A conversation with Jay Dockendorf, from Naz and Maalik #myNewYorkeye

Naz and Maalik is a multiple award winning movie by writer/director Jay Dockendorf, with lead actors Curtiss Cook Jr and Kerwin Johnson Jr. A relevant look at two closeted gay teenage African-American Muslims in Brooklyn who are under surveillance by FBI, this narrative film was inspired by real life stories of LGBT Muslims, as told to Jay.

Art Shrian from myNewYorkeye had a conversation with the wonderful filmmaker. Here are the excerpts.

Art Shrian: How are you doing Jay?

Jay Dockendorf: I’m great Art. How are you?

Art Shrian: I’m great, thanks. So, you’re based in New York?

Jay Dockendorf: I live in Brooklyn. I used to live in Bedstuy, and I moved here. I’m currently staying here, and I think next project will be here.

Art Shrian: So what do you think of the weather here?

Jay Dockendorf: I actually enjoy it more than I Thought. I’ve been here 4 years, I grew up in LA, went to school in CT, and now I’m here.

Art Shrian: So congratulations on wonderful movie. It’s very captivating. The subject of the movie is very interesting, but also the visuals of New York City are great. Like a New Yorker sees it. SO how did you shoot it?

Jay Dockendorf: We shot Guerilla style. We shot on location. I acted as location scout, and most film was shot on real locations, except the mosque scene. The style of the film has a lot to do with camera work, and cinematographer Jake Mickey and Production designer who worked together to create a look, of seeing New York that’s reflected in the shots, but also matches what’s happening with the characters. I have to give them full credit for the look of the film.

We shot with a lightweight camera Canon C300, which let us spend long days hand held. That was good for the guerilla style filmmaking.

Art Shrian: New York City itself plays a character and you guys have done a great job of it. About the story, its very complex. It has various layers, like subject of sexuality, subject of religion, subject of racial profiling. It brings multiple layers of emotions and journey of the characters through this story. So how did you come up with this story?

Jay Dockendorf: This is not a story of myself. It’s a story of many people how I thought deserve their story to be told. The sources are events that I saw on street, on subway, in homes where I have stayed in. Particularly, a gay couple I lived with inspires the main character.  It’s not a documentary, but things gave me lot of inspiration. I started writing this 2012, and I had my experience in Bedstuy with the African American community, which inspired me and became source of some of the story.

Art Shrian: As a filmmaker and writer, what was the most difficult thing or biggest challenge? And what was the most rewarding outcome of this project?

Jay Dockendorf: Most rewarding was creation of this film. We rehearsed the film together, walking through the city, for 3 weeks. The actors were so giving and committed, was great help. It allowed building characters in a way, which would not have been possible otherwise. The various challenging aspects were also very rewarding. Like shooting in subway was hard. To get right angles, right sound, everything was tough. Our sound recorder, Joe, was wonderful. Getting the camera to not shake much. And for actors to perform in front of live audience and strangers, it was all very challenging, but truly rewarding.

Art Shrian: The scenes on the street, with the guys selling things, were very cool. We see these folks in subway or street, selling stuff. But we usually don’t think of there backstory. This was cool to see. Were the others all actors, or real people?

Jay Dockendorf: It was a combination. We cast some people on the street. Some people reached out to us. Or actor’s improvised. People were very supportive.

Art Shrian: I really enjoyed the positivity and optimism of the film. Lot of dramatic stuff could have happened, but movie keeps a positive direction, avoiding the drama.

Jay Dockendorf: Thanks; I’m glad to hear that. It’s controversial aspect of the movie. Some people feel it could have been exploited more with potential conflict and drama, or thriller.

Art Shrian: So what’s your overall message for your audience, from this film and in general from your work?

Jay Dockendorf: I would want the film to speak for itself, and let people decide. It might be limiting, if I blurted it out, in few words. I would like to hear the audience’s interpretation of the film. I think it’s more powerful that way.

