PRAVDA BAR FILM SERIESBack to More Past ProjectsIn the fall of 2008, CEC ArtsLink teamed up with Pravda Bar to bring New Yorkers free Sunday evening screenings of independent films from our recent archives. Contemporary Russian and Central Asia cinema in fabulous SoHo! Sundays, 8pm, Pravda Bar, 281 Lafayette Street (between Houston and Prince) November 9Tiny KaterinaIvan Golovnev, 24 minutes, documentary (2004) Tiny Katerina is the youngest member of an indiginous Siberian family living a remote subsistence life. See the world through her eyes. Liza Pavel Fattakhudinov, 39 minutes, documentary (2005) Screened in early 2008 at CEC ArtsLink, this film is a tender portrayal of the adversities faced by a young girl with big dreams in a small Siberian village. November 2Sunless CitySergey Potemkin, 101 minutes, feature film (2005) October 26New Central Asian cinema, TBAOctober 19The Great Soviet EclipseProduced by Kabinet (St. Petersburg, Russia) and the Museum of Jurassic Technology (Culver City, CA); 90 minutes, documentary (2008) The final installment in a series known as Chain of Flowers, the film is about the thought and impact of Russian astronomer Nicholas Kozyrev (1908-1983) who, during imprisonment in a Russian Gulag, developed a controversial branch of astrophysics. October 12Civil StatusAlina Rudnitskaya, 29 minutes, documentary (2005) Rudnitskaya's black and white film shows episodes in the lives of Saint Petersburg residents as they make the most personal of life’s moments official. The film won Best Documentary Film at the 2006 Kinoblik Festival in Stuttgart, Germany; First Prize at the 2006 International Short Film Festival at Oberhausen; as well as other awards, and was screened at Rotterdam, the Chicago International Film Festival, and the Center for Contemporary Arts in Glasgow, and is included in The Cinema Guild’s a short list of "Acclaimed and Award-Winning Documentaries for Russian & Eastern European Studies". "Alina Rudnitskaya's Civil Status documents the day-to-day activities of the St. Petersburg's civil registry office. The director interviews the women who work there, and they discuss the various dramatic and humorous life situations they are privy to as part of their every workday."br> ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide 15 Bis Maksim Kazarinov and Aleksandr Murugov, 15 minutes, documentary, Banya Maksim Kazarinov and Aleksandr Murugov, 25 min, documentary, October 5CrueltyMarina Lyubakova, 90 minutes, feature (2007) Marina Lyubakova made her debut in feature film (following her documentary work) with this brazen portrait of teenagerdom in today’s Russia. The film premiered at the Moscow Festival of Premieres (where actress Renata Litvinova took home Best Actress for her role in the film), and has since garnered a cult following. This screening marks the US premiere of the film. September 28Aral, Fishing in an Invisible SeaSaodat Ismailova, 52 minutes, documentary (2004) This poignant and elegiac film documents the life of the remaining fishermen in the Aral Sea- which has all but dried up in one of the worst environmental disasters caused by human activity. The film won "Best Documentary" at 2004 Turin Film Festival, and was screened at Rotterdam, Vision du reel (Switzerland), and others. Zulfiya Saodat Ismailova, 9 minutes, short film (2003) The Aral Sea also serves as the setting for this short film depicting the arduous life of the nomads on the sea’s disappearing shores. The film was screened at the International Film Festival of Trieste, Italy, The Archipelago Film Festival in Rome, and the Human Rights Festival in Bolognia. Saodat Ismailova graduated from the Tashkent State Art Institute video and cinema direction department in 2002. Since then, she has completed five films, variously with the support of the Agakhan Foundation and Fabrica (of Benetton). In 2005, she was artist in residence at DAAD in Germany, and a 2007 ArtsLink resident at the Athens Center for Film and Video at Ohio University through CEC ArtsLink. Last year, her films were screened in New York at the Rubin Museum, among other venues. She is currently working on a full-length feature film. September 21URSDON: The Territory of LonelinessMaria Kozlova, 20 minutes, documentary (2007) 40 years ago there were more then 500 houses in the Caucasian village of Ursdon. Now there are only 3 left. The strong men live here... MOSCOW Bakur Bakuradze, 35 minutes, feature film (2007) A Kyrgyz family tries to make their way in Moscow, shifting between the desire to maintain their old way of life with the need to adapt to new circumstances. |