• 12th Jeonju International Film Festival Award Winners; “Jean Gentil” wins for best international film

    [caption id="attachment_1322" align="alignnone" width="560"]Jean Gentil[/caption]

    The South Korean film “Anyang, Paradise City”won the grand prize in the Korean feature films competition category at the 12th Jeonju International Film Festival.  Directed by Park Chan-kyong, the film portrays the past and present of the South Korean city of Anyang by integrating elements of documentary and feature film.

    Park is a younger brother of director Park Chan-wook, an award-winning director who captured the grand prix honors at Cannes in 2004 with “Oldboy.” The brothers shared the Golden Bear Award for Best Short Film at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival, as co-directors of “Night Fishing.”

    “Jean Gentil” by Israel Cardenas and Laura Amelia Guzman took the top international prize and “Double Clutch” by Ahn Guk-jin won the South Korean short film competition. ‘Jean Gentil’ follows an unemployed Haitian professor looking for work in Santo Domingo who falls upon hard times as he loses his apartment and struggles with his faith.

    The 12th Jeonju International Film Festival ran April 28 – May 6, 2011 in the South Korean city of Jeonju, under the theme of “Freedom, Independence and Communication” and featured 190 films from 38 countries.

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    [ via koreaherald ]

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  • 2011 New York Indian Film Festival Announces Award Winners; Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony) wins Best Film

    [caption id="attachment_1320" align="alignnone" width="560"]Best Feature Film – Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony)[/caption]

    The 11th Annual New York Indian Film Festival came to a close on May 8 with the Closing Night red carpet premiere of Rituparno Ghosh’s powerful film Noukadubi which was attended by Rishi Kapoor, Neetu Singh Kapoor, Salman Rushdie, Mira Nair, Aparna Sen, Madhur Jaffrey, Ambassador Prakash Shah, Consul General Prabhu Dayal, and many other notable celebrities. Noukadubi is a 1920s love story based on the novel by Rabindranath Tagore.

    Following the premiere at Asia Society in Manhattan was the festival’s annual awards ceremony.

    The 2011 award winning films are:

    Best Feature Film – Sthaniya Sambaad (Spring in the Colony), directed by Arjun Gourisaria & Moinak Biswas

    Best Director – Aparna Sen, Iti Mrinalini

    Best Actor – Rishi Kapoor, Do Dooni Chaar

    Best Actress – Konkona Sen Sharma, Iti Mrinalini

    Best Screenplay – Mohan Raghavan, T.D. Dasan Std. VI B

    Best Documentary – Bhopali (Max Carlson)

    Best Short Film – Just That Sort Of A Day (Abhay Kumar)

     

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  • Newport Beach Film Festival Announces 2011 Award Winners; ‘A Beginner’s Guide to Endings’ Wins Top Jury Prize

    Jonathan Sobol’s feature-length writing-directing debut ‘A Beginner’s Guide to Endings’ was the big winner at the 2011 Newport Beach Film Festival winning multiple awards including the top prize Jury Award for Best Feature Film. The film follows the three eldest sons (Scott Caan, Paul Costanzo and Jason Jones) of a career gambler (Harvey Keitel) and how they each respond to his death.

    Oren Kaplan’s “Hamill’ a true story based on the life of deaf UFC fighter Matt Hamill, continues to be ahuge audience favorite, snagging yet another Audience Award for Best Film.

    2011 JURY AWARDS:

    BEST FEATURE FILM: A Beginner’s Guide to Endings
    BEST ACTOR: Vince Colosima (Face to Face)
    BEST ACTRESS: Ra Chapman (Face to Face)
    BEST DIRECTOR: Michael Rymer (Face to Face)
    BEST CINEMATOGRAPHER: Samy Inayeh (A Beginner’s Guide to Endings)
    BEST SCREENPLAY: Jonathan Sobol (A Beginner’s Guide to Endings)
    BEST FEATURE DOCUMENTARY FILM: My So-Called Enemy (Director Lisa Gossels)
    HONORABLE MENTION: We Were Here (Directors David Weissman and Bill Weber)
    BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY FILM: Warriors of Qiugang (Director Ruby Yang)
    HONORABLE MENTION: Moth in Spring (Director Yu Gu)
    BEST SHORT ANIMATED FILM: Fly (Director Alan Short)
    HONORABLE MENTION: Bottle (Director Kirsten Lepore)
    BEST NARRATIVE SHORT FILM: Love Song of Iskra Prufrock (Director Lucy Gaffy)
    HONORABLE MENTION: The Escape (Director James Connelly)


