LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE[/caption]
The 25th Hamptons International Film Festival today announced their award winners, with UNDER THE TREE, and LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE winning the top awards.
UNDER THE TREE directed by Hafsteinn Gunnar Sigurðsson won the Award for Best Narrative Feature. LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE, directed by Gustavo Salmerón, received the Award for Best Documentary Feature. DEKALB ELEMENTARY, directed by Reed Van Dyk, and EDITH+EDDIE, directed by Laura Checkoway, received the Award for Best Narrative Short Film and for Best Documentary Short Film, respectively.
COMMODITY CITY, directed by Jessica Kingdon, received an Honorable Mention for Documentary Short Film.
The Tangerine Entertainment Juice Fund Award was awarded to NOVITIATE, directed by Maggie Betts. This award honors an outstanding female narrative filmmaker.
WANDERLAND, directed by Josh Klausner, was awarded the Suffolk County Next Exposure Grant. This program supports the completion of high quality, original, director-driven, lowbudget independent films from both emerging and established filmmakers who have completed 50% of principal photography within Suffolk County. The film was awarded a $3,000 grant.
HONDROS, directed by Greg Campbell, was awarded the 2017 Brizzolara Family Foundation Award for a Film of Conflict and Resolution.
THE LAST PIG, directed by Allison Argo, was awarded the Zelda Penzel Giving Voice to the Voiceless Award. This award is presented to a film that raises public awareness about contemporary social issues, including the moral and ethical treatment and the rights of animals as well as environmental protection.
I AM EVIDENCE was presented with the Victor Rabinowitz & Joanne Grant Award for Social Justice. The award was presented to directors Trish Adlesic and Geeta Gandbhir & producer Mariska Hargitay on Sunday, October 8th. The annual award is handed to a film that exemplifies the values of peace, equality, global justice and civil liberties, and is named after iconic civil rights lawyer Victor Rabinowitz and his wife Joanne Grant, an author, filmmaker and journalist. The award, which is accompanied by a cash prize of $1,500, is named in honor of two people who spent their entire lives fighting for those values.
Film Festivals
-
UNDER THE TREE, and LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE Win 2017 Hamptons International Film Festival Awards
[caption id="attachment_25023" align="aligncenter" width="1022"]
LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE[/caption]
The 25th Hamptons International Film Festival today announced their award winners, with UNDER THE TREE, and LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE winning the top awards.
UNDER THE TREE directed by Hafsteinn Gunnar Sigurðsson won the Award for Best Narrative Feature. LOTS OF KIDS, A MONKEY AND A CASTLE, directed by Gustavo Salmerón, received the Award for Best Documentary Feature. DEKALB ELEMENTARY, directed by Reed Van Dyk, and EDITH+EDDIE, directed by Laura Checkoway, received the Award for Best Narrative Short Film and for Best Documentary Short Film, respectively.
COMMODITY CITY, directed by Jessica Kingdon, received an Honorable Mention for Documentary Short Film.
The Tangerine Entertainment Juice Fund Award was awarded to NOVITIATE, directed by Maggie Betts. This award honors an outstanding female narrative filmmaker.
WANDERLAND, directed by Josh Klausner, was awarded the Suffolk County Next Exposure Grant. This program supports the completion of high quality, original, director-driven, lowbudget independent films from both emerging and established filmmakers who have completed 50% of principal photography within Suffolk County. The film was awarded a $3,000 grant.
HONDROS, directed by Greg Campbell, was awarded the 2017 Brizzolara Family Foundation Award for a Film of Conflict and Resolution.
THE LAST PIG, directed by Allison Argo, was awarded the Zelda Penzel Giving Voice to the Voiceless Award. This award is presented to a film that raises public awareness about contemporary social issues, including the moral and ethical treatment and the rights of animals as well as environmental protection.
I AM EVIDENCE was presented with the Victor Rabinowitz & Joanne Grant Award for Social Justice. The award was presented to directors Trish Adlesic and Geeta Gandbhir & producer Mariska Hargitay on Sunday, October 8th. The annual award is handed to a film that exemplifies the values of peace, equality, global justice and civil liberties, and is named after iconic civil rights lawyer Victor Rabinowitz and his wife Joanne Grant, an author, filmmaker and journalist. The award, which is accompanied by a cash prize of $1,500, is named in honor of two people who spent their entire lives fighting for those values.
