• New Indie Films, Documentaries in Theaters This Weekend Friday November 8, 2013

    New indie films and documentaries in theaters weekend of Friday November 8, 2013.

    If you’re a documentary fan, this would be a good weekend to free yourself up for going to the movies, new releases include THE ARMSTRONG LIE and AT BERKELEY.  Of course, like most weekends there’s a good mix of indie films of all different types , including literary adaptations, dramas, and comedies such as ASS BACKWARDS .  

    GREAT EXPECTATIONS

    GREAT EXPECTATIONS

    Though based on one of Charles Dickens’ most beloved works, I haven’t heard much about the latest adaptation of Great Expectations from director Mike Newell.  It’s been nearly a year since it was first released in the UK, and its cast — including Jeremy Irvine and Helena Bonham Carter — has received strong reviews.

    BEST MAN DOWN

    BEST MAN DOWN

    Though it originally had an internet release last month, the dramedy Best Man Down will be in limited release this weekend in theaters. It is the first film written and directed by Ted Koland, who was a writer on TV’s Fashion House and Saints & Sinners.  Best Man Down stars Justin Long and Jess Weixler as newlyweds who have to cancel their honeymoon after the death of their best man, who shockingly died right after the couple’s wedding ceremony.  Well, that would definitely kill the party’s mood, right?

    HOW I LIVE NOW

    HOW I LIVE NOW

    Saoirse Ronan has made a number of indie films since first becoming known to mainstream audiences with The Lovely Bones, and in How I Live Now she stars as an American teenager living with her relatives in the UK when a violent uprising turns the country into hell.  Director Kevin Macdonald can handle real-life drama well based on his documentaries and The Last King of Scotland, so this is definitely worth a look.

    THE ARMSTRONG LIE (Documentary)

    THE ARMSTRONG LIE (Documentary)

    Director Alex Gibney was hired in 2009 to create a documentary about Lance Armstrong’s incredible comeback to cycling.  I am sure you know what happened next.  Gibney has a history of great documentaries about cover-ups (including Enron: The Smartest Guys In the Room), so he wound in the right place at the right time to make a documentary not about Armstrong’s return to cycling but Armstrong’s history of doping and his decades-long history of denials and coverups.  Though the Armstrong fallout still hasn’t ended, this doucmentary serves as a way for the public to begin analyzing Armstrong’s fall from grace.

    ASS BACKWARDS

    ASS BACKWARDS

    I don’t know about you, but child beauty pageants have always seemed to be a potentially bad thing to involve your children in to me.  The comedy Ass Backwards explores this idea, with two women who finished last in a childhood beauty pageant years ago (June Diane Raphael and Casey Wilson, who also wrote the film) who return to the pageant years later in an attempt to right past “wrongs” committed against them.  Critics have generally given it a pass, but if you’re a fan of the comediennes who star in this it’s likely right up your alley.

    AT BERKELEY (Documentary)

    AT BERKELEY (Documentary)

    Every critic who has sat through this four hour, four minute documentary about the current operations and troubling budget issues of The University of California at Berkeley has raved about it.  I don’t think I’m the only who would suggest that if you are interested, you might want to wait for it to hit VOD or cable in order to watch it at your own pace!  Nonetheless, it’s great to say that veteran documentarian Frederick Wiseman doesn’t feel that he needs to cut his films down to 90 or 100 minutes for commercial appeal.

    THE MOTEL LIFE

    THE MOTEL LIFE

    Emile Hirsch, soon-to-be-star of the John Belushi biopic, stars in this adaptation of the Willy Vlautin novel about two aimless brothers who live from motel to motel and the chilling changes that undergo in their relationship after one brother (Stephen Dorff) is involved in a terrible crime.  The film is directed by first-time directors Gabe Polsky and Alan Polsky and won three major awards at last year’s Rome Film Fest.

    Other notable weekend indie, foreign & documentary releases:

    THE WIND RISES

    REACHING FOR THE MOON

    GO FOR SISTERS

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  • GREASE director Randal Kleiser to Receive First Stanley Kramer Lifetime Achievement Award

    GREASE director Randal Kleiser

    GREASE director, Randal Kleiser has been selected to be the recipient of the first annual Stanley Kramer Lifetime Achievement Award at the Stanley Kramer Film Festival, which takes place November 15 to 17, 2013, at the Camelot Theatres in Palm Springs. Kleiser, whose first feature film, Grease (1978), launched his professional career as a Director, starred John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John, and went on to became the most successful movie musical ever made. Mr. Kleiser’s other directorial film credits include The Blue Lagoon, Summer Lovers, Grandview, USA, Flight of the Navigator, Honey I Blew Up the Kid, White Fang, Getting It Right, Shadow of Doubt, Love Wrecked, Red Riding Hood, and It’s My Party. 

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  • 10 Animated Shorts Advance in 2013 Oscar Race

    “FERAL” directed by Daniel Sousa“FERAL” directed by Daniel Sousa

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced that 10 animated short films will advance in the voting process for the 86th Academy Awards®. Fifty-six pictures had originally qualified in the category.

    The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title, with their production companies:

    “FERAL,” Daniel Sousa, director, and Dan Golden, music and sound design (Daniel Sousa) (pictured above)

    “GET A HORSE!” Lauren MacMullan, director, and Dorothy McKim, producer (Walt Disney Feature Animation)

    “GLORIA VICTORIA,” Theodore Ushev, director (National Film Board of Canada)

    “HOLLOW LAND,” Uri Kranot and Michelle Kranot, directors (Dansk Tegnefilm, Les Films de l’Arlequin and the National Film Board of Canada)

    “THE MISSING SCARF,” Eoin Duffy, director, and Jamie Hogan, producer (Belly Creative Inc.)

    “MR. HUBLOT,” Laurent Witz, director, and Alexandre Espigares, co-director (Zeilt Productions)

    “POSSESSIONS,” Shuhei Morita, director (Sunrise Inc.)

    “REQUIEM FOR ROMANCE,” Jonathan Ng, director (Kungfu Romance Productions Inc.)

    “ROOM ON THE BROOM,” Max Lang and Jan Lachauer, directors (Magic Light Pictures)

    “SUBCONSCIOUS PASSWORD,” Chris Landreth, director (National Film Board of Canada with the participation of Seneca College Animation Arts Centre and Copperheart Entertainment)

    The Academy’s Short Films and Feature Animation Branch Reviewing Committee viewed all the eligible entries for the preliminary round of voting at screenings held in New York and Los Angeles. Short Films and Feature Animation Branch members will now select three to five nominees from among the 10 titles on the shortlist. Branch screenings will be held in Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco in December.

    The 86th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 16, 2014, at 5:30 a.m. PT in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.

    Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2013 will be presented on Oscar Sunday, March 2, 2014, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® and televised live on the ABC Television Network. The presentation also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

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  • Mountainfilm is Headed to NYC; MAIDENTRIP is Opening Night Film

    Maidentrip

    Mountainfilm in Telluride is headed on the road to New York City; the Film Society of Lincoln Center released the lineup for the 2013 Mountainfilm series, taking place from November 15 to 17, 2013 at Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center at Lincoln Center in New York City.   Films on the lineup include an exclusive sneak preview of MAIDENTRIP as its opening night selection about 14-year-old Laura Dekker who sailed around the world solo, complete with personal video she shot herself during her journey. In DUK COUNTY, world-class climber Dr. Geoff Tabin heads to Sudan to restore the sight of more than 200 blind people. Norwegian documentary NORDFOR SOLA (North of the Sun) follows two young men who spent most of the year on an isolated, cold beach north of the Arctic Circle with nothing but surfboards and sustaining comfortably off the garbage/waste of others – all the while discovering the world’s best surfing waves. 

    FILMS, SCHEDULE & DESCRIPTIONS

    OPENING NIGHT 
    MAIDENTRIP (2013) 81m
    Director: Jillian Schlesinger
    Country: USA
    Laura Dekker knew more about herself at the age of 13 than most of us will learn over a lifetime. At that age, she was already fighting the government of her native Holland for the right to sail around the world—solo. With support from her non-traditional family (she was born on a boat in New Zealand and traveled by sea with her now-divorced parents for the first five years of her life), she won the battle and set sail on a grand adventure a year later at age 14. Her dream was “to be the youngest ever to sail around the world alone,” but she didn’t want to set a speed record. Instead, she sought to experience the remote and wonderful corners of the planet on her own. Much of this brilliant and endearing documentary captures Dekker’s own words with video she shot during the journey. But director Jillian Schlesinger weaves it together with her own footage, media reports and charming animation to tell the story of this precocious and lovely young woman, whose fascinating life has only just begun.
    * Director Jillian Schlesinger in attendance
    Screening with:
    CASCADA (2013) 8m
    Directors: Skip Armstrong & Anson Fogel
    Country: USA
    When a crew of filmmakers and kayakers head to the Mexican jungle to hunt big waterfalls, they find a place of unrelenting rain, heinous insects, thick mud, scary viruses and utter perfection. Cascada, another gorgeous short film by Forge Motion Pictures, follows the crew as they explore a world beyond expectations, where biting flies, tangled vines and shoddy hotel rooms can’t detract from the unrivaled waterfalls and powerful rapids they discover.
    Friday, November 15, 9:00pm 

    DUK COUNTY (2013) 37m
    Director: Jordan Campbell
    Country: USA
    Mountainfilm audiences have come to know the hyper-achieving Dr. Geoff Tabin, a world-class climber who has ascended the Seven Summits and who is best known for dramatically changing the rates of curable blindness in Nepal and Rwanda. Tabin and his team from the Moran Eye Center in Park City, Utah, took their operation to South Sudan to work with John Dau (one of the original Lost Boys of Sudan whose remarkable story of survival was featured in the film God Grew Tired of Us.Duk County, which was directed by Jordan Campbell, tells the story of this collaboration in which the sight of more than 200 people was restored. Unfortunately—and perhaps inevitably—this triumph is tainted by the ongoing conflict in South Sudan.
    * Director Jordan Campbell and subjects John Dau and Geoff Tabin in attendance
    Screening with:
    THE WATER TOWER (2013) 27m
    Director: Peter McBride
    Country: USA
    Following his elegiac look at the plight of the Colorado River in Chasing Water (Mountainfilm 2011), filmmaker, photographer and adventurer Pete McBride turns his talents to an analogous story about the vast watershed beneath Mt. Kenya and the challenges it faces. Beautifully shot and thoughtfully written, this film paints a human portrait of climate change and frames it in forces far greater than human.
    Saturday, November 16, 4:00pm 

    HIGH & HALLOWED: EVEREST 1963 (2013) 50m
    Directors: Jim Aikman, David Morton & Jake Norton
    Country: USA
    In May of 1963, a team of brave Americans assembled on Mt. Everest in an effort to be the first from the U.S. to stand atop the world’s tallestmountain. Jim Whittaker summited on May 1, planting the American flag for his teammates to see when they reached the top. Whittaker had climbed the traditional South Col route, but two of his comrades—Tom Hornbein and Willi Unsoeld—attempted the daunting, and previously unclimbed, West Ridge. (The duos success is considered one of the most daring climbs in history.) High & Hallowed is primarily the story of the Americans on Everest 50 years ago, but it also incorporates a modern-day attempt on the West Ridge in 2012. The team of Charley Mace, Jake Norton, David Morton and Brent Bishop (son of Barry Bishop, one of the photographers on the 1963 expedition) try their luck, but given the hideous conditions in the Hornbein Couloir, their attempt is unsuccessful. This film, directed by Morton and Norton, mixes the present and past skillfully to tell a tale that spans five decades.
    * Director David Morton and subject Jim Whittaker in attendance
    Screening with:
    35 (2013) 5m
    Directors: Nasa Koski, Austin Siadak & Matt Van Biene
    Country: USA
    The number 35 holds a special significance for us this year because 2013 marks our 35th festival, so a film with this title is particularly apt. Of course it takes more than a good title to get into this festival, and this poetic reflection by a man turning 35 qualifies. It also captures the rootsy spirit of those who choose to be part of a community that prefers to be outdoors.
    and
    KEEPER OF THE MOUNTAINS (2013) 25m
    Director: Allison Otto
    Country: USA
    It’s odd to consider that the one person who has exhaustively tracked, detailed and archived Himalayan expeditions of the past half century is someone who has never climbed a mountain herself. Elizabeth Hawley has interviewed thousands of expedition leaders and is a force of nature every bit as impressive and indefatigable as any alpinist, but she has never been interested in joining them on any of the routes that she’s come to know intimately in her mind’s eye. This portrait of Miss Hawley reflects the character it chronicles by being direct, sharp and not without a sense of humor.
    A 2012 Mountainfilm Commitment Grant recipient.
    Friday, November 15, 6:30pm 

    HONNOLD 3.0 (2012) 32m
    Directors: Peter Mortimer & Josh Lowell
    Country: USA
    Just a few years ago, Alex Honnold was just another girlfriendless climber living in his van and roaming the Yosemite Valley. But he began putting up routes with increasing audacity and remarkable composure and then pulled off a couple of insanely bold free solo feats on Moonlight Buttress and Half Dome, shocking the climbing world and drawing media attention and public intrigue in equal measure. He was vaulted into the spotlight—appearing on the cover of National Geographic and featured in “60 Minutes,” The New York Times and even commercials. His gift: tremendous strength, steely focus and incredible mental control. Honnold 3.0 is a portrait of an intensely private person who must balance his ambitions with self-preservation under a new set of expectations. From highball boulder first ascents to 5.13 free solos to speed records on The Nose, Honnold wrestles with this as he prepares for his biggest adventure yet: The Yosemite Triple, an attempt to climb Mt. Watkins, El Cap and Half Dome in just one day, 95 percent of it without a rope.
    Screening with: 
    A NEW PERSPECTIVE (2012) 10m
    Director: Corey Rich
    Country: USA
    David Lama is best known as the young competition climber who conquered an 8b+ at the age of 12 and went on to become a junior world championship and twice winner of the European Youth Cup. But these days, Lama is focused on the toothy peaks in the world’s tallest mountainranges. A New Perspective follows the soft-spoken climber and his partner, Peter Ortner, as they tackle these heights. After free climbing the Cerro Torre in Patagonia, the pair travels to Pakistan to attempt to free climb Eternal Flame, a pitch up the Nameless Tower in the lofty Karakorum Range.
    and
    THE KRYGYZSTAN PROJECT (2012) 20m
    Directors: Jim Aikman & Matt Segal
    Country: USA
    Impeccable rock, one-of-a kind setting, good and trusted friends: the stuff of climbers’ dreams. Real life is rarely so straightforward, though, and this story of a climbing trip in Kyrgyzstan is haunted by the specter of an earlier one that had frightening and dire results. In 2000, John Dickey went on an expedition to Kyrgyzstan and was kidnapped by violent militants who held him and his partners at gunpoint for six days. They made a harrowing escape, but Dickey is still troubled by the memories of what they had to do to save their own lives. His return to Kyrgyzstan extols the meaning of friendship and the healing power of climbing adventures.
    Sunday, November 17, 6:30pm 

