• “A House, A Home,” “Commencement” Among Top Winning Films From 2013 Charleston International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_3798" align="alignnone" width="550"]A House A Home[/caption]

    The 2013 Charleston International Film Festival closed on Sunday night with the Awards Gala, where legendary cinematographer Bill Butler received the festival’s inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award.

    A House, A Home took the award for Best Film and William Blake was awarded Best Screenplay for his work Isaiah’s Rest – An Edisto Ghost Story. The Jury Awards were given to Breaking at the Edge for Best Feature in which Rebecca Da Costa and Milo Ventimiglia played the leading roles. The film was directed by Peter Antonijevic, and produced by Peter D. Graves, David A. Jones, and Warren Ostergard. Nissar Modi was the writer. Other Jury Awards included Smile for Best Short, and Solo La Caña for Best Documentary.

    [caption id="attachment_3799" align="alignnone" width="550"]Commencement[/caption]

    On the flip side, the audience picked AKA Doc Pomus for Best Documentary, Commencement for Best Feature, Love Scene for Best Short, Counting Happiness for Best Foreign Film and Green Acres for Best Animation. Counting Happiness was also awarded Best Actor for its leading man Satyam Singh, who’s not even five years old. Best Actress was awarded to Marin Hinkle in Commencement.

    Read more


  • 47 Students Selected As Finalists for Student Academy Awards

    There is the Academy Awards, and there is the Student Academy Awards, all supported by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The Academy established the Student Academy Awards in 1972 to support and encourage excellence in filmmaking at the collegiate level; past winners include John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Robert Zemeckis, Trey Parker and Spike Lee. This year thirty-eight students from 17 U.S. colleges and universities as well as nine students from foreign universities have been selected as finalists in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Student Academy Awards competition. 

    The finalists are (listed alphabetically by film title):

    Alternative
    “Beyond the Spheres,” Meghdad Asadi Lari, Rochester Institute of Technology
    “Bottled Up,” Rafael Cortina, Occidental College
    “Bye Hyungjik,” Hyungjik Lee, Florida State University
    “The Compositor,” John Mattiuzzi, School of Visual Arts
    “File Not Found,” Maria Sequeira, University of Southern California
    “The Pirate of Love,” Sara Gunnarsdottir, California Institute of the Arts
    “Zug,” Perry Janes, University of Michigan

    Animation
    “Couch & Potatoes,” Chris Lam and Eunsoo Jeong, San Jose State University
    “Dia de los Muertos,” Lindsey St. Pierre and Ashley Graham, Ringling College of Art and Design
    “Drifters,” Ethan Clarke, California Institute of the Arts
    “Make a Wish,” Heejin Kim, School of Visual Arts
    “Peck Pocketed,” Kevin Herron, Ringling College of Art and Design
    “Runaway,” Emily Buchanan and Esther Parobek, Ringling College of Art and Design
    “Still I Breathe,” Sang Ho Lee, School of Visual Arts
    “Watercolors,” Robert Kornstein, New York University
    “Will,” Eusong Lee, California Institute of the Arts

    Documentary
    “The Battle of the Jazz Guitarist,” Mark Columbus, University of California, Los Angeles
    “Every Tuesday: A Portrait of The New Yorker Cartoonists,” Rachel Loube, School of Visual Arts
    “Everybody’s Business,” Laura Green, Stanford University
    “Graceland Girls,” Jordan Theresa Salvatoriello, Emerson College
    “A Second Chance,” David Aristizabal, University of Southern California
    “Through the Fire,” Eunice Lau, New York University
    “Vultures of Tibet,” Russell O. Bush, University of Texas at Austin
    “Win or Lose,” Daniel Koehler, Elon University
    “Wonder Workshop,” Amitabh Joshi and Erik Spink, School of Visual Arts

    Narrative
    “Caught,” Bruce Li, New York University
    “Cootie Contagion,” Joshua Smooha, Florida State University
    “Footsteps,” Thomas (Hyungkyun) Kim, New York University
    “Josephine and the Roach,” Jonathan Langager, University of Southern California
    “Kalifornija,” Tomas Vengris, American Film Institute
    “The Midwife’s Husband,” Deja Bernhardt, University of Texas at Austin
    “Ol’ Daddy,” Brian Schwarz, University of Texas at Austin
    “Samnang,” Asaph Polonsky, American Film Institute
    “Un Mundo para Raúl (A World for Raúl),” Mauro Mueller, Columbia University

    Foreign Film
    “Erbgut (Liquidation),” Matthias Zuder, Hamburg Media School, Germany
    “För Sverige i Tiden (King of Sweden),” Jonas Westbom, Stockholm Academy of Dramatic Arts, Sweden
    “Kanyekanye,” Miklas Manneke, AFDA The South African School of Motion Picture Medium and 
    Live Performance, South Africa
    “The Library of Burned Books,” Alasdair Beckett-King, London Film School, United Kingdom
    “Miss Todd,” Kristina Yee, National Film and Television School, United Kingdom
    “MO,” Jakub Kouril, FAMU, Film and TV School of Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, Czech Republic
    “Parvaneh,”Talkhon Hamzavi, Zurich University of the Arts, Switzerland
    “To Guard a Mountain,” Izer Aliu, The Norwegian Filmschool, Norway
    “Tweesprong (Crossroads),” Wouter Bouvijn, Rits School of Arts, Erasmus College Brussels, Belgium

    The 40th Student Academy Awards ceremony will take place on Saturday, June 8, at 7:30 p.m. in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.

    image: credit: Richard Harbaugh / ©A.M.P.A.S.

