For a relatively little town, Santa Barbara takes its films very seriously. In addition to boasting an impressive lineup of selections ranging from regional to international, the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, now in its 27th year, will also host 37 American and 16 world premieresāamong them Darling Companion, starring Diane Keaton and Kevin Kline, and the Samuel L. Jackson thriller The Samaritan. The event is also cleverly timed just weeks before the Academy Awards. And though the official Oscar nominees werenāt announced until two days before the Santa Barbara festivalās opening, the SBIFFās lineup of honorees has traditionally had a weird knack for predicting these things. (This year, the festival will host over 20 nominees.) But despite the eventās considerable star power, its relaxed setting and intimate venues somehow keep it from feeling too pretentious.

It helps, too, that a Hollywood contact high isnāt even the festivalās biggest thrill. A smorgasbord of good cinema, much of it previously unseen on the Central Coast, is what makes this event a worthwhile destination. In addition to the usual film categories offered, four sidebars are new this year, divided along social and cultural lines. āCinema Nouveauā will shine a spotlight on emerging French directors. Kolnoa, Hebrew for ācinema,ā includes eight documentaries reflecting on the Jewish and Israeli experience.
Screen Cuisine, a category highlighting the sustainable practices of farmers, chefs and entrepreneurs, contains several surprisingly powerful documentaries, such as Nothing Like Chocolate, the story of an anarchist chocolateer, and Cafeteria Man, the tale of a rebel chef. In Taste the Waste, German filmmaker Valentin Thurn travels around the globe to see what people in the United States, Europe, Japan, and Cameroon are doing to stop the enormous amount of food being wasted each year (nearly as much as the food being eaten.)
Another newly christened category, Cinesonic presents a collection of feature films on iconic musicians. (Its centerpiece event is the world premiere of an original score to F. W. Marneauās 1926 silent film Faust, performed by Santa Barbara alt-rock band Gardens & Villa.) Thereās plenty more to be said on the subject of actual films, but letās get the exciting celebrity stuff out of the way first, so we can all relax.
Glitz! Glamour!
The 2012 Virtuosos Award, presented Friday, Feb. 3, will honor the yearās strongest performances. Damien Bachir (A Better Life), Rooney Mara (David Fincherās The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), Melissa McCarthy (Bridesmaids), Patton Oswalt (Young Adult), Andy Serkis (Planet of the Apes) and Shailene Woodley (The Descendants) will accept the award.

On Monday, Jan. 30, the festivalās American Riviera Award will go to Martin Scorsese (Hugo, the HBO Documentary George Harrison: Living in the Material World), marking the first time a director has received the honor.
On Sunday, Feb. 4, The Cinema Vanguard Award, a category created to recognize actors who have taken significant artistic risks and made unique contribution to film, will honor Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo, who star in the silent film The Artist.
For her portrayal of housemaid Aibileen Clark in Tate Taylorās The Help, Viola Davis will receive the festivalās Outstanding Performer of the Year Award, presented on Friday, Jan. 27.
Christopher Plummer, who starred in the 2011 film Beginners as Hal Fields, a man who, after his wifeās death, announces to his sonāplayed by Ewan McGregorāthat he is gay, will accept the Modern Master Award, the festivalās highest honor.
And now, our feature presentationsā¦
The festival opens with the world premiere of Darling Companion, directed by Lawrence Kasdan, on Thursday, Jan. 26. Diane Keaton stars as Beth, who saves a bedraggled, lost dog from the side of a Denver freeway. As Beth deals with an empty nest and distracted, self-absorbed husband Joseph (Kevin Kline), she and the rescued animal develop a special bond. But when Joseph loses the dog after a wedding in the Rockies, the ensuing searchāa synopsis readsāātakes them in unexpected directionsācomic, harrowing, and sometimes deeply emotional.ā
The eventās Centerpiece film is the American premiere of Samsara, an unconventional documentary from director Ron Fricke and producer Mark Magidson, whose previous projects Baraka and Chronos proved that visual and musical artistry can play a far more important communicative role than any explanatory dialogue. Samsara, a Tibetan word for āthe ever-turning wheel of lifeā promises spellbinding images of āsacred grounds, disaster sites, industrialized zones and natural wonders.ā
Closing the festival is Where Do We Go Now?, director Nadine Labakiās second feature. Set in the Lebanese countryside, in an isolated village surrounded by landminesāthe leftovers of a bloody conflictāthe film centers upon five women determined to protect their loved ones from future strife through a series of unconventional methods.
āWhere Do We Go Now? offers new twists on thematic motifs widely addressed in popular Lebanese musicals from the sixties, revisiting questions familiar to the countryās postwar cinema with refreshing and unflinching lucidity,ā the program reads.
Long live the rockumentary!