Art Shrian: That’s wonderful, I completely agree. The movie does speak for itself and shows your care and concern for the wonderful characters, the subject and everything else around it. Thanks a lot for talking to us, and making this beautiful film. Congratulations!

Naz & Maalik opened in select cinemas on Jan 22, 2016. It’s also be available from Jan 26, 2016 on DVD via Wolfe Video and many major retailers. And also on VOD via www.WolfeOnDemand.com and additional digital platforms.

The Cinefamily presents The X-Files: Live Podcast and Marathon with sneak preview of new X-Files episode

FREE ADMISSION Saturday, January 16th, 12pm - 10pm 

  • Hosted by upcoming 'X-Files" guest star Kumail Nanjiani
  • Surprise X-Files Cast & Crew Appearances
  • Event will be a special live episode of Nanjiani's podcast 'The X-Files Files"
  • Marathon will end with a sneak screening of the first new episode

A good sequel or TV show reprise on the horizon means one thing and one thing only... schedule your marathon to binge watch the original STAT! Well, Mulder and Scully (aka David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson), the stars of the moody and cinematic 90s phenomenon The X-Files-"one of the most elaborate, long-winded, beleaguered, and beloved cult sci-fi series in TV history" (Wired)-are poised to return, and Cinefamily is prepared to ensure that you are ready. With the show's six new episodes beginning Jan 24th on FOX, the time is nigh to survey the best of the beloved science fiction drama's previous seasons.

Our host for the evening, podcaster and upcoming "The X-Files" guest star Kumail Nanjiani, will take us on a tour of the absolute best of the X-Files, for a special live episode of his podcast "The X-Files Files." To top it all off, expect surprise X-Files cast & crew appearances, plus a sneak peek of the first new episode. And if you're not on board yet, just know that Kumail says... ""This is going to be the greatest day of my life."

THE X-FILES debuts with a special two-night event on FOX beginning Sunday, Jan. 24 (10:00-11:00 PM ET/7:00-8:00 PM PT), and continuing with its time period premiere on Monday, Jan. 25(8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT). The all-new episodes will encompass a mixture of stand-alone episodes and those that further the original show's seminal mythology. Featuring appearances by guest stars, including Joel McHale ("Community"), Robbie Amell ("The Flash"), Lauren Ambrose ("Dig," "Six Feet Under"), Annabeth Gish ("The Bridge"), Annet Mahendru ("The Americans"), Rhys Darby ("Flight of the Conchords"), Kumail Nanjiani ("Silicon Valley") and William B. Davis, who reprises his role as CIGARETTE SMOKING MAN. Three of the episodes are written and directed by Chris Carter, with the remaining new episodes written and directed by original series veterans Glen Morgan, Darin Morgan and James Wong.

More Information: http://www.cinefamily.org/films/special-events-january-2016/#the-x-files-files-live-podcast-and-marathon

ADMISSION / TICKET INFO

*Free Admission by Pre-Registration. Cinefamily Members receive priority admission.

Pre-Registration:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1F_9SRZOHgJvRkVhBD-oyr6XV8VEG8uh6VImGOq5dLqY/viewform?fbzx=-5232405041342400931

*Seating is first-come, first-serves, pre-registration does not guarantee admission, seating subject to availability

The Cinefamily, 611 N. Fairfax Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90036

Website: www.cinefamily.org | Phone: 323.655.2510

For More info: www.cinefamily.org

STRATFORD ON HOUSTON at Film Forum, January 13-21

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STRATFORD ON HOUSTON, a nine-day, 11-film festival of classic Shakespeare screen adaptations commemorating the 400th anniversary of the Bard’s death, will run at Film Forum from Wednesday, January 13 through Thursday, January 21
 

Following a twelve-day run of Orson Welles’ long-unavailable masterpiece Chimes at Midnight (January 1-12; see earlier press release), the series kicks off on Wednesday, January 13 with two of Welles’ earlier Shakespeare adaptations: his original director’s cut of Macbeth, or the so-called “Scottish version,” with the actors speaking the lines with thick Scottish accents (later drastically cut and dubbed into “American” for general release), and his magnificent Othello, winner of the Grand Prize at Cannes – with Welles starring in the title role of both films.

