• Tribeca Film Institute Announces 2011 Award Winners and Grantees for Programs

    The Tribeca Film Institute (TFI) today announced several program award winners and grantees at the TFI Awards Luncheon at Riverpark NYC during the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival, totaling $125,000 in funds.

    During the TFI Awards Ceremony at Riverpark NYC in Manhattan, the following Tribeca All Access Creative Promise winners were announced:

    TAA Creative Promise Award for Documentary
    Gideon’s Army

    Every day, more and more people are arrested, handcuffed, shoved into a squad car, and booked. Weeks turn into months and their only line of defense is in the hands of a public defender. “Gideon’s Army” asks, are public defenders up to the fight?
    Dawn Porter (Director)

    TAA Creative Promise Award for Narrative
    County Line

    A Southern town’s underbelly exposed when its sheriff tries to rid himself of a drug alliance with a family friend and investigate the deaths of his female informants. In the process, he must confront his son’s addiction to the drugs he’s allowed in his county.
    Tina Mabry (Director, Producer)
    Morgan R. Stiff (Producer, Screenwriter, Editor)
    Lee V. Stiff, (Producer, Executive Producer)

    TAA also extended its programming and support for alumni this year including $25,000 in grants and fellowships for past TAA projects in development or new works by program alumni. The following grants were announced today:

    Tribeca All Access Ontrack Grant Narrative
    When I Saw You
    Jordan, 1960s. An eccentric and unbounded boy runs away from home knowing full well his young mother will follow in this search for freedom.
    Annemarie Jacir (Director, Producer, Screenwriter)

    Tribeca All Access Ontrack Grant Documentary
    Untitled Gay Retiree Documentary
    Set against the backdrop of various LGBTQ-friendly communities, Untitled Gay Retiree Documentary captures the experiences of several LGBTQ seniors as they navigate the adventures, challenges and surprises of their “golden years.”
    PJ Raval (Director, Producer)
    Sara Giustini (Producer)           
    Kyle Henry (Editor)

    Tribeca All Access Trans Media Award Narrative
    Chinafornia
    America, 2018. Unable to pay the ten trillion dollars it owes to China, the U.S. comes up with a plan: it gives China the  state of California. ANIMATION
    Ellie Lee (Director, Screenwriter)
    Peter Dowd (Screenwriter)

    Tribeca All Access Trans Media Award Documentary
    Untitled Mu Xin Project (Working Title)
    In the sweep of China’s turbulent history, Mu Xin sacrificed everything for his art. Starting while he was illegally imprisoned, he transformed his experiences into a body of work merging East, West, classicism, modernism, terror and transcendence.
    He has avoided speaking of the horrors he has seen – until now.
    Francisco Bello (Director, Producer, Director of Photography)
    Tim Sternberg (Director, Producer, Editor)

    The TAA Adrienne Shelly Foundation Filmmaker Grant
    El Jardin
    El Jardin is a portrait of a cemetery in the drug heartland of México. Since the war on drugs began in 2007 it has claimed over 35,000 lives. The cemetery has doubled in size and the mausoleums have doubled in height.
    Natalia Almada (Director/Producer)

    The Games for Change Fellowship for TAA Alumni
    The Undocumented
    The Undocumented is a feature length documentary which chronicles Arizona’s deadly summer months, following Border Patrol agents who fight to prevent migrant deaths, medical investigators and the Mexican Consulate who work to identify migrants who die crossing the border, and Mexican families who struggle to accept the loss of loved ones.
    Marco Williams (Director)

    Audience Activation Grant
    The Ipo Boys (aka They Are All My Brothers)
    Several boys at a home for abandoned youth in Mexico rebuild their lives while contributing to the social enterprise that sustains them: world-renowned French artisan goat cheese. DOCUMENTARY
    Nicole Opper (Director, Producer)

    The Latin America Media Arts Fund also announced four winners to support innovative film and video artists who are living or working in Mexico, Central and South America. The awards announced today included:

    The Battle for Land (Columbia)
    , Directed by Juan Mejia– The Battle for Land delves deep into the complexities of mass displacement pushing us past prevailing ideas where displacement is seen as an aberration of war, and progressively revealing a more intricate and terrifying picture. It is above all a journey deep into the heart of uprooting and the dark side of progress.