    39th Annual Student Academy Awards Winners

    Front row (left to right): Amanda Tasse, Ellen Tripler, Heather Burky, Mark Raso, Thomas Stuber and Justin Tipping.

    Back row (left to right): David Wolter, David Winstone Elmar Imanov, Keiko Wright, Eric Prah, Ryan Prows and Mark Nelson.

     

    Read more


  • Political Energy Satire Cape Spin! An American Power Struggle Gets A Release Date

    “Cape Spin! An American Power Struggle” described as a “political/energy satire ” has a theatrical release date – the film will open in New York City at Lincoln Center Cinemas on Friday, May 17th, 2013.

    “Cape Spin! An American Power Struggle,” five years in the making, is further described as the surreal, fascinating, tragicomic tale of the battle over America’s largest clean energy project. When energy entrepreneur Jim Gordon first proposed putting 130 wind turbines in fabled Nantucket Sound, he had no idea that a firestorm would erupt. Cape Spin! tells the incredible tale of how America’s first proposed offshore wind farm triggered a schism in this idyllic coastal region, pitting neighbor against neighbor and environmentalist against environmentalist.  Revealing the root causes of their furor, the filmmakers enjoyed unprecedented behind-the-scenes access to the key players on both sides of the controversy. The tale frames the battle over Nantucket Sound as a microcosm of America’s struggle towards energy sustainability. After 10 years, $70 million and 8,000 pages of analysis the Federal Government approved the wind farm project on April 28, 2010. 

    http://youtu.be/RfboOuuml3Y

    Read more


  • “Blind Pass” ”Joe Papp in V Acts” Among Winners of 2013 Fort Myers Beach Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_3791" align="alignnone" width="550"]Blind Pass, directed by Steve Tatone[/caption]

    The Fort Myers Beach Film Festival honored the winning filmmakers and actors with awards for their work on independent films screened during the 7th edition of the festival which ran April 24 – 28, 2013 in Fort Myers, Florida. The winning filmmaker of the Best Documentary is Joe Papp in Five Acts, directed by Tracie Holder and Karen Thorsen. Best Feature Film Award went to Blind Pass, directed by Steve Tatone.

    The festival also honored local residents who submitted films to the festival with the Islander Award going to Love Letter, directed by Taylor Hill and Best Local Film went to Stuck, directed by Mitch Glass. Best Student Film is Red Tide, directed by Dino Gallina.

    2013 AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED:

    Islander Award: “Love Letter” directed by Taylor Hill
    Best Local Film: “Stuck” directed by Mitch Glass
    Best Student Film: “Red Tide” directed by Dino Gallina
    Best Short Film: “The Last Session” directed by Chad Gurdgiel
    Best Documentary: ”Joe Papp in V Acts” directed by Tracie Holder and Karen THorsen
    Best Feature Film: “Blind Pass” directed by Steve Tatone
    Best Actor: Sally Kirkland for her work in the film “Posey”
    Rising Star Award: Danielle White
    Star Achievement Award winner: Billy DaMota, Director, Producer, Writer and Casting Director of “Posey”.
    People’s Choice Award (selected by the audience): “The Gift of the Game”, written and directed by novelist Randy Wayne White.

    Read more


  • “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” Director David Lowery to Host Opening Night of 2013 Maryland Film Festival

    David Lowery, director of Ain’t Them Bodies Saints, starring Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, and Rooney Mara, has been picked to host the 2013 Opening Night of the Maryland Film Festival taking place the evening of May 8, 2013, in downtown Baltimore. Lowery, a multi-year participant in MFF and an alumnus of the festival’s signature Opening Night shorts program, has received widespread acclaim for his forthcoming feature, the Cannes-bound Ain’t Them Bodies Saints. Lowery has also made waves in recent months with a series of profile-raising announced projects, ranging from a reinvention of Disney’s Pete’s Dragon to a crime drama with Robert Redford attached as star and producer, The Old Man and the Gun. 

    Read more


  • LA Premiere of “Putzel” to Open 2013 Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival

    The 8th Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival (LAJFF) will kick off its week long film festival with the star studded red carpet LA premiere of the comedy film “Putzel”on June 1, 2013 in Beverly Hills, California. 

    In addition to “Putzel,” the LAJFF will hold LA Premiere screening events for Jonathan Holiff’s “My Father and the Man in Black” about Johnny Cash and his Jewish manager Sid Holiff, and “Roman Polanski, A Memoir” the documentary that screened at Cannes;  the US premiere of the BBC documentary, “Neil Diamond:Solitary Man” ; and the closing night film –  the World premiere of “When Comedy Went To School”  When Comedy Went To School is a documentary about the Jewish stand up comics well known around the world who got their start in the Catskills. The documentary directed by Ron Frank features interviews with Jerry Lewis, Mort Sahl, Jerry Stiller, Jackie Mason and Robert Klein and many others.

