New York International Children's Film Festival Fall/Winter Film Lineup
NEW YORK INT'L CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL FALL/WINTER FILM LINEUP
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THE BOY WHO WANTED TO BE A BEAR
Denmark, Jannik Hastrup, 2002, 74 min
In English - Recommended ages 4 to 10
Sat, Oct 31 & Sun, Nov 1, 11:00am - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
From the producer of Triplets of Belleville, an animated fable about family, belonging, and survival, set in the windswept snowfields of the Arctic north. When a mother polar bear's cub dies, her mate steals a newborn human boy to be their son and the new child helps to soothe her incredible grief. The mother bear loves the child more with each passing day, while the boy grows up as wild and free as the strongest bear. But the boy's father, a proud Inuit hunter, works relentlessly to track and retrieve his young son, and when they are finally reunited, Little Bear is faced with the impossible choice of leading a normal hunter's life with his biological parents, or siding with the wild family who raised him.
Winner of multiple film festivals, The Boy Who Wanted To Be a Bear has received critical raves for its animated portrait of the Arctic, with soft watercolor backdrops of starry skies and enormous ice shelves mingling with Inuit imagery to reveal the beauty and harshness of an unforgiving terrain.
Comment: Contains an emotional scene of the death of the mother bear, which includes animated blood.
BEST OF HEEBIE JEEBIES
A COLLECTION OF FUNNY, SPOOKY, FREAKY SHORTS
Recommended ages 9 to adult
Sat, Oct 31 & Sun, Nov 1, 1:00pm - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
Looking for a nice dark place to prepare for Halloween (or kick your sugar hangover the next morning)? Why not spend the weekend with the New York Int'l Children's Film Festival, as we deliver a playful blend of weird, spooky, and darkly humorous short films, guaranteed to get everyone in the holiday spirit! Selected from the past ten years of the festival's Heebie Jeebies program, for complete lineup visit the website.
Comment: As noted above, these films are "darkly humorous", "creepy" and "weird". Not intended for younger audiences!
MILLIONS
UK, Danny Boyle, 2004, 97 min
In English - Recommended ages 8 to adult
Sat & Sun, Nov 21 & 22, 11:00am at IFC Center, 323 Sixth Avenue (at West Third)
NYICFF presented the US Premiere of Millions as opening night film of NYICFF 2005, and we are pleased to welcome back this great picture by the Academy Award winning director Danny Boyle! Wielding a wildly inventive visual style, Boyle spins an atmosphere of playful magical realism punctuated by moments of pure cinematic exuberance.
Millions is the tale of two Liverpudlian lads who have just moved with their dad into a new house to begin life without their recently departed mother. Damien, brilliantly performed by young Alex Etel, is a dreamer, representing all that is naive and unspoiled in the world. His purity is such that he even receives visits from saints. So when a duffle bag stuffed with cash literally falls out of the sky at Damien's feet, he thinks it's a gift from God and begins searching for poor people to give the money to. Older brother Anthony is more business-minded, and sets his task to educate his brother on the practical uses of money. But there's a catch: the boys have only one week to spend the cash before Britain converts to the euro and their money is rendered worthless.
OSAMU TEZUKA: ASTRO BOY & KIMBA
In English - Recommended all ages
Sat & Sun, Nov 28 & 29, 11:00am - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
The hugely influential comic artist and animator Osamu Tezuka literally invented the genre of Japanese anime, and his archetypal characters and bold designs have reverberated with a massive pop culture impact that continues to this day. Part one of this two-part retrospective includes his best known and best loved early works (which parents of a certain age will remember from Saturday morning television).
ASTRO BOY
Animation, Osamu Tezuka, 1963, Japan
One of the most iconic animated figures of all time, Astro Boy is the adventure of a robot boy who, although a product of technology himself, sets out to combat those who would exploit technology for evil.
KIMBA THE WHITE LION
Animation, Osamu Tezuka, 1967, Japan
A plucky lion cub with a cute lioness girlfriend... his father is killed and he must take over as king... but first he must vie for power with his evil usurping uncle who is supported by a band of hyena lackeys. Sound familiar? Well, it's not Simba, it's Kimba - the original 1966 lion king. A free set of tickets for the first person to sing the Kimba TV theme song on the festival answering machine... really.
OSAMU TEZUKA: LEGEND OF THE FOREST
Recommended ages 8 to adult
Sat, Nov 28, 1pm - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
Part two of our retrospective includes three of Tezuka's most beautiful and imaginative films. Tales of a Street Corner and Legend of the Forest come from opposite ends of his career, yet both use classical music as the backdrop for epic battles of good and evil, while the third film, Jumping, offers a humorously wry commentary on the state of the world.