    Cocaine Prison  (Bolivia), Directed by Violeta Ayala– Trying to establish a cocaine business inside Bolivia’s craziest prison an unlikely friendship develops, between two ‘little fish’, a young ambitious trafficker and a middle-aged cocaine worker fighting for release, personifying the country’s love affair with cocaine.

    Toys (Mexico), Directed by Alba Mora-Roca– Toys explores how a family’s peculiar love for toys helps children overcome the effects of violence in Mexico. It follows a Mexican-Japanese family who, having gathered the largest toy collection in Latin America, travels north to do workshops with victims of the violence generated by fighting drug cartels.

    When Two Worlds Collide (Peru), Directed by Taira Akbar and Heidi Brandenburg– An indigenous leader forced into exile and facing 20 years in prison for resisting the environmental ruin of Amazonian lands by big business. Refusing to surrender he continues his quest, shedding light on conflicting visions shaping the fate of the Amazon and the climate future of our world.

    Four additional grantees of the TFI Documentary Fund were also announced through the backing of NY-based Insurgent Media. Insurgent Media was founded by Andrew Karsch, Erik Gordon and Fisher Stevens and is a central innovator in the production and distribution of thought-provoking filmed content. The recipients announced today include:

    Teenage, Directed by Matt Wolf and written by Jon Savage– Teenage is an unconventional historical film about youth culture based on an acclaimed book by the punk author Jon Savage. The film examines the invention of modern teenagers in wartime America with profiles of extraordinary adolescents.

    Of Monsters and Men
    , Directed by Morgan Matthews– Of Monsters and Men is a fascinating and touching portrait of men who are obsessed with monsters and their adventures to find them.

    Smash & Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers, Directed by Havana Marking and Producer by Mike Lerner– Smash & Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers, in their own words, the most successful jewel thieves of all time take you into their world: the post-Milosovic Balkans, the modern diamond trade and a 21st Century crime gang.

    Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey, Directed by Ramona Diaz – Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey follows the real life rock-n-roll fairy tale story of Filipino Arnel Pineda, who was plucked from You Tube to become the front man for iconic American rock band, Journey, thereby becoming the latest performer to go from the Internet to real life celebrity. 

    During this year’s Tribeca Film Festival (April 20-May 1), TFI filmmakers from programs including Tribeca All Access and the TFI Sloan Filmmaker Fund, participated in one-on-one industry meetings on Tuesday, April 26 and Wednesday, April 27 to network with film industry executives, potential investors, development executives, producers and agents.

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  • A Tribe Called Quest Documentary Announces Theatrical Release Dates

    Michael Rapaport’s documentary on hip-hop legends A Tribe Called Quest, “Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest” will first open July 8 in New York City and Los Angeles and then on to  another 32 cities reports Billboard.

    “Beats, Rhymes & Life” will play San Francisco, Chicago and Washington, D.C., on its second week, San Diego, Boston, Philadelphia, Minneapolis and Atlanta beginning July 22.  The screening run wraps on August 12 when it premieres in 10 cities, among them New Orleans, Indianapolis and Pittsburgh.

    Having forged a 20-year run as one of the most innovative and influential hip-hop bands of all time, A Tribe Called Quest has kept a generation hungry for more of its groundbreaking music since the group’s much-publicized breakup in 1998. The band shaped a unique sound by wedding jazz-infused musicscapes to Afrocentric rhymes espousing unity and community. Its music became the anthem for cool and broke down barriers for people who had never before connected with hip-hop. In spite of unparalleled artistic success, however, the group encountered pitfalls that eventually caused its tumultuous breakup.

    Beats, Rhymes & Life, the feature directorial debut of acclaimed actor Michael Rapaport, documents the inner workings and behind-the-scenes drama that follow the band even today and explores what’s next for a group many claim are the pioneers of alternative rap. Rapaport’s passion for his subjects allows them to open up to the camera, resulting in a remarkably honest, emotional portrait that does justice to this seminal band.
    [ 2011 Sundance Film Festival ]

    “Beats, Rhymes & Life” had its world premiere earlier this year at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and is currently screening at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival.

