A BAD IDEA GONE WRONG

  • 2017 Lighthouse International Film Festival Unveils Lineup, Opens with KING OF PEKING

    [caption id="attachment_22330" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]KING OF PEKING KING OF PEKING[/caption] The 2017 Lighthouse International Film Festival (LIFF) will open with Sam Voutas’ acclaimed KING OF PEKING, a rousing Beijing-set love letter to cinema that brought cheering audiences to their feet at Tribeca 2017. “From the opening frames of KING OF PEKING, I knew that it was special and a film that the LIFF audience will love,” says Lighthouse International Film Festival’s Eric Johnson. “Sam Voutas has made a film that speaks to cinephiles in a unique way, filled with moments that show film’s ability to act as a universal bond, while also telling a terrific story with a ton of heart and laughs. It is punctuated by pitch-perfect turns from his actors and it all comes together to form a sublime way to kick off the 2017 festival. We are thrilled to champion the emergence of one of the most exciting young directors working today by opening with KING OF PEKING.” In addition, the festival announced the complete lineup for its ninth annual event, which will take place June 8 to 11, 2017 on Long Beach Island, New Jersey. LIFF will again present both Documentary and Narrative Centerpiece Films, including Jonathan Olshefski’s QUEST as Documentary Centerpiece. A vérité portrait of a North Philadelphia family that was shot over the course of a decade, it tells the tale of Christopher “Quest” Rainey, along with his wife Christine (aka “Ma Quest”). They open the door to their home music studio, which serves as a creative sanctuary from the strife that grips their neighborhood. Over the years, the family evolves as everyday life brings a mix of joy and unexpected crisis. Set against the backdrop of a country now in turmoil, the film is a tender depiction of an American family whose journey is a profound testament to love, healing and hope. QUEST will screen at The Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts & Sciences on June 10th. The Festival’s Narrative Centerpiece film is FITS AND STARTS, the feature directorial debut of Laura Terruso. The acclaimed comedy stars The Daily Show’s Wyatt Cenac as a struggling writer who has been toiling away at the same novel for years. His wife (Jennifer Greta Lee) is a hot young literary figure, who has just released a new masterpiece. When her publisher invites the couple to an artists’ salon at his home in Connecticut, the pair embark on a twisted journey, and David must face his demons and try to “not be weird” among the waspy salon guests and competitive art set in attendance. He encounters a dentist with publishing aspirations, a book critic full of condescending advice, a fellow writer who may know his wife a little too well, an old “friend” and a high powered bipolar literary agent who just might be able to help him… for a price. FITS AND STARTS will screen on June 9th at The Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts & Sciences, with Laura Terruso in attendance for a Q&A after the film. Closing the 2017 Festival will be MISSING IN EUROPE, director Tamar Halpern’s tense new thriller about a cyber security expert visiting Serbia under the guise of attending a conference for work, but is really there to check in on her daughter, Karissa, who has been studying abroad. Their happy reunion is cut short when Karissa and her classmate Lara go clubbing and seemingly disappear into thin air. Sara is certain that her daughter has been abducted. Utilizing a host of hacking skills and following the clues Karissa is leaving behind, she starts to uncover a major sex trafficking ring. Even worse, it seems the local police force is in on it. With nobody to trust but