2018 Chicago Critics Film Festival - Full Lineup
The complete lineup for the sixth annual Chicago Critics Film Festival is below, including screening dates/times and special guests expected to attend. Explore the entire schedule and secure tickets/passes in advance at www.chicagocriticsfilmfestival.com. Select films are available for advanced review and interviews; interested media should apply for accreditation online here.
Abducted in Plain Sight (Documentary)
Director: Skye Borgman | 91 mins
Abducted in Plain Sight is the twisting, turning, story of the Broberg’s, a naïve, church-going Idaho family whose daughter, Jan, is kidnapped by the family’s best friend and neighbor. Twice. This true-crime documentary examines one family’s struggle with desire, deceit, faith and forgiveness. The Brobergs’ troubling admissions reveal epic failures and untold personal dramas that point to the biggest tragedy of all – that these crimes could have been prevented.
Screens: Thursday, May 10 at 6pm*
*Director Skye Borgman is scheduled to attend
American Animals
Director: Bart Layton | Cast: Evan Peters, Barry Keoghan, Blake Jenner | 116 mins
Four young men mistake their lives for a movie and attempt one of the most audacious heists in U.S. history.
Screens: Wednesday, May 9 at 9:30pm
Beast
Director: Michael Pearce | Cast: Jessie Buckley, Johnny Flynn, Geraldine James | 107 mins
Moll is 27 and still living at home, stifled by the small island community around her and too beholden to her family to break away. When she meets Pascal, a free-spirited stranger, a whole new world opens up to her and she begins to feel alive for the first time, falling madly in love. Finally breaking free from her family, Moll moves in with Pascal to start a new life. But when he is arrested as the key suspect in a series of brutal murders, she is left isolated and afraid. Choosing to stand with him against the suspicions of the community, Moll finds herself forced to make choices that will impact her life forever.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at Midnight
Bodied
Director: Joseph Kahn | Cast: Calum Worthy, Jackie Long, Rory Uphold | 120 mins
A satire set in the world of competitive battle rap, Bodied is the story of Adam Merkin, a progressive grad student who becomes an accidental battle rapper after encountering Behn Grym, a respected icon in the merciless sub-culture of poetic personal insults. As Adam makes his politically-incorrect climb up the ranks, he risks alienating his father, a renowned writer and tenured professor at Adam’s university, along with his skeptical girlfriend Maya, and all of his academic friends. His success breeds outrage however; Adam soon faces growing backlash on campus and the consequences of his controversial talent. Bodied explores the dangerous spaces of the world’s most multicultural and artistically brutal sport.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 7pm*
*Director Joseph Kahn is scheduled to attend
Damsel
Director: David Zellner & Nathan Zellner | Cast: Robert Pattinson, Mia Wasikowska, Robert Forster | 113 mins
Samuel Alabaster (Robert Pattinson), an affluent pioneer, ventures across the American Frontier to marry the love of his life, Penelope (Mia Wasikowska). As Samuel traverses the Wild West with a drunkard named Parson Henry (David Zellner) and a miniature horse called Butterscotch, their once-simple journey grows treacherous, blurring the lines between hero, villain and damsel. A loving reinvention of the western genre from the Zellner brothers (Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter), Damsel showcases their trademark unpredictability, off-kilter sense of humor, and unique brand of humanism.
Screens: Sunday, May 6 at 7:15pm*
*Directors David and Nathan Zellner are scheduled to attend
Eighth Grade (Closing Night Selection)
Director: Bo Burnham | Cast: Elsie Fisher, Josh Hamilton, Emily Robinson | 91 mins
Thirteen-year-old Kayla endures the tidal wave of contemporary suburban adolescence as she makes her way through the last week of middle school—the end of her thus far disastrous eighth grade year—before she begins high school.
Screens: Thursday, May 10 at 8:30pm*
*Writer/Director Bo Burnham is scheduled to attend
Fast Color (Opening Night Selection)
Director: Julia Hart | Cast: Gugu Mbatha-Raw, David Strathairn, Lorraine Toussaint | 100 mins
A woman is forced to go on the run when her superhuman abilities are discovered. Years after having abandoned her family, the only place she has left to hide is home.
Screens: Friday, May 4 at 7pm*
*Star Gugu Mbatha-Raw and co-writer/producer Jordan Horowitz are scheduled to attend.
First Reformed (Centerpiece Selection)
Director: Paul Schrader | Cast: Ethan Hawke, Amanda Seyfried, Cedric the Entertainer | 108 mins
The pastor of a small church in upstate New York (Ethan Hawke) spirals out of control after a soul-shaking encounter with an unstable environmental activist and his pregnant wife (Amanda Seyfried) in this taut, chilling thriller.
