:: HIFF flash pass ::

All the latest news from the Hawaii International Film Festival - but faster, and more intense.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

:: soundtracks ::

I love movie soundtracks...from Lawrence of Arabia and Pulp Fiction to Akira Ikufube and Ennio Morricone! So let me tell you about the best of the soundtracks for the films of HIFF's Spring Showcase. We've got new rhythms from South Africa, old school punk rock from Japan, show tunes from Bollywood and some Spanish glam-rock covers, too!

THE PROPOSITION's score was composed by Australian counter-culture musician Nick Cave, who also co-wrote the script. The movie is a rugged Australian western with the ingredients of the Outback, conflict with Aboriginals, bushranger and featuring David Wenham and Guy Pearce. But this is no BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN. "Let's get this straight," Nick says, "there's no gay sex in our western." Read a great interview with Nick or a review of the score. Preview the album on iTunes.
PARINEETA, based on the classic novel of the same name by legendary Bengali writer Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay, thrilled audiences at this year's Berlin Film Festival. German audiences were humming the famous song Piyu Bole as they exited the theatres. The soundtrack is a fusion of Broadway and Bollwood. Yes, there are teems of kids singing in unison. But there are also songs like Kaisi Paheli Zindagani (listen), a brassy showtime belted out cabaret style. More streaming previews are available here.

LINDA LINDA LINDA's soundtrack features an all-schoolgirl cover of the eponymous hit song from the 80s Japanese punk band, THE BLUE HEARTS. Citypages reports that it's the best incessant use of a diabolically catchy tune since Wong Kar-wai put "California Dreamin'" on a loop for Chungking Express. Audiences proclaimed LINDA...the unofficial theme song of the Tornonto International Film Festival. But in the sic transit gloria mundi department, Nintendo snagged the song for the DS video game Ouendan in 2005. LINDA... also stars Shiori Sekine of the j-rock band Base Ball Bear! Finally, Punk News has a sweet story about a young gaijin's first encounter with LINDA LINDA LINDA on the streets of Shinjuku, along girl named X-ko.

ZOZO, Sweden's choice for Best Foreign Film for the 2005 Academy Awards, is the most traditional movie score of the titles mentioned herein. But the score is cinematic and sweeping in its scope, and is evocative even when separated from its images. The composer "has a sound all his own, but the subtlety and beauty of his melodies and his understanding of non-Western instruments certainly recall what both Mychael and his brother Jeff Danna have been doing for some years. Nordén carefully crafts his universe with a sad piano, a soft duduk, the occasional guitar, even a choir, and a toned down string ensemble."

TSOTSI screens on March 31 as part of our Opening Night! The film features several tracks by South African legend Zola (a.k.a., the king of kwaito) who also acts in the film as the gangster Fela. Kwaito music hasn't reached critical mass in pop culture consciousness, but it's an amazing post-apartheid fusion of American hip-hop with African political themes.

"Kwaito music is a distinctly homegrown style of popular dance music that is rooted in Johannesburg's urban culture. It features rhythmically recited vocals over an instrumental backing with strong bass lines. Like American hip-hop, it is an expression of urban South African youth; it is the voice of the township." Want to learn more?

And the Spanish covers of David Bowie? Go see 20 CENTIMETERS! I don't have any links to the previews!

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

:: spring showcase one line reviews ::

Don't know where to start planning for the HIFF Spring Showcase? Check out the one-line summaries for the films of the Spring Showcase below!


CRITICS' CHOICES

Friends With Money (USA, 2006) - direct from the 2006 Sundance Film Festival

Tsotsi (South Africa, 2005) - winner of the 2006 Academy Award for Best Foreign Film


PREMIERES

The Gift (Japan, 2006) - a tale of tragic love, based on the best selling Japanese novel

Always Sunset on Third Street (Japan, 2005) - winner of 13 Japanese Academy Awards

Minsan Pa (Philippines, 2005) - a gorgeous and smart melodrama, filmed in the Visayas


KOREA

Rules of Dating (South Korea, 2005) - a smart, sexy and adult comedy on relationships

Love Is a Crazy Thing (South Korea, 2005) - gritty tale of the Busan underground

The Bow (South Korea, 2005) - the 12th film from Kim Ki-duk, director of 3-IRON


WORLD CINEMA

20 Centimeters (Spain, 2005) - hit musical comedy about a narcoleptic transsexual

Iron Island (Iran, 2005) - black comedy set on a beached oil tanker

Parineeta (India, 2005) - song, dance and romance in 1960s Calcutta

Spring Snow (Japan, 2005)
- based on the famous novel by Mishima Yukio

Zozo (Sweden, 2005) - a young boy goes on the road from Beirut to Sweden


COMEDIES

Citizen Dog (Thailand, 2004) - romance and magical realism in Bangkok, a la AMELIE

Linda Linda Linda (Japan, 2005) - Japanese schoolgirls, a talent contest and punk rock

Moonlight in Tokyo (Hong Kong, 2005) - Leon Lai and Chapman To are Rainman gigolos

Shopaholics (Hong Kong, 2006) - a psychiatrist and a millionaire chase Cecilia Cheung


AUSTRALIA

Little Fish (Australia, 2005) - a junkie's struggle, with Cate Blanchett and Hugo Weaving

Look Both Ways (Australia, 2005) - Australia's most award winning film of 2005


ACTION AND THRILLERS

Lady Vengeance (South Korea, 2005) - the sequel to OLDBOY

District 13 (France, 2005) - hip French action pic, with stunts that rival ONG BAK

Hard Candy (USA, 2005) - psychological thriller, wherein the hunter becomes the hunted

The Proposition (Australia, 2005) - outback western with Guy Pearce and David Wenham


LESSONS OF WAR - sponsored by the USS Missouri

Soong Sisters (Hong Kong, 1997) - Michelle Yeoh, Maggie Cheung in the HIFF favorite

Spy Sorge (Japan, 2003) - an espionage thriller set in 1930s Tokyo

Letter from an Unknown Woman (HK, 2004) - lush romance set against war and invasion