Los Angeles Times

SXSW’s plans for f ilm festival

Seth Rogen’s comedy and a cable TV section to premiere at annual film festival.

- By Gina McIntyre gina.mcintyre@latimes.com

South by Southwest’s annual event includes the premiere of Seth Rogen’s comedy “Neighbors.”

“Neighbors,” the raunchy Seth Rogen comedy about a married couple living next to a frat house, will premiere alongside Jon Favreau’s restaurant comedy “Chef ” and Rob Thomas’ crowd-funded “Veronica Mars” movie as part of the 21st edition of the South by Southwest Film Conference and Festival in Austin, Texas, organizers announced Thursday.

The 115-film lineup at the film fest, set for March 7-15, includes new movies from David Gordon Green, who will bring his adaptation of the Larry Brown novel “Joe,” starring Nicolas Cage and Tye Sheridan; Diego Luna, who will screen his biopic “Cesar Chavez” about the labor organizer; and Patrick Brice, who will premiere “Creep,” starring Mark Duplass as a videograph­er who answers a want ad for a job only to discover the client is not what he appears to be.

Filmmaker Wes Anderson also will be on hand for a screening of his new picture, “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” followed by an indepth discussion about his career.

“I feel great about the range of work we’re able to premiere this year,” said film conference and festival producer Janet Pierson. “It’s a lot of films that I think are really intriguing across all budget sizes, sensibilit­ies. As programmer­s, you look for work that just sort of speaks to you. You’re looking for a point of view, perhaps, a singular voice, a directoria­l hand.”

This year’s event also will showcase a range of new television series with an Episodic section spotlighti­ng high-profile shows such as HBO’s “Silicon Valley” from Mike Judge, Showtime’s horror romance “Penny Dreadful,” AMC’s period-set take on the dawn of the personal computing age, “Halt and Catch Fire,” Hulu’s supernatur­al-themed “Deadbeat,” Fox’s “Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey” and “From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series,” debuting on Robert Rodriguez’s El Rey Network.

“It’s something we’d been interested in putting together for quite a while and finally the work caught up with being able to create a section dedicated to premiering one or two episodes of a new series,” Pierson said.

“It’s where a lot of creative people are working, there’s a lot of great content, and we were able to come up with a lot of work that spoke to us.”

The music lineup for the festival has yet to be fully announced, but potential breakouts or notable appearance­s so far include folk rock singer-songwriter Angel Olsen, the duo of Broken Bells (Danger Mouse and James Mercer of the Shins), Dum Dum Girls, young rapper Vince Staples and Annie Clark, who performs as St. Vincent.

Although documentar­ies make up a smaller portion of the roster than in years past, a number of high-profile titles will screen at SXSW, including “Supermensc­h,” Mike Myers’ chronicle of legendary manager Shep Gordon, and “Manny,” a portrait of boxer and Philippine­s congressma­n Manny Pacquiao, which is playing under the SXsports banner, a new sports-focused category that will include programmin­g for festivalgo­ers and attendees of SXSW’s Interactiv­e conference.

“Our Vinyl Weighs a Ton (This Is Stones Throw Records)” explores the inf luence of the L.A.-based avant-garde record label.

Special events will commemorat­e the 40th anniversar­y of “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre,” and the legacy of the original 1954 “Godzilla.” Gareth Edwards, who is directing the new “Godzilla” movie due out this summer, will appear for a Q&A about the Japanese release.

Overall, the lineup includes 68 titles from firsttime filmmakers, and 76 world premieres. Festival organizers said they received a record number of 6,482 submission­s this year, up 14% from 2013.

SXSW will announce the programmin­g for its Midnighter­s feature section and its short film program on Feb. 5.

More informatio­n is available at sxsw.com/film.

 ?? Glen Wilson Universal Pictures ?? ZAC EFRON, left, and Dave Franco star in the raunchy comedy “Neighbors,” debuting at SXSW.
Glen Wilson Universal Pictures ZAC EFRON, left, and Dave Franco star in the raunchy comedy “Neighbors,” debuting at SXSW.

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