    Here is the theatrical release schedule for “Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest”:



    7/8 



    NEW YORK 

    Sunshine 

    Empire 

    Magic Johnson 



    LOS ANGELES 

    Arclight Hollywood 

    Century City 15 

    Criterion Santa Monica 



    7/15 



    SAN FRANCISCO 

    Metreon 

    Kabuki 



    CHICAGO 

    Century Centre 

    River East 

    CineArts Evanston 



    WASHINGTON, DC 

    E-Street 

    Georgetown 

    Bethesda Row 

    Shirlington 

    Magic Johnson 



    7/22 



    SAN DIEGO 

    Hillcrest 



    BOSTON 

    Kendall Square 

    Boston Commons 

    Embassy Waltham 



    PHILADELPHIA 

    Ritz 5 

    Ritz Center Voorhees 



    MINNEAPOLIS 

    Uptown 



    ATLANTA 

    Midtown 

    Phipps Plaza 



    SAN FRANCISCO – ADD ONS 

    Shattuck 

    Century Mountain View 

    Marin Sausalito 

    CineArts Santana Row San Jose 



    7/29 



    DALLAS 

    Angelika 

    Angelika Plano



    HOUSTON 

    Edwards Greenway 



    AUSTIN 

    Violet Crown 

    Arbor 



    SEATTLE 

    Pacific Place 

    Metro 

    Lincoln Square Bellevue 



    PORTLAND 

    Cinema 21 



    MILWAUKEE 

    Oriental 



    DETROIT 

    Uptown Birmingham 



    8/5 



    PHOENIX 

    Tempe Marketplace 



    MADISON 

    Sundancen Cinemas 



    MIAMI 

    Regal South Beach 



    ST. LOUIS 

    Tivoli 



    CLEVELAND 

    Cedar Lee 



    CINCINNATI 

    Esquire



    HONOLULU 

    Kahala 



    8/12 



    SAN ANTONIO 

    Bijou 

    AMC Huebner 



    COLUMBUS 

    Gateway 

    AMC Lennox 



    DAYTON 

    Neon Movies 



    KANSAS CITY 

    Palace 

    AMC Studio Olathe 



    SALT LAKE CITY 

    Broadway 



    INDIANAPOLIS 

    Keystone Art 



    PITTSBURGH 

    Regent 



    NEW ORLEANS 

    Canal Place 

    Elmwood 



    CHARLOTTE 

    Manor 



    RALEIGH-CHAPEL HILL 

    Colony Raleigh 

    Chelsea Chapel Hill

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  • Darren Aronofsky, director of The Wrestler and Black Swan, to chair International Jury for 2011 Venice International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_1239" align="alignnone" width="560"]Director, Darren Aronofsky on the set of THE WRESTLER[/caption]

    Oscar nominated American director, producer and screenwriter Darren Aronofsky (director/screenwriter  of the opening film of the 67th Venice Film Festival, Black Swan, and winner of the 2008 Golden Lion for The Wrestler) will be the president of the International Jury for the Competition at the 68th Venice International Film Festival (August 31 – September 10 2011). The International Jury will award the Golden Lion and the other official prizes.

    Darren Aronofsky recently directed Black Swan, which upon its release established a new box office record for Fox Searchlight Pictures, received 5 Oscar nominations including best director and best picture and 4 Golden Globe Award nominations. Black Swan swept the Independent Spirit Award winning best feature, best director, best female lead and best cinematography.

    Leading actress Natalie Portman’s performance in Black Swan, won her the Oscar as Best Actress, the Golden Globe, the BAFTA, the Independent Spirit Award, the Screen Actors Guild Award and prizes from the major associations of film critics.

    For his earlier work The Wrestler (2008), Aronofsky was awarded the Golden Lion at the 65th Venice International Film Festival, and later won the Independent Spirit Award for best feature. Leading actor Mickey Rourke won the Golden Globe, the BAFTA and the Independent Spirit Award, as well as an Oscar nomination, and prizes from all the major associations of film critics.

