Friday, October 1st Old Dog OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Pema Tseden, dGenerate Films, Narrative, 2011 Tibet
The Tibetan nomad mastiff is an exotic prize dog in China, fetching as much as millions of dollars from wealthy Chinese. When a young man notices several thefts of mastiffs from Tibetan farm families, he decides to sell his family’s dog before it is stolen and sold on the black market. His father, an aging Tibetan herder, is furious when he discovers their dog missing. When the father seeks to buy the dog back, it leads to a series of tragicomic events that threaten to tear the family apart, while showing the erosion of Tibetan culture under the pressures of contemporary society.
Jinpa: Behind the Scenes OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Pema Tseden, 2018
Go behind-the-scenes in Tibet with the cast and crew of Jinpa, Pema Tseden’s dreamy take on a road movie. Wednesday, October 6th What if Babel Was Just a Myth? OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Sandrine Loncke, Icarus Films, Documentary, 2019 France
According to Unesco, a human language disappears every two weeks. Within a century, 50 to 90 percent of all languages will be gone. Does it matter?
Linguist Florian Lionnet of Princeton University emphatically believes it does. For years, he’s been documenting Láàl, a language spoken by only 700 people living in two villages on the banks of the Moyen-Chari River, in Southern Chad. Language encodes culture and worldviews, and each time a language disappears, we lose an irreplaceable part of humanity.
What if Babel Was Just a Myth? follows Lionnet as he accompanies villagers during their daily activities—fishing, carving a dugout canoe, dancing, and telling stories. He listens in on conversations, asks questions about vocabulary and grammar, and diligently records everything.
Bruly Bouabré’s Alphabet OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Nurith Aviv, Icarus Films, Documentary, 2005 France
In the 1950’s, Ivory Coast artist Frederic Bruly Bouabré created several hundred pictograms, based on one-syllable words in his language, Bété, to help people in the Bété community learn to read more quickly. Although some 600,000 Bétés live in the Ivory Coast, their language is not taught in schools, and all education is conducted in French.
Bouabré’s 400 pictograms, in various combinations, provide a playful yet tangible method of instruction. As the now elderly Bouabré explains, his aim was to “form a specific African writing from scenes of human life.” Thursday, October 7th The Rape of Europa Directed by Richard Berge, Nicole Newnham and Bonni Cohen, Menemsha Films, Documentary, 2006 US
The Rape of Europa is an epic journey through seven countries, into the violent whirlwind of fanaticism, greed, and warfare that threatened to wipe out the artistic heritage of Europe. Joan Allen narrates this chronicle about the battle over centuries of western culture.
The Waldheim Waltz Directed by Ruth Beckermann, Menemsha Films, Documentary, 2018 Austria
Ruth Beckermann documents the process of uncovering former UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim’s wartime past. It shows the swift succession of new allegations by the World Jewish Congress during his Austrian presidential campaign, the denial by the Austrian political class, and the outbreak of anti-Semitism and patriotism, which finally led to his election.
Created from international archive material and what Beckermann shot at the time, the film shows that history repeats itself time and time again. Friday, October 8th Beauty in Trouble OVID Exclusive Directed by Jan Hrebejk, Menemsha Films, Narrative, 2006 Czech Republic
Beauty in Trouble explores a young woman’s romantic dilemma: torn between a primal connection and the need to provide for her children, she loves two men. Beauty in Trouble is full of unexpected twists, humor and amazing performances culminating in a surprising and paradoxical ending.
1945 Directed by Ferenc Török, Menemsha Films, Narrative, 2017 Hungary
On a summer day in 1945, an Orthodox man and his grown son return to a village in Hungary while the villagers prepare for the wedding of the town clerk’s son. The townspeople – suspicious, remorseful, fearful, and cunning – expect the worst and behave accordingly. The town clerk fears the men may be heirs of the village’s deported Jews and expects them to demand their illegally acquired property back.
Director Ferenc Török paints a complex picture of a society trying to come to terms with the recent horrors they’ve experienced, perpetrated, or just tolerated for personal gain.
Los Angeles Times Critics’ Pick!
Wednesday, October 13th
The Ritchie Boys Directed by Christian Bauer, Menemsha Films, Documentary, 2004 Germany, Canada The Ritchie Boys is the riveting, untold story of a group of young men who fled Nazi Germany and returned as soldiers in U.S. uniforms. They knew the psychology and the language of the enemy better than anyone. In Camp Ritchie, Maryland, they were trained in intelligence and psychological warfare. Determined, bright, and inventive, they fought their own kind of war.
