NEW YORK CITY – The 17th Tribeca Film Festival wrapped a couple weeks ago (April 29th, 2018) and the award winning films of the festival [22] have been named. Patrick McDonald of HollywoodChicago.com was there for the first week of Tribeca, and files his personal best of the films that he experienced.
The films are either in release (“Disobedience,” “Tully”) or are still looking for distributors, but many of them are already scheduled for 2018 theatrical runs. The Tribeca Film Festival screenings occur mostly in the Chelsea neighborhood, steps from the famed Hotel Chelsea (now under renovation).
The following are the prime 11 of the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival…
BATHTUBS OVER BROADWAY
When is the last time you really saw a miracle take place? The story of “Bathtubs Over Broadway” is one such happenstance, as a disaffected comedy writer named Steve Young unwittingly stumbled upon a lost piece of 1950s/’60s art… the corporate meeting stage show, also known as “industrial musicals.” Companies like General Electric, Ford, BF Goodrich, Owens-Corning and more would often hire Broadway level songwriters and performers to come into their sales or corporate meetings to do a show. How did Young stumble upon them? He wrote the “Dave’s Record Collection” comedy bit for the Letterman show, and found company-only album souvenirs of these shows for that bit. The journey that Young takes with this odd obsession is truly magical, culminating in his own connection to the phenomenon. Truly a miracle.
No release date yet, still in festival run.
GHOSTBOX COWBOY
This oddball film starts out like a documentary, then switches to a nightmare that symbolizes the economic relationship between China and the USA. David Zellner portrays Jimmy Van Horn, who takes his last $40K and invests it into a “ghostbox,” a novelty toy that supposedly detects otherworldly spirits. He searches for a Chinese investor/manufacturer, and learns a lesson in business. The film gets darker as it goes on, up to a point where Jimmy is impersonating cowboys for Chinese events and gets lost in the ghost towns of China’s excruciating economy and post-millennial life.
No release date yet, still in festival run.
TULLY
A remarkably empathetic overview of motherhood, told through the Mom character of Charlize Theron, going through the challenges and insanity of birthing the “third child.” When her wealthy brother gifts her a night nanny (basically a helper who allows Mom to sleep by taking overnight duties), her life begins to change for the better. Director Jason Reitman is working again with writer Diablo Cody, the same team that produced “Juno,” but “Tully” is a grown up perspective on the sheer sacrifice that humans make to raise kids in a time of more stress, and more of everything. It’s both a life lesson and a cultural perspective.
Opened in Chicago and nationwide on May 4th.
LOVE GILDA
The Opening Night film of the 17th Tribeca Film Festival was a documentary about Gilda Radner, the accidental star in the first (1975) cast of ”Saturday Night Live.” She grew up in Detroit, in a well-off family, but every aspect of her performance life came through the prism of her freedom and joy. As she put it, “I was just taking the next job,” until that job rose all the way to a one woman show on Broadway. Her triumphs, her challenges and her relationships (most famously with eventual husband Gene Wilder, but her first live-in boyfriend resulted in her joining The Second City comedy troupe in Toronto) are explored, culminating in her battle with ovarian cancer. It’s always something.
Picked up by Magnolia Pictures, no release date yet.
BLUE NIGHT
Carrie Bradshaw goes through the looking glass, with Sarah Jessica Parker portraying a jazz singer who receives some devastating news. Like Carrie, Parker’s character uses New York City as her path of redemption, and the film follows her for one tumultuous day. She deals with her distant mother (Jacqueline Bisset), her Sex-and-the-City type pal Tessa (Renée Zellweger) and ex-husband (Simon Baker), among others. Truly a remarkable performance by Parker, which includes her own singing in a centerpiece song that defines everything. A must see for SJP fans.
No distributor or release date yet.
FREAKS AND GEEKS: THE DOCUMENTARY
One of the most passionate shows in television history finally gets its due, with a documentary that also expresses how “Freaks and Geeks” was a training ground for some of the biggest names in entertainment today… cast members Seth Rogen, Jason Segel and James Franco, executive producer Judd Apatow and show creator/executive producer Paul Feig. The one season cult show was a realistic perspective on the early 1980s in a Michigan high school, and the doc’s step-by-step overview about its time in the spotlight is enhanced by interviews with the principle cast, production crew and network executives, in an era (1999) where the TV landscape was completely different. An excellent history, both in nostalgia and as a reminder to binge watch the 18 episodes again.
