The altitude isn’t the only thing that may make attendees of the 51st Telluride Film Festival giddy. The sea-level visitors to the globally renowned fest in the town beneath the jagged San Juan Mountains hear the cautions: “Ease up on the caffeine, drink plenty of water and take it easy on the cocktails.”
But post-pandemic and after last year’s dual labor strikes — which prevented actors from attending film fests to support their work — something feels different headed into the Labor Day weekend ritual.
“I feel like the program has an element of exuberance to it,” executive director Julie Huntsinger said in a call. Programming Telluride is an act of mirroring more than molding, she believes, so Huntsinger offered her customary (if humble) caveat. “We just reflect. All glory goes to filmmakers — but there is a reflection of a hopefulness that everybody not only needs but is also entitled to.”
In a hallowed Telluride tradition, the fest announced the four-day program on the cusp of the gathering. The festival begins Friday and ends Monday evening. This is the first peek at what festivalgoers will line up for, ride the occasional gondola to get to and immerse themselves in. The fest will screen feature films, shorts, revival programs, along with tributes, panels, conversations and student programs. As a festival founded on a love of international cinema, it’s no surprise that 26 countries will be represented among the 60 or so films.
At a festival that has never shied away from the dark and demanding — and doesn’t for this edition, either — signs of the upbeat and exhilarating include “Saturday Night.” Director Jason Reitman’s film unfurls in the 90 minutes before the first airing of a little show called “Saturday Night Live” in 1975. As with so many innovations, creator Lorne Michaels’ idea of a show written by young firebrands and packed with unknowns who would in fairly short order become pop cultural quasars got lots of pushback.
As if to nod to the durability of the show, two of its stars who’ve gone on to first-rate film careers will appear onscreen in different movies. Will Ferrell and his dear friend Harper Steele, who is transgender, hit the road in the documentary “Will & Harper,” about the deep truths of friendship, directed by Jeff Greenbaum. And Bill Murray appears alongside Naomi Watts, Carla Gugino and Bing, a harlequin Great Dane, in directors David Siegel and Scott McGehee’s adaptation of “The Friend,” novelist Sigrid Nunez’s National Book Award-winning novel about an author who adopts the dog of her departed mentor. News has it the giant pup will be on hand. (In the unabashedly dog-friendly town, that won’t give anyone paws.)
Also in the ebullient department, director Morgan Neville’s “Piece by Piece” tells the story of Pharrell Williams, the singer-songwriter-producer responsible for one of the most titularly happy songs ever. To accentuate childlike wonder, the biopic is told using animation with Lego bricks.
The documentary “Casa Bonita Mi Amor!” will introduce those not in the know (i.e., not from the Denver area) to the pink palace of entrancing cliff driving and legendarily so-so (OK, not good) Mexican food, Casa Bonita. Director Arthur Bradford follows “South Park” creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone on their passionate quest to reopen the iconic restaurant (yes, with a great chef). It screens in the Backlot, the festival’s most accessible venue, which means non-passholders have a shot at seeing the film. (Also of note in the Backlot: the Irish drama “Swallow,” which features Brenda Fricker as a ruminative solitary figure living in a seaside home, who begins writing a letter to an unknown correspondent.)
Films that premiered at the Cannes Film Festival to acclaim — either whole-hearted or prickly — will be well represented with Sean Baker’s Palme d’Or-winning “Anora” and festival honoree Jacque Audiard’s “Emilia Pérez.” Both make the argument that the language of filmmaking is often buoyant and wowing beyond its subject matter. Baker (“Tangerine,” “Red Rocket”) has made the loving centering of sex workers his oeuvre. “Anora” features a Brooklyn call girl who snags the affection of a scion of a Russian oligarch. When the news hits Russia, the fantasy Ani (Mickey Madison) hopes to live out gets complicated. Audiard’s latest features a quartet of lauded performances in a sumptuously shot musical about a transgender drug lord: Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez, Adriana Paz and Karla Sofía Gascón, as the cartel boss of the title, all took the best actress prize at Cannes earlier this year.
