Cool. Classy. Comfortable. Who wants their BIFFwear for 2012?
The emphasis this year is on the classy -- check out these delicately shaded T-shirts! We are glad to present the work of Anvil Knitwear yet again, happy to get our logos on their fine, quality product. Aaaannd -- we have ballcaps, with and without those wonderful "hattails" that prevent flyaway headgear, and totes as well.
These items can be found and purchased this year ONLY at the Boulder Theater and at the Tent on the Pearl Street Mall, between 13th and 14th Streets (you can't miss it . . . it's the only big giant tent out there this weekend). AND we have discounts for VIP passholders!
Here's the breakdown:
Adult T-shirts, $20; w/VIP discount, $15
Kids' T-shirts, $15; w/VIP discount, $12.50
Hats w/hattails, $25; w/VIP discount, $20
Hats w/o hattails, $20; w/VIP discount $15
Totes, $12.50; w/VIP discount $10
So make a statement. That statement is, "I rock. BIFF rocks. And I'm rockin' this shirt with my hot bod." Yeah.
Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Volunteers to the rescue!
Attention BIFF volunteers! Here's a last-minute shout-out -- we would love to have some help on a few selected shifts (see below). This is your chance to dash in and save the day, just like John Wayne and the cavalry in a John Ford movie!
Earn vouchers for tickets! Receive a nifty BIFF 2012 T-shirt absolutely free! Impress your friends and confuse your enemies! Here's the info from our Volunteer Coordinator:
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Monday, February 6, 2012
The BIFF Saga: Year Four (Feb. 14 – 17, 2008)
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Who dat? Festival director Robin Beeck at BIFF 2008. [Photo by Randy Malone] |
Year Four comes back to us in bits and pieces. There was no overriding event or personality that year. Instead, BIFF 2008 was like a firework exploding in the night – a thousand flashes of color that lit up the landscape.
Here are some moments:
The premiere of Helen Hunt’s directorial debut, “Then She Found Me,” on opening night (Valentine’s Day, don’t you know!). Hazel Miller sang the night away.
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Denver diva Hazel Miller entertains on BIFF's opening night in 2008. |
A breathtaking live performance by Boulder’sown blues master, Otis Taylor, in the wake of the documentary short “American Black Banjo Player,” filmed in conjunction with the recording of Taylor’s groundbreaking album “Recapturing the Banjo.”
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Boulder bluesman Otis Taylor (far right) and ensemble. [Photo by Randy Malone] |
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The women who were the subject of Michael Brown's "3 Peaks, 3 Weeks." |
Over at the Filmmakers’ Panel, Film Threat’s Chris Gore led a hilarious and too-short session about how to get backing a film idea, which climaxed with taking aspiring filmmakers out of the audience and subjecting them to impromptu pitch sessions.
Among the five sell-out shows at the festival were “Les Paul: Chasing Sound” and “Dalai Lama Renaissance.” The latter was so popular that a second screening was added – a BIFF first!
The Festival’s powerful closing night film, “Stranded: I’ve Come from a Plane that Crashed on the Mountains”, a documentary about the infamous 1972 Andes plane crash, was followed with a Q&A session with Antonio “Tintin” Vizintin, a survivor of the horrific crash who traveled to Boulder from his home in Montevideo, Uruguay, to help present the film. The sold-out crowd was mesmerized as Tintin described the harrowing 73 days he spent in the Andes and the impact of the crash on his life.
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Antonio “Tintin” Vizintin and the Vielher for "Stranded". [Photo by Randy Malone] |
Educator of the Year
Jim Palmer, CU-BoulderBest Student Film
“The Replacement Child,” Justin Lerner, director (U.S.)
Most InspirationalFilm
“The Singing Revolution,” Jim Tusty and Maureen Castle,directors (U.S.)
Best Comedy
“The Job,” Jonathan Browning, director (U.S.)
Best Colorado Film
“Iron Ladies of Liberia,” Daniel Junge and Siatta ScottJohnson, directors (Liberia/U.S.)
