Dennis Lim joined writer J. Hoberman for an expansive discussion about his latest book, Make My Day: Movie Culture in the Age of Reagan, the relationship between politics and pop culture in the 1980s, and more.
The series, underway through this Wednesday, September 3, offers a chance to experience the Eighties as seen through the lens of 24 unforgettable films, including The King of Comedy, Back to the Future, The Last Temptation of Christ, RoboCop, The Terminator, Near Dark, and more. Save with 2-for-1 double feature pricing at filmlinc.org.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
8/29/2019 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 2 seconds
#241 - Ari Aster on the Director's Cut of Midsommar
Today, we’re sharing a special conversation following the world premiere of Ari Aster’s director’s cut of Midsommar. The 171-minute version of his sunny Sweden-set horror film premiered this past weekend at the 12th edition of our annual Scary Movies film festival.
In the Q&A, Aster talked with programmer Madeline Whittle about the differences in his director’s cut, how it’s closer to his original intentions for the film, his admiration for Edward Yang, the shot from the trailer that got cut from both versions of the film, and much more.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
8/21/2019 • 34 minutes, 51 seconds
#240 - Roberto Minervini & Subjects on What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire?
Today, we’re sharing a conversation about What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire?, which opens exclusively at Film at Lincoln Center this Friday. Roberto Minervini’s passionately urgent, lyrical new documentary is a portrait of African-Americans in New Orleans struggling to maintain their unique cultural identity and to find social justice.
The film was an official selection at the 56th New York Film Festival, where the director, producer Paolo Benzi, producer Denise Ping Lee, and the film’s subjects, Judy Hill, Krystal Muhammad, and Nat Turner, joined FLC Director of Programming Dennis Lim for a Q&A.
Join the the director, Judy Hill, and Krystal Muhammad this weekend for Q&As, plus an opening night reception on Friday. Get tickets at filmlinc.org.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
8/14/2019 • 28 minutes, 18 seconds
#239 - Co-Director Nanfu Wang on One Child Nation
Today, we’re sharing a conversation about the Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner One Child Nation, which opens in limited release this week. The film, directed by Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang, powerfully and personally explores China’s One Child Policy, which made it illegal in most circumstances for couples to have more than one child.
The film screened at Human Rights Watch Film Festival, where co-director Nanfu Wang joined Yaqiu Wang, China Researcher at Human Rights Watch and Minky Worden, Director of Global Initiatives at Human Rights Watch.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
8/8/2019 • 38 minutes, 37 seconds
#238 - Director Claudio Giovannesi on Piranhas
On this week's podcast, we’re sharing a conversation about Piranhas, opening here at Film at Lincoln Center on Friday, August 2. The Berlinale Silver Bear winner, co-written and directed by Claudio Giovannesi, is a singular coming-of-age story and a haunting reflection on doomed adolescence.
The film was the Opening Night selection of our Open Roads: New Italian Cinema festival earlier this year, where the director joined programmer Florence Almozini for a Q&A.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
7/31/2019 • 28 minutes, 32 seconds
#237 - Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov on Honeyland
On this week's podcast, we’re sharing a conversation about Honeyland, which begins its theatrical release this week. The Sundance World Cinema Documentary Grand Jury Prize winner, directed by Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov, is an evocative, often outrageously funny modern-day parable of the Good Samaritan.
The film was an official selection at New Directors/New Films earlier this year, where the directors joined programmer Dan Sullivan for a Q&A.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
7/24/2019 • 23 minutes, 8 seconds
#236 - Louis Garrel, Laetitia Casta & Lily-Rose Depp on A Faithful Man
On this week's podcast, we’re sharing a conversation about A Faithful Man, which begins its theatrical release this week in New York City. The film, directed by, written by, and starring Louis Garrel, is at once a beguiling bedroom farce and a slippery inquiry into truth, subjectivity, and the elusive nature of romantic attraction.
The film was a Main Slate selection at the 56th New York Film Festival, where Garrel and stars Laetitia Casta and Lily-Rose Depp joined programmer Florence Almozini for a Q&A.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
7/18/2019 • 26 minutes, 47 seconds
#235 - 'The Plagiarists'
Experimental filmmakers James N. Kienitz Wilkins and Robin Schavoir, and producer Paul Dallas discuss their collaboration on THE PLAGIARISTS, playing here at Film at Lincoln Center through Thursday, July 11.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/10/2019 • 28 minutes, 9 seconds
#234 - Yuen Woo-ping
Hong Kong action choreographer and director extraordinaire Yuen Woo-ping, perhaps best known to Western audiences for his work on THE MATRIX; CROUCHING TIGER, HIDDEN DRAGON; and KILL BILL, discusses his art and career in Asia and America.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/3/2019 • 43 minutes, 1 second
#233 - 'Yesterday' / 'Maiden'
Director Danny Boyle, screenwriter Richard Curtis, and star Himesh Patel joined our Deputy Director Eugene Hernandez to discuss YESTERDAY. Also on this week's podcast, Tracy Edwards and director Alex Holmes join our Executive Director Lesli Klainberg to discuss the new documentary MAIDEN.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/26/2019 • 50 minutes, 40 seconds
#232 - 'Advocate'
Director Rachel Leah Jones, Lea Tsemel, Human Rights Lawyer Jamil Dakwar, and Human Rights Watch Senior Counsel Balkees Jarrah discuss the new film ADVOCATE after the Opening Night screening at Human Rights Watch Film Festival here at Film at Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/19/2019 • 49 minutes, 17 seconds
#231 - 'August at Akiko's'
Actor-musician Alex Zhang Hungtai and writer-director Makoto Yogi discuss AUGUST AT AKIKO's after a sneak preview screening here at Film at Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/12/2019 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
#230 - Ava DuVernay
Ava DuVernay discusses WHEN THEY SEE US, a four-part series chronicling the notorious case of five teenagers of color, labeled the Central Park Five, who were convicted of a rape they did not commit. The series is now playing on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/6/2019 • 38 minutes, 38 seconds
#229 - 'Too Late to Die Young'
At the 56th New York Film Festival, writer-director Dominga Sotomayor, producer Rodrigo Teixeira, and executive producer Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo discuss Too Late to Die Young, which opens at Film at Lincoln Center on May 31.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/29/2019 • 25 minutes, 48 seconds
#228 - 'Diamantino'
Longtime collaborators Daniel Schmidt and Gabriel Abrantes discuss DIAMANTINO, a perversely pleasurable sendup of Brexit, genetic science, and the ongoing refugee crisis. The film opens in select theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
5/22/2019 • 30 minutes, 7 seconds
#227 - Joanna Hogg, Tilda Swinton, and Honor Swinton Byrne
Joanna Hogg, Honor Swinton Byrne, and Tilda Swinton discuss THE SOUVENIR, Hogg’s much-anticipated follow-up to 2013’s Exhibition and a breakthrough from this year’s Sundance Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/15/2019 • 49 minutes, 49 seconds
#226 - 'Knock Down the House'
KNOCK DOWN THE HOUSE, Rachel Lears’s remarkable documentary following four female politicians as they challenged local Democratic incumbents in the 2018 midterm elections, is now playing daily here at Film at Lincoln Center. Director Rachel Lears and editor Robin Blotnick joined Karen James from The BBC for a Q&A after last week’s premiere screening.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
5/8/2019 • 20 minutes, 39 seconds
#225 - 50th Anniversary Episode
Film at Lincoln Center (formerly the Film Society of Lincoln Center) is celebrating 50 years!
Director of Editorial and Creative Strategy Michael Koresky joins Executive Director Lesli Klainberg and Deputy Director Eugene Hernandez to discuss the organization's history. Then you'll hear from some of the organization's key figures like Dennis Lim, Richard Peña, and others. And finally, we're proud to share highlights from our 50th anniversary gala featuring Tilda Swinton, John Waters, Dee Rees, and Martin Scorsese.
This podcast is brought to you by Film at Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/1/2019 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 25 seconds
#224 - Robert Pattinson & Claire Denis
Claire Denis and Robert Pattinson discuss HIGH LIFE, which premiered at the 56th New York Film Festival and opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/24/2019 • 41 minutes, 55 seconds
#223 - Jodie Foster & Pamela B. Green
At the 56th New York Film Festival premiere of BE NATURAL: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ALICE GUY-BLACHÉ, director Pamela B. Green and narrator Jodie Foster discussed the pioneering filmmaker of early cinema and the more than 1000 films that bore her name, most of them lost.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/17/2019 • 24 minutes, 54 seconds
#222 - Bi Gan
Writer-director Bi Gan discusses his acclaimed follow up to KAILI BLUES, LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT, an immersive art-house sensation that broke box office records in China. The film premiered at last year’s New York Film Festival and it begins its official theatrical run this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/11/2019 • 23 minutes, 42 seconds
#221 - Agnès Varda
French filmmaking pioneer Agnès Varda passed away last Friday at the age of 90.
We were proud to welcome Varda here at the Film Society many times throughout her career. Back in 2017, she joined us for a special event during Rendez-Vous with French Cinema to reflect on her voluminous body of work, influences, and approach to filmmaking. The evening was moderated by critic Melissa Anderson.
**This talk was previously published in episode #127**
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/3/2019 • 39 minutes, 11 seconds
#220 - Chinonye Chukwu (Clemency)
Chinonye Chukwu discusses her film CLEMENCY, this year’s Opening Night selection at New Directors/New Films. The festival runs March 27th through April 7th here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and at MoMA.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/29/2019 • 25 minutes, 28 seconds
#219 - Kent Jones
Esteemed critic and director of the New York Film Festival discusses his narrative debut DIANE, which opens March 31st.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/22/2019 • 33 minutes, 26 seconds
#218 - Filmmaking Abroad
During this year's "Rendez-Vous with French Cinema," a selection of French and American artists met to discuss a rapidly globalizing film community and the ethics of filming abroad. The discussion was moderated by our Deputy Director Eugene Hernandez and featured Eva Husson, Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre, Brady Corbet, and Jean-Stéphane Sauvaire.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/13/2019 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 26 seconds
#217 - Russell Banks & Paul Schrader
Poet and novelist Russell Banks joins filmmaker Paul Schrader for a conversation about French cinema and adaptation.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/7/2019 • 54 minutes, 5 seconds
#216 - Christian Petzold
German director Christian Petzold discusses his new film TRANSIT, which opens here at the Film Society on Friday March 1st.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/27/2019 • 38 minutes, 27 seconds
#215 - Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón discusses ROMA at the 56th New York Film Festival. The film is nominated for ten Oscars at the 91st Academy Awards, airing this Sunday.
2/20/2019 • 52 minutes, 45 seconds
#214- Jonas Åkerlund & Rory Culkin
Director Jonas Åkerlund and Rory Culkin discuss their film LORDS OF CHAOS, which is now playing in select theaters.
From Swedish music video and film director extraordinaire Jonas Åkerlund, LORDS OF CHAOS tells the story of the notorious rise and fall of Norwegian black-metal band Mayhem. The film had its New York premiere at the 11th edition of Scary Movies, the Film Society’s annual celebration of the horror genre.
2/13/2019 • 22 minutes, 58 seconds
#213 - László Nemes
Director László Nemes discusses his new film SUNSET at Opening Night of Film Comment Selects, the magazine’s festival of movies curated by its editors (February 6 - 10).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/7/2019 • 20 minutes, 32 seconds
#212 - Jia Zhangke
Chinese filmmaker Jia Zhangke discusses his new film ASH IS PUREST WHITE at the 56th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/30/2019 • 39 minutes, 21 seconds
#211 - Yorgos Lanthimos
Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos talks about his new film THE FAVOURITE, which has been nominated for ten Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/23/2019 • 45 minutes, 7 seconds
#210 - Errol Morris
Errol Morris discusses his latest documentary AMERICAN DHARMA, about former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon, at the 56th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/16/2019 • 1 hour, 46 seconds
#209 - Claire Denis
French filmmaker Claire Denis takes part in our On Cinema conversation, a tradition at the New York Film Festival in which one of the featured filmmakers joins NYFF director Kent Jones to discuss their cinematic influences.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/9/2019 • 49 minutes, 47 seconds
#208 - Willem Dafoe
Willem Dafoe joined Kent Jones for an in-depth conversation at this year's New York Film Festival. The actor is in three movies currently playing in theaters: AT ETERNITY'S GATE, AQUAMAN, and VOX LUX.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/26/2018 • 50 minutes, 22 seconds
#207 - Alice Rohrwacher
Filmmaker Alice Rohrwacher discusses her new film HAPPY AS LAZZARO, which ranked #9 on Film Comment's end of the year critics poll, and is now playing on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/19/2018 • 48 minutes, 38 seconds
#206 - Morgan Neville
Filmmaker Morgan Neville discusses his films WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR, about the life of Fred Rogers, and THEY'LL LOVE ME WHEN I'M DEAD, about the making of Orson Welles’s long-lost The Other Side of the Wind. The latter film premiered at this year's New York Film Festival and is now playing on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/12/2018 • 49 minutes, 57 seconds
#205 - Julian Schnabel & Jean-Claude Carrière
Legendary screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière and acclaimed director Julian Schnabel discuss AT ETERNITY'S GATE, which had its North American premiere at the 56th New York Film Festival and is now playing in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/5/2018 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 18 seconds
#204 - Barry Jenkins
Writer-director Barry Jenkins discusses IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK at the 56th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/29/2018 • 51 minutes, 29 seconds
#203 - 'The Favourite'
Hear the director, writer, and stars of THE FAVOURITE discuss the film at this year's New York Film Festival, where it was the Opening Night selection. Director Yorgos Lanthimos joined writer Tony McNamara, and cast members Olivia Colman, Emma Stone, Joe Alwyn, and Nicholas Hoult to discuss the film, which begins its official theatrical run this weekend.
11/21/2018 • 29 minutes, 31 seconds
#202 - Joel & Ethan Coen
Joel and Ethan Coen join actors Tim Blake Nelson, Zoe Kazan, and Bill Heck to discuss their new western anthology film, THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS. The film had its North American premiere at this year's New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/14/2018 • 24 minutes, 47 seconds
#201 - Ed Lachman
Famed Cinematographer Ed Lachman discusses this year's official New York Film Festival poster, which he co-designed with artist JR.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
11/7/2018 • 47 minutes, 43 seconds
#200 - Steven Yeun ('Burning')
Actor Steven Yeun discusses his starring role in Lee Chang-dong’s masterful BURNING after its opening night screening here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. The film was a Main Slate selection in this year’s New York Film Festival, where it was a favorite among critics and audiences alike.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/2/2018 • 30 minutes, 7 seconds
#199 - Paul Schrader & Alex Ross Perry
Paul Schrader and Alex Ross Perry discuss writing for the screen at the 56th New York Film Festival. The event was moderated by NYFF Director Kent Jones.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/24/2018 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 37 seconds
#198 - Writing Partners
Paul Dano, Zoe Kazan, Mary Harron, and John Walsh discuss the dynamics of collaboration in an NYFF Live talk about writing partners.
