A documentary about an artist colony in New Delhi is coming to online platforms tomorrow thanks to distributor Bond 360 Films. Twitch has been given an exclusive clip to share with you from the film. Witness some crazy good puppetry skills from puppeteer Puran Bhatt.Tomorrow We Disappear chronicles the last days of Kathputli, the mysterious hand-built artist colony featured in Salman Rushdie's iconic Midnight's Children. Hidden in the alleyways of New Delhi, a community of magicians, acrobats and puppeteers approach their looming eviction to make way for a modern skyscraper. Bound together by tradition and impending gentrification, this captivating film allows us to experience a culture's magic and wonder before it's gone. Directed by Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber Tomorrow We Disappear will be available on...
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- 8/25/2015
- Screen Anarchy
Strand Releasing has acquired all Us rights from Films Boutique to Peter Greenaway’s fact-based drama.
The film received its world premiere in competition in Berlin and centres on Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s romance with a local male guide while shooting Que Viva Mexico in Guanajuato in 1931. Elmer Back and Luis Alberti star.
Jon Gerrans of Strand Releasing negotiated the deal with Jean-Christophe Simon of Films Boutique.
Strand plans for a late 2015 / early 2016 release after the North American premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival.
Bond/360 has acquired rights to Tomorrow We Disappear, Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber’s documentary abut the last days of Kathputli, a hand-built artist colony hidden away in the alleyways of New Delhi that was featured in Salman Rushdie’s classic Midnight’s Children. Bond/360 brokered the deal with Preferred Content and Wme Global and will distribute the film on all major VOD platforms in July 2015.IFC Films has picked up North...
The film received its world premiere in competition in Berlin and centres on Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s romance with a local male guide while shooting Que Viva Mexico in Guanajuato in 1931. Elmer Back and Luis Alberti star.
Jon Gerrans of Strand Releasing negotiated the deal with Jean-Christophe Simon of Films Boutique.
Strand plans for a late 2015 / early 2016 release after the North American premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival.
Bond/360 has acquired rights to Tomorrow We Disappear, Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber’s documentary abut the last days of Kathputli, a hand-built artist colony hidden away in the alleyways of New Delhi that was featured in Salman Rushdie’s classic Midnight’s Children. Bond/360 brokered the deal with Preferred Content and Wme Global and will distribute the film on all major VOD platforms in July 2015.IFC Films has picked up North...
- 4/14/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Strand Releasing has acquired all Us rights from Films Boutique to Peter Greenaway’s fact-based drama.
The film received its world premiere in competition in Berlin and centres on Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s romance with a local male guide while shooting Que Viva Mexico in Guanajuato in 1931. Elmer Back and Luis Alberti star.
Jon Gerrans of Strand Releasing negotiated the deal with Jean-Christophe Simon of Films Boutique.
Strand plans for a late 2015 / early 2016 release after the North American premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival.
Bond/360 has acquired rights to Tomorrow We Disappear, Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber’s documentary abut the last days of Kathputli, a hand-built artist colony hidden away in the alleyways of New Delhi that was featured in Salman Rushdie’s classic Midnight’s Children. Bond/360 brokered the deal with Preferred Content and Wme Global and will distribute the film on all major VOD platforms in July 2015.IFC Films has picked up North...
The film received its world premiere in competition in Berlin and centres on Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein’s romance with a local male guide while shooting Que Viva Mexico in Guanajuato in 1931. Elmer Back and Luis Alberti star.
Jon Gerrans of Strand Releasing negotiated the deal with Jean-Christophe Simon of Films Boutique.
Strand plans for a late 2015 / early 2016 release after the North American premiere at the Seattle International Film Festival.
Bond/360 has acquired rights to Tomorrow We Disappear, Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber’s documentary abut the last days of Kathputli, a hand-built artist colony hidden away in the alleyways of New Delhi that was featured in Salman Rushdie’s classic Midnight’s Children. Bond/360 brokered the deal with Preferred Content and Wme Global and will distribute the film on all major VOD platforms in July 2015.IFC Films has picked up North...
- 4/14/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Tomorrow We Disappear
Directed by Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber
USA/India, 2014
Tomorrow We Disappear has a vibrant, human immediacy that commands attention and, ultimately, delight. This feature documentary by filmmakers Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber chronicles part of the story of the Kathputli Colony in New Delhi, the last artist colony in India. Composed of some 3000 families, its residents – magicians, acrobats, puppeteers, and street performers – are faced with relocation when the city decides to “redevelop” the slum area they live in. The documentary, filmed over several years, captures both the way of life of these artists and their responses to this impending change.