    2011 AUDIENCE AWARDS:

    Audience Award Winner Feature (US) – Hamill (Oren Kaplan)
    Audience Award Winner Feature (Foreign) – My Afternoons With Margueritte (Jean Becker)
    Audience Award Winner Documentary – Defining Beauty: Ms. Wheelchair America (Alexis Ostrander)
    Audience Award Winner Action Sports Feature – Splinters (Adam Pesce)
    Audience Award Winner Family Film – [no winner named]
    Audience Award Winner Short Film – Moonfishing (David Michael Friend)
    Audience Award Winner Art, Architecture + Design – [no winner named]
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking  Acting- Jericho Rosales (Subject: I Love You)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking Directing – Matt Walsh (High Road)
    Outstanding Achievement in Feature Filmmaking – Takeshi Koike (Redline)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – André Øvredal (Trollhunter)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Drew Pierce, Brett Pierce (Deadheads)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Liz Garbus (Bobby Fisher Against The World)
    Outstanding Achievement in Filmmaking – Alana Morshead (Peach Plum Pear)
    Outstanding Achievement in Documentary – James Marsh (Project Nim)
    Outstanding Achievement in Documentary – David Dworsky, Victor Köhler (Press Pause Play)
    Outstanding Achievement in Action Sports Filmmaking – Adam Pesce (Splinters)
    Outstanding Achievement in Action Sports Filmmaking – Eric Iberg, Shane Nelson (Like A Lion)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Animation – Robert Kohn (The Lift)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Horror – Jerome Sable (The Legend of Beaver Dam)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking Directing – Skot Bright (Ollie Klublershturf vs The Nazis)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – Antonio Piazza, Fabio Grassadonia (Rita)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – Vicky Mather (Stanley Pickle)
    Outstanding Achievement in Short Filmmaking – David Yarovesky (Ghild)


    2011 CHUCK JONES CENTER FOR CREATIVITY AWARD FOR ACHIEVEMENT IN ANIMATION:

    The Chuck Jones Award for Direction, Story and Character Development – Le Cirque (Nicolas Brault)
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Comic Timing – Fly
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Art Direction – Thought For You
    Chuck Jones Special Recognition Award For Character Development – Blind Date


    2011 MACGILLVRAY FREEMAN FILMS AWARDS:

    MacGillivray Freeman Films Award for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking (feature) – My So-Called Enemy
    MacGillivray Freeman Films Award for Excellence in Documentary Filmmaking (short) -The Dancer
    MacGillivray Freeman Films Special Achievement Award in Environmental Filmmaking – This is Your Ocean: Sharks

    [ via ocweekly ]

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  • Hot Docs 2011 Award Winners; Dragonslayer Wins Best International Feature

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    [caption id="attachment_1317" align="alignnone" width="560"]Dragonslayer[/caption]

    ‘Dragonslayer’ won Best International Feature and ‘Family Portrait in Black and White’ won Best Canadian Feature at the 2011 Hot Docs Film Festival. Nine awards and over $72,000 in cash prizes were presented to Canadian and international filmmakers, including awards for Festival films in competition and those recognizing emerging and established filmmakers.

    2011 Hot Docs Film Festival Award Winners:

    Best Canadian Feature
    FAMILY PORTRAIT IN BLACK AND WHITE (D: Julia Ivanova; P: Boris Ivanov, Mike Jackson)
    Sponsored by the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation and Documentary Organization of Canada, the award includes a $15,000 prize courtesy of the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation.

