2015-04-28

3rd annual LIFF announces full 2015 lineup. The fest takes off on Wings of Laughter with Melissa McCarthy in Paul Feig’s Spy. Here’s the press release:

The 2015 Louisiana International Film Festival and Mentorship Program takes place May 7-10 at Cinemark Perkins Rowe, featuring films from all over the globe, including world and Louisiana premieres. Programming includes dramas, animation, foreign-language, comedies, adventure and more in feature, documentary and short formats.

A special American Premiere screening of the new Frankenstein will be presented with director Bernard Rose (Candyman, Immortal Beloved) in attendance for a Q&A session. Last year, Rose’s The Devil’s Violinist captured LIFF’s coveted Audience Award. Rose’s new one, based on Mary Shelley’s classic but set in current day LA, was last weekend awarded the Golden Raven, top prize at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival. The monster is played by otherwise handsome young star Xavier Samuel (Fury).

OPENING NIGHT, THURSDAY, MAY 7th
7:00 pm – SPY – GALA PREMIERE (120 min)

We are honored to present the second screening in the world of the year’s most awaited comedy, SPY from the director of Bridesmaids, Paul Feig, starring the incomparable laugh-maker Melissa McCarthy in what critics are already calling her masterpiece. Firing on all cylinders, SPY is an uproarious blast of globe trotting action-comedy delirium that doesn’t let up for a second. It’s guaranteed to put you in the best mood you’ve been in months, and have the best time at the movies this year. Join us for this incredibly special celebration of entertainment, and marvel in the talent that is Paul Feig, Melissa McCarthy, Jude Law, Rose Byrne, Jason Statham, Bobby Cannavale and the glorious Allison Janney.

FRIDAY, MAY 8th

4:30 PM – INTERNATIONAL SHORT ANIMATION PROGRAM (120 min)
WACKATDOO (Benjamin Arcand/Canada); WOLFGANG, WOLFGANG JR (James Kwan/USA); DIJI DEATH SAILS (Dmitri Voloshin/Moldova); ENHEBRADO (Eduardo Solera/Spain); CINDERELLA: A SHADOW BALLET (Carla Patullo/USA); MONSTRO! (Christopher Romano/USA); ELEPHANT’S GARDEN (Felix Colgrave/Australia); TICK TOCK (Zeynep Kocak/Turkey); THE BALLAD OF HOLLAND ISLAND HOUSE (Lynn Tomlinson/USA); THE REWARD: TALES OF ALETHRION (Kenneth Ladekjaer, Mikkel Mainz Elkjaer/Denmark).

6:00 PM – BIG CHARITY – Guest (61 min)

Founded as a hospital for the poor by a dying French merchant in 1736, Big Charity was a symbol of compassion and a beacon of hope in New Orleans… but today the towering art deco building, closed abruptly after Katrina in 2005, stands empty. This documentary film combines never-before-seen footage and exclusive interviews with hospital employees who miraculously withstood the storm to shed new light its closure.

7:00 PM – PEOPLE PLACES THINGS(85 min)

Director Jim Strouse (Grace Is Gone, The Winning Season) returns to the screen with this effortlessly touching fatherhood dramaedy starring the wonderful Jemaine Clement. Here Clement plays a comic artist and art institute teacher who is dealing with the failure of his relationship with the mother of his children. It’s a story about failing, getting back up again, failing some more and navigating your way through the often uncertain waters of adulthood. This fresh, funny and moving film captured both audiences and critics alike at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

7:15 PM – THE YES MEN ARE REVOLTING(91 min)
The Yes Men, a duo of notorious activists armed with nothing but thrift-store suits and a lack of shame, stage phony events and issue fake press releases to draw attention to corporate crimes against humanity and the environment. Now well into their 40s, these iconoclastic revolutionaries face mid-life crises that threaten to their activism forever -even as they prepare to take on their biggest challenge: climate change.

7:30 PM – BEST OF ENEMIES – GALA (87 min)

Get out your boxing gloves, here comes director Morgan Neville (20 Feet From Stardom, LIFF 2013) and Robert Gordon’s wonderful account of the infamous televised debates between liberal firebrand Gore Vidal and conservative gadfly William F. Buckley, Jr. during the 1968 Republican and Democratic Conventions. A sort of brainy equivalent of the Ali-Frazier boxing matches of the same general era, the televised debates between William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal during the two national political conventions in the convulsive year of 1968 comprised a watershed event in several ways, all of which are reflected in this outstanding documentary.

