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Lost City of Z to close New York Film Festival


The Lost City of Z will close the New York Film Festival.

http://deadline.com/2016/08/lost-city-of-z-new-york-film-festival-closing-night-film-james-gray-charlie-hunnam-1201797811/

The Film Society of Lincoln Center has set as its closing film The Lost City of Z, the period adventure that James Gray directed and scripted from the David Grann nonfiction book. The film, which stars Charlie Hunnam, Sienna Miller, Robert Pattinson and Tom Holland, will make its World Premiere at the festival’s final gala screening on Saturday, October 15. Pic tells the story of Lieutenant Colonel Percy Fawcett (Hunnam), the British military-man-turned-explorer whose search for a lost city deep in the Amazon grows into an increasingly feverish, decades-long magnificent obsession that takes a toll on his reputation, his home life with his wife (Miller) and family. His plunge into the Amazon, shot by cinematographer Darius Khondji, alternates between rapture and dizzying terror.

Said New York Film Festival Director and Selection Committee Chair Kent Jones: “James Gray is one of the finest filmmakers we have. Each of his movies is so beautifully wrought, visually and emotionally, but The Lost City of Z represents something new. It’s a true epic, spanning two continents and three decades, and it’s a genuine vision of the search for sublimity.”

Said Gray, whose 2014 film The Immigrant played in the 51st New York Film Festival, called the selection “truly a dream come true for me to have The Lost City of Z selected for the closing night of the New York Film Festival.“ I couldn’t be more honored that the film’s world premiere will be in my hometown, a city I still love above all others.”

Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Anthony Katagas, and Dale Armin Johnson produced, and Brad Pitt and Marc Butan are the exec producers. Fest previously announced that Ava DuVernay’s documentary The 13th will open the festival, with the Mike Mills-directed 20th Century Women will premiere in the Centerpiece slot.


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Whoooooo!!! We have a festival premiere date.

I'm not surprised by this. LCOZ isn't exactly arty festival stuff, so a Cannes debut sounded very odd. This works well.

Variety notes that the film is scheduled to be released in 2017...so we're still looking at that for a release period...but that works.

I wonder if Good Time might hit NYFF as well?

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If the reviews out of NYFF are great, then the distributor can definitely schedule a limited release, then the film, director and main actors will very likely become contenders in this awards season, and then it would have a wider release in 2017. Anyway, great news!

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Wow! This is amazing. I was so sucked into the Cannes theory. This is much, much better! Yay!!!

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I agree, Sammie, this is much better. And a fall film festival debut could be great, I think it will depend on the film's reception.

So now we know why the film didn't debut at Venice or TiIFF, they got a closing slot at the NYFF! Great news!

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I'm not surprised by this. LCOZ isn't exactly arty festival stuff, so a Cannes debut sounded very odd. This works well.
Cannes is not as arty as it used to be. They have some movies just to have big stars, remember The Expandables a few years ago. Some Indiana Jones premiered at Cannes. Look at all the models who show up and have nothing to do with cinema, but with L'Oréal...

James Gray is loved in France, so Cannes would have welcome his film.

Anyway very happy about this news. Hoping that we will have the opportunity to see it "soon".

Rob: 15 times on French news programmes. His face is a Greco-Roman marvel.

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Very cool. Been looking forward to this film for what seems like forever.

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Tracy, thanks for providing all those other articles.

It's great that LCOZ was trending.

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