herself, Sara uses every tool at her disposal to locate her daughter before she’s sold to the highest bidder and disappears forever. MISSING IN EUROPE will screen at The Long Beach Island Foundation of the Arts & Sciences on June 11th, with director Tamar Halpern on hand for a Q&A afterward. OPENING NIGHT FILM King of Peking, Sam Voutas, China NARRATIVE CENTERPIECE FILM Fits and Starts, Laura Terruso, USA DOCUMENTARY CENTERPIECE FILM Quest, Jonathan Olshefski, USA CLOSING NIGHT FILM Missing in Europe, Tamar Halopern, USA SPOTLIGHT FILMS Bad Black, Nabwana I.G.G., Uganda Dina, Dan Sickles and Antonio Santini, USA Gaza Surf Club, Philip Gnadt and Mickey Yamine, Germany Infinity Baby, Bob Byington, USA The Journey, Nick Hamm, UK Person to Person, Dustin Guy Defa, USA The Road Movie, Dimitrii Kalashnikov, Belarus/Russia/Serbia/Bosnia & Herzegovina/Croatia NARRATIVE COMPETITION FILMS A Bad Idea Gone Wrong, Jason Headley, USA Brave New Jersey, Jody Lambert, USA The Dunning Man, Michael Clayton, USA Gold Star, Victoria Negri, USA Man Underground, Michael Borowiec and Sam Marine, USA Memories of Summer, Adam Guzinski, Poland Our Father, Meni Yaish, Israel Woven, Nagwa Ibrahim and Salome Mulugeta. USA DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION FILMS The Crest, Mark Covino, USA One October, Rachel Shuman, USA The Oyster Farmers, Angela Anderson and Corinne Gray Ruff, USA Santoalla, Andrew Becker and Daniel Mehrer, USA/Spain Swim Team, Lara Stolman, USA That Way Madness Lies, Sandra Luckow, USA EPISODIC CONTENT Black Magic for White Boys, Onur Tukel, USA SHORT FILMS The Accord, R.C. Cone, USA/Iceland Another Girl, Austin Kase, USA The Bake Sale, Susan Skoog, USA The Best and the Loneliest Days, Qianzhu Luo, USA Break-In, Christopher Cox, USA Bruce Loves You, Darin Quan, USA C.I.T., Cara Consilvio, USA Candice and Peter’s Smokin’ Hot Date, Leanne Bishop and Michael Mason, Canada Catherine, Britt Raes, Belgium The Collection, Adam Roffman, USA Commercial Crabberman (A Livelyhood On The Barengat Bay), Andrew DiAngelis, USA Le Creuset, Don Downie, USA Deadbeat, Jesse R. Tendler, USA Demonoid (1971), Alaric Rocha, USA Do No Harm, Roseanne Liang, New Zealand Dogs and Tacos, Steven Bachrach, USA Don’t Think About It, Niv Klainer, USA Election Night, Ryan Scafuro, USA/England Epiphany V, Kevin Newbury, USA La Folia, Adam Grannick, USA For Marta, Isabel Ellison, USA Fresh Blood, Richa Rudola, USA Fry Day, Laura Moss, USA Good Luck (in Farsi), Jessica Cummings, USA Hilda, Kiira Benzing, USA The Hobbyist, George Vatistas, USA I’m Sticking With You, Eric Shahinian, USA Innocent or Otherwise, Alex Forstenhausler, USA Juliet Remembered, Tamzin Merchant, UK Life and Sand, Simon Mendes, USA Lone Signal, Jessi Erian Colon, USA Nanny, Kathy Meng, USA Night Shift, Marshall Tyler, USA The Other End, Sudeep Kanwal, USA/India The Other Side, Griselda San Martin, Spain The Poet and the Professor, Ariel Kavoussi, USA Prerequesite, Geoffrey Guerrero, USA Refugee, Joyce Chen, Emily Chen, and Emily Moore, USA Rikishi, Julien Menanteau, Germany Rose’s Children, Josh Adwar and Jamie Dolan, USA Says, David C. Lynch, Ireland The Scarecrow, Phillip Rhys, USA The Seven Men of Hanukkah, Daryl Lathon, USA Shapers, Graham Willoughby, USA Silver Lining, Joe Kolbow, USA Siren Song: Women Singers of Pakistan, Fawzia Afzal-Khan, India/Pakistan The Skull, Graceann Dorse, USA The Spectrum, Sean MacLaughlin and Quinn MacLaughlin, USA Spell Claire, Greg Emetaz, USA Static, Kevin Hoyer, USA Stitched, Heather Taylor, USA Sure-Fire, Michael Goldburg, USA Test of Courage, Rena Dumont, Germany Twin Days, Alex Markman, USA Wake, Kristen Kress Parness, USA

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  • 2017 SXSW Film Awards – MOST BEAUTIFUL ISLAND, THE WORK Win Grand Jury Awards