    K2: SIREN OF THE HIMALAYAS (2012) 75m
    Director: Dave Ohlson
    Country: USA
    Everest gets the lion’s share of media coverage, but alpinists know that K2—at 8,611 meters, the second-highest peak in the world—is more challenging. Perhaps those difficult conditions explain why there are so few documentaries about K2, but K2: Siren of the Himalayas tells the story of a 2009 ascent of the mountain by Fabrizio Zangrilli and Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, a century after the Duke of Abruzzi’s famous expedition. Filmed in Pakistan, this often-gripping documentary shows how hard it is for even the world’s finest alpinists to climb this mountain, where for every four people who have reached summit, one has died trying.
    * Subject Fabrizio Zangrilli in attendance
    Screening with:
    SEA OF ROCK (2012) 12m
    Director: Sebastian Doerk
    Country: Austria
    Four decades ago, a couple of young guys hauled a bicycle up Mont Simmerstein in a rugged pocket of the Austrian Alps and attempted to ride down. The mountain—known as the Sea of Rock for its jagged armor of boulders, stones and cliffs—destroyed the bike. Local mountain biker Harald Philipp has attempted the descent many times and failed—pits, technical sections and razor-sharp stones make it a nightmare. In Sea of Rock, Philipp recruits pro trails rider Thomas Ohler in the hope that, by combining their knowledge, they can successfully thread through the wicked terrain. The film follows the riders as they find lines through this imposing and beautiful landscape, chasing the long sought-after goal with two completely different styles.
    Saturday, November 16, 6:30pm (In Person)

    NORDFOR SOLA (North of the Sun) (2012) 46m
    Directors: Inge Wegge & Jorn Ranum
    Country: Norway
    Last winter, if you had happened upon a particular isolated and frigid beach north of the Arctic Circle in Norway, you might have been surprised to find two young men, two surfboards and a pile of garbage. Inge Wegge (age 25) and Jørn Ranum (age 22) spent nine months of the year—of which all could arguably be considered winter in the frozen north—testing a hypothesis that they could live happily, and even comfortably, off the waste of others. They chose this beach because it held a well-kept secret: some of the world’s finest undiscovered surfing waves. Bringing only their surfboards and their enthusiasm for adventure, the duo picked up driftwood to build a shelter, found a barrel to use as a stove, hiked to a nearby town to collect free expired food from a grocery store, caught fish and also caught waves. Almost as an aside, Wegge and Ranum piled washed-up garbage (despite its remoteness, the beach seems to collect a lot human detritus) to remove at the end of their stay. The location of their makeshift home will remain a secret, but they are generous enough to share the story of their winter North of the Sun with us.
    Screening with:
    SLOMO (2013) 17m
    Director: Joshua Izenberg
    Country: USA
    How has John Kitchin found a way to connect physically to the center of the world and spiritually to the divine? By rollerblading. Sounds crazy, but before you write Kitchin off as certifiable, you should consider that his actual certifications are in neurology and psychiatry. If you’re someone who questions the sanity of daily life on the success treadmill, this film may push you to do what you want—and reap the rich psychic rewards that come with rolling through life.
    and 
    RUNNING BLIND (2013) 32m
    Director: Ryan Suffern
    Country: USA
    We hold ordinary heroes in the highest regard at Mountainfilm, so E.J. Scott should feel at home in Telluride as he fits the description perfectly. Suffering from a degenerative, genetic disease of the retina called choroideremia, Scott is slowly losing his vision. His response is to commit enormous amounts of time, money and, most likely, knee cartilage to raise funds and awareness for a cure by running a dozen marathons in a dozen states in 2012. As he says in the film, confidently directed by Ryan Suffern (who edited 2012 Mountainfilm favorites Bidder 70  and Right to Play), “If you’re trying, you’re making a difference.”
    * Subject EJ Scott in attendance
    Sunday, November 17, 4:00pm 

    WIDEBOYZ (2012) 50m
    Directors: Paul Diffley & Chris Alstrin
    Country: UK
    This film features bloody knuckles, all-out grunt sessions and willful participation in pain. Welcome to the world of off-width crack climbing, a sub-genre that attracts a rare breed willing to jam elbows, knees, torsos — whatever it takes, really — into large cracks for climbing ascents. It’s painful, tough and occasionally downright awful. But two British climbers, Pete Whittaker and Tom Randall, love it. WideBoyz follows the off-width-obsessed pair as they undertake an insane two-year training regime — most of it spent hanging upside down in the “dungeon of doom” they set up in Whittaker’s basement — in preparation for a trip to the holy land of off-widths: the American West. After touring some of the country’s best known big cracks — and ticking them off with impressive swiftness — they head to the ultimate test. The Century Crack, 120 feet of overhanging off-width in the Canyonlands of Utah, is considered the world’s hardest off-width. After dreaming about the first ascent of it for years, the British duo finally gets a shot at this beautiful, hellish crack.
    * Director Chris Alstrin in attendance
    Screening with:
    JE VEUX (2012) 13m
    Director: Joachim Hellinger
    Country: Germany
    You’ve never seen a climbing film like Je Veux. Joachim Hellinger, who has been bringing his inventive and well-produced mountaineering and adventure films to Mountainfilm in Telluride for 20 years, is a bit of a Francophile. He fell in love with the music of French singer Zaz (one of the most popular and identifiable musicians in France today) and was in the unique position to help her carry out her dream: performing on the top of the tallest mountain in Europe. At an altitude of 15,781 feet, climbing Mont Blanc is no small feat, especially considering that Zaz’s small band includes an acoustic contrabass. Those not familiar with Zaz will fall in love with her unassuming songs that are rooted in jazz and traditional French music; the mountaineers in the audience will be impressed, as well.
    and
    THE GIMP MONKEYS (2012) 8m
    Directors: Fitz Cahall & Mikey Schaefer
    Country: USA
    After four nights and five days, Craig DeMartino, Jarem Frye and Pete Davis scrambled to the top of the 1,800-foot Zodiac Wall on Yosemite’s El Capitan on June 9, 2012. It’s a route that’s been climbed countless times, but not like this: the first all-disabled ascent. DeMartino (who lost a leg in a climbing accident), Frye (who lost a leg to bone cancer) and Davis (who was born without an arm) didn’t accomplish the feat to raise awareness or champion their cause. They did it because they are climbers first and disabled second. Martino says, “If a climber is what you are…you want to climb El Cap.” So with four legs, five arms and three heads, they tackled the towering expanse of granite. Gimp Monkeysfollows the trio’s monumental trip up the wall and examines where passion, tenacity, perspective and toughness can lead. Because, as Davis says, “The right attitude and one arm will beat the wrong attitude and two arms every time.”
    Saturday, November 16, 9:00pm 

    http://youtu.be/04z3dS6P60g

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  • Award-Winning Prison Drama STARRED UP to Get 2014 U.S. Release | TRAILER