Produced for the A&E Network’s “Cultureshock” docuseries. No air date yet.
STOCKHOLM
Ethan Hawke is embarking on the character actor phase of his career, and “Stockholm” is a classic role for him. He plays a clueless American criminal who takes hostages at a bank in the titular city, and mucks it up pretty spectacularly. This is based on a true story, and has a “Dog Day Afternoon” quality to it, but with a European spin. One of the other remarkable performances in the film is Noomi Rapace as Bianca, whose connection to Hawke’s character became the genesis for the term “Stockholm Syndrome” (when hostages become sympathetic to their captors). Like Dog Day, it’s a situation that becomes surreal through the nature of the time and place.
No American distributor or release date yet.
WOMAN WALKS AHEAD
Jessica Chastain continues a character run that is more appropriate to her carriage as an actor, as she portrays the real-life Catherine Weldon, an East Coast portrait artist who lived in late 19th Century America. She wants to paint the famous Indian Chief Sitting Bull (Michael Greyere) and heads to the Wild West Dakotas to do so. She is shunned by the American Military presence there, who desire her to go home, and gets involved in the politics and treaties between “manifest destiny” and the Native Americans. Chastain creates a perfect spirit for the character, the harshness of the territory isn’t romanticized and the film passionately uses the vistas of the region.
Nationwide release scheduled for June 29th.
DISOBEDIENCE
This unusual story features Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams as lovers, against a background of their Orthodox Jewish roots. The film has been released, and the full review can be read by clicking here. [23]
The film has been released in the last two weeks to theaters nationwide. See local listings for theaters and showtimes.
BLOWIN’ UP
The view inside a courtroom, specializing in hearing cases regarding sex workers, prostitution and human trafficking – tied inextricably to immigration – is the subject of this fly-on-the-wall style documentary. The court is located in the New York City borough of Queens, and exists to rehabilitate the offenders, creating a community outreach-based lifeline for the often desperate women who come before the sympathetic judge and defense lawyers. It really comes down to the titans who want to help, personified by the all-woman legal staff who seek redemption for the victims and their “crimes.”
No distributor or release date set.
BACK ROADS
Based on a 2000 novel by Tawni O’Dell, “Back Roads” has had a precarious and almost 10 year journey to the big screen, with director Adrian Lyne (who shares screenwriting credit with O’Dell) once attached. The directing reins were taken by Alex Pettyfer, who also portrays the lead role of Harley, a 20-year-old man trying to keep his family together, after his mother (Juliette Lewis) kills his abusive father. The film is somewhat miscast and hyperbolic, and lacks the flavor of the novel’s roots.
No distributor or release date set.
For a “Love Gilda” Opening Night Slideshow at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, CLICK HERE. [24]
For a Red Carpet overview of “Blue Night,” CLICK HERE. [25]
For an interview with author Tawni O’Dell of “Back Roads,” CLICK HERE. [26]
For the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival Award Winners, CLICK HERE. [22]
[28] | By PATRICK McDONALD [29] |
Links:
[1] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/users/hankq
[2] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/17th
[3] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/2018
[4] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/back-roads
[5] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/bathtubs-over-broadway
[6] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/blowin-up
[7] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/blue-night
[8] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/disobedience
[9] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/film-news
[10] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/freaks-and-geeks-the-documentary
[11] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/ghostbox-cowboy
[12] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/hollywoodchicagodotcom-content
[13] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/jason-segel
[14] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/love-gilda
[15] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/patrick-mcdonald
[16] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/paul-feig
[17] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/stockholm
[18] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/tawni-o-dell
[19] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/tribeca-film-festival
[20] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/tully
[21] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/woman-walks-ahead
[22] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/28478/film-news-2018-tribeca-film-festival-honors-diane-as-best-us-narrative-feature
[23] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/reviews/28512/strange-story-of-disobedience-is-constant-distraction
[24] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/28455/tribeca-2018-slideshow-opening-night-red-carpet-for-love-gilda
[25] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/28471/tribeca-2018-sarah-jessica-parker-shines-in-blue-night
[26] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/news/28492/tribeca-2018-author-tawni-o-dell-on-the-screenplay-adaptation-of-her-book-back-roads
[27] https://www.tribecafilm.com/
[28] mailto:pat@hollywoodchicago.com
[29] http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/about#PAT