    Here are the highlighted films

    Putzel 
    LA Premiere
 Directed by Jason Chaet 
USA / 90 mins / 2012
    
Stars Melanie Lynskey, Susie Essman, John Pankow and Jack Carpenter. For some, life is an adventure filled with opportunities to excel and places to explore. For Walter Himmelstein, a young man, endearingly known as Putzel, life literally doesn’t go beyond his family’s fish store and his community on the upper west side of Manhattan. In this heartwarming comedy, Walter’s aspirations of taking over his uncle’s smoked fish emporium are disrupted by the arrival of Sally, who becomes romantically involved with his about-to-retire and very-married uncle. While Walter tries to thwart their romance in order to ensure his taking over the business, he finds his circumscribed life thrown off kilter, and, after years of being undermined by his family and friends, he finally starts to realize his full potential. With Sally’s help, Walter confronts his fears and proves he is more than a Putzel. 

    The Last White Knight   

    [caption id="attachment_3781" align="alignnone" width="550"]The Last White Knight [/caption]

    LA Premiere 
    Directed by Paul Saltzman 
Canada / 78 mins / 2012
    In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the murder of Medgar Evers
    In 1965, 21-year-old Torontonian, Paul Saltzman drove to Mississippi, volunteering as a civil rights worker with the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. He was arrested, spending 10 days in jail. He smuggled letters out of jail to the Toronto Star. Canadian Foreign Affairs requested his release but Saltzman declined. Posted to one of the toughest segregationist towns, Greenwood, he helped disadvantaged sharecroppers register to vote. He was assaulted by a young Klansman. In 2007, Saltzman returned to find the KKK member who had punched him in the head, to explore if individual reconciliation was possible. He found him and a 5 year dialogue has ensued. His assailant was, Byron de la Beckwith Jr., whose father, Byron de la Beckwith Sr. murdered NAACP Field Secretary Medgar Evers.

    Road Angel
    Directed by Steve Lainer 
Israel / 15 mins / 2012
    On his way to a village to find those responsible for the murder of his son, Moshik encounters an abandoned baby and simultaneously meets Manar, a troubled young Arabic woman. Could this chance meeting change their lives forever? 

    Beyond Right and Wrong: Stories of Justice and Forgiveness

    [caption id="attachment_3782" align="alignnone" width="550"]Beyond Right and Wrong: Stories of Justice and Forgiveness[/caption]

    Directed by Roger Spottiswoode and Lekha Singh
    USA/81 mins/2012
    ‘Beyond Right and Wrong’ explores the journeys of the daughter of a man killed in a terrorist bombing in Great Britain, a mother whose five children were murdered in the genocide in Rwanda, and a father whose daughter is killed by a suicide bomber in Israel.

    Sonny Boy 

    [caption id="attachment_3783" align="alignnone" width="550"]Sonny Boy [/caption]

    LA Premiere Directed by Maria Peters
    The Netherlands /132 mins / 2011 Dutch with English Subtitles
    Official Selection to the 2012 Academy Awards.
    From the Netherlands comes an emotional drama about forbidden romance, Nazi brutality, and wartime courage. Adapted by director Maria Peters from a bestseller by Annejet van der Zihl, this is the unlikely tale of Rika (Ricky Koole), a middle-class Dutch wife and mother of four, and Waldemar (Sergio Hasselbaink), a black immigrant from Surinam who’s 17 years her junior. Against all the odds—and under the pitiless gaze of stern, prewar Dutch society—they fall in love, have a child out of wedlock (the titular Sonny Boy), and try to navigate the terrors of World War II in occupied Holland.

    Neil Diamond: Solitary Man   
    
Directed by Mark Cooper, Produced by Samantha Peters 
UK / 60 mins / 2011
    A 60-minute documentary including an interview and exclusive location filming with Neil Diamond in New York and Los Angeles. Interviews with Robbie Robertson, Neil Sedaka, Jeff Barry, Mickey Dolenz and other contributors track Neil from his childhood in Brooklyn to his early days in the Brill Building, his nascent solo career and superstardom in the early 70s, the lean years of the 80s, his career reboot via Rick Rubin in the nineties and his Glastonbury success.

    Nono, the Zigzag Kid 

    [caption id="attachment_3784" align="alignnone" width="550"]Nono, the Zigzag Kid [/caption]

    The Netherlands/Belgium / 90 mins
    Dutch/French with English Subtitles
    The journey from childhood to adulthood is fraught with highs and lows, and it’s no different for thirteen-year-old Amnon Feierberg (or “Nono,” as he’s nicknamed), despite the fact that he’s the son of the world’s greatest police inspector. Adapting the beloved book by acclaimed Israeli writer David Grossman, Flemish writer-director Vincent Bal has created a witty, spirited and action-packed adventure.