-
Niklaus Hilber’s PARADISE WAR Wins 3rd Filmmaker Award at Zurich Film Festival
Niklaus Hilber’s feature film project PARADISE WAR was presented with the third Filmmaker Award at the IWC gala dinner entitled ‘For the Love of Cinema’ at the 13th Zurich Film Festival.
“It’s a real honur for me to be here to present this prize. The Filmmaker Award plays an important role in bringing creative projects by Swiss filmmakers to the big screen,” said actor James Marsden who presented the Filmmaker Award at the IWC gala dinner. “The projects submitted this year were of such high quality and so diverse that it was again difficult for us to choose a winner,” continued CEO of IWC, Christoph Grainger-Herr, at the award ceremony.
This feature film, produced by Valentin Greutert, tells the eventful story of Swiss-born Bruno Manser, who spent many years in Malaysia. Here, he joined the indigenous Penan people in their non-violent battle against deforestation of the rainforest, which is home to many endangered species, including the orang-utan. Manser disappeared without trace during his last visit to the rainforest, and has remained missing to this day. Shooting of PARADISE WAR is scheduled to begin in the next few weeks.
The other nominees for the award were Bettina Oberli’s LE VENT TOURNE, produced by Pauline Gygax and Max Karli, and Simon Jaquemet’s DER UNSCHULDIGE, produced by Aurelius Eisenreich and Tolga Dilsiz. The two winning projects from last year – FORTUNA by Germinal Roaux and DAS BLUE NOTE PROJEKT by Sophie Huber – have since been completed and will soon be released internationally.
Image via Zurich Film Festival
-
13th Zurich Film Festival Awards – POP AYE, MACHINES and BLUE MY MIND Win Golden Eyes
[caption id="attachment_19942" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
MACHINES by Rahul Jainmac[/caption]
The 13th Zurich Film Festival has awarded their Golden Eyes to POP AYE by Kirsten Tan from Singapore for International Feature Film; MACHINES by Rahul Jain from India, Germany and Finland for International Documentary Film; and BLUE MY MIND by Lisa Brühlmann from Switzerland for Focus: Switzerland, Germany, Austria.
The Emerging Swiss Talent Award for a Swiss film went to AVANT LA FIN DE L’ÉTÉ / BEFORE SUMMER ENDS by Maryam Goormaghtigh (Switzerland, France) and the Critics’ Choice Award goes to BLUE MY MIND by Lisa Brühlmann (Switzerland).
The Audience Award went to A RIVER BELOW by Mark Grieco (Colombia, USA).
2017 Zurich Film Festival Awards
International Feature Film Competition
The 13th Zurich Film Festival’s Golden Eye for Best Film in the International Feature Film Competition category goes to: POP AYE by Kirsten Tan (Singapore) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ku1ZPsWqM0 A Special Mention goes to: JUSQU’À LA GARDE / CUSTODY by Xavier Legrand (France) UNDER THE TREE / UNDIR TRÉNU by Hafsteinn Gunnar Sigurdsson (Iceland, Denmark, Poland, Germany)International Documentary Film Competition
The 13th Zurich Film Festival’s Golden Eye for Best Film in the International Documentary Film Competition category goes to: MACHINES by Rahul Jain (India, Germany, Finland) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vm0gxjao36E A Special Mention goes to: DIE GENTRIFIZIERUNG BIN ICH. BEICHTE EINES FINSTERLINGS / I AM GENTRIFICATION. CONFESSIONS OF A SCOUNDREL by Thomas Haemmerli (Switzerland) AL OTRO LADO DEL MURO / THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WALL by Pau Ortiz (Spain, Mexico)Focus: Switzerland, Germany, Austria
The 13th Zurich Film Festival’s Golden Eye for Best Film in the Focus: Switzerland, Germany, Austria Competition category goes to: BLUE MY MIND by Lisa Brühlmann (Switzerland) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBijdXcd5hkEmerging Swiss Talent Award
