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Directors John Hancock and Mark Lewis Bring Premieres to 13th Annual
Virginia Film Festival
Oct.
25,
2000 -- The 13th annual Virginia
Film Festival, scheduled for Thursday, Oct. 26 through Sunday,
Oct. 29, is proud to announce a number of premiere film presentations,
including John Hancock's "A Piece of Eden" and Mark Lewis's "A Natural
History of the Chicken." These premieres were announced by Artistic
Director Richard Herskowitz as part of the theme of this year's
festival, "Animal Attractions."
Acclaimed
director John Hancock ("Bang the Drum Slowly," "Weeds") will present
his new film, "A Piece of Eden," accompanied by screenwriter Dorothy
Tristan and actress Rebecca Harrell. A bittersweet comedy, "A Piece
of Eden" follows three generations of the unlucky Tredici family
from Corsica in the 1940s to an Indiana fruit farm in the present.
Based on memories of Hancock's own childhood upbringing, the film
moved National Book Award-winning author John Casey, a classmate
of Hancock's at Harvard, to bring the film to the attention of Festival
artistic director Richard Herskowitz. Casey, who will moderate the
discussion after the screening, has said: "I loved the movie. The
last thing I was expecting to do -- I mean, there was a happy end
-- was to burst into tears." (Friday, Oct. 27 at the Regal Cinema
6, Downtown Mall, Main Street).
Dorothy
Tristan (who happens to be Hancock's wife and professional partner),
has written three of her husband's films: "Steal the Sky," "Weeds,"
and "A Piece of Eden." She is currently finishing the screenplay
on his next project. Originally an actress, Tristan began her career
in the theater and in films such as "Klute," "Man on a Swing" and
"End of the Road" with James Earl Jones and Stacy Keach.
In
addition to "A Piece of Eden," Hancock will present the Christmas
classic "Prancer," his 1998 film in which Rebecca Harrell made her
film debut at the age of eight as a young girl who discovers and
protects a wounded reindeer. The film also stars Sam Elliott, Cloris
Leachman and Abe Vigoda. Roger Ebert, reviewing the film at its
opening, wrote: "I know, this sounds like a cloying fantasy designed
to paralyze anyone over the age of 9, but not the way it's told
by director John Hancock and writer Greg Taylor. They give the film
an unsentimental, almost realistic edge. ... And what really redeems
the movie . ... is the performance by a young actress named Rebecca
Harrell." (Sunday, Oct. 29, at 10 a.m., Vinegar Hill Theatre, 220
Market St.).
Mark
Lewis, the wry and comedic nature filmmaker from Australia, will
present "A Natural History of the Chicken," filmed this past year
in Virginia, along with his classic "Cane Toads" (1988). "A Natural
History of the Chicken" premiered at this fall's Toronto Film Festival,
prompting Time's Richard Corliss to write: "In a festival that shows
264 features, this critic's favorite film was not a film at all
but a video documentary -- Mark Lewis's weird and delectable 'The
Natural History of the Chicken.' " Lewis's "Cane Toads," more horrible
than any nature-run-amok fiction feature, documents the misguided
introduction of the giant poison toad to Australia. Both films will
be presented on a double bill on Saturday, Oct. 28, 4 p.m. at the
Regal Cinema 6, Downtown Mall, and Main Street. Lewis will also
be presenting his award-winning 1998 film "Rat," in which New York
City residents share their experiences cohabiting with the ubiquitous
creature, as a free screening at the Scottsville Victory Hall on
Sunday, Oct. 29, at 2 p.m.
Other
directors who will accompany their premiere films include Kelly
Greene, who will present "Attack of the Bat Monsters." Set in 1959,
this comedy takes an affectionate look at the men and women who
created low-budget science fiction movies for drive-in theaters
with their rubber-suited monsters and ubiquitous themes of radioactivity
and atomic mutations. (Saturday, Oct. 28, at 10 p.m. at the Regal
Cinema 6, Downtown Mall, Main Street).
Mongolian
filmmaker Dorjhandyn Turmunkh will present his film "State of Dogs."
A prize-winner at fourteen international film festivals, "State
of Dogs" is "an astonishing mixture of travelogue and mysticism"
says David Stratton, Variety. Employing human actors and a dog's
eye view of the world, the film is structured around the life of
a dog called Baasar. (Saturday, Oct. 28, 7 p.m. at the Vinegar Hill
Theater, 220 Market Street).
Director
Kathy High's "Animal Attraction" is a documentary exploring our
fascination with animals and our attempts to communicate with them.
The film follows the work of Dawn Hayman, an animal communicator
-- or interspecies telepathic communicator -- as she telepathically
talks with animals and teaches other people to do the same. Hayman
and her partner Margot live on a farm with 28 horses, 14 bunnies,
two llamas, 27 ducks, and 100 plus cats. Both director High and
Dawn Hayman will be present at the screening. (Saturday, Oct. 28,
at 4 p.m. at the Vinegar Hill Theatre, 220 Market St.).
The
complete program for the Virginia Film Festival is available at
www.vafilm.com. Tickets are available online. Call 1-800-UVA-FEST
for more information.
Contact:
Anne Hooff at Payne, Ross & Associates: 804/977-7607 (phone), 804/977-7610
(fax), or e-mail annehooff@aol.com
Cara White, 843/881-1480 e-mail: carapub@aol.com
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