    Jack O'Connell in "Starred Up", directed by David Mackenzie a Tribeca Film release.

    Scottish director David Mackenzie’s award-winning gritty prison drama STARRED UP, which stars Jack O’Connell (“Skins”, Angelina Jolie’s upcoming Unbroken), Ben Mendelsohn (The Dark Knight Rises, The Place Beyond the Pines), and Rupert Friend (“Homeland”) will be released in the US by Tribeca Film in 2014. 

    STARRED UP, which premiered earlier this year at the 2013 Telluride Film Festival and 2013 Toronto International Film Festival, is about ultra-violent 19-year-old Eric (O’Connell), who is prematurely transferred to the same adult prison facility as his estranged father (Mendelsohn). As his explosive temper quickly finds him enemies in both prison authorities and fellow inmates — and his already volatile relationship with his father is pushed past the breaking point — Eric is approached by a volunteer psychotherapist (Friend), who runs an anger management group for prisoners. Torn between gang politics, prison corruption, and a glimmer of something better, Eric finds himself in a fight for his own life, unsure if his own father is there to protect him or join in punishing him.

    Fox Searchlight will release the film in the U.K. in the spring of 2014. 

    http://youtu.be/WuaN_xeapGU

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  • ‘IT FELT LIKE LOVE’ ‘BROTHERS HYPNOTIC’ Lead Winning Films at 2013 Indie Memphis

    IT FELT LIKE LOVE, directed by Eliza HittmanIT FELT LIKE LOVE, directed by Eliza Hittman

    IT FELT LIKE LOVE, directed by Eliza Hittman won the Jury award for Best Narrative Feature; and BROTHERS HYPNOTIC, directed by Reuben Atlas won the Jury award for Best Documentary Feature at the Indie Memphis film festival which took place October 31 to November 3, 2013. The audience, on the other hand, voted for SHORT TERM 12, directed by Destin Cretton to win the Narrative Feature Audience award and A WHOLE LOTT MORE, directed by Victor Buhler took home the Documentary Feature Audience award.

    2013 Festival Awards

    Best Narrative Feature*
    ($1,000 cash prize presented by Nice Shoes)
    IT FELT LIKE LOVE, directed by Eliza Hittman

    During an uneventful summer on the outskirts of Brooklyn, Lila, a lonely fourteen-year-old from Gravesend, turns her attentions to Sammy, an older thug she sees at Rockaway beach. Wanting something to brag about, she weaves a story about him and becomes fixated on seeing it realized. When her attempts fail, she propels the lie even further, claiming they’ve had sex. During her sexual quest, Lila turns from predator to prey.

    Duncan-Williams Scriptwriting Award*($1,000 cash prize presented by Duncan-Williams, Inc.)Duncan-Williams Scriptwriting Award*
    ($1,000 cash prize presented by Duncan-Williams, Inc.)
    SEE YOU NEXT TUESDAY, written by Drew Tobia

    Starring Dana Eskelson, Eleanore Pienta, Keisha Zollar and Molly Plunk

    Mona is pregnant, single, and mentally unbalanced. Her only close friend is her mother, May, a recovering alcoholic with a brash sense of humor. Mona’s sister, Jordan, is an emotionally distant and unemployable party girl. In the last days of her pregnancy, Mona draws her mother and sister into her hectic life as she drifts further from reality.
    Special Jury Award for outstanding performance
    Eleanor Pienta (SEE YOU NEXT TUESDAY)

    Special Jury Award – The Emerging Artist Award for the creative promise shown by their debut feature
    WHAT I LOVE ABOUT CONCRETE, directed by Katherine Dohan & Alanna Stewart
    Starring Morgan Rose Stewart

    A homespun high school fairy tale comedy, WHAT I LOVE ABOUT CONCRETE is a tour through the unbearable awkwardness, nascent cynicism, and disarming wonder that comprise the 11th grade experience, in a world where synchronized swimming breaks out in rundown motel pools, and dead swans are concealed in Mary Poppins-like bottomless book bags.

    Armed with only a shoestring budget and a grand vision, co-directors Katherine Dohan and Alanna Stewart turned to homemade special effects, an original score, family members as actors, and puppets to realize their uncanny take on the classic heroine’s journey.

    DOCUMENTARY JURY AWARDS

    Best Documentary Feature*
    ($1,000 cash prize presented by Classic American Hardwoods)
    BROTHERS HYPNOTIC, directed by Reuben Atlas

    For the eight young men who comprise the joyful and bombastic Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, brotherhood is literal: They’re all sons of anti-establishment jazz legend Phil Cohran. Raised on a steady diet of jazz and funk crossed with Black Consciousness on Chicago’s South Side, this jazz cooperative has moved from busking on the streets to collaborating with Mos Def and opening for Prince. This coming-of-age doc is filled with their unremittingly unique brand of music and showcases their struggle to maintain the values they were raised on w

    Special Jury Award
    GREAT CHICKEN WING HUNT, directed by Matt Reynolds

    Short Film Jury AwardsBest Narrative Short*</strong><br>($500 cash prize)<br><a href=\”<a href=” http:=”” indiememphis=”” festivalgenius=”” com=”” 2013=”” films=”” aftermath_indiememphis2013_indiememphis2013=””>
    American expatriate, international journalist and upstate New Yorker Matt Reynolds forsake a successful life in Eastern Europe, compelled by a singular obsession: find the world’s best Buffalo chicken wing. Joined by his long-suffering Czech girlfriend, a perplexed Slovak film crew, and a ragtag gang of wing-obsessed misfits recruited on-line, Reynolds embarks on THE GREAT CHICKEN WING HUNT. After 2,627 miles and 284 varieties of wings, the quest ends in the very countryside of Reynolds’ childhood.