A new music category, largely comprised of documentary features, will provide a glimpse into the life and work of musicians of many different genres. There is Live at Preservation Hall: Louisiana Fairytale, from director Danny Clinch, which documents the collaboration of the legendary Preservation Hall Jazz Band and the American rock band My Morning Jacket, and the ways in which this 50-year-old New Orleans jazz group is inspiring a new generation of musicians. In another vein entirely is El Medico: The Cubaton Story, the tale of a young Cuban doctor trying to make it as a Cuban Reggaeton (Cubaton) singer-songwriter. Meanwhile, his mother, a Castro supporter, āreminds him of his debt to the revolution, his compatriots, and Cubaās world-renowned medical system.ā
Another doc in the Cinesonic category, Rhino Resurrected, tells how a ramshackle record store, Rhino Records, a haven for hardcore music misfits since the ā70s, would achieve cult status as the launcher of many careers, the pioneer of the boxed set, andāafter accidentally producing a hit singleāgrow into a record label cherished by music lovers around the world.
Rhino was a place with attitude, where the music-geek staff might argue bitterly with the clientele over their musical tasteāeven creating a āworst customersā list and hanging it prominently on the wallāand yet people kept coming back, again and again. When founder Richard Foos set up a pop-up store in L.A., attempting to replicate the vibe of the original, musicians and music geeks turned out in droves. Among them was director Keith Shapiro.
āI immediately felt like there was something going on here, and I borrowed my friendās camera and started shooting. I thought it would be kind of a fun, cool thing,ā Shapiro said. āBut before you know, itās all these well-known people coming through the doors. It was an amazing collection of people, and the more I talked to all of them, the more I realized how special this place actually was. It was nothing but surprises, because the story just kept getting more and more convoluted and interesting.ā
Live performances by the likes of Dr. Demento, Nirvana, the Stoogesā Mike Watt, and the Temple City Kazoo Orchestra make this world premiere one to watch for.

Ā

On a related note is Cure for the Pain: The Mark Sandman Story, directors David Ferino and Robert G. Bralverās exploration of the life and music of Mark Sandman, reclusive frontman of the ālow-rockā band Morphine.
Morphine, an unusual rock trio with a sound unlike any other (no guitars, but a two-string slide bass, drums, and two saxophones) was beloved by critics but still outside of the mainstream when Sandman suddenly passed away of a heart attack.
Jeff Broadway, who produced the film, is also a second cousin of the late Sandman.
āMark died onstage at a music festival in a town called Palestrina, about 30 minutes outside Rome,ā recalled Broadway. āIt was a music festival called Nel Nome del Rock. That was in 1999.ā
Sandmanās life and music, said Broadway, were profoundly affected by a family tragedy that occurred when the musician was in his 20sāsomething the bassist and singer kept very private, preferring to channel his emotions into his art.
āHe was a bit of a mythical, cultish, rockinā figure in my family,ā Broadway told New Times. āI always appreciated the music, but as I got older, and after he died, I really started getting into him as a musician and as a lyricist and as a songwriter.ā
Sandman may never have received the fame he deserved, but his distinctive style would leave a mark on his generation, as interviews with prominent bassists Les Claypool (Primus), Mike Watt (The Stooges), and Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) illustrate.

Though not in the same category, Louise Palankerās Family Band: The Cowsills Story is its own kind of rockumentary. Itās the story of a wholesome-seeming family band, the Cowsills, who rose to prominence in the ā60s with several hit singles, TV specials, and appearances on Ed Sullivan. The band even served as the real-life inspiration for The Partridge Family. But behind the heartwarming image was a tyrannical, abusive, alcoholic father, six terrified kids, and a mother unable to stand up for them. Cheated out of their money by the time the band finally fell apart, the Cowsill children disappeared from the public consciousness entirely. Palankerās quest to find out what happened to them resulted in the making of the film.
āMy opening question was, āWhat happened to the Cowsills?āā said Palanker. I didnāt set out to tell a cautionary tale about what happens to children in show business. I just wanted to find out what happened to their family, and everything else was just sort of revealed along the way. What I discovered kind of told the story of the Baby Boomer generation. The idea was, letās look perfect ā¦There were a lot of secrets and pain that was not being dealt with. The Cowsills personified that, by being the face of the American family that sings togetherā¦It was not acceptable to not be perfect.ā
āKolnoaā lauds unsung heroes
Eight documentaries on the Jewish and Israeli experience around the world comprise the festivalās new Kolnoa category. There is Nickyās Family, the nearly forgotten story of Nicholas Winton, an Englishman who coordinated the rescue of 669 Czech and Slovak children before the outbreak of World War IIāthen didnāt mention his efforts again until, over 50 years later, his wife discovered a suitcase in his attic containing the transport plans.


Igal Hechtās The Hilltops follows the lives of three female activists in the West Bank hilltops, the frontier of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Filmmaker Sigal Emanuel documented the life of Reut, a young Israeli girl moving from one place to the next, ultimately ending up on the street, in A Place of Her Own.
Hollywood screenwriter and first-time director James Freedman presents the world premiere of Glickman, a fascinating story of Martin āMartyā Glickman, a Jewish-American athlete turned legendary sports broadcaster. After anti-Semitism excluded Glickman, then a runner on the American 400-meter relay team, from a likely victory at the 1936 Nazi Olympics, he went on to become a sports broadcasting legend, revolutionizing the field and mentoring two generations of sports broadcasters.
The filmās powerful story is augmented by interviews with Lou Zamperini, Bob Costas, Marv Albert, and Larry King, with music from Mad Men composer David Carbonara.
āHe was not allowed to run in the Olympics because we were appeasing Adolf Hitler, who didnāt want to see a Jew on the victory stand,ā explained Freedman. āAnd it was a foregone conclusion we would win that relay race, and we won by 15 yards. And unfortunately, because World War II broke out, Marty never had another chance to run in the Olympics. That was taken away from him. But you can go two ways when youāre 18 and someone takes your lifeās dream away: you can become very bitter, or you can become a Mensch. And Marty Glickman became a Mensch.ā
Anna Weltner is art editor of New Times, the Sunās sister paper to the north. Contact her at aweltner@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Jan 26 – Feb 2, 2012.