The Emerging Swiss Talent Award for Best Swiss Film in the Festival Programme goes to: AVANT LA FIN DE L’ÉTÉ / BEFORE SUMMER ENDS by Maryam Goormaghtigh (Switzerland) A Special Mention goes to: TIERE / ANIMALS by Greg Zglinski (Switzerland, Austria, Poland) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIoHmGiSFvACritics’ Choice Award
The Swiss Association of Film Journalists (SVFJ) award their prize for Best Debut Feature Film in the Competition Section to: BLUE MY MIND by Lisa Brühlmann (Switzerland)Audience Award
Given to the best film from the three competition categories as chosen by viewers, the Audience Award goes to: A RIVER BELOW by Mark Grieco (Colombia, USA) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dm-P9Pi7gIKids Jury Award for Best Children’s Film
The Kids Jury gives their award to: UP IN THE SKY / UPP I DET BLÅ by Peter Lennstrand (Sweden)Audience Award for Best Children’s Film
The Audience Award for best film in the ZFF for Kids section as chosen by our young viewers goes to: DIE HÄSCHENSCHULE – JAGD NACH DEM GOLDENEN EI / RABBIT SCHOOL – GUARDIANS OF THE GOLDEN EGG by Ute von Münchow-Pohl (Germany)Treatment Competition Award
The Award for Best Treatment goes to: Seraina Nyikos for the Project SECONDO (Switzerland)
-
Director Brett Morgen and Jane Goodall Attend NYFF Premiere of JANE
Director Brett Morgen and subject Jane Goodall were in attendance to introduce the stunning documentary, National Geographic’s JANE at the 2017 New York Film Festival.
[caption id="attachment_24059" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Jane[/caption]
JANE is the story of how Jane Goodall became Jane Goodall – using footage shot by future husband Hugo van Lawick of her first experiences in Gombe, Tanzinia in the 1960’s. Previously thought to be lost forever, the footage was only recently discovered in a storage unit, and has been now masterfully intercut with interviews of present day Jane Goodall to provide an in-depth portrait of her life.
JANE will be released in select theaters starting October 20.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRlUJrEUn0Y&feature=youtu.be
Image: NEW YORK – OCTOBER 5: (L-R) Jane Goodall and Director Brett Morgen attend the NY Film Festival screening of National Geographic’s documentary ‘Jane’ at the Walter Reade Theater on October 5, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Anthony Behar/NatGeo/PictureGroup)
-
10 Best Foreign Language Submissions for 2018 Oscars to Compete at Heartland Film Festival
The 26th Heartland Film Festival will debut the inaugural “Foreign Language Best Picture Contender” sidebar featuring 10 films submitted as the respective country’s official entry for the Best Foreign Language Film category at the 2018 Academy Awards®. Each selection will play once during Heartland’s 11-day celebration of international independent film.
“Each year, Heartland Film Festival proudly showcases a healthy percentage of foreign language films which are much admired, roundly discussed and debated by our audiences,” said International Film Programmer Hannah Fisher. “We present this year – for the first time – a section of films submitted to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for consideration in the category known as ‘Best Foreign Language Film.‘
“We anticipate this program will grow and evolve in stature, in much the same way that that Heartland Film Festival continues to gain international recognition and prominence. Heartland is thrilled to be among the first North American film festivals to showcase these foreign language contenders,” concluded Fisher.
Set to award more than $100,000 in cash prizes across various categories, the 2017 Heartland Film Festival will bestow a $5,000 cash prize to one of these 10 films, as selected by the Festival’s foreign language contender jury.