    SHORT FILM JURY AWARDS

    Best Narrative Short*
    ($500 cash prize)
    AFTERMATH, directed by Jeremy Robbins

    Best Documentary Short*
    ($500 cash prize)
    SWEET CRUDE MAN CAMP, directed by Isaac Gale

    Best Animation or Experimental Film*
    THE MISSING SCARF, directed by Eoin Duffy

    Special Jury Award
    MS. BELVEDERE, directed by Michael Reynolds

    Special Jury Award
    HOW TO SHARPEN PENCILS, directed by Kenneth Price

    SPECIAL FESTIVAL AWARDS

    Southern Soul of Independent Film Award*
    ORANGE MOUND, TENNESSEE: AMERICA’S COMMUNITY, directed by Emmanuel Amido

    Ron Tibbett Excellence in Filmmaking Award*
    BOB BIRDNOW’S REMARKABLE TALE OF HUMAN SURVIVAL AND THE TRANSCENDENCE OF SELF, directed by Eric Steele

    Craig Brewer Emerging Filmmaker Award*
    ESCAPE FROM TOMORROW, directed by Randy Moore


    AUDIENCE AWARDS

    Narrative Feature*
    SHORT TERM 12, directed by Destin Cretton

    SHORT TERM 12 follows the story of Grace, a 24-year-old girl who is the supervisor for a group home that houses 15 at-risk teenagers. As she deals with the day-to-day problems of the kids, along with her own discovery of an unwanted pregnancy, Grace is forced to confront the issues from her past she’s always avoided.

    Documentary Feature*
    A WHOLE LOTT MORE, directed by Victor Buhler

    There are almost eight million Americans with developmental disabilities – which include Cerebral Palsy, Autism and Down’s syndrome. Many of these Americans live on the edges of society, separate from the non-disabled. In a competitive job market people with developmental disabilities struggle to earn a living – an estimated 80% of them are out of work. Those who do work often find refuge in ‘disabled workplaces’ – coalitions of industry and social service that provide manufacturing jobs. Until recently these were called ‘sheltered workshops’. But few are like Lott Industries.

    For decades, Lott Industries successfully competed with non-disabled factories for auto industry contracts. TJ Hawker, who has cerebral palsy and is deaf, cannot imagine working anywhere else – he suffered depression after he lost his previous job at a local hospital. Wanda Huber, who has Turner’s and Down’s Syndrome, is the fiery leader of the workers’ group at Lott. Kevin Tyree is a recent high school graduate who has autism. Is Lott the best option for him in a changing economy or should he look for a job in the wider community?

    Ever since Ford pulled out of town the company has struggled. Lott has twelve months to find new contracts or they will close. For Joan Browne, Lott’s President, it is an unthinkable scenario. A WHOLE LOTT MORE is a moving feature documentary that details the most crucial year in Lott Industries’ history and brings audiences closer to the working world for Americans with developmental disabilities.

    Narrative Short*
    COOTIE CONTAGION, directed by Joshua Smooha

    Documentary Short*
    MABON ‘TEENIE’ HODGES: A PORTRAIT OF A MEMPHIS SOUL ORIGINAL, directed by Susanna Vapnek

    Hometowner Film*
    MEANWHILE IN MEMPHIS: THE SOUND OF A REVOLUTION, directed by Nan Hackman & Robert Allen Parker


    HOMETOWNER AWARDS

    Best Hometowner Feature*
    ($1,000 cash prize presented by the Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission)
    BEING AWESOME, directed by Allen C. GardnerBest Hometowner Narrative Short*
    ($500 cash prize presented by the Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission)
    JOHN’S FARM, directed by Melissa SweazyBest Hometowner Documentary Short*
    ($500 cash prize presented by the Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission)
    BOOKIN’, directed by John Kirkscey

     

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  • ‘FRUITVALE STATION’ ‘THE RAILWAY MAN’ Among Int’l Films on Lineup for 2013 Dubai International Film Festival

     THE RAILWAY MAN starring Colin Firth and Nicole KidmanTHE RAILWAY MAN starring Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman

    The 10th edition of the Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF) which takes place from the December 6th to 14th, 2013, unveiled the line-up of international films in the Cinema of the World section. Films on the lineup include award-winning indie film FRUITVALE STATION; THE RAILWAY MAN starring Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman;  Polish Oscar contender WALESA. MAN OF HOPE; Georgia Oscar contender IN BLOOM; documentary THE UNKNOWN KNOWN; Italian film THE REFEREE, and Slovenian film CLASS ENEMY.

    FRUITVALE STATIONFRUITVALE STATION

    The winner of the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award at this year’s Sundance Film Festival; “FRUITVALE STATION”, is a confident, touching and, finally, shattering directorial début by Ryan Coogler. Produced by Forest Whitaker the film follows the true story of Oscar Grant (Michael B. Jordan), a 22-year-old Bay Area resident, who crosses paths with friends, enemies, family, and strangers on the last day of 2008.

    Academy Award winners Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman star in “THE RAILWAY MAN” the true story of Eric Lomax, a British soldier in World War II who endured gruelling conditions as a forced labourer on the Thailand Death Railway after being captured by Japanese troops. Director Jonathan Teplitzky’s adaptation of Lomax’s bestselling memoir chronicles the stunning true story of one man’s epic journey toward forgiving those who had done him unspeakable harm.

    WALESA. MAN OF HOPEWALESA. MAN OF HOPE

    From the acclaimed filmmaker Andrzej Wajda and Poland’s candidate for the Academy Awards in the Foreign Language Film category comes “WALESA. MAN OF HOPE”. The impressive, decades-spanning biopic is the story of one of the most famous and heroic men in Polish history, former dockworker, Solidarity founder, and eventual Polish president Lech Walesa, who helped millions of people by leading a revolution that ended up not only toppling a dictatorship in his own country, but also eating away at the crumbling edifice of the Soviet empire in the 1980s.

    “IN BLOOM” directed by Nana Ekvtimishvili and Simon Gross“IN BLOOM” directed by Nana Ekvtimishvili and Simon Gross

    Another contender for the Oscar in the Foreign Language Film category is Georgia’s submission “IN BLOOM” directed by Nana Ekvtimishvili and Simon Gross. This absorbing and powerful coming-of-age drama follows two young girls navigating the oppressive familial and societal expectations of post-Soviet Georgia. This fascinating story is loosely based on debut writer and co-director Ekvtimishvili’s childhood memories of growing up in newly independent Georgia in the early 1990s.

    THE UNKNOWN KNOWNTHE UNKNOWN KNOWN

    Academy Award winning and one of the most important and influential non-fiction filmmakers of his generation, Errol Morris (The Fog Of War) returns with the documentary “THE UNKNOWN KNOWN”. The gripping exploration details the career and philosophy of former U.S Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld. Using declassified memos, Morris guides Rumsfeld through a discussion of his controversial career as a high-level executive under four different Republican presidents. Such absorbing topics as Vietnam, the Cold War, Desert Storm and the War on Terror are all examined through the words of one of America’s most divisive and complex public figures.

    “THE REFEREE” (“L’ARBITRO”) by Italian filmmaker and writer Paolo Zucca“THE REFEREE” (“L’ARBITRO”) by Italian filmmaker and writer Paolo Zucca

    “THE REFEREE” (“L’ARBITRO”) is the brilliant first feature by Italian filmmaker and writer Paolo Zucca, a development of his earlier short film with the same title which won the Prix Spécial du Jury at Clermont-Ferrand in 2009. The drastic reversal of fortunes for two Sardinian third league teams, the corruption scandal that destroyed an international referee’s career and the ancient codes of sheep breeding are among the stories woven around each other in this unique football comedy-drama.

