Ebertfest 2024 full program announced, including ‘Omoiyari: A Song Film by Kishi Bashi’

Ebertfest 25th logo

AUDIENCE CHOICE FILM IS ROBERT ALTMAN’S  ‘COOKIE’S FORTUNE’

NEWLY LAUNCHED ‘LITTLE INDIAN GIRL COLLECTIVE’ PANEL IN DIALOGUE AND PERFORMANCE

ACADEMY AWARD-WINNING ‘ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS  MIND’ TO  BE SCREENED

Roger Ebert’s Film Festival is pleased to announce its full program, with the additions of the documentary Omoiyari: A Song Film by Kishi Bashi, the Audience Choice film Cookie’s Fortune, the indie cult classic Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and a panel with the Little Indian Girl Collective.

Ebertfest, celebrating its 25th anniversary, will be held from Wednesday, April 17, through Saturday, April 20, 2024, at the Virginia Theatre, 203 W. Park, in downtown Champaign. Individual tickets are now on sale.

Omoiyari Kishi Bashi

Kaoru Ishibashi, renowned singer, multi-instrumentalist, and songwriter who performs under the name Kishi Bashi will join Ebertfest to discuss a documentary he co-directed, Omoiyari: A Song Film by Kishi Bashi. When a media interview links the Muslim ban and the immigration crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border with the incarceration of Japanese-Americans during WWII, he goes on a journey to learn about this history and its relevance to better understand his own identity as a bi-cultural American.

Cookie's Fortune

After polling Ebertfest fans, this year’s Audience Choice film winner is Cookie’s Fortune, a 1999 American noir comedy film directed by Robert Altman and starring Glenn Close, Julianne Moore, Liv Tyler, Patricia Neal, Charles S. Dutton, and Chris O'Donnell. The award-winning film, which premiered at Sundance Film Festival in 1999, follows a dysfunctional family in small-town Mississippi and the conflicts that arise after the death of their wealthy aunt. Roger Ebert described the film as the “kind of comedy with a lot of laughs, and even more smiles.” 

Little Indian Girl Collective

The Little Indian Girl Collective will present a panel on “Women Who Embody Revolution Through Storytelling.” In the midst of the climate crisis, fast-paced news, social media, and increasing disconnection, hope is found in community-driven stories. Little Indian Girl, a new storytelling collective, discusses the future of storytelling and the power of narrative sovereignty with women, Indigenous and two-spirit artists, and Earth guardians who embody revolution through art. A song featuring Indian and Intuit throat singing traditions will be performed.

Eternal Sunshine

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), an American science fiction, romantic drama film directed by Michel Gondry, will be screened at this year’s festival. The film, which stars Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet, follows two individuals who undergo a procedure to erase each other from their memories following the dissolution of their relationship. Based on Charlie Kaufman's screenplay, and a story by Michel Gondry, Kaufman, and Pierre Bismuth, Roger Ebert gave the film high praise with 4 stars. “The wisdom in Eternal Sunshine is how it illuminates the way memory interacts with love. We more readily recall pleasure than pain,” Ebert wrote. Bismuth, Gondry, and Kaufman won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, and Winslet received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. A cult classic, it’s considered by many critics to be one of the best films of the 2000s. Kaufman was a past Ebertfest guest in 2010 with the first film he directed, Synecdoche, New York.

Matt Singer

Matthew Singer, author of Opposable Thumbs: How Siskel & Ebert Changed Movies Forever, will also be a special guest at the festival and will sign copies of his book. 

This year’s festival will be dedicated to film historian David Bordwell, a past Ebertfest guest and the Jacques Ledoux Professor Emeritus of Film Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and to Ebertfest’s namesake, Roger Ebert, on this milestone occasion of the festival’s 25th anniversary. Bordwell, who passed away on February 29, 2024, wrote the foreword for two of Ebert’s books, Awake in the Dark and The Great Movies III.

Please see previous 2024 press releases and ebertfest.com to get additional information about the filmmakers and musicians attending, including Michael Barker, Eric Roberts, Renee Elise Goldsberry , Lynn Whitfield, Malcolm D. Lee, Andrew Davis, Lisa Cortes, Christine Swanson, Michael Swanson, Larry Karazewski, Scott Alexander, Diane Moore, Rana Segal, Roderick Cox, Gingger Shankar, Richie Davis, and many more.

The final program schedule is:

Wednesday, April 17

6:30 p.m.—Star 80

 

Thursday, April 18

9:30 a.m.—Little Indian Girl Collective Panel

11 a.m.—Conducting Life / The Light of Truth: Richard Hunt’s Monument to Ida B. Wells (double short film presentation)

3 p.m.—Stony Island

8 p.m.—The Teachers’ Lounge

 

Friday, April 19

9 a.m.—Cookie’s Fortune

1:30 p.m.—Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind 

4:30 p.m.—Little Richard: I Am Everything

9:30 p.m.—The Best Man

 

Saturday, April 20

9:30 a.m.—Blackmail featuring the Anvil Orchestra

1 p.m.—Omoiyari: A Song Film by Kishi Bashi

4 p.m.—Albany Road

9 p.m.—Man on the Moon

 

Ebertfest passes are currently available to purchase online or by calling the box office at 217-356-9063. Individual festival passes to see all films cost $200, which includes reserved seating. New this year are 4-film passes for $70: choose between an Evening Pass or a Saturday Pass.

Roger Ebert was a Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times, University of Illinois journalism alumnus, and Urbana native. Ebertfest is a collaboration between his widow, Ebert Digital CEO Chaz Ebert, and the University of Illinois College of Media.

For additional information, please visit ebertfest.com and follow Ebertfest on social media:

To become a supporting Festival Sponsor please contact Molly Cornyn, the Festival Coordinator, at mcornyn2@illinois.edu.

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PRESS CONTACTS: 

Molly Cornyn, mcornyn2@illinois.edu, 217-333-1590