Heartland Film Festival “Foreign Language Best Picture Contender” Lineup
“One Thousand Ropes” (2016) Country: New Zealand, Director: Tusi Tamales, Distributor: Transmission Films Synopsis: When a father reconnects with his estranged teenage daughter, he is given a rare chance to reshape the future of his family in unexpected ways. “Ayla: The Daughter of War” (2017) Country: Turkey, Director: Can Ulkay Synopsis: The true story or a little orphaned girl and the soldier who fell in love with her. “Saawan” (2017) Country: Pakistan, Director: Farhan Alam, Distributor: Kalaker Films Synopsis: A handicapped nine-year old boy who lives in a valley in the mountains of Balochistan is rejected by his father, intimidated by society, harassed by friends and left alone due to his disability. Strengthened by memories and dreams of the love of his mother, he begins a perilous journey back to his family in the main city. “White Sun” (2016) Country: Nepal, Director: Deepak Rauniyar, Distributor: Kimstim Films Synopsis: A former Maoist rebel struggles to reintegrate with his unwelcoming community and move beyond a painful past. “Newton” (2017) Country: India, Director: Amit Masurkar Synopsis: A government clerk on election duty in the conflict ridden jungle of Central India tries his best to conduct free and fair voting despite the apathy of security forces and the looming fear of guerrilla attacks by communist rebels. “BPM (Beats Per Minute)” (2017) Country: France, Director: Robin Campillo, Distributor: The Orchard Synopsis: In Paris in the early 1990s, a passionate group of activists goes to battle for those stricken with HIV/AIDS, taking on sluggish government agencies and major pharmaceutical companies. “Divine Order” (2017) Country: Switzerland, Director: Petra Volpe, Distributor: Kino Lorber Synopsis: A bucolic alpine village becomes a battleground for social change in 1970 Switzerland. “Reşeba: The Dark Wind” (2016) Country: Iraq, Director: Hussein Hassan Synopsis: Radical Islamist militants attack a village in Iraq where two young Yazidi prepare for marriage. From that moment onwards their lives are turned into a nightmare. “Pomegranate Orchard” (2017) Country: Azerbaijan, Director: Ilgar Najaf, Distributor: Buta Film Synopsis: Gabil returns home to the humble family farmstead, surrounded by an orchard of venerable pomegranate trees; since his sudden departure twelve years ago he was never once in contact. However, the deep emotional scars he left behind cannot be erased from one day to the next. “Thelma” (2017) Country: Norway, Director: Joachim Trier, Distributor: The Orchard Synopsis: A timid young woman leaves her rural home to study in Oslo. She does not understand her unique ability to manipulate her environment.
-
7th Catalina Film Festival Awards – ROCKAWAY and BLACK AND BLUE Win Top Prizes
[caption id="attachment_24999" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Rockaway[/caption]
After screening over 100 films, Rockaway was awarded the prize for Best U.S. Feature Prize, and Black and Blue the prize for Best Documentary at the 7th annual Catalina Film Festival (CFF). Awards were issued in 14 film competition categories selected from the films screened at venues throughout the famed Catalina Island.
The annual film festival also featured career tributes, as well as the annual Film & New Media Summit.
FESTIVAL AWARDS
U.S. Feature — Winner: ROCKAWAY / Excellence: Tater Tot & Patton https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBr8khZWxrE Documentary — Winner: Black and Blue / Excellence: A Classy Broad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-1PHhFy1MI Wes Craven Horror — Winner: Matthew 19:14 / Excellence: The Madame in Black Screenplay — Winner: Time Zero / Excellence: The Joyrider Animation — Winner: Alike / Excellence: Catching the L Train U.S. Short — Winner: Chocolate / Excellence: The Visit Conservation — Winner: Manmade Waters / Excellence: Gaviota: The End of Southern California Advanced Student — Winner: Icarus / Excellence: The Transfer High School Student — Winner: Puget Sound / Excellence: Color My Dreams International Short — Winner: Pushing Night Away / Excellence: Girl in White International Feature — Winner: Secret from the Past / Excellence: Generation Wolf Festival Treasure — My Loyal Audience Deb Bauer Unsung Hero — SEARCHDOG Golden Fox Award for Excellence in Directing — Brian Crano, PermissionCAREER TRIBUTE AWARDS
Breaking the Glass Ceiling Award: 91-year-old veteran producer, Marcia Nasatir (The Big Chill, Rocky, Carrie, Apocalypse Now) Maverick Award: Actor and Activist, Matt McGorry (How to Get Away with Murder) Crest Award—Directing: Jordan Vogt-Roberts (Kong: Skull Island, Metal Gear, Destiny 2) Crest Award—Acting: Wyatt Oleff (IT, Guardians of the Galaxy)
-
Washington, DC’s Double Exposure Investigative Film Festival Announces 2017 Lineup
[caption id="attachment_21915" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
NO STONE UNTURNED – Alex Gibneyno[/caption]
The Double Exposure Investigative Film Festival and Symposium taking place October 19 to 22, in Washington, DC will feature a lineup of 13 documentary films that go beyond the headlines to capture riveting stories and confront matters that have been hidden from the public, until now.