    It can be dangerous to be black in post-Soviet era Ukraine, a country peopled by 99.9% blue-eyed blonds. Olga Nenya faces down age-old xenophobia as she fosters 23 abandoned children along with her own, including 16 bi-racial orphans, in a ramshackle house in a small Ukrainian town. At first their lives seem like an idyllic United Colors of Benetton ad: love and affection from Olga, swimming trips to the lake, playing with chickens, goats and cats, going to school and doing chores in the garden and house. But as the film progresses over three years, a more layered and psychologically disturbing portrait emerges. Olga plays favourites and picks on kids who contradict her, and strict Soviet-era ideas about child rearing stymie their opportunities and abilities. Fresh from its Sundance premiere, Julia Ivanova brings festival audiences a rich observational portrait of a woman who wants to save the children from an unjust world—her way.

    Special Jury Prize – Canadian Feature (tie)
    AT NIGHT, THEY DANCE (D: Isabelle Lavigne, Stéphane Thibault; P: Lucie Lambert)
    and
    THE GUANTANAMO TRAP (D: Thomas Selim Wallner; P: Thomas Kufus, Amit Breuer, Marcel Hoehn, Christoph Jorg)
    Sponsored by the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation and Documentary Organization of Canada, the award includes a $10,000 prize courtesy of the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation.

    The Canadian Features Jury also acknowledged the film WIEBO’S WAR (D: David York, P: David York, Nick Hector, Bryn Hughes, Bonnie Thompson; EP: David York, David Christensen) with an honourable mention.

    Best International Feature
    DRAGONSLAYER (D: Tristan Patterson; P: John Baker, EP: Christine Vachon)
    Sponsored by A&E, the award includes a $10,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    California’s suburbs, decimated by economic collapse, are a sprawl of abandoned foreclosures and deserted swimming pools. Skreech, a 23-year-old skate punk, takes full advantage of the decline, stretching out his adolescence by riding empty pools, getting wasted, camping in friends’ backyards and chilling with his girl. If Holden Caulfield had grown up broke in 21st-century Fullerton, no doubt his life would have mirrored Skreech’s. A countdown orders the chaos of our hero’s Peter Pan lifestyle, ticking down the time he has left to get high—5—drink—4—puke—3—and road trip before real-world responsibilities encroach on his idyll. Despite getting his kicks at no one else’s expense—2—society demands he be productive—1—and employed. Dragonslayer is an amazing and unconventional nostalgia trip that questions what “going nowhere” looks like, how capitalism determines our way of life and why inertia is such a powerful threat.

    Special Jury Prize – International Feature
    THE CASTLE (D: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti; P: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti; EP: Massimo D’Anolfi, Martina Parenti)
    Sponsored by the Ontario Media Development Corporation, the award includes a $5,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The International Features Jury also acknowledged the films GRANDE HOTEL (D: Lotte Stoops; P: Ellen De Waele, Co-Producer Denis Vaslin, Volya Films; EP: Ellen De Waele) and HELL AND BACK AGAIN (D: Danfung Dennis; P: Mike Lerner, Martin Herring; EP: Dan Cogan, Karol Martesko Fenster, Gernot Schaffler, Thomas Brunner, Maxyne Franklin) with honourable mentions.

    Best Mid-Length Documentary
    OUR NEWSPAPER (D: Eline Flipse; P: Eline Flipse; EP: Eline Flipse)
    Sponsored by Canada Council for the Arts, the award includes a $3,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The Short and Mid-Length Films Jury also acknowledged the film PEOPLE I COULD HAVE BEEN AND MAYBE AM (D: Boris Gerrets; P: Pieter van Huystee) with an honourable mention.

    Best Short Documentary
    FLYING ANNE (D: Catherine van Campen; P: Joost Seelen)
    The award includes a $3,000 prize courtesy of Hot Docs.

    The Short and Mid-Length Films Jury also acknowledged the film SOMETHING TO TELL YOU (D: Pete Gleeson; P: Pete Gleeson; EP: Yvette Coyne) with an honourable mention.