    [caption id="attachment_20918" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Most Beautiful Island Most Beautiful Island[/caption] The South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference and Festivals announced the 2017 Jury and Special Award winners of the SXSW Film Awards. SXSW also announced the Jury Award winners in Shorts Filmmaking and winners of the SXSW Film Design Awards, as well as Special Awards including the Louis Black “Lone Star” Award and Karen Schmeer Film Editing Fellowship, plus new categories with the SXSW Adam Yauch Hörnblowér Award alongside the SXSW LUNA® Gamechanger Award – Narrative and SXSW LUNA® Chicken & Egg Award – Documentary.

    2017 SXSW Film Festival Awards

    Feature Film Grand Jury Awards

    NARRATIVE FEATURE COMPETITION Winner: Most Beautiful Island Director: Ana Asensio Special Jury Recognition for Breakthrough Performance: The Strange Ones Actor: James Freedson-Jackson Special Jury Recognition for Best Ensemble: A Bad Idea Gone Wrong Cast: Matt Jones, Eleanore Pienta, Will Rogers, Jonny Mars, Sam Eidson, Jennymarie Jemison DOCUMENTARY FEATURE COMPETITION Winner: The Work Directors: Jairus McLeary and Gethin Aldous Special Jury Recognition for Excellence in Observational Cinema: Maineland Director: Miao Wang Special Jury Recognition for Excellence in Documentary Storytelling: I Am Another You Director: Nanfu Wang

    Short Film Grand Jury Awards

    NARRATIVE SHORTS Winner: Forever Now Director: Kristian Håskjold Special Jury Recognition for Acting: DeKalb Elementary Actor: Tarra Riggs DOCUMENTARY SHORTS Winner: Little Potato Director: Wes Hurley & Nathan M. Miller MIDNIGHT SHORTS Winner: The Suplex Duplex Complex Director: Todd Rohal ANIMATED SHORTS Winner: Wednesday with Goddard Directors: Nicolas Menard Special Jury Recognition: Pussy Director: Renata Gasiorowska MUSIC VIDEOS Winner: Leon Bridges – ‘RIVER’ Director: Miles Jay Special Jury Recognition: Tame Impala – ‘The Less I Know The Better’ Director: CANADA TEXAS SHORTS Winner: The Rabbit Hunt Director: Patrick Bresnan TEXAS HIGH SCHOOL SHORTS Winner: Better Late Than Never Director: Atheena Frizzell Special Jury Recognition: Darcy’s Quinceañera Director: Sam Cooper

    SXSW Film Design Awards

    EXCELLENCE IN POSTER DESIGN Winner: Fry Day Designer: Caspar Newbolt Special Jury Recognition: Like Me Designer: Jeremy Enecio EXCELLENCE IN TITLE DESIGN Winner: Into The Current Directors: Chris R. Moberg and Jared Young

    SXSW Special Awards

    SXSW LUNA® Gamechanger Award – Narrative Winner: INFLAME Director: Ceylan Ozgun Ozcelik SXSW LUNA® Chicken & Egg Award – Documentary Winner: I Am Another You Director: Nanfu Wang SXSW Louis Black “Lone Star” Award To honor SXSW co-founder/director Louis Black, a jury prize was created in 2011 called the Louis Black “Lone Star” Award, to be awarded to a Texas film in content, filmmaker residency, or primary shooting location. (Opt-in Award) Louis Black “Lone Star” Award Winner: Mr. Roosevelt Director: Noël Wells SXSW Adam Yauch Hörnblowér Award In honor of a filmmaker whose work strives to be wholly its own, without regard for norms or desire to conform. The Adam Yauch Hörnblowér Award is presented to a filmmaker from our Visions screening category. SXSW Adam Yauch Hörnblowér Award Presented to: Assholes directed by Peter Vack SXSW Karen Schmeer Film Editing Fellowship Presentation The Karen Schmeer Film Editing Fellowship is a year-long experience that encourages and champions the talent of an emerging documentary editor. Awarded annually, the fellowship was created to honor the memory of gifted editor Karen Schmeer. Karen Schmeer Film Editing Fellowship Presented to: Leigh Johnson The SXSW Film Awards are presented by FilmStruck. FilmStruck is a new streaming service for serious film fans, offering a comprehensive library including indie, contemporary and classic art house, foreign and cult films. It is the exclusive streaming home of The Criterion Collection.