The film program is intertwined with a daytime symposium with topics this year including panels on “the real take” on fake news, protecting sources and subjects in newly hostile environments, immersive and undercover reporting, and conversations with leading filmmakers.
“We are excited to bring these probing, new investigative documentaries to Washington audiences,” said Diana Jean Schemo, Double Exposure’s founder and co-director. “This season’s slate explores timely issues in our nation’s political life just now, including race in America, the drug trade, Latin America, and the media itself.”
“The films in this year’s lineup are not only great works of journalism, but great works of cinematic storytelling that bring vivid and distinct focus to a range of topics and issues otherwise left unseen,” said Sky Sitney, Double Exposure co-director.
COCAINE PRISON
Washington, DC Premiere
Director Violeta Ayala
Australia / France / Bolivia / United States
From inside Bolivia’s most notorious prison a cocaine worker, a drug mule and his younger sister reveal the country’s complex and inescapable relationship with cocaine.
DEVIL’S FREEDOM (LA LIBERTAD DEL DIABLO)
Director Everardo González
Mexico
In searing testimony from both victims and perpetrators, this documentary paints an indelible portrait of violence in Mexico. Using masks to protect the identities of his subjects, filmmaker Everardo González brings a rare candor to their tales.
DID YOU WONDER WHO FIRED THE GUN?
Washington, DC Premiere
Director Travis Wilkinson
United States
Travis Wilkerson sets out to explore the truth behind a family story: that his white supremacist great grandfather killed a black man in his store in lower Alabama in 1946.
END OF TRUTH
World Premiere
Directors Tricia Todd and Eric Matthies
United States
An emotionally powerful investigation into the political and criminal enterprise of kidnappings as ISIS rose to power in war torn Syria. By intercutting exclusive footage with intimate interviews of negotiators, investigators, fixers and even a used car salesman who are caught up in the confusion, the filmmakers examine the leads that led to lies revealing the terrible consequence of misinformation when lives are at stake.
HALL OF MIRRORS
Washington, DC Premiere
Directors Ena Talakic and Ines Talakic
Italy / United States
Edward Jay Epstein has built a career on taking a deeper look at hidden trends and unquestioned scripts that enter mainstream thinking. In Hall of Mirrors, he delves into Edward Snowden’s historic leak of data on U.S. government surveillance, delighting in the absurdities he discovers.
NO STONE UNTURNED
Centerpiece Film – Washington, DC Premiere
Director Alex Gibney
United States
In 1994, six men were gunned down and five wounded in a pub while watching a World Cup soccer match in Loughinisland, Northern Ireland. With a police investigation that was perfunctory at best, the case remained unsolved. In this non-fiction murder mystery, Academy Award-winning documentarian Alex Gibney reopens the original case to investigate why no culprit was ever brought to justice.
ONE OF US
Opening Night Film – Washington, DC Premiere
Directors Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady
United States
Academy Award nominated filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady follow the lives of three people who have chosen to leave the world of Hasidic Judaism. A Netflix Original Documentary.
THE OTHER SIDE OF EVERYTHING
U.S. Premiere
Director Mila Turajlic
Serbia
A locked door inside a Belgrade apartment has kept one family separated from their past for over 70 years. As the filmmaker begins an intimate conversation with her mother, the political fault line running through their home reveals a house and a country haunted by history. She fights and secures the release of hidden records that the nationalist government had removed from public archives. The chronicle of a family in Serbia turns into a searing portrait of an activist in times of great turmoil, questioning the responsibility of each generation to the next.
THE RAPE OF RECY TAYLOR
Washington, DC Premiere
Director Nancy Buirski
United States
Recy Taylor was gang raped by 6 white boys in Alabama in 1944. Unbroken, she spoke up, and with help from Rosa Parks and legions of women, fought for justice. Entwined through family and social ties with local police, Taylor’s rapists were never tried for their crime. The film explores the largely hidden phenomenon of white men raping black women in the south, a crime all but ignored by law enforcement and the press.
