Brooklyn Film Festival

  • 17th Brooklyn Film Festival Announces Feature Film Line-Up — Opening Night Films: World Premiere of TJ Misny’s “Intimate Semaphores” & NY Premiere of Leah Meyerhoff’s “I Believe in Unicorns”

      I Believe in Unicorns I Believe in Unicorns

    Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF), the largest and longest running festival in Brooklyn and the oldest international competitive festival in New York, announced its feature film line-up for its 2014 festival, themed FORMULA, comprised of bold, brave and unique indie films and new discoveries, many from first-time feature filmmakers from Brooklyn and beyond. The event will run from May 30 through June 8 in Williamsburg at indieScreen (289 Kent Avenue) and Windmill Studios NYC (287 Kent Avenue). The festival will present over 100 film premieres from around the world, selected from over 2,000 submissions. Tickets will be available soon for advanced purchase online.

    BFF presents two Opening Night films: The World Premiere of T.J. Misny’s Intimate Semaphores, a collection of three short stories starring today’s great new acting talents including Kate Lyn Sheil (“Sun Don’t Shine”), Ariane Labed (“Attenberg”), Jocelin Donahue (“House of the Devil”) and featuring rising comics Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson of “Broad City,” and Sasheer Zamata from “Saturday Night Live”; and the New York Premiere of Leah Meyerhoff’s I Believe in Unicorns, the story of an imaginative teenage girl who runs away from home with an older boy, starring Natalia Dyer and Peter Vack as the star-crossed teens, and featuring Julia Garner (“We Are What We Are”) and Amy Seimetz (“Upstream Color”).

    Narrative Features highlights include the World Premiere of Brooklyn filmmakers Alexis and Bodine Boling’s Sci-Fi drama Movement and Location, which is Seed & Spark’s first narrative feature film to go from crowdfunding to festival premiere, and the World Premiere of Brendan Gibbons’ Occupy Wall Street comedy Preoccupied. From outside the USA, the festival will present the New York Premiere of BFF alumni Wojtek Smarzowski’s Polish box-office smash Traffic Department, and Slamdance award winner’s Rezeta and Copenhagen.

    The Documentary Features line-up highlights include the New York Premiere of Born to Fly, Catherine Gund’s portrait of Brooklyn-based choreographer Elizabeth Streb; the New York Premiere of Who Took Johnny by Suki Hawley, Michael Galinsky and David Beilinson – 2011 BFF alumni for Battle from Brooklyn, and fresh off their Hot Docs premieres in Canada, the U.S. Premieres of Tony Shaff’s Hotline and Nantenaina Lova’s The Malagasy Way. For the first time, BFF will also present awards in a Documentary Shorts competition.

    BFF Executive Director Marco Ursino said of the 2014 edition, “Our theme this year deals with an enigma: Is there a winning Formula to communicate with the audience and ultimately create a successful independent film? We ponder this complex question by thinking about the chemistry that might ultimately achieve such a formula. Do formulas apply exclusively to big budget filmmaking, are there formulas for independent filmmakers, and is there such a thing as formula-free filmmaking? How does a project preserve its independent spirit when the story is told by adopting proven storytelling formulas? And what has the independent film movement done in recent years to adapt new methods of filmmaking? We encourage our filmmakers, audiences, industry guests, Brooklyn, all New Yorkers and the rest of the world to stir the ingredients in this potent and perplexing formula.”

    BFF will award the winners with prizes totaling over $50,000 in film services and products. Prizes include a seven-day theatrical release at indieScreen for the Best Narrative Feature and Best Documentary award winners, and for the first time as well for the Best Narrative Short and Best Documentary Short. 

    BFF’s prestigious alumni have gone on to garner both critical acclaim and nationwide distribution. A record number of films from the 2013 edition went on to receive U.S. theatrical releases. These include Jeremy O’Keefe’s Best Narrative Feature Winner Somewhere Slow, Nathan Silver’s Soft in the Head, and Jeffrey Karoff’s Cavedigger, which went on to receive a 2014 Oscar Nomination for Best Documentary Short. Other BFF alumni include: Suki Hawley and Michael Galinsky’s Battle for Brooklyn (shortlisted for a 2011 Academy Award nomination); Katie Dellamaggiore’s Brooklyn Castle (2013 nationwide broadcast on PBS’ P.O.V.); and Kelly Anderson’s My Brooklyn (a successful DIY release in 2013), amongst many more. Numerous films from the Brooklyn Film Festival have gone on to be nominated for and win awards by both the American and British Academy Awards.

    After last year’s successful “Expand Your View” campaign, TBWA returns as a sponsor for BFF with a brand new promotional campaign to be announced soon. “TBWA partners with Brooklyn Film Festival because we support creativity and giving filmmakers a platform to feature their disruptive ideas, creativity and perspective not necessarily following any mainstream rules,” said Lizzie Dewhurst, TBWA Communications Manager. “Expand Your View” was recognized by the prestigious Webby Awards with two 2014 nominations on the categories of Social: Best Use of Video and Mobile & Apps: Integrated Mobile Experience.