Dano and Kazan collaborated on the script for WILDLIFE, which was a Main Slate selection in this year’s New York Film Festival and opens in select theaters this week. Harron and Walsh most recently collaborated on Dali Land, which is now in pre-production; they have previously co-written the shorts Armani, Sonnet for a Town Car, and Holding Fast.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
10/17/2018 • 48 minutes, 31 seconds
#197 - Making 'Private Life'
Writer-director Tamara Jenkins, actor Kayli Carter, and producer Anthony Bregman discuss the making of their new film PRIVATE LIFE, which is now playing in select theaters and streaming on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/10/2018 • 1 hour, 12 minutes, 23 seconds
#196 - Frederick Wiseman
Legendary documentarian Frederick Wiseman talks filmmaking at an NYFF Live talk with Kent Jones. His latest, MONROVIA, INDIANA, premiered in the festival's main slate. The 56th New York Film Festival continues through October 14th.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
10/3/2018 • 40 minutes, 4 seconds
#195 - Karl Ove Knausgaard, Emil Trier & Joachim Trier
Karl Ove Knausgaard and Emil & Joachim Trier discuss their new film THE OTHER MUNCH, which follows Knausgaard as he is invited to guest-curate an exhibition of paintings by Edvard Munch at Oslo’s Munch Museum.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/26/2018 • 48 minutes, 2 seconds
#194 - NYFF 56 Preview
Michael Koresky (Film Society Editorial Director) discusses this year's New York Film Festival lineup with Kent Jones (NYFF Director) and Dennis Lim (Film Society Director of Programming).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/20/2018 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 25 seconds
#193 - Dennis Cooper
Acclaimed writer and artist Dennis Cooper joined the Film Society’s Director of Programming Dennis Lim for an extended onstage discussion exploring his singular body of work, his rich relationship with cinema, and his new feature film, the tense and metaphysical Permanent Green Light (co-directed by artist Zac Farley).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/7/2018 • 43 minutes, 6 seconds
#192 - Germaine Dulac and Women in Film History
Hear an extended conversation with Germaine Dulac scholar and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor Tami Williams, Columbia University professor Jane Gaines, and Rutgers University professor Sandy Flitterman-Lewis as they discuss Dulac’s pioneering artistry, her films’ political context, and her pivotal place in the history of cinema.
The evening was sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/30/2018 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 46 seconds
#191 - Reed Morano / Ashley Connor
Director-cinematographer Reed Morano discusses her new film I THINK WE'RE ALONE NOW, which won the Special Jury Prize at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival and opens in September.
Also, cinematographer Ashley Connor discusses her new film THE MISEDUCATION OF CAMERON POST, which is now playing in theaters.
Both talks were part of our series, "The Female Gaze," which showcased work from some of the best female cinematographers working today.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/15/2018 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 10 seconds
#190 - 'Gimme Shelter' Panel
Writer and critic Saul Austerlitz moderates a panel with GIMME SHELTER cinematographer Joan Churchill, producer Porter Bibb, editor Mirra Bank, and Judy Maysles. The event came on the occasion of the publishing of Austerlitz's new book, "Just a Shot Away: Peace, Love, and Tragedy with the Rolling Stones at Altamont."
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/9/2018 • 34 minutes, 32 seconds
#189 - The Female Gaze
Cinematographers Natasha Braier, Ashley Connor, Agnès Godard, and Joan Churchill discuss the notion of a "Female Gaze" over opening weekend of our series of the same name.
"The Female Gaze" continues here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center through August 9th with films by directors like Claire Denis, Jacques Rivette, Chantal Akerman, Ryan Coogler, and Lucrecia Martel.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
8/1/2018 • 1 hour, 59 seconds
#188 - Lauren Greenfield ('Generation Wealth')
Filmmaker Lauren Greenfield discusses her new film, GENERATION WEALTH, which is now playing daily here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/25/2018 • 26 minutes, 55 seconds
#187 - 'Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda'
Composer Ryuichi Sakamoto, filmmaker Stephen Schible discuss their new film RYUICHI SAKAMOTO: CODA with writer Sasha Frere-Jones after an opening weekend screening here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. The film is now playing.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/12/2018 • 33 minutes, 41 seconds
#186 - Masato Harada Master Class
During the 17th New York Asian Film Festival (continuing through July 15th), Masato Harada delivered a master class. He was honored this year with this year's Star Asia Lifetime Achievement Award.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/3/2018 • 56 minutes, 40 seconds
#185 - 'Araby'
Hear Brazilian filmmakers João Dumans and Affonso Uchoa discuss their film ARABY, which is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/28/2018 • 23 minutes, 53 seconds
#184 -David & Nathan Zellner ('Damsel')
David and Nathan Zellner discuss their new film DAMSEL, which is now playing in select theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/22/2018 • 32 minutes, 53 seconds
#183 - Morgan Neville (Won't You Be My Neighbor?)
Filmmaker Morgan Neville discusses his documentary, WON'T YOU BE MY NEIGHBOR, which is about the life and legacy of Fred Rogers, the beloved host of the popular children's TV show Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/14/2018 • 15 minutes, 46 seconds
#182 - 'Last Days of Disco' 20th Anniversary
Director Whit Stillman joins Chloë Sevigny, Michael Weatherly, and Mackenzie Astin following our 20th anniversary screening of LAST DAYS OF DISCO.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/6/2018 • 36 minutes, 7 seconds
#181 - Wim Wenders
Legendary German director Wim Wenders discusses his new film, POPE FRANCIS: A MAN OF HIS WORD.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/30/2018 • 23 minutes, 12 seconds
#180 - Jennifer Fox (The Tale)
Filmmaker Jennifer Fox talks about her new film, The Tale, which premieres on HBO this Saturday.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/23/2018 • 31 minutes, 16 seconds
#179 - Paul Schrader, Ethan Hawke, and Cedric the Entertainer
Paul Schrader joins Ethan Hawke and Cedric the Entertainer to discuss their new film, FIRST REFORMED, which opens in select theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/17/2018 • 33 minutes, 25 seconds
#178 - Juliette Binoche
Juliette Binoche discusses her new film, LET THE SUNSHINE IN, directed by Claire Denis. The film was a Main Slate selection in last year's New York Film Festival and is now playing daily here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
5/9/2018 • 24 minutes, 57 seconds
#177 - Art of the Real
Hear Q&A's from two highlights of this year's Art of the Real series, which continues through May 6th. Co-presented with MUBI, the series offers a survey of the most vital and innovative voices in nonfiction and hybrid filmmaking.
In the first half, Neil Young, Jake Meginsky, and Milford Graves discuss MILFORD GRAVES FULL MANTIS. After that, you'll hear Julien Faraut discuss JOHN MCENROE: IN THE REALM OF PERFECTION, which was this year's Opening Night selection.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
5/2/2018 • 56 minutes, 52 seconds
#176 - Grace Jones & Sophie Fiennes
Grace Jones and director Sophie Fiennes discuss their documentary GRACE JONES: BLOODLIGHT AND BAMI, which is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/25/2018 • 29 minutes, 24 seconds
#175 - The Puppet Master: The Complete Jiri Trnka
Michael Koresky discusses the work of Czech animation master Jiri Trnka with programmers Florence Almozini and Irena Kovarova. Our complete retrospective runs April 20-25.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/18/2018 • 34 minutes, 59 seconds
#174 - Arnaud Desplechin
French Director Arnaud Desplechin discusses his film ISMAEL'S GHOST, which is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/11/2018 • 28 minutes, 44 seconds
#173 - M.I.A. & Stephen Loveridge
Stephen Loveridge and rapper M.I.A. discuss their new documentary MATANGI/MAYA/M.I.A., which was the Opening Night film at this year's New Directors / New Films festival (continuing through April 8).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/4/2018 • 29 minutes, 17 seconds
#172 - Wes Anderson & Guests
Wes Anderson joins producer Jeremy Dawson, co-writer Jason Schwartzman, and cast members Courtney B. Vance, Jeff Goldblum, Akira Ito, and Koyu Rankin to discuss ISLE OF DOGS, which is now playing in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/28/2018 • 28 minutes, 22 seconds
#171 - Ava DuVernay
Ava DuVernay discusses A WRINKLE IN TIME after a special sneak preview here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/14/2018 • 21 minutes, 15 seconds
#170 - Hong Sang-soo
Prolific South Korean director Hong Sang-soo discusses his career and process at the 55th New York Film Festival. Hong's new film, CLAIRE'S CAMERA, is opening here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this Friday March 9th.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/7/2018 • 50 minutes, 35 seconds
#169 - 'Mudbound' / 'On Body and Soul'
Writer-director Dee Rees joins Carey Mulligan, Jason Mitchell, Garrett Hedlund, Jason Clarke, Rob Morgan, and Mary J. Blige to talk about MUDBOUND, which is nominated for the Oscars for Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Supporting Actress (for Mary J. Blige), and Best Song.
Also on this week's podcast, the director of ON BODY AND SOUL discusses the film at its New York theatrical premiere. It is nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/28/2018 • 55 minutes, 22 seconds
#168 - Film Comment Selects
Film Comment's Editor-in-Chief Nicolas Rapold discusses this year's edition of Film Comment Selects with the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Editorial Director Michael Koresky.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/22/2018 • 40 minutes, 43 seconds
#167 - 'Western'
German director Valeska Grisebach discusses her new film WESTERN, which was a Main Slate selection at the 55th New York Film Festival, and begins an exclusive theatrical run here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this weekend. Grisebach was joined by actor Syuleyman Alilov Letifov at NYFF for a Q&A.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/15/2018 • 31 minutes, 40 seconds
#166 - '24 Frames' / 'A Fantastic Woman'
Hear Abbas Kiarostami's son Ahmad discuss his late father's career and final film, 24 FRAMES, which is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
After that, Sebastián Lelio discusses his new film A FANTASTIC WOMAN, which also opened this past weekend here at the Film Society.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
2/7/2018 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 6 seconds
#165 - Greta Gerwig / Luca Guadagnino
On the heels of their multiple Oscar nominations, listen to the directors of LADY BIRD and CALL ME BY YOUR NAME discuss the films at the 55th New York Film Festival, where both had their New York premieres.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/24/2018 • 47 minutes, 32 seconds
#164 - 'Voyeur'
From the 55th New York Film Festival, hear the directors and subject of the documentary VOYEUR discuss the film's controversial journey to screen. The film had its world premiere at NYFF and is now playing on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/11/2018 • 33 minutes, 32 seconds
#163 - Philippe Garrel
French director Philippe Garrel joins Kent Jones for a discussion about filmmaking at the 55th New York Film Festival. His new film, LOVER FOR A DAY, was a Main Slate selection in the festival, and begins its official theatrical run at the Film Society of Lincoln Center on January 12th.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/4/2018 • 29 minutes, 33 seconds
#162 - The Year in Moviegoing
Michael Koresky leads a panel of cinephiles in a discussion of the year in moviegoing.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/28/2017 • 45 minutes, 55 seconds
#161 - Laura Dern
Laura Dern discusses her career at our recent celebration of her ongoing contribution to the screen, big and small. Her recent triumphs include STAR WARS: THE LAST JEDI, TWIN PEAKS, and BIG LITTLE LIES.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/20/2017 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 43 seconds
#160 - Emotion Pictures: International Melodrama
The programmers of our new 62-film series Emotion Pictures: International Melodrama (December 13th - January 7th) talk with the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Editorial Director Michael Koresky.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/13/2017 • 27 minutes, 29 seconds
#159 - Laurie Anderson & Special Guests
Laurie Anderson leads a panel discussion about "The Federation," a coalition of artists and activists banding together in response to the increased xenophobia and closing of physical borders.
Panelists include co-founder Tanya Selvaratnam, curator and writer Kali Holloway, musician Alsarah, musician Emel Mathlouthi, filmmaker Sara Driver, and filmmaker Barbet Schroeder.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
12/6/2017 • 47 minutes, 28 seconds
#158 - Master Class with Ed Lachman & Vittorio Storaro
Two legendary cinematographers discuss their craft and careers at the 55th New York Film Festival. Ed Lachman (CAROL, THE VIRGIN SUICIDES, ERIN BROCKOVICH) discusses his collaboration with Todd Haynes on WONDERSTRUCK. Vittorio Storaro (APOCALYPSE NOW, LAST TANGO IN PARIS) talks about his work on the new Woody Allen Film, WONDER WHEEL.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/29/2017 • 1 hour, 14 minutes, 46 seconds
#157 - 'Call Me By Your Name'
The director and cast of CALL ME BY YOUR NAME discuss the making of the film.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/22/2017 • 44 minutes, 4 seconds
#156 - Kate Winslet
Kate Winslet discusses her career at a special live event during the 55th New York Film Festival. She stars in the new film from Woody Allen, WONDER WHEEL, which was the festival's Closing Night selection and opens in theaters on December 1st.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/15/2017 • 51 minutes, 40 seconds
#155 - Richard Linklater
Richard Linklater discusses his influences in a special On Cinema conversation from last month's New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/8/2017 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 49 seconds
#154 - Greta Gerwig
Greta Gerwig discusses her directorial debut LADY BIRD at the 55th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/1/2017 • 48 minutes, 20 seconds
#153 - Ruben Östlund
Swedish filmmaker Ruben Östlund discusses his film THE SQUARE at the 55th New York Film Festival. The movie opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this weekend, with the director in person for a Q&A on Friday (10/27).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/25/2017 • 51 minutes, 8 seconds
#152 - Noah Baumbach
Noah Baumbach discusses his new film THE MEYEROWITZ STORIES (NEW AND SELECTED) at the 55th New York Film Festival where it had its US premiere. The film is now streaming on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Sean DiSerio
10/18/2017 • 51 minutes, 11 seconds
#151 - Making 'The Florida Project'
The team behind THE FLORIDA PROJECT discuss the film's journey from conception to execution at the 55th New York Film Festival. THE FLORIDA PROJECT had its premiere in the festival's Main Slate and is now playing in select theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/12/2017 • 43 minutes, 40 seconds
#150 - Agnès Varda & JR
Collaborators Agnès Varda and JR discuss their new film FACES PLACES at the 55th New York Film Festival (September 28 - October 15).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/4/2017 • 49 minutes, 12 seconds
#149 - From the Archives - Frederick Wiseman
Frederick Wiseman's new film EX LIBRIS: THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, is now playing in select theaters.