TRUSTWHO
World Premiere
Director Lillian Franck
Germany
Is the World Health Organization sick? The filmmaker and mother Lilian Franck reveals clandestine influences by the tobacco, pharmaceutical and nuclear industries on the organization, charged with protecting global health.
VOYEUR
Closing Night Film – Washington, DC Premiere
Directors Myles Kane and Josh Koury
United States
Voyeur follows journalist Gay Talese as he reports on one of the most controversial stories of his career: a Colorado motel owner, Gerald Foos, who spent decades spying on his guests and recording their private moments. A Netflix original documentary.
-
BLACK BEACH/WHITE BEACH, GINGER NATION, KNIFE SKILLS, Among Docs Featured at Cucalorus Festival
[caption id="attachment_24993" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
Black Beach/White Beach: A Tale of Two Beaches[/caption]
The 23rd Cucalorus Festival takes over downtown Wilmington, North Carolina, from November 8 to 12 and will feature more than 70 documentaries, including the world premiere of Ricky and Cherie Kelly’s racially-charged motorcycle doc “Black Beach/White Beach: A Tale of Two Beaches” and the international premiere of Shawn Hitchins’ fiery, flamboyant stage show-doc “Ginger Nation.”
One of many films crossing the divide between Cucalorus Film and Cucalorus Connect is Thomas Lennon’s “Knife Skills,” about a French restaurant staffed entirely by men and women just out of prison. Lennon shared, “I knew Cucalorus was a creative festival. What I didn’t know is how deep its roots run in its community, its passion to connect each film to an audience in a way that packs the biggest possible punch. They really go the extra mile, which makes the festival even more exciting for us.”
Other documentary debuts include the U.S. premiere of “Forbidden Games: The Justin Fashanu Story” by Jon Carey and Adam Darke, chronicling the complex and troubled story of a talented (and openly gay) British soccer player. “The Power of Glove,” from Andrew Austin and Adam Ward, presenting the legacy of the notoriously “bad” Nintendo Power Glove, and “True Conviction” from Jamie Meltzer, depicting a detective agency run by exonerated men to free innocent people, both make their southeast U.S. premieres. “ACORN and the Firestorm,” directed by Reuben Atlas and Sam Pollard, will have it’s North Carolina premiere and documents the amateur journalists who posed as a pimp and prostitute hoping to expose America’s largest grassroots community organizing group via hidden-camera.
Cucalorus also includes 55 short documentaries, including the world premiere of Joanne Hock’s “Martin Hill: Camera Man,” honoring a curator of cameras that shot some of the most iconic films in Hollywood’s past. Other key short docs include “Water Warriors” by Michael Premo, “Under the Mask” by Alex Hoelscher, and “Lonnie Holley: The Truth of Dirt” by Marco Williams.
Feature Docs
“No Dress Code Required (Etiqueta no rigurosa),” Cristina Herrera Borquez “True Conviction,” Jamie Meltzer “Rebels on Pointe,” Bobbi Jo Hart “ACORN and the Firestorm,” Reuben Atlas, Sam Pollard “Working In Protest,” Michael Galinsky, Suki Hawley, David Beilinson “The Power of Glove,” Andrew Austin & Adam Ward “Forbidden Games: The Justin Fashanu Story,” Jon Carey and Adam Darke “Motherland,” Ramona S. Díaz “What Lies Upstream,” Cullen Hoback “Knife Skills,” Thomas Lennon “The Road Movie,” Dmitrii Kalashnikov “Ginger Nation,” Shawn Hitchins, Mitch Fillion “Liberation Day,” Morten Traavik, Ugis Olte “The Work,” Gethin Aldous and Jairus McLeary “Purple Dreams,” Joanne Hock “Black Beach/White Beach: A Tale of Two Beaches,” Ricky Kelly
-
N. Scott Momaday Documentary RETURN TO RAINY MOUNTAIN to Premiere at Santa Fe Independent Film Festival
[caption id="attachment_24980" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]
RETURN TO RAINY MOUNTAIN[/caption]
Return to Rainy Mountain is a documentary celebrating the life and legacy of author N. Scott Momaday and the rich cultural history of the Kiowa people. The film will have its premiere viewing during this year’s Santa Fe Independent Film Festival.