    My Father and the Man in Black 

    [caption id="attachment_3785" align="alignnone" width="550"]My Father and the Man in Black [/caption]

    LA Premiere 
    Directed by Jonathan Holiff 
Canada / 90 mins / 2012
    An intense personal adventure with universal themes that just happens to feature on of 20th-century music’s greatest icons, ‘My Father and The Man In Black’ presents the untold story of ‘bad boy’ Johnny Cash, his talented but troubled manager, Saul Holiff, and a son searching for clues to his father’s suicide in the shadow of a legend.


    http://youtu.be/jtovAxxPo2Q

    “Lunch”
    Directed by Donna Kantor
 USA /78 mins /2012
    For the past 40 years, a group of writers and directors has been meeting for lunch every other Wednesday. The members and their meeting places have changed over the years, but their appetites for the ties that nourish their friendships have remained. Lunch goes beyond a single meal, and into the lives and successes of each comedy legend. Starring: Sid Caesar, Carl Reiner, Monty Hall, Arthur Hiller, Rocky Kalish, Hal Kanter, Arthur Marx, Gary Owens, John Rappaport, Matty Simmons and Ben Starr.

    All In 

    [caption id="attachment_3786" align="alignnone" width="550"]All In Directed by Daniel Burman[/caption]

    Directed by Daniel Burman
    Comedy / Argentina / 113 mins /2012
    Spanish with English Subtitles
    Starring Norma Alendro, Luis Brandoni, Valeria Bertuccelli, Jorge Drexler and Silvina Bosco.
    Drexler plays Uriel, a divorced dad who enters the picture in his doctor’s office, declaring it’s time to get a vasectomy so he can enjoy his bachelorhood with peace of mind. A hustler who’s always looking for special deals (and cheerfully lies to get them), he’s disconcertingly dishonest with his children as well, despite appearing to love them. While on a gambling vacation, poker fan Uriel stumbles across his world weary ex-girlfriend Gloria (Valeria Bertuccelli), newly single and ready to be convinced she should give him another chance. 

    Reporting on the NY Times 
    Directed by Emily Harrold 
USA / 17 mins / 2012
    Inspired by Laurel Leff’s award winning book Buried by The Times, this film explores how The New York Times handled reports of The Holocaust during World War II. It also explores why The Times, a Jewish owned newspaper, buried more than one thousand articles in its back pages. Was it simply an oversight? Or did the publishers and editors fear an American Antisemitic backlash? Though interviews and testimony of a Holocaust survivor, historians, journalists, and American citizens who lived through World War II, Reporting on The Times encourages audiences to reevaluate America’s place at The Great Liberator. The film also asks viewers to consider the power of the press in creating change.

    Two Who Dared: The Sharp’s War 

    [caption id="attachment_3787" align="alignnone" width="550"]Two Who Dared: The Sharp’s War [/caption]

    West Coast Premiere
    Directed by Artemis Joukowsky
    USA / 76 mins / 2012
    TWO WHO DARED: THE SHARPS’ WAR is the never before told story of Waitstill and Martha Sharp, an American minister and his wife who boldly committed to a life-threatening mission in Europe to help save imperiled Jews and refugees at the onset of World War II.

    Becoming Henry
    LA Premiere 
    Produced by Stephanie Silverman Houser 
USA / 9 mins / 2012
    A short film based on a true story from the book, An Unbroken Chain: My Journey though the Nazi Holocaust by Henry A. Oertelt. A German immigrant is questioned during a cocktail party in Minnesota regarding his whereabouts during World War II…and discovers that the world can be a very small place.

    Roman Polanski: A Memoir 
    Directed by Laurent Bouzereau
 United Kingdom / 90 mins / 2012 
Actor, director, Krakow Ghetto survivor, American fugitive — filmmaker Roman Polanski addresses every aspect of his celebrated, tragic and scandalous life in this intimate documentary. Interviewed by a long-time friend, Polanski sets the record straight on the 1968 murder of his pregnant wife, Sharon Tate, by the Manson cult, and his 1977 sexual encounter with a 13-year-old girl that led to his exile and, 30 years later, arrest in Switzerland. Clips from such Polanski classics as ROSEMARY’S BABY, CHINATOWN and THE PIANIST connect the Oscar-winner’s anguished past with his artistic achievements, making for the definitive picture of this complex artist.

    When Comedy Went to School 
    US Premere
    Directed by Ron Frank
    USA/85 mins /2013
    The birth of modern stand-up comedy began in the Catskill Mountains – a boot camp for the greatest generation of Jewish-American Comedians. Narrated by Robert Klein; stars Sid Caesar, Larry King, Jerry Lewis, Jerry Stiller, Mort Sahl and others.
    When Comedy Went to School is an entertaining portrait of this country’s greatest generation of comedians – the generation that includes the likes of Jerry Lewis, Sid Caesar, Jackie Mason, Mort Sahl, and Jerry Stiller, all of whom make appearances in the film, telling jokes and telling their stories. The film also asks the question:  Why are so many comedians Jewish?  The answer is found in New York State’s Catskill Mountains, where Jewish immigrants transformed lush farmland into the world’s largest resort complex of the 20th century.  Those Catskill resorts not only offered a burgeoning Jewish middle class a place to vacation with other Jews, it also provided the setting for a remarkable group of young Jewish-American comedians to hone their craft and become worldwide legends. It was truly When Comedy Went to School.

