From loai at MIT.EDU Tue Jan 22 16:32:46 2008 From: loai at MIT.EDU (Loai Naamani) Date: Tue, 22 Jan 2008 16:32:46 -0500 Subject: [LCM Events] Missed the Oscars, but in Boston soon: Caramel Message-ID: <000701c85d3e$55ddbd90$6401a8c0@LOAIX60S> Playing at Kendall Square Cinema on February 8th; please circulate to friends in other US cities. More below on missing this year's Oscars. Best, L. US trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lpnC8cUIij0 Long trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdVShbXTSIA *RELEASE SCHEDULE (subject to change) http://www.newamericanvision.com/Caramel.html February 1 New York (Upper West Side) [Lincoln Plaza] New York (SoHo) [The Angelika] Los Angeles (Santa Monica) [The Landmark] Los Angeles (West Hollywood) [Sunset 5] Los Angeles (Irvine) [Westpark 8] Los Angeles (Encino) [Town Center 5] Los Angeles (Pasadena) [Playhouse 7] Chicago [The Century Centre] Philadelphia [The Ritz] San Francisco [The Embarcadero] February 8 Atlanta [The Tara] Baltimore [The Charles] Boston [The Kendall] Dallas [The Magnolia] Denver [The Chez Artist] Detroit [The Maple Art] Seattle [TBD] February 15 Austin [The Arbor] Portland [Fox Tower] TBD Washington, DC Running Time: 1 hour 36 minutes Rated PG for thematic elements involving sexuality, language and some smoking Dear Friends and Colleagues: We would like to tell you about CARAMEL, a new award-winning Lebanese film that will open in select cities next month. This film is special for many reasons. First, it is critically acclaimed. A hit at the Cannes Film Festival this past year, CARAMEL went on to win the Audience Award at The San Sebastian Film Festival. And it is Lebanon's Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 80th Annual Academy Awards next month. Second, CARAMEL is an Arab film that is not only directed by a woman, it also features an all-women cast. This is, in and of itself, an exceptional achievement. Third, it is utterly charming. CARAMEL centers around five women whose lives intersect in a beauty salon, a colorful and sensual microcosm of Beirut. The salon is a place where several generations come into contact, talk and confide in each other. Between haircuts and sugar waxing with caramel, they engage in intimate and liberated conversations that reveal their joys and fears surrounding men, sex and motherhood. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, it marks one of the widest U.S. theatrical releases of a film from an Arab nation in recent years. Supporting this film sends a message to the film industry that there is a viable market for films from this part of the world. It also affords those outside the Arab-American community an opportunity to gain a wider perspective on a region of the world that most know far too little about. Films like CARAMEL remind us that our similarities oftentimes vastly outweigh our differences. We urge you to help us spread the word by sending the URL link for this page to the members of your organization, and your friends and neighbors. For additional information, please visit: http://www.caramelmovie.com If you have any questions, please contact us at: caramel at newamericanvision.com Thank you Oscars 2008 : Bittersweet 'Caramel' failed to make the first cut January 21, 2008 Zeina Karam - From a country more known for violent politics, a taboo-breaking movie about a group of ordinary women meeting at a Beirut beauty salon may change how people view war-torn Lebanon. "Caramel," directed by Nadine Labaki, digs into the lives of five women, of different religious backgrounds, as they struggle to deal with heartbreak, sexuality and aging between haircuts, facials and intimate conversations at the salon. The bittersweet story was one of 63 entries seeking a best-foreign-film nomination at this year's Oscars but failed to make the first cut last week, when a short-list of nine was announced. The list will be whittled down to the five finalists Tuesday. Still in the running Monday was Quebec's Denys Arcand and his "Age of Darkness" ("L'Age des tenebres"), the final instalment in his trilogy that began with "The Decline of the American Empire" in 1986. "Barbarian Invasions," the second film in the trilogy, won the best-foreign-film Oscar in 2004. "Caramel" or "Sukkar Banat" in Arabic, refers to a waxing method used by women in the Middle East to remove undesired body hair with a mixture of water, sugar and lemon juice brought to the boil and then left to cool. The movie, Labaki said in a recent television interview, is fast changing Western stereotypes about Lebanon - away from the bombings and carnage that have deeply marked the traditionally liberal country with a unique mix of Christian and Muslim. "They like Lebanon through this film. They are seeing an image they don't know existed," she said. "I don't deny we are a country that has had many wars, but we are also other things. We are very colourful and warm as people and we love life." In the movie, Labaki also plays the role of Layal, a Christian beautician involved with a married man who