• Spanish Dark Comedy “LA NAVAJA DE DON JUAN” to World Premiere at 2013 Austin Film Festival | TRAILER

    LA NAVAJA DE DON JUAN

    The action-packed, Spanish-language dark comedy “LA NAVAJA DE DON JUAN” will World Premiere at the upcoming 2013 Austin Film Festival, with screenings at the Rollins Theater at the Long Center for Performing Arts on Sunday, October 27th at 7PM, and a second screening on Thursday, October 31st. “LA NAVAJA DE DON JUAN is described as a “Superbad”-meets-“Y Tu Mamá También”, coming-of-age story set in Lima, Peru follows two rivaling brothers who attempt to outwit their meddling Grandmother and several other obstacles in order to attend a house party, where the younger brother hopes the night will end with the loss of his virginity.

    After his womanizing older brother, MARIO (Rodrigo Viaggio, “Jarjacha 3”, 2007) wins the right to dance with the girl that younger brother WALTER (J.C. Montoya) hopes to lose his virginity to, Walter challenges his brother to another arm-wrestling battle, where he wins the coveted pocket knife of their deceased father. Together, the brothers set out across the barrios of Lima to reach an upper-class neighborhood to attend a house party. Unfortunately, the two must convince their GRANDMA (Irma Maury, “La Mar Estaba Serena”, 2001 and “Motor y Motivo”, 2009) to let them go to the party, which requires a white lie about a quinceañera and change of costume to leisure suits. Broke and targets for every thug, pimp and troublemaker that stands between them and the promise of a great night, the boys’ adventure contains fights with each other and with wealthy party-attendees, resulting in the best laid plans of the evening to quickly spiral out of control.

    Inspired by the family stories the film’s writer and director Tom Sanchez overheard from his father and uncle while growing up in Lima, “La Navaja de Don Juan” stars an all-Peruvian cast including J.C. Montoya, Rodrigo Viaggio, Nataniel Sánchez, Irma Maury and Antonio Arrué. The film explores themes of sibling rivalry, brotherhood and masculinity, as well as relationships between young Latino men and women, and marks Tom Sanchez’s directorial debut.

     http://youtu.be/gy3D_mjQNS0

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  • Cucalorus Film Festival in Wilmington, NC, Unveils 2013 Schedule

    cucalorus film festival

    Cucalorus Film Festival taking place in downtown Wilmington, North Carolina, from November 13 to 17, 2013, unveiled its full 2013 schedule of screenings, artistic interventions and parties. More than 200 features, docs and shorts will be presented as part of the Magnolia, Vanguard, Voices, Works-in-Progress, Midnight Madness and Shorts Programs. The festival opens on Wednesday with Dance-a-lorus, a growing program of performances, screenings and workshops exploring the intersection between dance and film. 

    Set in Florida but lensed in the Wilmington area late last year, Michael Maren’s directorial debut, A SHORT HISTORY OF DECAY, will have its Southern US Premier. The dark comedy had its World Premier last week at the Hamptons Film Festival. Former Wilmington resident Linda Lavin delivers a solid performance as a mother and wife struggling with the realities of Alzheimer’s.

    REDWOOD HIGHWAY, directed by Gary Lundgren (Calvin Marshall, CucFF 2009), features a beautiful performance from Shirley Knight, who plays a woman struggling with her increasing lack of independence in her later years. 

    Fresh from its World Premier at the Toronto Film Festival, Ingrid Veninger’s THE ANIMAL PROJECT, a charming ensemble comedy, will have its US Premier on Friday, November 15. Full of inspiring surf footage and a touching testimony to local surfing legend Jack Viorel, BOUND BY SEA (directed by Nate Daniel) will have its World Premier on Saturday, November 16.

    Foreign language Academy contenders BORGMAN (Netherlands) and BOY EATING THE BIRDS FOOD (Greece) join Scandinavian deep sea diving thriller PIONEER on the list of 31 international films. SXSW audience award winner SHORT TERM 12 returns to the festival (Director Destin Cretton’s short of the same title screened at Cucalorus in 2009). BLUE RUIN headlines the Midnight Madness program and charming comedy THE ZIGZAG KID fills the festival’s new slot for a Sunday afternoon family film (ages 11 and up).