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  • First 11 Films Revealed for 2017 Dallas International Film Festival

    [caption id="attachment_20108" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Strad Style Strad Style[/caption] The Dallas International Film Festival revealed the first eleven official selections for the upcoming 11th edition of the festival. Led by Stefon Avalos’s Slamdance Film Festival award-winner, STRAD STYLE, the list of titles include François Ozon’s FRANTZ , Sarah Adina Smith’s BUSTER’S MAL HEART, and James Gray’s THE LOST CITY OF Z (NYFF). This year’s Texas Competition, which promotes the state’s impressive home-grown filmmaking talent by focusing on films produced and shot in Texas, includes the world premiere of Jameson Brooks’s drama BOMB CITY, about a controversial hate-crime that took place in a small, conservative Texas town. Also competing in the category is Jason Headley’s comedy A BAD IDEA GONE WRONG about two would-be thieves that bungle their way into a hostage situation during a poorly-planned break-in. The second announced world premiere selection, Micah Barber’s INTO THE WHO KNOWS! about a boy and his best friend, Felix the Fox, that escape summer camp to embark on a big mystical adventure, will make its debut as part of DIFF’s Family Friendly section. Also screening will be Tony Shaff’s documentary 44 PAGES, which tells the surprising story of Highlights Magazine, and screens at DIFF immediately following its debut at SXSWedu in March. DIFF’s Premiere Series will include; Smith’s mind-bender BUSTER’S MAL HEART, which stars Mr. Robot’s Rami Malek as a mountain man drifter who had a life-changing run-in with a stranger obsessed with a conspiracy theory; Ozon’s drama FRANTZ, about a woman coming to terms with the death of her fiancé in World War I; and Gray’s true-life epic THE LOST CITY OF Z, which follows the tale of British explorer Col. Percival Fawcett, who disappeared in the Amazon in the 1920s. Avalos’s STRAD STYLE, which won both the Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the recently concluded Slamdance Film Festival, and Matt Schrader’s SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY, are the first two selections announced from DIFF’s beloved Deep Ellum Sounds section. The music-themed documentary section hails back to the film festival’s roots in the colorful music-infused neighborhood with the Deep Ellum Film Festival, which was the precursor to the Dallas International Film Festival. STRAD STYLE follows the efforts of a man in Ohio, who decides he can build a classic Stradivarius violin, and SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY, looks at the art of film scoring via interviews with nearly every prominent film composer on the scene today. Rounding out the first selections revealed to the public are Steve James’s ABACUS: TOO SMALL TO JAIL, about the only U.S. bank to face criminal charges in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, and Alejandro Molina’s THE PRESENT ONES (Los Presentes), about an actress having identity issues after returning to play a character that gets under her skin just as she faces a relationship crisis. ABACUS: TOO SMALL TO JAIL will screen as part of DIFF’s Documentary Showcase, and marks the fourth of James’s films to be a part of the festival. THE PRESENT ONES is part of DIFF’s Latino Cinema Showcase. The film festival will present the Studio Movie Grill Silver Heart Award to the film that best addresses Human Rights issues. A $5,000 cash prize will be presented by the Schultz Family during the Dallas Film Society Honors event presented by the Arthur E. Benjamin Foundation on Friday, April 7, as DIFF continues its decade-long tradition of looking beyond the artistic value of film to the impact on the community, either via environmental, or in this case, human rights issues, as well. The Silver Heart Award is bestowed on an individual or film for their dedication to fighting injustices and/or creating social change for the improvement of humanity. The eleven official selections include: ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL Director: Steve James Country: USA, Running Time: 88min ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL tells the incredible saga of the Chinese immigrant Sung family, owners of Abacus Federal Savings of Chinatown, New York. Accused