Best Adventure Film
“3 Peaks, 3 Weeks,” Michael Brown, director (U.S.)
Best Animation
“The Fog,” Emilio Ramos, director (Mexico/Spain)
Best Short Film
“Tanghi Argentini,” Guido Thys, director (Belgium)
Best ShortDocumentary
“In Times of War: Ray Parker’s Story,” Mark and ChristineBonn, directors (U.S.)
Best FeatureDocumentary
“War Dance,” Andrea Nix and Sean Fine, directors(Uganda/U.S.)
Best Feature Film
“Charlie Bartlett,” Jon Poll, director (U.S.)
Grand Prize
“Stranded: I've Come from a Plane that Crashed on theMountains,” Gonzalo Arijon, director (France)
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
LAST CALL for BIFF 2012 volunteers! Plus, do's and dont's
We are still looking for volunteers! Our annual Volunteer Orientations will take place this evening (Wednesday, Feb. 1) from 6:30 to 8 p.m. and on Saturday morning from 10 a.m. to noon in the cozy confines of the Hotel Boulderado at 2115 13th St. in downtown Boulder.
We welcome both first-time and returning BIFFsters. Please join us, whether you have signed up online already or not. This is an excellent chance for you to get the complete information you will need to participate this year, to find out what our departmental needs are, and meet our team leaders. C'mon down!
Along this line of thought, we wanted to answer a "Dear BIFF" Facebook post we received last week. It asked: "how do i know as a volunteer which events i'll get into and which events i should buy tickets for? don't want to miss anything!"
To tell you the truth, if you don't want to miss anything, you really should buy a VIP pass! Sad as it may sound, volunteering for BIFF is not just a means to an end, a way to get into events -- and if that's your interest, we much prefer that you buy a ticket to the event in question and enjoy yourself.
We volunteer in order to make the yearly miracle of BIFF take place. That means we put aside our desire to see the films, celebrities and events we are working at so that we can make that experience as friendly and enjoyable as we can for those that have paid to be there. For instance, while I would love to watch the tribute to Martin Sheen in the Boulder Theater on Saturday afternoon, I will be busy working at the Filmmakers Panel in the Boulder Public Library at that time.
So, if you don't want to miss something -- BUY A TICKET FOR IT -- DON'T VOLUNTEER FOR IT! Most of us will find out about what we missed by checking the BIFF blog and website later for reports prepared by our Digital Communications team.
That being said, there are some awesomely fun things that being a volunteer will get you! Not only do you earn vouchers for screenings and events that you aren't actively working, all qualified volunteers (eight hours' service plus) will have access to our Filmmakers' Lounge at the Lazy Dog, 1346 Pearl St.! This exclusive hangout will be open ONLY to filmmakers, VIP passholders, staff and volunteers throughout the festival. If you want to hobnob with directors, producers, actors and other special guests, this will be your big chance to do it!
We also are throwing the party to end all parties -- the B.A.D.! The inaugural BIFF After Dark party will take place at Oddfellows Hall at 1543 Pearl St. from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Saturday night. This hoedown/throwdown will feature films projected all over the venue, two live bands, comedy from Boulder's own Hippie Man, and food from Chipotle, beers from Avery and Boulder Beer, and wine from Francis Ford Coppola Winery. IT - WILL - BE - SICK. Filmmakers, VIP passholders, staff, and volunteers ONLY.
Plus, I think we each get a groovy BIFF 2012 T-shirt to wear. And we work hard and have fun! Many of my closest friends are those I've made over the eight-year history of BIFF. If you want to join the club, please do! . . . but don't ask anyone for their autograph. We're just the help!
We welcome both first-time and returning BIFFsters. Please join us, whether you have signed up online already or not. This is an excellent chance for you to get the complete information you will need to participate this year, to find out what our departmental needs are, and meet our team leaders. C'mon down!