    Darren Aronofsky made his debut in 1998 with p, earning the prize of best director at the Sundance Film Festival and best screenplay at the Independent Spirit Awards. His second film, Requiem for a Dream, from the novel by Hubert Selby Jr. was presented at Cannes in 2000, and later won wide international recognition, including an Oscar nomination for Ellen Burstyn as best actress.

    In 2006 Aronofsky participated in the Competition at the 63rd Venice International Film Festival with The Fountain, a romantic and psychedelic science fiction film starring Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz.

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  • EARTHWORK, the true story of real-life crop artist Stan Herd opens in NY on April 29 and LA on May 20

    EARTHWORK, a film by Chris Ordal, and winner over 20 film festival awards, will open in New York at Angelika Film Center on April 29 and in Los Angeles at the Laemmle Music Hall on May 20.

    EARTHWORK is the true story of real-life crop artist Stan Herd (played by Oscar nominee and Spirit Award Winner for “Winter’s Bone” John Hawkes, in his first starring role), told through a single episode of his life.   In 1994, Stan traveled from Kansas to New York City and risked everything to create a massive environmental artwork on land owned by Donald Trump. The multi-acre piece was made from soil, rock, plants and vegetation near an underground railway tunnel. Stan recruited a number of homeless individuals living in the tunnel as his crew. Over the months it took to complete the earthwork, Stan dealt with the difficulties of bringing his unique, rural art form to an urban canvas and the many costs exacted upon his life. In an effort to show his unique perspective to a larger audience, Stan unexpectedly encountered the true meaning of his art and it’s ultimate, lasting rewards.

    Shot almost entirely in rural Kansas (with a one-day shoot in New York City) on a minimal budget, EARTHWORK is Chris Ordal’s feature film debut.  Ordal, a University of Kansas alum, was taken by Stan Herd’s dedication to his temporary art and found it the perfect story to tell through film, a permanent art form.  “It was important to me that my first feature capture a story that needed to be told via the cinema.  Stan Herd’s art is temporary, eventually returning to the earth after it has lived its life.  EARTHWORK is an attempt to share the beauty and truth that Stan creates with an audience through a medium that can last forever.  Stan has to get people into a helicopter or a tall building in order for them to see his work, so getting his art on the big screen finally allows audiences to experience his art and discover his incredible story.”

    The filmmakers were very determined to exemplify the spirit of Stan Herd throughout production, and thanks to an amazing and supportive crew, EARTHWORK was a production as “green” as the story it told.

    with Laura Kirk (Jan Herd); James McDaniel (Lone Wolf); Zach Grenier (Mayor); Chris Bachand (Ryan); Brandon Glad (Cage) and Sam Greenlee (El-Trac)
    {youtube}5Cz7Ke4UZqc{/youtube}

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  • Tribeca Film Festival: One-on-One with “Treatment” Co-Directors and Star Steven Schardt and Sean Nelson

    What if you are a struggling screenwriter that needs a real break? What if your favorite A-list star just checked into rehab, and you decide all you need to do to pitch him your movie is get yourself duly check-in there? Sean Nelson and Steven Schardt co-direct Treatment, this sweetly wry and generationally pitch-perfect tale of friendship, creative delusion and celebrity obsession. Starring Josh Leonard, Sean Nelson, Ross Partridge, Jessica Makinson and Brie Larson, from a script conceived by Schardt and written by Nelson, Vimooz.com had the luck to sit down the film’s two directors (and writer/star!) – Steven Schardt and Sean Nelson. You can see the film at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival this week on Friday, April 29th at the AMC Loews Village at 4 pm.

    Vimooz.com: Was Leonard based on anyone you know personally, or a type? How did the script come about?

    Steven Schardt: You know, I was finishing up this script that I was working on about Werner Erhard, the founder of EST.(Which now exists as the Landmark Forum today)  He was a fantastic, very charismatic figure, but he essentially sold….nothing. You would just go, get locked in a room with 250 strangers for a weekend. It was highly controlled. You would just go, pay, and get this experience. And I was a little tired of working on this script, and I went to the gym. I picked up “People” magazine, and there was Brittany Spears on the cover.