    Film information via LAJFF 

    Read more


  • “The Rocket,” “Bridegroom” Win Audience Awards at 2013 Tribeca Film Festival

    The 12th Tribeca Film Festival (TFF) announced the winners of the two Heineken Audience Awards — one for narrative and one for documentary. The Rocket, directed by Kim Mordaunt, was chosen by the audience to receive the Narrative award; the film also took top honors at the Festival jury awards where it received both The Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature and Best Actor in a Narrative Feature Film for Sitthiphon Disamoe’s performance as Ahlo. Bridegroom, directed by Linda Bloodworth Thomason, was chosen for the Documentary award. Each award comes with a cash prize of $25,000.

    Set against the lush backdrop of rural Laos, The Rocket tells the story of scrappy ten-year-old Ahlo, who yearns to break free from his ill-fated destiny. After his village is displaced to make way for a massive dam, Ahlo escapes with his father and grandmother through the Laotian outback in search of a new home. Along the way, they come across a rocket festival that offers a lucrative—but dangerous—chance for a new beginning. With the help of his new friend Kia and her eccentric, James Brown-loving uncle, Ahlo sets out to build his own rocket, enter the contest and prove his worth to his family. The Rocket’s characters, mostly played by non-professional actors, embody the spirit of resilience and hope born out of a country affected by a legacy of war and undergoing a great economic change. 

    Bridegroom chronicles the emotional journey of Shane and Tom, two young men in a loving and committed relationship. Unfortunately, their love is cut short by Tom’s accidental death, and his partner finds himself facing the failure of same sex marriage protections that leave him completely shut out and ostracized. Bloodworth Thomason sheds light on the often-overlooked struggles that same sex couples face as a result of marriage inequality. As this issue heads to the United States Supreme Court for deliberation, Bridegroom is poised as a timely and moving documentary about love and perseverance through loss.

    http://youtu.be/uN1F49l8DDc

    Read more


  • San Francisco International Film Festival to Honor Harrison Ford

    Harrison Ford will be honored with the 2013 Peter J. Owens Award for excellence in acting at the upcoming 56th San Francisco International Film Festival to take place April 25 – May 9, 2013. The award will be presented to Ford at San Francisco Film Society Awards Night, Tuesday, May 7. Ford will also be honored at An Afternoon with Harrison Ford at Sundance Kabuki Cinemas, on Tuesday May 7. A screening of a film featuring one of his iconic performances will follow an onstage interview and a selection of clips from his impressive career.

    Read more


  • Only Lovers Left Alive Starring Tilda Swinton Among 5 Films Added to 2013 Cannes Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_3774" align="alignnone" width="550"]Only Lovers Left Alive[/caption]

    The Cannes Film Festival added 5 films to the lineup to complete the Official Selection for the upcoming 2013 festival. The 5 films are ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE by Jim Jarmusch (pictured above) was added to Competition; LE DERNIER DES INJUSTES by Claude Lanzmann was added to Out of Competition; and  MY SWEET PEPPERLAND by Hiner Saleem, TORE TANZT by Katrin Gebbe and WAKOLDA by Lucia Puenzo was added to Un Certain Regard.

    Only Lovers Left Alive (pictured above), which was added to Competition, is a romance drama vampire film starring Tom Hiddleston, Tilda Swinton, Mia Wasikowska, John Hurt and Anton Yelchin. 

    The Last Of The Unjust (Le Dernier Des Injustes) by Claude Lanzmann – director of the Holocaust documentary Shoah – is another Holocaust documentary, this time  based on the concentration camp, Theresienstadt, where more than 150,000 Jews were held before being sent to death camps. It focuses on Benjamin Murmelstein, last president of Theresienstadt’s Jewish Council, and his relationship with the notorious German Nazi Adolf Eichmann.

    The 2013 Cannes Film Festival will run May 15th to May 26th, 2013. 

    Read more


  • Film About Nigerian Immigrants “Mother of George” to Close 2013 Maryland Film Festival

    Mother of George, directed by Andrew Dosunmu, and which premiered earlier this year at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, will be the closing night film for the 2013 Maryland Film Festival

    Mother of George, starring Danai Gurira (of The Visitor, The Walking Dead, and Treme) and Isaach De Bankolé, is described as the story of a Nigerian couple in Brooklyn struggling to make their young marriage work while running a restaurant and navigating a new culture.

    Maryland Film Festival has supported Mother of George since its earliest stages of development, awarding Dosunmu and screenwriter Darci Picoult the Maryland Filmmakers Fellowship for their script in 2005. Dosunmu’s first produced narrative feature, the beautiful and moving Restless City, was presented within Maryland Film Festival 2011, and according to the festival “it’s with great pleasure that the festival welcomes him back to Baltimore with his new film.”

    The 15th annual Maryland Film Festival 2013 takes place May 8-12, 2013 in downtown Baltimore, screening nearly 50 features and 80 short films on 7 screens in the Station North Arts and Entertainment District. 