Along this line of thought, we wanted to answer a "Dear BIFF" Facebook post we received last week. It asked: "how do i know as a volunteer which events i'll get into and which events i should buy tickets for? don't want to miss anything!"
To tell you the truth, if you don't want to miss anything, you really should buy a VIP pass! Sad as it may sound, volunteering for BIFF is not just a means to an end, a way to get into events -- and if that's your interest, we much prefer that you buy a ticket to the event in question and enjoy yourself.
We volunteer in order to make the yearly miracle of BIFF take place. That means we put aside our desire to see the films, celebrities and events we are working at so that we can make that experience as friendly and enjoyable as we can for those that have paid to be there. For instance, while I would love to watch the tribute to Martin Sheen in the Boulder Theater on Saturday afternoon, I will be busy working at the Filmmakers Panel in the Boulder Public Library at that time.
So, if you don't want to miss something -- BUY A TICKET FOR IT -- DON'T VOLUNTEER FOR IT! Most of us will find out about what we missed by checking the BIFF blog and website later for reports prepared by our Digital Communications team.
That being said, there are some awesomely fun things that being a volunteer will get you! Not only do you earn vouchers for screenings and events that you aren't actively working, all qualified volunteers (eight hours' service plus) will have access to our Filmmakers' Lounge at the Lazy Dog, 1346 Pearl St.! This exclusive hangout will be open ONLY to filmmakers, VIP passholders, staff and volunteers throughout the festival. If you want to hobnob with directors, producers, actors and other special guests, this will be your big chance to do it!
We also are throwing the party to end all parties -- the B.A.D.! The inaugural BIFF After Dark party will take place at Oddfellows Hall at 1543 Pearl St. from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Saturday night. This hoedown/throwdown will feature films projected all over the venue, two live bands, comedy from Boulder's own Hippie Man, and food from Chipotle, beers from Avery and Boulder Beer, and wine from Francis Ford Coppola Winery. IT - WILL - BE - SICK. Filmmakers, VIP passholders, staff, and volunteers ONLY.
Plus, I think we each get a groovy BIFF 2012 T-shirt to wear. And we work hard and have fun! Many of my closest friends are those I've made over the eight-year history of BIFF. If you want to join the club, please do! . . . but don't ask anyone for their autograph. We're just the help!
Anger over women's health scandal: BIFF and "Pink Ribbons, Inc."
ARE YOU INCENSED over the decision announced Tuesday by the organization Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation, the group that co-opted and capitalized the iconic "pink ribbon" to support awareness and preventative treatment for breast cancer, to halt its funding of those efforts by Planned Parenthood? Here's a link to the story -- many advocates say that Komen caved in to pressure from right-wing groups who oppose a woman's right to choose . . . even if cutting off funds will make those women sicken and die.
If so, you must see the feature documentary we have scheduled for BIFF 2012. "Pink Ribbons, Inc.," directed by Lea Pool, will receive its Colorado premiere at BIFF on Saturday, Feb. 18 at 12:15 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church, 1421 Spruce St.
This hard-hitting film blows the pink lid off of corporate"Pink Ribbon" marketing campaigns for breast cancer. Labeled a"dream cause" by marketing experts, the ubiquitous Pink Ribbon hasbeen hijacked by companies as diverse as Yoplait, Ford Motors and Kentucky Fried Chicken as a tool tosell their products. But where does this money go? Research has stronglysuggested that estrogen-imitating food and cosmetics additives are some of thecauses of the breast cancer explosion, yet the boards of cancer foundations aredominated by the very corporations that sell and deliver these products. Findout about the daily realities of breast cancer treatment, far below the pinkcloud of corporate double-speak, and see what you can do to change it.
This movie is part of our 14-film Call 2 Action package -- where we provide you with access, dialogue and tools to make change happen NOW. This screening is co-presented by the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation's Army of Women Program, and will be introduced by Vicki Tosher, president of the Colorado Breast Cancer Coalition.