    HBO Documentary Films Emerging Artist Award
    Michal Marczak for the film AT THE EDGE OF RUSSIA (P: Marianna Rowinska)
    Sponsored by HBO Documentary Films.

    documentary’s Don Haig Award
    Rama Rau
    Awarded by the Don Haig Foundation, the prize includes a $20,000 cash prize generously sponsored by documentary.

    Lindalee Tracey Award
    Honouring an emerging Canadian filmmaker with a passionate point of view, a strong sense of social justice and a sense of humour, the award was presented to Alexandre Hamel.
    The award winner will receive a $6,000 cash prize and $3,000 in film stock donated by Kodak Canada.

    The Hot Docs Board of Directors acknowledged the Terence Macartney-Filgate as the recipient of the 2011 Hot Docs Outstanding Achievement Award, which was presented to the influential Canadian filmmaker at an event earlier in the day.

    The Sundance Channel People’s Choice Award and audience top ten favourite films of the 2011 Festival, determined by audience ballot, will be announced on Monday, May 9. Also announced on this day is the Filmmaker Award, determined by ballots cast by Hot Docs 2011 filmmakers.

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  • Donald Trump Gets ‘Trumped’ in New Documentary at Hot Docs Festival

    Donald Trump is making more news, this time with a new Scottish documentary coming out that paints a pretty negative picture of the tycoon.

    The film, You’ve Been Trumped, directed by the Scottish filmmaker Anthony Baxter, premiered at the Toronto Hot Docs Festival, which is still running. It follows the process of Trump trying to build a golf course in the lovely seaside village of Balmedie, Scotland, where the sport was reportedly born. He runs up against a local farmer who refuses to sell his land, and subsequently wages war against him. Baxter delves into the conflict, apparently at the risk of angering authorities, as he was arrested at one point for trespassing.

    The Edinburgh Film Festival actually rejected the film, deeming it too “racy,” but Baxter raised money online and is now pitching the film to U.S. distributors. The doc also boasts a score by Jonsi, the lead singer of Sigur Ros.

    This new documentary gives a glimpse of what Donald Trump looks and acts like in the face of adversity; a symbolic story of strong rural residents standing against the ruthless American capitalism that tries to exploit their land. But more than just being symbolic, Baxter hopes to illustrate a very real side of Trump that Americans may not know exists, and realizes the timeliness of the film coinciding with Trump’s new political aspirations.

     

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  • Festival Winner “Lebanon, Pa” Now In Theaters

    It took three long years, but Philadelphia native Ben Hickernell debut his first full-length feature film partially shot in and named after Lebanon, Pennsylvania, named “Lebanon, Pa” at Great Escape theater at the Lebanon Valley Mall in Lebanon, Pennsylvania

    Hickernell wrote, directed and co-produced the film, and as reported by ldnews.com, stresses that the film is not about the town itself and is merely the setting for the story. Although some of the scenes were shot in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, most of the film was actually shot in Philadelphia.

    The story is described as Will (Josh Hopkins), a charming 35-year-old Philadelphia ad man, heads to Lebanon, Pa. to bury his recently deceased father. He forms an unexpected friendship with CJ (Rachel Kitson), his bright, newly pregnant 17-year-old cousin. As Will becomes interested in CJ’s married teacher (Samantha Mathis) and CJ confronts her conflicted father, both struggle with formidable decisions about the path their lives will take.

    Can we vault our differences and meet in the middle? This bittersweet comic drama tenderly explores the cultural divide in America through the lives of one extended family.

    “Lebanon, Pa” premiered at the 2010 South by Southwest Film Conference and Festival in Austin, Texas, and also screened in filmmaker Michael Moore’s Traverse City Film Festival in Michigan in July, where it won the Founder’s Prize for Best Fiction Film.

    The film also won the Filmadelphia Award for the best film made in Pennsylvania at the Philadelphia Film Festival and the Standout Film Award at the Hells Half Mile Film and Music Festival in Michigan.

    The movie is now in limited release in New York City, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Michigan and Florida, with new cities continuously being added.

    Visit the official film site for more details.