    For the third year in a row, the festival will continue its BFF Exchange aimed ultimately at connecting filmmakers with film distributors. BFF Exchange will be staged at indieScreen on June 7, and will feature a pitch session and a “distribution” panel. On Saturday, May 31 at indieScreen, BFF will present the 10th annual kidsfilmfest, which aims to discover, expose and promote children’s filmmakers while drawing worldwide attention to Brooklyn.

     Narrative Features (in alphabetical order):

     

    Copenhagen (Canada) Dir. Mark Raso – New York Premiere

    (Winner – Audience Award at the 2014 Slamdance Film Festival)

    After weeks of traveling through Europe the immature William finds himself at crossroads in Copenhagen. Copenhagen is not just another European city for William; it is also the city of his father’s birth. When fourteen-year-old Effy befriends the thirty-year-old William they set off on an adventure to uncover his family’s sordid past. 

     

    The Girls on Liberty Street (USA) Dir. John Rangel – East Coast Premiere

    (Official Selection, Chicago International Film Festival)

    Her boyfriend is pulling away. Her sister is growing up too fast. Her brother is falling under a bad influence. Her friends have plans that don’t include her. With one week before she ships off for basic training, Brianna finds herself trying to make sure home will be the same place when she returns. 

     

    I Believe in Unicorns (USA) Dir. Leah Meyerhoff – New York Premiere
    (Nominated, SXSW Grand Jury Award, Narrative Feature. BFF Alumni for Twitch and Team Queen)

    A teenage girl avoids caring for her disabled mother by running away with an older boy in a whirlwind of romance and adventure. As their new relationship turns abusive, she attempts to retreat to a fantasy world but ultimately must learn to face her stark reality and reconnect with the world she left behind. Not even unicorns can save her now.

     

    The Impeccables [Kusursuzlar] (Turkey) Dir. Ramin Matin – U.S. Premiere
    (Winner – Best Film, Best Director & Special Jury Award at Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival) 

    Two sisters in their early thirties find themselves isolated in the Aegean summer cottage of their childhood, where they must deal with their uneasy sibling relationship and confront their devastating recent past.

     

    Intimate Semaphores (USA) – Dir. T.J. Misny – World Premiere

    A collection of three short stories. Each story is a surreal and darkly comic exploration of creative expression and how our artistic impulses have the power to unite us or alienate us. “Helberger In Paradise” stars Kate Lyn Sheil as a New Yorker who returns to her hometown to make good on an anarchistic promise to a deceased lover. “High And Dry” stars Ariane Labed as a privileged street photographer who suspects that her declining eyesight might have disturbing psychological implications. In “The Crumb of It,” a struggling comedian (Jocelin Donahue) and rising star pastry chef (Chioke Nassor) find that their creative pursuits threaten to sabotage their new relationship.

     

    Menthol (USA) Dir. Micah Van Hove – New York Premiere

    (Official Selection, Santa Barbara International Film Festival)

    Four male twenty-somethings spend 24 hours reliving their high school glory days. The drugs, video games, and boozing end in a moment of terrible violence, forcing them to bury their guilt in this bleak and unflinching portrait of 21st Century nihilism. 

     

    Movement and Location (USA) Dir. Alexis Boling – World Premiere

    (Seed & Spark’s first narrative feature film to go from crowdfunding to festival premiere.)

    Kim Getty is an immigrant from 400 years in the future, sent back in time to live out an easier life in Brooklyn. It’s a one-way trip of difficult isolation, but in the three years since she landed, Kim has built a life that feels almost satisfying. She has a full time job, shares an apartment with a roommate, and is falling in love. But when she stumbles on a teenage girl who is also from the future, Kim’s remade sense of self is tested. 

     

    My Blind Heart [Mein Blindes Herz] (Austria) Dir. Peter Brunner – East Coast Premiere

    (Nominated, Tiger Award, Rotterdam International Film Festival)

    Kurt suffers from the rare Marfan syndrome and is almost blind. After killing his mother, he goes on a journey where the boundaries between perpetrator and victim are blurred. Haunted by her calls, Kurt leaves his assisted living home in distress. Taking to the streets, he meets Conny, a 13-year-old runaway from a broken home. She readily participates in Kurt’s protest against his body, not knowing what moves him or into which abyss his journey is leading.

     

    Paradise Cruise (Israel) Dir. Matan Guggenheim – U.S. Premiere
    (Winner, Audience Award at Israel Film Festival in Paris, BFF Alumni for Crickets)

    Dora spends her time photographing Israeli military funerals and commemoration ceremonies. She is trying to capture the face of a soldier that haunts her. When she meets Yossi, a rebellious young man just out of military service, they begin to fall in love. They have an unwritten contract to never speak of their past. But they cannot escape, and their love is put to the ultimate test in this neo-noir drama.

     

    Preoccupied (USA) Dir. Brendan Gibbons – World Premiere

    Two New York investment bankers attempt to shut down the Occupy Wall Street protests of 2011, creating their own counter movement called Bankers Unite. But if this is what the ‘One Percent’ looks like, it may be time to get out of the market. 

     

    Rezeta (Mexico) Dir. Gerardo Gatica – East Coast Premiere
    (Winner – Grand Jury Prize, Best Narrative Feature at Slamdance Film Festival)

    Rezeta is a 21-year-old model born in Albania who arrives in Mexico after making a living out of her beauty all around the globe. She soon meets Alex, a tattooed musician who cleans up the trailer where she waits during a commercial photo shoot. They quickly become friends, and then their relationship becomes something more. This is the story of their complicated romance, set against a backdrop of bands, parties and everyday life in modern Mexico.