    “CLASS ENEMY” by Slovenian director Rok Bicek“CLASS ENEMY” by Slovenian director Rok Bicek

    Slovenian director Rok Bicek’s gripping debut feature “CLASS ENEMY” is loosely based on actual events about a high-school class that spins out of control. The compelling film revolves around a group of teens who blame their demanding new teacher and his demeaning methods when one of their classmates commits suicide, leading to rising tension as the situation approaches a boiling point. Only gradually do the students come to realise that things are not always as black and white as they seem, but at that point it may be too late.
    Nashen Moodley, DIFF’s Co-Director of the Cinema of the World programme, said: “This year’s Cinema of the World slate is guaranteed to take you on an emotional rollercoaster this December. From inspiring and uplifting to heartbreaking and shocking, the diversity of the stories in this section is truly remarkable. The performances are magnetic and engaging with acclaimed directors at the helm, and it’s a pleasure to present some of the most anticipated films of the year.” 

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  • FROZEN Among 19 Animated Features Submitted For 2013 Oscar Race

     FROZENFROZEN

     Nineteen features have been submitted for consideration in the Animated Feature Film category for the 86th Academy Awards®.

    The 19 submitted features, listed in alphabetical order, are:

    “CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2”
    “THE CROODS”
    “DESPICABLE ME 2”
    “EPIC”
    “ERNEST AND CELESTINE”
    “THE FAKE”
    “FREE BIRDS“
    “FROZEN”
    “KHUMBA”
    “THE LEGEND OF SARILA”
    “A LETTER TO MOMO”
    “MONSTERS UNIVERSITY”
    “O APÓSTOLO”
    “PLANES”
    “PUELLA MAGI MADOKA MAGICA THE MOVIE – REBELLION”
    “RIO: 2096 A STORY OF LOVE AND FURY”
    “THE SMURFS 2”
    “TURBO”
    “THE WIND RISES”

    Several of the films have not yet had their required Los Angeles qualifying runs. Submitted features must fulfill the theatrical release requirements and comply with all of the category’s other qualifying rules before they can advance in the voting process. At least eight eligible animated features must be theatrically released in Los Angeles County within the calendar year for this category to be activated.

    Films submitted in the Animated Feature Film category may also qualify for Academy Awards in other categories, including Best Picture, provided they meet the requirements for those categories.

    The 86th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 16, 2014, at 5:30 a.m. PT in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.

    Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2013 will be presented on Oscar Sunday, March 2, 2014, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center® and televised live on the ABC Television Network. The presentation also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

     

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  • Wes Anderson’s THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL to Open 2014 Berlin International Film Festival

    THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

    The 64th Berlin International Film Festival will open on February 6, 2014 with the world premiere of Wes Anderson’s THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL. THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL,shot on location in Germany, recounts the adventures of Gustave H, a legendary concierge at a famous European hotel between the wars, and Zero Moustafa, the lobby boy who becomes his most trusted friend.

    The story involves the theft and recovery of a priceless Renaissance painting and the battle for an enormous family fortune — all against the back-drop of a suddenly and dramatically changing Continent.

    In addition to starring Ralph Fiennes and Tony Revolori in the lead roles, the film also features F. Murray Abraham, Mathieu Amalric, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Harvey Keitel, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Jason Schwartzman, Tilda Swinton, Léa Seydoux, Tom Wilkinson and Owen Wilson.

    http://youtu.be/1Fg5iWmQjwk

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  • Whistler Film Festival Unveils 2013 Film Lineup; Closes with THE CRASH REEL

     THE CRASH REEL THE CRASH REEL

    The 13th Whistler Film Festival (WFF) taking place from December 4th to 8th, 2013, in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada has unveiled its lineup of films . WFF’s Closing Night Gala film is the Western Canadian Premiere of THE CRASH REEL by two time Academy Award nominated documentary director, Lucy Walker, and is about champion half-pipe snowboard legend Kevin Pearce’s inspiring rehabilitation following a devastating neck injury.

    The festival previously announced Canadian director and actor Jason Priestley’s CAS & DYLAN (Western Canadian Premiere) is this year’s Opening Night Gala presentation.

    Additional feature film World Premieres include: snowbound romantic comedy THREE NIGHT STAND directed by Pat Kiely; and late night thriller ICE SOLDIERS directed by Sturla Gunnarsson. Returning programming strands include the 10th Anniversary Borsos Competition for Best Canadian Feature featuring six diverse titles including CAS & DYLAN, THE HUSBAND, PATCH TOWN and UVANGA, LOUIS CYR and Richie Mehta’s SIDDHARTH.

    The Documentary competition returns with five titles, including Barry Avrich’s FILTHY GORGEOUS: THE BOB GUCCIONE STORY, and the Canadian Premiere of Whitney Ransick’s MISFIRE: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE SHOOTING GALLERY.

    Mountain Culture is back with three Western Canadian premieres, and includes THE RIDGE, THE CRASH REEL, and the Latvian snowboard doc SKLMNTI.

    WFF’s World Now will showcase four films from diverse corners of the world including the Canadian Premieres of Chinese box office giant FINDING MR. RIGHT (China) directed by Xiao Lu Xue; CINCO DE MAYO: THE BATTLE (Mexico) from director Rafa Lafa; and Benecio Del Toro starring JIMMY P: PSYCHOTHERAPY OF A PLAINS INDIAN, directed by Arnaud Desplechin.

    Nine films make up this year’s Special Presentations including, LE DEMANTELEMENT (Sébastien Pilote), SEX AFTER KIDS (Jeremy LaLonde), THE GRAND SEDUCTION (Don McKellar), and the Canadian nominee for the Best Foreign Language category at this year’s Academy Awards GABRIELLE (Louise Archambault).

    Late Night selections will showcase great genre films including the World Premiere of ICE SOLDIERS directed by Sturla Gunnarsson; the Canadian premiere of SAVAGED directed by Michael S. Ojeda; and the Western Canadian premieres of ODD THOMAS directed by Stephen Sommers and Austria’s THE STATION directed by Marvin Kren.

    A selection of all age friendly flicks make up the Family program, including the World Premiere of BC film IF I HAD WINGS directed by Allan Harmon and starring Lorne Cardinal and Jill Hennessey; and the Western Canadian nature doc AMAZONIA, WFF’s first ever 3D presentation.

    Finally, WFF’s American Indies strand features a particularly edgy collection this year with Justin Long and Tyler Labine in BEST MAN DOWN; Lukas Haas in METH HEAD from director Jane Clark; THE WAIT starring Chloe Sevigny & Jena Malone, directed by M. Blash; and the jaw-droppingly shocking CHEAP THRILLS featuring David Koechner.