    Read more


  • New York’s Rooftop Films Releases Full 2013 Film Lineup for Outdoor Summer Series, incl. “12 O’Clock Boys,” “Frances Ha”

    Rooftop Films full feature film slate for 2013 was released today and it includes more than 45 new independent films, including two special sneak preview screenings co-presented with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Rooftop Films and the Academy will present a free screening of “Twenty Feet from Stardom,” which premiered at Sundance. The film, which opens June 14th, shines a spotlight on the untold true story of the backup singers behind some of the greatest musical legends of the 21st century. Rooftop and the Academy will also partner to present “Short Term 12”, the feature film debut of Destin Cretton. Cretton was a 2010 Academy Nicholl Screenwriting Fellowship winner, and “Short Term 12” went on to win the 2013 SXSW Grand Jury Award in March.

    The 2013 Rooftop Films Summer Series begins on May 10th and continues through the summer, with screenings each weekend in a variety of outdoor locations in New York City.

    Rooftop Films 2013 Summer Series Feature Films Line-up

    12 O’Clock Boys (Dir. Lotfy Nathan) NY Premiere 

    Pug, a young boy growing up on a combative West Baltimore block, finds solace in a group of illegal dirt bike riders known as The 12 O’Clock Boys. Courtesy of Oscilloscope Laboratories.

    Ain’t Them Bodies Saints (Dir. David Lowery) 

    “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” tells the tale of an outlaw who escapes from prison and sets out across the Texas hills to reunite with his wife and the daughter he has never met. Courtesy of IFC Films.

    Awful Nice (Dir. Todd Sklar) NY Premiere

    Estranged brothers Jim and Dave must travel to Branson together when their father dies and leaves them the family lake home. A series of hilarious mishaps and costly misadventures follow as they attempt to restore the house and rebuild their relationship.

    Belleville Baby (Dir. Mia Engberg) NY Premiere

    A long distance call from a long lost lover makes her reminisce about their common past. She remembers the spring when they met in Paris, the riots, the vespa and the cat named Baby. A film about love, time and things that got lost along the way.

    Bending Steel (Dir. David Carroll, produced by Ryan Scafuro) 

    A remarkable and intimate documentary exploring the lost art of the old time strongman, and one man’s struggle to overcome limitations of body and mind.

    Brasslands (Dir. Meerkat Media Collective) NY Premiere

    Devoted American musicians, Serbian brass heavyweights, and a Gypsy trumpet master collide at the world’s largest trumpet festival.

    Brothers Hypnotic (Dir. Reuben Atlas) NY Premiere

    Brotherhood, whether biological or ideological, is never easy. “Brothers Hypnotic” is a coming-of-age story—for eight young men, and for an ideal.

    The Central Park Five (Dir. Sarah Burns, Ken Burns, Dave McMahon)

    Set against a backdrop of a decaying city beset by violence and racial tension, “The Central Park Five” tells the story of how five lives were upended by the rush to judgment by police, a sensationalist media and a devastating miscarriage of justice. Courtesy of Florentine Films.

    Crystal Fairy (Dir. Sebastián Silva) Special Sneak Preview

    A hilariously unpredictable comedy about a self-involved young American searching for a secret hallucinogenic cactus in the desert of Chile. Courtesy of IFC Films.

    Cutie and the Boxer (Dir. Zachary Heinzerling) 

    This candid New York love story explores the chaotic 40-year marriage of renowned “boxing” painter Ushio Shinohara and his wife, Noriko. Anxious to shed her role of assistant to her overbearing husband, Noriko seeks an identity of her own. Courtesy of RADiUS-TWC.

    The Dirties (Dir. Matt Johnson) NY Premiere 

    Matt and Owen are best friends, who are constantly bullied by a group they call The Dirties. When an assignment goes awry, the friends hatch a plan to enact revenge on their high school tormentors.

    Domestic (Dir. Adrian Sitaru) NY Premiere 

    Wonderfully surreal, painfully real, this is the story of children, adults and animals who live together trying to have a better life, but sometimes death comes unexpectedly. In the bittersweet comedy “Domestic” it is all about us, people who eat the animals that they love and the animals that love people unconditionally.

    Drinking Buddies (Dir. Joe Swanberg) NY Premiere 

    Luke and Kate are co-workers at a Chicago brewery where they spend their days drinking and flirting. They’re perfect for each other, except that they’re both in relationships. But you know what makes the line between “friends” and “more than friends” really blurry? Beer.
    Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

    Elena (Dir. Petra Costa) NY Premiere

    [caption id="attachment_3763" align="alignnone" width="550"]Elena[/caption]

    Intimate in style, “Elena” delves into the abyss of one family’s drama, revealing at once the inspiration that can be born from tragedy.

    The Expedition to the End of the World (Dir. Daniel Dencik) NY Premiere

    A real adventure film – for the 21st century. On a three-mast schooner packed with artists, scientists and ambitions worthy of Noah or Columbus, they set off for the end of the world: the rapidly melting massifs of North-East Greenland. 