Streit’s: Matzo and the American Dream Directed by Michael Levine, Menemsha Films, Documentary, 2016 US For more than 90 years, the Streit’s matzo factory sat in a low-slung tenement building on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. While other matzo companies modernized, Streit’s remained a piece of living history, churning out 40 percent of the nation’s unleavened bread on pre-war machinery as old as the factory itself. In a neighborhood where the Jewish immigrants long ago moved on, in a nation where progress and profits trump all else, where manufacturing has left the cities if not the country, where family businesses are bought out by giant corporations and workers move from job to low paying job, filmmaker Michael Levine captures the Streit’s saga and echoes the American Dream. Friday, October 15th The Whalers OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1956 France Ruspoli’s influential portrait of the last whale fishermen to work with harpoons, living in the Azores.
The Earth’s Forgotten OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1961 France
Ruspoli had a standing interest in isolated and marginalized communities, very much on display in France’s rugged, unforgiving south. In The Earth’s Forgotten, the subjects are peasants eking out a subsistence-level existence.
A Look at Madness OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1962 France
The daily life of patients and the work of doctors, including the highly influential psychiatrist Dr. François Tosquelles, at the psychiatric hospital of Saint-Alban in Lozère, formerly a monastery and prison. Captive Feast OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1962 France
A companion piece to A Look at Madness documents the annual village festival that allows inmates a rare chance to mingle with the rest of the population.
The Last Drink OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1964 France
Documents the process of detox treatments at a hospital in Bordeaux. Chaval (1971) La Chavalanthrope (1972) OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premieres Directed by Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary France
Two tributes to Ruspoli’s longtime friend, the humorist and cartoonist Chaval, made after his suicide in 1968. Three Cheers for the Whale OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Chris Marker and Mario Ruspoli, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 1972 France
Chronicles the history of mankind’s relationship with the largest and most majestic of marine mammals, and graphically exposes their slaughter by the whaling industry.
Mario Ruspoli, Prince of the Whales OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Florence Dauman, Kino-Lober/Metrograph, Documentary, 2011 France
Director Florence Dauman, whose father was a lifelong friend and producer of Ruspoli’s, uses her privileged perspective to create an intimate portrait of this revolutionary but often overlooked artist.
The result, a film that caused Chris Marker to exclaim, “Finally, the tribute he deserved,” draws on a treasury of relics provided by Ruspoli’s widow, Dominique, as well as the testimonials of friends and admirers included Richard Leacock, D.A. Pennebaker, Albert Maysles, and many more. Establishing Ruspoli’s proper place in film history, it’s a memorial deeply stamped with the personality of its inimitable subject, a eulogy told with love by a friend. Wednesday, October 20th Flower in Otomi OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Luisa Riley, Icarus Films, Documentary, 2012 Mexico On February 14th, 1974, 19-year-old Deni Prieto Stock was killed by the Mexican army in the town of Nepantla, along with four of her comrades in the Fuerzas de Liberacion Nacional (National Liberation Forces), a forerunner to the Zapatistas.
Her sister and other family members recount a cozy childhood spent between New York and Mexico City with parents who raised them to support leftist causes. A cousin shares letters that detail her radicalization, and former lovers describe her growing conviction, particularly following the killing of student protestors in the Tlatelolco massacre, that armed revolution was the only path to economic and social justice in Mexico. Tina in Mexico OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Brenda Longfellow, Bullfrog Films, Documentary, 2003 US Follows the tumultuous and epic story of Tina Modotti, revolutionary, bohemian spirit and renowned photographer, acclaimed for her innovative and impassioned depiction of social issues.
Longfellow’s film weaves archival footage, the luminous photographs of Tina Modotti and Edward Weston, the murals of Diego Rivera, and lyrical re-enactments, to conjure up the political, artistic and intimate spaces of their lives in Mexico during the 1920s. Friday, October 22nd The Juche Idea OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Jim Finn, Experimental Feature, 2010 US In the late 1960’s Kim Jong Il guaranteed his succession as the Dear Leader of North Korea by adapting his father’s Juche (pronounced choo-CHAY) philosophy to propaganda, film and art. Translated as self-reliance, Juche is a hybrid of Confucian and authoritarian Stalinist pseudo-socialism. Inspired by the real-life story of the South Korean director kidnapped in the 70’s to invigorate the North Korean film industry, the film follows Yoon Jung Lee, a young video artist invited to work at a Juche art residency on a North Korean collective farm.
The Annotated Field Guide of Ulysses S. Grant OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Jim Finn, Documentary, 2020 US For four years in the 1860’s half of the United States was held hostage by an unrecognized white supremacist republic. Shot on 16mm in national military parks, swamps, forests and the suburban sprawl across the former battlefields, The Annotated Field Guide of Ulysses S. Grant follows General Grant’s path liberating the southern United States. It focuses not only on his battles but on massacres committed by Confederate armies and the role of enslaved people in the war.
