• Sundance Institute Selects 22 Fellows Representing 9 Documentary Films for 2013 Documentary Edit and Story Labs

     sundance-institute

    22 Fellows representing nine documentary film projects have been selected to participate in the Sundance Institute 2013 Documentary Edit and Story Labs, June 21-29 and July 5-13 at Sundance Resort in Sundance, Utah.

    Built upon the immersive Lab model launched in 1981 by Sundance Institute President & Founder Robert Redford, each session of the Documentary Edit and Story Labs brings together director and editor teams with world-renowned documentary filmmakers and Sundance Institute staff to support creative risk-taking around issues of story, dramatic structure and character development.

    JUNE 21-29 DOCUMENTARY EDIT AND STORY LAB

    A BLIND EYE (U.S.)
    Director: Kirsten Johnson
    Editor: Amanda Laws
    The voice of an American camerawoman explores the nature of cinematography and what she has failed to see while filming in Afghanistan through her encounters with two Afghan teenagers. Najeeb, a one-eyed boy, struggles to hide what really haunts him, while a bold teenage girl must decide how much she will risk to be visible. A U.S. Military surveillance blimp in the sky over Kabul tracks their every move.

    ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM (U.S.)
    Co-directors and Editor: Ed Pincus, Lucia Small
    Producer: Mary Kerr
    Two filmmakers of different generations turn the camera on each other to explore friendship, legacy, loss and living with terminal illness. Told from two points of view, Elephant in the Room offers a unique, raw, personal glimpse into a creative partnership and the difficulty of capturing the preciousness of life.

    THE LAST HIJACK (U.S., Netherlands)
    Co-directors: Tommy Pallotta and Femke Wolting
    Editor: Edgar Burcksen
    Mohamed, an experienced Somali pirate, assembles his team to conduct his final hijacking. Increasing pressure from his family and future wife to quit an increasingly dangerous profession provide the backdrop for this dramatic tale about survival in a failed state.

    STREET FIGHTING MAN (U.S.)
    Director: Andrew James
    Editor: Jason Tippet
    In a new America where the promise of education, safety and shelter are in jeopardy, three Detroit men fight to build something lasting for themselves and future generations.

    TOTONEL (Romania)
    Director: Alexander Nanau
    Editor: Mirceau Olteanu
    What happens when we discover that we can get more from life than our parents have to offer?

    JULY 5-13 DOCUMENTARY EDIT AND STORY LAB

    AN AFRICAN SPRING (U.S.)
    Director: Elizabeth ‘Chai’ Vasarhelyi
    Editor: Jay Freund
    In the Spring of 2011, Senegal was pitched into crisis when President Abdoulaye Wade decided to change the constitution to allow for a third term. An artist-led youth movement erupted to protect one of Africa’s oldest and most stable democracies.

    THE HOMESTRETCH (U.S.)
    Co-Directors: Anne de Mare, Kirsten Kelly
    Editor: Leslie Simmer
    Four homeless teenagers brave Chicago winters, the pressures of high school, and life alone on the streets to build a brighter future. Against all odds, these kids defy stereotypes as they learn to reach out for help and create new, surprising definitions of home.

    RICH HILL (U.S.)
    Co-directors: Tracy Draz Tragos, Andrew Droz Palermo
    Editor: Jim Hession
    Rich Hill chronicles the turbulent lives of three boys living in a dying Midwestern town, witnessing their struggles up close as they fight to have self-worth, a sense of belonging and a family bond. Despite deep need, these boys still have hope. There is still the dream of transformation: that cycles of poverty can be broken, that love will sustain, that hard work will be rewarded, and that even they can live the American dream.

    STRONG ISLAND (U.S.)
    Director: Yance Ford
    Editor: Shannon Kennedy
    Haunted by the violent death for over 20 years, Strong Island is the director’s meditation on loss, the impact of grief over time and the illusive meaning of “justice.”

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  • WATCH Trailer for Award Winning Indie Film “FULL CIRCLE”

    full circle

    See the trailer for FULL CIRCLE, directed by Olli Koivula and Solvan Naim, and winner of the Award for Best New York Feature Film at the 2013 New York City International Film Festival (NYCIFF). FULL CIRCLE also features Solvan Niam (aka Slick the Misfit) the 23-year-old Algerian-American rapper and music video director from Bushwick in Brooklyn, New York, in the lead starring role as young pizza delivery boy, Anthoni, who faces a life-changing crisis when his curiosity pulls him away from his delivery order into an adjacent apartment’s open door.

    FULL CIRCLE

    He cannot resist the temptation when he stumbles across a large sum of money in the aftermath of what seems to be a drug deal gone bad. After taking the money his life is thrown into turmoil as everyone he knows and cares about is put in jeopardy. Anthoni’s focus turns to revenge when a close friend is killed for his actions. Anthoni goes on his comically charged journey for vengeance as outlandish characters banter through out in this musically infused, urban set comedy-action-drama. Anthoni is focused on avenging the death of his close friend even if it means going up against the neighborhood’s most notorious thug, Lomatic. [Full Circle official website]

    http://youtu.be/dGb1JnEmaG0

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  • WATCH Trailer for Indie Comedy Film “SPENCER”

    Spencer directed by Olli Koivula and Solvan Naim

    See the trailer for the independent comedy film SPENCER, written by, starring, and directed by Geoff Lerer. The film which recently won the Award for Best U.S.A. Feature Film at the 2013 New York City International Film Festival (NYCIFF) follows the travails of Spencer Berg, an aspiring filmmaker trying to make his first movie in Brooklyn. 

