7 interesting music lies – Muppets and Music Take Lower Manhattan for Tribeca 2011

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Muppets and Music Take Lower Manhattan for Tribeca 2011

The Tribeca Film Festival, which takes place for the 10th time this week, has been a curious, contradictory and occasionally controversial festival throughout its existence.

It has been applauded for bringing economic activity to Lower Manhattan after 9/11, and criticized for high prices and less-than-stellar movies.

It focuses on independent films, most of which do not end up with theatrical distribution, but is closely identified with the big movie star who co-founded it in 2002, Robert De Niro.

It’s a well-funded, for-profit film festival with lots of corporate backers, beginning with founding sponsor American Express, but it has never managed to attain the cachet of top-tier festivals like Cannes (which follows it by two weeks), Toronto, Sundance, Venice and Telluride.

It draws an enormous number of people through an extensive array of free “Tribeca Drive-In” screenings, a family-oriented street fair, a sports day and free panel discussions – but it also inflamed critics in 2007 when it raised ticket prices by 50 percent, from $12 to $18.

(Prices have since been lowered and are now $16 for evening and weekend screenings and $8 for matinees and late-night films, though substantial service charges are added to online and phone orders, print-at-home tickets and many will-call orders.)

But with the 10th TFF beginning on Wednesday with a free screening of Cameron Crowe’s documentary “The Union,” Tribeca also seems to have settled into a relatively comfortable niche as one of New York’s two main film festivals, alongside the New York Film Festival in the fall.

In the New York Times, Stephen Holden called it “a potpourri of cinema and razzle-dazzle with one eye trained on Hollywood” and “a useful cultural stimulant” that has generated more than $600 million in economic activity centered in Lower Manhattan.

It also has an extensive online presence, with the Tribeca (Online) Film Festival offering films streaming live at the same time as their TFF debuts.

Also read: Tribeca (Online) Fest to Stream Docs, Horror Films, Romances

In addition, Tribeca has partnered with TheWrap to present a half-day conference on the business and future of independent film, “The No-Fear Future of Independent Film,” with speakers that include Harvey Weinstein, Tribeca co-founder Jane Rosenthal and director Drake Doremus. Details and registration informatioin are available at TheWrap.

Over the years, Tribeca has been strongest in its documentary programming, where it debuted films including Alex Gibney’s Oscar-winning “Taxi to the Dark Side.” Leah Rozen summed up one recurring Tribeca problem in TheWrap last year: “Every year it’s the same story at the Tribeca Film Festival: the documentaries are amazing, while the narrative features — at least the ones looking for distribution — not so much.”  

This year’s docs, which make up a little less than half the festival’s feature programming, include Gibney’s baseball documentary “Catching Hell,” the surreal “Bombay Beach,” and “Despicable Dick and Righteous Richard” which sounds like a real-life (and darker) “My Name Is Earl.”

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