The series includes three of the great Shakespeare adapations directed by and starring Laurence Olivier: his multi-Oscar-winning (Best Picture, Actor, Art Direction, Costumes) Hamlet; the wartime Technicolor tour-de-force Henry V; and a ravishing new 4K color restoration of Richard III, co-starring Ralph Richardson, John Gielgud, and Claire Bloom.

STRATFORD ON HOUSTON also includes Franco Zeffirelli’s Romeo and Juliet, with Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey as the ill-fated couple (perhaps the first actors of the correct age to play them), the most commercially successful Shakespearean movie adaptation ever; Zeffirelli’s underrated Taming of the Shrew, starring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor; Throne of BloodMacbeth transposed by Akira Kurosawa to medieval Japan, starring the great Toshiro Mifune and Isuzu Yamada (as “Lady Macbeth”); Joseph L. Mankiewicz’ Julius Caesar, with Marlon Brando as Marc Antony and an all-star cast inlcuding James Mason and Deborah Kerr; and a 4K restoration of Roman Polanski’s own adaptation of Macbeth, produced by Hugh Hefner and notable for its prodigious use of sex and violence. The series also includes a new restoration of Forbidden Planet, Shakespeare’s The Tempest in outer space, starring Walter Pidgeon, Leslie Nielsen, Anne Francis, and “Robby the Robot.”
 

Public Screening Schedule (all separate admissions)

JANUARY 13 WED
OTHELLO (1952, Orson Welles) DCP
Orson Welles, Micheál MacLiammóir, Suzanne Cloutier
12:30, 4:40, 9:15

MACBETH (1948, Orson Welles) 35mm
“Scottish Version” (longer director’s cut)
Orson Welles, Jeanette Nolan
Courtesy UCLA Film & Television Archive
2:30, 7:00

JANUARY 14 THURS
HAMLET (1948, Laurence Olivier) DCP restoration
Laurence Olivier, Jean Simmons, Eileen Herlie
1:00, 4:00, 7:00

JANUARY 15 FRI
RICHARD III (1955, Laurence Olivier) 4K DCP restoration
Laurence Olivier, Cedric Hardwicke, John Gielgud, Ralph Richardson, Claire Bloom
1:00, 4:00, 7:00

JANUARY 16 SAT
RICHARD III (1955, Laurence Olivier) 4K DCP restoration
1:00, 4:00, 7:00

FORBIDDEN PLANET (1956, Fred McLeod Wilcox) DCP restoration
Walter Pidgeon, Anne Francis, Leslie Nielsen, “Robby the Robot”
10:00

JANUARY 17 SUN
FORBIDDEN PLANET (1956, Fred McLeod Wilcox) DCP
11:00 AM*
*Part of our Film Forum Jr. Series; all seats $8.00

ROMEO AND JULIET (1968, Franco Zeffirelli) archival 35mm print
Olivia Hussey, Leonard Whiting, Michael York
1:20, 4:00, 7:00

JANUARY 18 MON
ROMEO AND JULIET (1968, Franco Zeffirelli) archival 35mm print
12:30

THRONE OF BLOOD (1957, Akira Kurosawa) 35mm
Toshiro Mifune, Isuzu Yamada
3:10, 5:20, 7:30. 9:40

JANUARY 19 TUE
HENRY V (1945, Laurence Olivier) DCP restoration
Laurence Olivier, Robert Newton, Leslie Banks
1:00, 3:40, 7:00, 9:45

JANUARY 20 WED
JULIUS CAESAR (1953, Joseph L. Maniewicz) 35mm
Marlon Brando. James Mason, Deborah Kerr, John Gielgud, Lous Calhern
12:30, 5:10, 9:50

THE TAMING OF THE SHREW (1967, Franco Zeffirelli) DCP restoration
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton
2:50, 7:30