     

    Traffic Department [Drogówka] (Poland) Dir. Wojtek Smarzowski – New York Premiere
    (Winner – Best Supporting Actor & Best Screenplay at Polish Film Awards, BFF Alumni for Rose and The Dark House)

    Seven friends, officers of the Warsaw’s traffic police department, are leading seemingly fulfilled lives. They work together, party together, together they play jokes, cut small deals and sport fast cars. Their small world gets rocked when one of them is found murdered. Sargent Król becomes a chief suspect in the case. He manages to escape arrest and as a fugitive tries to prove his innocence. Slowly he begins to uncover a corruption scheme, which points towards high circles of authority in police and politics. 

     

    Victoriana (USA) Dir. Jadrien Steele – East Coast Premiere

    (Winner – New Vision Award at Cinequest San Jose Film Festival, BFF Alumni for Just Make Believe)

    When Sophie Becker convinces her husband Tim, a struggling author, to invest her inheritance in a Victorian townhouse in Brooklyn, what begins as a classic American dream turns into a Dostoyevskian nightmare. After Sophie is involved in a fatal accident, the couple is faced with financial ruin, and must make a fateful decision that not only attracts the attention of the police, but also reveals long-hidden truths about themselves and their marriage.

     

    Documentary Features (in alphabetical order):

     

    Born to Fly (USA) Dir. Catherine Gund – New York Premiere

    (BORN TO FLY will have a week-long theatrical release starting Sept. 10 at Film Forum. ***All full reviews and interviews are embargoed till the theatrical release***)

    Born to Fly harnesses the thrill and energy of Elizabeth Streb’s Brooklyn-based STREB Extreme Action Company. Inter-cutting archival footage from decades of STREB performances with verité moments between Streb, her partner Laura and their collaborators, the documentary follows Streb over the course of a year as she reflects on her influences, evolution, and inventions, all while preparing for her greatest public performance.

     

    Boy Saloum (France) Dir. Audrey Gallet – U.S. Premiere

    They are thirty years old. They have fire in their bellies. They have charisma. In 2011, a few young Senegalese rappers created a social movement called Y’en A Marre (Enough Is Enough). Little did they know that their protest against an oppressive regime would bring about an epic encounter with history. Boy Saloum is their story, an intimate portrait of Senegalese culture as a country fights for its rights.

     

    Glena (USA) Dir. Alan Luebke – New York Premiere

    (Nominated, Grand Jury Prize, Best Documentary Feature at Slamdance Film Festival)

    Glena was living the American Dream: successful career, two happy children, long-term relationship, and a beautiful family home. Then one day, with no background or training, she decided to give cage fighting a try.

     

    Hotline (USA) Dir. Tony Shaff – U.S. Premiere

    (Official Selection, Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, 2013 BFF Exchange Pitch Panel alumni)

    ‘Hotline’ is a feature-length documentary about the intense connections made between strangers over the telephone, and explores these anonymous conversations that people are often too hesitant to have with those closest to them. From crisis centers to psychics and sex workers, this documentary eavesdrops on the inner-workings of hotlines and puts faces to the voice on the other end of the line.

     

    Jeepney (Philippines/USA) Dir. Esy Casey – East Coast Premiere

    (Nominated, Jury Award, Best Documentary at San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival)

    JEEPNEY visualizes the richly diverse cultural and social climate of the Philippines through its most popular form of mass transportation: vividly decorated ex-WWII military jeeps. The film follows jeepney artists, drivers, and passengers, whose stories take place amidst nationwide protest against oil price hikes that pressure drivers to work overseas to earn a living.

     

    The Malagasy Way (Madagascar) Dir. Nantenaina Lova – U.S. Premiere

    (Official Selection, Hot Docs Canadian International Film Festival)

    The Malagasy Way is a poetic, proverb-packed tour of an alternative way of life central to Madagascar’s culture and society. Rejecting the waste and overconsumption that plague Western nations, the film examines how the people of Madagascar have embraced a conservationist lifestyle of recycling, repurposing and self-reliance in the midst of a global economic crisis, using ingenuity, not underdevelopment, as their inspiration.

     

    No Burqas Behind Bars (Sweden) Dir. Nima Sarvestani – East Coast Premiere

    (Nominated, Dragon Award, Best Nordic Documentary, Göteborg Film Festival)

    Takhar Prison. 40 women. 34 children. Four cells. No burqas. This documentary takes viewers inside one of the world’s most restricted environments: an Afghan women’s prison. Through the prisoners’ own stories, it explore how ‘moral crimes’ are used to control women in post-Taliban Afghanistan, a society where women are normally faceless.

     

    Unplugged [Anplagd] (Serbia and Montenegro/Finland) Dir. Mladen Kovacevic – East Coast Premiere

    ‘Unplugged’ is an existential allegory about music played on tree leaves, humorously rattling between the most primitive of instruments and the most universal escapism of music. Music has rarely been so offbeat. 