    On the brink of success, Spencer’s world is shattered when his supermodel/actress girlfriend ditches him. Spencer must overcome the loss of his leading lady, the funding that came along with her name above the line, an overeager mother and a terrible part-time job as a clown for children’s parties. Imagine what Woody Allen would be like if he was 26 in 2013, with a Canon 5D and all the attendant hopes and dreams of a young man who can’t fail, despite his best efforts. That’s Spencer.

    http://youtu.be/PrkXNWulaAE

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  • FULL CIRCLE, THE TALE OF AN PHUC HOUSE and SPENCER Among Winning Films at 2013 New York City International Film Festival

    FULL CIRCLE won the Award for Best New York Feature Film at New York International Film FestivalFULL CIRCLE won the Award for Best New York Feature Film at New York International Film Festival

    The Vietnamese documentary film “THE TALE OF AN PHUC HOUSE”  directed by Ivan Tankushev won the Award for Best feature Documentary Film at the 2013 New York City International Film Festival (NYCIFF).  “THE TALE OF AN PHUC HOUSE” follows the everyday lives of twenty disabled children – third generation victims of the Agent Orange warfare that occurred during the Vietnam War ( 1963-1973). JIHAD IN AMERICA: THE GRAND DECEPTION, a 70-minute documentary film exploring the Muslim Brotherhood in America, and directed by Investigative Project on Terrorism Executive Director Steven Emerson won an honorary award. 

    FULL CIRCLE won the Award for Best New York Feature Film, SPENCER won the Award for Best U.S.A. Feature Film and the South African film, LITTLE ONE won the Award for Best International Feature Film. FULL CIRCLE directed by Olli Koivula and Solvan Naim is about a young pizza delivery boy, Anthoni, who faces a life-changing crisis when his curiosity pulls him away from his delivery order into an adjacent apartment’s open door.  SPENCER, written by, starring, and directed by Geoff Lerer, follows the travails of Spencer Berg, an aspiring filmmaker trying to make his first movie in Brooklyn.  LITTLE ONE directed by Darrell Roodt and South Africa’s entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards, is the story about a six-year-old girl found left for dead outside a township in Johannesburg.

    The complete list of awards.

    Feature Film Awards

    Best Feature Documentary Film
    THE TALE OF AN PHUC HOUSE
    Vietnam/Canada

    Best U.S.A. Documentary In A Political Subject

    An Honorary Award
    JIHAD IN AMERICA: THE GRAND DECEPTION
    U.S.A.

    Most Imaginative Documentary

    An Honorary Award
    THE GUN, THE CAKE AND THE BUTTERFLY
    United Kingdom

    Best Cinematography
    ARTURO DE LAROSA FOR APASIONADO PANCHO VILLA 
    Mexico

    Best Original Story
    LA VENTA DEL PARAISO
    Spain

    Best Supporting Actress

    An Honorary Award
    Mathilde Norholt For 4REALITY
    Denmark

    Honorary Award For Best Actress In A Comedy

    An Honorary Award
    Margaret Keane Williams For WET BEHIND THE EARS
    U.S.A.

    Best Actress In A Leading Role
    Lindiwe Ndlovu For LITTLE ONE
    South Africa

    Best Supporting Actor

    An Honorary Award
    Omar Franco Morejon For PABLO 
    Cuba

    Best Actor In A Leading Role
    Jagath Chamila For SAM’S STORY
    Sri Lanka

    Best Director
    Yosmani Acosta Martinez For PABLO
    Cuba

    Best New York Feature Film
    FULL CIRCLE

    Best U.S.A. Feature Film
    SPENCER
    New York

    Best International Feature Film
    LITTLE ONE
    South Africa

    Short Film Awards

    Best Animated Short Film
    SHELVED
    New Zealand

    Best Documentary Short Film
    BETWEEN TWO MOMS
    Israel

    Best Student Short Film
    LUCY
    U.S.A.

    Best Comedy In A Short Film
    ON THE NATURE OF HOTNESS
    U.S.A.

    Best Drama In A Short Film
    ADAM
    Indonesia-Israel-Usa

    Best Director In A Short Film
    Marina Santana For LA FORTUNA EN UN DIA DE SOL Y LLUVIA
    Mexico

    Most Original Storyline
    Thomas Tristonho 
    Brazil

    Best Actress In A Leading Role
    Daniella Rincon For EL SILENCIO ED VERONICA
    Perú

    Best Actor In A Leading Role
    Francesco Sarmiento For BODYPIECES 
    Italy

    Best Narrative Short Film
    RETROVISOR 
    Spain

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  • WORLD WAR Z starring Brad Pitt Opens 35th Moscow International Film Festival

    Brad Pitt attends the "World War Z" Screening during the Moscow International Film Festival at Pushkinsky Cinema on June 20, 2013 in Moscow, Russia. Brad Pitt attends the “World War Z” Screening during the Moscow International Film Festival at Pushkinsky Cinema on June 20, 2013 in Moscow, Russia.

    The 35th Moscow International Film Festival kicked off on Thursday, June 20, 2013 with the opening gala premiere of Marc Forster’s WORLD WAR Z starring Brad Pitt. The film revolves around United Nations employee Gerry Lane (Pitt), who traverses the world in a race against time to stop a pandemic that is toppling armies and governments and threatening to decimate humanity itself.

    The complete lineup of feature films in competition include:

    MATTERHORN dir. Diederik Ebbinge, Netherlands, 2013, 87’ 

    In a small religious village leads Fred a lonely existence. His wife has died and he has lost contact with his son. The only thing he does is go to church and talk with the neighbors. When a stranger suddenly pops up in the village, Fred is getting the color back in his life.

     

    DROGÓWKA (TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT) , dir. Wojtek Smarzowski, Poland, 2013, 118′

    The story of seven policemen who are colleagues as well as friends, sharing a fondness for parties, sports cars, and business. Their enclosed world seems to be running smoothly. Everything changes after one of them dies under mysterious circumstances. Sergeant Ryszard Królis accused of murder. Trying to clear his name, he discovers the truth about criminalties in the top ranks of government.

     

    SPAGHETTI STORY dir. Ciro de Caro, Italy, 83’, 2013

    Nowadays, four Italian young adults longing to change their lives, yet stuck upon the shelf: Valerio and Kookie, dreaming of their big break, yet still not being independent; Giovanna and Serena, pretending to be adult, yet never having dared to live. Then, the encounter with Mei Mei, a young Chinese prostitute, shines a light on the truth: the gain of one’s freedom is, above all, an inside job.

     

    ROL’ (The Role), dir. Konstantin Lopushansky, Russia, 2013, 132’

    The Role is about a brilliant actor in revolutionary Russia who takes on the greatest role of his life – the role of another man. Influenced by the ideas of symbolism and the Silver Age, he decides to slip into the life of his doppelganger – a revolutionary leader in the new Soviet Russia. First intrigued, then obsessed, he flings himself into the role and lives it to the hilt… even when the play of the life he is writing heads towards a tragic finale. Based on true incidents in the lives of Russia’s symbolists, this gripping film explores how far one man will go for the role of a lifetime.