JANUARY 21 THU
MACBETH (1972, Roman Polanski) 4K DCP restoration
Jon Finch, Francesca Annis
1:00, 3:40 7:00, 9:40


For more information about showtimes, visit www.filmforum.org

FSLC announces Neighboring Scenes: New Latin American Cinema, January 7-10

The Film Society of Lincoln Center announces Neighboring Scenes, a new showcase of contemporary Latin American cinema co-presented with Cinema Tropical. Launching in the New Year, this selective slate of premieres highlights impressive recent productions from across the region and exhibits the vast breadth of styles, techniques, and approaches employed by Latin American filmmakers today.

“It’s been some years since Latin American cinema ‘reemerged,’” said Programmer at Large Rachael Rakes. “Now, as the output from countries like Mexico, Argentina, and Brazil continues to be some of the most compelling and engaged cinema today, new scenes are establishing themselves all across the map, showcasing fresh talent and ideas, and challenging the notion of an identifiable contemporary Latin American cinema. We’re pleased to highlight a few of the most impressive recent films from the region.”

Opening the series is Benjamín Naishtat’s El Movimiento, a stark, black-and-white snapshot of anarchy in 19th-century Argentina and follow-up to his acclaimed debut, History of Fear. Other highlights include the 2015 Cannes Caméra d’Or winner, César Augusto Acevedo’s Land and Shade; the U.S. premiere of Arturo Ripstein’s Bleak Street, which has drawn comparisons to Luis Buñuel’s Mexican period; Rodrigo Plá’s Venice Horizons opener A Monster with a Thousand Heads; Pablo Larraín’s Silver Bear–winning The Club, Chile’s submission for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar; and more.

With titles from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, and Mexico, Neighboring Scenes spans a wide geographic range, evidencing the many sites of contemporary Latin American filmmaking. Some of the featured directors are established auteurs, while others have recently emerged on the international festival scene, snagging top prizes and critical accolades at festivals like Cannes, Berlin, Venice, and Locarno.

Organized by Rachael Rakes and Dennis Lim.

Tickets go on sale Thursday, December 17 and are $14; $11 for students and seniors (62+); and $9 for Film Society members. See more and save with the $75 All Access Pass or 3+ film discount package.

FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS

Opening Night
El Movimiento
Benjamín Naishtat, Argentina, 2015, DCP, 70m
Spanish with English subtitles

Continuing his preoccupation with violence and Argentina’s past, Benjamín Naishtat (History of Fear, a New Directors/New Films 2014 selection) dramatizes a crucial moment in that nation’s history characterized by political zealotry and terrorism. Pablo Cedrón portrays the fiery, unhinged leader of a mysterious militia (modeled on Confederacy-era dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas’s Mazorca) who wantonly roam the pampas in an effort to “purify” and unite society, killing and plundering settlers along the way. Characters emerge from and disappear into dark expanses—the film is masterfully shot in black and white—heightening its intense, chilling atmosphere. Funded by the Jeonju Digital Project.
Thursday, January 7, 7:00pm (Q&A with Benjamín Naishtat)

Alexfilm
Pablo Chavarria Gutiérrez, Mexico, 2015, DCP, 60m
Spanish with English subtitles

Marked by a light touch and emphasizing openness over conventional, linear narrative, biologist-turned-filmmaker Pablo Chavarria Gutiérrez documents the rhythms of a man awaiting an important event that never comes. As he cooks breakfast, naps, paints, tries on sunglasses, and wanders through different rooms in his home, Chavarria Guitérrez lovingly frames every action in beautiful natural light, allowing each moment to flow to the next while maintaining its own transcendent essence. North American Premiere

Screening with:
Gulliver
María Alché, Argentina, 2015, DCP, 25m
Spanish with English subtitles