     

    Who Took Johnny (USA) Dir. David Beilinson, Suki Hawley and Michael Galinsky – New York Premiere

    (Winner, Jury Award at Chicago Underground Film Festival & Special Jury Award at Newport Beach Film Festival. 2011 BFF Alumni, Battle for Brooklyn)

    Who Took Johnny examines the infamous thirty-year-old cold case behind the disappearance of Iowa paperboy Johnny Gosch, the first missing child to appear on a milk carton. It traces the heartbreaking story of Johnny’s mother, Noreen Gosch, and her relentless quest to find the truth about what happened to her son when he never returned from his morning paper route.

     

     

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  • “SOMEWHERE SLOW” and “WITHOUT SHEPHERDS” Win Brooklyn Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_4031" align="alignnone" width="550"]SOMEWHERE SLOW[/caption]

    The Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF) under the theme MAGNETIC which ran from May 31 through June 9, 2013 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NYC, at indieScreen and for the first time at Windmill Studios NYC came to a close last night with a ceremony honoring the winning films.  SOMEWHERE SLOW directed by Jeremy O’Keefe won the award for Best Narrative Feature, and WITHOUT SHEPHERDS directed by Cary McClelland won the award for Best Documentary. The prizes for Best Narrative Feature and Best Documentary Feature award winners include a seven-day theatrical release at indieScreen in Brooklyn, New York.

    GRAND CHAMELEON AWARD:

    [caption id="attachment_4100" align="alignnone" width="550"]Without Shepherds[/caption]

    Cary McClelland for Without Shepherds

    BEST IN CATEGORY:

    Narrative Feature – Jeremy O’Keefe for Somewhere Slow
    Documentary – Cary McClelland for Without Shepherds
    Short Subject – David Figueroa García for Scoundrels (Ratitas)
    Animation –  Tomasz Popakul for Ziegenort
    Experimental – Eduardo Menz for A Film Portrait on Reconstructing 12 Possibilities that Preceded the Disappearance of Zoe Dean Drum

    AUDIENCE AWARDS:

    Documentary – Amy Finkel for Furever
    Narrative Feature – Dan Eberle for Cut to Black
    Animation – Rachel Salomon O’Meara for The Course
    Experimental – Timothy Ziegler For Baldr
    Short Subject – Max Sherwood for Nervous Person

    CERTIFICATES OF ACHIEVEMENT:

    Best New Director – Nicole Gomez Fisher for Sleeping With The Fishes
    Best Producer – James E. Duff & Julia Morrison for Hank And Asha
    Best Screenplay – Adam Weirbianski for HairBrained
    Best Cinematography – Polly Morgan for Emanuel and The Truth About Fishes
    Best Editing – Lindsay Lindenbaum & Nadav Kurtz for Scattered
    Best Original Score – Slavomir Kowalewski for Sado Tempest
    Best Actor (Female) – Sheila Etxeberría for Soft In The Head
    Best Actor (Male) – Alex Wolff for HairBrained

    SPIRIT AWARDS:

    Narrative Feature – Enrique Alvarez for Giraffes
    Documentary – Inigo Westmeier for Dragon Girls
    Short Subject – Connor Hurley for The Naturalist
    Experimental – Carlo Sampietro for Tambourine Buttocks
    Animation – Susanna Nicchiarelli for Live Bait

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  • Amy Finkel Explores Handling the Loss of A Pet in FUREVER at the Brooklyn Film Festival

    Amy Finkel’s documentary film “FUREVER” is an official selection at the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival. FUREVER explores the dimensions of grief people experience over the loss of a pet. The film features interviews from grieving pet owners, veterinarians, psychologists, sociologists, religious scholars, neuroscientists, and the many professionals who preserve a pet’s body or re-purpose a pet’s remains in unique ways  including taxidermy, cloning, mummification, and freeze-drying. Considering that Amy made a documentary about four-string jazz banjo culture entitled “Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart: The Banjomaniacs of Guthrie,”  we wanted to know how did she end up making a documentary about a pet’s last rites.

    We connected with Amy at the Brooklyn Film Festivals in her hometown, Brooklyn, New York, with lots of questions and she provided us with lots of answers.  

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on FUREVER being an official selection in the 2013 Brooklyn International Film Festival? How does it feel?

    Amy Finkel: Thanks! It’s wonderful! The FUREVER screenings thus far have all been in other faraway cities, so I’d been hoping for a great hometown screening, and this is, of course, it. I was really excited for my friends to get to see the film; many have helped me so much on it over the years. And I just adore all of the people who run the Brooklyn Film Festival, so it’s been fantastic.

    VIMOOZ: Am I correct – you are a New Yorker…and live in Brooklyn?

    Amy Finkel: I do indeed. In Boerum Hill — the same apartment for 15 years now!

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about the film?

    Amy Finkel: It’s called FUREVER and it’s a feature-length documentary about pet loss, the dimensions of grief people experience when they lose a pet, the sociological evolution of pets in our culture, and the myriad ways we choose to memorialize our pets when they pass away.

    FUREVER features interviews with grieving pet owners, veterinarians, psychologists, sociologists, religious scholars, neuroscientists, and the many professionals who preserve a pet’s body for their devastated clientele, or re-purpose a pet’s cremains in unique ways (taxidermy, cloning, mummification, freeze-drying, and many more), FUREVER confronts contemporary trends, perspectives, and relevant cultural assumptions regarding attachment, religion, ritual, grief, and death, and studies the bonds that form between humans and animals, both psychological and physiological.

