About Festival

Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal and Craig Hatkoff founded the Tribeca Film Festival in 2001, following the attacks on the World Trade Center. to spur the economic and cultural revitalization of lower Manhattan through an annual celebration of film, music, and culture. The Festival’s mission focuses on assisting filmmakers to reach the broadest possible audience, enabling the international film community and general public to experience the power of cinema, and promoting New York City as a major filmmaking center.

Since its founding, the festival has attracted over 2 million attendees from the U.S. and abroad and has generated more than $425 million in economic activity for New York City.

Back to Tribeca Fim Festival Index

Joshua Seftel-WAR INC.

Highlights:

In a return to the dark comic form he perfected in Grosse Pointe Blank, John Cusack stars as hit man Brand Hauser, hired by the former US vice president (who also happens to be the head of Tamerlane, a huge American conglomerate) to eliminate the CEO of a rival company competing for dominance in the fictional war-torn Middle Eastern country of Turaqistan. As the VP cheerfully explains, it's the first war to be 100 percent outsourced to private enterprise, and he's not about to let anything stand in the way of Tamerlane reaping the benefits of rebuilding the country it so expertly destroyed. Complications, however, ensue when a reporter (Marisa Tomei) arrives on the scene and begins to question the motives of Brand and his high-strung assistant Marsha (Joan Cusack). Adding to the chaos is the arrival of a Middle Eastern pop princess (Hilary Duff), whose impending nuptials to the son of a powerful local politician are set to be broadcast across the world as the centerpiece of Tamerlane's glittering PR campaign for Turaqistan. Partly inspired by the Naomi Klein article "Baghdad Year Zero," WAR,INC . is a humorous (and often scarily on-the-mark) send-up of war zone capitalism run amok. Cowritten and produced by John Cusack, the film can be seen as a darker, more political counterpart to Grosse Pointe, a barbed satire that does not shy away from showing the chaos of a world overrun by mega-corporations and saturated by 24-hour media outlets. --Genna Terranova, Tribeca Film Festival

Happenings:

Director Joshua Seftel (b. Schenectady, New York) has traveled to Romania, Bosnia, South Africa, Costa Rica, Iceland, and across the United States as a filmmaker. At age 22, he received his first Emmy nomination for his documentary Lost and Found (1991), about the plight of Romania's 120,000 orphaned and abandoned children. Seftel's subsequent films include Old Warrior (1994), Taking on the Kennedys (chosen by TIME as one the 10 best of 1996), and the HBO film Ennis' Gift (2001), made in memory of Bill Cosby's late son. His work has also appeared on Ira Glass' This American Life. Seftel's award-winning narrative film debut was the sharp, satirical short Breaking the Mold (2003).

You need to upgrade your Flash Player.  Click Here to download the latest version.

Watch other clips from this set