promises to leave his wife for her but never does. Layal eventually finds herself face to face with the wife - having to wax her legs at the salon. Another character, Nisrine, a Muslim, is about to get married but is petrified her husband will leave her when he finds out she is not a virgin. She opts to have her hymen repaired surgically. When her fiancee phones her while she's at the clinic, she tells her friends, much to their amusement and that of the audience: "Tell him I went to the seamstress." Another salon employee, Rima, is tormented by her attraction for women and falls desperately in love with a client who comes in regularly to the salon get her hair done. "This movie is a result of questions I was asking myself about who we are as Lebanese women. We are lost between East and West and haven't found ourselves yet," Labaki told Lebanon's Future TV. On the surface, open and modern, Lebanese women still suffer from the restraints and self-denying conservatism present in all Arab societies. The 33-year-old actor and screenwriter, already well-known for directing video clips for top Arab pop music stars, has travelled constantly since "Caramel" debuted in early 2007. An assistant said Labaki was not available for an interview. "Caramel" has been sold in more than 40 countries. It opened the Paris Cinema Film Festival and won three prizes at the San Sebastian International Film Festival in Spain. It ran for the Camera d'Or during the 2007 Cannes Film Festival and has won various Middle Eastern awards. Caroline Labaki, Nadine's sister who worked on the film's costume design, said the movie is a resounding success, regardless of whether it made the cut at the Oscars. "This movie laid open issues, without preaching or claiming to offer solutions. It merely put them up for debate and made people reflect on them," she said. Giselle Awad, who plays the role of an eccentric salon client who refuses to accept she is growing old, said the movie was candid without being insolent. "It's very personal. It tells the stories of ordinary people, stories shared by women all over the world," she said. "That's what made it a success." -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-events/attachments/20080122/d3b4e678/attachment.htm -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: image/gif Size: 1865 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-events/attachments/20080122/d3b4e678/attachment.gif From loai at MIT.EDU Tue Jan 22 16:32:46 2008 From: loai at MIT.EDU (Loai Naamani) Date: Tue, 22 Jan 2008 16:32:46 -0500 Subject: [LCM Events] [Leb4ever] Missed the Oscars, but in Boston soon: Caramel Message-ID: <000701c85d3e$55ddbd90$6401a8c0@LOAIX60S> Playing at Kendall Square Cinema on February 8th; please circulate to friends in other US cities. More below on missing this year's Oscars. Best, L. US trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lpnC8cUIij0 Long trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdVShbXTSIA *RELEASE SCHEDULE (subject to change) http://www.newamericanvision.com/Caramel.html February 1 New York (Upper West Side) [Lincoln Plaza] New York (SoHo) [The Angelika] Los Angeles (Santa Monica) [The Landmark] Los Angeles (West Hollywood) [Sunset 5] Los Angeles (Irvine) [Westpark 8] Los Angeles (Encino) [Town Center 5] Los Angeles (Pasadena) [Playhouse 7] Chicago [The Century Centre] Philadelphia [The Ritz] San Francisco [The Embarcadero] February 8 Atlanta [The Tara] Baltimore [The Charles] Boston [The Kendall] Dallas [The Magnolia] Denver [The Chez Artist] Detroit [The Maple Art] Seattle [TBD] February 15 Austin [The Arbor] Portland [Fox Tower] TBD Washington, DC Running Time: 1 hour 36 minutes Rated PG for thematic elements involving sexuality, language and some smoking Dear Friends and Colleagues: We would like to tell you about CARAMEL, a new award-winning Lebanese film that will open in select cities next month. This film is special for many reasons. First, it is critically acclaimed. A hit at the Cannes Film Festival this past year, CARAMEL went on to win the Audience Award at The San Sebastian Film Festival. And it is Lebanon's Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 80th Annual Academy Awards next month. Second, CARAMEL is an Arab film that is not only directed by a woman, it also features an all-women cast. This is, in and of itself, an exceptional achievement. Third, it is utterly charming. CARAMEL centers around five women whose lives intersect in a beauty salon, a colorful and sensual microcosm of Beirut. The salon is a place where several generations come into contact, talk and confide in each other. Between haircuts and sugar waxing with caramel, they engage in intimate and liberated conversations that reveal their joys and fears surrounding men, sex and motherhood. