Telluride Film Festival Announces Lineup
Friday, September 3, 2010 at 7:26AM
The First Grader in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Another Year, Biutiful, Charles Ferguson, Film Festivals, Inside Job, Justin Chadwick, Mike Leigh, Telluride Film Festival, The First Grader, The King's Speech, Tom Hooper, Toronto Film Festival

‘Never Let Me Go,’ ‘Biutiful,’ join Scorsese doc set at fest’

Dave McNary - Variety

Mixing prestige with offbeat titles, the 37th Telluride Film Festival will offer its usual low-key glimpse at an eclectic array of potential awards contenders over Labor Day weekend.

Lineup, unveiled Thursday, features several pics that will head to the Toronto Film Festival afterward, including Mike Leigh’s “Another Year,” Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s “Biutiful,” Tom Hooper’s “The King’s Speech,” Xavier Beauvois’ “Of Gods and Men,” Charles Ferguson’s docu “Inside Job,” Errol Morris’ “Tabloid” and Stephen Frears’ “Tamara Drewe.”

In all, the Telluride program contains 24 feature films along with six programs by guest director, novelist Michael Ondaatje, 25 short films and 13 documentaries screening in the fest’s Backlot program.

Tributes are set for actress Claudia Cardinale; director Peter Weir as part of the world premiere screening of prison-escape drama “The Way Back”; and thesp Colin Firth, who will be feted along with the premiere of “The King’s Speech.”

Other high-profile titles include Mark Romanek’s “Never Let Me Go” and Romanian drama “If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle,” which won the Silver Bear at Berlin. Besides “Inside Job” and “Tabloid,” notable documentary titles include Martin Scorsese’s “A Letter to Elia,” Werner Herzog’s “Happy People: A Year in the Taiga” and Ken Burns’ “The Tenth Inning,” a four-hour addition to his 1994 PBS series “Baseball.”

Programmers drew heavily on Cannes titles, including grand jury prize winner “Of Gods and Men,” along with “Another Year,” “Biutiful,” Olivier Assayas’ “Carlos,” docu “Inside Job,” Michelangelo Frammartino’s “Le quattro volte,” Justin Chadwick’s “The First Grader,” South Korean drama “Poetry,” Sylvain Chomet’s animated “The Illusionist,” Bertrand Tavernier’s period drama “The Princess of Montpensier” and Frears’ “Tamara Drewe.”

“We felt that the Cannes films were particularly strong this year,” said co-director Gary Meyer. “There were about a dozen knockouts.”

Telluride’s drawn an impressive list of awards contenders in recent years, serving as the launching pad for “Slumdog Millionaire,” “Juno,” “Brokeback Mountain,” “Capote” and “The Last King of Scotland.”

Unlike the Venice and Toronto fests, however, Telluride continues to opt for a straightforward presentation over the Friday-Monday period - without red carpets or awards competitions. Org, which relies on about 700 local residents to run the fest, refuses to tout any title as a “premiere.”

“We are always just looking for the most interesting films out there,” Meyer told Daily Variety. He estimated that Telluride has an acceptance rate of about 95% for the films it invites.The initial Telluride lineup did not include a pair of Fox Searchlight titles - Danny Boyle’s “127 Hours” and Darren Aronofsky’s “Black Swan” - though it was rumored that the two pics would be last-minute additions. Jason Reitman’s “Up in the Air” was added to the program last year after the first official announcement.

Meyer warned against such speculation. “We always have a big laugh over the films that are going to come here that don’t,” he said.

First up on Friday will be “Carlos,” the six-hour biopic about the legendary terrorist. “We fell in love with ‘Carlos’ when we saw it in January,” Meyer recalled. “If it had been in competition at Cannes, it would have won.”

Meyer was particularly enthused over “If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle,” which he saw with Telluride co-directors Julie Huntsinger and Tom Luddy at Berlin. “We saw a lot of Romanian films but this one was head and shoulders above the rest,” he added.

Meyer’s also a champion for two relatively unknown titles - Lavinia Currier’s African rain - forest tale “Oka! Amerikee” and Spanish animated entry “Chico and Rita.” “We checked with people at the other festivals, and they didn’t even know about these two,” he added.

Meyer noted that on “The Way Back,” the organizers needed to contact 23 different producers. “We saw it in June, and it seemed just right to us to bring here, because no one’s ever really done a tribute to Peter Weir,” he added. Festival has issued 2,400 passes, and there will probably be about 6,000 visitors in town.

The 2010 Telluride lineup :

THE ‘SHOW’

MEDALLION AWARDS

GUEST DIRECTOR PROGRAMS

ADDITIONAL FILM REVIVALS

BACKLOT

Article originally appeared on The First Grader (http://www.thefirstgrader-themovie.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.