    WFF 2013 Complete Feature Film Listing:

    World Premieres:
    AFTERPARTY (Canada) Dir. Michelle Ouellet
    DOWN HERE (Canada) Dir. Teach Grant
    IF I HAD WINGS (Canada) Dir. Allan Harmon
    ICE SOLDIERS (Canada) Dir. Sturla Gunnarsson
    NO CLUE (Canada) Dir. Carl Bessai
    THREE NIGHT STAND (Canada) Dir. Pat Kiely

    Canadian Premieres:
    CINCO DE MAYO: THE BATTLE (Mexico) Dir. Rafa Lara
    BEST MAN DOWN (USA) Dir. Ted Koland
    FINDING MR. RIGHT (China) Dir. Xiao Le Xue
    JIMMY P: PSYCHOTHERAPY OF A PLAINS INDIAN (USA/France) Dir Arnaud Desplechin
    JINGLE BELL ROCKS! (Canada) Dir. Mitchell Kezin
    METH HEAD (USA) Dir. Jane Clark
    PATCH TOWN (Canada) Dir. Craig Goodwill
    MISFIRE: THE RISE & FALL OF THE SHOOTING GALLERY (Canada) Dir Whitney Ransick
    SAVAGED (USA) Dir. Michael S. Ojeda
    WAIT, THE (USA) Dir. M. Blash

    Western Canadian Premieres:
    ANIMAL PROJECT, THE (Canada) Dir. Ingrid Veninger
    AMAZONIA 3D(France) Dir Thierry Ragobert
    CAS & DYLAN (Canada) Dir. Jason Priestley
    CITIZEN MARC (Canada) Dir. Roger Larry
    CHEAP THRILLS (Canada) Dir. E.L. Katz
    CRASH REEL, THE (USA) Dir. Lucy Walker
    DARK BLOOD (USA) Dir. George Sluizer
    DEVIL’S KNOT (USA) Dir. Atom Egoyan
    EMPIRE OF DIRT (Canada) Dir. Peter Stebbings
    FILTHY GORGEOUS: THE BOB GUCCIONE STORY (Canada) Dir. Barry Avrich
    HI-HO MISTAHEY! (Canada) Dir. Alanis Obomsawin
    HUSBAND, THE (Canada) Dir. Bruce McDonald
    LE DEMANTELEMENT (Canada) Dir. Sébastien Pilote
    LIFE’S A BREEZE (Ireland) Dir. Lance Daly
    LOUIS CYR, STRONGEST MAN IN THE WORLD (Canada) Dir. Daniel Roby
    ODD THOMAS (USA) Dir. Stephen Sommers
    RIDGE, THE (UK) Dir. Pablo Iranburu
    SIDDHARTH (Canada) Dir. Richie Mehta
    STATION, THE (Austria) Dir. Marvin Kren
    SKLMNTI (Latvia) Dir. Ernests Cerbul
    UVANGA (Canada) Dir. Marie-Hélène Cousineau, Madeline Piujuq Ivalu

    BC Premieres:
    GRAND SEDUCTION, THE (Canada) Dir. Don McKellar
    SEX AFTER KIDS (Canada) Dir. Jeremy LaLonde

    Whistler Premieres:
    CALIGULA (USA) Dir. Tinto Brass/Bob Guccione
    DALLAS BUYERS CLUB (USA) Dir. Jean-Marc Vallée
    GABRIELLE (Canada) Dir. Louise Archambault

    Special Presentation:
    PRISONERS (USA) Dir. Denis Villeneuve

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  • Austin Film Festival Announces 2013 Audience Award Winners; Sets 2014 Dates

    ,

    1982 written and directed by Tommy Oliver won the Marquee Feature Audience Award1982 written and directed by Tommy Oliver won the Marquee Feature Audience Award

    The 20th Austin Film Festival (AFF) which ran October 24 to 31, 2013, announced the 2013 Audience Award winners, voted on by festival audience members. 1982 written and directed by Tommy Oliver and starring Hill Harper, Bokeem Woodbine, Quinton Aaron, and Wayne Brady, won the Marquee Feature Audience Award. in the film, a father protects his gifted daughter from the insidious crack cocaine epidemic which has literally come home via her drug-addicted mother. BESIDE STILL WATERS won the Narrative Feature Audience Award and ALL OF ME tied with THE LIFE AND CRIMES OF DORIS PAYNE to win the Documentary Feature Audience Award. AFF also announced its dates for the 21st Annual Austin Film Festival and Conference for October 23 to 30, 2014. 

    Marquee Feature Audience Award:

    1982
    Writer/ Director: Tommy Oliver
    Starring Hill Harper, Bokeem Woodbine, Quinton Aaron, and Wayne Brady

    Narrative Feature Audience Award:

    BESIDE STILL WATERS
    Writers: Chris Lowell, Mohit Narang
    Director: Chris Lowell
    Starring: Reid Scott, Brett Dalton, Beck Bennett, Ryan Eggold, and Britt Lower

    BESIDE STILL WATERS

    In this BIG CHILL for Generation Y, a group of childhood friends come together for the last time at the scenic lake house where they all grew up, to comfort each other, rekindle old flames and drunkenly stumble down memory lane. The house brings out the adolescence in all of them, and what follows is a weekend full of drinking and dancing. Laughter and secrets. Sex, drugs, mischief and regret. Equally full of humor and heartbreak, BESIDE STILL WATERS explores the past and getting past it.

    Documentary Feature Audience Award: (tie)

    (tie) ALL OF ME
    Director: Alexandra Lescaze

     ALL OF ME

    The ‘Girls’ have been friends for years, bonding over hopes, dreams, food, and the shared experience of being very obese. They met via the Austin chapter of the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) and partied together among Austin’s Big Beautiful Women community. Meanwhile they tried every diet and every pill. Now going through the life-changing process of weight-loss surgery, their center has shifted and upset everything they knew about happiness, friendship and love.

    (tie) THE LIFE AND CRIMES OF DORIS PAYNE
    Directors: Kirk Marcolina, Matthew Pond

    The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne

    Find out how a poor, single, African-American mother from segregated 1930s America winds up as one of the world’s most notorious jewel thieves. A glamorous 80-year-old, Doris Payne is as unapologetic today about the $2 million in jewels she’s stolen over a 60-year career as she was the day she stole her first carat. With Doris now on trial for the theft of a department store diamond ring, we probe beneath her consummate smile to uncover the secrets of her trade and what drove her to a life of crime. Stylized recreations, an extensive archive and candid interviews reveal how Payne managed to jet-set her way into any Cartier or Tiffany’s from Monte Carlo to Japan and walk out with small fortunes. This sensational portrait exposes a rebel who defies society’s prejudices and pinches her own version of the American Dream while she steals your heart.

    Comedy Vanguard Audience Award:

    THE GOLDEN SCALLOP
    Writer: Kevin Harrigan
    Director: Joseph Laraja
    Starring: James Cosmo, Nicole Steinwedell, and Tobias Jelinek

    THE GOLDEN SCALLOP

    Three fried-fish restaurants’ struggles, passions and eccentricities are documented at the ultimate short order cooking contest, The Golden Scallop Championship. A food truck, a novelty eatery, and old favorite all vie for victory, but all their practice cannot prepare them for their head-to-head-to-head showdown. For fans of BEST IN SHOW and WAITING FOR GUFFMAN, this mockumentary-style film is full of battles and battered cod.