of mortgage fraud by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., Abacus becomes the only U.S. bank to face criminal charges in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. The indictment and subsequent trial forces the Sung family to defend themselves – and their bank’s legacy in the Chinatown community – over the course of a five-year legal battle. A BAD IDEA GONE WRONG Director: Jason Headley Country: USA, Running Time: 85min A BAD IDEA GONE WRONG is a comedy about two would-be thieves who accidentally arm the alarm system and have to break out of the house they just broke into. When they discover an unexpected house sitter, they suddenly have to deal with a hostage situation, double crosses, sexual tensions, and discoveries that make their difficult escape even more dubious. BOMB CITY Director: Jameson Brooks Country: USA, Running Time: 93min BOMB CITY is a gritty-drama, about the hatred and oppression of a group of punk revolutionaries in a conservative Texas town. Their ongoing battle with a rival clique leads to one of the most controversial hate crimes the U.S. has ever seen. Based on the true story of Brian Deneke. BUSTER’S MAL HEART Director: Sarah Adina Smith Country: USA, Running Time: 96min In this bold thriller spiked with dark humor, Rami Malek (Mr. Robot) is Buster, a family man whose chance encounter with a conspiracy-obsessed drifter leaves him on the run from the police and an impending event known as The Inversion. 44 PAGES Director: Tony Shaff Country: USA, Running Time: 97min 44 PAGES is a portrait of Highlights Magazine following the creation of the cultural phenomenon’s 70th Anniversary issue, from the first editorial meeting to its arrival in homes, and introducing the quirky people who passionately produce the monthly publication for “the world’s most important people,”…children. Along the way, a rich and tragic history is revealed, the state of childhood, technology, and education is explored, and the future of print media is questioned. FRANTZ Director: François Ozon Country: France/Germany, Running Time: 113min A haunting tale of love and reconciliation begins in a small town in Germany in the immediate aftermath of World War I when a young woman mourning the death of her fiancé encounters a mysterious Frenchman laying flowers on her beloved’s grave. INTO THE WHO KNOWS! Director: Micah Barber Country: USA, Running Time: 72min Ten-year old Thomas has a best friend: Felix the Fox. But his parents want him to make “real friends”, so they send him to summer camp. However, he hates it, so he and Felix make a midnight escape. Deep in the forest of the Who Knows they pursue a mythical being called the Totem, and decide to catch it. THE LOST CITY OF Z Director: James Gray Country: USA, Running Time: 141min A true-life drama, centering on British explorer Col. Percival Fawcett, who disappeared while searching for a mysterious city in the Amazon in the 1920s. THE PRESENT ONES (LOS PRESENTES) Director: Alejandro Molina Country: Mexico, Running Time: 90min Ana, a former actress, gets the chance to reunite herself with Ophelia, a character she played years ago on the stage, when she met and fell for the man who is her husband now. However, at this point in her life, her marriage is facing a difficult time, tenuously kept together is their 6-year old son. By playing the character, and “becoming” Ophelia once again, and under stressful circumstances, Ana suffers a personality split which leads her to an extreme and life changing juncture, something she has never faced before. SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY Director: Matt Schrader Country: USA, Running Time: 93min SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY brings Hollywood’s premiere composers together to give viewers a privileged look inside the musical challenges and creative secrecy of the world’s most widely known music genre: the film score. STRAD STYLE Director: Stefan Avalos Country: USA, Running Time: 104min STRAD STYLE follows a backwoods dreamer from Ohio with an obsession for ‘Stradivari’ and all things violin, who, through the magic of social-media, convinces a famous European concert violinist that he can make a copy of the most famous and valuable violin in the world. Fighting time, poverty, and most of all – himself – Danny Houck puts everything on the line for one shot at glory.