     

    LOS CHICOS DEL PUERTO dir. Alberto Morais, Spain, 78’, 2013

    Miguel makes the journey that his grandfather cannot make because he is locked up by his own family. The mission is very simple, go to a funeral and leave an army jacket on the grave of an old man, a friend of his grandfather. Miguel, accompanied by Lola and Guillermo, leaves that island of cement that is the Nazareth neighborhood. He wanders the outskirts of Valencia, looking for a cemetery and faces a deserted city.

     

    ZERRE (PARTICLE), dir., Erdem Tepegöz , Turkey, 2012, 80

    How much space does Zeynep take up in this vast universe? This is a city brimming with the struggling and the unemployed; aren’t their lives a bit like the infinite, tiny particles flying through the air? Zeynep is already trying hard to make ends meet when she gets fired from her job at a textile mill. The Particle follows her as she searches for a job. We follow her in and out of workspaces. Zeynep’s world – the streets and homes in Tarlabaşı – are dark and suffocating.

     

    ROSIE dir. Marsel Gisler, Switzerland, 106’, 2013

    Lorenz Meran, a successful gay author suffering acute writers’ block, has to leave Berlin and return to eastern Switzerland to provide care for his aged mother, Rosie. When he finds himself confronted with the fact that fun-loving Rosie refuses both outside assistance and a care home, he discovers that he is stuck fast in his small home town of Altstätten. But it is not only his mother’s battle against being dictated to and losing her dignity that he is struggling with. It’s also his own midlife crisis. And when long-kept secrets are suddenly revealed under the tensions of family dynamics, Lorenz almost fails to notice that love is knocking on the front door of his parent’s house…

     

    SAYONARA KEIKOKU (THE RAVINE OF GOODBYE), dir. Tatsushi Ômori Japan,2013, 117’

    In a valley, with a dense growth of trees, a baby is killed. The baby’s mother Satomi is arrested as the prime suspect. The police also learn that Satomi is involved in a romantic relationship with her next door neighbor Ozaki. The information was provided by the neighbor’s lover Kanako. Meanwhile, magazine reporter Watanabe, who is covering the story, discovers the shocking fact that Ozaki was involved in a rape case 15 years ago. Even more shocking, the victim in the rape case is Kanako.

     

    KOMA (DISORDER), dir.Archil Kavtaradze, Georgia , 2013, 90’

    A young man is arrested and put into prison for a car accident. His two victims in a coma get into a hospital. The director from his own tragic experience shows us the reverse side of Georgia. Where is the edge to cruelty and sadism, how much can a person bear in a world of absurd injustice and total ridicule? What can you do when you confront the system?

     

    SKOLZHENIYE (SLIDE), dir. Anton Rozenberg, Russia, 2013, 117

    The main characters of “Slide” are above the law. They are a group of police investigators wallowed in criminal activities. But the up-and-running criminal scheme worked out by the experienced team begins to fail. There appears to be a mole reporting directly to the FSB. When Pepel finds himself in a life-threatening situation he starts thinking about his existence for the first time ever. Once he begins to think he can’t go back to his former self. The team begin to suspect that he is the mole. The former co-workers turn into mortal enemies.

     

    L’AUTRE VIE DE RICHARD KEMP (Back in Crime), director: Germinal Alvarez, 2013, 102’

    When Police Captain Richard Kemp investigates a murder, strange similarities to the case bring to mind Pierced Ear, a serial killer who he hunted in vain at the beginning of his career. His only witness is Hélène Batistelli. But a mysterious event sends Kemp back twenty years into the past, to May 1989, the day before the first murder was carried out by Pierced Ear. Kemp tries once again to stop murders from taking place, but a young cop complicates things for him: this ambitious detective is none other but himself, twenty years younger… Hélène, who knows nothing about him, will cross his path…

     

    MAMAROŠ dir. Momčilo Moma Mrdaković , Serbia, Germany, France, Hungary 105′, 2013

    Middle-aged cinephile and film projectionist Pera still lives with his mother – and best friend – Mara, in Belgrade. It’s 1999 and when NATO bombs start raining down on Serbia, the two of them become refugees. After a surreal journey, they end up in New York, where Pera realizes that he can no longer do the old job he loved so much. While he and Mara were struggling to survive, the new age of digital projection was born. Then Pera stumbles upon some discarded projectors and his new mission in life becomes clear: he will travel around and show people the magic of Real Cinema – the magic that can only be created by celluoid, mechanical projectors, the silver screen and flickering light.

     

    LEBANON EMOTION director Young-heun Jung, 106′, 2013

    A man chases a woman. She runs by and then meets another man. The film shows desolate sights. The director’s intention to show indescribable emotions comes up in the frames.

     

    IUDA (JUDAS) director: Andrey Bogatyryov, 108’, 2013

    Judas, a seasoned thief, finds himself in the market square where Christ is giving a sermon and his apostles are collecting alms. He follows them and steals their money, only to be caught red-handed. Nevertheless, the Teacher forgives him. What is more, He invites the thief to become one of His followers and offers him a position as the group’s treasurer. Shocked by Christ’s unexpected offer, Judas decides to join the apostles, if only to figure out what is going on. He gradually starts to comprehend Christ’s message, but feels that the apostles are blindly following their teacher. Judas argues with them, and tries to defend his right to divine the truth of God. But when he fails to make them understand, he realizes that Christ’s teachings may sink into oblivion without benefiting humanity. His solution is to betray Christ. “By killing a man, have I not saved a God?”

     

    A MEMÓRIA QUE ME CONTAM (Memories they told me) Director Lúcia Murat Brasil, 100’, 2012

    An ironic drama about defeated utopias, terrorism, sexual behavior and the creation of a myth. A group of friends, who resisted the military dictatorship, and their children will face the conflict between the daily life of today and the past when one of them is dying.

