
Attenberg
An Evening with Athina Rachel Tsangari
September 17, 2015
Tsangari’s second feature symbolically visualizes a change in generation and perspective as a father and daughter (Vangelis Mourikis and Ariane Labed) gently negotiate their individual rites of passage, yielding a work poised between sincerity and hilarity, tradition and experimentation. A New Directors/New Films 2011 selection.
Make it a double feature with The Slow Business of Going and save!
In its irreverent use of (new) Nouvelle Vague, musical, melodrama, and nature documentary, Attenberg symbolically visualizes a change in generation and perspective as a father and daughter gently negotiate their individual rites of passage. The film follows a visionary architect who has come home to die in the vanishing industrial town that is his legacy to his daughter. Meanwhile, his daughter (played by Ariane Labed, in a performance that won her the Best Actress award at the Venice Film Festival) is exploring the mysteries of kissing with her girlfriend, and the beyond with a visiting engineer. Tsangari’s film—with a soundtrack featuring Françoise Hardy and Suicide—is poised between sincerity and hilarity, tradition and experimentation. A New Directors/New Films 2011 selection.





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