    Frances Ha (Dir. Noah Baumbach) 

    Frances wants so much more than she has, but lives her life with unaccountable joy and lightness. “Frances Ha” is a modern comic fable in which Noah Baumbach explores New York, friendship, class, ambition, failure, and redemption.  Courtesy of IFC Films.

    F— for Forest (Dir. Michal Marczak) NY Premiere 

    Berlin’s “F—“ for Forest is one of the world’s most bizarre charities: based on the idea that sex can change the world, the NGO raises money for their environmental cause by selling home-made erotic films on the Internet.

    The Genius of Marian (Dir. Banker White, Anna Fitch)

    An intimate family portrait that explores the tragedy of Alzheimer’s disease, the power of art and the meaning of family. “The Genius of Marian” follows Pam White in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease as her son, the filmmaker, documents her struggle to hang on to a sense of self.

    i hate myself 🙂 (Dir. Joanna Arnow) NY Premiere

    Nebbishy filmmaker Joanna Arnow documents her yearlong relationship with racially charged poet-provocateur James Kepple. What starts out as an uncomfortably intimate portrait of a dysfunctional relationship and protracted mid-twenties adolescence, quickly turns into a complex commentary on societal repression, sexuality and self-confrontation through art.

    The Kings of Summer (Dir. Jordan Vogt-Roberts) New York Special Screening

    “The Kings of Summer” is a unique coming-of-age comedy about three teenage friends – Joe, Patrick and the eccentric and unpredictable Biaggio – who, in the ultimate act of independence, decide to spend their summer building a house in the woods and living off the land.  Courtesy of CBS.

    Newlyweeds (Dir. Shaka King)

    Brooklyn residents Lyle and Nina blaze away the stress of living in New York City, but what should be a match made in stoner heaven turns into a love triangle gone awry. Courtesy of Phase 4 Films.

    North of South, West of East (Dir. Meredith Danluck) NY Premiere

    North of South, West of East takes a scrupulous look at the American Dream through Hollywood tropes and conventional cinema. Working with a narrative structure this four-part 85 minute film takes the chronic existential crisis that is the American identity and turns it inside out, laying the typical components of comedy, thrill, violence, love and death (the ultimate reinvention) neatly side by side.

    Our Nixon (Dir. Penny Lane) 

    Throughout Richard Nixon’s presidency, three of his top White House aides obsessively documented their experiences with Super 8 home movie cameras. Young, idealistic and dedicated, they had no idea that a few years later they’d all be in prison. “Our Nixon” is an all-archival documentary presenting those home movies for the first time, along with other rare footage, creating an intimate and complex portrait of the Nixon presidency as never seen before. 

    Short Term 12 (Dir. Destin Daniel Cretton) Special FREE Sneak Preview

    “Short Term 12” follows Grace (Brie Larson), a young supervisor at a foster-care facility, as she looks after the teens in her charge and reckons with her own troubled past.

    Tiger Tail in Blue (Dir. Frank V. Ross) 

    “Tiger Tail in Blue” is about a young married couple, Christopher & Melody, that work opposite schedules to remain financially afloat as Chris bangs out his first novel while working nights as a waiter. Never seeing each other is taking its toll, as the two rarely get a chance to engage one another. Chris finds the attention he craves in the past and Brandy, a saucy co-worker.

    Towheads (Dir. Shannon Plumb)

    A harried New York mother struggling as an artist searches for a happy (if slightly unhinged) hybrid of the two. In her debut feature, Shannon Plumb’s charming Chaplin-like characters light up the screen with visual playfulness.

    Twenty Feet From Stardom (Dir. Morgan Neville) Special FREE Sneak Preview

    Meet the unsung heroes behind the greatest music of our time. Courtesy of RADiUS-TWC.

    WILLIAM AND THE WINDMILL (Dir. Ben Nabors)

    William Kamkwamba, a young Malawian, builds a power-generating windmill from junk parts to rescue his family from famine, transforming his life and catapulting him on to the world stage. His fame and success lead him to new opportunities and complex choices about his future, distancing him from the life he once knew.

     

    Read more


  • “The Rocket”, “The Kill Team”, “A Short Film About Guns” Among Winners of 2013 Tribeca Film Festival

    The 2013 Tribeca Film Festival announced the winners of its competition categories with The Rocket, directed by Kim Mordaunt of Australia taking the top prize for narrative films – The Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature and The Kill Team, directed by Dan Krauss winning the prize for Best Documentary Feature.

    WORLD NARRATIVE COMPETITION CATEGORIES:

    The Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature – The Rocket, directed by Kim Mordaunt (Australia). Winner receives $25,000, sponsored by AKA, and the art award “Two Voices #1” by Angelina Nasso. The award was given by Robert De Niro and Jane Rosenthal. 

    Special Jury Mention — Stand Clear of the Closing Doors, directed by Sam Fleischner. The announcement was made by Kenneth Lonergan.

     

    Best Actor in a Narrative Feature Film – Sitthiphon Disamoe as Ahlo in The Rocket, directed by Kim Mordaunt (Australia). Winner receives $2,500. The award was given by Blythe Danner.