Screens: Monday, May 7 at 7:15pm*
*Director Paul Schrader is scheduled to attend
The Guilty
Director: Gustav Möller | Cast: Jakob Cedergren, Jessica Dinnage, Omar Shargawi
85 mins | Danish w/ Eng. subtitles
When police officer Asger Holm (Jakob Cedergren) is demoted to desk work, he expects a sleepy beat as an emergency dispatcher. That all changes when he answers a panicked phone call from a kidnapped woman who then disconnects abruptly. Asger, confined to the police station, is forced to use others as his eyes and ears as the severity of the crime slowly becomes more clear. The search to find the missing woman and her assailant will take every bit of his intuition and skill, as a ticking clock and his own personal demons conspire against him. This innovative and unrelenting Danish thriller uses a single location to great effect, ratcheting up the tension as twists pile up and secrets are revealed. Director Gustav Möller expertly frames the increasingly messy proceedings against the clean Scandinavian sterility of the police department, while Cedergren’s strong performance anchors the film and places the audience squarely in Holm’s tragically flawed yet well-intentioned mindspace.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 5pm; Thursday, May 10 at 2pm
Hal (Documentary)
Director: Amy Scott | 90 mins
Hal Ashby’s obsessive genius led to an unprecedented string of Oscar®-winning classics, including Harold and Maude, Shampoo and Being There. But as contemporaries Coppola, Scorsese and Spielberg rose to blockbuster stardom in the 1980s, Ashby’s uncompromising nature played out as a cautionary tale of art versus commerce.
Screens: Monday, May 7 at 9:45pm
Jurassic Park (25th Anniversary in 35mm)
Director: Steven Spielberg | Cast: Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum | 127 mins
In director Steven Spielberg’s three-time Academy Award®-winning blockbuster Jurassic Park, paleontologists Alan Grant (Sam Neill) and Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) and mathematician Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum) are among a select group chosen to tour an island theme park populated by dinosaurs created from prehistoric DNA. While the park’s mastermind, billionaire John Hammond (Richard Attenborough), assures everyone that the facility is safe, they find out otherwise when various ferocious predators break free and go on the hunt. The groundbreaking epic that launched one of the most popular series in cinema history was originally released in theaters on June 11, 1993. Jurassic Park is based on the novel by Michael Crichton and produced by Kathleen Kennedy and Gerald R. Molen.
Screens: Sunday, May 6 at Noon
A Kid Like Jake
Director: Silas Howard | Cast: Claire Danes, Priyanka Chopra, Octavia Spencer | 92 mins
A Brooklyn couple has always known that their four-year-old son is more interested in fairy tale princesses than toy cars. But when his preschool director points out that his gender-nonconforming play may be more than a phase, the couple is forced to rethink their roles as parents and spouses.
Screens: Wednesday, May 9 at 5pm
Leave No Trace
Director: Debra Granik | Cast: Ben Foster, Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie, Jeff Kober | 108 mins
Will (Ben Foster) and his teenage daughter, Tom (Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie), have lived off the grid for years in the forests of Portland, Oregon. When their idyllic life is shattered, both are put into social services. After clashing with their new surroundings, Will and Tom set off on a harrowing journey back to their wild homeland.
Screens: Sunday, May 6 at 4:45pm
Liyana (Documentary)
Director: Aaron Kopp, Amanda Kopp | 75 mins
A Swazi girl embarks on a dangerous quest to rescue her young twin brothers. This animated African tale is born in the imaginations of five orphaned children in Swaziland who collaborate to tell a story of perseverance drawn from their darkest memories and brightest dreams. Their fictional character’s journey is interwoven with poetic and observational documentary scenes to create a genre-defying celebration of collective storytelling.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 1:15pm
Madeline’s Madeline
Director: Josephine Decker | Cast: Miranda July, Helena Howard, Molly Parker | 93 mins
A theater director’s latest project takes on a life of its own when her young star takes her performance too seriously.
Screens: Sunday, May 6 at 9:45pm
On Chesil Beach
Director: Dominic Cooke | Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Billy Howle, Emily Watson | 110 mins
Adapted by Ian McEwan from his bestselling novel, the drama centers on a young couple of drastically different backgrounds in the summer of 1962. Following the pair through their idyllic courtship, the film explores sex and the societal pressure that can accompany physical intimacy, leading to an awkward and fateful wedding night.
Screens: Tuesday, May 8 at 9:45pm
Puzzle
Director: Marc Turtletaub | Cast: Kelly Macdonald
Agnes, taken for granted as a suburban mother, discovers a passion for solving jigsaw puzzles, which unexpectedly draws her into a new world – where her life unfolds in ways she could never have imagined.
Screens: Wednesday, May 9 at 7pm*
*Director Marc Turtletaub is scheduled to attend
Revenge
Director: Coralie Fargeat | Cast: Matilda Anna Ingrid Lutz, Kevin Janssens, Vincent Colombe | 108 mins
Three wealthy married men get together for their annual hunting game in a desert canyon. But this time, one of them comes along with his mistress, a sexy lolita who quickly arouses the interest of the two others. Things get dramatically out of hand when the young woman, left for dead in the middle of desert hell, comes back to life and the hunting game turns into a ruthless manhunt.