Flawlessly transitioning from a highly naturalistic family tale to something overtly surreal and back again, Gulliver captures the circumstances—imagined or not—of one of those evenings when siblings come to a deeper understanding of one another. After hanging out at home with their mom (Martín Rejtman regular Susana Pampin) and older sister Mariela (Agustina Muñoz), Agos and Renzo go to a raging party where Agos ends up drinking too much. Upon stepping outside to recover, the pair wander into a strange but familiar landscape, and begin to ask questions about the world and themselves.
Sunday, January 10, 5:00pm

Bleak Street / La calle de la amargura
Arturo Ripstein, Mexico/Spain, 2015, DCP, 99m
Spanish with English subtitles

Based on a true story, the latest feature by Arturo Ripstein is an unflinching look at the mean streets of El Defectuoso. Two prostitutes, Adela (Nora Velázquez) and Dora (Patricia Reyes Spíndola), are burdened by horrible marriages and financial problems stemming from their long-departed youth. In an attempt to make ends meet, they drug and rob dwarf twins (Juan Francisco Longoria and Guillermo López)—who themselves barely scrape by as doubles for professional luchadores. Ripstein masterfully contrasts the grittiness of alleyways and seedy apartments with gliding Steadicam cinematography, siding with neither the victims nor the perpetrators. A Leisure Time Features release. U.S. Premiere
Sunday, January 10, 3:00pm

The Club / El Club
Pablo Larraín, Chile, 2015, DCP, 98m
Spanish with English subtitles

Pablo Larraín (director of No and Post Mortem) continues to explore the long shadows of Chile’s recent past with this quietly scathing film about the Catholic Church’s concealment of clerical misconduct. Four aging former priests peacefully live out their days together in a dumpy seaside town, focused on training their racing greyhound rather than doing penance for their assorted crimes. Their idyll is shattered when a fifth priest arrives and, confronted by one of his victims, commits suicide. A young priest begins an investigation into the retirees’ pasts, setting off a series of events that call into question faith, piety, and complicity. Winner of the Silver Bear at the 2015 Berlinale and Chile’s Oscar submission. A Music Box Films release.
Sunday, January 10, 9:00pm

The Gold Bug, or Victoria’s Revenge / El escarabajo de oro o Victorias Hamnd
Alejo Moguillansky & Fia-Stina Sandlund, Argentina/Denmark/Sweden, 2014, DCP, 102m
Spanish and Swedish with English and Spanish subtitles

Fusing elements of Edgar Allan Poe’s titular short story and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, Alejo Moguillansky and Fia-Stina Sandlund’s meta-film follows an Argentine-Swedish co-production in Buenos Aires shooting a biopic of the 19th-century realist author and proto-feminist Victoria Benedictsson. After a hustling actor finds a treasure map detailing the location of ancient gold hidden near a town in the Misiones province named after the 19th-century politician Leandro N. Alem, he successfully persuades the producers to reframe the project as a portrait of the radical Alem (swapping feminist politics for anti-Eurocentric ones) and move the production there—so he can better search for the treasure. Fast-paced and hilariously self-reflexive, the film takes a playful approach to texts and history that is reminiscent of Borges.
Thursday, January 7, 9:00pm

Hopefuls / Aspirantes
Ives Rosenfeld, Brazil, 2015, DCP, 71m
Portuguese with English subtitles

Focused on the alluring promise of wealth and fame that professional soccer holds for Brazilian youth, Ives Rosenfeld’s directorial debut features a host of excellent performances from its cast. Junior (Ariclenes Barroso) ekes out a living working nights at a warehouse while playing by day in an amateur league with his talented best friend Bento (Sergio Malheiros). When Bento gets signed to a professional team, Junior struggles with his crippling jealousy—which becomes heightened by his pregnant girlfriend and alcoholic uncle. Artfully lensed and deliberately paced, the film silently builds toward a legitimately shocking climax that provides a grim reality check.
Sunday, January 10, 7:00pm (Q&A with Ives Rosenfeld)

It All Started at the End / Todo comenzó por el fin
Luis Ospina, Colombia, 2015, DCP, 208m
Spanish with English subtitles

