13-10-2009

RABBIT A LA BERLIN CLOSER TO OSCAR NOMINATIONS

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced the list of eight semi-finalists in the Documentary Short Subject category for the 2010 Academy Awards. Three to five of those shorts will end up with Oscar nominations. Short documentary Rabbit à la Berlin by Bartek Konopka and Piotr Rosolowski is among the eight selected films. The Documentary was developed at Ex Oriente Film 2005 and producer Anna Wydra will hold the film´s case study at this year's East European Forum. Congratulations!

    For more, go to: http://www.docuinter.net/en/net_archive.php?id=732


    Rabbit à la Berlin is Polish-German coproduction of Anna Wydra MS Films, Telewizja Polska and ma.ja.de Filmproduktion, MDR, RBB in association with ARTE, YLE, Lichtpunt, VPRO. Film is supported by Polish Film Institute, MEDIA Programme and Andrzej Wajda Master School of Film Directing. The film was developed within following programs and workshops: Nipkow Foundation, Ex Oriente Film, IDF and the Discovery Campus Masterschool (now Documentary Campus).

    Rabbit à la Berlin/ Mauerhase | 2009 | 40'& 51' | creative documentary
    Germany, Poland 2009
    Director: Bartek Konopka
    Producer: Anna Wydra
    Script: Bartek Konopka, Piotr Rosołowski
    Cinematography: Piotr Rosołowski
    Editor: Mateusz Romaszkan
    SFX: Grzegorz Korczaky
    Sound: Franciszek Kozłowski
    Music: Maciej Cieślak

    It's an important lesson of history that a system of order intended to produce one result will often give birth to something entirely unexpected. So it was with the Berlin Wall, which was, in fact, two separate walls, one on the east and one on the west with a 120-kilometre strip of land between them. The enclosed patch was unintentionally converted into a kind of rabbit reserve as the walls encircled the lush green meadows of Potsdamer Platz and cut its rabbit population off from both escape and predators. But then one day the walls came down and the rabbits were suddenly freed from a restrictive system, albeit one to which they had become accustomed. Told in the style of a nature documentary, with a captivatingly dreamy tone and a tongue-in-cheek nod to the story's allegorical significance, Rabbit à la Berlin provides a fascinating history lesson told through the eyes of animals.


    The eight films are listed below in alphabetical order by title, with their production company:

    • China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province, Downtown Community Television Center, Inc.

    • The Last Campaign of Governor Booth Gardner, Just Media

    • The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant, Community Media Productions

    • Lt. Watada, Chanlim Films

    • Music by Prudence, iThemba Productions, Inc.

    • Rabbit a la Berlin, MS Films

    • Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait of Maurice Sendak, Outside Productions

    • Woman Rebel, Women Rebel Films


    Subjects range from interviews with parents who lost their children following the devastating Sichuan earthquake of 2008 (Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill's China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province) to the closing down of the General Motors assembly plant in Moraine, Ohio (Steve Bognar and Julia Reichert's The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant); from an examination of children's book writer and illustrator Maurice Sendak's thoughts, including his lifelong obsession with death (Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze's Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait of Maurice Sendak) to how rabbits stuck inside the confines of the Berlin Wall (or rather, walls) were affected after the Wall came down in the late '80s (Bartek Konopka's Rabbit a la Berlin).


    Also, Daniel Junge's The Last Campaign of Governor Booth Gardner shows how the former governor of the state of Washington led the campaign on behalf of the state's Death with Dignity Act, which allows assisted suicide; Lt. Watada is a portrait of US Army First Lieutenant Ehren Watada, who refused to fight in the Iraq War and got into some serious trouble for that reason; Roger Ross Williams‘ Music by Prudence looks at the Zimbabwe musical group Liyana and their lead singer, Prudence Mabhena; and Kiran Deol's Woman Rebel chronicles the stories of female Nepalese rebel fighters who have recently been running for public office.


    The eight semi-finalists were chosen after voters from the Academy's Documentary Branch viewed this year's 37 eligible entries and submitted their ballots to PricewaterhouseCoopers for tabulation. (How many voters actually watched all 37 entries remains unclear.)


    The 2010 Academy Award nominations will be announced on Tuesday, February 2, 2010, at 5:30 a.m. PT in the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.
    The Academy Awards ceremony will take place on Sunday, March 7, 2010, at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center. In the US, it'll be televised live by ABC.