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  • Ten Narrative Film Projects Selected for 2016 IFP Filmmaker Labs

    2016 IFP Filmmaker Labs Ten narratives have been selected for the 2016 IFP Filmmaker Labs, IFP’s annual yearlong fellowship for first-time feature directors. The creative teams of the selected films are currently attending the first week’s sessions – The Time Warner Foundation Completion Labs – taking place May 23-27th in New York City. The IFP Narrative Filmmaker Labs are the only labs that support first-time feature directors with projects in post-production as they complete, market and distribute their films. The Labs provide filmmakers with the technical, creative and strategic tools necessary to launch their films and careers. Now entering its twelfth year with over 100+ first-feature filmmakers supported, the community of Labs alumni is comprised of some of the most exciting and critically-acclaimed artists working today across film, television, new media and VR; these include multi-hyphenate creators such as Amy Seimetz (“The Girlfriend Experience”), Alex Karpovsky (“Girls”), David Lowery (PETE’S DRAGON), Dee Rees (BESSIE), Andrew Dosunmu (MOTHER OF GEORGE), Tim Sutton (DARK NIGHT), Jennifer Phang (ADVANTAGEOUS), and Terence Nance (AN OVERSIMPLIFICATION OF HER BEAUTY). Recent 2015 IFP Labs Fellows have been already making their mark on the festival circuit. Just this year, THE ARBALEST won SXSW’s Narrative Grand Jury Prize and DONALD CRIED received distribution from The Orchard. Of the ten selected projects, seven have already premiered at top festivals including SXSW, Tribeca, Los Angeles Film Festival, Slamdance and Bentonville and two fellows are shooting new projects this summer. “To highlight and support diverse stories and storytellers has always been the mission of the IFP Labs and of IFP as a whole,” says Joana Vicente, Executive Director of IFP and the Made in NY Media Center. “This year’s Narrative Lab Fellows are a perfect example of this, and the boundless creativity and diversity in their work is evident in just how wide-ranging these films’ settings are: from Kyiv, Ukraine, to the Alaskan fish canneries, to right here in Brooklyn’s Borough Park neighborhood.” Under the artistic direction of IFP Head of Programming Amy Dotson and Program Manager and Producer Zach Mandinach, the supervising 2016 Narrative Lab leaders include Jon Reiss, director/producer and author (BOMB IT!; Think Outside the Box Office), Susan Stover, producer (WELCOME TO THE DOLLHOUSE; HIGH ART; HAPPY ACCIDENTS); Pierce Varous, producer (ALWAYS SHINE; H.) and founder of Nice Dissolve; Scott Macaulay, Filmmaker Magazine’s Editor-in-Chief and producer (JULIEN-DONKEY BOY). Individual Workshop Leaders include composer Keegan Dewitt (I’LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS; QUEEN OF EARTH), film editors Sabine Hoffman (MAGGIE’S PLAN; THE BALLAD OF JACK AND ROSE), Lee Percy (MARIA FULL OF GRACE; BOYS DON’T CRY), Jennifer Ruff (A WOMAN, A PART; GLASS CHIN),) and Marc Vives (MUSEUM HOURS; I USED TO BE DARKER), marketing experts Adam Kersh (Brigade Marketing) and Nick Camacho (Oscilloscope Laboratories), producers Anne Carey (THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL; THE SAVAGES), Mollye Asher (SONGS MY BROTHERS TAUGHT ME), Jodi Redmond (THE WITCH), and Darren Dean (TANGERINE), festival programmers Tom Hall (Montclair Film Festival) and Dan Nuxoll (Rooftop Films), and fellow filmmakers Ingrid Jungermann (WOMEN WHO KILL), Leah Meyerhoff (I BELIEVE IN UNICORNS), and Takeshi Fukunaga (OUT OF MY HAND). In addition to lead support from the Time Warner Foundation, additional support for the IFP Filmmaker Labs includes grants from The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Ford Foundation, Hollywood Foreign Press Association, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, New York State Council on the Arts, and SAGIndie. Lab partners include The Adrienne Shelly Foundation, BMI, and Rooftop Films. The selected narrative projects for the 2016 IFP Filmmaker Labs and their attending Lab Fellows are: ALASKA IS A DRAG An aspiring superstar’s diva fabulous dreams are hard fought working at a fish cannery in Alaska. He dreams of escaping the monotony of fish guts and fist fights, but in the meantime, out of necessity he has learned to fight and is scouted by the