Producer/Director Jill Momaday takes viewers on a visual and poetic journey to places that inform the Kiowa ancestral myths and collective identity. Following the film will be a panel discussion including Dr. Momaday, recipient of the SFIFF Lifetime Achievement Award, Jill Momaday, plus mentors to the film, Chris Eyre, multi-award-winning writer and producer, known for Smoke Signals (1998), Skins (2002) and Edge of America (2003) and moderated by Kirk Ellis, Emmy award-winning writer and producer for the HBO mini-series, John Adams (2008).
Momaday’s legacy includes winning the only Pulitzer Prize for Literature awarded to a Native American writer, for his 1969 novel, House Made of Dawn. Also published in 1969, his bestselling The Way to Rainy Mountain (UNM Press) provided parts of the narrative for this film. Momaday earned a Masters and a PhD in English from Stanford University and has 20 honorary doctorates from esteemed universities. A 2005 award-winning PBS documentary Remembered Earth: New Mexico’s High Desert featured Momaday. He also narrated the 1978 documentary More Than Bows and Arrows, which aired on PBS and the Discovery Channel. Momaday was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2007 by President George W. Bush for his writings and his work that celebrates and preserves Native American art and oral tradition.” Among other notable honors are the Oklahoma Centennial State Poet Laureate in 2007, a Guggenheim Fellowship and UNESCO’s Artist for Peace Award.
Return to Rainy Mountain retraces the sacred journey of the Kiowa to Devil’s Tower in Wyoming and Rainy Mountain in southwestern Oklahoma, landmarks that inform the Kiowa oral traditions passed along for generations. Director Jill Momaday was inspired in 2014 when her Kiowa Aunt passed away at the age of 95 and she recognized the urgency and importance of capturing the Kiowa oral tradition on film. She was a great-granddaughter of Sitting Bear, the keeper of stories and knowledge, a powerful and amazing woman. “I realized with her passing, that many stories would be lost. It made a profound impression of the importance of preserving them, as my father has done with his writing,” said Momaday.
As early as 1971, Dr. Momaday was recognized as a pioneer of environmental education, authoring “The American Land Ethic” which noted the tradition of respect for nature practiced by many of America’s native people. Jill Momaday steps into the role of a modern spokesperson for this tradition of respect for nature. The 2015 annual honoree for New Mexico Women in the Arts says, “In addition to sharing the Kiowa history and oral tradition, the film gave me time with my father and a chance to really know him. He was absent much of my life as he carved out his brilliant career and legacy. We’ve been fitting the pieces of a puzzle together to tell one big story which is also the bigger story of Humanity: Man’s relationship to nature, animals, the universe, Creator and each other.” The film follows one story arc of the Kiowa legends and another of the Momaday family reconciliation.
The visual/sound and editing team includes Director of Photography/Editor, Doug Crawford, an Emmy and Peabody Award winning Cinematographer (Surviving Columbus: The Story of the Pueblo People, PBS, 1992) also Director of Photography for The Native Americans (TBS, 1994); David Aubrey, nominated for the EDDIE awards, Best Edited Documentary (Baraka, 1993), and Blackhorse Lowe, cinematographer (Among Ravens, 2014).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrd7c2M7T2A
Only The Brave
Directed by Joseph Kosinski
A drama based on the elite crew of firemen from Prescott, Arizona who battled a wildfire in Yarnell, AZ in June 2013 that claimed the lives of 19 of their members.
Producer Michael Menchel in attendance
Becoming Who I Was
Directed by Moon Chang-Yong, Jeon Jin
Deep in the highlands of northern India, a young Buddhist boy discovers that he is the reincarnation of an ancient Tibetan monk. This documentary explores the boy’s coronation as Rinpoche, the reincarnation of a spiritual leader, and his journey to discover the secrets of his past life.