The residents are offered transit housing in a temporary colony, while their homes will be destroyed and new apartment buildings built, along with skyscrapers and a large mall. The land is government-owned, although many Kathputli familes have resided there for generations, and the city offers the...
Directed by Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber
USA/India, 2014
Tomorrow We Disappear has a vibrant, human immediacy that commands attention and, ultimately, delight. This feature documentary by filmmakers Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber chronicles part of the story of the Kathputli Colony in New Delhi, the last artist colony in India. Composed of some 3000 families, its residents – magicians, acrobats, puppeteers, and street performers – are faced with relocation when the city decides to “redevelop” the slum area they live in. The documentary, filmed over several years, captures both the way of life of these artists and their responses to this impending change.
The residents are offered transit housing in a temporary colony, while their homes will be destroyed and new apartment buildings built, along with skyscrapers and a large mall. The land is government-owned, although many Kathputli familes have resided there for generations, and the city offers the...
- 4/4/2015
- by Claire Hellar
- SoundOnSight
Still from Children of The Pyre
The 63rd Melbourne International Film Festival, which began on July 31 and will go on till August 17, is screening a total of 11 Indian films in different categories.
The lineup includes recent films like Kanu Behl’s Titli (world premiere at Cannes Film Festival 2014) and Avinash Arun’s Killa (world premiere at Berlin Film Festival 2014) as well as festival favourites like Nagraj Manjule’s Fandry.
A specially curated section at the festival, India in Flux: Living Resistance, will screen some of the most important Indian documentaries of recent times including Ashim Ahluwalia’s John & Jane, Rajesh Jala’s Children of the Pyre, Anand Patwardhan’s Jai Bhim Comrade, Deepa Dhanraj’s Invoking Justice, Farida Pacha’s My Name is Salt, Avijit Mukul Kishore’s Vertical City and Ranu Ghosh’s Quarter Number 4/11. These documentaries showcase the history of dissent and engagement with the ‘real’ while discussing matters of politics,...
The 63rd Melbourne International Film Festival, which began on July 31 and will go on till August 17, is screening a total of 11 Indian films in different categories.
The lineup includes recent films like Kanu Behl’s Titli (world premiere at Cannes Film Festival 2014) and Avinash Arun’s Killa (world premiere at Berlin Film Festival 2014) as well as festival favourites like Nagraj Manjule’s Fandry.
A specially curated section at the festival, India in Flux: Living Resistance, will screen some of the most important Indian documentaries of recent times including Ashim Ahluwalia’s John & Jane, Rajesh Jala’s Children of the Pyre, Anand Patwardhan’s Jai Bhim Comrade, Deepa Dhanraj’s Invoking Justice, Farida Pacha’s My Name is Salt, Avijit Mukul Kishore’s Vertical City and Ranu Ghosh’s Quarter Number 4/11. These documentaries showcase the history of dissent and engagement with the ‘real’ while discussing matters of politics,...
- 8/4/2014
- by NewsDesk
- DearCinema.com
Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber spent three years in India observing and documenting the world of Puran Bhat. Then, they returned the favor and brought him to America. The co-directors’ documentary, “Tomorrow We Disappear,” premiered to strong reviews at the Tribeca Film Festival, with audiences captured by the story of a small artist's colony hidden away in New Delhi that is facing extinction thanks to the city's rapid development. Bhat, who is a puppeteer of incredible talent, was flown all the way to New York for the curtain raise on the film. Also read: Tribeca Docs ‘Virunga’ and ‘Tomorrow We Disappear’ Inspire.
- 5/5/2014
- by Jordan Zakarin
- The Wrap
In places all over the world, there are remarkable people doing amazing things, and even as connected as we are, the opportunity to truly immerse yourself in another culture is difficult. But the filmmakers behind "Tomorrow We Disappear," premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival, will take viewers on a journey to a place they've likely never seen before. The documentary, directed by Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber, follows a colony of artists in New Delhi called the Kathputli, where children are taught acrobatics, musical instruments and other tricks at an early age. However, this unique world is slowly vanishing to real-estate developers, leaving the magicians, acrobats, and puppeteers trying to find a way to stay together. And in this exclusive clip, we see some of the remarkable feats these artists are able to accomplish with ease. "Tomorrow We Disappear" premieres at Tribeca on Saturday, April 19th at 7:00Pm at the AV73. Watch below.