8:00 PM – GOODBYE TO LANGUAGE 3D (70 min)

New Wave icon Jean-Luc Godard (Breathless) is the youngest 85 year-old director working today: by embracing 3D in his new film, he has found his biggest US audience since the 60s. Using a typically lush cascade of images, words, puns, camera tricks, literary and musical quotes, the wily Godard simultaneously expresses and obscures his current ideas. He may or may not be saying goodbye to language but this film is a big hello to cinema. Be there or be square.

9:00 PM – THE CUT (138 min)

In this epic tale of one man’s Job-like odyssey, the Turkish-German filmmaker Fatih Akin tackles the taboo subject (for Turks) of the 1915 Armenian genocide. When the men in his town are abducted and forced into slavery by the Turkish army, Nazaret, a young Armenian blacksmith and father, survives the horrors only to learn his daughters have disappeared. His quest takes him from the Mesopotamian desert through Havana to an uncertain future in desolate North Dakota. With obvious parallels to today’s Jihadist atrocities, The Cut resonates with audiences everywhere.

9:15 PM – EDEN – French Language (131 min)

The life of a French DJ who’s credited with inventing “French house” or the “French touch,” a type of French electronic music that became popular in the 1990s.

9:45 PM – THE HARVEST (104 min)
THE HARVEST is a film that could be called a cross between MISERY and the recent thriller, THE BABADOOK. Couple that with two of the most versatile and respected actors in the business, Academy Award nominees Michael Shannon and Samantha Morton, and you have one of the most deeply disturbing, chilling and terrifying films about childhood in recent years. It would be a shame to give too much away here. A very welcome return to form for director John McNaughton (Henry: Portrait of A Serial Killer).

9:45 PM – MANGLEHORN – Special Presentation (97 min)

Manglehorn is a beguiling study of a man, a one-time roustabout now living as a locksmith in Texas, who lost his way on the path of life after he stopped dreaming, and Al Pacino hasn’t been this good in years in an understated, complex role that he plays perfectly. Holly Hunter is every bit his match in this unusual and unexpected love story from director David Gordon Green.

SATURDAY, MAY 9th

10:00 AM – LOUISIANA SHORTS – Guests (120 min)

SNIP (Eric Rippetoe); LOVABLE (Zac Taylor, Erica Silverman); BASED ON ROSENTHAL (Stephen Kinigopoulos); A BIRD’S NEST (Christine Chen); TRUE HEROES (Chris Ganucheau); MADELINE’S OIL (Caleb Michaelson).

11:45 AM – KHALIL GIBRAN’S THE PROPHET(85 min)

A labor of love by Mexican-Lebanese actress/producer Salma Hayak, this adaptation of the philosopher-poet Gibran’s widely cherished guide to life, love and death is a tribute to the aesthetic possibilities of animation. Except for the wrap around story of a mother and child who encounter the revolutionary poet named Mustafa (voiced by Hayak, Quvenzhane Wallis and Liam Neeson) each of the prophet’s parables is rendered by a different international artist, each in his own style. Scored to music and songs by Gabriel Yared, Lisa Hannigan and Damien Rice, the result is a film Variety called “as visually mesmerizing as it is profound.”

12:00 PM – OBAMA MAMA – Guest (83 min)

Barack Obama’s mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, was more than the mother of the first black President: she was an anthropologist with a Ph.D. whose intelligence, progressive politics, and activism inspired her son. In Vivian Norris’s illuminating documentary, friends and colleagues shed light on a woman whose life spanned small-town Kansas, Seattle, Hawaii, and Indonesia; and who was active in the Civil Rights and Feminist movements, in consciousness raising efforts regarding global poverty, and in the development of microcredit programs that address rural poverty.

12:15 PM – DELI MAN (91 min) + HAPPY GOATS Short – Guest (16 min)

Who doesn’t love good deli? This funny, nostalgic and informative film focuses on Ziggy Gruber, who gave up a promising career as a cordon blue chef to open a Houston deli, a tribute both to his Jewish heritage and to the savory foods that his beloved grandparents served him as a child. Preceded by HAPPY GOATS, HAPPY CHEESE (15 min.), a charming visit to chevre farm in South Carolina.

