Back To Top

Franco, Cornish among those with films at Tribeca

NEW YORK (AP) ― This year’s Tribeca Film Festival will feature many domestically oriented movies that deal with contentious contemporary issues, from the recession to James Franco’s artistic antics.

Tribeca announced the first half of its slate for this year’s festival Tuesday: 46 feature films out of a planned 90. This half includes entries in the world narrative and documentary categories, as well as those in the festival’s “viewpoints’’ section, a category that highlights edgier films.

The documentary “Downeast’’ follows unemployed 70-year-olds who are trying to get back to work after the closure of a sardine canning factory. The documentary “Off Label’’ explores overmedication. And clashes over school textbook content are chronicled in “The Revisionaries.’’

In the narrative competition, “The Girl,’’ written and directed by David Riker, stars Abbie Cornish as a single mother who loses her job. Desperate for income to keep custody of her son, she helps smuggle illegal immigrants over the U.S.-Mexico border.

A film Franco made while moonlighting on the daytime soap opera “General Hospital’’ will also play at the festival. It’s an “experimental psychological thriller’’ about “a celebrity’s escalating paranoia’’ called “Francophrenia (or: Don’t Kill Me, I Know Where the Baby Is).’’ Co-directed by Franco and Ian Olds, the film (which premiered at the Rotterdam International Festival) uses footage Franco shot while appearing on “General Hospital.’’
MOST POPULAR
LATEST NEWS
subscribe
피터빈트