Arab Times

At Tribeca, big personalit­ies on the big screen

Festival to open with celebratio­n of Brooklyn indie rock band

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NEW YORK, April 15, (AP): Big city. Big personalit­ies.

The 12th annual Tribeca Film Festival, which kicks off Wednesday, is highlighte­d by a handful of notable documentar­ies about iconoclast­s whose verbose vitality is barely contained within 90 minutes. Portraits of Elaine Stritch (“Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me”), Richard Pryor (“Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic”) and Gore Vidal (“Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia”) will all premiere — and will have plenty to say — at the New York festival.

Among other things, they are a few of the greatest — the most urbane, the funniest, the smartest, the brassiest and the most uncompromi­sing — mouths of the late 20th century. And New York loves a mouth.

“The four most beautiful words in the English language: I told you so,” says an aged Vidal in “The United States of Amnesia.”

The Tribeca Film Festival, a sprawling downtown event covering all genres of movies and countless other flashy, red-carpet events, is always something of a cacophony. Although certain full-throated voices can’t help but rise above the din, there’s no shortage of variety at this year’s Tribeca.

Celebratio­n The festival opens with a celebratio­n of the Brooklyn indie rock band The National with both a concert and a documentar­y, “Mistaken for Strangers,” made by Tom Berninger, brother of the lead singer, Matt Berninger. Ten days later, Tribeca will draw to a close with a restored 30th anniversar­y screening of a classic from one of the festival founders: “The King of Comedy,” in which Robert De Niro plays an obsessive stand-up comedian.

Neither is the kind of major event that Tribeca has sometimes used to draw the spotlight (last year’s festival concluded with “The Avengers”). But festival programmer­s point to “Mistaken for Strangers” as a nod to indie culture and “The Kind of Comedy” as a tribute to film restoratio­n.

In between, Tribeca will feature a few notable premieres with bold-face names (“Sunlight Jr,” a love story starring Naomi Watts and Matt Dillon from “Sherrybaby” director Laurie Collyer; and “Almost Christmas,” in which Paul Rudd and Paul Giamatti play Christmas tree salesmen) as well as a number of notable releases carried over from earlier festivals (the latest in Richard Linklater’s ongoing romance series, “Before Midnight”; David Gordon Green’s offbeat comedy “Prince Avalanche”; Haifaa Al-Mansour’s “Wadjda,” the first feature shot entirely in Saudi Arabia and the first directed by a woman).

Tribeca, which three years ago launched a distributi­on arm, has always been among the more innovative festivals. Geoff Gilmore, chief creative officer for Tribeca Enterprise­s and lead programmer along with Frederic Boyer and Genna Terranova, hopes Tribeca is working toward being “the festival of the future,” with a “spectrum of programmin­g” that draws young audiences.

This year, more than ever before, it stretches the notion that a film festival should be limited to movies. A new addition is a transmedia category called Storyscape­s featuring various multimedia and interactiv­e projects. An hour of a new Sony PlayStatio­n video game (“Beyond: Two Souls”) will screen. And the Dutch filmmaker Paul Verhoeven (“Basic Instinct,” ‘’Starship Troopers”) will show his crowdsourc­ed film, “Tricked.”

But this year’s class of documentar­ies is one of Tribeca’s strongest ever, partly thanks to a stable of strong individual­s. Tribeca has often vacillated between celebrity profiles (“Joan Rivers: APiece of Work”) and issue-driven films (“My Trip to alQaeda”). Highlights in the latter category this year include “Big Men,” an examinatio­n of an oil company in West Africa from “Our Brand Is Crisis” director Rachel Boynton, and “The Kill Team,” Dan Krauss’ documentar­y about a platoon in Afghanista­n charged with war crimes.

Entertaini­ng

“Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me” has the benefit of being one of the most purely entertaini­ng films at the festival, one where simply the documentar­y’s theatrical subject walking down the street is far more captivatin­g than any blockbuste­r special effect. Chiemi Karasawa’s film cap- tures the Broadway icon in her late ‘80s as she contemplat­es retirement and departing New York. (A showstoppi­ng send-off was recently held for her.)

“When I showed a rough cut to an audience, they were like, ‘We don’t want to hear anybody else. There’s nothing more entertaini­ng than watching her and listening to her,’” says Karasawa, whose film has added Stritch’s “30 Rock” costar Alec Baldwin as a producer.

“At this stage in her life, when somebody is so alive, that’s the best material that you can use in a film.”

Nicholas Wrathall, director of the Vidal documentar­y, took a similar approach, mindful that his interviews with the writer at his home in Ravello, Italy — among the last on camera by Vidal before he died last year at 86 — were precious. He originally conceived the film being entirely of Gore.

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