Hear the director discuss his films and creative process in two talks from our archives. First, in 2006, Wiseman stopped by for a master class about his career in general. After that, you'll hear the director discuss his 2013 film, AT BERKELEY, at the 51st New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/20/2017 • 1 hour, 8 minutes, 49 seconds
#148 - Jane Campion
Australian auteur Jane Campion discusses her four-decade career and the new season of TOP OF THE LAKE, which is now playing on SundanceTV. Our full retrospective, "Jane Campion's Own Stories," is running through September 17th here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/13/2017 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 30 seconds
#147 - New York Film Festival 55 Preview
NYFF Director Kent Jones discusses this year's lineup with the Film Society's Editorial Director Michael Koresky. The festival runs September 28 - October 15th, and tickets go on sale this Sunday, September 10th.
9/8/2017 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 38 seconds
#146 - 'Beach Rats'
BEACH RATS opens this Friday here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. The film was the Centerpiece selection at this year's New Directors / New Films, where director Eliza Hittman joined the cast for a Q&A.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by GODLIS
8/22/2017 • 23 minutes, 13 seconds
#145 - From the Archives - Wim Wenders
Wim Wenders discusses filmmaking at the 49th New York Film Festival in 2011.
Check out the newly announced main slate for the upcoming 55th NYFF (September 28-October 15) at filmlinc.org/nyff, featuring new films from Richard Linklater, Todd Haynes, Agnès Varda, Claire Denis, and more.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
8/16/2017 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 59 seconds
#144 - Deeper Into 'Nocturama'
We discuss the new film from Bertrand Bonello, NOCTURAMA, opening this Friday, August 11th here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. We're presenting a series entitled "Deeper into Nocturama" featuring films hand-picked by Bonello to shed light on his inspirations for the film. Programmer Dan Sullivan, Film Comment Digital Producer Violet Lucca, and Editorial Director Michael Koresky discuss the series.
After their conversation, we're sharing our Q&A with Bonello after NOCTURAMA screened in Rendez-Vous With French Cinema earlier this year.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/9/2017 • 55 minutes, 18 seconds
#143 - Dustin Guy Defa
Writer-director Dustin Guy Defa discusses his new film PERSON TO PERSON, which opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/27/2017 • 23 minutes, 42 seconds
#142 - Christopher Nolan / 'Landline'
Christopher Nolan discusses his new WWII epic, DUNKIRK. Also, the filmmakers and cast of LANDLINE discuss the comedic drama after a sneak preview screening. The guests include writer-director Gillian Robespierre, co-writer Elizabeth Holm, Jenny Slate, and Abby Quinn. Both films come out in theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/20/2017 • 1 hour, 12 minutes, 41 seconds
#141 - Scary Movies X
The programmers of Scary Movies X, the Film Society of Lincoln Center's horror film festival (July 14th-20th) discuss this year's lineup. Also, in anticipation of the series, we're sharing a highlight from Scary Movies 8 back in 2014, when Jemaine Clement joined us for a screening of WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/12/2017 • 52 minutes, 46 seconds
#140 - Errol Morris / Chuck Klosterman
Errol Morris discusses his new documentary, THE B-SIDE: ELSA DORFMAN'S PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY, along with the film's subject Elsa Dorfman after a screening earlier this week. The film officially opens here at the Film Society this weekend.
Also, Chuck Klosterman discusses his book "But What if We're Wrong" after a 35mm screening of Peter Watkins’s 1967 black comedy PRIVILEGE last summer. The conversation was part of our ongoing Print Screen series, which continues this Thursday with a 35mm screening of THE LONG GOODBYE presented by author Yuri Herrera.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/28/2017 • 46 minutes, 8 seconds
#139 - Sofia Coppola
Hear the audio from our recent sold out Evening with Sofia Coppola, featuring an in-depth discussion with the director about influences, collaboration, and Bill Murray.
To see the photographs discussed in the talk, follow this link:
https://www.filmlinc.org/daily/the-close-up-sofia-coppola-talks-filmmaking-and-the-beguiled
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/22/2017 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 37 seconds
#138 - 'Hermia & Helena'
Now playing at the Film Society of Lincoln Center is HERMIA & HELENA, a bittersweet comedy of coupling and uncoupling from New York-based Argentinian director Matias Piñero. Following the film's U.S. premiere at last year's New York Film Festival, Piñero joined cast members Agustina Muñoz, Dustin Guy Defa, Dan Sallitt, Keith Paulson, and Mati Diop for a conversation moderated by festival director Kent Jones.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/31/2017 • 42 minutes, 40 seconds
#137 - From the Archives - Sofia Coppola
While Sofia Coppola's highly anticipated new film THE BEGUILED premieres at Cannes, listen to the director discuss her last theatrical release, THE BLING RING, in 2013.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/24/2017 • 43 minutes, 43 seconds
#136 - From the Archives - Alexander Payne
Hear Alexander Payne discuss the movies that influence him during our "On Cinema" conversation at the 49th New York Film Festival in 2011.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/17/2017 • 48 minutes, 36 seconds
#135 - NYFF Documentary Panel
Hear a cross-section of the documentary filmmakers featured in the 2016 New York Film Festival discuss their films and approach to filmmaking. The esteemed panel included Linda Saffire and Adam Schlesinger, whose film RESTLESS CREATURE: WENDY WHELAN begins its official theatrical run here at the Film Society on May 24th.
Panelists:
Simon Dotan (The Settlers)
Alexis Bloom and Fisher Stevens (Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds)
Linda Saffire and Adam Schlesinger (Restless Creature: Wendy Whelan)
Shirley Abraham and Amit Madheshiya (Cinema Travellers)
Moderated by Film Society Executive Director Lesli Klainberg
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/10/2017 • 1 hour, 41 seconds
#134 - From the Archives - Jonathan Demme
In remembrance of the great Jonathan Demme, who passed away last week at 73, we're looking back to 2012 when he visited the Film Society for a conversation and screening of two of his early works.
1977’s CITIZEN'S BAND and 1980’s MELVIN AND HOWARD screened in our series commemorating the 50 year anniversary of the New York Film Festival. On the occasion, Demme joined Program Director Richard Peña as well as actor and frequent collaborator Paul Le Mat for an insightful and personal discussion of his early career.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Daniel Rodriguez
5/3/2017 • 59 minutes, 11 seconds
#133 - From the Archives - Darren Aronofsky
This week we're looking back to the 46th New York Film Festival in 2008, where Darren Aronofsky's Oscar-nominated drama THE WRESTLER was the Closing Night selection. During the festival, the director joined Richard Peña for one of our HBO Directors Dialogues to talk in depth about his career and approach to filmmaking.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/26/2017 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 33 seconds
#132 - 'I Called Him Morgan' / 'The Death of Louis XIV'
Filmmaker Kasper Collin discusses his new documentary I CALLED HIM MORGAN along with jazz musicians and film subjects Larry Ridley and Dylan Harper. The film concerns the tragic and mysterious relationship between jazz saxophonist Lee Morgan and his wife, Helen Morgan, who shot and killed the musician outside a Manhattan club in 1972. Also on this week's episode, hear legendary French actor Jean-Pierre Léaud discuss his career-topping role in THE DEATH OF LOUIS XIV with director Albert Serra at the 54th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
Photo by Mettie Ostrowski
www.filminc.org
4/19/2017 • 50 minutes, 44 seconds
#131 - 'My Entire High School Sinking Into the Sea'
Writer/Director Dash Shaw, animator Jane Samborski, and producer Kyle Martin discuss MY ENTIRE HIGH SCHOOL SINKING INTO THE SEA at the 54th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/12/2017 • 52 minutes, 56 seconds
#130 - 'The Lost City of Z' / 'A Quiet Passion'
James Gray, Robert Patterson, and Sienna Miller discuss THE LOST CITY OF Z, and Terence Davies and Cynthia Nixon talk A QUIET PASSION. Both films had their premieres at the 54th New York Film Festival and begin their official theatrical runs on April 14th.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
www.filmlinc.org
4/5/2017 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 47 seconds
#129 - International Co-Productions
Hear an esteemed panel of producers from the U.S. and France discuss the strategies and challenges of international co-productions.
PANELISTS:
David Hinojosa (WEINER-DOG, FRANK & LOLA)
Jay Van Hoy (BEGINNERS, FRANK & LOLA, THE WITCH)
Justin Taurand (2016 IFCIC Award for Best Young Producer)
Gaëlle Mareschi (Kinology and Flexus Films)
Nathan Silver (UNCERTAIN TERMS)
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/29/2017 • 53 minutes, 17 seconds
#128 - Cinema as a Political Tool
During the 22nd Rendez-Vous with French Cinema festival, co-presented with UniFrance, we assembled a panel of filmmakers to discuss how films can address political turmoil or social unrest.
Panelists: Emmanuelle Bercot (150 MILLIGRAMS), Bertrand Bonello (NOCTURAMA), Mira Nair (QUEEN OF KATWE), and Ira Sachs (LITTLE MEN, LOVE IS STRANGE).
3/22/2017 • 46 minutes, 47 seconds
#127 - Agnès Varda / 'Raw'
Hear Agnes Varda discuss her varied and influential career in a live discussion during the 22nd Rendez-Vous With French Cinema festival, co-presented with UniFrance. Also on this week's episode, the director and star of the new French horror film RAW discuss the film after its New York premiere.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/15/2017 • 59 minutes, 37 seconds
#126 - 'Personal Shopper' / 'Certain Women'
Olivier Assayas and Kristen Stewart discuss PERSONAL SHOPPER, which opens in select theaters this weekend. Also, Kristen Stewart discusses CERTAIN WOMEN with director Kelly Reichardt, and co-stars Lily Gladstone and Laura Dern.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/8/2017 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 59 seconds
#125 - Paul Verhoeven
Master provocateur Paul Verhoeven discusses his American breakthrough ROBOCOP and cult classic STARSHIP TROOPERS at our complete retrospective last fall. The director was also joined by lead actor Casper Van Dien for the latter conversation.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/1/2017 • 56 minutes, 23 seconds
#124 - 'Loving' / 'Anatomy of a Male Ballet Dancer'
Directors David Barba and James Pellerito and dancer Marcelo Gomes discuss the documentary ANATOMY OF A MALE BALLET DANCER at Opening Night of the 45th Dance on Camera Festival (co-presented with Dance Films Association), and Jeff Nichols and Ruth Negga discuss LOVING, which is nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Actress category for Negga's performance.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/22/2017 • 54 minutes, 55 seconds
#123 - Film & Media in a Time of Repression (Part 2)
Part two of our panel discussion hosted by the Film Society and Film Quarterly exploring film’s histories and futures in times of fascism, dictatorship, and moments of stress.
--Moderated by critic and Film Quarterly Editor B. Ruby Rich--
PANELISTS:
- Walter Bernstein, Academy Award Nominated Screenwriter (The Front), Author of Inside Out: A Memoir of the Blacklist
- Natalia Brizuela, Associate Professor, UC Berkeley (Department of Spanish & Portuguese)
- Ruth Ben Ghiat, Cultural critic and Professor of History & Italian Studies at New York University
- Michael Gillespie, Associate Professor of Film in the Department of Media and Communication Arts and the Black Studies Program at the City College of New York
- Imani Perry, Princeton University, Hughes-Rogers professor of African American studies at Princeton University
- Susana de Sousa, filmmaker
- Beau Willimon, screenwriter, playwright, producer
- Angela Zito, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Religious Studies
Photo by Jean-Philippe Voiron
2/15/2017 • 1 hour, 18 minutes, 53 seconds
#122 - Film & Media in a Time of Repression (Part 1)
Part one of our panel discussion hosted by the Film Society and Film Quarterly exploring film’s histories and futures in times of fascism, dictatorship, and moments of stress.
--Moderated by critic and Film Quarterly Editor B. Ruby Rich--
PANELISTS:
- Walter Bernstein, Academy Award Nominated Screenwriter (The Front), Author of Inside Out: A Memoir of the Blacklist
- Natalia Brizuela, Associate Professor, UC Berkeley (Department of Spanish & Portuguese)
- Ruth Ben Ghiat, Cultural critic and Professor of History & Italian Studies at New York University
- Michael Gillespie, Associate Professor of Film in the Department of Media and Communication Arts and the Black Studies Program at the City College of New York
- Imani Perry, Princeton University, Hughes-Rogers professor of African American studies at Princeton University
- Susana de Sousa, filmmaker
- Beau Willimon, screenwriter, playwright, producer
- Angela Zito, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Religious Studies
Photo by Jean-Philippe Voiron.
2/8/2017 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 46 seconds
#121 - Tomer Heymann
Documentary filmmaker Tomer Heymann gives an intimate master class at the 26th New York Jewish Film Festival, which is co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Jewish Museum. Heymann's latest film MR. GAGA, profiling Ohad Naharin, renowned Israeli choreographer and artistic director of the Batsheva Dance Company, opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this week.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/1/2017 • 58 minutes, 1 second
#120 - Raoul Peck / Film Comment @ Sundance
Director Raoul Peck discusses his new documentary I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO, which tells the story of race in America through James Baldwin's words. Also, we share an excerpt from the Film Comment dispatch from the Sundance Film Festival. The entire conversation can be heard on the Film Comment Podcast, available on iTunes and at filmcomment.com.
Photo by Lindsey Seide
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/25/2017 • 44 minutes, 30 seconds
#119 - Martin Scorsese (Part 2)
Part 2 of Martin Scorsese and Kent Jones discussing film history. Recorded at our 2001 series The Next Generation of Film, which was co-presented with the New York Times.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/20/2017 • 36 minutes, 37 seconds
#119 - Martin Scorsese (Part 1)
In a special archival episode, Martin Scorsese and Kent Jones have a wide-ranging discussion about film history. Recorded at our 2001 series The Next Generation of Film, which was co-presented with the New York Times. Part 1 of 2.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/18/2017 • 50 minutes, 17 seconds
#118 - Barry Jenkins / Eugène Green
Barry Jenkins discusses his Golden Globe-winning MOONLIGHT at a special screening during our "Illuminating Moonlight" series. Also, Eugène Green discusses THE SON OF JOSEPH, which premiered at the 54th New York Film Festival and is beginning its official theatrical run this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/11/2017 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 50 seconds
#117 - Jim Jarmusch
Jim Jarmusch talks about his influences at the 54th New York Film Festival. The director's latest film, PATERSON, is now in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/4/2017 • 58 minutes
#116 - Mike Mills
Hear writer-director Mike Mills discuss writing, directing, Bogart, and his new film 20TH CENTURY WOMEN at the 54th New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/28/2016 • 56 minutes, 54 seconds
#115 - Maren Ade
German director Maren Ade discusses her festival hit TONI ERDMANN at the 54th New York Film Festival. The film opens in select theaters on Christmas day.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/21/2016 • 44 minutes, 43 seconds
#114 - Denzel Washington + Viola Davis / Adam Driver
On this week's two-part episode, the cast of FENCES discuss the film at a preview screening, and Adam Driver talks PATERSON and SILENCE at the 54th New York Film Festival.
