Posts Tagged ‘new york film festival’

Acclaimed Documentary Ghost Town Makes Weeklong Run at MoMA

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Ghost Town (dir. Zhao Dayong)

Following its triumphant US Premiere at the 2009 New York Film Festival, Zhao Dayong’s Ghost Town will enjoy a weeklong run at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The MoMA will screen Ghost Town at the following dates:

  • Monday, March 15, 2010, 3 p.m.
  • Wednesday, March 17, 2010, 4 p.m.
  • Thursday, March 18, 2010, 7 p.m.
  • Friday, March 19, 2010, 3:30 p.m.
  • Saturday, March 20, 2010, 4 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 21, 2010, 12:30 p.m.

Tickets can be purchased at the MoMA Film Box Office adjacent to the The Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53 Street, New York, NY. Details at the MoMA site.

Further details and trailer after the break.

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Zhao Dayong Interview on Hammer to Nail!

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Hammer to Nail, a pioneering online journal about ambitious films, has just published Ghost Town director Zhao Dayong’s interview with Nelson Kim, two days after the New York Film Festival screening.

In the conversation, Zhao discussed the situation of independent filmmaking in China, his experiences in painting, installation, and performance art and their influence on his later choice in filmmaking, as well as his recent project about the underground Nigerian Christian community in Guangzhou.

Concerning the three-part structure of the film, Zhao insisted that the film was less a quote unquote documentary than a reflection of his experience living in the community, presented from a “clear, subjective concept” of him. Zhao also expressed his wish for Chinese independent filmmakers to “be persistent, to insist on making good quality films.”

The complete interview can be accessed here.

Ghost Town Debuts!

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

If you’ve been reading this blog, you know that the dGenerate Films team had been working hard in anticipation of last Sunday’s international premiere of Zhao Dayong’s Ghost Town. It all paid off, as Ghost Town packed the house and generated extended applause for its depiction of a mountainous village in slow decay.

To all of you in attendance, thanks for coming out. Your support has helped put the newest vanguard of Chinese independent filmmaking on the map. If you feel Ghost Town deserves to be seen by a wider audience, whether on the big or small screen, please get in touch with us or pass the word to your fellow film enthusiasts, professors, programmers, curators, critics, and acquisition colleagues.

Here are some photos from both the screening as well as the post-screening reception at Bamboo 52.

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Don’t Forget About Ghost Town!

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Just a final reminder that Ghost Town premieres Sunday at the New York Film Festival. Showtime is at 2:15pm. Get your tickets here! And don’t just take our word for it, see what Current TV had to say about it.

The screening is being co-sponsored by the fine folks at Stranger than Fiction, a documentary series at the IFC Center curated by Thom Powers. For the past ten years, STF has presented an eclectic mix of documentaries (followed by filmmaker discussions!), and has cemented its place as a gathering spot for New York’s independent film community. Thanks for supporting Ghost Town, STF!

Zhao Dayong’s Ghost Town Premieres at the NYFF, Tix on Sale Sunday!

Friday, September 11th, 2009

The dGenerate team have been working feverishly in preparation for Zhao Dayong’s amazing documentary (and dGenerate title) Ghost Town‘s international premiere at the prestigious New York Film Festival. Ghost Town, the only Chinese film in this year’s festival, screens Sunday, September 27 at 2:15 at the Lincoln Center. We strongly advise you to get tickets in advance, as the NYFF screenings always sell out quick. Tickets go on sale this Sunday, September 13.

Jury members Dennis Lim and Scott Foundas had this to say about the film:

  • “Ghost Town is one of the most surprising and rewarding films I’ve seen all year, one of the most important films to have emerged from the booming (but still underexplored) field of Chinese independent documentaries.” – Dennis Lim, film critic, Editor of Moving Image Source, New York Film Festival selection committee member
  • “I didn’t think there was another Jia Zhangke or Wang Bing lurking out there, but it turns out there is!” – Scott Foundas, film critic, Film Editor of L.A.Weekly, New York Film Festival selection committee member

Click here for more information on Ghost Town.

Click here to buy tickets to the New York Film Festival.

Ghost Town: a New Chapter for Chinese Cinema at the New York Film Festival

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
Ghost Town (photo courtesy of Fanhall Films)

Ghost Town (photo courtesy of Fanhall Films)

Marking a breakthrough for the Chinese digital filmmaking community, director Zhao Dayong’s Ghost Town (Fei Cheng, 2008) was selected for the 47th New York Film Festival (September 25 – October 11), as the only Chinese entry in the lineup. This low-budget documentary shot on HD has never been shown in any major festival outside China; as of this article it has yet to even appear on IMDb and All Movie Guide. Yet it joins a prestigious NYFF lineup that features new works by renowned directors such as Alain Resnais, Pedro Almodovar, Jacques Rivette, and Lars von Trier. Its inclusion in the NYFF represents a first in the festival’s program: a nod to China’s digital generation of documentary filmmakers.

According to the website of Fanhall Films, a multi-faceted indie film support organization based in Beijing, the three-hour documentary is not about phantoms, but the Lisu and Nu minority villagers in the abandoned halls of a remote former communist county seat in the southwestern province of Yunnan, China. Consisting of three chapters, “Voices,” “Recollections,” and “Innocence,” the film observes and records the mode of existence of the nameless and the forgotten, offering extraordinary insights into such topics as religious faith, relationships, juvenile deviants, generational differences, and lost history.

Dennis Lim, a member of this year’s NYFF jury and a major voice in promoting Chinese independent cinema, shared his reasons for selecting the film with dGenerate Films’ Kevin Lee: “Ghost Town is one of the most surprising and rewarding films I’ve seen all year, one of the most important films to have emerged from the booming (but still underexplored) field of Chinese independent documentaries.” Fellow jury member Scott Foundas also considered the film an exciting discovery, exclaiming: “I didn’t think there was another Jia Zhangke or Wang Bing lurking out there, but it turns out there is!”

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