    VIMOOZ: What was in your opinion, the most outlandish (if I dare use that word) pet memorial you’ve seen while filming the documentary or in general?

    Amy Finkel: Hmmm…at this point I’m pretty desensitized to it all. I think dog cloning is the most extreme, because it’s the most expensive ($100,000) and you can only do it in South Korea (fewer animal welfare organizations there). Plus many people who choose that option truly believe they’re cheating death. It’s also the most technologically advanced. But it’s funny to me what people think of as extreme. I did an interview with someone in the film who freeze-dried his pet, and he finds the idea of having a pet’s ashes on a mantelpiece unbelievably distasteful. As far as actual physical memorials go, for me, the most outlandish were always those that were the most kitsch. I adored one that was an elaborate silver memorial of a dog urinating on a fire hydrant. While it wasn’t working when we were there, after speaking with the pet cemetery where I found it, they said it’s usually a working fountain.

    VIMOOZ: How did you come up with the idea for FUREVER?

    Amy Finkel: We had many types of animals growing up and I became very attached to them over the years. My parents were huge advocates of animal rescue, so we ended up with all sorts: anoles, rats, dogs, budgies, gerbils, etc.  And no matter what the species, I found that I became unbelievably attached to each of them. As a result, I had a very tough time letting go. So when I read the article about people freeze-drying their pets several years ago, I was fascinated by what it was about keeping the body of a dead animal in a lively-looking state that was offering so much comfort to the devastated pet owners. How was it not a constant reminder that their pet was gone? Where did they think the soul had gone, if they believed in that (which I suspected they did)? That was not a discussion in my atheist household growing up. But—and I should mention that I’m not particularly judgmental in general—I never assumed they were crazy, as many do. I totally understood their level of attachment and their inability to let go; I simply didn’t understand why it would offer them comfort. I thought it was peculiar, and potentially destructive psychologically if there were a disconnect there (feeling as though their pet was still alive), but I tried to go into it with an open mind. Freeze-drying certainly would not have offered comfort to me. But I’d often wondered why I was getting so attached to my animals; whether it was projection or perhaps being less tolerant of humans than animals (I did have a lot of human friends growing up too). I figured there had to be some physiological component, which is why I put a whole segment in the film about the biology of the human-animal bond. But yes, for some reason freeze-drying was the perfect jumping off point for an inquiry of all of these questions, and an exploration of grief in general, so I set off to investigate.

    VIMOOZ: Are you a pet owner? If yes, what pets do you own? If not, why not?

    Amy Finkel: I’m afraid that my (rent-controlled) apartment doesn’t allow pets, so I don’t have one. But I’m huge animal lover. If I could have a dog now, I would in a heartbeat. Luckily, I have numerous surrogate dogs in the neighborhood, so I do get my fix here and there.

    That said, I do, actually, have some freeze-dried and taxidermied animals: Chompers, my groundhog, Fleischesser, my armadillo, and angel, my wild boar. One of my subjects, Mac, gave them to me as thank you gifts for making his website. I feel a bit uneasy knowing that they, likely, did not die of natural causes, nor, unlike the boar, did anyone eat their meat, so it makes me feel better to treat them in death with the dignity and respect they never received in life. They get frequent positive affirmations and simulated food offerings. You know, for that extra dose of anthropomorphic affection (with a chaser of projection). Chompers and Angel spend time with me in my living room, and Fleischesser lives in my office, positioned so that he may stare in perpetuity at a gorgeous old mannequin whose arms frequently fall off, as an homage to his species’ leprotic leanings.

    VIMOOZ: Would you/have you ever created a pet memorial? Would you consider it?

    Amy Finkel: We always buried our small animals in the backyard or cremated our larger ones (I keep their ashes now). At this point, I’ve of course, seen all that can be done with a deceased pet. Most of the memorials would be cost prohibitive for me and wouldn’t offer me much comfort, but I love Jessica Joslin’s articulated skeleton work (not sure I’d be able to do that with a pet, but I do think her work is beautiful). I can absolutely imagine pressing the ashes of a pet into a vinyl record (“And Vinyly”). I love that option. I love a lot of the options — I vetted all of the businesses in the film; all of the company owners are really great people who mean well and are by no means simply trying to exploit pet owners at a time when they’re most vulnerable.  

    VIMOOZ: What do you want viewers to take away from watching the documentary?

    Amy Finkel: I’m hoping that the stigma attached to grieving the loss of a pet can be removed.

    VIMOOZ: By the way who came up with the name for the film?

    Amy Finkel: My friend, Laura Pence! I told her that I wanted to call it “Forever” (I’m pretty sure we were pretty tipsy at the time), and she cracked up and said, “FUR-ever!” She thought she was making a joke, but I knew immediately that there was no other title but that.

    VIMOOZ: What’s next for Furever?

    Amy Finkel: We’re currently working out our distribution plans — check the fureverfilm.com website in the next few weeks for details about that. And we’re doing the film festival route for the next year (we started two months ago).

