1135 13th St
Boulder, Colorado 80302

55 Films and 31 Filmmakers Slated for

2009 Boulder International Film Festival Feb. 12-15,

with a Spotlight on Comedy, Adventure and Music Themes


An evening with funny man Chevy Chase and an award-winning documentary about political
uprising by Burma’s Buddhist monks are among highlights of fifth-annual festival



Boulder, Colo. (Jan. 23, 2009)
Films from around the world, conversations with directors, producers, screenwriters and actors,
world-class food, parties and an opportunity to rub elbows with filmmakers in a hip mountain
town at the foot of the Rockies can only mean one thing: it’s time for the Boulder International
Film Festival (BIFF). This year’s Festival takes place Feb. 12-15, and brings films, filmmakers
and sophisticated cinema fans from around the world to Boulder for a four-day celebration of
the fine art of filmmaking.



“The combination of exciting screenings, parties and special events BIFF has become known for
has quickly elevated it to a must-attend event,” said Kathy Beeck, director of BIFF.
“We’ve screened over 1,000 independent films this year to ensure BIFF attendees see the cream
of the crop, many of which truly embody powerful messages sure to resonate with audiences.
The Festival will feature films from 28 countries including Iran, Cambodia, India, the Netherlands,
Senegal, Brazil and Nepal, among others.”


The Festival will kick off Thursday, Feb. 12 at 6:30 p.m. with an Opening Night Party and
screening of “Nothing But the Truth,” starring Kate Beckinsale,
Alan Alda, Matt Dillon and Angela Bassett.
Nothing But the Truth” parallels the jailing of New York Times
reporter Judith Miller for
refusing to name the source of her story blowing the cover of CIA operative Valerie Plame.
Director Rod Lurie will attend the screening and participate in a Q&A session after the film,
which has been described by Rolling Stone as “a fierce, fire-breathing movie laced with
stinging laughs.”
View Trailer.
Prior to the screening of the film, event attendees can enjoy live music
by Chris Daniels and the Kings, one of the world’s best “horn bands.”




Those looking for a little bit of romance and laughter, courtesy of Chevy
Chase, can find both at BIFF’s Red Carpet Valentine’s Gala on Saturday,
Feb. 14 at 7 p.m. During the event, guests can dine on food from the
Cheesecake Factory, sip their favorite drinks and enjoy the music of Hazel
Miller, one of Colorado’s most sought-after performers. The highlight of
the evening will be an appearance by comedic icon Chevy Chase. The
Saturday Night Live veteran and National Lampoon star will be honored with
an Award of Excellence in Comedy and participate in a Q&A session with Ron
Bostwick, BIFF executive producer, following a retrospective of his work.


BIFF’s Closing Night Awards Ceremony, taking place Sunday, Feb. 15 at 6:30
p.m., will include a special screening of “Burma VJ: Reporting from a
Closed Country

a top prize winner at IDFA Amsterdam, one of the world’s
premier documentary festivals. “Burma VJ: Reporting from a
Closed Country

captures the movement of the “Saffron Revolution,” during which 10,000
Buddhist monks risked torture and death to protest a cruel military
dictatorship that has held the country hostage for more 40 years. Though
Burma was closed off to the world, a small band of video journalists,
calling themselves the DVB, were able to capture the abuses inflicted by
the dictatorship. As government intelligence begins to understand the
power of DVB’s footage, the group soon becomes the target in a
life-and-death chase, all captured on camera. The film will be followed by
a Q&A with Burmese Princess Inge Sargent, author of Twilight over Burma and
a recipient of the United Nations Association International Human Rights
Award. Sargent is a longtime Boulder teacher, and heads a Burmese
expatriate organization that raises hundreds of thousands of dollars to
fund Burmese refugees in Thailand.
View Trailer.



The event also will include live music and desserts and coffee,
as well as an awards ceremony honoring some of the Festival’s most
captivating films.


Other film highlights from the Festival include:


Buddha Collapsed Out of Shame

Premiering in Colorado at BIFF, and winner
of Michael Moore’s Founders Prize, awarded at the Traverse City Film
Festival, this feature film, made by an 18 year-old Iranian woman, was shot
in war-torn Afghanistan near the ruins of the 100-foot-tall Buddhas
destroyed by the Taliban. Armed only with a notebook and her mother’s
lipstick for a pencil, 6-year-old Bakhtay (the film’s narrator) travels a
long, dangerous journey to a recently opened girls’ school. Along the way,
she is harassed by ruthless boys that imitate the violence they’ve
witnessed their whole lives. These same boys threaten to stone her, blow
her up the same way the Taliban blew up the Buddha, and to shoot her “like
Americans do.” View Trailer.



American Outrage

This powerful film tells the story of two elderly
Western Shoshone sisters persecuted and prosecuted by the U.S. government
for grazing a few hundred horses and cows on desolate open-range desert
lands outside their Nevada ranch. Directors Beth and George Gage and
Carrie Dann, one of the sisters featured in the film, will join movie-goers
at the screening. Read more.