    I had met Sean (Nelson, a star of “Treatment” who plays Leonard) working on some of Lynn Shelton’s movies, and he was down shooting “The Freebie” with Katie Duplass, and he stayed with me for two weeks. And I was, again, taken up by writing another script. I told Sean about the idea. The executive producers had purchased a hotel in West Hollywood that they were renovating, and I was staying in a little bungalow there. Sean and I stayed there, and pretty much hung out every day, and we had a pretty good treatment by the end of it.

    Then we just kept working on it two or three months before shooting began, and I had approached Josh (Leonard) at Sundance, and said “I have something for you,” and Josh signed on. When we were in pre-production in Los Angeles, Sean started writing sides for audition, they were just hilarious.  We had attempted to do it as a  total improv, and there was a lot of improv in the final film, but the sides that he was writing were just so good. He just kept writing four or five weeks before production

    Vimooz.com: Did he love it off the bat?

    SS: Yeah, I think the idea was very clear, you know, you ‘re really able to see a movie happening that way.

    Vimooz.com: At what point did Brie Larson get attached?

    SS: She got attached about a month before we started shooting. Josh had worked with her, and she came over to read, and she was great. She often gets cast in youngish roles this was something were (the character) of Frannie has a kind of native intelligence.

    Vimooz.com: How much improv did you use? Your actors really know comedy well…

    SS: We had an incredibly ambitious schedule, eighteen days of shooting, we would basically come in, set up a scene, and in that time-have a slight rehearsal, there were some script changes, we would improvise some things, and we would get what was on-script, as well. The best day, my favorite day on the shoot, was with (musician) Robyn Hitchcock…

    Vimooz.com: He was fantastic…

    SS: We had asked him to play the “professional Brit,” you know, someone who can con you and make their way through, and be charming in some way, just because they have a British accent. You know, like he’s one of these “guys” that Leonard has, because he thinks that’s really cool. But (Robyn’s character) probably just came to LA to be a bass player for the Doors or something, and it never panned out, so he just stuck around Hollywood. There is so much material that did not even make it in (with Robyn Hitchcock) We kept shooting. We had a camera where we can only shoot twelve-minute takes at a time, and we just kept shooting these twelve minute takes! And Robyn is such a skilled improviser. We talked a lot on the phone about the role, He was very interested, and thinking up new ideas to do…There are just boundless takes. There’s hours of it! So I’m really looking forward to the DVD extras.

    Vimooz.com:  What films did you reference personally and for the actors on this film?

    SS: I think tonally, “Withnail and I.” We wanted it to feel slack and funny and wry. But I think we ended with something a little broader in the beginning, but when he just take the turn, it gets darker.

    Vimooz.com: It was a bold choice.

    SS: Yes, if it was remade as a studio movie, it would definitely go the other way.

    Vimooz.com: You also play with celebrity obsession, of course…

    SS: Ross (Ross Partridge, who plays hilariously self-absorbed movie star Gregg D in the film ) was amazing. When we were talking about his role on the phone, we were talking about he was preparing. And he was doing so much work, taping (himself in character,) sending them to me.

    Vimooz.com: You had a small budget. What did you shoot with?

    SS: We shot with a Canon 7D. And we had two cameras running, which we had learned from being on Lynn’s sets. I’m normally working as a producer (He produced “Humpday,”the MTV web series “$5 Cover”, “The Oregonian,” and “Sister, Sister” -with Mark Duplass and Emily Blunt), so it’s just so great to be here at Tribeca as a director.


     

     


     



    Interview with “Treatment’s’ Sean Nelson:


    Vimooz.com:  Can you tell us how you developed the script with Steve?


    Sean Nelson:  It’s funny, because Steven had originally asked if I wanted to be in this movie he was going to make with Josh Leonard. And I said yes, right away. The idea was-screenwriter checks into rehab to pitch movie to movie star.