     

    DELIGHT Director Gareth Jones , UK, 101’, 2013

    Echo goes looking for her one-time lover and comrade-in-arms, only to fall into a passionate relationship with his son. But sexual abandon triggers the unravelling of a trauma she has long buried for the sake of her children, which now threatens to tear their lives apart. Can eros bring a healing of trauma, or merely its repetition?

    The complete lineup of documentary films in competition include:

    AND WHO TAUGHT YOU TO DRIVE Director: Andrea Thiele Germany, 84’, 2012

    Driving through traffic at home is already stressful enough. Now imagine driving a car in a completely foreign country. Mirela, moving from Germany to India, Jake moving from the USA to Japan and South Korean Hye-Won living in Germany are facing the same problem: they are all forced to obtain a new local driver’s license. Driving lessons soon become lessons in life when our protagonists discover that getting through the day will involve much more than just obeying the rules of the road in their host country. 

     

    HOLOCAUST – IS IT A WALLPAPER PASTE? Director: Mumin Shakirov Russia, 56’, 2013

    The Karatygin sisters received what many young people dream about – to become famous. This is why they came to participate in a MUZ-TV programme “The Utterly Stunning”. This quiz show usually does not cover topics one would have during exams and unexpectedly the girls were asked what the word “Holocaust” meant. The girls replied that it was some paste for wall paper. This episode of the show received an enormous number of clicks on YouTube and raised a lot of questions about the education in Russia and about the girls themselves. After meeting the girls the author of the film got an idea to arrange a trip for them to Auschwitz in Poland.

     

    THE GENIUS OF MARIAN Director: Banker White Co-director Anna Fritch USA,  84’, 2013

    The Genius of Marian follows Pam White in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Her son, the filmmaker, works with her as she attempts to write a book that tributes her mother, the renowned artist Marian Steele. As Pam’s family comes together to support her, they must also prepare for the new reality that Alzheimer’s disease brings.

     

    OJCIEC I SYN Father and son Director: Paweł Łoziński Poland, 58’, 2013

    My father and I get into an old camper and head for Paris where, 23 years ago, he dispersed his mother’s ashes in the Luxembourg Garden. Our trip will take two weeks. We’re both documentary filmmakers so we’ve decided to make a film recording the journey. We stop at camper parks or gas stations for the night. We each have a camera to keep the conditions fair and so we’re both the directors and protagonists at the same time. My father is 70, I am 44. We discuss various things – family history, difficult past, my father’s divorces. Any question is allowed. The journey is a pretext to get to know each other a little better. A cinematic-psychological experiment about the father-son relationship. Once in the editing room, will we be able to create a single version that would be acceptable to both?

     

    THE CONDEMNED Director Nick Read Producer Mark Franchetti UK, Russia, 80’, 2013

    The film takes viewers into the hidden world of one of Russia’s most impenetrable and remote institutions: Penal Colony 56, a maximum security prison exclusively for murderers. Its 260 inmates have collectively killed nearly 800 people. The documentary delves into the mind and soul of six main characters: The contract killer whose family believed he worked in the oil business. The hard man who has spent more than forty years behind bars. The murderer of six who, by his own admission, is too vicious to ever be let out again. The “downcast” – a killer whose hand even other murderers will not shake. The inmate who, after 20 years in jail, now fears freedom. In charge of the mad and the bad is the prison’s hard line governor, who after 26 years, has been at the penal colony longer than any inmate. 

     

    THE CRASH REEL Director: Lucy Walker USA, 109′, 2013

    U.S. champion snowboarder Kevin Pearce was at the top of his sport in 2009 when he suffered massive head trauma while training for the 2010 Winter Olympics. What begins as a documentary of a daring and tireless athlete working to become the new face of a growing sport, quickly becomes a chronicle of a young man’s brave journey towards rehabilitation and the understanding of his own limits.

     

    THE DARK MATTER OF LOVE Director: Sarah McCarthy UK, 93’, 2013

    Eleven year old Masha Kulabokhova is about to be adopted into fourteen year old Cami Diaz’s family. Masha grew up in a Russian orphanage; Cami was born and raised in Wisconsin and has been the exclusive focus of her parents’ love her whole life. The Dark Matter of Love follows Masha as she leaves Russia to the spend her first year as part of the Diaz family, who have also adopted five year old twin boys Marcel and Vadim. When the reality of bonding with children who have grown up in institutions turns out to be more difficult than they ever imagined, the Diaz’s hire two of the world’s best developmental psychologists to help them build their new family – through science. 

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  • TaorminaFilmFest Pays Tribute to James Gandolfini

     gandolfini

    TaorminaFilmFest released a statement today on behalf of actor James Gandolfini, who died of a heart attack yesteday in Italy.  Gandolfini was in Italy to attend the 59th TaorminaFilmFest. In a statement on it’s website, the festival said that Gandolfini had been confirmed to attend the TaorminaFilmFest on June 22 to preside over a TaoClass that the festival dedicated to what it calls “the great interpreters of film and television” and to receive the Taormina City Prize.

    Mario Sesti editorial director of Taormina FilmFest and Tiziana Rocca general manager said they had spoken to the actor just a few hours before his death, and that he was very happy to receive the award and visit Italy. “He was the American actor that better than anyone else has been able to interpret the Italian-American with his personality full of contrasts, ambition, pain, humor. He was the face representative of the golden age of television, but also an actor of memorable cinema. We are organizing in this time a tribute that the Taormina FilmFest will dedicate to  his career and talent.”

    The TaorminaFilmFest continues through Saturday, June 22, 2013 in Taormina, Italy.

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  • First Time Feature Directors Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck and Robert Machoian Indie Film FORTY YEARS FROM YESTERDAY

    Forty Years From Yesterday 

    Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck and Robert Machoian’s feature film debut FORTY YEARS FROM YESTERDAY premiered on Sunday at the 203 Los Angeles Film Festival.  Starring Bruce Graham, Suzette Graham, Robert Eddington, Wyatt Eddington, Matt Valdez, Chelsea Word, Elizabeth Overton and Rebekah Mott, the film follows Bruce, a quietly spiritual man with three grown daughters, returns home from his morning jog to discover Suzette, his beloved wife of forty years, has passed away. The film then goes on to capture moments with each family member as they grieve. FORTY YEARS FROM YESTERDAY screens again on Saturday at the festival.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on being an official selection in the 2013 LA Film Festival … and the World Premiere.

