This year’s New York Film Festival will be held largely virtually and in outdoor screenings, organizers said Thursday while unveiling a lineup featuring new films from Chloe Zhao, Steve McQueen and Azazel Jacobs
By
JAKE COYLE AP Film Writer
August 13, 2020, 7:13 PM
3 min read
NEW YORK -- This year's New York Film Festival will be held largely virtually and in outdoor screenings, organizers said Thursday while unveiling a lineup featuring new films from Chloe Zhao, Steve McQueen and Azazel Jacobs.
The major fall film festivals, which often jockey for the chance to premiere the season's top films, have this year worked in concert to salvage what they can from a more limited array of films and a drastic reduction in attendees. Many of the films selected by Film at Lincoln Center, which presents the New York Film Festival, will also play at the Venice and Toronto festivals.
“The disorientation and uncertainty of this tough year had the effect of returning us to core principles,” said Dennis Lim, the festival's director of programming, in a statement. “To put it simply, the main slate is our collective response to one central question: which films matter to us right now?"
As previously announced, the 58th New York Film Festival will kick off with McQueen's “Lovers Rock"; Chloe Zhao's “Nomadland” is the centerpiece; and Azazel Jacobs' “French Exit,” starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Lucas Hedges. Two more of McQueen's films — “Mangrove” and “Red, White and Blue” — will play at the festival; all come from his upcoming “Small Axe” television anthology for the BBC and Amazon about West Indians in London.
Venice and Toronto previously announced their lineups, which likewise are largely absent the kind of feverishly anticipated premieres that usually accompany the festivals. Last year, Martin Scorsese's “Irishman” debuted opening night at the New York Film Festival. This year, with an uncertain and delayed Oscar season, Netflix has thus far largely sat out the fall festivals.
But many will surely be eager to see the NYFF selections. They include: Frederick Wiseman’s “City Hall"; Jia Zhangke's “Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue”; Christian Petzold's “Blue”; Hong Sangsoo's “The Woman Who Ran”; and Garrett Bradley's “Time,” a prize winner at Sundance in January.
The 58th New York Film Festival will run a week earlier, from Sept. 17–Oct. 11. This is the first festival overseen by NYFF's new leadership team of festival director Eugene Hernandez and Lim, following the departure of Kent Jones.