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Rotterdam 2009

Blind Pig Who Wants To Fly.
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FIPRESCI-Prize: "Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly"
Trainee Project. The Festival invited six young critics to a workshop. We publish their text: Phil Dy / Brandon Harris / Gaetano Maiorino / Camila Moraes / Yoana Pavlova / Paula Ruiz.

There are small but still conspicuous signs at the beginning of a festival which hint at the good things to come: in this case it was the sight of Isabella Rossellini as an electric Joan of Arc on the giant screen by our hotel window, just across the street — in a Guy Maddin film (Send Me to the ‘Lectric Chair) designed to be screened on Rotterdam buildings.
   This 38th edition of the International Film Festival Rotterdam is still the best location in the world for auteurs, independent, uncompromised films lovers to begin the year. And the main competition (The Tiger Awards, for first or second features) is the laboratory in which to find the next Carlos Reygadas or Hong Sang-Soo, both of whom came to worldwide prominence at Rotterdam. Besides the discoveries (for example, a Young Turkish Cinema selection), retrospectives were dedicated to Paolo Benvenuti and Jerzy Skolimowski. The festival still challenges filmgoers with well-thought installations and expositions making cinema and art converge such as "Size Matters" — which underlines that screens (whether they're in multiplexes or on your I-Pod) are a stimulating topic.
   The other main event of the festival, the co-production market Cinemart, not surprisingly raised the main discussion of the year: funding issues in these times of crisis. So far, current projects are safe and we're hoping for much from the projects we read submitted by gifted newcomers such as Ruben Ostlund, Celina Murga or Gina Kim.
   Our jury was impressed by very different films — and the energy and passion of the six kids from the Trainee Project for Young Film Critics who participated in our discussions. Among the most discussed films were the sizzling mix of melodrama-mobsters-comedy Breathless (Ddongpari) by Yang Ik-June (Korea), the very humble Wrong Rosary (Uzak ihtimal) by Mahmut Fazil Coskun (Turkey) and the subtle Tourists (Turistas) by Alicia Scherson (Chile).
    Our prize went to the very challenging Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly (Babi buta yang ingin terbang) by Edwin (Indonesia), with its brave take on personal and political matters and haunting images (and sounds, such as Stevie Wonder's "I Just Called To Say I Love You" used in an infectious way). (Leo Soesanto)

International Film Festival Rotterdam, January 21 — February 1, 2009, www.filmfestivalrotterdam.com
FIPRESCI Prize: Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly by Edwin (Indonesia). Details arrow.

Reports

Chinese Indonesians, Portrayed Hauntingly Mind-blowing. A pig is a pig is not a pig is perhaps a pig and maybe not. Dana Linssen looks at the critics winner which, she proclaims, was also the most controversial and resonant film of the program: Blind Pig Who Wants to Fly by Indonesian Edwin arrow.
"I Didn't Come Crawling Out of a Cave". A conversation with Rotterdam's new festival director Rutger Wolfson in which Dana Linssen and Jos van der Burg discover how this A-List festival prepares to face a changing and uncertain world. arrow.
Dark and Bright Mirrors. Leo Soesanto uses the opportunity of being a jury member to focus on the meta-criticism of being a film critic, with all its privileges, pitfalls... and references to Marcel Duchamp. arrow.
Breathless: Fool and Cool. Firat Yücel argues that it's hard to imagine a more playful film concerning the interchangeability of melodrama, violence, values and emotions, but that is what Yang-Ik Juni's film Breathless does while also maintaining a naturalistic style. arrow.
A Bit of a Melodramatic Tiger. There was a selection of films in the VPRO Tiger awards section which particularly caught the eye of Ashok Rane, who discusses their merits and what made them individualistic. arrow.
Meeting HIM. Will the visions of Cronenberg's eXistenZ and Fincher's The Game finally come true? Lance Weiler, producer/director of cross-media-project HIM, thinks time has come. And he's not even afraid. Maya McKechneay reports. arrow.
You have to be One Hundred Percent Behind Someone to Stab Him in the Back. There have been humans and there has been traffic. As Mike Naafs poignantly reminds us in this world there is a war amongst people, despite it making for compelling viewing.  arrow.

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Rotterdam 2009

Festival
bullet. Index
bullet. "Bilnd Pig"
bullet. Rutger Wolfson
bullet. On Film Criticism
bullet. "Breathless"
bullet. Overview
bullet. Lance Weiler
bullet. How to Survive

Texts edited by
Steven Yates

Trainee Project
bullet. Phil Dy
bullet. Brandon Harris
bullet. Gaetano Maiorino
bullet. Camila Moraes
bullet. Yoana Pavlova
bullet. Paula Ruiz

Texts edited by
Dana Linssen