Traverse City Film Festival

  • “FRUITVALE STATION” “INEQUALITY FOR ALL” “PROPAGANDA” Among Winning Films at 2013 Travese City Film Festival

    Audience Award Winner - Best Documentary Film - INEQUALITY FOR ALLAudience Award Winner – Best Documentary Film – INEQUALITY FOR ALL

    After almost a week of screening an outstanding lineup of films, Travese City Film Festival founder and President Michael Moore announced the 2013 Award Winners. The winning films include Audience Award – Best American Film for FRUITVALE STATION, Audience Award Winner – Best Documentary Film for INEQUALITY FOR ALL, and Founders Grand Prize – Best Film for PROPAGANDA.

    AUDIENCE AWARDS

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Kids Short
    HEDGEHOGS AND THE CITY

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Kids Film
    THE PAINTING

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Narrative Short
    FOOLS DAY

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Documentary Short
    WAITING FOR MAMU

    Audience Award Runner Up
    Best Foreign Film
    INTO THE WHITE

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Foreign Film
    STARBUCK

    Audience Award Runner Up
    Best American Film
    TRUST

    Audience Award Winner
    Best American Film
    FRUITVALE STATION

    Audience Award Runner Up
    Best Documentary Film
    GORE VIDAL: THE UNITED STATES OF AMNESIA

    Audience Award Winner
    Best Documentary Film
    INEQUALITY FOR ALL

    FOUNDERS AWARDS

    Special Founders Prize
    In Honor of Helen W. Milliken

    Special Founders Prize
    In Honor of Bryan J. Crough

    Discovery Award
    Liana Liberato

    Visionary Award
    Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman

    Visionary Award
    Mark Cousins

    Michigan Filmmaker Award
    Paul Feig

    Lifetime Achievement Award
    Michael Apted

    Founders Prize
    Best Narrative Short
    FOOLS DAY

    Founders Prize
    Special Mention Short Film
    THE RIDER AND THE STORM

    Founders Prize
    Best Documentary Short
    THE BATTLE OF THE JAZZ GUITARIST

    Stuart Hollander Prize
    Best Kids Film
    MUD CRAB

    John Waters Prize
    Best Midnight Film
    COCKNEYS VS ZOMBIES

    Buzz Wilson Prize
    Best Experimental/Avant Garde Film
    YOUR DAY IS MY NIGHT

    Roger Ebert Prize
    Best Film by a First Time Filmmaker
    WADJDA

    Founders Prize
    Special Award
    KON-TIKI

    Founders Prize
    Special Award
    GORE VIDAL: THE UNITED STATES OF AMNESIA

    Founders Prize
    Special Award
    MISTAKEN FOR STRANGERS

    Founders Prize
    Special Award
    DIRTY WARS

    Founders Prize
    Special Award
    CITIZEN KOCH

    Stanley Kubrick Award
    For Bold and Innovative Filmmaking
    THE ACT OF KILLING

    Founders Prize
    Best Documentary
    OUR NIXON

    Founders Prize
    Best Documentary
    REMOTE AREA MEDICAL

    Founders Prize
    Best Comedy
    THE WORLD IS OURS

    Founders Prize
    Best Comedy
    Bypass

    Founders Prize
    Best Drama
    THE EAST

    Founders Grand Prize
    Best Film
    PROPAGANDA

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  • Michael Moore Announces Lineup of 150+ Films for 2013 Traverse City Film Festival

    Cate Blanchett in Blue Jasmine-Cate Blanchett in Blue Jasmine

    Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore announced the lineup of 150 plus films for his ninth annual Traverse City Film Festival (TCFF), to be held July 30 to August 4 in Traverse City, Michigan. The festival kicks off with Woody Allen’s latest film “BLUE JASMINE”. After a stretch of films set abroad, his latest work brings us back to American soil, where a wealthy New York socialite, played by Cate Blanchett, moves to San Francisco to escape her faltering marriage to a wealthy Wall Street executive, played by Alec Baldwin.

    TCFF will close the ninth annual Film Festival with “AUSTENLAND,” starring Keri Russell as a thirty-something with an unhealthy obsession with all things Jane Austen. Lucky for her, there’s Austenland, the ultimate getaway for literary devotees. The directorial debut from “Napoleon Dynamite” screenwriter Jerusha Hess is a rollicking rom-com featuring a supporting cast including Bret Mackenzie and Jennifer Coolidge.