    Forty Years From Yesterday

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about the film – the story?

    The story is about a husband, who has been married for 40 years and comes home to find that his wife has died. From that point we observe as he deals with the idea, as well as see how the process of death works technically as well.

    VIMOOZ: Is this a “sad” film?

    Is it a “sad” film. I guess so. The point wasn’t to be sad, because to us the film is about love, and sometimes the way we recognize the value of things is to remove the thing, in this case his wife. And the removal brings to light the appreciation, or in this case, we come to understand how much he loved her.

    Forty Years From Yesterday

    VIMOOZ:Who are the actors in the film?

    The actors are co-director Robert Machoian’s parent’s and siblings, as well as the local mortician in town.

    VIMOOZ: Did they have to audition?

    No not really, we were interested in the idea of casting the people who would be the people involved, or will be involved in the event when my mother actual does die. And were interested in that would bring another type of performance to light.

    VIMOOZ: This film has had quite a journey, first a short, now a feature. Was the transition hard?

    It wasn’t as hard as we thought it’d be. When we make shorts we don’t think of ever making them into features. We want them to exist as they are, without further expectations then just being a great short film. But WAITING ROOM which is the short, a year after we shot it and had it on the festival circuit, it seemed to be asking for more, so we explored it, and I think what we came found was even deeper then the short.

    VIMOOZ: Robert, you are credited as the writer for the film, what was the inspiration?

    My aunt was the inspiration for the film. I was on a bus with her once, she had taken care of both her parents until they died. They died years a part from each other, so it was long time of her caring for her parents. I wanted to understand what that was like for her. Though the film is very different from what she shared, it made me really think about death in a very different way, and that way brought out this film.

    VIMOOZ: What does the title of the film mean?

    The title of the film is in direct relationship to my parents, they have been together for forty years, they are both very much in love with each other as there son it seems to me like it’s still fresh. They aren’t the older couples you see bicker, but then are so much in love. They are like the thing Hollywood romances are trying to capture, that twinkle. So I thought all this time has gone by as if it were yesterday. So pretty simple and straight forward FORTY YEARS FROM YESTERDAY

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for the film?

    Well we have our international premiere coming very soon, we can’t announce it yet because they haven’t, but we are very excited for that, and then it will live on the festival circuit for the next year, and hopefully find a home with a distributor.

    Directors Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck and Robert MachoianDirectors Rodrigo Ojeda-Beck and Robert Machoian

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    We start production on our next feature titled THE LATCHKEY KIDS in July. It’s a film about a sister and her four brothers. We are very excited to shoot it, and think it’s gonna be something pretty wonderful.

    http://youtu.be/1SbzJi6RVzI

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  • Karl Jacob Talks About Writing, Producing, Starring in and Directing His New Indie Film “POLLYWOGS”

    pollywogs

    The new indepedent film POLLYWOGS premiered just recently at the still running 2013 LA Film Festival where it was described as offering an equally amusing and insightful look at directionless thirty-somethings lurching towards adulthood. The film is directed by first-time feature director Karl Jacob (who also wrote the screenplay, produced and starred) and T. Arthur Cottam. In the film Dylan–who’s played by Karl Jacob–retreats to Minnesota for a family reunion featuring firearms, heavy metal and unwelcome questions. Amongst the throng of relatives, he discovers Sarah, the childhood crush he hasn’t seen since her family decamped to a religious compound. Could she prove to be the perpetually heartbroken Dylan’s salvation or will their emotional scars fail to align?

    We were fortunate to catch up with the talented Karl Jacobs and fired off a few questions about his new film.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on POLLYWOGS being an official selection in the 2013 LA Film Festival … and the World Premiere on Friday.

    Karl Jacob: Thanks. We are excited to be premiering it here at LAFF, they have been taking really good care of us, and the audiences have been amazing. Both of our screenings were sold out shows!

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about POLLYWOGS – the story?

    Karl Jacob: The story is about a man coming home to Minnesota after a bitter breakup to seek support from his family during a reunion. While he is there he runs into his childhood best friend and first love who he has not seen for 18 years since her family moved to a religious compound. It’s really a story of confronting your past in order to move ahead.

    pollywogs

    VIMOOZ: Why did you set the film in Minnesota and not say Brooklyn or California?

    Karl Jacob: Northern Minnesota is where I was born and raised, and I am interested in focusing my story worlds to exist inside of the culture there. It’s a world I know a lot about, and find very fascinating. It’s also a culture that I haven’t really seen showcased much in cinema. There was also a practical decision for this as I cast my entire family in the film and we shot it at our family cabin. As filmmakers it’s always a huge boost to production value when you can get amazing locations and willing actors for free.

    VIMOOZ: What films have you directed before?

    Karl Jacob: This is my directorial debut, aside from some small music videos. I have directed some theater and taught many acting classes. I have also acted professionally for 15 years. I produced a feature film in 2011 called Happy New Year.

    VIMOOZ: You wrote the film, what was the inspiration? Was it based on experience?

    Karl Jacob: I think every work of fiction pulls from experiences that we have in our own lives, and so does Pollywogs. The film was definitely inspired by a breakup, and the relection afterward is what lead to the finished product. Conversations with friends and family, working with T. on the structure along with workshoping the film with the actors over the course of 6 months got us to what you see on the screen. While shooting we stuck to a firm story structure, but all of the dialogue is improvised, which is why the actors all have an “Additional Material” credit. Everyone brought something to the table, it was hyper colaborative.

    Karl Jacob as Dylan Stares in Pollywogs Karl Jacob as Dylan Stares in Pollywogs

    VIMOOZ: And you also acted in the film, what was more difficult, the acting or the directing?

    Karl Jacob: Well, to be honest it kind of blurred at a certain point. We were all so well rehearsed and talked so much about the story and the vision that I was able to really rely on everyone coming with their A-game. This made it much more comfortable to both act and direct. We had an amazing team and I really could not have done it without their diligence and professionalism. It was also a fun and unique experience to guide the scene as a director through my performance while I was acting in it.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for POLLYWOGS, the film?