Movies like "Pink Ribbons" are important to put on society's radar. That's a huge part of why we put on BIFF, and why we act through our Call 2 Action program to empower YOU to raise your consciousness and change your world with the help of the power of film. Let's see if we can sell out this screening TODAY! BUY TICKETS ONLINE AT WWW.BIFF1.COM!
Monday, January 30, 2012
Almost there! And so it begins
Our wonderful Workshops and Panels Coordinator Donna Crain grabbed these images at our Program Release Party on Thursday. It's the annual event at which members, sponsors and community representatives are given an exclusive sneak peek at our program for the year.
This year, the event was staged in a unique and beautiful venue -- that of the jeweler Todd Reed Gallery at 2015 Pearl Street. Thank you to Todd Reed (toddreed.com), and to Francis Ford Coppola wines, Avery Brewing, and Zoe Ma Ma for sponsoring our event. The performance by the Lemon Sponge Cake contemporary dance troupe was spectacular as well! And, as you can see, the party was a blast.
We're incredibly excited by this year's films and special guests. We will be announcing the posting of the 2012 schedule, along with tickets sales for all events, within hours. Stay tuned!
This year, the event was staged in a unique and beautiful venue -- that of the jeweler Todd Reed Gallery at 2015 Pearl Street. Thank you to Todd Reed (toddreed.com), and to Francis Ford Coppola wines, Avery Brewing, and Zoe Ma Ma for sponsoring our event. The performance by the Lemon Sponge Cake contemporary dance troupe was spectacular as well! And, as you can see, the party was a blast.
We're incredibly excited by this year's films and special guests. We will be announcing the posting of the 2012 schedule, along with tickets sales for all events, within hours. Stay tuned!
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
The BIFF Saga: Year Two (Feb. 16-19, 2006)
Actress and BIFF 2006 attendee Maria Bello, who received the Colorado Film Society Award for Excellence in Acting. [Photo by Randy Malone] |
It was COLD.
Colder than a [insert your favorite metaphor here].
BIFF Year Two was marked by a record-breaking cold snap (minus-14, anyone?) that posed some logistical challenges, but didn’t stop the attendees from increasing by 50 percent from Year One. Even though downtown Boulder was subject to rolling blackouts throughout the weekend, everything took place as scheduled!
51 films were shown, and an avalanche of special guests included actors Maria Bello, Patrick Warburton, Danielle Proulx, Marie Matiko and Eric Roberts; screenwriters Amy Fox and Richard Alfieri; directors Arthur Seidelman, Stephen Auerbach, Andrew Quigley, Kathleen Man and Jim Butterworth; and producers Judd Payne and Joe Eastwood.
All these guests and many visiting filmmakers bundled up and scooted from their hotels to the BIFF venues. Many of our volunteers brought our guests hats, gloves and coats to borrow, and even brought them door-to-door! Snuggled away in the evenings, we partied enthusiastically together.
Here’s some more info, taken from the end-of-fest wrap-up:
Actress Maria Bello and the makers of “The Sisters” attended the Opening Night Gala on Thursday evening at the Boulder Theater. After the film, which held the audience in a web of family dysfunction and drama, Bello, director Arthur Seidelman, screenwriter Richard Alfieri and producers Judd Payne and Joe Eastwood, answered questions from the audience. Bello was presented with the Colorado Film Society Award for Excellence in Acting. Later, Onda rocked the house with its unique brand of Afro-Cuban jazz.
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A still from the hilarious "West Bank Story," which took Best Short Film honors at BIFF 2006. |
French-Canadian actress Danielle Proulx answered questions from the audience after the screening of "C.R.A.Z.Y.," in which she portrayed the mother of five sons.
"Burning Man: Beyond Black Rock," about the annual gathering in Nevada, played to two nearly sold out screenings.
“The Civilization of Maxwell Bright,” a film about redemption through unconditional love, played to a large audience late Saturday night at the Boulder Theater.
Present were actors Patrick Warburton, Eric Roberts and Marie Matiko, who played the Chinese bride who chose to see her husband’s beauty and offer him a sense of peace. After the film, the three stars answered audience questions for more than 30 minutes.
