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Trailer Watch: Lance Oppenheim’s HBO Documentary Series, Ren Faire

Ren Faire

Lance Oppenheim, a 2019 25 New Face who is something of a non-fiction poet laureate of contemporary loneliness, oddball institutional rituals, and the ways in which fantasy and reality commingle in American life, premieres his latest documentary series, Ren Faire, tonight on HBO. Produced by Elara Pictures, with executive producers including Josh Safdie, Benny Safdie and Ronnie Bronstein, the three-part series tells a Succession-like drama involving an aging "king," George Coulam, in the midst of deciding which of his employees will take over his sprawling and lucrative Texas-based Renaissance theme park. The series follows Oppenheim's excellent Spermworld, for which the 28-year-old director and editor Daniel Garber spoke to Vadim Rizov about. With Ren Faire, Oppenheim draws on the fact that…  Read more

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Hard Drives Full of Abandoned Projects: Chris Wilcha on Flipside

A man clutches his forehead standing beneath the awning of a record store.Dan Dondiego in Flipside

With Chris Wilcha's recommended documentary Flipside opening today — including at NYC's IFC Center — from Oscilloscope, we're reposting Vikram Murthri's deep dive interview below. — Editor In his first feature, The Target Shoots First, Chris Wilcha documented his tenure at Columbia House, the mail-order music service whose ads famously promised “12 CDs for a penny.” Then a recent NYU philosophy graduate, Wilcha landed the job partly due to his familiarity with “alternative culture,” a burgeoning new market at the time (Nirvana’s In Utero was soon to be released), and brought a sardonic Gen X sensibility to chronicling his time in the company’s marketing department. Part workplace comedy and part personal essay, Target chronicled Wilcha’s anxiety about selling out his personal…  Read more

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“Understanding Taiwan on Its Own Terms”: Vanessa Hope on Invisible Nation

A woman walks through a hallway in a dark blazer and white shirt while four people in light blue shirts follow behind her.Tsai Ing-wen in Invisible Nation

With Vanessa Hope's recommended documentary Invisible Nation opening today in theaters, including NYC's Quad Cinema, where Hope and producer Ted Hope will be doing Q&A's tonight and tomorrow, we're reposting Lauren Wissot's interview with the director published last Fall. -- Editor Though producer-director Vanessa Hope has spent her career zeroing in on China—from producing Wang Quanan's The Story Of Ermei and Chantal Akerman's Tombee De Nuit Sur Shanghai to directing her own short China In Three Words and feature-length debut All Eyes and Ears—Hope’s followup feature is nonetheless a bit of a surprise. An intimate portrait of Taiwan’s first female president Tsai Ing-wen, Invisible Nation weaves the tale of President Tsai’s contemporary rise with the (often buried) history of the long-colonized…  Read more

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Cannes 2024: Awards, Anora, Emilia Pérez, The Substance, The Seed of the Sacred Fig

A young woman dances in a club.Mikey Madison in Anora

In my awards-wrap piece for last year’s Cannes, I complimented jury president Ruben Östlund and his deliberators on a deliberation well done. They chose to award mostly the films Vadim Rizov and I had already covered in prior dispatches, granting me the freedom to go longer on my thoughts about The State of the Festival, as well as highlights from the Quinzaine des cinéastes sidebar (a.k.a. The Directors’ Fortnight), which had just finished unveiling new artistic director Julien Rejl’s inaugural edition. No such luck this year—not because Greta Gerwig gave ungreat prizes (au contraire, her jury’s picks were about as good as could be in what is widely considered a down year), but because the prizes were given either to…  Read more

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Cannes 2024: Caught by the Tides, Misericordie, Grand Tour

A Chinese woman holds a styrofoam container of rice while eating on a deserted boat deck.Zhao Tao in Caught by the Tides

Like Jia Zhangke's Ash is Purest White, Caught by the Tides is a multi-decade triptych beginning in the early aughts and ending in the present, its past emerging from a sort of video diary practice he maintained up through 2006’s Still Life. As he explains, “I got my first digital video camera in 2001. I took it to Datong in Shanxi back then and shot tons of material. It was all completely hit-and-miss. I shot people I saw in factories, bus stations, on buses, in ballrooms, saunas, karaoke bars, all kinds of places.” There are numerous other similarities with 2018’s Ash: the middle segment of Caughts takes place during the Three Gorges Dam’s construction, which Jia first captured in Still…  Read more

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“I Want To Get Back To That Lack of Self-Consciousness I Had as a Kid” Molly Gordon, Back To One, Episode 293

Molly Gordon makes everything better. She was a stand-out among stand-outs in films like Good Boys, Booksmart, and Shiva Baby. Then she showed her talents on the other side of the camera, co-writing/directing the hilarious indie hit Theater Camp. Now she plays Claire on the beloved series The Bear, which is about to drop its third season. On this episode she talks about why she loves improv, how her parents unintentionally formed her comedy sensibilities, getting “buzzed” from in-person auditions, “locking in” with Jeremy Allen White, why she’s always aspiring to a child-like lack of self consciousness, and much more. Back To One can be found wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Google Play, and Spotify. And if you're…  Read more

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“I Was Much More Influenced by Andrea Arnold’s Work or That of the Safdie Brothers”: Boris Lojkine on His Cannes Jury Prize-Winning The Story of Souleymane

The Story of Souleymane

The Story of Souleymane follows an undocumented delivery worker as he prepares for an asylum application interview while pedaling through the Paris streets. But belying the innocuous title and unassuming premise, this latest narrative feature from veteran filmmaker Boris Lojkine is actually a fast-paced thriller. And also a logistical feat as Lojkine’s lens races to keep up with his less than honest protagonist (played by dazzling newcomer Abou Sangare, an immigrant from Guinea who, unlike his titular character, is a mechanic by trade) as he literally cycles through a Kafkaesque EU system in which even the most mundane move might unleash a disastrous domino effect. Shortly after the film’s Un Certain Regard premiere, where it nabbed both the Jury Prize and…  Read more

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