FENCES Q&A - 01:09
Featuring: Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, Jovan Adepo, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Constanza Romero Wilson.
Adam Driver -35:28
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center
www.filmlinc.org
12/14/2016 • 1 hour, 24 seconds
#113 - Iggy Pop + Jim Jarmusch / Isabelle Huppert + Mia Hansen-Løve
Iggy Pop joins Jim Jarmusch to talk about his documentary GIMME DANGER, which chronicles Pop's rise to fame with his band The Stooges.
Also on this week's show, Isabelle Huppert and Mia Hansen-Løve discuss THINGS TO COME, which is now playing in select theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/7/2016 • 51 minutes, 53 seconds
#112 - The Art of Screenwriting
In partnership with the Writers Guild of America, East, we presented a panel discussion on the art of screenwriting at the 54th New York Film Festival. Panelists include Jean-Christophe Castelli (Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk), Rebecca Miller (Maggie’s Plan), and Mike Mills (20th Century Women). Moderated by WGAE President Michael Winship.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/30/2016 • 44 minutes, 6 seconds
#111 - The Art of Casting
Hear an esteemed panel of casting directors discuss the creative and collaborative art of casting at the 54th New York Film Festival.
Panelists: Gayle Keller (CERTAIN WOMEN, LOUIE), Henry Russell Bergstein (MANCHESTER BY THE SEA, MOZART IN THE JUNGLE) and moderator Richard Hicks (ZERO DARK THIRTY, HELL OR HIGH WATER, president of the Casting Society of America).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here. www.filmlinc.org
[Photo by Silvia Saponaro]
11/23/2016 • 57 minutes, 57 seconds
#110 - Kenneth Lonergan
Filmmaker Kenneth Lonergan discusses his new film MANCHESTER BY THE SEA at the 54th New York Film Festival. The critically acclaimed drama, which opens this weekend, stars Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler and Lucas Hedges.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah
11/16/2016 • 47 minutes, 55 seconds
#109 - Paul Verhoeven
Dutch provocateur Paul Verhoeven discusses his new film ELLE, which opens in select theaters this weekend. On the occasion its release, we’re celebrating the director's 40-plus year career with a complete retrospective. "Total Verhoeven" runs November 9th - 23rd with Q&As with Verhoeven and cast members and select screenings. Check out filmlinc.org for more information.
The conversation comes from the 54th New York Film Festival, where the filmmaker joined Dennis Lim for one of our HBO Directors Dialogues.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/9/2016 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 31 seconds
#108 - Ang Lee
Director Ang Lee discussed BILLY LYNN'S LONG HALFTIME WALK after a special World Premiere event during the 54th New York Film Festival. The evening was a part of our HBO Directors Dialogues series.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/2/2016 • 41 minutes, 35 seconds
#107 - I Am Indie: 20 Years of Independent Film
In honor of IndieWire's 20th anniversary, an esteemed panel of artists discussed the last 20 years of independent film at the 54th New York Film Festival earlier this month.
Rose McGowan (Dawn), cinematographer Ellen Kuras (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind), Steve James (Hoop Dreams, Abacus: Small Enough to Jail), Ira Sachs (Little Men), and Roger Ross Williams (Life Animated) join IndieWire's chief film critic and senior editor Eric Kohn to discuss the challenges facing independent artists today, and hopes for the future of the industry.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/26/2016 • 58 minutes, 51 seconds
#106 - Making 'Moonlight'
Director Barry Jenkins discusses the making of his festival hit MOONLIGHT with playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney, indie producer Adele Romanski, and Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner from Plan B, Brad Pitt’s production company. MOONLIGHT opens in theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/19/2016 • 58 minutes, 30 seconds
#105 - Kristen Stewart / 'Aquarius'
Kristen Stewart discusses her life and career at our special "Evening with Kristen Stewart" event during the 54th New York Film Festival. She stars in Kelly Reichardt's CERTAIN WOMEN, which opens in theaters this weekend.
Also on today's episode, Brazilian director Kleber Mendonça Filho and legendary Brazilian actress Sônia Braga discuss their new film AQUARIUS, which opens in select theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/11/2016 • 1 hour, 12 minutes, 43 seconds
#104 - '13TH' Panel at NYFF54
Hear notable subjects from Ava DuVernay's documentary 13TH continue the conversation on mass criminalization and inequality in America. The film was the Opening Night selection in the 54th New York Film Festival, which continues through October 16 here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. For more information, head to filmlinc.org/nyff
Panelists:
Ashley Clark (The Guardian, BFI, Film Comment)
Jelani Cobb (The New Yorker, The Substance of Hope: Barack Obama and the Paradox of Progress)
Malkia Cyril(Center for Media Justice)
Kevin Gannon (Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning)
Khalil Gibran Muhammad (former Director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture)
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
Photo by Lindsey Seide
www.filmlinc.org
10/4/2016 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 29 seconds
#103 - Pedro Almodóvar in 2011
Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar talks filmmaking at the 49th New York Film Festival in 2011. Catch his latest film JULIETA at its New York premiere on October 7th as part of the 54th edition of the festival (September 30 - October 16).
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
Photo by Olga Bas
www.filmlinc.org
9/28/2016 • 36 minutes, 6 seconds
#102 - Oliver Stone
Oliver Stone discusses his new film SNOWDEN with writer Matt Zoller Seitz, author of the new book "The Oliver Stone Experience."
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. FIlm Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Lindsey Seide
9/21/2016 • 27 minutes, 19 seconds
#101 - Charles Burnett / Kirsten Johnson
Charles Burnett discusses his under-appreciated masterpiece TO SLEEP WITH ANGER, which is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. The conversation is excerpted from the Film Comment Podcast, which is available on iTunes, Stitcher, and Google Play. Also on this week's episode, renowned cinematographer Kirsten Johnson discusses her directorial debut CAMERAPERSON, which is now playing in select theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/14/2016 • 31 minutes, 11 seconds
100th Episode!
This week marks the 100th episode The Close-Up! To celebrate, we're sharing clips from our most popular episodes.
1:00 - 6:06 -- Paul Thomas Anderson from Episode #1
6:15 - 17:00 -- Parker Posey from Episode #39
17:05 - 24:36 -- Todd Haynes from Episode #58
24:55 - 35:00 -- David Fincher from a Bonus Archival Episode
35:59 - 43:58 -- New Hollywood? Panel Discussion from Episode #52
44:05 - 53:30 -- Judd Apatow & Lena Dunham from Episode #57
53:44 - 1:02:32 -- Alex Ross Perry & Elisabeth Moss from Episode #46
1:02:42 - 1:10:14 -- Kate Winslet from Episode #54
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/7/2016 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 15 seconds
#99 - Tony Robbins + Joe Berlinger
Motivational speaker and filmmaker Joe Berlinger discuss the new documentary, TONY ROBBINS: I AM NOT YOUR GURU, which is now on Netflix.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here .
www.filmlinc.org
8/31/2016 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 57 seconds
#98 - Ang Lee / James Ivory
Ang Lee discusses his life and career in an HBO Directors Dialogue from the 50th New York Film Festival in 2012. Lee's new film, BILLY LYNN'S LONG HALFTIME WALK, will world premiere at the upcoming 54th New York Film Festival.
Also on this week's episode, hear director James Ivory discuss his landmark Merchant Ivory Production, HOWARDS END, which is being re-released in theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/24/2016 • 1 hour, 20 minutes, 32 seconds
#97 - Immersive Storytelling Goes Global
Every year, NYFF Convergence brings together preeminent innovators in the exciting world of interactive storytelling, featuring virtual reality, augmented reality, installations, and more. This will be the second year in a row Convergence has teamed with StoryCode, a community of creative professionals exploring interactive narrative.
On this week's episode, you'll hear an event from last year called "Immersive Storytelling Goes Global: A Live StoryCode Dispatch," which brought together StoryCode chapter organizers to share happenings and breakthroughs from around the country and the world.
8/17/2016 • 41 minutes, 21 seconds
#96 - NYFF54 Main Slate / David Lowery
Hear the official unveiling of this year's New York Film Festival Main Slate, which features new works from world cinema icons like Pedro Almodovar, Kelly Reichardt and Jim Jarmusch. Festival director Kent Jones discussed the selections in an intimate press conference in our amphitheater. The 54th New York Film Festival will run September 30-October 16.
Also on this week's episode, hear a fascinating Q&A with writer-director David Lowery, whose new film PETE'S DRAGON (a remake of the 1977 Disney film) opens in theaters this weekend. Lowery joined us back in 2013 to discuss his indie hit, AINT THEM BODIES SAINTS, starring Rooney Mara and Casey Affleck.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/10/2016 • 48 minutes, 23 seconds
From the Archives - James Gray
James Gray discusses THE IMMIGRANT in one of our Free Talks in 2014. Gray's new film, THE LOST CITY OF Z, will have its world premiere as the Closing Night selection at the upcoming 54th New York Film Festival (September 30 - October 16).
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah
8/5/2016 • 49 minutes, 3 seconds
#95 - Ira Sachs / Paul Greengrass
Ira Sachs, Greg Kinnear, and Jennifer Ehle discuss the new film LITTLE MEN, which opens here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center on August 5th.
And Paul Greengrass discusses his life and career at the 51st New York Film Festival, where his 2013 film, CAPTAIN PHILLIPS, had its world premiere. Greengrass's latest film, JASON BOURNE, is now in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/3/2016 • 1 hour, 22 minutes, 43 seconds
#94 - Barbara Kopple + Sharon Jones
Academy Award-winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple (HARLAN COUNTY, USA, AMERICAN DREAM) and Grammy-nominated singer Sharon Jones discuss the new documentary, MISS SHARON JONES!, which traces the singer's journey to stardom against the backdrop of her recent battle with cancer. The film opens this Friday, July 29th.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/27/2016 • 36 minutes, 18 seconds
#93 - Ava DuVernay / Jamal Joseph
Announcements have begun for the 54th New York Film Festival!
The Opening Night selection will be the new film from SELMA director Ava DuVernay, THE 13TH, which explores the American prison industry and the horrors of mass criminalization. Eugene Hernandez caught up with DuVernay in Los Angeles over the weekend to discuss the project.
In part two of this week's episode, we're sharing an inspirational panel from last month's Human Rights Watch Film Festival. Following a screening of CHAPTER & VERSE, a film about a reformed gang leader who struggles to re-enter society after eight years in prison, director Jamal Joseph joined lead actor Daniel Beatty and producers Cheryl Hill and Jonathan Singer to talk about racism, gang violence, gentrification, and what it means to forge your own destiny in an outwardly harsh society.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/20/2016 • 1 hour, 12 minutes, 6 seconds
#92 - Abbas Kiarostami / Norman Lear
The directors and subject of NORMAN LEAR: JUST ANOTHER VERSION OF YOU discuss the making of the film at its New York premiere. The evening was moderated by actor and comedian Hasan Minhaj. The film is now playing here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami passed away on July 4th at the age of 76. In honor of the visionary director, we're looking back at his last visit to the Film Society, when he joined us for the US premiere of LIKE SOMEONE IN LOVE at the 50th New York Film Festival. The conversation was moderated by former NYFF director Richard Peña.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Godlis
7/13/2016 • 58 minutes, 29 seconds
From the Archives - Michael Cimino
Michael Cimino and Kris Kristofferson discuss HEAVENS GATE after a screening of the restored director's cut at the 50th New York Film Festival in 2012.
Cimino passed away last week at the age of 77.
HEAVEN'S GATE was Cimino's highly anticipated follow-up to the Oscar winning THE DEER HUNTER, and it is widely known as one of the biggest box office flops in history. The film has been reappraised, however, and many believe it to be a misunderstood classic. After the sold out screening, an emotional Cimino took the stage saying, "It's difficult to be rational in this moment...it's taken 33 years to get here."
This podcast is brought to you be the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah
7/8/2016 • 31 minutes, 48 seconds
#91 - Michel Gondry
French visionary Michel Gondry discusses his latest film, MICROBE & GASOLINE, which had its US premiere at last year's New York Film Festival and is now playing in select theaters. The conversation was part of our NYFF Live Talks, which are sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
7/6/2016 • 42 minutes, 16 seconds
#90 - Nicolas Winding Refn
Nicolas Winding Refn joins us to discuss his latest film THE NEON DEMON, which stars Elle Fanning as an aspiring model in the cutthroat Los Angeles scene. The conversation was part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO. To learn more about upcoming free events, check out filmlinc.org/free.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/29/2016 • 44 minutes, 56 seconds
#89 - The Daniels (Swiss Army Man)
Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (a.k.a. “the Daniels”), the directing team behind the Sundance hit SWISS ARMY MAN, discuss their collaborative process, their award-winning music videos, and the origins of their unique feature debut.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/22/2016 • 43 minutes
#88 - Pierre Lhomme
World-renowned French cinematographer Pierre Lhomme discusses his life and career at a special event in 2013. The evening was in conjunction with the release of a 50th anniversary restoration of LA JOLIE MAI, which was co-directed by Lhomme and Chris Marker, and the conversation followed a screening of Jean-Pierre Melville's ARMY OF SHADOWS.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/15/2016 • 47 minutes, 20 seconds
#87 - Brian De Palma, Noah Baumbach & Jake Paltrow
Brian De Palma, Noah Baumbach, and Jake Paltrow discuss the new documentary DE PALMA, which is directed by Baumbach and Paltrow. The film was a special presentation at the 53rd New York Film Festival and and is being released in theaters this weekend. The directors joined Kent Jones this week for one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/9/2016 • 42 minutes, 57 seconds
#86 - 'The Fits' / 'The Witness'
The filmmakers behind the coming-of-age drama THE FITS, joined us for a Q&A during New Directors/New Films, where it had its New York premiere. Also, the director of THE WITNESS joins subject Bill Genovese and co-producer Melissa Jacobson to talk about the legacy of the infamous Kitty Genovese murder. Both films open in select theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
6/1/2016 • 54 minutes, 55 seconds
From the Archives - Woody Allen
In a bonus episode of The Close-Up, we're looking back at a memorable evening with Woody Allen from 2005. The iconic director's latest film, CAFE SOCIETY, had its world premiere at Cannes this month.