    Karl Jacob: Up next we have a screening in Duluth, MN, near where we shot the movie. It is on it’s way to a few more festivals as well. The complete list will be announced on Pollywogsmovie.com soon. Signing up for our region-based mailing list on the website will get you announcements for when it is coming to a theater near you. It will be on VOD in soon as well.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    Karl Jacob: I have a documentary that I will be shooting in the fall about 2 men and their journey into the Colorado Rockies to seek out and kill an elk with a Bow. I also have a episodic series in development.

    http://youtu.be/XTumZoAoRNY

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  • Durban International Film Festival Announces 2013 Film Lineup incl Focus on African Films, American Indies and Films About Sexual Identity

    Free AngelaClosing Night Film – Free Angela

    From July 18 to 28, 2013, Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) in South Africa, will feature over 250 screenings, including 72 feature films, 48 documentaries and 45 short films. As part of its African Focus this year’s festival will open with ‘ground-breaking African-noir work’ Of Good Report by filmmaker-on-the-rise Jahmil XT Qubeka. Telling the story of a serial killer obsessed with beautiful young girls, the film expands the language of African cinema. The festival’s closing film acknowledges Angela Davis, an important figure in the African diaspora, with the film Free Angela – and all political prisoners, directed by Shola Lynch.

    Durban International Film Festival 2013 poster

    High-profile South African films being showcased include Layla Fourie (which received its world premier at Berlin earlier this year), The Forgotten Kingdom which is set in the movingly beautiful landscape of Lesotho, Felix, which tells the story of a young township boy intent following his dreams of being a musician, and The Good Man, an intriguing look at a globalised reality.

    Other local films include Everyman’s Taxi Ian Robert’s anarchic celebration of the new South Africa, Andrew Worsdale’s long-awaited Durban Poison and Khumba, the latest outing from Cape Town animation studio Triggerfish that won best South African film at DIFF 2012 for Adventures in Zambezia and has gone on to widespread commercial success around the world. Blood Tokolosh tells the disturbing story of a man who finds himself under the spell of the mythical Southern African creature, while Angel of the Sky reprises the role of South African pilots during the second world war. Actorholic comes from Oliver Rodger, who gave us last year’s Copposites, and African Gothic is a US/South African co-production based on the Reza de Wet play Diepe Grond.

    From further afield, DIFF 2013 presents a number of cinematic gems, most of which are engaged in expanding the language of African cinema while dealing with significant issues around life on the continent. Tall As The Baobab Tree, from Senegal, tells the story of a poor couple who try to sell their daughter off into a forced marriage. Yema, from Algeria, tells the metaphoric story of a how a mother’s relationship with her sons is defined by war and violence, while Virgin Margarida chronicles a dark chapter in Mozambican history. The Battle Of Tabato is a fascinating blend of history, music and surrealism while Le Presidente bends the form of the fiction film while asking fascinating questions. Something Necessary chronicles an intimate moment in the lives of two people from very different sides of history, while It’s Us deals with tribalised violence in Kenya with hope and vibrancy.

    This year’s program also showcases films of contemporary Europe and includes the new Sally Potter film Ginger and Rosa which tells the story of two close friends during the liberal years of the 1960s. The Look of Love is the new film from DIFF regular Michael Winterbottom while Me and You is the first film in more than a decade from master filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci.

    American Independents includes Wrong the latest film from Quentin Dupieux who gave us the DIFF cult-hit Rubber in 2011 and Spring Breakers from Harmony Korine, the enfant terrible of American independent cinema. Francine tells the small and delicately drawn story of a socially inept woman who has just come of out prison, while The Place Beyond the Pines is the highly anticipated new drama from director Derek Cianfrance who gave us Blue Valentine.

    This year DIFF acknowledges the wide diversity of sexual identities with films from Dennis Cotes drama Vic+Flo Saw a Bear which chronicles the relationship between an ex-convict and her much younger lover to the documentary Valentine Road which provides a sociological post-mortem on the death of a young transgender boy to Interior. Leather Bar which examines contemporary masculinity through reconstructing a censored scene from the 1980 Al Pacino film Cruising, DIFF 2013 explores a very broad continuum of sexuality. Laurence Anyways tells the sprawling but immaculately rendered tale of a transgendered man and her female lover. Dust presents a diverse group of siblings forced to confront their unfulfilled lives while Two Mothers portrays the difficult involved in a gay couple adopting a child in progressive Germany.

    In keeping with a broad acceptance of diversity, DIFF’s focus includes not only GLBT sexuality but also an exploration of heterosexuality in films such It Felt Like Love in which a young girl is determined to lose her virginity and The Future in which a young girl becomes a sexual companion to a blind former action hero. Una Noche tells of two Cuban boys, one of whom has unrequited feelings for the other, as they attempt to escape across the ocean to Miami.

    Documentaries that deal with sexuality gender include Pussy Riot – A Punk Prayer, I Am Divine a biopic about the gender-bending singer and artist Divine and Born This Way, about the lives of gay and lesbian people in Cameroon. Then there is the short film Atlantic Avenue which deals with the sexual attraction between a young man and a physically challenged woman.

    DIFF 2013 will showcase a selection of films from the current Zombie wave, and headlining this area is the  remake of the Evil Dead which conforms in many ways to the classic zombie genre, as does Zombie Fever 3D, one of the first zombie films from Russia. On a more serious note, there’s the slow, mournful and thoroughly beautiful Halley which tells of a man whose body is rotting away. Frankenstein’s Army tells of a secret Nazi lab in which all manner of strange machines have been stitched together with human bodies. Then there’s Harold’s Going Stiff, an ultra-dry British zombie comedy with a big heart.

    In addition, DIFF 2013 will screen a host of award-winning films from around the world, including works from many of contemporary cinema’s great masters. From Chinese director Wong Kar Wai comes The Grandmaster, which opened Berlin earlier this year, while Canadian director David Cronenberg descends once more into the darkness with Cosmopolis based on the Don deLillo novel. Takeshi Kitano, the king of stylised violence, delivers Outrage Beyond, while the enigmatic Closed Curtain comes from banned Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi. Deepa Mehta gives us a gorgeously sprawling rendition of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children while Danish dogma director Thomas Vinterberg’s The Hunt will chill you to the bone. Then there’s the exciting news that Ashgar Farhadi, whose A Separation won both the best Foreign Picture Oscar this year as well as best film at DIFF, returns with his latest film The Past.

