“Dreams”, Interview with director Michel Franco
Dreams by Michel Franco, in competition at the Berlinale, marks his second collaboration with actress and producer Jessica Chastain
Listeners:
Top listeners:
ENGLISH Channel 01 If English is your language, or a language you understand, THIS IS YOUR CHANNEL !
ITALIAN Channel 02 Se l’italiano è la tua lingua, o una lingua che conosci, QUESTO È IL TUO CANALE!
EXTRA Channel 03 FRED Film Radio channel used to broadcast press conferences, seminars, workshops, master classes, etc.
GERMAN Channel 04 Wenn Ihre Sprache Deutsch ist, oder Sie diese Sprache verstehen, dann ist das IHR KANAL !
POLISH Channel 05
SPANISH Channel 06 Si tu idioma es el español, o es un idioma que conoces, ¡ESTE ES TU CANAL!
FRENCH Channel 07 Si votre langue maternelle est le français, ou si vous le comprenez, VOICI VOTRE CHAINE !
PORTUGUESE Channel 08
ROMANIAN Channel 09 Dacă vorbiţi sau înţelegeţi limba română, ACESTA ESTE CANALUL DUMNEAVOASTRĂ!
SLOVENIAN Channel 10
ENTERTAINMENT Channel 11 FRED Film Radio Channel used to broadcast music and live shows from Film Festivals.
BULGARIAN Channel 16 Ако българският е вашият роден език, или го разбирате, ТОВА Е ВАШИЯТ КАНАЛ !
CROATIAN Channel 17 Ako je hrvatski tvoj jezik, ili ga jednostavno razumiješ, OVO JE TVOJ KANAL!
LATVIAN Channel 18
DANISH Channel 19
HUNGARIAN Channel 20
DUTCH Channel 21
GREEK Channel 22
CZECH Channel 23
LITHUANIAN Channel 24
SLOVAK Channel 25
ICELANDIC Channel 26 Ef þú talar, eða skilur íslensku, er ÞETTA RÁSIN ÞÍN !
INDUSTRY Channel 27 FRED Film Radio channel completely dedicated to industry professionals.
EDUCATION Channel 28 FRED Film Radio channel completely dedicated to film literacy.
SARDU Channel 29 Si su sardu est sa limba tua, custu est su canale chi ti deghet!
“Conversation with” at the 20th Marrakech IFF, interview with actor Willem Dafoe Bénédicte Prot
"Mad Bills To Pay", interview with the director Joel Alfonso Vargas Angelo Acerbi
“Mad Bills To Pay” by Joel Alfonso Vargas is a realist social drama on a Latino family in the Bronx. there is a lot of personal memories in the film, as the director comes form Bronx and inevitably the neighbourhood becomes another lead character of the movie. We met with the director on the day of the film’s premiere in the Perspective programme in the Berlin International Film Festival.
One of the aims of Joel Alfonso Vargas in making “Mad Bills To Pay” was the realism, in order to get that he decided to cast also on professional actors form the Bronx. Casting was very successful and the chosen people were so natural and at ease not to show their minor acting skills. The rehearsals were long and they are all perfectly integrated in the film.
The way “Mad Bills To Pay” is shot is through use of wide angles, some static wide shots from a distance, to give the audience the idea of the world the characters live in and also to open a peek in that life for an audience that sometimes feels to be in a real-life show more than in a fiction.
Rico belongs to a tight-knit Dominican-American community in the Bronx. He is hustling his way through a carefree summer, selling bootleg “nutcracker” cocktails and chasing girls on the beach. But when circumstances arise that force his girlfriend Destiny to move in with his family, the small apartment becomes the stage for their messy, complicated love life. It is only a matter of time before they must face a sobering reality: they are growing up too fast in a city that waits for no one. Writer-director Joel Alfonso Vargas turns his hometown into the heartbeat of his debut feature film. Teaming up with talent cast on the streets, he and his two leading actors deliver an authentic, slice-of-life portrait of the Bronx. With grit and humour, he paints a tender portrait of the chaos and charm of urban living as well as the ups and downs of youthful abandon when life takes an unexpected turn.
Written by: Angelo Acerbi
Guest
Joel AlfonsoFilm
Mad Bills To PayFestival
BerlinaleDreams by Michel Franco, in competition at the Berlinale, marks his second collaboration with actress and producer Jessica Chastain
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese shares a meditation on memory, loss, and displacement in his new film "Ancestral Visions of the Future".
In The memory of the butterflies, director Tatiana Fuentes Sadowski recovers lost stories from the rubber boom era, offering a counter-history to colonial narratives.
At the 75th Berlinale Film Festival, we had the pleasure of speaking with Brendan Canty, director of "Christy", the opening film of the Generation section. Set in the north side of Cork City, "Christy" follows a foster kid forced to …
The Light is Tom Tykwer’s comeback to narrating pur present day after a decade spent with Babylon Berlin
"How to Be Normal and The Oddness of the Other World" is the first feature by Florian Pochatklo, presented in the Perspectives section of Berlinale 75. A visually astounding and politically compelling take on mental illness, through the life pf …
Blue Moon by Linklater, is, according to Andrew Scott, both a friendship story and an artistic love story
Rafaela Camelo's " The Nature of Invisible Things" has been the Opening Film of the Generation Kplus section of Berlinale 25. the film tells us about a great unforgettable summer two 10y.o girls live, when they build a friendship and …
© 2023 Emerald Clear Ltd - all rights reserved.