    We were at the Independent Spirit Awards when Steven told me about it (Sean had just starred in Lynn Shelton’s “My Effortless Brilliance” and Steve was there with “Hump Day.”) And I asked him if he wanted help fleshing it out, and he said yes. So, back in Seattle, we got down to it pretty quickly, and worked pretty hard on it for awhile. My impulse as a writer was to diminish my role, because I didn’t want it to be like I was writing myself a part. For the longest time we’d just call the characters Josh and Sean, because I couldn’t think of any others! At the eleventh hour, we just used our last names. But there is a lot of the Nelson character that is based on me and my sort of complicated friendships that I have with the guys I’ve been friends with in my life. There always is an element of competition, and there always is an element of power struggle. I do not now, or did ever have a trust fund, but we thought it would be really funny…in this sort of fantasy situation, where you have this, “Boom, I have it!” (The $10 grand Leonard needs to check into rehab) It was just the shortest distance, so we could get the sort of farce elements of the film going. It’s not reality based, exactly. I was talking to my oldest friend about the differences between Nelson and myself. I would never have stood up to Leonard, I stand up for myself when it’s important, but I’m shy of that kind of direct confrontation.

    Vimooz.com: How did you meet Lynn Shelton? What is your acting & writing background?

    SN: Well, when I was younger, I wanted to be an actor. And I got into NYU, the Tisch School of the Arts, studying at Playwrights Horizons. And I just had this sort of sense that I had made this huge mistake by specializing so early, because I sensed that I wasn’t ready to do it. And I saw a couple of films around that time, that made me think, “There’s nothing in this training that I’m starting to get, or going to get, that’s going to make me ready, or able, to do the kind of work I’m seeing that’s blowing my mind. I’m thinking primarily of, well, River Phoenix in “My Own Private Idaho,” that came out two weeks into my first term at NYU, and I just thought, “I could never reveal myself that way.” Talent aside, there was something else about it, he (River) was so very bold in that performance. The idea that this character was so vulnerable, that every time conflict arises, he falls asleep! I loved it. I love the Shakespeare stuff in it. What I saw was this sense that I didn’t know how to be young. I never felt that I was a part of a generation, or my classmates , I just didn’t ever get it, at all. Rock-n-roll, it seemed forbidding, because it was “cool.” I moved to Seattle very much to learn how to be young, and it was great for me. The fact that there was eighteen and nineteen-year old kids my age, renting their own apartments, working at minimum-wage jobs. They were having fun! But I thought that dropping out of college was volunteering for homelessness, because that’s what I’d always been told. And I was really scared, at first. But they were like, “This is how we live!”  

    The other end of the spectrum was “Barton Fink,” which came out around the same time. It was so controlled, so cerebral, yet so funny. The mastery of it! On a writing level, on an acting level, and on a filmmaking level. Again, it was so forbidding. It was like, “You’re never going to do that! You’re never going to get to that!” Certainly not this way. (Being at NYU.) So, I wound up becoming a musician (as front man of the Seattle band Harvey Danger) for almost fifteen years. Almost accidentally. I moved to Seattle, got in band, and I had never done that before. But it just made a lot more sense to me, somehow, then pursuing the life of an actor, which I still don’t quite have the nerve to pursue, really! Lynn knew my music, and I had a radio show at KEXP in Seattle, and I’m somewhat visible there (in Seattle), so she knew about me. And she just sort of had me on the brain. And she asked me to help her with the music for her first film, “We Go Way Back,” as a kind of de-facto music supervisor. But we worked on the music for that, but I was there when she and Michelle were editing it, and she asked for my thoughts, and my notes, and I gave her my thoughts and notes about certain things, and they were meaningful to her. Which I was very flattered by. And, so, we just kind of became…really good friends. When it came time for her to do another movie, she wanted to do it much differently than she had done “We Go Way Back,” and she’d been inspired by Joe Swanberg and Mark Duplass, and the way they make these movies that are really cheap, low-budget, tiny crew, with a small cast, and improvised. She then asked me to be the sort of fixed point around which she made this movie- which became “My Effortless Brilliance.” Which was, truly, one of the greatest experiences of my life, if not THE great one. Because I’d been a performer all my life, and a big part of it, to be discovered. Really, you are waiting for people to see you. And to have someone say, not only do I want YOU to be in it, but I want it to be about you, and I want you to create the character with me. It’s just, like, an absolute dream. It couldn’t have been the more perfect thing to say to me! (laughs). I will always be incredibly grateful to Lynn, and we’re really good friends. It was just a peak experience for me.

