THE FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER PRESENTS MUSIC DOCUMENTARY SERIES: SOUND + VISION
JULY 26 – AUGUST 1

THE CAMERA IS TURNED ON MUSIC SUBJECTS AS VARIED AS GREEN DAY’S BILLIE JOE ARMSTRONG, JAMES BOOKER (“THE BLACK LIBERACE”), MEXICAN ROCK GROUP MOLOTOV, COUNTRY MUSIC STAR JIM LAUDERDALE, CLASSICAL MUSIC PRODIGIES, K-POP, THE MUSCLE SHOALS SOUND AND MORE!

New York, NY (June 19, 2013) – The Film Society of Lincoln Center announced today the lineup for SOUND + VISION (July 26 to August 1), a music documentary series exploring an exciting range of musical artists, genres and styles.

Green Day’s front man and lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong is featured in BROADWAY IDIOT, a behind-the-scenes look at how the band’s successful, political-punk studio album AMERICAN IDIOT was translated into a Broadway musical, complete with live concert footage and clips of a punky pre-teen Armstrong. For classical music enthusiasts there is I AM NOT A ROCK STAR, in which Canadian pianist Marika Bournaki ages and musically matures from a 12-year-old gifted pianist to a 20-year-old musical dynamo.

“This series is an homage to the people who create our music, who struggle and work to have it heard and, when they succeed, help us connect with one another.
Music is a catalyst for rebellion, progress, and fulfillment on both a personal and social level,” says Film Society Programmer Isa Cucinotta. “Sometimes music is a lifeline for the musician, sometimes a springboard, but it always serves to unite listeners and it is that energy that is captured in these films.”

Among the many highlights BORN IN CHICAGO, traces the influence Mississippi Delta blues legends like Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Buddy Guy had on a group of hip, up-and-coming white artists in the 60s, among them Buddy Goldberg, Mike Bloomfield, and Paul Butterfield, who eventually went on to create their own unique, ground-breaking sounds. MUSCLE SHOALS takes a look at FAME Studios in Alabama, which brought together black and white musicians at a time of high racial tension and became the birthplace for some of the biggest hits recorded from the 60s onwards from noted artists like Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, Etta James, Rolling Stones, Greg Allman and others.

Politics mixes with music in GIMME THE POWER, which traces the political history of Mexico and spotlights the controversial, award-winning, left-wing protest band Molotov, while VIVA CUBA LIBRE: RAP IS WAR!, chronicles which rap duo Los Aldeanos make their mark in the Cuban underground scene and put themselves at risk by simply performing with the film’s director Jesse Acevedo putting himself at risk by simply making the film.

South Korea is the setting for 9 MUSES OF STAR EMPIRE, in which nine attractive, young women are trailed for a year as they are plucked, groomed and trained to become the next huge K-pop sensation girl group “Nine Muses” and face intense scrutiny on their way to the top of the charts, all the while being molded by a powerful CEO. A world away from that film, both in geography and style, are BAYOU MAHARAJAH: THE TRAGIC GENIUS OF JAMES BOOKER, which profiles the man known as “The Black Liberace,” and JIM LAUDERDALE: THE KING OF BROKEN HEARTS, which traces the Grammy-winning country singer/songwriter’s journey to success performing and writing hits for other stars such as George Strait, Patty Loveless, and the Dixie Chicks. 

Tickets for Sound and Vision screenings will go on sale Thursday, June 27. Single screening tickets are $13; $9 for students and seniors (62+); and $8 for Film Society members. Discount prices apply with the purchase of tickets to three films or more.  Visit www.FilmLinc.com for complete film festival information.

All screenings will be held at the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, 144 West 65th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue.

FILMS, DESCRIPTIONS & SCHEDULE

OPENING NIGHT
New York premiere!

CHARLES BRADLEY: SOUL OF AMERICA (2012) 74m
Director: Poull Brien
Country: USA
Filmmaker Poull Brien met Charles Bradley while they were shooting a music video together and decided to follow this unassuming, talented singer in the months leading up to the release of his first album, No Time for Dreaming, at the age of 62. After a lifetime struggling with poverty, a broken family and illiteracy, Bradley gets his break with Daptone Records, a Brooklyn-based soul, funk and gospel label. While his earlier performances were often killer James Brown impersonations, he reveals himself as a talented soul singer and songwriter in his own right. Bradley is able to hold on to his warmth and honesty through the years of hardship, and realize his dreams of a singing career.
Director Poull Brien & subject Charles Bradley in person for Q&A!
Friday, July 26 at 6:30

North American Premiere!