- 4/16/2014
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
By the looks of it, the Tribeca Film Festival might finally be growing out of their awkward teenage phase and moving into a new era where the nab more than just Sundance and SXSW festival rejects. Artistic Director Frederic Boyer has managed to nab some noteworthy American indie projects such as Lou Howe’s Gabriel (see pic above), Keith Miller’s Five Star, Adam Rapp’s Loitering with Intent, and Tristan Patterson’s Electric Slide.
On the docu front, we’ve got the latest from the likes of notable documentarians Marshall Curry and Jessica Yu. Think Ewan McGregor’s Long Way Round meets child solider movie for Curry’s awesomely titled Point and Shoot — where the Libyan rebel army take hold of Curry’s subject. Yu moves from water shortage in Last Call at the Oasis (read our review) to the biggest pandemic of all; Misconception looks at the consequences...
On the docu front, we’ve got the latest from the likes of notable documentarians Marshall Curry and Jessica Yu. Think Ewan McGregor’s Long Way Round meets child solider movie for Curry’s awesomely titled Point and Shoot — where the Libyan rebel army take hold of Curry’s subject. Yu moves from water shortage in Last Call at the Oasis (read our review) to the biggest pandemic of all; Misconception looks at the consequences...
- 3/4/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
The 13th Tribeca Film Festival has announced half its slate for next month’s New York celebration, which runs April 16-27. Culled from more than 6,000 submissions, Tribeca 2014 includes 55 world premieres, 37 first-time filmmakers, and 22 female directors. “Variously inspired by individual interests and experience and driven by an intense sensibility of style, the array of new filmmaking voices in this year’s competition is especially impressive and I think memorable,” said Frederic Boyer, Tribeca’s artistic director. “The range of American subcultures and international genres represented here are both eclectic and wide reaching.”
On April 17, Gabriel will open the World Narrative competition,...
On April 17, Gabriel will open the World Narrative competition,...
- 3/4/2014
- by Jeff Labrecque
- EW - Inside Movies
Tribeca Film Festival top brass have announced (4) the World Narrative and Documentary Competition film selections and Viewpoints titles, comprising 47 of the 89 features that will screen at the festival over April 16-27.
The World Narrative Feature Competition will open with the world premiere of Lou Howe’s Gabriel starring Rory Culkin, while the corresponding documentary category kicks off with the world premiere of Frédéric Tcheng’s Dior And I (pictured).
Viewpoints opens with the world premiere of Onur Tukel’s Summer Of Blood and the section includes the North American premiere of Diao Yinan’s Berlin Golden Bear winner Black Coal, Thin Ice as well as the Us premiere of David Mackenzie’s Starred Up.
All three sections will commence on April 17. As previously announced, the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival will open with documentary Time Is Illmatic a day earlier.
Overall the festival will screen features from 32 countries including 55 world premieres, six international premieres, 12 North American...
The World Narrative Feature Competition will open with the world premiere of Lou Howe’s Gabriel starring Rory Culkin, while the corresponding documentary category kicks off with the world premiere of Frédéric Tcheng’s Dior And I (pictured).
Viewpoints opens with the world premiere of Onur Tukel’s Summer Of Blood and the section includes the North American premiere of Diao Yinan’s Berlin Golden Bear winner Black Coal, Thin Ice as well as the Us premiere of David Mackenzie’s Starred Up.
All three sections will commence on April 17. As previously announced, the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival will open with documentary Time Is Illmatic a day earlier.
Overall the festival will screen features from 32 countries including 55 world premieres, six international premieres, 12 North American...
- 3/4/2014
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
The recipients of 2013 San Francisco Film Society Documentary Film Fund awards totalling $100,000 are Anne Bogart and Holly Morris’ The Babushkas Of Chernobyl, Jamie Meltzer’s Freedom Fighters and Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber’s Tomorrow We Disappear.
Previous Documentary Film Fund winners include Shaul Schwarz’s Narco Cultura, which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie And The Boxer, which won Sundance’s directing award for documentary and screens next month in the Sundance Los Angeles event Next Weekend
Since 2011 Sffs has distributed $100,000 annually in grants to advance new work by documentary filmmakers nationwide.
“These three projects exhibit exactly the kind of compelling storytelling and creative approach to their subjects that the Doc Film Fund was created to support, and I can’t wait to see the finished products,” said Sffs executive director Ted Hope.