An Evening with Woody Allen took place before the release of his critically acclaimed drama MATCH POINT, and in addition to discussing that film, Allen also talked about his creative process, his approach to directing actors, and where he finds his ideas.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/27/2016 • 31 minutes, 8 seconds
#85 - Athina Rachel Tsangari
Greek filmmaker Athina Rachel Tsangari discusses her new film CHEVALIER, which opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this Friday.
Tsangari was the filmmaker in residence at last fall's New York Film Festival, where CHEVALIER had its US premiere. Our filmmaker in residence program was co-founded by Jaeger-LeCoultre. During the festival she joined IndieWire's Eric Kohn for one of our HBO-sponsored NYFF Live talks.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/25/2016 • 40 minutes, 12 seconds
#84 - 'The Other Side' / Cristian Mungiu
Roberto Minervini stops by to answer questions about his new film, THE OTHER SIDE, which opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this Friday.
Also on this week's episode, we look back to an archival conversation with Romanian director Cristian Mungiu, whose new film, GRADUATION, is premiering at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. Mungiu won the Palme d'Or for his 2007 film 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS, 2 DAYS. Our conversation comes from the 50th New York Film Festival, when the director joined us to discuss his 2012 film, BEYOND THE HILLS, which was a Main Slate selection.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Film Lives Here
www.filmlinc.org
[Photo: Godlis]
5/18/2016 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 27 seconds
#83 - Jim Jarmusch / Yorgos Lanthimos
Jim Jarmusch -- who has two new films in this year's Cannes Film Festival -- discusses his 1995 acid western, DEAD MAN.
Also on this week's episode, Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos and actress Ariane Labed discuss THE LOBSTER, which had its US premiere at last year's New York Film Festival and is being released in theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/11/2016 • 57 minutes, 48 seconds
#82 - Rebecca Miller
Rebecca Miller joins producers Damon Cardasis and Rachael Horovitz, casting director Cindy Tolan, editor Sabine Hoffmann, and writer Karen Rinaldi to discuss MAGGIE'S PLAN, which will be released in theaters later this month.
The talk comes from the 53rd New York Film Festival, where the film had its New York premiere.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
5/4/2016 • 41 minutes
#81 - Susan Sarandon
Legendary actress Susan Sarandon stopped by the Film Society of Lincoln Center to discuss her illustrious career and her new film THE MEDDLER. The conversation was part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO. Photo by Sean DiSerio.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/27/2016 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 17 seconds
#80 - Jon Favreau
Jon Favreau stopped by the Film Society of Lincoln Center for one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO. His latest film is a live-action adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's THE JUNGLE BOOK, which is now in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/20/2016 • 41 minutes, 37 seconds
#79 - 'Louder Than Bombs / 'Green Room'
The director and star of LOUDER THAN BOMBS, Joachim Trier and Gabriel Byrne, discuss the film after a recent sneak preview.
Plus, writer-director Jeremy Saulnier answers questions after a recent screening of GREEN ROOM, his new horror-thriller starring Patrick Stewart, Anton Yelchin, and Alia Shawkat.
LOUDER THAN BOMBS opened in select theaters last weekend, and GREEN ROOM opens this Friday.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
4/13/2016 • 53 minutes, 14 seconds
#78 - 'Neon Bull' / 'Kaili Blues'
This week's episode brings two highlights from this year's New Directors/New Films festival, which is co-presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Museum of Modern Art. Gabriel Mascaro discusses his stunning new film, NEON BULL, and Chinese director Bi Gan talks about his audacious debut film, KAILI BLUES.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Gabriel Honzik.
4/6/2016 • 57 minutes, 56 seconds
#77 - Gregory Crewdson
Renowned photographer Gregory Crewdson joined us to discuss his latest exhibit and book, CATHEDRAL OF THE PINES, at one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Film Lives Here
www.filmlinc.org
3/30/2016 • 52 minutes
#76 - Melvil Poupaud
Acclaimed actor and director Melvil Poupaud discusses his latest role in THE GREAT GAME, which had its US premiere during our Rendez-Vous with French Cinema festival, as well as his experiences working with iconic directors like Raúl Ruiz, Eric Rohmer, François Ozon, and Xavier Dolan.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/23/2016 • 42 minutes, 41 seconds
#75 - Julie Delpy
Julie Delpy stopped by the Film Society of Lincoln Center to discuss French Comedy and her latest film, LOLO, which had its New York premiere in our Rendez-Vous with French Cinema festival last week.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/16/2016 • 52 minutes, 43 seconds
From the Archives - Kelly Reichardt
Kelly Reichardt discusses her approach to filmmaking in 2014 on the occasion of the release of her thriller, NIGHT MOVES. Reichardt's superb debut film, RIVER OF GRASS, referred to by her as a "road movie without the road," is being re-released in select theaters starting today.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/11/2016 • 54 minutes, 39 seconds
#74 - Isabelle Huppert
Renowned French actress Isabelle Hubbert discusses her latest film, VALLEY OF LOVE, which was the Opening Night selection in this year's Rendez-Vous With French Cinema and opens for a theatrical run here at the Film Society on March 25th.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
3/9/2016 • 47 minutes, 6 seconds
#73 - Arnaud Desplechin
French filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin discusses his latest film MY GOLDEN DAYS, which will begin its official theatrical here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center on March 18th.
Beginning on March 11th, we will be celebrating Desplechin's illustrious career with a full retrospective, and the director himself will be joining us for Q&A's at select screenings. Check out filmlinc.org for more information.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
3/2/2016 • 44 minutes, 12 seconds
#72 - Matthew Heineman ('Cartel Land')
Matthew Heineman and Kirsten Johnson (CAMERAPERSON) discuss Heineman's Oscar nominated CARTEL LAND in one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/24/2016 • 57 minutes, 31 seconds
#71 - Jonas Mekas
Avant-garde cinema pioneer Jonas Mekas joins us for one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO.
Jonas Mekas is a name synonymous with alternative film culture in New York City. In addition to his prolific work as a director, Mekas has also been an integral figure in the exhibition and promotion of experimental film. He founded "Film Culture" magazine in 1954, the "Film-Makers Cooperative" in 1962, and the "Filmmakers Cinematheque" in 1964, which went on to become Anthology Film Archives. Two of his pivotal works, LOST LOST LOST and WALDEN were recently released on Blu-ray by Kino Lorber.
Our evening with Jonas Mekas was moderated by programmer Dan Sullivan.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/17/2016 • 49 minutes, 34 seconds
#70 - Jia Zhangke
Chinese director Jia Zhangke discusses his career and approach to filmmaking at one of our HBO Directors Dialogues during the 53rd New York Film Festival. His latest film, MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART, opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center this Friday.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
2/10/2016 • 49 minutes, 56 seconds
From the Archives - Coen Brothers + Noah Baumbach
BONUS EPISODE: In honor of the opening of HAIL, CAESAR!, listen to Joel and Ethan Coen discuss filmmaking with Noah Baumbach in 2011.
The talk comes from the opening of our Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, and the night's topic was opening shots. The three directors examined the openings of many of their films as a jumping-off point for a wide-ranging discussion of their careers.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Godlis.
2/5/2016 • 54 minutes, 41 seconds
#69 - Jane Birkin + Charlotte Gainsbourg
Jane Birkin and Charlotte Gainsbourg join us for opening night of our current series, "Jane and Charlotte Forever," which continues through February 7th with films by Agnès Varda, Jacque Rivette, and Lars Von Trier.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Yifu Chien
2/3/2016 • 45 minutes, 5 seconds
#68 - Curating Film
A collection of New York's finest film curators and programmers discuss film programming in the 21st Century. The talk was moderated by Jens Hoffmann (The Jewish Museum) and featured panelists Dennis Lim (The Film Society of Lincoln Center), Chrissie Iles (The Whitney Museum), Thomas Beard (Light Industry), and Stuart Comer (MOMA).
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Maren McGlashen
1/27/2016 • 1 hour, 13 minutes, 48 seconds
#67 - Ed Lachman ('Carol')
Master cinematographer Ed Lachman discusses working with Todd Haynes, shooting on film vs. digital, composition, and more at the 53rd New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Mettie Ostrowski
1/20/2016 • 51 minutes, 9 seconds
#66 - 'Joy' / Amos Gitai
Part 1: Virginia Madsen and Diane Ladd discuss working on David O. Russell's new film, JOY, which garnered three nominations and one win (Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical for Jennifer Lawrence) at the Golden Globes this past Sunday.
Part 2: Israeli filmmaker Amos Gitai conducts a career-spanning Master Class at the 2014 New York Jewish Film Festival. The 25th edition of the festival begins today, January 13th, and runs through the 26th with premieres, retrospectives, and special events celebrating the diversity of the Jewish experience throughout the world. Check out nyjff.org for more information.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
1/13/2016 • 1 hour, 29 minutes, 31 seconds
#65 - Michael Moore
Michael Moore joins Kent Jones for one of our HBO Directors Dialogues during the 53rd New York Film Festival, where his latest film, WHERE TO INVADE NEXT, had its U.S. premiere. The lively, hour-plus conversation touches on topics like why Moore hates the label "documentarian," how everyday citizens can make a difference, and Hollywood's ongoing problem with gender and racial inequality.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Godlis
1/6/2016 • 1 hour, 13 minutes, 2 seconds
#64 - 'Anomalisa' / '45 Years'
On today's two part episode, hear Tom Noonan discuss Charlie Kaufman's unique and inventive stop-motion comedy, ANOMALISA, and British writer-director Andrew Haigh joins legendary actress, Charlotte Rampling, to discuss the critically acclaimed drama, 45 YEARS.
00:00–01:11 - Intro
01:11–21:30 - ANOMALISA Q&A
23:24–50:49 - 45 YEARS Q&A
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/30/2015 • 50 minutes, 47 seconds
#63 - 'The Revenant' / 'Straight Outta Compton' / Film Comment's Best of 2015
Alejandro Iñárritu, Mark L. Smith, and Mary Parent discuss THE REVENANT; F. Gary Gray, Ice Cube, and O'Shea Jackson Jr. discuss STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON; and a panel of film critics discuss the best films of the year.
00:00–01:51 - INTRO
01:51–14:36 - Film Comment's Best of 2015 (excerpt)
16:05–43:35 - THE REVENANT Q&A
44:15–01:20:50 - STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON Q&A
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah.
12/23/2015 • 1 hour, 20 minutes, 50 seconds
#62 - László Nemes ('Son of Saul') / Dennis Lim (David Lynch)
Dennis Lim dissects the genius of David Lynch, and Hungarian director László Nemes discusses his debut film, SON OF SAUL, which took the Grand Prix at this year's Cannes and screened in the 53rd New York Film Festival earlier this fall. Both conversations were recorded live as part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
filmlinc.org
00:00 – 02:05 | Introduction
02:05 – 28:10 | Dennis Lim
28:10 – 01:10:22 | László Nemes + Géza Röhrig
12/16/2015 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 22 seconds
#61 - Ron Howard
Ron Howard discusses his latest film, IN THE HEART OF THE SEA. The conversation comes from a recent HBO-sponsored Free Talk here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. To find out more about upcoming free events like this one, check out filmlinc.org.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/9/2015 • 47 minutes, 36 seconds
#60 - Miguel Gomes
Portuguese filmmaker Miguel Gomes discusses his three-part epic paean to the art of storytelling, ARABIAN NIGHTS, at the 53rd New York Film Festival.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
12/2/2015 • 43 minutes, 18 seconds
#59 - Ryan Coogler
Listen to filmmaker Ryan Coogler discuss his breakthrough hit, FRUITVALE STATION, at one of our Summer Talks back in 2013. Coogler's latest film, CREED, opens in theaters this weekend.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
11/25/2015 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 14 seconds
#58 - Todd Haynes
Todd Haynes joins Kent Jones for an HBO Directors Dialogue during the 53rd New York Film Festival. In addition to discussing CAROL, which opens in theaters this weekend, Haynes also talks about his many influences, his use of 16mm, and his approach to adaptation.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
filmlinc.org
Film Lives Here
[photo by Olga Bas]
11/18/2015 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 16 seconds
#57 - Judd Apatow + Lena Dunham
Judd Apatow and Lena Dunham discuss writing, comedy, feminism, and Apatow's latest film TRAINWRECK, which was written by and stars Amy Schumer and is now available on DVD. The episode contains explicit language and has been edited for content and length.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Film Lives Here
www.filmlinc.org
[Photo by Julie Cunnah]
11/11/2015 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 2 seconds
#56 - Kent Jones + Noah Baumbach / Rick Alverson
Noah Baumbach talks to Kent Jones about his new film HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT, which opens in select theaters on December 2, and Rick Alverson discusses his dark comedy ENTERTAINMENT, which opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center on November 13.
00:00 - 01:06 – Intro
01:06 - 25:20 – Kent Jones Q&A
25:20 - 53:10 – Rick Alverson Q&A
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Sean DiSerio
11/4/2015 • 53 minutes, 11 seconds
#55 - 'Brooklyn' / "The Working Screenwriter"
Director John Crowley joins actress Saoirse Ronan, screenwriter Nick Hornby, author Colm Tóibín, and producer Finola Dwyer to talk about BROOKLYN, which was a Main Slate selection in the 53rd New York Film Festival and opens in select theaters next week.
Also, screenwriter/journalist Mike Jones gives an insightful and honest presentation about his experiences working as a professional screenwriter. For over 15 years, Jones has worked for independent producers, big studios, and now Pixar.
00:00 - 00:59 – Intro
00:59 - 36:15 – BROOKLYN Press Conference
36:15 - 01:20:04 – Mike Jones "The Working Screenwriter"
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah
10/28/2015 • 1 hour, 20 minutes, 4 seconds
#54 - Kate Winslet / Laura Poitras / Paul Thomas Anderson
On this week's episode, hear Kate Winslet talk about her life and career; Laura Poitras discuss her new project, "Field Of Vision"; and Paul Thomas Anderson talk about his new music documentary, JUNUN, which is currently available exclusively on mubi.com.