Veteran film actor Eric Roberts takes questions from an appreciative crowd after the screening of "The Civilization of Maxwell Bright." [Photo by Randy Malone] |
Festival attendees devoured the decadent hors d’oeuvres prepared by Frasca at the sold-out Closing Night Awards Ceremony on Sunday. The Colorado Film Society Awards were presented, and the Tibetan/Canadian film “What Remains of Us” mesmerized the audience.
After the film, Kalsang Dolma, the Tibetan-Canadian woman featured in the documentary, answered questions from a very emotional audience. The Rebecca Folsom Band performed to close out the Festival.
Amy Fox’s screenwriting workshop was well attended, as was Jim Butterworth’s documentary workshop. The panel discussion, "Film Forward," highlighted the issues surrounding new media.
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Playwright and screenwriter Amy Fox gave a well-attended screenwriting seminar in a chilly Municipal Building on BIFF 2006 Saturday. |
BIFF 2006 Award Winners
Best Student Film
“The Saviour,” Peter Templeman, director (Australia)
Best New Filmmaker
Andrew Menan, “Frozen Food Section” (U.S.)
Best Short Film
“West Bank Story,” Ari Sandel, director (U.S.)
Best Colorado Film
“Light of the Himalaya,” Michael Brown, director (Nepal/U.S.)
Best Animated Film
“Magda,” Chel White, director (U.S.)
Best Short Documentary
“Carhenge: Genius or Junk?,”David Liban, director (U.S.)
Best Documentary
“Boys of Baraka,” Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, directors (Kenya/U.S.)
Best Adventure Film
“Race Across America,” Stephen Auerbach, director (U.S.)
Best Feature Film
“C.R.A.Z.Y.”, Jean-Marc Vallee, director (Canada)
Best Actress
Danielle Proulx, “C.R.A.Z.Y.”
Best Actor
Patrick Warburton, “The Civilization of Maxwell Bright”
Colorado Film Society Award for Excellence in Acting
Maria Bello
Special Jury Award
“Diameter of the Bomb,” Andrew Quigley, director (UK/Canada)
Monday, December 19, 2011
Five million minutes to BIFF 2012!
Get ready. We are dreaming and scheming, planning, chatting . . . dealing with logistics, statistics, plans, scans, and Dans. BIFF 2012 is on its way!
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Ave et vale: 'til BIFF 2012!
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Welcome to Boulder: These guys drummed merrily next to our Call 2 Action tent all day Saturday. We kind of liked it! Plus, they set out a lot of instruments for kids to play on as well. |
Here are a few more photos I took -- I have plenty of notes for things we can improve upon for next year in terms of social media; one of them is a stronger sense of backstage life. We would love to share more experiences from all levels of involvement in the festival, not just celebrity interviews and sightings. It took nearly 500 people to make this year's BIFF happen! Here are a few you may have missed:
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Life in the Call 2 Action Tent -- Mike Carroll from "Hand Held" at far left. |
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Howdy from some folks at the Info Booth! Info Master Scott Chavkin at far right. (Note the fire extinguisher at far right: not only were we in compliance with city fire codes, we were HOT.) |
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Check out the merch: biggest sales ever this year! |
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Meanwhile, back at the ranch: the BIFF offices were a hive of activity all weekend. |
The numbers are in, and more people than ever before came to BIFF 2011. WE hope you had fun! We did. As always, we welcome your input and feedback -- here, on our Facebook page, or straight to our offices via phone or email.
What was started on a lark seven years ago has turned into an important and vibrant cultural event. We want to increase the size and depth and scope of your filmgoing experience. Tune in next year for the best BIFF ever!
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Stone speaks: the BIFF interview
By Brad Weismann
Social Media Director
Boulder International Film Festival
Photos by Bonnie Chaim“I’m too young for this,” quipped Oliver Stone as he accepted the Master of Cinema Award from the Boulder International Film Festival on Sunday night, Feb. 20 – Closing Night at the Festival.