local boxing coach and a new boy moves to town and wants to be his sparring partner. Shaz Bennett (Director, Writer, Producer), Jean-Pierre Caner (Producer, Consulting Editor). Los Angeles, CA. A BAD IDEA GONE WRONG A comedy about two would-­be thieves who accidentally arm the alarm system and have to break out of the house they just broke into. When they discover an unexpected housesitter, they suddenly have to deal with a hostage situation, double crosses, and discoveries that make their difficult escape even more dubious. Jason Headley (Director, Writer), Tim Fender (Editor). San Francisco, CA. COLD NOVEMBER A 12-year-old girl being raised within a matriarchal household is taken through the right of passage of killing a deer for the first time. Expectations dissolve into chaos, and Florence finds herself alone, relying on instinct and training to follow through with her decisions and pull herself together while simultaneously living through the aftermath of a recent family trauma. Karl Jacob (Director, Writer, Producer), Pete Ohs (Editor). Hibbing, MN. DAYVEON Dayveon is a twelve-year-old boy who is coming to terms with the death of his older brother. Torn between a loving sister who has become his sole caretaker and the sense of camaraderie offered by his local gang, he’s forced to make decisions that threaten to rob him of his innocence. Amman Abbasi (Director, Writer, Producer), Steven Reneau (Writer, Producer). Little Rock, AR. HEARTLOCK A convict realizes his best shot at escaping is to master the art of “ducking,” a specialized form of prison manipulation in which an inmate befriends a flawed guard for the purposes of blackmail. He targets a tough-as-nails female guard with an underlying vulnerability. However, it doesn’t take long for his plan to hit a snag: he falls in love with her. Jon Kauffman (Director, Writer), Chris Cummings (Writer), Dominic Laperriere (Editor). New York, NY. JULIA BLUE Julia, a bright university student, is preparing for a life abroad when she meets English, a damaged soldier returning from the war zone in eastern Ukraine. An unexpected romance sparks between the two, as Julia and English fall deeply for each other. From metropolitan Kyiv to a remote Carpathian village, Julia and English must decide if they are ready to build a future together in a homeland that is slowly being torn apart. Roxy Toporowych (Director, Writer), Nilou Safinya (Producer), Ben Kim (Editor). Brooklyn, NY. THE MISSING SUN After a solar flare powers down her remote community, Alma discovers her husband Terry comatose. Pursuing a series of bizarre clues, she soon believes Terry is astral traveling to reunite with his deceased ex-wife. Determined to bring him back, Alma seeks helps from Terry’s estranged, psychedelic son and from the leader of a new-age religion who believes the sun-storm may signal the end-times. Brennan Vance (Director, Writer, Producer, DP, Editor), James Christenson (Producer). Minneapolis, MN. POOR JANE Jane and Henry are in a loving marriage. Another man humiliates Henry at a Christmas party and Jane decides she no longer loves him. The following morning Jane tells Henry she’s going to Target, but instead checks into a hotel and stops answering her phone. Jane spends the holidays drinking, having impulsive encounters with men and contemplating whether or not she wants to remain married. Katie Orr (Director, Writer), Alex Orr (Producer), David Swinburne (Co-Producer). Atlanta, GA. SOLACE When her father dies, Sole, 17, numbs her emotions with food. She unwillingly lives with her estranged grandmother. Desperate to escape her grandmother’s controlling love and illicit relationship with the pastor, Sole enters a forbidden friendship with the rebellious teenage neighbors. Juggling these relationships spirals Sole out of control with food but it ultimately forces her to confront her pain. Tchaiko Omawale (Director, Writer, Producer), Eileen Cabling (Associate Producer), Amanda Griffin (Editor). Los Angeles, CA. UNTITLED HASIDIC FILM Given unprecedented access to New York’s Orthodox Jewish community, the film is a story of faith and fatherhood – performed entirely in Yiddish. Joshua Z Weinstein (Director, Writer, Producer, DP), Daniel Finkelman (Producer), Danelle Eliav (Co-Producer), Royce Brown (Co-Producer). Brooklyn, NY.

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