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  • RIP: Jackie Cooper, Film and Television Actor

    [caption id="attachment_1311" align="alignnone" width="533"] Jackie Cooper in SUPERMAN III (1983)[/caption]

    Jackie Cooper, Emmy-winning director of “M*A*S*H” and other hits, plus known to moviegoers as Perry White, editor of The Daily Planet, in four “Superman” films died on Tuesday in Los Angeles. He was 88.

    His agent, Ronnie Leif, said Mr. Cooper died in a hospital after a short illness.

    Read more in NY Times

     

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  • ONE LUCKY ELEPHANT – documentary film will open in NYC on June 8; and in LA on June 24

    ONE LUCKY ELEPHANT, a documentary film directed by Lisa Leeman and produced by Cristina Colissimo and Jordana Jordana Glick-Franzheim will open at Film Forum in NYC on Wednesday, June 8 and at Laemmle Theaters in LA on Friday, June 24.

    Ten years in the making, this poignant, compelling saga of Flora the Circus Elephant has screened to enthusiastic audience and critical reception at numerous international film festivals, winning Best Editing Award at the Woodstock Film Festival.

    Where does an elephant go after a life in the circus?  Sixteen years have passed since circus producer David Balding adopted Flora, the orphaned baby African elephant. As Flora approaches adulthood, David realizes that she is not happy performing. Ultimately, he must face the difficult truth that the circus is no place for Flora; she needs to be with other elephants. The road to Flora’s retirement, however, is a difficult and emotional journey which tests their bond in unexpected ways.  ONE LUCKY ELEPHANT eschews easy sentimentality and doesn’t shy away from examining the problems and mysteries posed by keeping wild animals in captivity, while never losing sight of the delicate love story between a man and a 10,000 pound elephant, who share feelings of loyalty, sorrow, admiration and joy.  The film is suitable for children, 10 and older.
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  • 90 Films Are KIDS FIRST! Best Award Winners

    [caption id="attachment_1308" align="alignnone" width="560"]Gorilla in the Greenhouse – Great Pacific Garbage Patch[/caption]

    Ninety-one short and feature films met KIDS FIRST!’s standards for combining excellence in filmmaking with pro-social benefits to be selected winners of the annual KIDS FIRST! Best Awards.  Tinkerbell, The Pups of Liberty and Paws and Whiskers; and How toTrain Your Dragon, Shrek: Forever After, Barbie and Wubbzy, were all celebrated as creative and innovative works and winners.

    2010 KIDS FIRST! Best Winners    

    SERIES, AGES 2-5    
    Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!     Anchor Bay Entertainment

    FEATURE FILM, AGES 2-5    
    1     Curious George: A Very Monkey Christmas     Universal Studios Home Entertainment
    2     Curious George: Follow That Monkey     Universal Studios Home Entertainment

    SERIES, AGES 5-8    
    1     WordGirl      Scholastic Media
    2     Strawberry Shortcake     20th Century Fox Home Entertainment

    FEATURE FILM, AGES 5-8    
    1     Tinker Bell and the Great Fairy Rescue     Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
    2     Barbie in a Mermaid Tale     Universal Studios Home Entertainment
    3     Lego: The Adventures Of Clutch Powers     Universal Studios Home Entertainment

    SHORT AGES 5-12    
    1     Goosebumps: Go Eat Worms     20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
    2     Goosebumps: The Blog That Ate Everyone     20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
    3     Tom & Jerry Meet Sherlock Holmes     Warner Home Video

    FEATURE FILM, AGES 5-12    
    1     How to Train Your Dragon     Paramount
    2     Shrek Forever After     Paramount
    3     Spy Next Door, The     Lionsgate

    FEATURE FILM, AGES 8-12    
    1     Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief     20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
    2     Diary of a Wimpy Kid     20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
    3     The White Lion     Screen Media Films

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, AGES 2-5    
    1     Eco Beeps with Skip & Molly: Plastic Bags     Magic Drawer Productions
    2     Tails of Abbygail: Finding Betty     Kid Vid Entertainment
    3     Sheepies     NMG

    SHORT AGES 5-8    
    1     The North Star     Fablevision/Scholastic
    2     Great Joy     Weston Woods/Scholastic Productions
    3     Safety Smart: In the Water     Disney Educational Productions