    Best Actress in a Narrative Feature Film – Veerle Baetens as Elise Vandevelde in The Broken Circle Breakdown, directed by Felix van Groeningen(Netherlands, Belgium). Winner receives $2,500. The award was given by Bryce Dallas Howard.

     

    Best Cinematography in a Narrative Feature Film – Cinematography by Marius Matzow Gulbrandsen, for Before Snowfall, directed by HishamZaman (Germany, Norway). Winner receives $5,000, sponsored by Sony Electronics; a Sony Alpha A99 Full Frame Camera and a Sony NEX-VG900 Full Frame Camcorder; and $50,000 in post-production services provided by Company 3. The award was given by Blythe Danner and Alec Shapiro, President, Sony Professional Solutions of America.  

    Best Screenplay for a Narrative Feature Film – The Broken Circle Breakdown, written by Carl Joos and Felix van Groeningen and directed by Felix van Groeningen (Netherlands, Belgium). Winner receives $5,000. The award was given by Paul Haggis. 

    BEST NEW NARRATIVE DIRECTOR: 

     

    Best New Narrative Director – Emanuel Hoss-Desmarais, director of Whitewash  (Canada). Winner receives $25,000, presented by American Express; $50,000 in post-production services provided by Company 3; and the art award “New Elands Bay” by Erik Parker. The award was given by Tony Gilroy, Radha Mitchell and Deborah Curtis from American Express, Vice President, Entertainment Marketing & Sponsorships.

    Special Jury Mention: Harmony Lessons, directed by Emir Baigazin (Germany, France). The announcement was made by Naomi Foner and Ari Graynor.

    WORLD DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION CATEGORIES:

    Best Documentary Feature – The Kill Team, directed by Dan Krauss (USA). Winner receives $25,000, sponsored by Citizens of Humanity, and the art award “Harley Before the White Prom” by Gillian Laub. The award was given by Mira Sorvino and Gareth Baxendale from Citizens of Humanity.

    Special Jury Mention: Oxyana, directed by Sean Dunne (USA). The announcement was made by Joe Berlinger.

     

    Best Editing in a Documentary Feature – Let the Fire Burn, edited by Nels Bangerter, directed by Jason Osder (USA). Winner receives $5,000. The award was given by Whoopi Goldberg and Sandi DuBowski.

     

    BEST NEW DOCUMENTARY DIRECTOR COMPETITION: 

    Best New Documentary Director – Sean Dunne for Oxyana (USA). Winner receives $25,000, presented by American Express; and the art award “Untitled (#5), from the Men in the Cities Photo Portfolio” by Robert Longo, courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures. The award was given by Taraji P. Henson and Deborah Curtis from American Express.  

    Special Jury Mention — Let the Fire Burn, directed by Jason Osder. The announcement was made by Riley Keough and Jason O’Mara.

    SHORT FILM COMPETITION CATEGORIES:

    Best Narrative Short – The Nightshift Belongs to the Stars, directed by Edoardo Ponti (Italy). Winner receives $5,000, sponsored by Persol; 10,000 feet of film stock donated by Kodak; and the art award “Study: Northern City Renaissance, Mauve Dawn (Mass MoCA #79-R)” by Stephen Hannock. The award was given by Christine Baranksi and Andrea Dorigo, President of Luxottica, North America.

    Special Jury Mention: Yardbird, directed by Michael Spiccia (Australia). The announcement was made by Christine Baranski.

     

    Best Documentary Short – Coach, directed by Bess Kargman (USA). Winner receives $5,000, sponsored by Persol, and the art award “Psycho” by William Wegman. The award was given by Jason Silva and Andrea Dorigo, President of Luxottica/Persol.

    Special Jury Mention: Royal American, directed by Michael Scalisi (USA). The announcement was made by Jason Silva.

    Student Visionary Award – Life Doesn’t Frighten Me, directed by Stephen Dunn (Canada). Winner receives the art award “Platonic Haircut” by Dustin Yellin. The award was given by Danny Strong.

    Special Jury Mention — Reporting on the Times: The New York Times and the Holocaust, directed by Emily Harrold USA). The announcement was made by Danny Strong.

     

    BOMBAY SAPPHIRE AWARD FOR TRANSMEDIA

    Bombay Sapphire Award for Transmedia: Sandy Storyline, created by Rachel Falcone, Laura Gottesdiener, and Michael Premo (USA). Winner receives $10,000, presented by BOMBAY SAPPHIRE gin, and the art award “Study For Austin Courthouse” by Clifford Ross. The award was given by Thomas Allen Harris and Ned Duggan, Brand Director, Bombay Gins.

     

    TRIBECA ONLINE FESTIVAL CATEGORIES:

    Tribeca Online Festival Best Feature Film: Lil Bub & Friendz, directed by Andy Capper and Juliette Eisner (USA). Winner receives $10,000 and the art award “Blk. Candy Series 5”, by Curtis Kulig The award was given by Geoff Gilmore.

    Tribeca Online Festival Best Short Film: A Short Film About Guns, directed by Minos Papas (USA, UK). Winner receives $5,000. The award was given by Geoff Gilmore.

     

    Read more