NZIFF 2023: Q&A With Michael McDonnell, programmer
How has it been programming the 2023 NZIFF?
It almost
seems like things have been getting back to something like normal after several
years of disruption. It was good to be able to attend festivals like Sundance
and Berlin myself, and my colleague Sandra Reid was again back at Cannes where
the programme was as rich as ever.Anatomy of a Fall
What have the quality of the films been like this year?
As usual
there were a lot more great films than we could reasonably fit into a 19-day
programme, although a disconcerting number of the biggest films still come in
very late in the piece from Cannes, which can make for some anxious
programmers.
The Aotearoa contingent seems particularly strong this year – what do you put that down to?
The number
of strong local films available usually just comes down to timing and what is
ready to be finished or released around festival time each year. I don’t know
if this year is any different except that this year’s crop has proven to be
especially bountiful.
Bad Behaviour
The biggest sellers so far are our opening night film Anatomy of a Fall, Asteroid City, Past Lives and our closing night film Fallen Leaves. More surprising top sellers include Merkel and the music documentary Little Richard: I Am Everything. The top selling New Zealand titles are Loop Track, Bad Behaviour, King Loser and Ms. Information.
Which film do you think people should not miss out on and why?
I suspect
a sleeper hit will be Robot Dreams. Although it may look like a fairly
straightforward children’s film it’s definitely one that hits on a deeper
level. Audiences that went wild for Marcel last year will probably be
kicking themselves if they miss out on this one. Just remember to bring along a
box of tissues, trust me you’ll be thankful. Robot Dreams
Another
real sleeper that will stun audiences is Beyond Utopia. It tells a truly
amazing story and gives a pretty different view of life in North Korea than the
usual quirky documentary portrayals we see.
Which are your favourites from the programme and why?
As usual, some
of the smaller, more unknown titles are my real favourites. A definite
favourite is the Chinese film Suzhou River from 2000, which I believe
will be screening officially in New Zealand for the first time, certainly
theatrically. It’s a great film which shows a real different, incredibly grungy
side of Shanghai which was on its way out at the turn of the century and is
completely gone now. The film itself is a lovelorn Wong Karwai-esque drama with
a touch of Vertigo.
Two newer favourites hot from Cannes include Omen and Pictures of Ghosts. Omen is the directorial debut of Belgian-Congolese rapper Baloji and is one of the more eye-poppingly stylish films in the festival this year. It’s not a horror film per se but Baloji definitely riffs on the elevated horror stylings of films like Get Out and Midsommar to tell the story of a Congolese man returning home from Europe. Pictures of Ghosts is an effortlessly entertaining documentary from festival favourite Kleber Mendonça Filho which will delight fans of his earlier films like Neighbouring Sounds and Aquarius. It’s a love letter to his hometown Recife and its arcane motion picture history. Who knew that the Nazis built a modernist movie theatre in Brazil?
What do you think have been the themes of this year’s films?
It’s hard
to identify a unifying theme in 130-ish wildly different films, but this year
there have been a noticeable number of films set in educational and medical
institutions.Monster
Kore-eda’s latest Monster follows an incident at a school from three different perspectives while Blue Jean about homophobia in schools in Thatcherite Britain sadly seems incredibly current. Radical tells a true inspirational story set in Mexico, while Arnold Is a Model Student takes a satirical look at education and politics in Thailand.
The documentary De Humani Corporis Fabrica offers a one-of-a-kind documentary perspective of the goings-on in French hospital taking cameras where nobody ever thought they would go, while Midwives delivers a more conventional and crowd-pleasing look at life in a busy maternity unit. On the Adamant portrays a unique outpatient service for Parisians with mental health challenges set aboard a barge floating on the Seine.
What do you think will be an audience favourite this year and why?
There’s
also a strong line-up of political films and I suspect Merkel will be a
firm audience favourite, although we’re all quite familiar with who Angela
Merkel was, the film will be quite revelatory to Kiwi audiences as it compiles
a treasure trove of archival material from German TV to present a rounded
portrait of the long-time Chancellor.
I suspect
audiences will really respond to a couple of quite different political
thrillers. Reality, an adaptation of director Tina Satter’s own play,
delivers an intense experience by merely recreating the arrest of US
whistleblower Reality Winner word-for-word, in real-time, while How to Blow
Up a Pipeline takes a similarly realist approach that will have audiences
on the edge of their seats as it follows a gang of eco-activists who take
climate protest to the next level.How To Have Sex
Based on its reception in Cannes, I think audiences will really react to Molly Manning Walker’s How to Have Sex which took home the Un Certain Regard Prize and probably should’ve had a competition berth. It was quickly compared to last year’s audience favourite Aftersun and not just because of its similar Mediterranean holiday settings.
It must be very heartening to welcome back international guests to the festival too?
Molly
Manning Walker has just recently been confirmed as able to attend our
screenings of How to Have Sex in Auckland and Wellington, so the
screenings will definitely be something special. But perhaps our biggest get is
Celine Song who will be visiting Auckland to present her film Past Lives
here in person. Her fellow A24 studio-mate, Elegance Bratton will be attending
Auckland and Wellington to present his striking and intensely personal drama The
Inspection. A very unique queer coming-of-age story based on Elegance’s own
background and involvement in the US Marines.
From Australia we’re welcoming the plunderphonic duo Soda Jerk who regular festivalgoers will remember from their savage satire of Australian politics Terror Nullius. This time they’ve manipulated thousands of clips to hilariously reimagine the madness that is US politics in the Trump era in their new work Hello Dankness. Also visiting from across the ditch is Rolf de Heer with his one-of-a-kind new film The Survival of Kindness.
From further afield we’re welcoming Laha Mebow with her indigenous Taiwanese family drama GAGA and perhaps the most exciting Q&A I’m looking forward to will be with Danish director Christoffer Guldbrandsen for his film A Storm Foretold. Guldbrandsen embedded himself with Trump fixer Roger Stone through the 2020 election and literally barely survived to tell the tale.
Which is
your one pick of Ant Timpson’s Incredibly Strange film festival?#Manhole
Ant has a
great selection this year and I don’t know how he did it seeing as he’s spent
the better part of the lead up to the festival in the remote South Island
wilderness shooting his upcoming film. I can attest to the wild entertainment
value of titles like #Manhole, Hello Dankness and Sisu,
but the Incredibly Strange title I’m most looking forward to checking out
myself is River the latest title from the filmmakers behind cult
festival favourite Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes. It looks like a
similarly inventive low-budget wonder, something like Groundhog Day on
steroids.
Just finally, which is the one film you will be in the crowd for, with your phone off and luxuriating in?
Hoping
I’ll be able to clear the decks and catch one of the screenings of the riotous
and campy noir Detour, it’s a long-time favourite so I’m hoping seeing
it in pristine 4K is as much fun as seeing it on a poor quality public domain
VHS, which I think would’ve been my previous viewing experience.
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