Film Lineup 2018 Official Selection

October 2, 2018 2018, News

Arpa IFF 2018 to Showcase Inspiring Lineup of Films from Around the World

Edward James Olmos to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award

We are thrilled to announce the full lineup of the 21st Annual Arpa International Film Festival (Arpa IFF) taking place at the historic Egyptian Theatre from November 2 to 4. This year’s festival will once again highlight a diverse range of films that explore themes such as genocide, war, feminism, family dynamics, environmentalism, music, art, adoption, intersectional identities, and LGBTQ issues.

Opening night on Friday, November 2 will kick off with a special reception and screening of MONDAY NIGHTS AT SEVEN, a love story about a single father who is struggling unsuccessfully to let go of his past. The film stars Edward James Olmos, Marty Sader, past Arpa IFF award recipient Mary Apick and mixed martial arts legend Anderson Silva. A special ceremony honoring Edward James Olmos with a Lifetime Achievement Award will follow the screening of the film. Olmos, currently starring in the television series Mayans M.C., has played iconic roles both in film and television, receiving Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations for “Stand and Deliver” (1988).

Saturday evening’s centerpiece program and reception will showcase two amazing films – YEVA, Armenia’s foreign language film Oscar submission last year, as well as DIVERTED EDEN written and directed by Prince Baghdasarian. YEVA, an Armenian-Iranian co-production, is set against the backdrop of the long-running conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh). Director Anahid Abad tells the story of a young woman named Yeva who escapes her influential in-laws with her daughter, after her husband’s tragic death and takes refuge in one of the villages of Karabakh. Yeva, accused of murdering her husband, is a complete stranger in this village and is obliged to live her daily life in disguise.

DIVERTED EDEN, winner of the Audience Award at this year’s Sedona International Film Festival, is the story of a war hero who takes matters into his own hands after his young daughter is kidnapped, as detectives unravel the mystery surrounding the unusual crime. Director Prince Bagdasarian’s debut feature “Abstraction” (2013) starring Ken Davitian and Korrina Rico won the Audience Award at Arpa IFF that same year.

A Glimpse into Some of Saturday’s Film Screenings

THE SONG OF SWAY LAKE (feature) (USA) – an intriguing family drama about a young record collector and his friend who go to his family’s lake house to claim a valuable jazz recording, upon his father’s suicide. While he is there, encounters with his estranged grandmother and a neighbor dredge up years of family suffering.

RIVER OF GOLD (documentary) (USA) – a disturbing account of the apocalyptic destruction of Peru’s Amazon rainforest in the pursuit of illegally mined gold. The acclaimed documentary is narrated by Academy Award winners Sissy Spacek and Herbie Hancock.

SIX MUSICIANS AND THE CITY (documentary) (Russia) – Filmmaker Tatiana Daniliyants showcases 6 amazing musicians based in Yerevan, each with their own unique story and musical genre. Between East and West, between strong traditions and today’s innovations, between the nostalgic melodies of duduk and the beat of modern jazz, is the city of Yerevan. Among the six participants of this film are Arto Tuncboyaciyan and Jivan Gasparyan.

THE GIRL IN THE SHOW (documentary) (USA) – a poignant retrospective of comediennes, exploring the ways in which women’s comedy and women’s liberation have evolved together. The Girl in the Show brilliantly explores how comedy and feminism have grown hand in hand to give women a stronger voice in the ongoing fight for equality.

NOWHERE (feature) (Serbia) – Serbian filmmaker Predrag Velinovic tells the story of three inseparable friends who graduate together and develop a relationship balancing on a thin line between friendship and love.

MODERN AMERICAN ARTISTS (documentary) (USA) – Rockstar/Guitarist Peter DiStefano of the band Porno for Pyros explores his local city of Los Angeles in search of local artists to collaborate with. Peter’s journey takes you on a day in the life of a modern American artist as he interacts with painter Michael Gorman and child prodigy Alice Asmar with whom he creates original works.

BETTY: THEY SAY I’M DIFFERENT (documentary) (USA) – creatively blending documentary, animation and nonfiction techniques, this movie traces the life of Funk Queen Betty Davis who arrived on the 70’s scene to break boundaries for women with her daring personality, iconic fashion and outrageous funk music. The wife of jazz legend Miles Davis, Betty was a feminist pioneer, inspiring and intimidating in a manner like no woman before. After years of trying, the elusive Betty who vanished overnight, finally allowed the filmmakers to creatively tell her story based on their conversations.

