Mubi Sets Spring Theatrical Release For Amalia Ulman’s ‘Magic Farm’

EXCLUSIVE: Mubi will be rolling out the movie Magic Farm starring Chloë Sevigny, Alex Wolff and Camila del Campo exclusively April 25 in New York City at the Angelika with a further expansion May 2 in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Chicago and Washington, DC.

Mubi will also platform the pic in the top 15 markets on May 9 including Dallas, Houston, Austin, Seattle, Minneapolis, Atlanta, Miami and Portland, with further breaks in NYC and L.A. before going nationwide May 16. The UK will also debut May 16.

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We first told you that Mubi acquired the Amalia Ulman-directed movie ahead of its global premiere at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. The distributor is handling distribution in the UK and U.S. The Match Factory is selling international territories.

Chloë Sevigny in 'Magic Farm'
Chloë Sevigny in ‘Magic Farm’

Pic follows a film crew working for an edgy media company. They travel to Argentina to profile a local musician, but their ineptitude leads them into the wrong country. As the crew collaborates with locals to fabricate a trend, unexpected connections blossom while a pervasive health crisis looms unacknowledged in the background.

Ulman also wrote the pic, which is produced by Alex Hughes, Eugene Kotlyarenko and Riccardo Maddalosso. Magic Farm also recently played in Berlin. Joe Apollonio and Simon Rex also star.

Sevigny told us at Sundance, “I had known about Amalia from around downtown Manhattan, she was kind of infamous as this artist/ filmmaker… We had this amazing conversation and I just found her to be one of the brightest people I’d come across in a really long time and I think she’s influenced by so many different art forms. People toss around ‘esoteric’ but she really does have very specific interests and I was just really impressed with her as a person and I loved [Ulman’s previous film] El Planeta, I found it really inspiring and magical, and I thought she had a really unique voice, and so when she asked me to come on board for this, I was like, ‘Yes’ without even even reading it, just because I was so excited by her as an artist and as a filmmaker and then I read it and I was like, ‘Oh so I get to play the b*tch.’ So I had to come to peace with that and know that my character was bringing a little tension.”

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