LEGEND OF THE FOREST
Animation, Osamu Tezuka, Japan, 1987, 29 min
In his career-capping masterpiece Legend of the Forest, Tezuka traces the stylistical evolution of animation from 19th-century etchings, through Disney and Fleischer, the UPA style of Mr. Magoo, all the way to contemporary anime, in a Fantasia-like tale of forest faeries, sprites, wizards, and animals defending themselves against greedy industrialists bent on destroying nature.
TALES OF THE STREET CORNER
Animation, Osamu Tezuka, Japan, 1962, 39 min
A girl who has lost her teddy bear and a family of Leo Lionni-esque mice inhabit this otherwise empty streetscape with walls plastered in posters. But the posters come to life, and their characters tell the story of an era -- and of a descent from playful optimism to war as the images of art and advertising are covered over with the face of a fascist dictator.
JUMPING
Animation, Osamu Tezuka, Japan, 1984, 6 min
In this highly entertaining short, we take the point of view of a bouncing ball, whose ever higher bounds land us farther and farther afield, and give us a series of two-second snapshots of the human condition.
Comment: Films contain brief shots of animated breasts as well as a couple of racially insensitive poster images.
WINTER WONDERSHORTS
In English - Recommended all ages
Sat, Jan 23, 11am and 1pm - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
The weather outside is frightful, but these shorts are so delightful! - Experience all of the splendor and magnificence of winter without the chattering teeth and frostbitten fingers. Grab your friends, your family, and your hot cocoa and come curl up in front of the big screen as the New York Int'l Children's Film Festival presents three beautiful animated short films celebrating snow, ice and all of winter's exciting wonders!
The program includes:
LEON IN WINTERTIME
Animation, Canada, Pierre-Luc Granjon and Pascal Le Notre, 2007, 27 min
Winter has descended on the kingdom and a mountain ogre has kidnapped beautiful Molly Gingerbread, the king's daughter. Meanwhile, Leon, a young bear adopted by a family of beekeepers, runs away from home, falls in love with the princess, and lands himself in all kinds of unexpected and perilous adventures.
SPOT & SPLODGE IN SNOWSTORM
Animation, Sweden, Uzi Geffenblad and Lotta Geffenblad, 2008, 7.5 min
It snows outside and Spot and Splodge run about building a snowman, having a snowball fight, and making snow angels. All of a sudden the wind is strong, the snow sticks all over their bodies, there isn't a spot of Spot to be seen! And where is Splodge? Where's the house?
CHOO-CHA
Animation, Russia, Garry Bardin, 1997, 25 min
A young boy is ignored by his parents and the other adults at a festive holiday gathering, and there are no other children to play with. So after concocting some minor mischief for the grownups, the boy retreats upstairs to the attic, where he rummages through odds and ends to create a special playmate for himself.
ANIMAL TREASURE ISLAND
Japan, Hiroshi Ikeda, 1971, 78 min
In English - Recommended ages 3 to 8
Sat, Jan 30, 11am and 1pm - Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway (at 95th Street)
Key Animation by Hayao Miyazaki - A decade before he became renowned for animated masterworks like Castle in the Sky, Nausicaa, and My Neighbor Totoro, and eventually won the Oscar for Spirited Away, a young Hayao Miyazaki was lead animator for Toei Studios. His Animal Treasure Island is an anime adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's classic adventure about a young boy who discovers a treasure map and goes toe to toe with the double-crossing, pegged-leg pirate Long John Silver. In this version Long John Silver is a cat, the pirates are all animals, and the young boy is joined by a tough-girl companion on a high seas adventure through imaginative worlds made even more fantastic by Miyazaki's boldly simple but beautiful style. The English language dub is reminiscent of 70's Hong Kong kung fu flick, but that somehow enhances the retro feel of the picture.
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Our History
GKIDS is the producer of the fabulous New York International Children's Film Festival (NYICFF), the largest festival of its kind in the country. Since its inception in 1997, NYICFF has presented over 1,000 exceptional works of film for kids and teens, including premieres of films by Hayao Miyazaki, Michel Ocelot, Katsuhiro Otomo, Danny Boyle, Josef Fares, Serge Ellisalde, Jean-Pierre Ameris, Santosh Sivan, Anders Klarund, Hiroyuki Morita and countless others. This year's festival runs from February 29 to March 16 in multiple theaters around New York City. The lineup is one of our biggest yet, and you can visit the Festival's homepage to see the 2008 films and schedule..
GKIDS and NYICFF started as the brain trust of partners Eric Beckman and Emily Shapiro, who realized years ago that kids and families need access to better cinematic offerings than most mainstream theaters provide. Through the New York International Children's Film Festival and GKIDS.TV we are making this happen!
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