1:00 PM – DIPLOMACY – French Language (84 min)

“Burn Paris!” ordered Hitler; and as the Allies march toward the City of Light in the summer of 1944, General Dietrich von Choltitz mines the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, and Notre Dame. When the Swedish Ambassador arrives at the 11th hour hoping to persuade ‘the good Nazi’ to do the right thing for mankind, a tension-filled game of verbal cat and mouse ensues, masterfully staged by Volker Schlöndorff (The Tin Drum).

1:30 PM – TAB HUNTER CONFIDENTIAL(90 min)

Fresh from its world premiere at Austin’s SXSW Festival in March comes this fascinating investigation into the life and times of Tab Hunter – a number one 50s box office star, a golden boy next door romantically linked to Natalie Wood and Debbie Reynolds…. and secretly gay. Meet the real Tab Hunter, a happy, healthy survivor of Hollywood’s roller coaster as he shares his story in a film Vanity Fair calls “slick, savvy, rollicking, eye-popping… and brave for its candor.”

2:15 PM – CARTEL LAND(98 min)

Winner of both ‘Best Director’ and ‘Best Cinematography’ at the Sundance Film Festival, Cartel Land takes the viewer deep inside the world of vigilantes fighting vicious Mexican drug cartels on both sides of the border. This fearless, character-driven film asks questions about lawlessness, the breakdown of order, and whether it is just for citizens to take up arms to fight violence with violence.

2:30 PM – THEEB(100 min)
Theeb is a gripping adventure tale, shot entirely on location against the ravishing landscape of Wadi Araba in Jordan. The year is 1916, the Ottoman Empire is crumbling, and a Bedouin boy and his elder brother have been hired to guide a British officer across the forbidding desert on a mysterious mission. Surviving thirst, heat, and sudden violence, Theeb becomes a man.

3:00 PM – JESUS TOWN, USA – Guest (95 min)

For 88 years, a small Oklahoma town has produced a passion play on a bizarre reproduction of Jerusalem built into the Wichita foothills… but today audiences are scant and the ‘new’ Jesus is a local paperboy with a secret. In this light-hearted film, director Billie Mintz documents a community of quirky characters as they grapple with questions of tradition and faith. Q&A to follow.

3:45 PM – THE BLACK PANTHERS(113 min)

More than 40 years after the Black Panther Party was founded in Oakland, California, the group and its leadership live on as powerful figures in our popular imagination. In this riveting and entertaining doc, veteran director Stanley Nelson (Freedom Summer) weaves the varied voices of those who lived this story – police, FBI informants, journalists, white supporters and detractors, those who remained loyal to the party and those who left it. A must-see for anyone interested in race in America, past and present.

4:30 PM – ABOUT ELLY(119 min)

A high-spirited outing to the seaside turns acrimonious when Elly, the only single woman in a group of 30-something couples, suddenly disappears. A masterful portrait of Iran’s conflicted middle class by the Oscar-winning director Asghar Farhadi (A Separation) About Elly is “breezy, then suspenseful, and gradually, crushingly sad… on its own terms, it’s a perfect film.” (New York Magazine)

4:45 PM – BREATHE – French Language (91 min)

Still waters run deep in this twisted tale of two beautiful high-school girls – one a shy achiever, the other an extroverted ‘new girl’ with a murky past – whose unlikely friendship moves from high-spirited ardor to rage and obsession. Directed by internationally acclaimed actress Mélanie Laurent (Inglorious Basterds) and adapted from a best-selling novel by a 17 year-old authoress, Breathe echoes Blue Is the Warmest Color in its incisive portrait of teenage angst and codependency.

5:15 PM – THE FLIGHT FANTASTIC – Guest (97 min)

In the Golden Age of the American circus, there is only one Flying Gaonas, a large Mexican family of trapeze artists renowned for the ‘triple somersault’ introduced in 1964 by Tito Gaona who performed it with grace, precision and consistency for 35 years. Tom Moore’s beguiling film introduces us to these amazing athletes who embody the myth, legend and legacy of a magical and vanishing world. Q&A to follow with director Tom Moore.

