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  • Gries is the word

    Writer/Director James Savoca (Around June, Sleepwalk), pictured right, welcomed actor Jon Gries (Napoleon Dynamite, Jackpot, Around June) to a free mixer at the San Francisco School of Digital Filmmaking to... more

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Shopping for films: David Kaplan’s 'Today’s Special,' which stars first-time scenarist (and *Daily Show* regular) Aasif Mandvi as a sous chef at a starry Manhattan French restaurant, opens the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival. (Photo courtesy SFIAAFF)

Experience

28th SF Int'l Asian American Film Festival Opens

By Dennis Harvey

This year’s San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival observes an organizational milestone: 2010 marks the beginning of a fourth decade for the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM), hitherto known (until 2005) as the National Asian American Telecommunications Association (NAATA).

CAAM’s and NAATA’s achievements over the last 30 years are too numerous to list here. Suffice it to say that an organization originally founded to nurture Asian American filmmakers (an effort given further muscle by strong support from the Center for Public Broadcasting) as well as counter ethnic stereotypes still prevailing in popular media (perhaps peaking with the protests against mid-late ’80s thrillers Year of the Dragon and Black Rain) has long since accomplished all that and more. Today’s CAAM can look back on helping to foster such important high-profile voices as Wayne Wang and Ang Lee, while stoking both present and future makers via its distribution, PBS presentation and funding arms.

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Village people: S. Leo Chiang documents Vietnamese residents of post-Katrina New Orleans standing up for their rights in "A Village Called Versailles." (Photo courtesy SFIAAFF)

Critic's Notebook

'Village' Offers New Look at New Orleans

By Judy Stone

S. Leo Chiang, born and raised in Taiwan, knew what it was like to be an outsider in the United States, so the seemingly inexplicable rebellion of previously docile Vietnamese residents in New Orleans was an ideal subject for this documentary director.

It took him more than a year to track down bits and pieces of film from unclassified archives at the University of New Orleans that could reconstruct the untold story of what happened to the 5,000 residents of the largest Vietnamese community outside of Vietnam after the 2005 Katrina hurricane wreaked havoc on that Louisiana city.

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Scene and herd: Artful ranching documentary 'Sweetgrass', with co-director Ilisa Barbash in person at screenings this weekend, captures a disappearing way of life. (Photo courtesy Cinema Guild)

Critic's Notebook

Gazing West with 'Sweetgrass'

By Dennis Harvey

There will probably never be a theatrical release for a film by James Benning, the Southern California-based filmmaker who recently made one of his frequent Bay Area visits for a four-night series of works presented by San Francisco Cinematheque. Benning’s landscape-focused movies often consist of very long stationary shots (sometimes as long as ten minutes each) sans commentary, interviews, explanatory text, or any sound save live found ones. They’re extraordinary, if a little too “pure” for the average moviegoer—even most arthouse habitues.

Amazingly, however, the marital filmmaking team of Ilisa Barbash and Lucien Castaing-Taylor have managed not only to score theatrical distribution but also make something of a splash with Sweetgrass, a new documentary opening this weekend that is almost as hypnotically austere in style and content as the films in Benning’s oeuvre.

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"Up" and away at the Oscars: Pixar won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for the third time in seven years.

Report

Bay Area's Pixar rises again at Oscars

By Michael Fox

Cementing its status as the preeminent animation company of the ‘00s, Pixar won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for the third time in seven years. Up director Pete Docter collected his first trophy in six trips, a stunning run that includes original screenplay nominations for Toy Story (1995), Wall-E (2008) and Up. The helium-fueled adventure was further buoyed by Michael Giacchino’s Oscar for original score, the category in which he was nominated two years ago for Ratatouille.

Pixar received five nominations altogether, including Best Picture (snagged by The Hurt Locker, directed by San Carlos native and San Francisco Art Institute alum Kathryn Bigelow), Original Screenplay (awarded to Mark Boal’s for The Hurt Locker over Docter and co-writer Bob Peterson) and Mixing.

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The Hurt locker: William Hurt plays Brett, with Kristen Stewart as Martine, and Eddie Redmayne as Gordy in "The Yellow Handkerchief." (Photo courtesy Samuel Goldwyn Films)

Take Two

Hurt and Belief in 'The Yellow Handkerchief'

By Dennis Harvey

If the usual line about William Hurt is that he looked to become a major star in the 1980s, but didn’t fulfill that promise, in more recent years it’s become clearer, that Hurt probably didn’t want to become that kind of star. He certainly hasn’t run his career like someone desperate to get to the top and stay there—at least not for a couple decades. So, while he’s stayed busy in the interim, it comes as a bit of a surprise to see him take charge of a whole movie, as is the case with new indie The Yellow Handkerchief. Though after two Twilight movies his co-star Kristen Stewart might be much the bigger marquee star, it’s Hurt who dominates here, albeit quietly. Rather like Jeff Bridges in the concurrent sleeper Crazy Heart, this is an opportunity to appreciate a very good actor too often taken for granted, at the top of his form.

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