    In addition to the best fiction features from around the world, DIFF 2013 has a wealth of documentaries to satisfy a broad spectrum of tastes and interests, including a strong selection from South Africa.  Riaan Hendrick’s The Devil’s Lair transports us deep into a claustrophobic drug den on the Cape Flats, while celebrated local documentary-maker Damon Foster gives us a window into the lives of crocodiles with Touching The Dragon. Angels in Exile is a moving documentary about two proud yet impoverished children who live on the streets of Durban and The Creators pays tribute to the creative power of South Africa’s youth, including acclaimed graffiti artist Faith 47. From further afield, Drama Consult tells the cannily directed story of Nigerian entrepreneurs heading to Europe to explore the possibilities of economic co-operation, while African Metropolis is a collection of short slices of reality from around the continent. The Spirit of 45, from British feature director Ken Loach looks at the enduring influence of the labour movement during the war years while More Than Honey looks at the importance of maintaining the earth’s bee population. Algorithms presents the riveting story of blind chess players in India and Fidai is a very personal story set against the Algerian battle for independence.

    For the ninth year, DIFF partners with Wavescape to screen films focusing on surfing cinema and shark stories. Bending Colors (Jordy Smith) chronicles the rise South Africa’s prodigal son who goes from teen sensation to world super star. In Revolution true life adventurer Rob Stewart goes on a mission to reveal the rapidly deteriorating circle of life on planet earth while The Heart and the Sea is a soulful and unpretentious tribute to the surf lifestyle. Other Wavescape films, including Immersion, Desert Rebels and Water From the Moon, take us around the world for some of the sickest waves on the planet.

     

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  • THE ACT OF KILLING and PARTICLE FEVER Among Award Winners at 2013 Sheffield Doc/Fest

    THE ACT OF KILLING directed by Joshua OppenheimerTHE ACT OF KILLING directed by Joshua Oppenheimer

    THE ACT OF KILLING directed by Joshua Oppenheimer won the Special Jury Award, and shared the 2013 Audience Award for Best Feature with PARTICLE FEVER directed by Mark Levinson at the 2013 Sheffield Doc/Fest. In the documentary THE ACT OF KILLING, produced by Errol Morris and Werner Herzog, the unrepentant former members of Indonesian death squads are challenged to re-enact some of their many murders in the style of the American movies they love.  PARTICLE FEVER follows six brilliant scientists during the launch of the Large Hadron Collider, marking the start-up of the biggest and most expensive experiment in the history of the planet, pushing the edge of human innovation.

    The Complete 2013 SHEFFIELD DOC/FEST AWARD WINNERS RECAP

    Inspiration Award: Nick Fraser
    Special Jury Award: The Act of Killing (Dir. Joshua Oppenheimer, Den/Nor/UK). MEETMARKET PITCHED.
    Special mention to Mothers (Xu Huijing, China 2013, 68mins)
    Sheffield Youth Jury Award: God Loves Uganda (Dir. Roger Ross Williams, USA). MEETMARKET PITCHED.
    Sheffield Innovation Award: Alma, a Tale of Violence (Dirs: Miquel Dewever-Plana & Isabelle Fougère, France). MEETMARKET PITCHED.
    Sheffield Green Award: Pandora’s Promise (Dir. Robert Stone, USA).
    Special mention to Fuck For Forest (Dir. Michal Marczak, Germany)
    Sheffield Student Doc Award: Boys (Dir. Marc Williamson, UK)
    Sheffield Short Doc Award: Slomo (Dir. Josh Izenberg, USA)
    The Tim Hetherington Award presented by Sheffield Doc/Fest and Dogwoof: The Square (Al Midan) (Dir. Jehane Noujaim, Egypt/USA)
    The EDA award for Best Female-Director awarded by the Alliance of Women Film Journalists, Inc. Rafea Solar Mama. (Dirs. Mona Eldaief, Jehane Noujaim, Jord/USA/Den/India)

    2013 Audience Award for Best Feature: The Act Of Killing (Dir. Joshua Oppenheimer, Denmark) and Particle Fever (Dir. Mark Levinson. USA)
    2013 Audience Award for Best Short Documentary: Slomo (Dir. Josh Izenberg, USA) and Solipsist Part 1 (Andrew Huang, UK)

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  • RIP: Actor James Gandolfini Suffers Heart Attack, Dead at 51

    James Gandolfini

    Actor James Gandolfini, best known for playing New Jersey mob boss Tony Sopranos on the HBO series “The Sopranos,”  died of a heart attack earlier today in Italy. He was 51. Gandolfini was reportedly scheduled to appear in conversation with director Gabriele Muccino at the 59th Taormina Film Festival in Sicily.

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  • Interview with Tamar Halpern and Chris Quilty, Documentary LLYN FOULKES ONE MAN BAND to Premiere at LA Film Festival

     LLYN FOULKES ONE MAN BAND

    LLYN FOULKES ONE MAN BAND, a feature documentary about artist and one-man-band musician Llyn Foulkes, will have its World Premiere at the 2013 LA Film Festival on Thursday, June 20. Directed and produced by first-time documentary filmmakers, Tamar Halpern and Chris Quilty, the documentary chronicles 7 years of Llyn Foulkes’s life from ages 70 to 77. During the seven years chronicled in the film, artist and musician Llyn Foulkes creates, destroys, and recreates a pair of large-scale, three-dimensional paintings, one that costs him his marriage, while trying to keep afloat in the fickle art market. 

    We caught up with filmmakers, Tamar Halpern and Chris Quilty at the LA Film Festival getting ready for their big World Premiere.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on LLYN FOULKES ONE MAN BAND being an official selection in the 2013 LA Film Festival … Are you nervous, excited by the upcoming premiere

    Tamar Halpern: We are thrilled to be included and cannot wait to share this film as we worked on it for eight years.

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about the film – the story?