    INDEPENDENT SHORT AGES 5-8    
    1     Pups of Liberty     Picnic Productions
    2     Sneeze Me Away     Ryan Grobins
    3     Gus Outdoors: Gull Island     Sand Pictures

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, AGES 5-12    
    1     Ride of the Mergansers     Steve Furman
    2     Great Race, The     Martin Humphreys
    3     Beans     Bad Sparkle Productions

    INDEPENDENT SHORT SHORTS, AGES 5-12, ANIMATION    
    1     Gorilla in the Greenhouse: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch     Sustainlane Media
    2     Cuento de la C (The Story of C)     Carlos Navarro
    3     Manantial     Gabriel Govela Azuela

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, AGES 5-12, ANIMATION    
    1     Lost and Found     Studio AKA
    2     Little Spirit: Christmas in New York     Curious Pictures
    3     Slap Back Jack “High Five Master”     Mark Newell

    INDEPENDENT FEATURE, AGES 8-12    
    1     The Wanderer (Dayo)     Cutting Edge Productions, Inc.
    2     I Sense Danger     Blind Dog Entertainment
    3     Ez Money     Vizmo Films LLC

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 8-12, Short Shorts    
    1     Parent-Teacher Night     Ouat Media
    2     Decklin and the Dentist     Lance Dumais
    3     Brain Zapped – Reason For The Seasons     George Garcia

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 8-12, Over 10 min    
    1     Superhuman     Kick The Dog Productions
    2     How I Taught My Grandmother To Read     Worldkids International
    3     Hollow Tree, The     Cyprus Productions

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 8-12, ANIMATION    
    1     El Salon Mexico     Paul Glickman
    2     For A Fistful Of Snow     Julien Ezri
    3     After Hours     Marshall Fels Elliot

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 8-12, ANIMATION/LIVE ACTION    
    1     Planet You     The Health Museum
    2     Locally Unwanted Land Usage     Katherine Balsley
    3     Jet     V. Sassmannshausen

    FEATURE, AGES 12-18    
    1     Twilight Saga, The: New Moon     Summit Entertainment

    INDEPENDENT DOCUMENTARY, AGES 12-18    
    1     Shi-Shi-Etko     Monkey Ink Media
    2     True Insight (Samyaktva)     Worldkids International
    3     AutoMorphosis     Harrod Blank

    INDEPENDENT DOCUMENTARY, AGES 12-18    
    1     Walking on Water     Walking On Water

    INDEPENDENT FEATURE, AGES 12-18    
    1     Broken Hill     Audience Alliance Mps
    2     Hey Hey It’s Esther Blueburger     Monterey Media
    3     Yeh Khulaa Aasmaan (This Open Sky)     Aaranca Creations

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 12-18    
    1     The Naughty List     Rodney Brunet
    2     The Day My Parents Became Cool     Eke Pictures LLC
    3     The Macabre World of Lavender Williams     Castilian Pirate Productions

    INDEPENDENT SHORT, 12-18, ANIMATION    
    1     A Long-Distance Call     Joe Chang
    2     The Lift     Kohrtoons Studio, Inc
    3     FOT-The Next Big Thing     Yukfoo Animation

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, ELEMENTARY    
    1     Paws And Whiskers     Katie Hoffman
    2     The Lion at Home     National Media Museum
    3     The Golden Tree     Emma Kenney/Gillian Kenney

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, MIDDLE SCHOOL    
    1     Ndepawa: I Am Given     Erin Buckley
    2     In The Footsteps Of Yellow Woman     Camille Manybeads Tso
    3     Sparks in the Night     Ben Kadie

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, HIGH SCHOOL    
    1     The Complex     Alex Fjellberg Swerdlowe
    2     Becoming Cephalopod     Reel Grrls, Katherine Nilsen
    3     What Lives On     Jesse Rosenberg

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, HS, DOCUMENTARY    
    1     Mama’s blouse     Profile Productions Ltd
    2     Beyond Green: Paper Gardens     Listen Up! Youth Media Network
    3     Beyond Green: Toxic Soil Busters     Listen Up! Youth Media Network