DORBEEN (short) (India)- based on the life of two street children in India and their pursuit of happiness in the little things in life that most adults are unaware of or choose to ignore.

ECHO (short animation) (Serbia) – a young boy spends a day with his father, whom he only occasionally sees, in nature, with the game of calling Echo. After a great emotional charge that the play and the presence of his father create in him, he returns to his mother’s house, where there is no place for such outbursts of “irrational” attitudes towards the world.

GENESIS (short animation) (Iran) – a fantasy short film with a critical point of view about the situation in Syria.

 

A Look into Some of Sunday’s Film Screenings

THE PURSUIT (short) (USA) – a first generation Armenian-American single mother still struggling with her cultural identity. She tries to conform with her family’s and culture’s expectations but feels that she is stuck in the middle of the Armenian and American cultures. When she discovers her daughter has similar ambitions to be in the arts as she once had, she is forced to self-reflect. Lucy must decide whether or not she will stand up for her daughter, and vicariously for herself, or will succumb to the ever-present familial pressures.

IN VINO (feature) (USA) – it’s a special night for the Buoitton Family. Charles and Linda, extremely wealthy couple, invite their closest friends and family members to dinner. Before dinner is served Charles raises the glass for a toast to his family and falls face forward on his plate DEAD. Linda confesses that she had poisoned him and she had poisoned everyone in the room to get the money. The guests have one choice: Kill one person among them and take the blame for both murders to get the antidote or… DIE in one hour. What follows is a hysterical exchange between the overstressed members of the group who, in an attempt to establish who should die and who should be the killer, reveal all the skeletons in the closet they have been hiding from each-other for years.

UNDER THE WALNUT TREE (short) (USA) – a young boy has been displaced during the massacre of his people and his family. After wandering alone for days, he is ready to give up but fights to continue to safety. His struggle for survival ends when he finds his mother singing to a lifeless body. Loosely based on the true story of Shahan Natalie, who survived the Hamidian Massacres (also known as the Armenian Massacres) which were the precursor to the Armenian Genocide.

MY NEW YEAR (short) (Armenia) – Based on childhood memories of the devastating 1988 Spitak earthquake in Armenia. A father and his two young children are left homeless, grieving the loss of their mother and wife. After painful quest to find her body and give her a proper burial, by New Year’s Eve, the family is settled in a trailer near the wreckage of their home. The father for the sake of his children struggles to find the strength and heart to live on.

ELVIS WALKS HOME (feature) (Albania) – an illegal Albanian who used to live in London, is a part time Elvis Presley impersonator. He gets a job entertaining British peacekeeping troops in the 1999 Balkans wars. When backstage problems ensue, he flees – straight into the war zone. He meets and is captured by a group of children refugees caught up in the merciless war.

AMERICAN MIRROR – INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY – (documentary) (USA) – Oscar-winning screen icon Susan Sarandon and Armenian painter Tigran Tsitoghdzyan discuss how the apparently in conflict values of beauty and aging are perceived in our modern society dominated by social media, as he limns her portrait during a timeless sitting session. With this film the director sets in motion his theory on poetics of cinematic art, by creating the sense memories of an artist in a non-linear, challenging story-telling scheme.

TANIEL (short) (UK) – Film Noir images, prophetic verse, and narration by Sean Bean tell the story of Taniel Varoujan, one of the most majestic poets of the 20th century. At the age of 31, he was lost under the vast shadow of the murder of a race, in what became known as the Armenian Genocide.

SIDE BY SIDE: OUT OF A KOREAN ORPHANAGE AND INTO THE WORLD (documentary) – an international journey through the personal memories and experiences of abandonment, relinquishment, orphanages, aging out, and inter-country adoption from South Korea.

I PROMISED HER LIFE (short) (USA) – On the day of her daughter’s funeral, a grieving Armenian-American mother defies a centuries-old ritual and tests the limits of tradition as she walks the thin line between death and afterlife.

LITTLE FIEL (short doc) (USA) – Artist Fiel dos Santos grew up during the 16-year-long civil war in his home country of Mozambique. The only one of his family to never have shot a gun, today he makes art out of guns to commemorate the lives lost.

HOMELESS (ANTOUNI) (short) (Armenia) – a nine-year old Syrian-Armenian girl discovers her father’s plans of leaving their beloved homeland.