00:00-01:21 – Intro
01:21-09:30 – Paul Thomas Anderson Q&A
09:30-10:40 – Kate Winslet Intro
10:40-45:35 – Kate Winslet Conversation
45:35-46:27 – Laura Poitras Intro
46:27-01:20:20 – Laura Poitras Conversation
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/21/2015 • 1 hour, 20 minutes, 21 seconds
#53 - Danny Boyle / Hou Hsiao-hsien
Hear two highlights from the 53rd New York Film Festival. In part one, Danny Boyle discusses his new film STEVE JOBS, and in part two, Hou Hsiao-hsien discusses the films that have inspired him. Both segments come from live events which were sponsored by HBO®.
00:00-02:23 – Intro
02:23-35:56 – Danny Boyle Interview
35:56-37:10 – Hou Hsiao-hsien Intro
37:10-01:05:09 – Hou Hsiao-hsien Interview
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
10/14/2015 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 10 seconds
#52 - "New Hollywood?" / NYFF53 Update
An esteemed panel of producers, writers, and filmmakers including Rose McGowan and Effie Brown discuss the issue of diversity and inclusion in Hollywood at a free NYFF Live talk sponsored by HBO. Additionally, you'll hear some other highlights from the first half of the 53rd New York Film Festival, which continues through October 11.
00:00 – 01:25 Intro
01:25 – 03:31 - THE WALK press conference (excerpt)
03:31 – 08:15 - STEVE JOBS press conference (excerpt)
08:15 – 16:14 - Martin Scorsese Q&A (excerpt)
16:14 – 01:45:02 - "New Hollywood?" panel
"NYFF Live: New Hollywood?" Panelists:
Effie T. Brown (HBO’s Project Greenlight. Producer: Dear White People, Real Women Have Curves)
Ira Deutchman (Executive and producer. Professor, Columbia University)
Mark Harris (Journalist: The New York Times, Grantland. Author: Pictures at a Revolution, Five Came Back)
Susan Lewis (Executive: AK Worldwide, MTV Films)
Mynette Louie (Gamechanger Films. Producer: Land Ho!, Mutual Appreciation)
Rose McGowan (Actress: Death Proof, Grindhouse. Director: Dawn)
Lydia Dean Pilcher (Producer: The Lunchbox, Cutie and the Boxer, The Darjeeling Limited, and The Talented Mr. Ripley.)
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
Photo by Sean Diserio.
www.filmlinc.org
10/7/2015 • 1 hour, 45 minutes, 2 seconds
#51 - Michael Moore in 2012
Michael Moore stopped by The Film Society of Lincoln Center back in 2012 to discuss his seminal debut feature, ROGER & ME. The filmmaker will be joining us at this year's New York Film Festival for the U.S. premiere of his latest film, WHERE TO INVADE NEXT.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/30/2015 • 42 minutes, 49 seconds
#50 - Apichatpong Weerasethakul in 2010
Thai filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul discusses his life and career in an HBO Directors Dialogue from the 48th New York Film Festival in 2010. His new film, CEMETARY OF SPLENDOR, will have its U.S. premiere at the 53rd New York Film Festival, which begins this Friday.
Leading up to this year’s NYFF, we’ve been looking back at some events from our archives that feature some of the stars of this year’s lineup. In case you missed it, check out last week’s wide-ranging discussion with THE WALK director, Robert Zemeckis.
At the 48th NYFF back in 2010, Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s last film, UNCLE BOONMEE WHO CAN RECALL HIS PAST LIVES, had its U.S. premiere after winning the prestigious Palme d’Or at Cannes. During the festival, the director joined programmer Dennis Lim on stage in our Walter Reade Theater. Their far-reaching discussion touched on many aspects of Weerasethakul’s illustrious career, from his unique approach to structure and sound design, to the influence of science-fiction on his work.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Godlis
9/23/2015 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 20 seconds
#49 - Robert Zemeckis in 2012
We're counting down to the 53rd New York Film Festival with archival episodes featuring some of the stars of this year's lineup. Today, we're sharing an HBO Directors Dialogue with Robert Zemeckis from the 50th NYFF in 2012.
The director's new film, THE WALK, starring Joseph Gordon as Phillipe Petit, the high-wire walker who famously strung his wire between the Twin Towers for a death defying display in 1974, will world premiere on opening night of the festival on September 25.
This interview from 2012 was in honor of the premiere of Zemeckis' last film, FLIGHT, which starred Denzel Washington as an alcoholic airline pilot. In addition to discussing that film, the wide-ranging discussion also touched on the director's experience in film school, his 80's blockbusters like BACK TO THE FUTURE and WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT?, and his ventures into CGI animation.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/16/2015 • 1 hour, 7 minutes, 48 seconds
#48 - Richard Gere
Spend some with Richard Gere on today's podcast, which comes from last year's New York Film Festival. The Golden Globe-winning actor joined festival director Kent Jones to discuss his new film, TIME OUT OF MIND, which opens in select theaters this weekend.
Photo by Silvia Sapanaro.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
9/9/2015 • 40 minutes, 24 seconds
#47 - Lily Tomlin + Paul Weitz
Legendary actress and comedian Lily Tomlin joined writer-director Paul Weitz here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center for one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO®. Weitz's new comedy GRANDMA, starring Tomlin, is now in theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Julie Cunnah
9/2/2015 • 50 minutes, 29 seconds
From the Archives - David Fincher
David Fincher discussed his career and approach to filmmaking with critic Todd McCarthy in one of our HBO Directors Dialogues at the 48th New York Film Festival in 2010.
THE SOCIAL NETWORK had its world premiere on opening night of the festival before going on to win the Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture, as well as Academy Awards for best screenwriting, editing, and score.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Godlis
8/28/2015 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 33 seconds
#46 - Alex Ross Perry + Elisabeth Moss
Writer-director Alex Ross Perry joined actress Elisabeth Moss here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center to discuss their new film together, QUEEN OF EARTH. The film opens here today, August 26th, with Moss and Perry in person for Q&As. For more info, check out filmlinc.org.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/26/2015 • 43 minutes, 24 seconds
#45 - Greta Gerwig + Noah Baumbach
Filmmaker Noah Baumbach joined actress and co-writer Greta Gerwig on stage in our Walter Reade Theater to discuss their new film, MISTRESS AMERICA, which is now playing in select theaters. The conversation followed a sneak preview of the film and was moderated by the New York Film Festival Director of Programming Kent Jones.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
Photo by Mettie Ostrowski
8/19/2015 • 38 minutes, 53 seconds
#44 - Salma Hayek
Salma Hayek stopped by the Film Society of Lincoln Center to discuss her latest project, Kahlil Gibran’s THE PROPHET, on which she served as a producer and lent her voice. The live conversation was part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO®.
Hayek joined former Variety critic Scott Foundas in front of a packed house in our amphitheatre to discuss the film, and their wide-ranging discussion also touched on gender inequality, cynicism, and maintaining individuality in Hollywood.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
8/12/2015 • 55 minutes, 5 seconds
#43 - Metropolitan
Bonus episode!
Director Whit Stillman joins cast members Isabel Gillies, Dylan Hundley, and Taylor Nichols to discuss their 90's indie classic METROPOLITAN, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary. A new restoration opens here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center today with Stillman and cast in person for Q&As at select screenings.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.org
8/7/2015 • 41 minutes, 18 seconds
#42 - Marielle Heller / Nadav Lapid
Marielle Heller is the director of the new coming-of-age comedy, THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL, starring Bel Powelle, Kristen Wiig, and Alexander Skarsgaard; and Nadav Lapid is the writer-director of THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER, a beautiful and perplexing drama from Israel. Both movies screened in last spring’s New Directors/New Films series, and today we're sharing the Q&A's that followed their sold out screenings.
THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL opens in select theaters this weekend, and THE KINDERGARTEN TEACHER is now playing here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center.
00:00–01:45 – Intro
01:45–24:00 – Nadav Lapid Q&A
24:00–25:04 – Membership Interstitial
25:04–44:23 – Marielle Heller Q&A
44:23–45:25 – Credits
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
8/5/2015 • 45 minutes, 26 seconds
#41 - Pedro Costa
Portuguese filmmaker Pedro Costa discussed HORSE MONEY at an HBO Directors Dialogue during the 52nd New York Film Festival. In addition to the new film, the acclaimed director also talked about his reverence for Yasujiro Ozu, his approach to directing actors, and his opinion on last year's sci-fi blockbuster, DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
Photo by Godlis
7/29/2015 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 32 seconds
From the Archives - Paul Schrader
For this month's selection from our archives, we're presenting an event from 2006, which coincided with the publication of an essay Paul Schrader wrote for Film Comment entitled “Canon Fodder.” The piece dissected the criteria by which we determine which films deserve to be called the greatest of all time, and on the occasion of its release, Paul Schrader joined New York Film Festival Director of Programming Kent Jones on stage to talk about film canons, Wong Kar Wai, Pauline Kael, and his pick for the greatest of all time, Jean Renoir’s RULES OF THE GAME.
Read the full essay here (http://www.filmcomment.com/article/cannon-foder-paul-schraders-criteria).
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
7/24/2015 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 42 seconds
#40 - Joshua Oppenheimer
Joshua Oppenheimer discusses his new documentary, THE LOOK OF SILENCE, which is a companion piece to his Oscar-nominated THE ACT OF KILLING (2014). The discussion was part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO®.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
7/22/2015 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 50 seconds
#39 - Parker Posey
Parker Posey stopped by The Film Society of Lincoln Center to discuss her role in Woody Allen's IRRATIONAL MAN, which opens this Friday. The evening was part of our ongoing Free Talks series, which is sponsored by HBO®.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
filmlinc.com
Photo by Mettie Ostrowski
7/15/2015 • 40 minutes, 12 seconds
#38 - Sean Baker / '54'
Indie director Sean Baker talks with Film Comment's Violet Lucca about the new film TANGERINE. The film, which David Ehrlich (Time Out) describes as "a Pedro Almodovar remake of CRANK," opens here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center on July 10th.
After that, you'll hear a Q&A from a screening of the newly restored director's cut of 1998 film, '54.' Director Mark Christopher, producer Ira Deutchman, editor Lee Percy, and production designer Kevin Thompson joined our Deputy Director Eugene Hernandez on stage to discuss the film's tumultuous journey.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
00:00–02:21 - INTRO
02:21–26:05 - Sean Baker Interview
26:05–28:45 - '54' INTRO
28:45–01:02:51 - '54' Q&A
7/8/2015 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 51 seconds
#37 - Rose McGowan / Alan Rickman
Actor-turned director Rose McGowan stopped by for one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO®. The conversation followed a screening of her directorial debut, the short film DAWN, which tells a disturbing story of a young girl's coming of age. DAWN is now available to watch free on YouTube.
After that, you'll hear a live conversation with British actor/director Alan Rickman, who stopped by to discuss his latest film, A LITTLE CHAOS, which stars Kate Winslet, Matthias Schoenaerts, and Stanley Tucci. A LITTLE CHAOS is now playing in select theaters.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
Photo by Mettie Ostrowski.
7/1/2015 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 48 seconds
From the Archives - Michael Haneke + Darren Aronofsky
Michael Haneke and Darren Aronofsky talk cinema on today's bonus episode, which features a conversation from one of our HBO Directors Dialogues at the 47th New York Film Festival.
We hope you've been enjoying the Film Society of Lincoln Center's weekly podcast The Close-Up. Today, we're excited to bring you the first in a series of monthly bonus episodes featuring content from our archives, which span more than 40 years of the New York Film Festival, Chaplin Award Gala, retrospectives, series, and special events.
What better way to start than with two giants of contemporary cinema: Michael Haneke and Darren Aronofsky. This fascinating conversation comes from one of our HBO Directors Dialogues at the 47th New York Film Festival back in 2009. It coincided with the premiere of Haneke’s Palme d'Or winner The White Ribbon in the festival’s main slate, with Aronofsky acting as the evening’s moderator. The two touched on Haneke’s distinctive approach to post-production, casting, and sound design.
Haneke and Aronofsky have a long history with the Film Society. Both directors’ debut features—Haneke’s The Seventh Continent (1989) and Aronofsky’s Pi (1992)—played at New Directors/New Films, which we co-present with The Museum of Modern Art each spring. Additionally, Haneke’s Benny’s Video (1992), Caché (2005), and Amour (2012) were all NYFF Main Slate selections and Aronofsky's The Wrestler closed the festival in 2008.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
Photo by Godlis
6/26/2015 • 37 minutes, 5 seconds
#36 - The Overnight / Julie Taymor
Today's episode features writer/director Patrick Brice, actors Jason Schwartzman, Adam Scott, Judith Godrèche, and producer Naomi Scott discussing their new comedy THE OVERNIGHT, as well as acclaimed film and theater director Julie Taymor discussing her latest film A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM.
Julie Taymor joined us here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center for one of our Summer Talks, which are sponsored by HBO®. David Rooney from The Hollywood Reporter moderated the conversation in our amphitheater, which centered around her latest film documenting a 2014 performance of her magnificent production of A MIDSUMMER NIGHTS DREAM. We're excited to share an excerpt from this fascinating discussion in the first part of this episode.
In part two, you'll hear from the director and cast of THE OVERNIGHT, which had a sneak preview screening here at The Film Society ahead of its release last weekend. The comedy (which led the specialty box office earnings last weekend) will open in wider release on June 26th. The evening was moderated by The Film Society's Nicholas Kemp.
Warning: The discussion of The Overnight contains some spoilers.
00:00 - 01:18 – Intro
01:18 - 02:48 – Julie Taymor Intro
02:48 - 28:12 – Julie Taymor Interview
28:12 - 30:18 – THE OVERNIGHT Intro
30:18 - 01:03:00 – THE OVERNIGHT Q&A
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
6/24/2015 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 7 seconds
#35 - The Wolfpack / Eden
Screenwriter Sven Hansen-Løve and actor Felix De Givry discuss their work in EDEN, the new film from acclaimed French director Mia Hansen-Løve. EDEN was a main slate selection in the 52nd New York Film Festival last fall, and it opens in theaters this weekend.
In part two, director Crystal Moselle talks about her Sundance hit THE WOLFPACK, which opened here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center last weekend. Following a sneak preview of the film, Moselle joined the film's subjects - the movie-obsessed Angulo family - on stage for a in depth Q&A.
00:00–02:28 - Intro
02:28–22:55 - EDEN Interview
22:55–25:40 - THE WOLFPACK Intro
25:40–53:01 - THE WOLFPACK Q&A
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
6/17/2015 • 53 minutes, 1 second
#34 - The Nightmare
Director Rodney Ascher (ROOM 237) discusses his new film THE NIGHTMARE on today's episode.