Sunshine Cleaning


Starring Colorado native Amy Adams and Emily Blunt,
this film delves into the story of two sisters so desperate to change their
lives and circumstances they decide to go into the crime scene clean-up
business. In no time, the women are up to their elbows in murders,
suicides and other…specialized situations. As they climb the ranks in a
very dirty job, the sisters find a true respect for one another and the
closeness they have always craved finally blossoms. View Trailer.


Revanche

Nominated for the 2009 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film, this
graphic, hyper-realistic film explores two very different couples whose
fates are intertwined by a single stray bullet. Tamara, who seeks to
escape the Vienna brothel in which she works, falls in love with ex-con
Alex, who believes their ticket out is through robbing a bank in the sleepy
Austrian village of his ancestors. When the plan backfires, Alex finds
refuge at the desolate farm of his elderly grandfather. Intertwining
relationships are revealed as events converge in this surprising,
challenging and mesmerizing film. View Trailer.




The Unwinking Gaze: The Inside Story of the Dalai Lama’s Struggle for
Tibet


This unforgettable feature documentary was conceived as an
opportunity to show the Chinese the unfiltered, unedited Dalai Lama.
Through the film, the Dalai Lama is shown to be a gentle, funny, deeply
spiritual man trying to make space in the People’s Republic for Tibetan
culture. Director Joshua Dugdale was given unprecedented access to the
Dalai Lama’s daily life and activities to create what is perhaps the most
honest and genuine film likely to be released in his lifetime. The
screening of the film will be followed by a conversation with Rep. Lobsang
Nyandak Zayul, the Representative of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to the
Americas, and head of the Office of Tibet in New York. Read more.


Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts


Making its first Colorado
appearance at BIFF, this musically sumptuous film directed by Scott Hicks,
seven-time Oscar nominee, profiles Philip Glass, one of the great composers
of classical music of the past 50 years. Though Glass’s music has made him
so famous that he’s even been featured as a character on “The Simpsons,” he
doesn’t allow it to consume him. Even as Glass focuses on the
pre-production of his opera adaptation, “Waiting For The Barbarians,”
audiences see him on a roller coaster, making pizza with his kids and
hanging out with friends. Special appearances include Chuck Close, Martin
Scorsese, Woody Allen and Errol Morris. View Trailer.


Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison

This powerful film, directed by Bestor Cram
and making its Colorado premiere at BIFF, tells the story of the making of
“Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison,” one of the greatest live albums ever
produced. It was January 1968, a few days before the Tet offensive in
Vietnam, in a prison cafeteria in Northern California, when hard men doing
hard time witnessed the making of the electrifying masterpiece. The album
catapulted Johnny Cash into international fame, and gave a voice to
society’s outcast and forgotten. One line became indelible: “I shot a man
in Reno/Just to watch him die/When I hear that whistle blowing/I hang my
head and cry,” and showed that Cash's own struggle with demons meant that
he understood the guilt, pain and sorrow of losing control of one's life.
View Trailer.




Other BIFF films not to be missed:


  • American Harmony,” follows Max Q, a barbershop quartet,
    through the
    high-stakes, high-pressure world of competitive barbershop singing.
    Director Aengus James will appear in-person at the BIFF screening. View
    Trailer
    .



  • Garrison Keillor: The Man on the Radio in the Red Shoes,”
    presents a
    year in the life of famous humorist and radio personality Garrison Keillor.
    Emmy-winning director Peter Rosen will be present during the screening of
    the documentary. Read more.




  • Pirate for the Sea,” profiles the legendary, bare-knuckled
    environmentalist Paul Watson, one of the founders of Greenpeace, as he
    patrols the sea using any means necessary to thwart the illegal harvesting
    of whales, dolphins, sharks and the clubbing of seals. Director Ron Colby
    and producer Patricia Van Ryker will both attend the film’s screening at
    BIFF.


  • Anvil: The Story of Anvil,” documents Canadian metal demigods
    from the
    ‘70s, who inspired the likes of Metallica, Slayer and Anthrax, and their
    quest for a Great Comeback Tour. Read more.



  • The Last Days of Shishmaref,” captures the struggles of
    the ancient
    Inupiaq village of Shishmaref, said to be the first real victims of global
    warming. View website.



“The Boulder International Film Festival is one of Boulder’s crown jewel
events,” said Mayor Shaun McGrath of Boulder. “Thanks to BIFF, Boulder has
continued to attract more visitors every winter, stimulating our local
economy and introducing more new people to the beauty of our hometown
located in the Rocky Mountain foothills.”


Festival tickets go on sale Friday, Jan. 23 and are $10 for adults and $8
for students and seniors 65 and older. All-access Festival VIP passes,
including tickets and access to the Red Carpet Valentine’s Gala and the
Closing Night Awards Ceremony, can be purchased for $345 or for a
discounted rate of $295 if purchased before Sunday, Feb.1. Tickets for the
Opening Night Party and Closing Night Awards Ceremony can be purchased for
$35. Individual tickets for the Red Carpet Valentine’s Day Gala with Chevy
Chase are $85. Tickets can be purchased at www.bouldertheater.com or by
calling (303) 786-7030.

Official Website: http://biff1.com/index.html

Added by shadz.rm on February 6, 2009

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