Tribeca Film Festival getting over growing pains
By Associated Press
Published April 29, 2004
NEW YORK - Now in its third year, the Tribeca Film Festival is a little older and a little wiser. It's also a little smaller, even though it's running a little longer.
In other words, the festival - which begins Saturday and runs through May 9 - is still trying to figure out exactly what it is.
One thing remains the same, though: a focus on the people and neighborhoods of lower Manhattan, the restoration of which was the driving purpose behind the festival's creation after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
"I think we are about community and about the audience and about people who love movies," festival co-founder Jane Rosenthal said, "whether they are people who love making movies, the filmmakers, or people who like watching movies, the general audience, or the very specific film industry audience."
To appeal to all those people she's talking about, the lineup again is eclectic: the first documentaries shot in Iraq after Saddam Hussein's fall; a screening of New York Minute, starring the grown-up Olsen twins; and a drive-in-style showing of the Friends series finale.
That something-for-everyone spirit separates Tribeca from older festivals, which can be competitive industry marketplaces where seeing and being seen is as important as seeing the films themselves.
In 2002, when planners cobbled the festival together in just a few months, it drew more than 150,000 people and generated more than $10.4-million in revenues for Tribeca businesses. Last year, twice as many people showed up and pumped more than $50-million into the downtown economy.
This year, there are more entries from filmmakers than ever before - 2,500-plus.
"People can plan for us more," said Rosenthal, who founded the festival with her business partner, Robert De Niro.
There will be a number of international offerings. Of the 14 feature films in competition, 12 are from outside the United States; of the 27 competing documentaries, 21 are from outside.
One of the international films that's not part of the competition is Saddam's Mass Graves, by Kurdish-American director Jano Rosebiani, which includes interviews with survivors and relatives of Saddam's victims. Another is War Is Over! which depicts the chaos director Bahman Ghobadi found when he went to Iraq immediately after Saddam's fall. The two films are being screened together.
The feature competition includes the surreal A Hole in One, the first film from writer-director Richard Ledes, starring Michelle Williams as a young woman in the 1950s who wants a lobotomy. Meat Loaf Aday plays her mobster boyfriend.
[Last modified April 29, 2004, 01:35:43]
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