    Vimooz.com: Well what about now? Would you like to professionally pursue acting?

    SN: I would love to. I love doing it. I’ve been in about six or seven movies in the last couple of years They’re all small, they get seen at festivals. Most all have gotten released. But all of them have come from directors who know me, or know of me, and call me and ask me to do it.

    Vimooz.com: I don’t think that’s cheating! It’s a huge compliment.

    SN: Yeah! It’s the best way to do it. I feel like I have a little niche that I know how to do. I could probably do a lot more than that. I do have a little training, and I have a lot more ambition in that way. But, the truth of the matter is, I don’t know how to do it. I have remained willfully ignorant of that stuff- getting an agent, going to auditions, all of that.

    Vimooz.com: I think that’s going to change after people see “Treatment!” Thank you both so much, and congratulations on “Treatment!”

    [caption id="attachment_1235" align="alignnone" width="560"]Steven Schardt and Sean Nelson[/caption]

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  • SING YOUR SONG, Harry Belafonte new documentary, will close 2011 Maryland Film Festival

    SING YOUR SONG, the new documentary about the life of actor/activist/singer Harry Belafonte, will close 2011 Maryland Film Festival, on May 8.

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  • Documentary on world’s only comedic, singing, yodeling lesbian twin sisters opens in NYC on May 13

    The Topp Twins: Untouchable a documentary by Leanne Pooley opens in NYC at Cinema Village on May 13, 2011.  Winner of numerous awards, including Best Feature Documentary at New York’s NewFest 2010, Freedom Award at 2010 Outfest,  and the Cadillac People’s Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival 2009  ‘The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls’ tells the story of the world’s only comedic, singing, yodeling lesbian twin sisters, Lynda and Jools Topp, whose political activism and unique brand of entertainment has helped change New Zealand’s social landscape. In the process they have become well-loved cultural icons.

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  • Filmmaker Zhu Rikun Flees Chinese Capital After Cancellation of Film Festival

    Zhu Rikun filming in Fan Hall

    After announcing that the 8th Beijing Independent Documentary Film Festival has been cancelled, the festival’s artistic director, Zhu Rikun, has reportedly resigned from the festival’s foundation, closed his production house, Fanhall Studio, and fled the Chinese capital.

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  • 2011 SOHO International Film Festival Winners; “Tanzania: A Friendship Journey” Wins both Best World Showcase and Best Documentary awards

    Tanzania: A Friendship Journey

    The 2011 SOHO International Film Festival wrapped up in New York City last Friday, April 22nd, 2011 with its award ceremony.   One of the highlights of the ceremony was the presentation of the very first NYC ICON AWARD to legendary character actor, Frank Vincent (“Raging Bull”, “Goodfellas”, “Sopranos”) honoring a New York film artist who has achieved a high degree of creative excellence over the years.

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  • Newport Beach Film Festival announced its 2011 Action Sports Film Series

    The Newport Beach Film Festival (NBFF) announced its 2011 Action Sports Film Series (ASFS), that will take place during the week of the Newport Beach Film Festival (April 28 – May 5, 2011) in Orange County, CA.

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  • 2011 Newport Beach Film Festival to Close with A Beginner’s Guide to Endings starring Harvey Keitel

    A Beginner’s Guide to Endings

    The 2011 Newport Beach Film Festival (NBFF) will end its eight-day run with A Beginner’s Guide to Endings on Thursday, May 5, 2011.

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  • Protesters Shut down Bollywood Movie Set Over Use of Foreign Dancers

    Amitabh Bachchan

    Production on the set of the Bollywood action movie “Bbuddha” starring Amitabh Bachchan was brought to a screeching halt, in Mumbai on Tuesday after a political party protested against the use of foreign dancers.

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