“Our deepest thanks go to Sharon and Larry Malcomson, whose inspiring...
Previous Documentary Film Fund winners include Shaul Schwarz’s Narco Cultura, which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie And The Boxer, which won Sundance’s directing award for documentary and screens next month in the Sundance Los Angeles event Next Weekend
Since 2011 Sffs has distributed $100,000 annually in grants to advance new work by documentary filmmakers nationwide.
“These three projects exhibit exactly the kind of compelling storytelling and creative approach to their subjects that the Doc Film Fund was created to support, and I can’t wait to see the finished products,” said Sffs executive director Ted Hope.
“Our deepest thanks go to Sharon and Larry Malcomson, whose inspiring...
- 7/25/2013
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
The San Francisco Film Society has announced the contenders for the 2013 Sffs Documentary Film Fund awards totalling $100,000.
The finallists are: John Fiege for Above All Else; Jennifer Grausman and Sam Cullman for Art And Craft; Anne Bogart and Holly Morris for The Babushkas Of Chernobyl; Darius Clark Monroe for Evolution Of A Criminal; Jamie Meltzer for Freedom Fighters; Anne De Mare and Kristen Kelly for Homestretch; and Catherine Gund for How To Become An Extreme Action Hero.
The list continues with Geeta Patel and Ravi V Patel for One In A Billion; Hillevi Loven for Radical Love; Amir Soltani and Chihiro Wimbush for Redemption; Tracy Tragos and Andrew Droz Palermo for Rich Hill; Andrew James for Street Fighting Man; and Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber for Tomorrow We Disappear.
The contenders were selected from more than 200 applicants and winners will be announced in late July.
The Sffs Documentary Film Fund has distributed $100,000 annually and was set up...
The finallists are: John Fiege for Above All Else; Jennifer Grausman and Sam Cullman for Art And Craft; Anne Bogart and Holly Morris for The Babushkas Of Chernobyl; Darius Clark Monroe for Evolution Of A Criminal; Jamie Meltzer for Freedom Fighters; Anne De Mare and Kristen Kelly for Homestretch; and Catherine Gund for How To Become An Extreme Action Hero.
The list continues with Geeta Patel and Ravi V Patel for One In A Billion; Hillevi Loven for Radical Love; Amir Soltani and Chihiro Wimbush for Redemption; Tracy Tragos and Andrew Droz Palermo for Rich Hill; Andrew James for Street Fighting Man; and Jimmy Goldblum and Adam Weber for Tomorrow We Disappear.
The contenders were selected from more than 200 applicants and winners will be announced in late July.
The Sffs Documentary Film Fund has distributed $100,000 annually and was set up...
- 6/17/2013
- ScreenDaily
The first rule of Film Week is that if you have time to blog during Film Week, you’re probably not doing it right. The second rule of Film Week is that if you attend, the best part is that you will meet all kinds of awesome people making awesome films. This may intimidate you. It’s okay. Be cool. I guess that’s the third rule of Film Week, bro: just be cool.
When the good folks at Filmmaker Magazine asked me to blog about Film Week again this year, I knew I wanted to write about some of the awesome people making awesome films I knew I would meet. With all the “industry” stuff to get excited/nervous about, it’s good to remember that everyone that is at Film Week is there because of the films. I could write about all of the films included in Film Week,...
When the good folks at Filmmaker Magazine asked me to blog about Film Week again this year, I knew I wanted to write about some of the awesome people making awesome films I knew I would meet. With all the “industry” stuff to get excited/nervous about, it’s good to remember that everyone that is at Film Week is there because of the films. I could write about all of the films included in Film Week,...
- 9/24/2012
- by Penny Lane
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Congratulations to “Tomorrow We Disappear” directors Adam Weber and Jim Goldblum. Their project received the most votes to win September's Project of the Month. As a prize, they will receive a consultation from the Sundance Institute. If you’re a filmmaker (or know one) and you want us to consider an in-production film for our Project of the Day column, fill out the form here. Here's more information on the winning ...
- 11/4/2011
- Indiewire
Thanks to your votes, the documentary about a fading, no, disappearing, magician's community in India "Tomorrow We Disappear" “Crisis Call 211” won this weekend’s Project of the Week contest for last week! Congratulations to “Tomorrow We Disappear" directors Adam Weber and Jim Goldblum. The filmmaker will receive a digital distribution consultation from SnagFilms and is now officially a candidate for Project of the Month. That winner will be awarded with ...
- 10/24/2011
- Indiewire
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