9 MUSES OF STAR EMPIRE (2012) 80m
Director: Hark-Joon Lee
Country: South Korea
Nine young women are followed for a year as they train to be the next big K-pop sensations as part of a new girl group, the Nine Muses. Selected for their looks more than their singing ability by the powerful Star Empire Agency, they undergo intense scrutiny and criticism as they are molded into the image created by the CEO. They prepare for their debut at the annual K-pop festival Dream Concert with relentless rehearsals, but the sacrifice is all for that shot at fame.
Friday, July 26 at 4:30pm
Tuesday, July 30 at 8:30pm

New York premiere!
APOCALYPSE: A BILL CALLAHAN TOUR FILM
(2012) 61m
Director: Hanly Banks
Country: USA
Following Callahan on his 2011 tour through California, the Midwest and back to NYC with beautifully shot images, Banks captures his live performances and moments from life on the road that seem to illustrate his lyrics. Callahan is a private person who enigmatically shares some thoughts on film. A concert film might just be the best way to understand him: “I think when I’m performing live, it’s really just the realest me there is.”
Saturday, July 27 at 3:00pm

New York premiere!
BAYOU MAHARAJAH: THE TRAGIC GENIUS OF JAMES BOOKER
(2013) 90m
Director: Lily Keber
Country: USA
“The best black, gay, one-eyed junkie piano genius New Orleans has ever produced!” “The Black Liberace!”  “Piano Prince of New Orleans!” Who was this guy and how did he lose that eye? Booker was a musical genius who started with classical training when he was 12; released his first recording at 15 and began performing in clubs at 16; taught Dr. John to play the organ; tutored Harry Connick Jr.; toured in Europe; went to prison; played a unique piano style that combined classical, jazz, blues and ragtime; and died young of drug and alcohol abuse. Lily Keber’s vibrant documentary captures it all through performance footage and interviews with Booker’s friends, supporters and fellow musicians.

Director Lily Keber in person for Q+A for both screenings.

Sunday, July 28 at 8:15pm
Monday, July 29 at 3:45pm

BIG EASY EXPRESS (2012) 67m
Director: Emmett Malloy
Country: USA
Malloy’s film follows Mumford & Sons, Old Crow Medicine Show, and Edward Sharp & the Magnetic Zeros on their 2011 six-city Railroad Revival Tour. From Oakland to New Orleans, the music never seems to stop—on the train, off the train, visiting an Austin high school, and probably in their sleep. The three bands build a genuine friendship with each other and a natural connection with their fans on this joyful whistle stop tour. Big Easy Express won a Grammy for Best Long Form Music Video 2013.
Saturday, July 27 at 7:00pm

U.S. premiere!
BLOODY DAUGHTER
(2012) 94m
Director: Stéphanie Argerich
Countries: France/Switzerland
The world-renowned pianist Martha Argerich is known to be a very private person. Fortunately for her fans her daughter Stéphanie decided to make a very personal film about her mother. The youngest of the three daughters with three different husbands, there was a lot Stéphanie wanted to know. Although the hard questions are not pushed, a portrait emerges of a great talent struggling to balance her career and children. At 72, Martha and her daughters have a warm relationship despite all they have been through.
Sunday, July 28 at 3:30pm
Tuesday, July 30 at 4:00pm

New York premiere!
BORN IN CHICAGO
(2013) 86m
Director: John Anderson
Country: USA
In 1960s Chicago, a group of middle class white boys fell in love with the blues being performed in the crowded nightclubs by black musicians from the Mississippi Delta. Howlin’ Wolf, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells, Buddy Guy, and Hubert Sumlin taught the next generation: Barry Goldberg, Mike Bloomfield, Paul Butterfield, Nick Gravenites, Charlie Musselwhite, and others, who went on to make the music their own. Interviews and performance footage of these “kids,” now in their 70s, trace the lineage and scope of this inspired music.
Friday, July 26 at 9:00pm

BROADWAY IDIOT (2013) 80m
Director: Doug Hamilton
Country: USA
Doug Hamilton’s film started out as a behind-the-scenes look at the idiots that thought a punk rock record could translate to a Broadway musical—Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong and Spring Awakening director Michael Mayer. But the film becomes much more than that; it chronicles Billie Joe’s growing engagement with the creative process of this new, for him, art form. Hamilton shows the journey including a peek at pre-teen Billie Joe, live concert footage and his Broadway debut.
Director Doug Hamilton and producer Ira Pittelman in person for Q&A!
Monday, July 29 at 8:45pm