Luis Ospina (The Vampire of PovertyPaper Tiger) turns the camera toward his radical roots—and his own intestines—for this documentary about the Cali Group, the Colombian artists’ collective that revolutionized art, cinema, and literature amid drug-related terrorism in the 1970s and ’80s. Boasting a wide array of never-before-seen archival material, Ospina (the group’s only surviving member, who was diagnosed with cancer during the making of the film) focuses on telling the stories of co-founders Andrés Caicedo and Carlos Mayolo. Never maudlin or self-important, this kaleidoscopic inside view of “Caliwood” is essential viewing for anyone looking for darkly comic, anarchic inspiration. U.S. Premiere
Saturday, January 9, 2:00pm (Q&A with Luis Ospina)


Ixcanul
Jayro Bustamante, Guatemala, 2015, DCP, 93m
Kaqchikel and Spanish with English subtitles

Maria (María Mercedes Coroy) is set to marry a much older foreman at the coffee plantation, but she has a crush on Pepe, who has fanciful dreams of getting rich in the U.S. After consummating their flirtation, Pepe leaves for the States—without Maria, who soon learns she is expecting a baby. A difficult pregnancy assisted only by traditional medicine finally leads her to the hectic big city, but on very grim terms. Shot in collaboration with the Kaqchikel Mayans of Guatemala’s coffee-growing highlands, Jayro Bustamante’s exquisitely shot debut feature (winner of a top prize at the Berlinale and Guatemala’s Oscar submission) explores what tradition and modernity mean for women living in marginalized communities. A Kino Lorber release.
Friday, January 8, 7:00pm

Land and Shade / La tierra y la sombra
César Augusto Acevedo, Colombia, 2015, DCP, 94m
Spanish with English subtitles

A poetic and devastating statement on how environmental issues impact every aspect of life, César Augusto Acevedo’s Caméra d’Or–winning directorial debut is not to be missed. The elderly Alfonso (Haimer Leal) returns to the small house in Valle del Cauca he left 17 years earlier in order to care for his bedridden son Geraldo (Edison Raigosa), who suffers from a mysterious ailment related to the harsh farming techniques of the sugar-cane plantations around them. Tensions quietly simmer between Alfonso and his ex-wife (the wonderful Hilda Ruiz), but familial ties and pride keep them tied to the land in Acevedo’s meditative and painterly allegory.
Friday, January 8, 9:00pm

Mar
Dominga Sotomayor, Chile, 2014, DCP, 70m
Spanish with English subtitles

Reminiscent of the films of Josephine Decker and Joe Swanberg, this low-key drama centers on the problems between Martin, aka Mar (Lisandro Rodríguez), and his girlfriend, Eli (Vanina Montes). On vacation in the Argentine resort town of Villa Gesell, conflicts arise concerning expectations and long-term commitments—having a baby, home ownership—but get pushed aside or elided. A visit from Martin’s gregarious, wine-guzzling mother and a random act of God threaten to push the couple to breaking point. Dominga Sotomayor matches her characters’ frustrations with the film’s expert framing, which often obscures faces and bodies, visually emphasizing their mutual misunderstanding.
Saturday, January 9, 6:30pm Q&A with Dominga Sotomayor)

A Monster with a Thousand Heads / Un monstruo de mil cabezas
Rodrigo Plá, Mexico, 2015, DCP, 74m
Spanish with English subtitles

Developed in tandem with his wife’s novel of the same title, Rodrigo Plá (The DelayThe Zone) crafts another airtight thriller, this time taking on a health-insurance system that prefers profit to adequate medical care. Refused treatment that would alleviate her terminally ill husband’s pain—yet not the frustrations of dealing with maddening bureaucracy—Sonia (Jana Raluy) snaps and, gun in hand, single-mindedly goes up the chain of command with a vengeance. The series of increasingly harrowing provocations are interspersed with moments of dark comedy, and coalesce into a final, shocking climax.
Saturday, January 9, 8:30pm (Q&A with Rodrigo Plá)

For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org