For his highly anticipated follow-up to 2012's ROOM 237, the director turned his attention to the terrifying subject of sleep paralysis. In the film, he interviews eight people who suffer from the affliction, and he cross-cuts their interviews with vivid reenactments of the nightmares they describe. The result is an intense experience that evokes the overwhelming fear that consumes the storytellers.
The film opened here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center last Friday and is now playing daily. On opening night, while a packed house enjoyed the film, we sat down with the director in our greenroom to discuss it. Our conversation started with the director's own experience with sleep paralysis, and from there we touched on subjects like artifice, visual influences, and the supernatural.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
6/10/2015 • 37 minutes, 50 seconds
#33 - 2015 Cannes Film Festival
On this week's episode, The Film Society looks back at last month's Cannes Film Festival which awarded Jacques Audiard’s DHEEPAN with the Palm d'Or.
Part one features a Film Comment roundtable in which critics Alexander Horvath (Vienna Film Museum), Charlotte Garçon (Paris), Scott Foundas (Variety), Anton Dolin (Evening Moscow), and Gavin Smith (Film Comment) discuss the best and worst of the festival.
Part two features a conversation between Film Society Deputy Director Eugene Hernandez and director Jonas Carpignano, whose film MEDITERRANEA screened in the festival’s critics week sidebar.
The podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
00:00 - 02:55 - Intro
02:55 - 32:30 - Film Comment Roundtable
33:05 - 33:52 - Jonas Carpignano Intro
33:52 - 52:18 - Jonas Carpignano Interview
6/3/2015 • 52 minutes, 18 seconds
#32 - Safdie Brothers / Karl Ove Knausgaard
On this week's episode of our podcast The Close-Up, we sat down with filmmaking brothers Josh and Benny Safdie. Their new film Heaven Knows What had its U.S. Premiere at the 52nd New York Film Festival last fall.
Heaven Knows What is a gritty New York drama starring Arielle Holmes as Harley, a heroin addict in a chaotic relationship with the explosive Ilya, played by Caleb Landry Jones. Much of the film was shot just blocks from Lincoln Center and it is based on Holmes’s own experiences living as a junkie on the streets of New York. On the occasion of its theatrical release, Film Comment Digital Editor Violet Lucca spoke with the Safdie brothers about the film. The candid conversation ranged from their approach to the film's score, their relationship to the cast, and the challenges of shooting in New York.
As a bonus, the episode also features an excerpt from our recent conversation with Norwegian author Karl Ove Knausgaard (My Struggle), who joined us for our new series Print Screen, which invites authors to present films that have complimented and inspired their work. Knausgaard chose to present Lars von Trier's Dogme 95 classic The Idiots, and following the screening he joined our Director of Programming Dennis Lim to discuss what the film, and cinema in general, means to him and his work.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
00:00-01:16 – Intro
01:16-04:20 – Karl Ove Knausgaard
05:23-06:48 – Safdie Brothers (Intro)
06:48-47:40 – Safdie Brothers (Interview)
5/27/2015 • 48 minutes, 39 seconds
#31 - Jia Zhang-ke in 2008
This week's episode features an archival conversation with Jia Zhang-ke, one of the most influential filmmakers in modern Chinese cinema. Jia is receiving the prestigious Carrosse d’Or (Golden Coach) award during this month's Cannes Film Festival and his latest film, MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART, is also screening in competition.
Jia Zhang-ke is one of the leading figures of the "Sixth Generation" of Chinese cinema, and we've welcomed him to the Film Society many times over the years. Back at the 2008 New York Film Festival, he came to present his documentary-fiction hybrid 24 CITY, which deals with the changing industrial landscape of Chengdu as a factory is torn down and replaced by luxury flats.
The film screened as part of the festival's main slate and, during his visit, the director sat down with critic Scott Foundas for one of our HBO Directors Dialogues. During the conversation, he discussed his beginnings as a filmmaker at the Beijing Film Academy, his criticisms of the "Fifth Generation" of Chinese filmmakers, and his singular approach to nonfiction filmmaking.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
5/20/2015 • 50 minutes, 31 seconds
Bonus Episode - Robert Redford Chaplin Award
In this special bonus episode of our weekly podcast The Close-Up, we're thrilled to present highlights from our 42nd annual Chaplin Award Gala honoring Robert Redford.
The star-studded evening kicked off with a hilarious speech by Jane Fonda, who received the Chaplin Award in 2001 and starred alongside Redford in The Chase (1966), Barefoot in the Park (1967), and The Electric Horseman (1979). After that, we heard from writer-director J.C. Chandor, whose 2013 film All Is Lost was an official selection at the 51st New York Film Festival and starred Redford (and Redford only) as a man lost at sea. The final speaker, Barbra Streisand, was another Chaplin Award recipient, back in 2013, and offered heartfelt praise for her The Way We Were (1973) co-star before finally bringing him out on stage to accept the award.
The Chaplin Award Gala is the Film Society of Lincoln Center's major fundraising event, helping to support our ongoing work in education, artist development, and cross-cultural film outreach. Past recipients include Sidney Poitier, Meryl Streep, Alfred Hitchcock, Audrey Hepburn, and, of course, Chaplin himself.
00:42 - 06:10 - Jane Fonda
06:10 - 12:56 - JC Chandor
12:56 - 16:14 - Barbara Streisand
16:14 - 24:00 - Robert Redford
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
5/16/2015 • 24 minutes, 58 seconds
#30 - Agnès Varda
Legendary French filmmaker Agnès Varda, who will be a recipient of an honorary Palme d'Or at Cannes, is the focus of this week's episode.
The director stopped by the Film Society during our second annual Art of the Real festival, during which she was honored with a sidebar retrospective entitled The Actualities of Agnès Varda.
Art of the Real is founded on the most expansive possible view of documentary film, and the selections from Varda's work showed the director's repeated interest in the boundary between fiction and nonfiction. Even in her fictions films, she always incorporated elements of the real.
Following a screening of her seminal debut, LA POINTE COURTE, Agnès Varda joined festival co-programmer Rachel Rakes for a Q&A. Besides sharing fascinating anecdotes from the making of the film, Varda also told stories of her interactions with other icons of French cinema like Alain Resnais, Francois Truffaut, and André Bazin.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
5/13/2015 • 37 minutes, 48 seconds
#29 - Bertrand Bonello
In honor of the release of his latest film, SAINT LAURENT, French filmmaker Bertrand Bonello stopped by the Film Society for a Q&A. The director was joined by actors Gaspar Ulliel and Aymeline Valade for a lively discussion with Director of Programming Dennis Lim.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
5/6/2015 • 30 minutes, 34 seconds
#28b - 'White God'
For part two of this week's podcast, we're featuring a conversation with the director and screenwriter of the Hungarian thriller, WHITE GOD.
Director Kornél Mundruczó and screenwriter Kata Wéber joined Film Comment's Gavin Smith for a Q&A during our annual New Directors/New Films series, which is co-presented with The Museum of Modern Art. WHITE GOD was one of the most buzzed-about films in the festival and the conversation took place in front of a sold out crowd in our Walter Reade Theater.
The film tells parallel stories of a young girl’s coming-of-age and the treacherous journey of her dog Hagen after he is let go by the girl’s strict father. The director offered fascinating insight into the film's production, which required the cooperation of no less than 200 dogs. It was miraculously done without relying on CGI, and the director emphasized that no dogs were harmed in the making of the movie. In fact, all 200 of the dogs were successfully placed into foster homes after the production completed.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
4/29/2015 • 24 minutes, 4 seconds
#28a - Albert Maysles
For part one of this week's podcast, we're featuring a conversation with Albert Maysles from last year's New York Film Festival. The Q&A took place after a screening of his latest film, IRIS, which is now in theaters.
The legendary director passed away this past March, and his presence will be sorely missed, but he will live on through his hugely influential films.
Albert Maysles was an important member of our extended Film Society family. "Grey Gardens" premiered at the 13th New York Film Festival in 1975 and IRIS had its world premiere here at the 52nd NYFF last year.
The film follows Iris Apfel, the quick-witted, flamboyantly dressed 93-year-old style maven who has had an outsized presence on the New York fashion scene for decades. More than a fashion film, the documentary is a story about creativity and how, even in Iris' dotage, a soaring free spirit continues to inspire.
This podcast is produced by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
4/29/2015 • 28 minutes, 57 seconds
#27 - 'Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck'
For this week's episode, we're featuring filmmaker Brett Morgen, whose new documentary Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck begins its limited theatrical release this weekend.
Morgen's HBO Documentary feature is the first documentary to be made about the late Nirvana singer and guitarist with the cooperation of his family. Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, approached Morgen about the idea of taking on the projects back in 2007. With that blessing, Morgen and his team were given unprecedented access to Cobain's personal and family archives. The powerful film includes footage of various Nirvana performances and unheard songs as well as previously unreleased home movies, recordings, artwork photography and more.
Additionally, the film includes interviews with Kurt Cobain's mother, Wendy, and father, Donald Cobain, as well as with Courtney Love. Kurt and Courtney's only daughter, Frances Bean Cobain, served as a co-executive producer of the film. After its debut at Sundance in January, the film screened at the 65th Berlin International Film Festival in February. HBO will begin airing the feature May 4th.
Morgen and the film's editor Joe Beshenkovsky joined the Film Society's Eugene Hernandez on stage at the Walter Reade Theater this past Monday night, following the screening of the film, for an extensive conversation about Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck, digging through Kurt Cobain's art, writing and music (the film contains previously unreleased music) and working with Courtney Love and Frances Cobain.
David Fear of Rolling Stone described the film as "the unfiltered Kurt experience," noting that Cobain is shown "not as a spokesperson of a generation," but as a "human being, husband and father."
4/22/2015 • 45 minutes, 57 seconds
#26 - 'Dior and I'
For this week's episode, we're featuring a conversation with filmmaker Frederic Tcheng, whose latest film, DIOR AND I, is now playing daily at The Film Society at Lincoln Center.
Dior and I gives a fascinating glimpse into the inner-workings of the fashion industry—in this case, the hallowed, 69-year-old house of Christian Dior. The film is the sophomore directorial effort from Frédéric Tcheng and his first as solo director.
Following the opening night screening of DIOR AND I, Tcheng sat with our own Eugene Hernandez here at the Walter Reade Theater for an intimate discussion about the film.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
4/15/2015 • 40 minutes, 14 seconds
#25 - Olivier Assayas, Kristen Stewart & Juliette Binoche
This week's two-part episode features French filmmaker Olivier Assayas. Special guests include actresses Juliette Binoche and Kristen Stewart, who co-star in his latest film, CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA, opening in theaters next weekend.
CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA, a main-slate selection of last year’s New York Film Festival, stars Binoche as a veteran actress coming to terms with her life and career after agreeing to act in a revival of the play that made her famous 20 years earlier. Stewart plays her assistant, who accompanies her on a soul-searching journey through the Sils Maria region of the Swiss Alps.
Assayas has been called the most innovative and influential French director of his generation, and his relationship to the New York Film Festival goes all the back to 1996, when his film IRMA VEP was included in that year’s festival.
Preceding the official NYFF52 screening of Clouds of Sils Maria, Assayas joined Binoche and Stewart onstage for a conversation with press, moderated by the festival’s director of programming, Kent Jones. The discussion will serve as part one of today’s episode.
Part two comes from 2004, when the director took the stage following a screening of his seminal 1996 film, IRMA VEP. That film stars Maggie Cheung as herself cast in an ill-fated production of a remake of Louis Feullade's classic silent film serial LES VAMPIRES. This fascinating conversation was also moderated by our own Kent Jones.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
00:00–02:13 - Intro
02:13–25:04 - Clouds of Sils Maria Press Conference
25:04–01:16:34 - Olivier Assayas Talk (2004)
4/8/2015 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 34 seconds
#24 - Noah Baumbach + Brian De Palma
This week's episode features a two-part conversation with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Noah Baumbach. Part one comes from a recent Q&A after a screening of his latest, WHILE WE'RE YOUNG; and part two comes from the 2012 New York Film Festival, when Baumbach sat with legendary director Brian De Palma for a very special Directors Dialogue.
Baumbach returned to the Film Society of Lincoln Center in March for a mini-retrospective entitled Growing Up Baumbach, which included a triple feature of KICKING AND SCREAMING, THE SQUID AND THE WHALE, and a sneak preview of WHILE WE'RE YOUNG.
In the film, which is now in theaters, Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts star as a married couple in their forties who connect with a younger couple played by Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried. The comedy has been hailed as the director’s most accessible film. In fact, at a recent screening the director jokingly said: “What you are about to see is the happiest I get.”
Noah Baumbach has a long history with the Film Society of Lincoln Center, starting in 1995 when his debut feature, KICKING AND SCREAMING, was a main-slate selection in the New York Film Festival. Since then, he has attended subsequent NYFFs to present THE SQUID AND THE WHALE in 2005, MARGOT AT THE WEDDING in 2007, and FRANCES HA in 2012.
In 2010, the director took the stage with legendary director Brian De Palma for a special Directors Dialogue moderated by Variety’s Scott Foundas, which is featured in part two of today's podcast.
But first, part one spotlights Baumbach's most recent appearance at the Film Society's Walter Reade Theater, with a talk moderated by New York Film Festival Director Kent Jones.
00:00–2:40 - Intro
02:40–30:59 - WHILE WE'RE YOUNG Q&A
31:54–01:42:48 - Noah Baumbach + Brian De Palma at NYFF50
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
4/1/2015 • 1 hour, 42 minutes, 49 seconds
#23 - Mad Men: The End of an Era
In celebration of the highly anticipated conclusion of the AMC series Mad Men, the Film Society paid tribute to the show with a gala event in Alice Tully Hall.
Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner and stars Jon Hamm, January Jones, Christina Hendricks, and John Slattery joined journalist Chuck Klosterman, who moderated the lively on-stage conversation about the Emmy and Golden Globe-winning series, looking back at the popular TV show's seven seasons. The event, which took place Saturday, March 21 here at Lincoln Center, was dubbed "Mad Men: The End of an Era."
Mad Men is set in the '60s initially at the fictional Sterling Cooper advertising agency on Madison Avenue in New York. The series has received widespread critical acclaim since its debut nearly eight years ago for its historical authenticity, visual style, costume design, acting, writing, and directing.
The series' list of awards include 15 Emmys and four Golden Globes. It is the first basic-cable series to win the Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series.