The big-framed, genial filmmaker joined the throngs at BIFF 2011 -- taking in some films, visiting around town, and then homing in on a Vielehr statuette and a long, fascinating conversation with BIFF Executive Producer of Special Events Ron Bostwick (who intrepidly scanned all 5,400 minutes of Stone’s filmic output as part of his preparation for the tribute).
The 64-year-old director, a three-time Oscar winner (as screenwriter, for “Midnight Express,” and as director of “Platoon” and “Born on the Fourth of July”), said, of his career-achievement honor, “This is not the end. This is the middle of the middle, not the beginning of the end.”
As he moved across the Boulder Theater stage to sit and chat with Bostwick, dozens of little glowing screens popped to life in the audience, viewscreens of cameras and video recorders, snapped on to drink in the sight and sound of the honoree.
Bostwick began the discussion asking Stone about the possible internal conflicts he faced when, as Stone has, he wore the hats of producer, director and writer of a given film interchangeably.
“I am conflicted,” Stone said. He talked about his self-termed Jekyll/Hyde impulses, explaining that his first name is William, his second Oliver, and that “the last psychiatrist I had theorized that William is the good boy and Oliver’s the bad boy. And Oliver does these things that William can’t stand – it creates tremendous tension, and out of that has come some fertility.”
Of his time at NYU, studying partly under Martin Scorsese: “Terrific. To major in film was new at the time, and we were in the first classes about this new medium . . . he (Scorsese) was tough. But the fellow students were the toughest! The chimpanzee bloodbath. It prepares you for the worst – which is what we experienced.”
He cited the incessant practicums in filmmaking at school as essential to his education. Each week, a team of students would make a film, trading functions such as actor, producer, writer, director, cameraman. “It was a good and rigorous way to learn,” he said. Ironically, the older, less wieldy pre-digital technology made the experience more rigorous.
“It was expensive – we couldn’t make many mistakes,” Stone said.
He recalled that it wasn’t until years after his experience as a combat soldier in the Vietnam War that he began to really to process, contemplate and understand it. During the filming of “Salvador” in 1984 the parallels between what was happening there and what happened in Vietnam were disturbing to him.
“It seemed such a repetition of Vietnam,” he said. “South America keeps coming back like a reminder, in my life.” Stone filmed documentaries on the region: “Comandante” in 2003 and “South of the Border” in 2009.
Of his political awareness and contrarianism, which has been stereotyped by the press as a paranoid, conspiracy-theory-ridden mentality, especially after the release of his 1991 “JFK” film: “I didn’t seek it out, it kind of happened. It (his war experiences) gave me a strong sense of outrage, a sense of hypocrisy, of the government’s use of violence. Even to this day I have anger – plus, I have more money now so I pay taxes to buy these fucking bombs!”
He was asked about the remarkable percentage of actors in his films who have nominated for Oscars for their performances. Stone credited the performers for the merit of their work. “Each one of those actors was at the cusp of change,” Stone said. “Actors are always dying to redefine themselves.” Parenthetically, he said, “Never tell an actor he is just not right for a part. He will hate you for the rest of his life.”
Of the Oscars itself, Stone said, “I think of it as a wonderful parade and let it go. It’s very much a fashion show.”
Stone’s credo when it comes to his work is: “Make the movie – lie and steal and cheat – make the fucking movie.” He also reserves the right to go back and improve work that he feels wasn’t up to snuff, citing his 2007 director’s cut of “Alexander” as time well spent getting to tell the story in the way he intended.
He also admitted to being scared off projects from time to time – listing one concerning Martin Luther King, and another concerning the My Lai massacre, neither of which saw the light of day.
Bostwick played a second highlight reel for Stone – one that showed Stone performing in numerous cameo roles in his films. Of them, Stone said: “It’s fun to throw myself into my films. You cross the barrier and see what things are like for the people on the other side of the camera. It helps to loosen you up.”
