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September 17 - 24, 1998

[Boston Film Festival]

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Blood, guts & Bill Plympton

Closing out the 14th Boston Film Festival

It's been an off year for independent filmmaking, and so the Boston Film Festival has retrenched a bit. Reduced from two weeks to 11 days in length (September 10 through 20), trimmed down to a svelte 44 features (as well as 27 shorts in six programs), the ever-evolving shindig has wisely sacrificed quantity for quality. Quality certainly was the operating principle in choosing the winners of this year's Film Achievement award: Robert Towne, screenwriter of such masterpieces as Chinatown and The Last Detail, and here represented by Without Limits, which he wrote and directed; and Holly Hunter, Oscar winner for her performance in The Piano, here starring in Living Out Loud. We can also applaud such choices as John Boorman's The General, Udayan Prasad's My Son the Fanatic, and Walter Salles's Central Station, to name a few of those upcoming. Here's the line-up for the final weekend of the 14th annual Boston Film Festival:

-- Peter Keough


Film Festival Feature Films

| The Witman Boys | The Cruise | Confessions of a Sexist Pig | Melting Pot | Pleasantville | Clay Pigeons | Waking Ned Devine | Blood, Guts, Bullets, & Octane | My Name is Joe | Six Ways to Sunday | The Theory of Flight | A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries | Down in the Delta | Children of Heaven | I Married a Strange Person | 20 Dates | Bandits |


More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times



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