Before a packed house, most of the cast members walked out on stage fittingly with cocktails in hand. Before opening the 90-minute discussion, Klosterman noted that many people who have been ardent viewers of Mad Men had not lived through the era, which the series so meticulously depicted. "What's amazing is that [there are many] people who feel nostalgia for an era they never actually experienced," he said. "But that also [shows] the power of advertising…"
The event featured favorite clips from various seasons of the series, curated by Weiner and cast. The podcast includes quick synopses of the clips to contextualize the conversation.
Mad Men premiered in July 2009 on AMC. The cable network will begin airing the final episodes of the series on April 5.
This podcast is brought to you by the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film lives here.
www.filmlinc.com
3/25/2015 • 1 hour, 31 minutes, 28 seconds
#22 – Ethan Hawke
This week's episode comes from last year's New York Film Festival, during which the Film Society paid tribute to actor/ director Ethan Hawke. The special event featured a dinner followed by an intimate discussion with programming director Kent Jones.
During the conversation, Hawke spoke at length about his fruitful collaborations with director Richard Linklater, his work in mainstream Hollywood, and his recent transition to working as a director. His directorial debut - SEYMOUR: AN INTRODUCTION - was an official selection in the festival and is now in theaters. The documentary profiles the legendary pianist Seymour Bernstein, who was in attendance at the event.
When discussing his reasons for making the film, Hawke admitted that in order to understand, one would need to hear Seymour play. Bernstein then graced the audience with a beautiful rendition of a Brahms Intermezzo.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
3/18/2015 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 39 seconds
#21 - Mélanie Laurent + Nathalie Baye
Two of the most accomplished actresses in contemporary French cinema—Mélanie Laurent and Nathalie Baye—discuss their careers in one of our Free Talks, which are sponsored by HBO®.
Nathalie Baye is a living legend of French cinema who began her career working with the likes of Jean-Luc Godard, Maurice Pialat, and Francois Truffaut. More recently, Baye has shown no signs of slowing down as she continues to produce exciting work with directors like Tsai Ming-liang and Xavier Dolan. Her latest film, SK1, is a suspenseful thriller that chronicles the multi-year hunt, arrest, and trial of serial killer Guy Georges. This past Sunday, Baye sat down with César Award-winning actress and filmmaker, Mélanie Laurent to discuss their work and careers with film critic Stephen Witty in the Film Society's Amphitheater. Laurent is best known to American audiences for her work in films like INGLORIOUS BASTERDS and BEGINNERS.
During the discussion, Baye spoke candidly about her relationship with directors, admitting that all she wants is “to be loved.” Truffaut, she said, was great with actors simply because he loved them well. On Godard, Baye said that he is “the biggest thief,” before adding, “I say [this] with the most tenderness.”
Mélanie Laurent made her directorial debut with 2011’s THE ADOPTED, and her follow-up, BREATHE, made its New York premiere here at the Film Society this past Saturday. The actress turned director spoke at length about her experiences stepping behind the camera and gave her perspective on what makes actor-director relationships flourish. She also admitted that directing has been her dream since she was a little girl.
Both SK1 and BREATHE are official selections of the 20th Rendez-Vous with French Cinema, currently underway at the Film Society. Co-produced with UniFrance films, the annual series surveys the latest and greatest in French cinema. .
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
3/11/2015 • 40 minutes, 17 seconds
#20 - Liv Corfixen + Nicolas Winding Refn
Filmmaker Liv Corfixen is the focus of this week's episode of The Close-Up, the Film Society of Lincoln Center's weekly podcast series.
Corfixen's documentary, MY LIFE DIRECTED BY NICOLAS WINDING REFN offers an intimate look behind the scenes of Nicolas Winding Refn's (Corfixen's husband) controversial film ONLY GOD FORGIVES. It is currently playing daily here at the Film Society.
The first part of this week's episode comes from this past Saturday, when Corfixen and Refn took the stage for a Q&A after a screening of the film. This event was moderated by Rolling Stone's David Fear.
After this, we are revisiting a live conversation between Nicolas Winding Refn and our own John Wildman from 2013, which was in honor of the opening of ONLY GOD FORGIVES here at the Film Society.
0:00 - 2:50 - Intro
2:50 - 25:50 - Liv Corfixen + Nicolas Winding Refn Q&A
26:20 - 1:22:55 - Nicolas Winding Refn Summer Talk (2013)
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
3/4/2015 • 1 hour, 22 minutes, 55 seconds
#19 - David Cronenberg
For this week’s episode of The Close-Up, we’re proud to present an archival conversation with master director David Cronenberg, whose latest film, MAPS TO THE STARS, hits theaters this weekend.
Back in 2005, the Film Society of Lincoln Center paid tribute to David Cronenberg leading up that year’s release of A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE. That film went on to garner widespread critical acclaim with Peter Travers (Rolling Stone) praising its “explosive power and subversive wit,” and Manohla Dargis (New York Times) calling it a “mindblower.” For our 2005 tribute, The Film Society capped off a retrospective of the director’s work with “An Evening with David Cronenberg,” which featured a conversation with journalist David D’Arcy.
The hour-plus discussion touched on many aspects of Cronenberg’s extensive career through the lens of the director’s rare moment of studio favor. “I’ve been getting a lot more offers from studios,” he said, “this will last about 10 minutes but I’m - for an older guy - kind of hot right now.” In addition to his dealings with studios, the director also speaks candidly about his relationship with critics, which he describes as very strange.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
Photo by Godlis
2/25/2015 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 19 seconds
#18 - Birdman
It's Oscar week!
In the spirit of this Sunday's Academy Awards, we are paying tribute to BIRDMAN, which is tied with Wes Anderson's THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL for the most nominations.
BIRDMAN was the Closing Night selection at last year's New York Film Festival, and hours before its official screening director Alejandro González Iñárritu joined Michael Keaton, Edward Norton, Naomi Watts, Emma Stone, Zach Galifianakis, and Amy Ryan on stage to discuss the film. We are proud to share this fascinating conversation for this week's episode of The Close-Up.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society Of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
2/18/2015 • 42 minutes, 46 seconds
#17 - Abderrahmane Sissako
Director Abderrahmane Sissako is the focus of this week's episode. The filmmaker joined co-host Brian Brooks on stage during last year's New York Film Festival to discuss TIMBUKTU. The film, which is currently in theaters, is nominated for the Academy Award for best foreign language film.
This talk was a part of our NYFF Live series, which is sponsored by HBO®. This series of free talks extends beyond the festival with year-round discussions from actors and filmmakers. Check filmlinc.com for more information.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
2/11/2015 • 28 minutes, 34 seconds
#16 - Liv Ullmann
For this episode of The Close-up, screen legend and director Liv Ullmann sat down with our own Brian Brooks as part of our ongoing Free Talks series here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center, which is sponsored by HBO®.
For information about upcoming free events like the one featured in this episode, check out filmlinc.com.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
2/4/2015 • 56 minutes, 53 seconds
#15 - Jay and Mark Duplass
Jay and Mark Duplass discuss their new HBO® series, TOGETHERNESS. The comedy-drama stars Mark Duplass, Melanie Lynskey, Amanda Peet, and Steve Zissis and airs on Sundays at 9:30pm.
As part of our HBO®-sponsored Free Talks series here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center, the Duplass Brothers joined our own Brian Brooks for a lively discussion following a screening of the show's first two episodes.
For more information about upcoming events like this, visit our website at www.filmlinc.com.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. #FilmLivesHere.
1/28/2015 • 48 minutes, 51 seconds
#14 - Xavier Dolan
Xavier Dolan sits with the Film Society's deputy director Eugene Hernandez to discuss his new film, Mommy, which opens at the Film Society on January 23rd.
The discussion took place as part of our ongoing Free Talks series here at The Film Society of Lincoln Center, which is sponsored by HBO. Recent guests of the program have included Jay and Mark Duplass, and Liv Ullman. Stay tuned at filmlinc.com for information on upcoming events.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
For more information, visit http://www.filmlinc.com/
1/21/2015 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 14 seconds
#13 - Eddie Redmayne + Felicity Jones
Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones sit down with The Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney to discuss their work in The Theory of Everything. The discussion followed a screening of the film here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
This talk is presented in partnership with The Hollywood Reporter.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
For more information, visit www.filmlinc.com.
1/14/2015 • 50 minutes, 59 seconds
#12 - Jennifer Aniston + Anna Kendrick
Jennifer Aniston and Anna Kendrick discuss their new film "Cake." The conversation followed a screening of the film here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and was moderated by Columbia Film Professor and Moderator of the REEL PIECES series at Manhattan's 92nd Street Y Annette Insdorf.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
1/7/2015 • 34 minutes, 30 seconds
#11 - Tim Burton
Tim Burton's latest film "Big Eyes" is now in theaters.
The visionary director and producer has a long history with the Film Society - "The Nightmare Before Christmas" premiered at the 31st New York Film Festival and "Ed Wood" screened at 32nd - and we are thrilled to present an event from our archives on the occasion of his new film.
In 2005, Tim Burton spoke with the Film Society's then Director of Programming Richard Peña ahead of the release of his animated fantasy "Corpse Bride." He spoke extensively about his approach to animation, his formative experiences as a young artist in Burbank, and his reliance on collaboration.
This podcast is brought to you by The Film Society of Lincoln Center. Film Lives Here.
www.filmlinc.com
12/31/2014 • 27 minutes, 42 seconds
#10 - Trent Reznor + Atticus Ross
Composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross talk with Shirley Halperin (Billboard, The Hollywood Reporter) about their work on David Fincher's GONE GIRL. The film marks the duo's third collaboration with Fincher, starting with THE SOCIAL NETWORK in 2010 followed by THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO in 2011.
The discussion touched on their process, their thoughts on mixing music and dialogue, and the differences between working on a film and a record.
Film Lives Here
filmlinc.com
12/24/2014 • 39 minutes, 58 seconds
#9 - Mike Leigh
Director Mike Leigh sat down with Amy Taubin during the 52nd New York Film Festival to discuss his new film "Mr. Turner." The conversation was part of NYFF's Directors Dialogue series, which is sponsored by HBO®.
12/17/2014 • 57 minutes, 52 seconds
Bonus Episode - Film Comment's Best Films of 2014
The editors of Film Comment magazine discuss the results of their Best Films of 2014 poll. The list is culled from over 100 critics and programmers and is split into two categories: films that received theatrical runs in 2014 and those viewed this year that currently have no announced plans for U.S. theatrical distribution.
The magazine's digital editor Violet Lucca sat down with editor-in-chief Gavin Smith and senior editor Nicolas Rapold to discuss this year's list.
Read more at filmcomment.com
The Best Released Films of 2014:
1. Boyhood (Richard Linklater)
2. Goodbye To Language (Jean-Luc Godard)
3. The Grand Budapest Hotel (Wes Anderson)
4. Ida (Pawel Pawlikowski)
5. Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer)
6. Stranger by the Lake (Alain Guiraudie)
7. Citizen Four (Laura Poitras)
8. Birdman or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance
(Alejandro G. Iñárritu)
9. Inherent Vice (Paul Thomas Anderson)
10. The Immigrant (James Gray)
The Best Unreleased Films of 2014:
1. The Wonders (Alice Rohrwacher)
2. Hill of Freedom (Hong Sang-soo)
3. Pasolini (Abel Ferrara)
4. The Iron Ministry (J.P. Sniadecki)
5. From What Is Before (Lav Diaz)
6. Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait (Ossama Mohammed & Wiam Bedirxan)
7. Approaching the Elephant (Amanda Wilder)
8. The Kindergarten Teacher (Nadav Lapid)
9. Stray Dog (Debra Granik)
10. Socialism (Peter von Bagh)
12/15/2014 • 35 minutes, 52 seconds
#8 - Marion Cotillard
Actress Marion Cotillard talks with Variety's Scott Foundas about her career and her role in Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne's "Two Days One Night" at the 52nd New York Film Festival. NYFF Live is sponsored by HBO®.
12/10/2014 • 52 minutes, 33 seconds
#7 - Damien Chazelle
Damien Chazelle talks about his film "Whiplash" at the 52nd New York Film Festival. NYFF Live is sponsored by HBO®.
12/3/2014 • 51 minutes, 41 seconds
#6b - Mike Nichols (Part 2): Getting Closer to Mike Nichols
In part 2 of The Close-Up's tribute to Mike Nichols, we present an in-depth conversation from 2004 between Mike Nichols and the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Wendy Keys.
Throughout both parts of this episode, you will hear excerpts from the 1999 Chaplin Award Gala honoring Mike Nichols. This part includes comments from Candice Bergen, Paul Simon, and Art Garfunkel.
11/26/2014 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 13 seconds
#6a - Mike Nichols (Part 1): Nichols and May
In this special two-part episode of The Close-Up, we pay tribute to the late Mike Nichols. For Part 1, we present a conversation between Mike Nichols and Elaine May after a screening of May's "Ishtar" here at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in 2006.
Throughout both parts of this episode, you will hear excerpts from the 1999 Chaplin Award Gala honoring Mike Nichols. This part includes comments from Meryl Streep, Matthew Broderick, and Nora Ephron.
11/26/2014 • 56 minutes, 52 seconds
#5 - John Waters
On the occasion of our comprehensive John Waters retrospective in September, Eugene Hernandez sat down with the director at his New York apartment to talk about his career and influences. For this episode, we're happy to present that conversation as well as one between film critic J. Hoberman and the director after a screening of his 1974 film, 'Female Trouble.'
11/19/2014 • 55 minutes, 58 seconds
#4 - Bennett Miller
Bennett Miller talks FOXCATCHER, his influences, and the art of filmmaking at an HBO Directors Dialogue during the 52nd New York Film Festival.
11/12/2014 • 57 minutes, 2 seconds
#3 - Discussing Godard
At the 52nd New York Film Festival, film critics and historians gathered to talk about Jean-Luc Godard’s work and career during an NYFF Live event sponsored by HBO. Panelists included The New Yorker’s Richard Brody, former MoMA curator Lawrence Kardish and GOODBYE TO LANGUAGE star Héloise Godet.
10/31/2014 • 42 minutes, 21 seconds
#1 - Paul Thomas Anderson
Paul Thomas Anderson talks INHERENT VICE, his influences, and the art of filmmaking at an HBO On Cinema talk during the 52nd New York Film Festival.
10/28/2014 • 58 minutes, 21 seconds
#2 - Laura Poitras
Laura Poitras talks CITIZENFOUR, Edward Snowden, the NSA, and surveilance, at one of our HBO Directors Dialogues during the 52nd New York Film Festival.