7:00 PM – I’LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS – GALA – Guest (92 min)

In this vibrant, bittersweet comedy, Broadway star Blythe Danner lights up the screen as Carole, a widow and former songstress who is jolted out of her comfortable routine by the death of her dog. Cheered on by three loyal girlfriends – June Squibb, Rhea Perlman, and Mary Kay Place – Carol embarks on an unlikely friendship with her pool maintenance man and a steamy love affair with Sam Elliot… learning that life can begin anew. Q&A to follow with director Brett Haley.

7:00 PM – TIMBUKTU(97 min)

At once timeless and contemporary, this heart-wrenching Oscar nominee from sub-Saharan Africa tells the tale of Kidane and his  family who live and tend their livestock in the dunes near Timbuktu. When religious fundamentalists take over the city, reducing women to shadows and banning music, laughter and soccer, Kidane’s life is changed forever.

7:15 PM – WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS (86 min)

Already a hit in it’s native New Zealand, and well on its way to cult status here in America, this incredibly hilarious mockumentary is perhaps the most refreshingly upbeat comedy of the year, with a very big bite. A group of filmmakers are permitted (unharmed) to interview a very unusual family of Vampires ranging from eight thousand years old to eight months (turned). When the aging vampires hit the town to party with werewolves, zombies and humans, you won’t be able to wipe the smile off your face. One of years true discoveries.

7:45 PM – DARK STAR: The World of H.R. GIGER(95 min)

Surrealist artist H. R. Giger (1940-2014) terrified audiences with his Oscar-winning monsters in Ridley Scott’s Alien. Sci-fi, horror, music, album covers, tattoos and fetish art have been influenced by his intricate paintings and sculptures depicting birth, death and sex. Both a mesmerizing introduction to Giger’s oeuvre and a must-see for Giger devotees, Belinda Sallin’s definitive documentary DARK STAR: H. R. GIGER’S WORLD shares the last years of the artist’s life and reveals how deeply he resided within his own artistic visions.

9:15 PM – THE TRIBE(132 min)

A stunning debut feature and winner of the Cannes International Critics Award, this hallucinatory tale unfolds in a Ukrainian boarding school for the deaf where crime, prostitution and corruption are a way of life: in order to survive, new boy Sergi must join the gang. Highly cinematic and performed entirely in Ukrainian sign language with no subtitles, THE TRIBE proves that for love and hatred you don’t need translation. Not for the faint of heart.

9:30 PM – FRANKENSTEIN – American Premiere – Guest (90 min)

LIFF Award Winning Director Bernard Rose (The Devil’s Violinist, Candyman) returns this year with his shocking and powerful new take on Mary Shelley’s classic tale of horror, starring heartthrob Xavier Samuel in a superb performance. A modern day journey of survival in a hostile world, Frankenstein couldn’t be more relevant for today’s audience. Q&A to follow with director Bernard Rose.

9:40 PM – THE CONNECTION – French Language (135 min)

Marseille 1975. In this classic gangster film, Gallic superstar and oscar-winner Jean Dujardin (Best Actor,The Artist) gets down and dirty as prosecutor Pierre Michel whose real life battle with the heroine kingpin ‘Tany’ Zampa, known as ‘the French connection,’ lasted 6 years and uncovered widespread corruption. Working from his award-winning script that pits poor hero against rich thug (suavely played by Dujardin lookalike Gilles Lellouche) director Cédric Jiminez, a Marseille native himself, hones in on the similarities and differences that bind these two driven men, while he amps up the action to the throb of 70s R&B.

9:45 PM – BROKEN HORSES(101 min)

Director Vidhu Vinod Chopra (3 Idiots) has fashioned a old fashioned western told with a modern day setting. Reminiscent  of the Coen Brothers Blood Simple and No Country For Old Men, Broken Horses follows the lives of two brothers (Anton Yelchin, Chris Marquette) from their father’s murder early in their youth to adulthood. Thrilling, unpredictable, and a great performance from actor Vincent D’Onofrio.

SUNDAY, MAY 1Oth

10:00 AM – INTERNATIONAL SHORTS – Guests (135 min)
THE MALTESE FIGHTER (Arev Manoukian/Malta); CONVERSATION WITH A CIGARETTE (Russell Brown/USA); A TEENAGE DRAMA (Phillip Clark Davis/USA); THE WALK (Aaron Wolf/USA); ALONE IN THE DUST (Brandon Kapelow/USA); RAG DOLL (Zena Dell Lowe/USA).