Sami Blood
Directed by Amanda Kernell
Elle Marja, 14, is a reindeer-breeding Sámi girl. Exposed to the racism of the 1930’s and race biology examinations at her boarding school, she starts dreaming of another life. To achieve this other life, she has to become someone else and break all ties with her family and culture.
Atomic Homefront
Directed by Rebecca Cammisa
A major metropolitan area in the United States lies dangerously close to a large landfill containing radioactive waste and an escalating underground fire.The film documents those (mostly women) who have mobilized to get answers, created a powerful coalition and continue to fight for environmental justice.
The Sensitives
Directed by Drew Xanthopoulos
A loving grandfather struck down by a debilitating, mysterious illness faces an agonizing choice: an uncertain future with his family or the lure of an isolated, safe community built for sensitives like him. As his wife and daughter struggle to keep their family together, we meet others who faced the same impossible choices: an aging mother and her twin sons living in quarantine deep in the desert and an activist in fragile recovery, who advocates for those worse off than herself. The Sensitives is an intimate, verité film focused on three families put to the test by an unknown illness.
On A Knife Edge
Directed by Jeremy Williams
Set against a background of rising tension and protest, a Lakota teenager learns first-hand what it means to lead a new generation and enter adulthood in a world where the odds are stacked against him. Filmed over a five-year period, On a Knife Edge provides a privileged view into the interior world of George Dull Knife as he becomes politically active with the American Indian Movement, confronts the challenges of growing up on the Pine Ridge Reservation, and wrestles with accepting leadership of his storied family from his aging father.
Most Beautiful Island
Directed by Ana Asensio
Most Beautiful Island is a chilling portrait of an undocumented young woman’s struggle for survival as she finds redemption from a tortured past in a dangerous game.
Pinsky
Directed by Amanda Lundquist
North American Premier
In the wake of a bad breakup and the death of her grandfather, Sophia Pinsky moves back home under the martial law of her Russian grandmother and is forced to reevaluate the terms of her adult life.
-
Francis Lee’s GOD’S OWN COUNTRY to Compete at 2017 Stockholm Film Festival | Trailer
Director Francis Lee intense new drama God’s Own Country described as the “new Brokeback Mountain” will screen at the 2017 Stockholm Film Festival and participate in the official Stockholm XXVIII Competition. The film has been awarded at the Berlin Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Festival and Sundance Film Festival among others.
God’s Own Country takes it’s start in the British countryside where we meet the young farmer Johnny Saxby who numbs his daily frustrations with binge drinking and casual sex. Until the arrival of a Romanian migrant worker named Gheorghe ignites an intense relationship that sets Johnny on a new path…
This is Francis Lee’s feature film debut as a writer and director after leaving his acting career to return to the British countryside where he grew up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sPE9sbXQoQ
-
STRONGER, Starring Jake Gyllenhaal as Boston Marathon Bombing Hero, to Screen at Rome Film Fest
Stronger, the critically acclaimed film by David Gordon Green, starring Jake Gyllenhaal will screen at the 12th Rome Film Fest, taking place October 26 to November 5, 2017.
The American director brings the inspiring true story of Jeff Bauman to the screen, an ordinary man who captured the hearts of his city and the world to become a symbol of hope following the infamous 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. It is Jeff’s deeply personal and heroic journey – a tour de force portrayal by Jake Gyllenhaal – which tests a family’s bond, defines a community’s pride and inspires his inner courage to overcome devastating adversity while rebuilding his life beside his partner Erin, played by Canadian actress Tatiana Maslany.
Jake Gyllenhaal and Jeff Bauman will attend the Rome Film Fest, and Gyllenhaal will participate in a Close Encounter on-stage conversation with the audience, during which the actor will discuss his career and his complex and profoundly different roles in films such as Donnie Darko, Brokeback Mountain, End of Watch, Prisoners, Nightcrawler, and Nocturnal Animals.
Artistic director Antonio Monda said: “I am extremely happy to present in Rome Stronger, a hymn to life and a splendid film. And I am enthusiastic to have the opportunity to conduct a “Close Encounter” with Jake Gyllenhaal, who in Stronger presents us with one of his greatest and most touching interpretations”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkoM5r9LR14

Lady Bird[/caption]
Actress Greta Gerwig directorial debut