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  • "An Afternoon with Aasif Mandvi"

    Aasif Mandvi, writer and star of the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival’s opening night film, Today’s Special, charmed the audience during an interview with Festival Director Chi-Hui Yang.

CALENDAR

Green screen: Greg Pak's 'Mister Green', created for ITVS's FUTURESTATES, is a parable about change. (Photo courtesy ITVS)

Platform

Karim Ahmad on ITVS's Forward-Thinking FUTURESTATES

By Adam Hartzell

When you think of public television in the United States, science fiction, or any type of fiction, may not spring to mind. Independent Television Services (ITVS) is trying to change that perception by creating a series of 11 fictional mini-features on American society in the not-too-distant future. Launched March 8 as an immersive destination website to be available for free via streaming video with subsequent distribution on pbs.org, FUTURESTATES directors such as Greg Pak (Robot Stories) and Ramin Bahrani (Goodbye, Solo thinking into the future while staying tethered to current events. The series dropped down on the South by Southwest and San Francisco International Asian American film festival this past month. After viewing two of the mini-features at an event held at the Jellyfish Gallery in SOMA sponsored by *Next American City magazine and ITVS, I sat down with FUTURESTATES programming manager Karim Ahmad to talk about the forward-thinking initiative.

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North Korea, cataloged: In a festival filled with archival treasures, a 2009 film about the North Korean women's national soccer team, 'Hana, Dul, Sed....', reminds us how important it is to preserve rare contemporary images for the future. (Photo courtesy SFIAAFF)

Critic's Notebook

SF International Asian American Film Festival Visits the Archives

By Adam Hartzell

A theme that emerged in this year’s San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival (SFIAAFF) was the importance of archives in the film world. The existence of film archives and restoration facilities all have a part to play in the films of Lino Brocka (who received retrospective treatment in the fest), Kim Ki-young’s 1960s classic The Housemaid, Ruby Yang’s documentary A Moment in Time (about Chinese American movie houses of old San Francisco), documentaries such as Aoki and State of Aloha that make heavy use of archival footage to tell their non-fiction narratives, and even an Austrian director’s film about representatives of the North Korean women’s soccer team, Hana, Dul, Sed…. 

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Mother from another planet: Bong Joon-ho's 'Mother' offers a host of new mixed-genre elements. (Photo courtesy Magnolia Pictures)

Review

Bong Joon-ho's Latest, 'Mother', Pleases

By Dennis Harvey

Already one of the heroes of South Korean cinema’s recent creative renaissance, Bong Joon-ho had an international success well beyond arthouse parameters with 2006’s The Host. That delightfully old-fashioned (albeit with up-to-the-moment CGI effects) sci-fi monster movie with a distinct local flavor managed what so many similar Hollywood exercises fail to do: Deliver thrills and spectacle without stinting on character involvement, social commentary, humor or even poignancy.

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Ask the Documentary Doctor

Social Media and Storytelling

By Fernanda Rossi

Dear Doc Doctor: All this new social media takes time. Lots of time. In the end, will my Facebook posts, tweets or blog entries help me with the story I’m trying to tell? Or is it just more promotional work I have to do to keep the film going? I want to be a filmmaker not an Internet nerd.

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Instruments of change: A new documentary looks at how the Louisville Orchestra rose to prominence more than a half century ago. (Photo courtesy filmmaker)

In Production

Hiler and Brown's ‘Music’ Salutes Symphonic Visionary

By Michael Fox

The so-called culture war is over, and the reactionaries have won. I recall with nostalgia Jesse Helms’ condemnation of the NEA for funding Marlon Riggs’ queer-centric Tongues Untied, and the late East Bay filmmaker’s blisteringly eloquent response. Such public right-wing remonstrations are no longer necessary, for the simple reason that 30 years of overt and covert pressure have cast a permanent chill on Federal and state arts organizations. I daresay the anti-intellectual denigration of culture and higher education, a cornerstone of the Reagan-Bush-Bush Era, is an unacknowledged factor in the current decimation of the public university system (which is conveniently blamed on the Great Recession). In this climate, Jerome Hiler and Owsley Brown III’s Music Makes a City is nothing short of a revelation. Now in its finishing stages, the documentary revisits the remarkable mid-century revival of Louisville, Kentucky, in the wake of the Great Flood of 1937.

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