BROTHERS HYPNOTIC (2013) 86m
Director: Reuben Atlas
Country: USA
Eight brothers make up the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, taking on the music business while trying to adhere to their father’s vision of music as a path to consciousness-raising. First-time director Atlas met them playing on 42nd street and followed them on tour, to meetings, in practice and at home in Chicago with their legendary musician father Phil Cohran. Their story is remarkable not because of their functional, loving family of one dad, three moms and 24 siblings, but because of their true talent and commitment to music while they develop their own ambitions both with and apart from the family.
Saturday, July 27 at 4:45pm

FUNKJAZZ KAFÉ: DIARY OF A DECADE (THE STORY OF A MOVEMENT) (2012) 126m
Director: Jason Orr
Country: USA
From the late 1980s to the early 2000s, Atlanta’s underground music scene had a renaissance that pivoted around the FunkJazz Kafe Arts & Music Festival. Here, a new generation of soul singers hit the stage, reinventing the form that was once at the height of mainstream music. The film also explores why there are so few soul bands in today’s commercial music scene. Narrated by Chuck D with appearances by Cornel West, Cee Lo Green, Jill Scott, Erykah Badu, George Clinton, N'Dea Davenport, Doug E. Fresh, Roy Ayers, Jamie Foxx and many others, FunkJazz Kafé is chock full of great performance footage.
Director Jason Orr in person for Q&A!
Wednesday, July 31 at 4:00pm

GIMME THE POWER (2012) 101m
Director: Olallo Rubio
Country: Mexico
Gimme the Power starts by tracing the political history of Mexico, from colonization to dictatorship to democracy. Then, true to rock’s form, the band Molotov explodes on stage with critiques of the government’s policies and the state of Mexico today. Despite having won the Latin Grammy Awards four times since 1995, Molotov keeps its identity as a contentious, left-wing, protest band. Rubio’s film works off their message to create one of his own.
Wednesday, July 31 at 9:15pm

New York premiere!
I AM NOT A ROCK STAR
(2012) 85m
Director: Bobbi Jo Hart
Country: Canada
The director follows her subject, Canadian pianist Marika Bournaki, for eight years, watching her development from a 12-year-old gifted piano student to a 20-year-old professional. It’s fascinating to watch the process behind the scenes, but this is equally the story of a young girl growing up, finding her own voice, and learning to take charge of her life. Hart’s patience with her subject pays off as the unfolding story reveals a young woman who is as complex and strong as she is talented.
Director Bobbi Jo Hart and subject Marika Bournaki in person for Q&A!
Tuesday, July 30 at 6:15pm

New York premiere!
JIM LAUDERDALE: THE KING OF BROKEN HEARTS
(2013) 90m
Director: Jeremy Dylan
Country: Australia
Lauderdale had to work hard for his success as he played the country music circuit from NY to LA and fought the frustrations of the music business. His talent won out and he was picked up by Dwight Yoakim’s producer and went on to write hits for George Strait, Patty Loveless, and the Dixie Chicks, among others, winning two Grammys in the process. Australian director Jeremy Dylan discovered Lauderdale on one of his tours and after a little research into his life and career knew he had a story that needed to be told.
Saturday, July 27 at 1:00pm

New York premiere!
LOW MOVIE (HOW TO QUIT SMOKING)
(2013) 70m
Director: Philip Harder
Country: USA
More document than documentary, according to director Philip Harder, Low Movie brings together the music videos and short movies he’s made with the band Low since their inception in the mid-90s. It documents their evolution musically and personally, as well as their relationship with the director. The work is visually stunning and some has never been available to the public before. The images complement the minimalist aesthetic of the Minnesota-based cult band in this gorgeous, hour-long experience.
Director Philip Harder in person for Q&A!
Monday, July 29 at 6:30pm

New York premiere!
MUSCLE SHOALS
(2013) 102m
Director: Greg Camalier
Country: USA
Muscle Shoals, Alabama, a small town on the Tennessee River, became the birthplace for some of the biggest hits from the 60s on, from Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, The Rolling Stones, Etta James, Gregg Allman and others. Rick Hall opened FAME Studios, bringing together black and white musicians at a time of racial tension. Years later, his studio musicians left to open a rival studio with equal success. Camalier explores through film and interviews the energy and creativity that came together in this amazing place to create the Muscle Shoals sound.
Sunday, July 28 at 6:00pm