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  • Michael Moore’s Traverse City Film Festival Kicks Off Tonite

    Traverse City Film Festival (TCFF), founded by documentary filmmaker Michael Moore, kicks off the 2011 edition of the festival, now in its seventh record-breaking year, tonight, Tuesday July 26, and runs thru July 31.

    Moore, the Academy Award-winning director of “Bowling for Columbine” and “Capitalism: A Love Story,” launched the Traverse City Film Festival in 2005, aiming to bring often-undistributed national and international films to film lovers from the northern Michigan community and around the world.  The festival is held in downtown Traverse City, Michigan on the shores of Lake Michigan’s Grand Traverse Bay.

    2011 Festival Highlights:

    OPENING NIGHT: The festival kicks-off opening night with two showings of two different films: “Made in Dagenham” starring Bob Hoskins, Sally Hawkins and the West Wing¹s Richard Schiff, and Icíar Bollaín’s Spanish drama, “Even the Rain.” In person at the opening night screenings will be four women who were involved in the real life events portrayed in the two films.

    KICKOFF OF THE STATE THEATRE CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION: Over each of the next five festivals, we will show one great silent movie that will be 100 years old that year. The celebration will begin at this summer’s fest with the very first Italian feature film ever made: “L’Inferno” (1911). It’s based on Dante’s Divine Comedy, “The Inferno.” The world-renowned Traverse City native and theater organist extraordinaire, Stephen Warner, will accompany the film on the State Theatre organ. This year’s festival also includes the world famous Alloy Orchestra accompanying a premiere of their “Wild and Weird Short Silent Films.” And Charlie Chaplin’s timeless classic “Modern Times” will conclude the festival as the Closing Night Film.

    THE FIRST MOVIE EVER PRODUCED BY THE TRAVERSE CITY FILM FESTIVAL: The first Michigan-Cuban co-production is complete and festival friend Ian Padron returns to the TCFF this summer with the world premiere of his film “Habanastation,” the first film completed using the TCFF Cuban Film Fund, with the people of Traverse City listed as producers.

    UNION! OUR SALUTE TO PUBLIC EMPLOYEES: This coming December marks the 75th anniversary of what the BBC calls “one of the most important events in the history of Western Civilization,” the Great Flint Sit Down Strike. This year the film fest salutes those surviving members of past labor struggles with the world premiere of a film by the grandson of Victor Reuther, “Brothers on the Line.”

    A TRIBUTE TO JAFAR PANAHI: Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi has been under house arrest for over a year because he has dared to make movies that challenge the elected leaders of Iran. He has been forbidden to make movies for the next 20 years. To show the festival’s solidarity with him, what many believe to be his best film ever, “The White Balloon,” will be shown. Because he has been prohibited from travel, he has been named the honorary chair of our TCFF jury in absentia.

    THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY SCREENING OF “TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD:” TCFF will pay tribute to 50 years of influence of the story of Atticus Finch, his children Scout and Jem, and the darkness they encounter in their small American town one summer. Mary Badham, who worked alongside Gregory Peck and Robert Duvall while playing the little girl Scout in the film, will be here in Traverse City to share her experiences with festival-goers. A new documentary with a self explanatory title: “Hey Boo: Harper Lee & To Kill a Mockingbird,” will also be shown.

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROY ROGERS! Roy would have been 100 years old this year and we’ve decided to invite some of his family here to celebrate with us by showing two of his classic films, “Under Western Stars” and “Don’t Fence Me In.”

    A GIFT FROM GEORGE LUCAS: It is very rare that festivals are able to screen Star Wars films outdoors for free, but this year, the great George Lucas has allowed the festival to kick off a week of Open Space screenings on a giant 100′ screen by the Bay with a Tuesday night screening of “Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back.”

    THE OTHER FREE OPEN SPACE MOVIES ON GRAND TRAVERSE BAY: Wednesday – “Mr. Deeds Goes to Town;” Thursday – “Mrs. Doubtfire;” Friday – the People’s Choice Winner “The Dark Knight;” Saturday – “Tangled.”

    150 SCREENINGS OF 150 FEATURE AND SHORT FILMS: Festival goers can choose from a great crop of foreign and US indie films this year, a huge batch of great docs (including two films shot in Michigan), and an expanded midnight section of movies, one of which was shot by two brothers from Royal Oak.

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