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, COLLEGE Short shorts    
    1     Extraordinary Monday of Herman Brumby     Allison Leger
    2     I’m In Love With Kimberly Johnson     Adam Johns
    3     Night Terrors     Matthew Thompson

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, COLLEGE Shorts    
    1     Harmony Town     Ryan Parma
    2     Grown-Up For A Day     Capri Films
    3     In This Place     Amy Bench

    STUDENT PRODUCTION, COLLEGE, ANIMATION    
    1     Kidnap     Sijia Luo
    2     We Are All Here     Yonghwa Choi
    3     Lobster Boy     Tracy Qiu

    SCREENPLAY FOR AGES 5-8    
    1     Blinda     Vicki Bartholomew

    SCREENPLAY FOR AGES 5-12    
    1     Toucan Amazon Adventure, A     Donna Lisa
    2     Nuts!     Kevan Peterson

    SCREENPLAY FOR AGES 8-12    
    1     Play Date     John Malkin
    2     The Horse of His Dreams     Sabrina Zackery
    3     Dressing Up     Hugh Schulze

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  • 18th Chicago Underground Film Festival Announces Opening and Closing Night Films + Jury

    [caption id="attachment_1306" align="alignnone" width="560"]Some Girls Never Learn[/caption]

    The 18th Chicago Underground Film Festival (CUFF) will open with the World Premiere of Chicago filmmaker, and School of the Art Institute of Chicago alum, Jerzy Rose’s first feature, “Some Girls Never Learn,” a humorous, absurd romp through time and space, the underworld and the stratosphere. Closing Night will bring Jeff Krulik and John Heyn back to Chicago to share the cult favorite “Heavy Metal Parking Lot” as an opener for their brand new feature documentary “Heavy Metal Picnic“

    The festival runs June 2 – June 9, 2011 and all screenings will take place at the Gene Siskel Film Center of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 164 North State Street.

    The Chicago Underground team also announced its jurors for the 2011 Festival:

    Donald Harrison – Executive Director of the Ann Arbor Film Festival

    Chi Jang Yin – Chinese-born media artist known for her conceptual, documentary work, which comments upon the state of Chinese culture, past and present

    Ignatiy Vishnevetsky – one of the new co-hosts of “Ebert Presents At The Movies”

    Irvine Welsh acclaimed and often controversial writer, his book Trainspotting was made into a 1996 film of the same name.

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  • ‘The House of Suh’ and ‘Living In Seduced Circumstances’ Took Top Jury Honors at 2011 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1304" align="alignnone" width="560"]LIVING IN SEDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES[/caption]

    The 2011 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival celebrated the closing night of their 27th Anniversary edition on Thursday night with the screening of the Taiwanese romantic comedy “LOVE IN DISGUISE” by Leehom Wang and the announcement of this year’s jury prizes.

    Filmmaker Ian Gamazon took home both the Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Fiction Film and Outstanding Director award for his film “LIVING IN SEDUCED CIRCUMSTANCES,” while actors Eric Mabius, Fernando Noriega, Will Yun Lee and Luke Brandon Field were singled out with a Best Ensemble Acting Award for their performances in “WHERE THE ROAD MEETS THE SUN” directed by Mun Chee Yong.

    Other narrative film awards given out included Outstanding Screenplay to writer/director Stephane Gauger for “SAIGON ELECTRIC;” Outstanding Cinematography to Gavin Kelly for “WHERE THE ROAD MEETS THE SUN;” and a Special Jury Award for Breakout  Performance by a New Actor to Ryan Greene for his role in “ONE KINE DAY.”

    First time filmmaker Byron Q received the Best First Film Award for his dramatic “BANG BANG.”

    The winning audience favorite awards went to “RAKENROL” from Quark Henares for fave fiction film and to “AMONG B-BOYS” from Christopher Woon for favorite documentary.

    In the documentary jury competition, “THE HOUSE OF SUH” from Iris K. Shim received both the Grand Jury Prize for Outstanding Non-Fiction Film and the Outstanding Director Award.