This year’s guests are scheduled to include Angelina Jolie, star of Pablo Larrain’s Maria Callas film, “Maria”; Danielle Deadwyler and John David Washington of “The Piano Lesson,” directed by Malcom Washington, making good on father Denzel’s promise to produce August Wilson’s 10-play cycle for the screen; Martha Stewart, the fascinating, resilient subject of R.J. Cutler’s documentary of the same name; Embeth Davitz, who directed but also acts in the adaptation of Alexandra Fuller’s “Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight,” about her childhood in Rhodesia (Zimbabwe); guest director Kenneth Lonergan; and Amanda Zurawski (who, along with husband Josh, made indelible the outrages of the Dobbs decision at the DNC) in the documentary “Zurawski v Texas,” about Texas abortion ban and the women fighting it.
Also attending: Saoirse Ronan, who will receive a tribute and one of the fest’s three silver medallions. Her latest, “The Outrun,” directed by Nora Fingscheidt, is based on Amy Liptrot’s celebrated memoir about her downward spiral into alcoholism.
Telluride is known for its deeply enjoyable and illuminating program notes (hats off to Larry Gross, who authors many of them). The one on Ronan was written by Greta Gerwig, who directed the actor in “Ladybird” and “Little Women.” “The word ‘prodigy’ is thrown around a lot, but in her case, it is fitting,” Gerwig writes of the four-time Oscar nominee, who made such a disquieting impression in “Atonement” at the age of 12. Her work has only deepened in films as varied as “The Lovely Bones,” “Hanna” “Brooklyn” and “Ammonite.”
“Her gift is incredibly rare, but how she’s cared for it and grown it to become the formidable artist she is today is rarer still,” Gerwig continues. “She is a translucent actor — she somehow makes her external life transparent so we can all see her soul. But every character she plays is unique, wildly different from the others, so each soul she shows us is a new revelation.” That should be one helluva tribute reel.
So, too, will be the one for film editor Thelma Schoonmaker, whose work as Martin Scorsese’s longtime collaborator is unparalleled. The Oscar nominations started in 1971 with Michael Wadleigh’s documentary “Woodstock” and continued to last year’s “The Killers of the Flower Moon.” The wins began in 1981 with Scorsese’s “Raging Bull” and include “The Aviator” and “The Departed.” Schoonmaker was married to British film director Michael Powell (who died in 1990). In an elegant gesture both cinematic and familial, Schoonmaker will be interviewed onstage by Powell’s grandson, director Kevin Macdonald (this year’s TFF doc “One to One” John & Yoko”). She’ll also be in conversation with film editing’s wise practitioner and champion Walter Murch.
If the festival were as tall as one of the nearby mineral-specked peaks, this preview would barely get us to the first steep incline. With films by Errol Morris (“Separated” about families cleaved at the U.S.-Mexico border), Matt Tyrnauer (“Carville: Winning Is Everything, Stupid”) and Bonnie Cohen (“In Waves and War” with Jon Shenk and “The White House Effect” with Shenk and Pedro Kos) among others, the documentary slate is better than robust, it’s edifyingly timely.
One film sure to arrive with the aura of discovery is “Nickel Boys.” The book it hails from is well known, but its budding director, RaMell Ross, is a cherished secret. His much-anticipated film is based on Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel that focuses on friends Elwood and Turner, who meet at a harsh Florida reformatory in the 1960s. That literary provenance might be reason enough for attendees to queue for the film, but it is Ross, in his narrative feature debut, who holds such great promise.
“It’s a remarkable achievement,” Huntsinger said of the film, which screens in the Herzog venue, an ice rink transformed into an arthouse with impossibly pristine sound. The film also opens the New York Film Festival next month.
“I just want everybody to understand how privileged we are to witness this,” Julie Huntsinger said. “I wish I could be in the screening at the Herzog to watch everybody discover this movie and feel it and go through the things that the characters go through. I’m very happy for everybody involved. May it be as beloved when it’s finally out there in the world.”
And with that benediction, the Show, as it’s dubbed, begins.