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  • Brooklyn Film Festival Announces Lineup for 2013 Festival, themed MAGNETIC; Opens with HairBrained

    [caption id="attachment_3871" align="alignnone" width="550"](USA) Dir. Billy Kent[/caption]

    Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF) announced the film line-up for its 2013 festival, themed MAGNETIC, scheduled to run from May 31 through June 9 in Brooklyn, New York. The festival will open with Festival alumnus Billy Kent’s HairBrained starring starring Brendan Fraser, Alex Wolff, Julia Garner and Parker Posey. In the film, 14-year old genius/outcast Eli Pettifog (Wolff) is rejected from Harvard, he ends up at Ivy-League wannabe Whittman College. It’s hate at first sight. Eli’s 41-year-old dorm mate Leo (Fraser), a former gambler whose world has imploded, has dropped out of life to enroll in college. This odd duo become unlikely friends.

    Opening Night Film:

    HairBrained (USA) Dir. Billy Kent – World Premiere
    Brooklyn Film Festival alumnus Billy Kent (The Oh In Ohio – BFF 2006 Audience Award) returns with his latest feature film HairBrained, a madcap coming-of-age comedy filmed in New York and starring Brendan Fraser, Alex Wolff, Julia Garner and Parker Posey. When 14-year old genius/outcast Eli Pettifog (Wolff) is rejected from Harvard, he ends up at Ivy-League wannabe Whittman College. It’s hate at first sight. Eli’s 41-year-old dorm mate Leo (Fraser), a former gambler whose world has imploded, has dropped out of life to enroll in college. This odd duo become unlikely friends. 

    Closing Night Film:

    Cut to Black (USA) Dir. Dan Eberle – World Premiere
    BFF 2008 alumnus Dan Eberle (The Local) , writes, produces, directs and stars as a disgraced ex-cop hired by a wealthy former friend to rid his estranged daughter Jessica of a stalker. Shot in lavish black and white tones, Cut to Black is a gorgeous cinematic tribute to classic noir, set against stark, gritty urban modernity. 

    Narrative Feature Highlights:

    Detonator(USA) Dir. Damon Maulucci & Keir Politz – East Coast Premiere 
    Starring Lawrence Levine, Joe Swanberg, Sophia Takal, Ben Fine and Robert Longstreet
    A story of revenge and deceit over the course of one long night in Philadelphia when Sully, the former frontman of a prominent Philly punk band, confronts his troubled past. With Brooklyn Film Fest alumns Lawrence Levine and Sophia Takal (2010 Best Feature – Gabi on the Roof in July).

    Somewhere Slow(USA) Dir. Jeremy O’Keefe – East Coast Premiere
    Jessalyn Gilsig – from ‘Glee’ and ‘Vikings’ – gives a fearless performance as a woman on the 
    edge in this intimate, raw and at times funny tale of two unlikely outlaws fleeing from life on a 
    road trip through New England.

    Flying Blind (UK) Dir. Katarzyna Klimkiewicz – New York Premiere
    A passionate post 9/11 love story of an older woman with a younger Muslim man in a world 
    where security is paramount and nothing is what it seems. A timely exploration that raises 
    questions about the new reality of drone strikes and urban terror plots. 

    Sleeping with the Fishes (USA) Dir. Nicole Gomez Fisher – World Premiere
    Brooklyn filmmaker Nicole Gomez Fisher tells the story of Alexis Fish (Gina Rodriguez), a 
    woman whose life as she once knew it no longer exists. After the death of her cheating husband, 
    Alexis returns home to pick up the pieces.

    Narrative Feature Line-Up (In Alphabetical Order):

    A Wife Alone (USA) Dir. Justin Reichman – World Premiere
    Black Out (The Netherlands) Dir. Arne Toonen – East Coast Premiere
    Cut to Black (USA) Dir. Dan Eberle – World Premiere
    Detonator (USA) Dir. Damon Maulucci & Keir Porlitz – East Coast Premiere
    Emmanuel and the Truth About Fishes (USA) Dir. Francesca Gregorini – East Coast Premiere
    Giraffes (Jirafas) (Cuba) Dir. Enrique Álvarez – USA Premiere
    HairBrained (USA) Dir. Billy Kent – World Premiere
    Hank and Asha (USA) Dir. James E. Duff – East Coast Premiere
    Sado Tempest (Japan) Dir. John Williams – East Coast Premiere
    Sleeping with the Fishes (USA) Dir. Nicole Gomez Fisher – World Premiere
    Soft in the Head (USA) Dir. Nathan Silver – New York Premiere
    Somewhere Slow (USA) Dir. Jeremy O’Keefe – East Coast Premiere

    Documentary Feature Highlights:

    Dragon Girls(Germany) Dir. Inigo Westmeier – USA Premiere
    Winner, 2013 Hot Docs Best International Feature Dragon Girls tells the story of three Chinese girls training to become martial arts experts far away from their families and homes. Their intense daily regimen takes place at the Shaolin Kung Fu School, located right next to the Shaolin Monastery in central China, where Kung Fu originated.

    Mr. Angel (USA) Dir. Dan Hunt – New York Premiere

    Buck Angel was born female yet knew he was male on the inside. This intimate documentary follows him for six years, tracing his aspirations to become a porn star. A moving story about universal lessons of acceptance, which also challenges our notions of gender and sexuality. Without Shepherds(Pakistan) Dir. Cary McClelland – New York Premiere A rare and essential glimpse into the turbulent reality of Pakistan today, following six Pakistanis who are navigating different aspects of society, including Imran Khan – a former cricket star who is now competing in the first national election in ten years.