    “ONE BIG HAPA FAMILY” directed by Jeff Chiba Stearns also took home two awards for Outstanding Cinematography to Jason Woodford and for Outstanding Editing to Chiba Stearns.

    The jury awarded a Special Jury Prize for Human Rights to “FINDING FACE” directed by Skye Fitzgerald and Patti Duncan which chronicles the details of the controversial case of rising star Tat Marina who was attacked with acid in Cambodia in 1999.

    Short films this year were in abundance with 148 shorts being screened at the festival.  The film “TEAMWORK” from Hong Seo Yun was the recipient of the Golden Reel Award, while Soham Mehta was honored with the Linda Mabalot New Directors/New Visions award for his film “FIRECRACKER.”

    The 2011 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival kicked off on April 28 with the Justin Lin action film “FAST FIVE” and has seen record-breaking attendance and multiple sold out shows throughout the past seven days.  The Fest will conclude May 6 and May 7 with encore screenings of award winners along with the Los Angeles premiere of “BANGKOK KNOCKOUT” from Thailand and the Sundance/Berlin Film Festival favorite “BOY” from Taika Waititi at the CGV Cinemas in KoreaTown, Los Angeles.  CGV Cinemas are located at 621 S. Western Avenue, Los Angeles, CA  90005.  This amazing venue is situated north of Wilshire Boulevard in K-Town.

    [via LAAPFF]

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  • 54th San Francisco International Film Festival Wraps; Announces More Awards

    [caption id="attachment_1301" align="alignnone" width="560"]oav Potash, director of CRIME AFTER CRIME and winner of the $25,000 Golden Gate Award for Investigative Documentary Feature, celebrating with subject Joshua Safran at the 54th San Francisco International Film Festival, May 4, 2011. [/caption]

    54th San Francisco International Film Festival (April 21 – May 5) with 265 screenings of 193 films from 48 countries came to close on Thursday.

    Eleven films were in juried competition for the 15th annual $15,000 New Directors Award which was given to director Park Jung-bumʼs The Journals of Musan (South Korea).

    The Salesman by Sébastien Pilote (Canada) was awarded the FIPRESCI prize. The jury described it as “a first feature with a precise sense of character and place, yet which is also provocatively ambivalent about the value of work in the aftermath of local economic collapse.” FIPRESCI, the influential international organization of film critics, supports cinema as an art and as an autonomous means of expression.

    As previously announced, the GGA for Best Investigative Documentary Feature was presented to Crime After Crime by Yoav Potash (USA). Best Documentary Feature and Best Bay Area Documentary Feature were both presented to Better This World by Kelly Duane de la Vega and Katie Galloway (USA).

    Other awards included Best Documentary Short, awarded to Into the Middle of Nowhere by Anna Frances Ewert (Scotland/England). The Best Narrative Short was Blokes by Marialy Rivas (Chile). First place for Best Bay Area Short went to Tourist Trap by Skye Thorstenson (USA), with second place going to Young Dracula by Alfred Seccombe (USA). The GGA Youth Work winner was Z-Man by Nat Talbot (USA), with The Math Test by Sam Rubin (USA) receiving Honorable Mention. The Best Work for Kids and Families was Specky Four Eyes by Jean-Claude Rozec (France), with Honorable Mention going to The Snowman by Kelly Wilson and Neil Wrischnik (USA). The Best Animated Short was The External World by David O’Reilly (Ireland) and Best New Visions was Lost Lake by Zackary Drucker (USA).

    The Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature went to Denis Villeneuve’s Incendies, with Takashi Miike’s 13 Assassins also scoring well with festivalgoers. The Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature went to Yoav Potash’s Crime After Crime, with Kelly Duane de la Vega and Katie Galloway’s Better This World also tallying high votes from the viewers.

    [caption id="attachment_1302" align="alignnone" width="560"]Park Jung-bum, director of THE JOURNALS OF MUSAN, which won the New Directors Award at the 54th San Francisco International Film Festival, May 4, 2011. [/caption]

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