Our Media Center takes you inside Film at Lincoln Center with photos, videos, and podcasts from our screenings, talks, and events, plus announcements of upcoming programs and coverage of our artist and education initiatives.
The Black List: The Business of Screenwriting Panel
By Nicholas Kemp
on
April 23, 2015
Franklin Leonard, Founder and CEO of the Black List, will join NYC-based screenwriters on-stage at the Film Center Amphitheater to discuss the intricacies of breaking into the entertainment business as a writer. The panel is free and open to the public, although seating is limited.
The Princess of France
By Nicholas Kemp
on
April 23, 2015
MatĂas Piñeiro’s dazzling fifth feature, which follows a group of young people involved in a radio production of Love’s Labour’s Lost, doesn’t transplant Shakespeare to the present day so much as summon the spirit of his polymorphous comedies. An NYFF52 selection.
The Wolfpack
By Nicholas Kemp
on
April 23, 2015
First-time feature filmmaker Crystal Moselle trains her camera on an utterly unique subject in this documentary portrait of the Angulos, a family whose children have been forbidden from leaving their Lower East Side apartment yet whose love for cinema signals a desire to engage with the outside world.
Heremias
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April 22, 2015
A merchant and his ox part ways with their traveling companions and embark on an almost mythical journey in Lav Diaz’s celebration of stillness and storytelling in all its forms.
Saint Laurent
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April 20, 2015
Zeroing in on a dark, hedonistic, wildly creative decade in the life of its subject, Bonello’s latest feature is a kaleidoscopic torrent of lavish excess—and a delirious twist on the modern biopic’s rules and limitations. An NYFF52 selection.
The White Angel
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April 16, 2015
King of Italian melodrama Raffaello Matarazzo merges neorealism with Sirk and Hitchcock in the continuing narrative of Guido, the luckless hero of Nobody’s Children.
Violent Summer
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April 16, 2015
The draft-dodging son of a prominent Fascist (Jean-Louis Trintignant) falls for a war widow in the summer leading up to Italy’s 1943 armistice.
Two Women
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April 16, 2015
A widow (Sophia Loren, in an Oscar-winning role) and her daughter find peace (and an affable Marxist played by Jean-Paul Belmondo) in the countryside, but their idyll is shattered on their way back to Rome.
Totò Diabolicus
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April 16, 2015
Kind Hearts and Coronets meets Danger: Diabolik in this uproarious black comedy, which features Italian superstar Totò (nicknamed “The Prince of Laughter”) in six roles.
Sweet Deceptions
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April 16, 2015
A 17-year-old girl examines her feelings for a much older family friend in Fellini collaborator Alberto Lattuada’s tender portrait of burgeoning adulthood that defies coming-of-age clichés.