Reeler talks to Richard Pena

The Reeler's Stu Van Airsdale asks N.Y. Film Festival director Richard Pena to respond to the A.O. Scott rap that the festival "isn't programmed as much as it is curated," which, Van Airsdale says, "implies a more abstract, individual mission than institutional mandate."

Pena replies as follows: "I think of 'curated' more in the sense that it gives people the sense of having been carefully selected. And it is. Basically, we have a lot of films to look at, and we have a very small number of slots. We know there's a point where we have to say, 'No -- we can't just keep adding on one more film.' That requires us to make choices.

"Because of that, hopefully the public really feels that this is a festival that is carefully selected. They might disagree violently with our selections, but they feel like somebody has selected these films -- that somebody has said, 'This film and not that film.' I think that's a good thing. I think our silent relationship with the public is really important that way. The public expects that we're an honest festival -- that no one can force their way into the New York Film Festival."

Which raises an interesting question: which major film festivals are most commonly regarded as being subject to political manipulation and are therefore susceptible to this or that producer trying to force their way in? Frankly, I can't think of a single festival -- the New York Film Festival included -- that doesn't grapple with and occasionally give way to (or at least accomodate) political agendas.

Is Pena saying that entrenched relationships, emotional attachments and occasional offerings of olive-branch favoritism aren't part of the selection process? I'm not sure Pena is in fact making this claim, but if he is then I have to say with due respect, "Bullshit."

Posted by Jeffrey Wells on September 25, 2007 at 1:11 PM

comment #1

Bilge Author Profile Page says ...

Jeff, the NYFF famously didn't select THE LIFE AQUATIC, mainly because (as some selection members stated off the record later) that they felt it wasn't a strong enough film. So, your suggestion that Wes Anderson just automatically has a slot reserved at the festival is just plain b.s. Indeed, Pena specifically goes on to address the (incorrect) notion that the festival always shows films made by certain directors.

Posted by Bilge Author Profile Page at September 25, 2007 1:50 PM

comment #2

md'a Author Profile Page says ...

Total number of feature films Wes Anderson has directed: 5
Number programmed by NYFF: 3
The last one they rejected: The last one

Posted by md'a Author Profile Page at September 25, 2007 1:50 PM

comment #3

JD Author Profile Page says ...

It's one thing to program a Wes Anderson film, but it's quite another to open the festival with it. I don't think they'd do that out of loyalty alone. And why would Film Comment -- which is an extension of the NYFF -- put Darjeeling on its cover unless they felt genuine affection for it? It's one of the few magazines that always selects its covers based on admiration.

Posted by JD Author Profile Page at September 25, 2007 1:56 PM

comment #4

JD Author Profile Page says ...

It's also worth noting that the Toronto Film Festival, for example, screens roughly 10 times more films than the NYFF and, as a result, they have a lot more room to do favors for people. And anyway, who would the NYFF want to do favours for, if not the filmmakers whose work they genuinely admire?

Posted by JD Author Profile Page at September 25, 2007 1:58 PM

comment #5

le corbeau Author Profile Page says ...

Listen, I stopped going to the Chicago Film Festival because it's such an uncurated mess-- your odds of seeing something not even great, but tolerable, better than TV movie level, are simply not high enough. (I wish Pena, who used to program the School of the Art Institute, had taken THAT over.) I'd much rather go to a well-chosen small fest than figure out what's worth seeing in a sprawling one.

Posted by le corbeau Author Profile Page at September 25, 2007 2:04 PM

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