    Dark Matters Audience Award:

    BLOOD PUNCH
    Writer: Eddie Guzelian
    Director: Madellaine Paxson
    Starring: Olivia Tennet, Cohen Holloway, Ari Boyland, Milo Cawthorne, Adelaide Kane, and Fleur Saville

    BLOOD PUNCH

    A mysterious “bad girl” checks herself into rehab to find someone who can cook meth for her. After breaking him out, she draws him into a dangerous love triangle with her abusive dirty cop boyfriend and their get-rich-quick drug score plan. Everything goes terribly wrong, and then the next day, they do it again in this genre-bending neo-noir time-shifting whiplash 

    Texas Independents Audience Award:

    SOMBRAS DE AZUL
    Writer/Director: Kelly Daniela Norris 
    Starring: Seedne Bujaidar, Yasmani Guerrero, Charlotta Mohlin, and Lieter Ledesma Alberto

    SOMBRAS DE AZUL

    In the wake of her brother’s suicide, a young Mexican woman, Maribel, books a one-way ticket to the place he’d always dreamt of going – Cuba. Wandering the streets of Havana, Maribel attempts to escape her grief, but the city’s rhythms and strangers just serve to trigger tortured ruminations and memories of him. It is only when she bonds with Eusebio – a petty thief and skilled woodcraftsman – that Maribel begins to face her demons. (In Spanish with English Subtitles)

     

    Write/Rec Audience Award:

    SPEAK NOW
    Writer: Erin Cardillo
    Director: Noah Harald
    Starring: Rosie Mattia, Jason Drumwright, Jayme Lynn Evans, Eric Goldrich, Rane Jameson, Russell Taylor, and Erika Ward

    SPEAK NOW is a romantic dramedy about a group of high school friends reuniting for a wedding. Setting aside their personal dramas to support the union of Tommy and Anna was the intention of the wedding guests, but as the night unfolds old offenses and newly mounting scandal plunge the group back into a pool of high-school drama. One wedding will challenge the beliefs and change the lives of all in attendance… forever. This feature film was shot in three days with all the dialogue improvised by the actors.

    Narrative Short Audience Award:

    MR. INVISIBLE
    Writer: Richard Sainsbury
    Director: Greg Ash

    Narrative Student Short Audience Award:

    COOTIE CONTAGION
    Writer/Director: Josh Smooha

    Animated Short Audience Award:

    MIA
    Writers: Wouter Bongaerts, Bert Vandecasteele
    Director: Wouter Bongaerts

    Documentary Short Audience Award:

    THE GUIDE
    Director: Jessica Yu 

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  • ‘JIN’ ‘BLUSH OF FRUIT’ Win Top Awards at 2013 Adelaide Film Festival

      JIN directed by Reha Erdem JIN directed by Reha Erdem

    Turkish film JIN and the documentary BLUSH OF FRUIT won top film honors at the 2013 Adelaide Film Festival which took place October 10 to 20, 2013 in Adelaide, Australia.  JIN, directed and written by Reha Erdem is the  winner of the Foxtel Movies International Award for Best Feature Film and BLUSH OF FRUIT, directed by Jakeb Anhvu, is the winner of the festival’s first ever Documentary Award.

    in JIN, a 17-year-old girl deserts the Kurdish guerrillas in the mountains and tries to make her way through the forest to her grandmother’s house. It’s a simple enough story that plays on the Little Red Riding Hood fairy tale, but it sets the framework for a film of extraordinary visual richness. As she moves through the intense green landscapes, she is in constantly in contact with animals who share her condition as solitary, threatened and magnificent figures—and there is no shortage of big bad wolves in the world, though they are exclusively human. Man makes war not simply on himself, but also on nature.

    Blush of Fruit directed by Reha ErdemBlush of Fruit directed by Reha Erdem

    BLUSH OF FRUIT,  is described as a fly on the wall documentary about a man’s quest and the mothers who care for the abused, orphaned children of Nha–Trang, Vietnam.  Tong Phuoc Phuc has won fame and fortune by opposing abortion in the name of Christianity and accumulating lucrative donations for taking in unwanted babies and pregnant girls in Vietnam. The girls are used as carers though the children are routinely treated with neglect and cruelty.

    2013 Audience Award Winners

    Most Popular Feature – CHARLIE’S COUNTRY, directed by Rolf de Heer

    CHARLIE’S COUNTRY, directed by Rolf de HeerCHARLIE’S COUNTRY, directed by Rolf de Heer

    After glowing reviews at the Festival from such publications as The Guardian, Screen Daily, Fairfax and ABC Radio, audiences agreed. Starring David Gulpilil, Charlie’s Country tells the story of an Aboriginal man living in a remote community who takes off, to live the old way, but in doing so sets off a chain of events in his life that has him return to his community chastened,  and somewhat the wiser.

    Most Popular Short – THE GALLANT CAPTAIN, directed by Graeme Base and Katrina Mathers

    Screened as part of the Festival’s family session, The Gallant Captain is the animated film debut of renowned children’s book illustrator and author Graeme Base. Adapted from Base’s hugely popular picture book The Legend of the Golden Snail, The Gallant Captain is a child’s pirate fantasy that celebrates the power of the imagination.

    Most Popular Documentary – ONCE MY MOTHER, directed by Sophia Turkiewicz

    ONCE MY MOTHER, directed by Sophia TurkiewiczONCE MY MOTHER, directed by Sophia Turkiewicz

    This is the story of two women: Turkiewicz, an award-winning Australian filmmaker, and her mother Helen. It is a story of survival and forgiveness, and finally a deeply affecting love story. In her old age her daughter leads her through a rediscovery of the epic journey of her life, from Poland to a wartime Siberian gulag, and through Uzbekistan, Persia and a refugee camp in Africa before she comes to rest in Adelaide. Turkiewicz traces her own life in parallel with her mother’s in an effort to make peace with their troubled relationship.

    Audience Award Top 10′s:

    FEATURE:

    1. Charlie’s Country

    2. Beatriz’s War

    3. 52 Tuesdays

    4. Like Father, Like Son

    5. Alan Partridge: Alpha Papa

    6. Short Term 12

    7. The Past

    8. Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?

    9. Omar

    10. Broken Circle Breakdown

    DOCUMENTARY

    1. Once My Mother

    2. Tender

    3. All This Mayhem

    4. Bradley Wiggins: A Year in Yellow

    5. Fire in the Blood

    6. This Ain”t No Mouse Music!

    7. Muscle Shoals

    8. Battle of the Sexes

    9. Blackfish

    10. A World Not Ours

    SHORT

    1. The Gallant Captain

    2. Welcome to Iron Knob

    3. I Want To Dance Better At Parties

    4. Bonny Doon

    5. Oh Willy

     

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