When asked if he was ready for one more clip of one of his performances, Stone joked, “It’s not a porno film, is it?” It turned to be Stone’s brief turn as a conspiratorially-minded version of himself on Larry King’s TV talk show in “Dave,” the 1993 comedy that involves a nice-guy double for a curmudgeonly President taking his place. Stone is the only one who notices the switch.
“Don’t you think you should point out that I’m the only one in the film that turns out to be right?” Stone said, eyebrows cocked.
Of his experience writing the script for “Midnight Express,” Stone said that part of the script came from his own personal experience. He stated that he had been busted for drug possession eight days after returning home from service in Vietnam. “It’s disgusting hypocrisy – busting people for grass,” he said to great applause.
Stone outlined the underlying themes of his films as interrogations of the American ethos. He paraphrased Roman satirist Juvenal, saying, “Luxury corrupts far more ruthlessly than war,” and went on say that, in many of his films, he is asking “’Who is the bad guy here?’ Who is the bad guy, Nicky and Mallory (the mass-murderer central characters of his 1994 film “Natural Born Killers”) or the state?”
Riffing on his experience in Vietnam and its relation to his film “Platoon,” Stone disagreed with the general worshipful assessment of the “Greatest Generation,” stating “These guys behaved so arrogantly (in Vietnam) . . . And don’t forget, people make money in war – the PX system is corrupt like Vegas. ‘Air America’ (the 1990 Roger Spottiswoode action/comedy that indicted the CIA for enabling drug trafficking during the era) is pretty accurate. Fuck the Wall Street Journal (which published an editorial stating that the film was an affront to the memory of the soldiers who fought and died in Vietnam).”
Stone then declared that he hoped no one was blogging in the audience. Those around me turned to me and laughed nervously. I grinned with clenched teeth and kept typing.
Stone then spoke positively about Rupert Murdoch, owner of the Journal and global media lord, as a person, though, stating that “Nothing’s black and white except maybe Roger Ailes (president of the Fox News Channel).”
Stone continued, “The major mainstream media is really screwed up and has put a bubble over this country. It’s not a democracy. If someone runs for office, he doesn’t have to win us -- if he wins the media, he wins the election.”
How can it be changed?, Bostwick asked.
“Get the airwaves back,” Stone replied. “Don’t give licenses to the biggest barons with money. Keep the real, free airwaves for the people. Media tells you what’s good, what’s bad, what to think . . . down beneath the media, it’s another world.”
Stone stated he was delighted with his visit. “I think Boulder should secede,” he said. “The Republic of Crazy, that’d be great! And then Steamboat Springs would jump in. Before you know it, there’d be a civil war between Aspen and you.”
Discussing his 1993 film “Heaven & Earth,” Stone said it “changed my heart. It was a chance for me as an American solider to look through the eyes of the people of Vietnam. That and ‘Nixon’ were my two biggest commercial disasters.”
He described the critical drubbing he took on “Heaven & Earth” as due partly to the difficulty of reviewers to grapple with overly spiritual material.
“Critics have a very hard time, ‘cause it’s a leap of faith. If they buy into it, they risk looking foolish on a spiritual level,” he said. As to “Nixon,” he said, “A man in a terrible suit glowering on a poster with a bunch of men in bad suits and bad haircuts is not a crowd-pleaser.”
When discussing how technology has changed the practice of experiencing a film, Stone stated first of all that “I loved road shows when I was a kid – four hours with an intermission!” (Roadshow theatrical releases, particularly popular from 1952 to 1971, we one- to two-a-day showings of widescreen epic films such as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Alamo” and “Lawrence of Arabia.”) “I love big dramas, I love Vincente Minnelli.”
Stone called Blu-ray “the last hardware.”
“This is your last chance to own a movie,” he said, surmising that non-theatrical audiences will in future order films online and download them, losing direct access to the created work. With the purchase of a concrete object that contains a given film, Stone said “You’re a possessor, you’re a collector,” and spoke of that warmly, stating by analogy that owning a library of films is satisfying, akin to “having a book on a shelf.”