    Furever(USA) Dir. Amy Finkel – New York Premiere
    Brooklyn filmmaker Amy Finkel explores the growing world of pet memorials, where grieving pet owners engage in taxidermy, cloning, mummification, freeze-drying, and many other methods to keep the memory of their pet alive.

    Documentary Line-Up (In Alphabetical Order):

    Ben: In the Mind’s Eye (USA) Dir. Iva Radivojevic – New York Premiere
    Caffe Capri (USA) Dir. Casimir Nozkowski – World Premiere
    Cavedigger (USA) Dir. Jeffrey Karoff – East Coast
    Dragon Girls (Germany) Dir. Inigo Westmeier – USA Premiere
    Exit Point (Poland) Dir. Jagoda Szelc – USA Premiere
    Eternal Amazon (Brazil) Dir. Belisario Franca – USA Premiere
    Forbidden Voices (Switzerland) Dir. Barbara Miller – New York Premiere
    Furever (USA) Dir. Amy Finkel – New York Premiere
    Glass Eyes of Locust Bayou (Canada) Dir. Simon Mercer – USA Premiere
    A Hole in the Sky (France) Dir. Antonio Tibaldi & Àlex Lora Cercós – USA Premiere
    Miles & War (Germany/Switzerland) Dir. Anne Thoma – USA Premiere
    Mr. Angel (USA) Dir. Dan Hunt – New York Premiere
    Not For Sale (USA) Dir. Matthew C. Levy – New York Premiere
    The Real Motel Life (USA) Dir. Winnie Cheung – World Premiere
    Rogalik (Poland) Dir. Pawel Ziemilski – USA Premiere
    Scattered (USA) Dir. Lindsay Lindenbaum – USA Premiere
    Venom & Fire (USA) Dir. Brandon Faris – USA Premiere
    Without Shepherds (Pakistan) Dir. Cary McClelland – New York Premiere

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  • Dear Mandela Leads The Winners of 2012 Brooklyn Film Festival

    The Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF) announced the winners for its annual festival, themed DECOY. The competitive event ran from June 1 through June 10 at indieScreen in Williamsburg and Brooklyn Heights Cinema.

    Winners were chosen from 104 film premieres that were selected from over 2,000 submissions coming from 111 countries. This year, BFF featured more than 30 New York City based film directors with over a dozen projects shot in Brooklyn.

    Through the resources of industry-related sponsors, the Brooklyn Film Festival awarded the 2012 winners with a total of $57,000 in prizes and film services. 

     

    GRAND CHAMELEON AWARD

    DEAR MANDELA by Dara Kell & Christopher Nizza

     

    Best Narrative Feature

    OLD DOG by Pema Tseden

     

    Best Documentary

    DEAR MANDELA by Dara Kell & Christopher Nizza

     

    Best Narrative Short

    CHEAP EXTERMINATION by Minka Farthing-kohl

     

    Best Animation

    THE MAKING OF LONGBIRD by Will Anderson

     

    Best Experimental

    MOVE by John Graham

     

    Best New Director 

    BROOKLYN CASTLE by Katie Dellamaggiore 

     

    Spirit Awards

    Feature Narrative: GEORGE THE HEDGEHOG by W. Wawszczyk, J. Tarkowski, T. Lesniak

    Documentary: [S]COMPARSE by Antonio Tibaldi

    Short Narrative: PIGEON KICKER by Daniel Long

    Experimental: PLACES OTHER PEOPLE HAVE LIVED by Laura Yilmaz

    Animation: WE, THE MASSES by Eoghan Kidne

     

    Audience Awards

    Feature Narrative: CAT SCRATCH FEVER by Lisa Duva

    Documentary: MY BROOKLYN by Kelly Anderson & GUT RENOVATION by Su Friedrich

    Short Narrative: NANI by Justin Tipping

    Experimental: SEA PAVILION by Marysia Makowska & Todd Somodevilla

    Animation: OLD MAN by Leah Shore

     

    Certificates of Outstanding Achievement

    Screenplay: TINA GHARAVI for I AM NASRINE

    Producer: CAITLYN COADY for PERCIVAL’S BIG NIGHT

    Cinematography: PIOTR SOBOCINSKI for ROSE

    Editing: LISA DUVA, KATHERINE NOLFI, BEN BROWN for CAT SCRATCH FEVER

    Original Score: ROBERT AIKI AUBREY LOWE for LAST KIND WORDS

    Actor Female: SARAH WHARTON for PERCIVAL’S BIG NIGHT

    Actor Male: BRYAN KAPLAN for FRAY

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  • 2011 Brooklyn Film Festival Winners; ‘Battle for Brooklyn’ is big winner

     

    [caption id="attachment_1458" align="alignnone" width="550"]Battle for Brooklyn [/caption]

    The Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF) announced the winners of this year’s festival held June 3 – June 12, 2011 at IndieScreen and Brooklyn Heights Cinema. Fittingly enough, a film about Brooklyn, ‘Battle For Brooklyn’ by Suki Hawley & Michael Galinsky took the Grand Chameleon Award and the award for Best Documentary.  BATTLE for BROOKLYN is an intensely intimate look at the very public and passionate fight waged by owners and residents facing condemnation of their property to make way for the controversial Atlantic Yards project, a massive plan to build 16 skyscrapers and a basketball arena for the New Jersey Nets in the heart of Brooklyn. Shot over seven years and compiled from almost 500 hours of footage, BATTLE for BROOKLYN is an epic tale of how far people will go to fight for what they believe in.