    TH- We followed the painter and musician Llyn Foulkes from age 70, when the art world seemed to have forgotten about him, till age 77 when he was at last rediscovered. Llyn works alone – without the aid of assistants – which is incredibly rare in contemporary art, and he plays The Machine, a one man band contraption he built by hand which has the effect. His fame as an artist seemed promising in the 1960’s when he won several awards here and abroad, sold paintings to major museums and had one man shows at the top galleries and museums. What happened over the next forty years, Llyn’s work and influence was shown with less frequency as his contemporaries shot to fame. Undeterred, Llyn kept making his art even when no one was paying attention to his efforts.

    Chris Quilty – This film is specifically a portrait of a fascinating and aging artist who really takes his sweet old time with his work, but there’s also a more universal story here. It’s also a film about growing old, and the great struggle for relevance in the world. It’s about obsession, perfection, and letting go.

    LLYN FOULKES ONE MAN BAND

    VIMOOZ: How did you first find out about Llyn Foulkes?

    TH- Llyn was my neighbor in the nineties down at the Brewery, an artist complex in downtown LA which was formerly a Pabst Blue Ribbon Brewery. I cast him in my feature film “Your Name Here” as a musician who give advice to his teenage grandson about the music industry, warning him that sometimes it’s easier to be a one man band than deal with the problems that arise among band mates. Llyn drew from his personal experience of playing in rock bands in the sixties and seventies, culminating in his appearance on The Tonight Show and a record deal with A and M. Llyn walked away from it all to become a one man band. This theme of walking away when things are going well seems to relate to his art career as well, evident in the first fame he had in the sixties when he was known for his beautiful, meditative rock paintings. Major museums here and abroad bought them and Llyn was a sudden hit in the art world. Instead of continuing with the newly lauded rock paintings, Llyn said he was losing his soul and instead started painting bloody heads – a series of macabre faces gouged out and beaten.

    CQ- I was doing sound for Tamar on one of her films back in 2004. Llyn had a small acting part. I was immediately charmed by his music and fascinating character, and thought to myself, “someone’s got to do a doc on this guy!”

    VIMOOZ: Was it difficult convincing him to participate?

    TH- Not at all. Llyn has been ready to share his fifty year perspective on the ups and downs of the art scene and when I approached him, he didn’t hesitate. He was angry at the art world but also blamed himself for his lack of success, which makes him a very sympathetic character. He is at turns hilarious, charming, angry and verbose – but always forthcoming. There was not a single performance in the film as everything he said, he said with uncensored honesty.

    CQ- Llyn is one of the most open people I’ve ever met. He loves to talk, and loves it even more if a camera is rolling. So he was game from day one. That’s not to say we didn’t have some issues as the years went by. During deadline crunch times when he was so into his work, we would often have to convince him to let us shoot. Occasionally we just backed off, but mostly he relented and invited us into his world. Because we had basically no crew, just the two of us and a camera, we could work “fly on the wall” style, which Llyn appreciated very much.

    VIMOOZ: How long did filming take?

    TH- We filmed off and on for over seven years until the ending revealed itself to us. It was the beginning of his rediscovery, but more important than that, it was a time he openly reflected on life, aging and happiness. Since this film isn’t just about an artist and musician- it’s also about a husband, ex husband, father and human – we allowed the narrative to encompass all aspects of Llyn, as complex and entertaining as they are.

    CQ- Our film took over 8 years to complete, but we could have made a different film and finished it much sooner. The “ending” kept changing, so we kept filming. Llyn says in the film about his work, “it’s never done until they take it away from me.” This could also be true for Tamar and me. We had to stop and let someone take it away from us.

    VIMOOZ: How was it working with Llyn Foulkes – was it difficult? Did you ever feel like quitting at some point?

    TH- There was never talk of quitting. If anything, this project fed our soul and fueled us through other jobs that were challenging. Chris worked thirteen hour days as a Hollywood sound man and Tamar wrote copy and directed commercials until she landed the feature Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life, a children’s film she adapted and directed. Through all of it, Tamar and Chris always had this beautiful gem of a film waiting for us and it made all the difference.

    CQ-  We never felt like quitting, but we would sort of drop it for a while and let it percolate for stretches of time. In fact, the nature of this extremely long shoot was that we had the luxury to let things go for a while, and then come back and see what’s new and how our story has developed.

    Co-Directors Tamar Halpern and Chris QuiltyCo-Directors Tamar Halpern and Chris Quilty

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about you, what films have you done before?

    TH– I’m a narrative writer and director so this is my first documentary. My film before this, Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life, starred Mira Sorvino, Joe Pantoliano and Michael Urie with music by Edie Brickell, and was based on a book by New York Times bestselling author Wendy Mass.

    CQ- My day job is “Hollywood sound man.” I’ve been in production sound for over 16 years, with many television and film credits. Although I’ve been a shutterbug for years, I basically learned to direct and shoot and edit on this film. But I wouldn’t call myself a cameraman, director, editor or even a sound man. I prefer the term “film maker.”

    VIMOOZ: Have you worked together before as co-directors? Will you work together again?

    TH- This was a first for us. I’d do it again in a minute.

    CQ- Tamar was actually my “boss” a few times in the past when I did sound for several of her narrative films. But this doc was the first time for us as co-directors/producers. We often have different opinions on things and different styles of working, which I believe led us to a better film. We never really talked about our work flow or individual responsibilities on this film. It would just  sort of fall into place organically. I’d be happy to work with Tamar again in any capacity.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for the film?

    TH- We are hoping to find our NY premiere and then an international premiere. As Llyn’s work becomes more known in France, Italy and Germany, we hope people will be excited to learn more about his odd iconoclast with volumes of talent. We’ve found that the film appeals beyond the art world because the message is universal – to keep following your passion even if no one is watching.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    TH- Tamar has just adapted Wendy Mass’s first book “A Mango Shaped Space”, a coming of age story about a thirteen year old girl with synesthesia. The book has been translated into seven languages including Chinese and has the most fan base of any of Wendy’s books domestically and internationally. It turns out more people have synesthesia than previously thought and those who don’t are fascinated. The film will be live action with animated elements to illustrate how the main character “sees sound and music”.

    CQ- There’s a few doc ideas we’re kicking around, but one thing’s for sure, the next one wont take us 8 years to make.

    http://youtu.be/O3aGdoNP7xU

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