11:00AM – I AM BIG BIRD (90 min)

This loving portrait chronicles the life of Caroll Spinney, the man who has been Sesame Street’s Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch since 1969. Featuring rare footage of Spinney’s earliest collaborations with Jim Henson, I AM BIG BIRD traces Caroll’s evolution from bullied child to the celebrated, tenacious and enthusiastic performer who at 81 has no intention of slowing down.

12:00 PM – THE GREAT MAN – French Language (107 min)

The friendship of two French legionnaires forged amid the carnage of Afghanistan is renewed in Paris where one is suffering from PTS and the other is an illegal resident trying to bond with the son he left behind. Never predictable and deeply moving, THE GREAT MAN is a rare depiction of fraternal/paternal relationships by a female director.

12:30 PM – COURT(116 min)

The trial of an elderly left-wing street singer accused of inspiring a working class man to commit suicide is the impetus for this assured and original debut film that grows from an isolated incident into a far-reaching critique of a greater court – India itself, with its archaic bureaucracy and superstitious traditions. A grand prize-winner at the Venice and Mumbai festivals, COURT is a beautifully crafted and passionate work.

1:00 PM – IRIS(83 min)

This documentary by the legendary Albert Maysles, who passed away in March, is an affectionate tribute to 93-year-old Iris Apfel, a soaring free spirit and New York style icon beloved by fashionistas worldwide for her collection of outlandish accessories and her razor-sharp wit. As Iris declares: “It is more important to be happy than to be well dressed!”

1:00 PM – NOBLE (101 min)

Based on the life of Christina Noble, a fearless Irish heroine, this is the incredible true story of one woman’s valiant struggle to overcome her own life on the streets of Ireland as a child and eventually help save over a million orphan Vietnamese children from a life of poverty, starvation, disease and drugs. Noble is an inspiring film about a brave woman who not only overcame her traumatic past, she actually did something about it. Our heartfelt Mother’s Day gift to you.

2:15 PM – THE SECOND MOTHER(114 min)

Winner of Jury Awards at both Berlin and Sundance, this empathetic character study of a live-in maid who has neglected her own child in order to serve the needs of an upper class Brazilian family is one of the most touching and inspiring films in the festival. With outstanding performances by Regina Casé as frumpy, funny Val and Camila Márdila as the now adult daughter who empowers her.

3:15 PM – IN THE NAME OF MY DAUGHTER – French Language (116 min)

Catherine Deneuve has her best role in years as Renee Le Roux the glamorous owner of a successful casino on the French Riviera. But there is trouble in paradise when her wayward daughter takes up with the casino’s ex-business manager and then mysteriously disappears. Love, betrayal and revenge are the high stakes in this beautifully acted and directed film based on an unsolved true crime that has fascinated France for 30 years.

5:00 PM – THE LOOK OF SILENCE(99 min)

In Indonesia, a country where criminals and victims live as neighbors, a brave 44-year-old optician meets face to face with the men who murdered his brother. By stripping away the silence surrounding the slaughter of suspected communists under the late 60s military dictatorship, director Joshua Oppenheimer has crafted a passionate meditation on memory and history that breaks the barriers between documentary and fiction. A multi award-winner at international festivals incl Chicago, Berlin, Zurich and Pusan.

3:20 PM – CITY OF GOLD(96 min)

This witty, fast moving film chronicles Pulitzer Prize-winning restaurant critic Jonathan Gold’s relationship to his beloved and sprawling metropolis, Los Angeles. Along for the ride as Gold seeks out new and far flung culinary experiences – both high and low – director Laura Gabbert reveals a complex, paradoxical urban landscape of taco stands, Korean food trucks and teeming Asian food emporiums. Featuring celebrity chefs Roy Choi, David Chang, and Ludo Lefebvre.