New York premiere!
VIVA CUBA LIBRE: RAP IS WAR!
(2013) 74m
Director: Jesse Acevedo
Country: USA
Music as political protest still exists in Cuba in the form of rap duo Los Aldeanos. Aldo and El B challenge the government’s social and economic policies, but in doing so they put themselves at real risk, as do the fans that come to see them and the director Jesse Acevedo in even making the film. Filming the Cuban underground scene, Acevedo follows the group with an anonymous crew to hastily promoted performances on the outskirts of town, working hidden cameras. The group has been accused of “anti-socialist sentiments.” It's a revolution against the revolutionaries, and the music is good.
Saturday, July 27 at 9:00pm
Thursday, August 1 at 4:00pm

U.S. premiere!
WOODSTOCK IN TIMBUKTU: THE ART OF RESITANCE
(2013) 86m
Director: Désirée von Trotha
Country: Germany
Filmed at the three-day Festival au Desert held near Timbuktu, Mali, Woodstock in Timbuktu comments on the power of music to unify and resist. The nomadic Kel Tamasheq (Touareg) people come together to preserve their culture, protest inequalities, and stand up to the militant groups and corporations encroaching on their land. Von Trotha highlights three bands, Amanar, Tartit and Bombino who discuss the difficulty and importance of the annual gathering, especially as the specter of war encroaches. Three days of peace and music, and no mud in sight.
Sunday, July 28 at 1:30pm

Public Screening Schedule

Screening Venues:
The Film Society of Lincoln Center
Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, 144 West 65th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam

Friday, July 26
4:30PM   9 Muses of Star Empire (80m)
6:30PM Charles Bradley: Soul of America (74m)
(Q&A with director Poull Brien and subject Charles Bradley)
9:00PM  Born in Chicago (86m)

Saturday, July 27
1:00PM  Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts (90m)
3:00PM  Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film (61m)
4:45PM  Brothers Hypnotic (86m)
7:00PM  Big Easy Express (67m)
9:00PM  Viva Cuba Libre: Rap is War! (74m)

Sunday, July 28
1:30PM  Woodstock in Timbuktu: The Art of Resistance (86m)
3:30PM  Bloody Daughter (94m)
6:00PM  Muscle Shoals (102m)
8:15PM Bayou Maharajah: The Tragic Genius of James Booker (90m)

Monday, July 29
3:45PM  Bayou Maharajah: The Tragic Genius of James Booker (90m)
6:15PM  Low Movie (How to Quit Smoking) (70m)

(Q&A) with director Philip Harder) 

8:45PM  Broadway Idiot (80m)
(Q&A with director Doug Hamilton and producer Ira Pittelman)

Tuesday, July 30
4:00PM  Bloody Daughter (94m)
6:30PM   I Am Not a Rockstar (85m)
(Q&A with director Bobbi Jo Hart and subject Marika Bournaki)
8:30PM  9 Muses of Star Empire (80m)

Wednesday, July 31
4:00PM  FunkJazz KafĂ©: Diary Of A Decade (The Story Of A
Movement) (126m)
(Q&A with director Jason Orr)
9:15PM  Gimme the Power (101m)

Thursday, August 1
4:00PM  Viva Cuba Libre: Rap is War! (74m)

FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER
Founded in 1969 to celebrate American and international cinema, the Film Society of Lincoln Center works to recognize and support new directors, and to enhance the awareness, accessibility and understanding of film. Among its yearly programming of film festivals, film series and special events, the Film Society presents two film festivals in particular that annually attract global attention: the New York Film Festival, which just celebrated its 50th edition, and New Directors/New Films which, since its founding in 1972, has been produced in collaboration with MoMA. The Film Society also publishes the award-winning Film Comment Magazine, and for over three decades has given an annual award—now named “The Chaplin Award”—to a major figure in world cinema. Past recipients of this award include Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, Martin Scorsese, Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, and Sidney Poitier. FSLC presents its year-round calendar of programming, panels, lectures, educational and transmedia programs and specialty film releases at the famous Walter Reade Theater and the new state-of-the-art Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center.

The Film Society receives generous, year-round support from Royal Bank of Canada, Jaeger-LeCoultre, American Airlines, The New York Times, Stonehenge Partners, Stella Artois, the Kobal Collection, the National Endowment for the Arts and New York State Council on the Arts. For more information, visit www.filmlinc.com and follow #filmlinc on Twitter.

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