La Trinchera Luminosa del Presidente Gonzalo OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Jim Finn, Experimental Feature, 2007 US A recreation of one day at the Canto Grande prison in Peru, following women guerrillas from the Maoist Shining Path movement in their morning marches to their bedtime chants. Kept isolated in their own cellblocks, the guerrillas refused to acknowledge that they were imprisoned. Their cellblocks were another front in the People’s War: “shining trenches of combat”. This film shows the intense indoctrination and belief system of the brutal Latin American insurgency.
Interkosmos OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Jim Finn, Experimental Feature, 2006 US In the 1970s, the East Germans hatch a top-secret plot to establish Communist colonies on the moons of Saturn and Jupiter.
“What a delight! How charming and fantastic, so full of rare atmospheres.” – Guy Maddin
Tuesday, October 26th Ziyara OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Simone Bitton, Icarus Films, Documentary, 2020 France Inviting viewers on a cinematic pilgrimage to her homeland of Morocco, celebrated documentary filmmaker Simone Bitton explores her Jewish roots through the sphere of the Muslim guardians of the nation’s Jewish memory, centered around the tradition of “ziyara”.
In the arid but beautiful landscape of rural Morocco, the country’s youngest citizens have largely never themselves coexisted alongside Jews, although their presence is still felt in symbols, old shrines, synagogues and cemeteries. Many Muslims still maintain and find beauty in these places, seeing them as a timeless connection to the word of God. Friday, October 29th Le Navire Night OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Marguerite Duras Starring Dominque Sanda, Bulle Ogier, and Mathieu Carrière Narrated by Benoît Jacquot and Marguerite Duras Cinematography by Pierre Lhomme Icarus Films, Feature, 1979, France
2K Restoration! With Le Navire Night, writer and filmmaker Marguerite Duras explores the matrix of love, desire and language in her characteristically oblique and experimental style. The film’s lovers—played by Dominique Sanda and Mathieu Carrière—are never allowed to meet in person, instead carrying out their conversations over the phone, using unlisted phone lines leftover from the German occupation of Paris. Elliptical sequences play out in empty streets, nocturnal cityscapes and shadowy interiors, linked together only by the spectral presence of the character’s voices.
At once dreamlike, intimate and fundamentally anonymous, Le Navire Night challenges the conventional relationship between sound, image and narrative.
Marguerite As She Was OVID Exclusive, Streaming Premiere Directed by Dominique Auvray, Icarus Films, Documentary, 2002 France Marguerite Duras (1914-1996) – best-known as the author of The Lover and for the screenplay for Hiroshima, Mon Amour (the classic 1960 New Wave film directed by Alain Resnais) – was one of the most prolific, controversial, and renowned cultural figures in post-war France. Between 1943 (when she published her first book) and 1995 (when she published her last – That’s All), Duras directed 19 films and wrote more than 70 novels, plays, movies and adaptations.
A friend of Duras, Dominique Auvray was also the editor of three of her films, including Le Navire Night. Given access to an amazing breadth of archival materials, photographs, television interviews, extracts from Duras’ films, and home movies from the 1950’s through the 1990’s, Auvray has crafted a personal portrait of the woman.
Complete list of films premiering on OVID this month (in alphabetical order):
1945, Ferenc Török (2017) A Look at Madness, Mario Ruspoli (1962) Beauty in Trouble, Jan Hrebejk (2006) Bruly Bouabré’s Alphabet, Nurith Aviv (2005) Captive Feast, Mario Ruspoli (1962) Chaval, Mario Ruspoli (1971) Flower in Otomi, Luisa Riley (2012) Interkosmos, Jim Finn (2006) Jinpa: Behind the Scenes, Pema Tseden (2018) La Trinchera Luminosa del Presidente Gonzalo, Jim Finn (2007) Le Chavalanthrope, Mario Ruspoli (1972) Le Navire Night, Marguerite Duras (1979) Marguerite As She Was, Dominique Auvray (2002) Mario Ruspoli, Prince of the Whales, Florence Dauman (2011) Old Dog, Pema Tseden (2011) Streit’s Matzo and the American Dream, Michael Levine (2016) The Annotated Field Guide of Ulysses S. Grant, Jim Finn (2020) The Earth’s Forgotten, Mario Ruspoli (1961) The Juche Idea, Jim Finn (2010) The Last Drink, Mario Ruspoli (1964) The Rape of Europa, Richard Berge, Nicole Newnham and Bonni Cohen (2006) The Ritchie Boys, Christian Bauer (2004) The Waldheim Waltz, Ruth Beckermann (2018) The Whalers, Mario Ruspoli (1958) Three Cheers for the Whale, Mario Ruspoli & Chris Marker (1972) Tina in Mexico, Brenda Longfellow (2003) What if Babel Was Just a Myth?, Sandrine Loncke (2019) Ziyara, Simone Bitton (2020)
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