Screens: Friday, May 4 at Midnight; Monday, May 7 at 3p
Searching
Director: Aneesh Chaganty | Cast: John Cho, Debra Messing, Joseph Lee | 101 mins
After David Kim (John Cho)’s 16-year- old daughter goes missing, a local investigation is opened and a detective is assigned to the case. But 37 hours later and without a single lead, David decides to search the one place no one has looked yet, where all secrets are kept today: his daughter’s laptop. In a hyper- modern thriller told via the technology devices we use every day to communicate, David must trace his daughter’s digital footprints before she disappears forever.
Screens: Tuesday, May 8 at 7:15pm*
*Director Aneesh Chaganty and co-writer/producer Sev Ohanian are scheduled to attend
Shotgun
Directors: Hannah Marks, Joey Power | Cast: Jeremy Allen White, Maika Monroe, Gina Gershon, Maika Monroe | 95 mins
A young couple’s relationship develops quickly when one of them is diagnosed with a life-changing illness.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 9:45pm; Tuesday, May 8 at 3pm
Support the Girls
Director: Andrew Bujalski | Cast: Regina Hall, Haley Lu Richardson, Dylan Gelula | 94 mins
Lisa Conroy is the last person you’d expect to find in a highway-side “sports bar with curves,”– but as general manager at Double Whammies, she’s come to love the place and its customers. An incurable den mother, she nurtures and protects her girls fiercely–but over the course of one trying day, her optimism is battered from every direction…Double Whammies sells a big, weird American fantasy, but what happens when reality pokes a bunch of holes in it.
Screens: Friday, May 4 at 9:30pm; Thursday, May 10 at 4pm
Three Identical Strangers (Documentary)
Director: Tim Wardle | 108 mins
New York, 1980: three complete strangers accidentally discover that they are identical triplets, separated at birth. The 19-year-olds’ joyous reunion catapults them to international fame, but it also unlocks an extraordinary and disturbing secret that goes beyond their own lives – and could transform our understanding of human nature forever.
Screens: Tuesday, May 8 at 5pm; Wednesday, May 9 at 3pm
We the Animals
Director: Jeremiah Zagar | Cast: Evan Rosado, Raúl Castillo, Sheila Vand | 94 mins
Synopsis: Manny, Joel and Jonah tear their way through childhood and push against the volatile love of their parents. As Manny and Joel grow into versions of their father and Ma dreams of escape, Jonah embraces an imagined world all his own.
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 3pm
Woman of Tokyo (35mm)
Director: Yasujiro Ozu | Cast: Yoshiko Okada, Ureo Egawa, Kinuyo Tanaka | 61 mins
Although the Japanese film industry converted to sound a few years prior, silent cinema continued to present opportunities for experimentation and refinement for Ozu. Two pairs of adult siblings attempt to eke out a living in Tokyo: a university student shares an apartment with the sister who pays for his education through office work while his girlfriend lives with her policeman brother. When the cop learns that the typist may be supplementing her income with disreputable side gigs, he inadvertently ruins one life and another in turn. This staunchly feminist tragedy envisions gender roles as pernicious traps for men and women alike.
Screens with A Straightforward Boy [Surviving Fragment] (35mm) (Yasujiro Ozu, 1929)
Screens: Saturday, May 5 at 11:30am
Presented by the Chicago Film Society. CCFF Passholders will be granted access to this screening.
About the Chicago Film Critics Association
The Chicago Film Critics Association supports and celebrates quality filmmaking that has something to say about our world, our lives, and our society. In the past, while the CFCA’s priority was to support and fight for the continued role of film critics in the media, the CFCA’s public interaction was limited to the announcement of its annual film awards. In recent years, the CFCA has expanded its presence on the Chicago arts scene, promoting critical thinking about cinema to a wider base through several initiatives, including the re-launch of a late-winter film awards ceremony; CFCA-hosted film screenings throughout Chicagoland; and a Young People’s Film Criticism Workshop at Facets Multimedia. The annual Chicago Critics Film Festival further builds on the organization’s goal to be an active part of the Chicago film landscape.
About the Music Box Theatre
For more than 30 years, the Music Box Theatre has been the premier venue in Chicago for independent and foreign films, festivals and some of the greatest cinematic events in Chicago. It currently has the largest cinema space operated full-time in the city. The Music Box Theatre is independently owned & operated by the Southport Music Box Corporation. SMBC, through its Music Box Films division, also distributes foreign and independent films in the theatrical, DVD and television markets throughout the United States. For more information, please visit www.musicboxtheatre.com
Festival Contacts
Erik Childress (CFCA Board Member) Producer – (224) 805-1573 | kgouda@aol.com
Brian Tallerico (CFCA Board Member), Producer/Website Coordinator – e-mail: briantallerico@gmail.com