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, it marks one of the widest U.S. theatrical releases of a film from an Arab nation in recent years. Supporting this film sends a message to the film industry that there is a viable market for films from this part of the world. It also affords those outside the Arab-American community an opportunity to gain a wider perspective on a region of the world that most know far too little about. Films like CARAMEL remind us that our similarities oftentimes vastly outweigh our differences. We urge you to help us spread the word by sending the URL link for this page to the members of your organization, and your friends and neighbors. For additional information, please visit: http://www.caramelmovie.com If you have any questions, please contact us at: caramel at newamericanvision.com Thank you Oscars 2008 : Bittersweet 'Caramel' failed to make the first cut January 21, 2008 Zeina Karam - From a country more known for violent politics, a taboo-breaking movie about a group of ordinary women meeting at a Beirut beauty salon may change how people view war-torn Lebanon. "Caramel," directed by Nadine Labaki, digs into the lives of five women, of different religious backgrounds, as they struggle to deal with heartbreak, sexuality and aging between haircuts, facials and intimate conversations at the salon. The bittersweet story was one of 63 entries seeking a best-foreign-film nomination at this year's Oscars but failed to make the first cut last week, when a short-list of nine was announced. The list will be whittled down to the five finalists Tuesday. Still in the running Monday was Quebec's Denys Arcand and his "Age of Darkness" ("L'Age des tenebres"), the final instalment in his trilogy that began with "The Decline of the American Empire" in 1986. "Barbarian Invasions," the second film in the trilogy, won the best-foreign-film Oscar in 2004. "Caramel" or "Sukkar Banat" in Arabic, refers to a waxing method used by women in the Middle East to remove undesired body hair with a mixture of water, sugar and lemon juice brought to the boil and then left to cool. The movie, Labaki said in a recent television interview, is fast changing Western stereotypes about Lebanon - away from the bombings and carnage that have deeply marked the traditionally liberal country with a unique mix of Christian and Muslim. "They like Lebanon through this film. They are seeing an image they don't know existed," she said. "I don't deny we are a country that has had many wars, but we are also other things. We are very colourful and warm as people and we love life." In the movie, Labaki also plays the role of Layal, a Christian beautician involved with a married man who promises to leave his wife for her but never does. Layal eventually finds herself face to face with the wife - having to wax her legs at the salon. Another character, Nisrine, a Muslim, is about to get married but is petrified her husband will leave her when he finds out she is not a virgin. She opts to have her hymen repaired surgically. When her fiancee phones her while she's at the clinic, she tells her friends, much to their amusement and that of the audience: "Tell him I went to the seamstress." Another salon employee, Rima, is tormented by her attraction for women and falls desperately in love with a client who comes in regularly to the salon get her hair done. "This movie is a result of questions I was asking myself about who we are as Lebanese women. We are lost between East and West and haven't found ourselves yet," Labaki told Lebanon's Future TV. On the surface, open and modern, Lebanese women still suffer from the restraints and self-denying conservatism present in all Arab societies. The 33-year-old actor and screenwriter, already well-known for directing video clips for top Arab pop music stars, has travelled constantly since "Caramel" debuted in early 2007. An assistant said Labaki was not available for an interview. "Caramel" has been sold in more than 40 countries. It opened the Paris Cinema Film Festival and won three prizes at the San Sebastian International Film Festival in Spain. It ran for the Camera d'Or during the 2007 Cannes Film Festival and has won various Middle Eastern awards. Caroline Labaki, Nadine's sister who worked on the film's costume design, said the movie is a resounding success, regardless of whether it made the cut at the Oscars. "This movie laid open issues, without preaching or claiming to offer solutions. It merely put them up for debate and made people reflect on them," she said. Giselle Awad, who plays the role of an eccentric salon client who refuses to accept she is growing old, said the movie was candid without being insolent. "It's very personal. It tells the stories of ordinary people, stories shared by women all over the world," she said. "That's what made it a success." -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-events/attachments/20080122/d3b4e678/attachment-0001.htm -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: image/gif Size: 1865 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/lebanon-events/attachments/20080122/d3b4e678/attachment-0001.gif -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Leb mailing list Leb at leb.lebanese4ever.com http://leb.lebanese4ever.com/listinfo.cgi/leb-lebanese4ever.com