The 21st Annual Arpa International Film Festival will close with a special Awards Ceremony on Sunday evening at the Egyptian Theatre, with a special Rising Star Award being presented to producer Natalie Qasabian. A graduate of USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, Natalie has been building her career as a producer ever since. The first short film she produced, “Join the Club” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2016. From there she went on to produce three Duplass Brothers features: “Rainbow Time,” “Take Me,” and “Duck Butter” directed by Miguel Arteta. She also produced “All About Nina” starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Common, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year and was acquired by The Orchard. Her latest feature “Searching,” a thriller starring John Cho and Debra Messing premiered at Sundance in January and won the Audience Award and Alfred P. Sloan Award. “Searching” was released theatrically in the US in August of this year and has grossed $54 million worldwide and received positive reviews from critics, who praised the acting, screenplay, and visual execution. Qasabian, who recently graduated with an MBA from Pepperdine University, is currently producing “Run” for Lionsgate alongside “Searching” producer Sev Ohanian and director Aneesh Chaganty.

 

Feature Narrative Films 2018 Arpa IFF Selection

DIVERTED EDEN, directed by Prince Bagdasarian
ELVIS WALKS HOME, directed by Fatmir Koci
IN VINO, directed by Leonardo Foti
MONDAY NIGHTS AT SEVEN, directed by Marty Sader
NOWHERE (NIGDE), directed by Predrag Velinovic
THE SONG OF SWAY LAKE, directed by Ari Gold
YEVA, directed by Anahid Abad

 

Documentary Films 2018 Arpa IFF Selection

16 DISTRICT, 16 FLOORS, 16 PEOPLE, directed by Tatevik Vardanyan
ACCUSED OF WITCHCRAFT, directed by Ewa Marcinowska
AMERICAN MIRROR: INTIMATIONS OF IMMORTALITY, directed by Arthur Balder
BETTY – THEY SAY I’M DIFFERENT, directed by Phil Cox
COTTON PLANT, directed by Matthew Michaud
I LOVE THE INVADERS, directed by Yann Krajewski
JUST GIZELLE, directed by Jonathan Fernandez
KARABIAN: A GLIMPSE INTO A STATEMAN’S LIFE, directed by Hrag Yedalian & Garen Mirzaian
LITTLE FIEL, directed by Irina Patkanian
MODERN AMERICAN ARTISTS, directed by Douglas Kaplan
NOBODY DIES HERE, directed by Simon Panay
RIVER OF GOLD, directed by Reuben Aaronson
SIDE BY SIDE: OUT OF A SOUTH KOREAN ORPHANAGE AND INTO THE WORLD, directed by Glenn Morey &Julie Morey
SIX MUSICIANS AND THE CITY, directed by Tatiana Daniliyants
THE GIRL IN THE SHOW, directed by Anna Fields
WAY BACK HOME, directed by Seda Grigoryan
WE WERE AMERICANS, directed by Avo John Kambourian

 

Short Films 2018 Arpa IFF Selection

ABLUTION, directed by Omar Al Dakheel
CAN’T TAKE MY EYES OFF YOU, directed by Gabriele Fabbro
DOORBEEN (BINOCULAR), directed by Anuj Rawra
ECHO, directed by Borisa Simovic
ELI, directed by Colin Gerrard
GENESIS, directed by Abtin Mozafari
HOMELESS (ANTOUNI), directed by Alik Barsoumian
I PROMISED HER LIFE, directed by Robert Nazar Arjoyan
MISAPPROPRIATION, directed by Ana Maria Ferri
MY NEW YEAR, directed by Arusyak Simonyan
PARANOID, directed by Giorgio Khachwajian
SECOND HAND, directed by Armen Poladian
SIMON, directed by Diego Vicentini
STAND/STILL, directed by Shawn-Caulin Young & Tanner Thomason
SUSANNA, directed by Oksana Mirzoyan
TANIEL, directed by Garo Berberian
TESSELLATION, directed by Julian Garnik
THE DELIVERER, directed by Ron Morales
THE HOOLIGAN SOUL (ALMA BANDIDA), directed by Marco Antônio Pereira
THE PURSUIT, directed by Randy Kent
UNDER THE WALNUT TREE, directed by Leah Bedrosian Peterson
WHAT WAR?, directed by Parvez S Imagery
WITH MY OWN TWO HANDS (DEUX MAINS), directed by Michaël Barocas

 

Times and theatre placement are in our Day By Day Schedule.