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The Berlin International Film Festival comes around for the 60th time from February 11th to the 21st. This monster festival is broken into 7 sections, each with its own director. There are a ton of movies, I thought I should mention a few that sound interesting to me.

One Life, Maybe Two is another paratemporal story, in which a single event goes both ways, and the fork between worldlines explores each outcome. The premise matches up with Sliding Doors in that regard, but the kind of events explored are quite different. While I suspect no one is referencing the Spanish Inquisition in this one, I am looking forward to seeing it some day.

Another film worth noting is Shutter Island, a rather surreal film about a disappearing mass murderess who may have escaped from a psychiatric prison. The talent involved with this film includes names like Martin Scorsese, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ben Kingsley, and Max von Sydow, and the trailer looks great. This one is not just for the film festivals; it goes into public release on the weekend of the 18th/19th of February.

There are a few other films you might want to check out. Howl has been making the festival circuits, a DocuDrama about the Ginsburg obscenity trial in 1957. That was the birthplace of the American Counterculture movement, and everything that it evolved into over the following 50 plus years. This film includes a presentation of the poem itself, which more than anything else puts into perspective just how far we have come since then.

And Ginsburg begat Dury; so how appropriate this festival also includes Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll, a film format reconstruction of Ian Dury’s biography, showing how he became key to the development of Punk and New Wave music, and the culture they spawned. He influenced The Clash, The Pretenders and the Sex Pistols to name just a few. He toured the US with Elvis Costello and Lou Reed back in the seventies. As the title of the film (it is also the title of his smash hit song) might make you suspect, he really was on the direct line of decent from Ginsburg, and was a major influence on the development of his segment of the Counterculture.

And Ginsberg begat Warhol and Waters; also in the 70s, No Wave film making was born in New York City, mostly in the low-income parts of the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The movie Blank City does a good job of presenting just how intense this Counterculture cauldron became, and what kind of film movements it spawned.

Wish I could be in Berlin for this fest, but I guess I will just have to cheer them on from here.

Wondering where the Film Festival entries have gone? There was too much to work with in the limited time I have to do the topic justice, even when all I was mentioning were the genre films hitting each festival. I am not abandoning the field, because so many of the better Sci-Fi and Fantasy films make the festival rounds while looking for a distributor, and for those that don’t find one there is sometimes no other way to see them. But I do need to rethink my approach to the topic, to deliver useful information about the films without trying to mention every festival in the world that one plays at. Until I decide on a structure that makes sense to me, I will use Tuesdays to mention other venues to appreciate SF.

Today happens to be Groundhogs Day, and I find it appropriate that Ned Ryerson (Stephen Tobolowsky) will be at the real one; it was a truly wonderful movie that pretty much every science fiction TV show did a spin-off of. You should watch your favorite episode, or perhaps even an entire series – Tru Calling would be my first choice, and Daybreak also comes to mind – built on the premise to celebrate!

If your a fan of Eureka, the episode would be I Do Over, while for Xena enthusiasts it’s Been There, Done That, and for X-Files folks it’s Monday. Almost all other Sci-Fi TV shows have an equivalent episode, and I feel confident you know the titles to your own favorites.

Trek of course had a plethora of them, including Time Squared, Cause and Effect, and Future’s End. For me though the one special Groundhogs Day TV episode has to be Stargate SG1’s Window of Opportunity from their 4th season. It was fun watching Anderson force his character to reveal it’s innate native intelligence (Kicking and screaming all the way, since O’Neil took pride in his good-old-boy appearance, but had to escape the time trap he was stuck in solely through his and Teal’cs efforts). But much more fun than that was what they did with the rest of their time. In all of these programs we watch the protagonists try one thing after another to solve the crises they find themselves neck deep in. But only in this episode of this show did we see the same kind of playful experimentation that was such a big part of the original Groundhog Day movie. After all, if you are trapped in time, you have all the time in the world to solve the problem; you might as well smell the roses as you pass by.

This week brings us one of the monster festivals of the year, the Sundance Film Festival from the 21st to the 31st. As always with Sundance, there are a ton of great films and workshops to attend, but there are two that look particularly interesting. The first would be Splice, a story of genetic engineering and its consequences, while the 2nd is Pumzi, a story of restoring the Earth to support life after WWIII. In the Comedy category we have Tucker & Dale vs Evil, which shows you what is really happening in all those Texas Chainsaw derived movies, and for the documentary side, Life 2.0 leads the pack with a representation of one of my favorite segments of virtual reality.

Other films worth noting include Howl, an experiment in film making showing the the birth of a counterculture, All My Friends Are Funeral Singers for the musically oriented, and the entire Drunk History series, of which my favorite is Drunk History: Tesla & Edison. There are about 20 more films I feel the need to mention, but if I don’t stop now, I may never do so.

Another festival running from the 22nd to the 24th is the Trail Dance Film Festival in Duncan, OK. Ready Teddy looks like a fun one there, with the story of how the Beatles kidnapped Elvis (yes, that comes under the heading of Alternate History).

This week sees the Palm Springs International Film Festival kick off, running from the 5th (today) to the 16th. While one of the more interesting segments is the G’Day USA: A Showcase of New Australian Cinema, it doesn’t have any actual genre entries. For that, Air Doll is one of the better choices. I think Hipsters about do-wap singers in 1955 Russia would make a great double feature with Howl about the US 1957 obscenity trial and counter-culture creation by Ginsberg.

This being Xmas Day, I hope you and yours are somewhere warm and protected (or cool and protected if you are in the southern hemisphere), and enjoying today with close friends and family. You deserve every bit of quality time the Universe can offer; So Say We All!

My car, taken a few days ago as the east coast got its white Xmas