Stone spoke of his upcoming documentary series for television, titled “Empire: the Forgotten History of the United States.” It tracks America’s military and foreign policies from World War II to today, postulating the errors that led in the view of some to the triumph of the military/industrial complex warned of by Eisenhower.
“We veered off into this national security state thing,” Stone said, and citing presidents such as Truman for their lack of intelligence in failing to prevent the tendency.
“There’s a mythos of Truman as this smart, tough little guy,” Stone said,” but I think we’ll eventually realize that he was as stupid as George W. Bush.”
Questions from the audience followed the interview. When asked by one young filmmaker, “Can you tell me what mistakes you made so that I don’t have to repeat them,” Stone replied, gently, “You have to make your own mistakes.”
Another aspiring filmmaker, now an enlisted person, asked what he should make a movie about. “Go to the Pentagon,” Stone said. “Make a film about what you know.”
When asked what kind of comic-book-character film he might make if were so inclined, Stone reminded the questioner that he had written the original script for “Conan the Barbarian,” and then said, “Why would you want to do that? Aren’t there enough of those films already? Make something else!”
When asked what thought of critics, he said, “Some of them should die,” then revised his statement, saying that writers such as Roger Ebert were to be praised for their intelligence and constructive criticism.
However, he went on, “They’re (bloggers are) looking for eyeballs and they’ll say anything. The thing I want to ask them is, ‘Are you happy in your soul? On your deathbed, do you think how many lives did you fuck up?’ In my mind, love is the only criticism. Think like a parent – point out the ways the child can improve his behavior, don’t trash him.”
After an interlude during which various audience members tried to convince Stone to make a film supporting their beliefs or causes (“I can’t chase every cause,” he explained, again gently), he was asked about the roles of festivals in promoting film.
“I love them,” he said. “Boulder, or Cannes, festivals are great. You get to see things you’d never see otherwise. Films like ‘The Edge’ (by Aleksi Uchitel, 2010) which we saw last night. Plus, it’s a nice place to give awards to old-timers,” referring ironically to himself.
Best BIFF video ever!
All right now, check THIS out -- our field reporter Kim Haney is a videographer and editor par excellence. In just one minute and 52 seconds, she captures the essence of the Boulder International Film Festival, 2011. Nice job!
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
BIFF Exclusive: Post-Awards Interview with Oliver Stone
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Oliver Stone on the red carpet at the Boulder International Film Festival, where he received the Master of Cinema award, on Sunday Feb. 20, 2011. [Photo by Katelyn Hauge-Aldridge] |

By Kaity Hauge-Aldridge
Boulder International Film Festival Field Reporter
After the commotion of the Closing Night ceremony at the Boulder International Film Festival on Sunday night, Feb. 20, I managed to catch up with director Oliver Stone, recipient of BIFF’s first Masters of Cinema award, to ask him a few final questions about his impressions of Boulder and the film festival before he took off for a night of bar-hopping around town.
The film festival marked the occasion for the third visit of Stone to Boulder. He recounted each of his three visits to Boulder, each with a very different purpose.
In the ‘90s, Stone visited Boulder for the first time in the cause of vindicating Leonard Peltier, a Native American activist who was convicted for the aiding and abetting the murder of two federal agents. When here, Stone interviewed A-Man-In-A-Hood, an American Indian who testified on camera that he had been responsible for the murders for which Peltier had been convicted.
Stone was brought to Boulder the next time in the early 2000s, this time to visit the Buddhist community at the Naropa Institute. And now BIFF.
“To me,” said Stone, “the town represents different facets -- first American Indian, Buddhism, and now the film festival. It’s not just granola and mountains.”
Stone welcomed the award.
“It’s nice that you think of me,” Stone said. “It’s nice to be remembered. It makes sense to come back -- like an old ham actor replaying the roles that you were once known for.”
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