4:45 PM – UNEXPECTED (90 min)

The universal act of having a baby plays out in interesting and humorous ways in Unexpected, a powerful new comedy-drama about class differences and similarities. Samantha Abbott (Cobie Smulders), a science teacher in a soon-to-be-closed inner-city Chicago high school, finds out she’s pregnant. She also learns that her best student, college-bound Jasmine (Gail Bean), is also pregnant, and they’re both due around the same time. What follows points out the different surroundings in which the 29-year-old white teacher and the 17-year-old black student are about to bring their children into the world. Both Bean and Smulders give beautiful performances as women anticipating major changes in their lives.

5:30 PM – THE LESSON(105 min)

An honest, hardworking schoolteacher in a small Bulgarian town suddenly learns she has only a few days to save her home from foreclosure by the bank. A gripping film that has won audience awards and critical praise at festivals from Spain to Tokyo, The Lesson embodies a universal human truth: in extreme circumstances, even good people can make bad choices.

5:30 PM – LIFF 2015 Symphony Orchestra

LIFF is proud to present a special closing night concert featuring the Louisiana International Film Festival Symphony Orchestra at Cinemark Perkins Rowe in the Great Hall. Free and open to the public to enjoy the greatest music hits from favorite movies past and present like “Somewhere Over the Rainbow”, “Star Wars” and “Harry Potter”. Celebrate Mother’s Day on the red carpet for a unique movie going experience. LIFF is honoring women of the world with its 2015 festival theme “Year of the Woman”. Bring your own chairs and blankets for enjoyment. Sponsored by The Advocate.

7:00 PM – ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL – CLOSING GALA (104 m)

The unequivocal hit of this years Sundance Film Festival (winner of both the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award), and an instant classic, ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL is a film that values intelligence and artistic pursuits in young people, teaching us that it is how we relate to one another and what we leave behind that really matters. A film people will hold dear to their heart for many years to come.

7:00 PM – BROKEN HORSES – Repeat (101 min)

7:30 PM – FRANKENSTEIN – Guest – Special Presentation – Repeat (90 min)

7:45 PM – WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS – Repeat (86 min)

9:40 PM – GIRL ON THE EDGE – (101 min)

When a seemingly normal teenager with a tragic past is targeted, manipulated, and victimized by an online predator through a dating app, she tries to cope with her trauma in unhealthy ways that quickly become self-destructive. Her parents, unable to give her the help she desperately needs, are forced to send her away to a residential treatment center where she struggles to find closure. Director Jay Silverman paints a realistic portrait of a young girl struggling to hang on to her dignity, and her sanity, in this moving film, based on a true story.9:45 PM –  Broken Horses – Repeat (101 min)

The festival kicks off with the Gala Premiere on the evening of Thursday, May 7, followed by three full days of film, food, cocktails and industry networking.

All films will be shown at Cinemark Perkins Rowe while workshops and other activities will take place throughout Perkins Rowe.

ALL ACCESS PASSES ($100): Get your All Access Pass for only $100 to the third annual Louisiana International Film Festival & Mentorship Program with guaranteed admission to over 60+ officially selected feature, documentary, animation and short film programs from around the world including premieres, exclusive sneak peeks, special screenings with filmmaker Q&A, entrance into filmmaker lounge, admission to special events and private parties featuring live music! Get what you can’t anywhere else @ LIFF 2015 with an All Access Pass. Get your ALL ACCESS PASS at www.

lifilmfest.org for a limited time! All Access Pass pickup available at the LIFF Box Office in Cinemark Theater Lobby starting May 4 through the event, May 7 – 10.

TICKETS ($10): Individual movie tickets for films will go on sale on the LIFF website on May 1st through the event, May 7 – 10, 2015. Ticket purchase at the Cinemark Box Office begins May 1.

VIP PASSES: VIP Passes

available exclusively for Patrons & Sponsors of the Louisiana International Film Festival & Mentorship Program 2015. VIP Passes not available for individual purchase. VIP Passes get you guaranteed admission to over 60+ officially selected feature, documentary, animation and short film programs from around the world including premieres, exclusive sneak peeks, special screenings with filmmaker Q&A, entrance into filmmaker lounge, admission to special events and private parties featuring live music! VIP first and preferred seating. Access to private VIP section at special events. Reserve your VIP Pass by sending name and contact information (email, phone number and address) to VIP@lifilmfest.org. Pickup your VIP Passes at the LIFF Box Office in Cinemark Theater Lobby starting May 4 through the event, May 7 – 10.

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