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    W Zappatore by Massimiliano Verdesca was the other big winner, taking the awards for Best Documentary and Best Actress for Sandra Milo. This hilarious, quirky Italian comedy explores the question: is it better to play the music of Satan or listen to the word of God? Marcello Zappatore is 33 years old. He earns a living by playing electric guitar in a Satanist heavy metal band. However, Marcello has a physical problem: an uncomfortable itch on the side of his rib cage that soon turns out to be stigmata. Is it divine intervention or just time for a change? Marcello does not know the answer, and the stigmata is causing him many problems. In one go, he loses his girlfriend and the flat they share, and is kicked out of his band. Marcello now finds himself ready to undertake a very personal voyage between two very different and incompatible worlds… that of God and that of Rock.

    2011 Brooklyn Film Festival winners:

    GRAND CHAMELEON AWARD
    BATTLE FOR BROOKLYN by Suki Hawley & Michael Galinsky

    Best Narrative Feature
    W. ZAPPATORE by Massimiliano Verdesca

    Best Documentary
    BATTLE FOR BROOKLYN by Suki Hawley & Michael Galinsky

    Best Narrative Short
    RITA by Antonio Piazza & Fabio Grassadonia

    Best Animation
    A MORNING STROLL by Grant Orchard

    Best Experimental
    DAME FACTORY by Melanie Abramov

    Best New Director
    SLAVA ROSS for Siberia Monamour

    Spirit Awards
    Feature Narrative
    Documentary
    Short Narrative
    Experimental
    Animation
    AMY GEORGE by Yonah Lewis & Calvin Thomas
    SCRAPPER by Stephan Wassmann
    GOWANUS 83 by Michael Wood
    TO BE IN ME by Marina Mello
    AMAR by Isabel Herguera
    Audience Awards
    Feature Narrative
    Documentary
    Short Narrative
    Experimental
    Animation
    DAVID by Joel Fendelman
    BED STUY DO OR DIE by Daniel Bishop
    TEARDROP by Damian John Harper
    POSE by Ivaylo Getov
    FALLING UP by Djuna Wahlrab
    Certificates of Outstanding Achievement
    Screenplay
    Producer
    Cinematography
    Editing
    Original Score
    Actor Female
    Actor Male
    ANNA KERRIGAN for Five Days Gone
    S. SCHAEFER, D. CRESPO, C. SILBER for My Last Day Without You
    MAGELA CROSIGNANI for Mary Marie
    TAKASHI DOSCHER for Snow on tha Bluff
    “FALL ON YOUR SWORD” for Aardvark
    MARIELENA LOGSDON for Babyland & SANDRA MILO for W. Zappatore
    RASSELAS LAKEW for The Athlete

     

     

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  • The US Premiere of Battle For Brooklyn to open 2011 Brooklyn Film Festival

    The US Premiere of Battle For Brooklyn, a controversial look at the Atlantic Yards project in Brooklyn will be the opening film event of 2011 Brooklyn Film Festival on June 3rd at Brooklyn Heights Cinemas at 8pm. The film will be also shown as a part of the Rooftop Films Summer Series on June 9th in Fort Greene Park. Prior to both Brooklyn screenings, the documentary will have its world premiere at the Toronto HotDocs festival on April 30th in Toronto, Canada. 

    “We are extremely excited to be working with such strong Brooklyn institutions that have supported us for over a decade,” said Directors Suki Hawley and Michael Galinski.

    “After searching for more than five years, graphic designer Daniel Goldstein finds the perfect place to call home in Brooklyn. Within months of moving in, however, he discovers that a new arena for the New Jersey Nets is slated to be built where his condo stands. The densest real estate development plan in US history, the Atlantic Yards project seeks to replace the existing neighborhood businesses and residences with 16 skyscrapers and a sports complex. Daniel becomes a reluctant activist when the government begins using eminent domain to force locals out, handing their property over to a private developer. Determined to fight back, Daniel participates in demonstrations, organizes meetings and gives media interviews and tours—anything to save his neighborhood. Spanning seven years, Battle for Brooklyn is the infuriating story of a greedy corporate Goliath and the new American way: corruption, bulldozing and corporate interests over citizen rights.”-Toronto Hot Docs

    Brooklyn Film Festival has received over 2,400 films from 111 countries of which 1,200 are US productions. The competitive event will run from June 3rd through June 12th at indieScreen, a brand new venue in Williamsburg, and the Brooklyn Heights Cinemas. The festival will present 120 film premieres and each film will be shown twice. The full festival lineup will be announced in May 2011.

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  • Brooklyn Film Festival 2010 Winners

    THE MINUTEMEN MOVIE by Corey Wascinski - Brooklyn Film Festival 2010 Winners
    THE MINUTEMEN MOVIE by Corey Wascinski

    GRAND CHAMELEON AWARD
    THE MINUTEMEN MOVIE by Corey Wascinski

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