Celebrating it's 30th anniversary David Lynch's Blue Velvet will screen as part of the Cinema Hooligante program. The unforgetable film is bizarre and has come to define what makes a Lynchian film. If your looking for something a little less bizarre try Beauty and the Beast as part of the Rated K: For Kids program. The 1991 film became the first animated film to be nominated for Best Picture and has earned a spot as a Disney classic.
If your looking for something even older don't worry they have you covered. The Festival is bringing back the Alloy Orchestra to perform live during the silent classic Metropolis. The 1927 movie is probably one of the most influential sci-fi films of all time and it's a great opportunity to see it on the big screen with live music. Think of it as a movie and concert all in one.
And one of the things we love about the film festival are the great documentaries and this year looks like Yarn is going to be one of the strangest ones. How do you make a documentary about knitting interesting? Well check out the trailer and see for yourself. vimeo.com/150597564. The movie will be playing in the Art and Artist program.
One of the most popular programs they have is Sound Vision which always feature interesting stories about the music world. This year they will be bringing a documentary about Austin City Limits TV show. The documentary has interviews with many musicians about how the show and their experience with it.
The other 3 films announced today range from a documentary about drugs (California Sunshine), a drama about being on the Afghan-Pakistani border (Neither Heaven nor Earth), and a coming of age story with a twist (The Fits)
The festival will run from September 22nd - October 6th.
Full descriptions of each film below with a link to their trailers.
(USA / 1991 / Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise)
Program: Rated K: For Kids
Trailer: youtube.com/watch?v=rqOShIwuCQg
Be our guest as the Milwaukee Film Festival opens its doors to one of the crown jewels of the Disney animated library: the timeless classic Beauty and the Beast presented here in a special sing-a-long version. Follow alongside the classic soundtrack (with lyrics helpfully included on screen!) and get swept away in this 'tale as old as time,' the first animated film ever to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar. It's a perfect opportunity to share this family favorite with a new generation on this, its 25th anniversary. And, who knows? Maybe on this repeat viewing you just might find something there that wasn't there before.
Blue Velvet
(USA / 1986 / Director: David Lynch)
Program: Cinema Hooligante
Trailer: vimeo.com/168749090
David Lynch's unforgettable snapshot of the rot at the heart of small-town America comes to the Milwaukee Film Festival in a gorgeous 30th anniversary restoration! David Lynch is one of our foremost excavators of the cinematic subconscious, and here his "seamless blending of beauty and horror is remarkable" (Geoff Andrew, Time Out), deftly combining the darkly comic and surreal. Returning home to care for his ailing father, Kyle MacLachlan rekindles a romance with the wholesome Laura Dern only to find himself in the midst of a seedy mystery: severed ears, sultry nightclub singers (Isabella Rossellini), and dangerous sadists (Dennis Hopper, never better) plunge him ever-deeper into a world that is equal turns thrilling and off-putting.
The Fits
(USA / 2015 / Director: Anna Rose Holmer)
Program: Competition
Trailer: vimeo.com/168749090
An astonishing work that tackles the liminal phase between childhood and adolescence with all the confusion and exuberance that it entails, The Fits is youthful ethnography that will appeal to anyone who's ever operated on the periphery. Pre-pubescent Toni (newcomer Royalty Hightower, in an amazing turn) spends her days training alongside her brother in his all-male boxing gym, while cautiously observing the female dance team The Lionesses perfect their intricate dance routine nearby. Finally mustering courage to sign up for the squad, Toni witnesses her teammates being stricken by mysterious convulsive spells that defy explanation. Told with the visual confidence of a veteran filmmaker with superbly naturalistic performances, this deft balance of the strange and joyous is certain to cast a spell.
Metropolis (with Alloy Orchestra Live)
(Germany / 1927 / Director: Fritz Lang)
Program: Spotlight Presentations
Trailer: youtube.com/watch?v=9VxgQN2GfMY
The Alloy Orchestra returns to the Milwaukee Film Festival, inspired by the Milwaukee Art Museum's upcoming Haunted Screens exhibit, providing their inimitable brand of musical accompaniment to Fritz Lang's sci-fi opus Metropolis. A stunning tale of working class rebellion, mad scientists, and sexy lady robots whose influence has never waned, Metropolis is the urtext of sci-fi cinema. And there is simply no other experience that matches up to seeing a classic silent film with live music in the Oriental Theatre's main house, so whether this is your first experience or you're looking to relive the magic of their previous MFF performances, there's no doubt that this one-night-only event will be unforgettable!
Neither Heaven Nor Earth
(France, Belgium / 2015 / Director: Clément Cogitore)
Program: Worldviews
Trailer: vimeo.com/129692617
Tasked with protecting an isolated patch of land near the Afghan-Pakistani border, a French army unit settles into the monotony of military operations as the war effort winds down, lifting weights and cracking wise as they await the call back home. But the disappearance of two soldiers during a nighttime patrol combined with the news that Taliban forces also lost men under similarly mysterious circumstances triggers an investigation and descent into paranoia. A ghost story in a stark contemporary setting, this psychological thriller drops us in the middle of "the Twilight War Zone" (Variety) with an unsettling mystery that is equal parts Carpenter and Antonioni.
Orange Sunshine
(USA / 2016 / Director: William A. Kirkley)
Program: Documentary Festival Favorites
Trailer: vimeo.com/156963454
In the 1960s, a shaggy band of SoCal hippies and beach bums formed a church known as the Brotherhood of Eternal Love, looking to change society through the use of psychedelics. The Brotherhood quickly became the primary supplier of LSD across the country (overseeing an operation that created over 100 million doses), operating under the nose of both local and federal authorities - but all good trips must come to an end. Using fascinating Super 8 recreations, crackerjack editing, and unprecedented access to Brotherhood members (telling their story for the first time), Orange Sunshine brings the ‘60s counterculture and war on drugs to stirring life.
A Song for You: The Austin City Limits Story
(USA / 2016 / Director: Keith Maitland)
Program: Sound Vision
Trailer: vimeo.com/137272503
For over four decades, Austin City Limits has been a musical institution, the longest running music show in TV history, a rollicking repository of some of our greatest musical acts (ranging from Willie Nelson to Ray Charles to Radiohead) letting loose with unforgettable performances that brought a diversity of music to a wider, appreciative audience. This oral history crackles with the energy of some of Austin City Limits’ finest sets, as a cavalcade of performers and admirers give testament to this monument of music and bring its compelling history to life, with more archival performances and interviews than we could possibly list here (okay, we'll try: Lyle Lovett, Wilco, BB King, Bonnie Raitt, St. Vincent, and so very many more).
Yarn
(Iceland, Poland, Cuba, Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, USA, UK / 2016 / Directors: Thodur Jonsson, Una Lorenzen, Heather Millard)
Program: Art & Artists
Trailer: vimeo.com/150597564
Though the dual arts of crochet and knitting have long been thought of as a domestic concern, four brilliant female artists are taking this artform from the comfort of our homes to the public sphere of art installations, allowing us to rethink our relationship to and with yarn. We're taken on a colorful, globe-trotting journey following these artists as they use yarn in surprising and varied ways, from buoyant surfaces for children to play atop of to stage shows where acrobats incorporate knitting technique into their performance, showcasing the art behind what is often dismissed as craft. These disparate threads are woven together into a bold and energetic tapestry that shows a tight-knit community forming around this versatile medium.