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  • “AUTUMN BLOOD” “WALKING THE CAMINO” Win Top Awards at 2013 Hollywood Film Festival

    AUTUMN BLOOD directed by Markus BlunderAUTUMN BLOOD directed by Markus Blunder

     The 17th Hollywood Film Festival which ran from Friday, October 18 to Sunday, October 20 in Hollywood. announced the award winners for the 2013 Festival.  The Narrative Award for Best Film went to Markus Blunder for AUTUMN BLOOD, and the Best Documentary Award went to Lydia Smith for WALKING THE CAMINO.  The Emerging Filmmaker Award was added this year to honor a local filmmaker in the inaugural “Celebrate Hollywood” section, films either shot in Hollywood or referencing show business. The prize went to Nathan Sutton for AUTUMN WANDERER.

    Awards were given out in the following categories:

    Narrative Award (for Best Narrative Feature)
    Winner: AUTUMN BLOOD directed by Markus Blunder (Austria)
    High in the mountains, a widowed mother dies, leaving her two children orphaned. Fearing being split up they keep their mother’s death a secret. They survive until villagers destroy their innocence when they brutally assault the girl. Now the siblings must come of age to protect each other and survive.

    Documentary Award (for Best Documentary Feature)
    Winner: WALKING THE CAMINO directed by Lydia Smith (Spain)
    Six determined strangers on a life-changing journey across Spain. Whatever their motivation, no one can predict just how their paths will unfold, what personal demons or angels they will face, or what transformations they will undergo by trail’s end.

    Short Film Award (for Best Short Film)
    Winner: THE BRIGHT SIDE directed by Sarah Wilson Thacker (U.S.)
    1940′s Hollywood glitz, glamour, and the promise of the American dream meets the harsh, gritty reality of a world at war in this musical romance, where Leonard Lewis, a young theatre performer, races against time and confusion to vie for the heart of the girl of his dreams – before it’s too late.

    Emerging Filmmaker Award (for nascent local filmmaker)
    The Emerging Filmmaker Award was added this year to honor a local filmmaker in the inaugural “Celebrate Hollywood” section, films either shot in Hollywood or referencing show business. The prize went to Nathan Sutton for AUTUMN WANDERER.
    Winner: AUTUMN WANDERER directed by Nathan Sutton (U.S.)
    While dealing with his father’s schizophrenia, and the very real possibility of it being passed down, Charlie meets the woman of his dreams.

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  • Puerto Rican Documentary THE GREAT FALLACY to Open in NYC on November 15 | TRAILER

    ,

    LA GRAN FALACIA The Milking of the Puerto Rican Colony (THE GREAT FALLACY)

    THE GREAT FALLACY, The Milking of the Puerto Rican Colony, (LA GRAN FALACIA), a new film by Paco Vázquez will open at the Quad Cinema in NYC on Friday, November 15, 2013.  THE GREAT FALLACY is a documentary about the politics, economics and the social fabric of Puerto Rico today, especially as it relates to Law 7 and its impact on labor unions and the public sector.

    THE GREAT FALLACY exposes conflicts and abuses in the public and private economy and explores several possible solutions to inspire reconsideration of the relationship among welfare and wages, the national balance of payments, and the individual incentive to work. Although this film is aimed at Puerto Ricans living on the US mainland (more than 5 million), any audience can appreciate its relevance to the social upheavals in the world today. The film seeks to provide the Right with a critical rationalization for continued reconsideration of policy, and the Left with information, to broaden their perception of the structures of government spending. Economic stimulus, and economic and social independence.  

    http://youtu.be/cF6h7Hck5Gk

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  • BREASTMILK Documentary to Screen at 2013 DOC NYC | TRAILER

      documentary BREASTMILK directed/produced by Dana Ben-Ari and executive produced by Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein

    The new documentary BREASTMILK directed/produced by Dana Ben-Ari and executive produced by Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein, will screen at the 4th annual DOC NYC, the largest documentary festival in the U.S. BREASTMILK follows five New York City mothers from late pregnancy until their babies are a year old. Filmed in in a cinéma vérité style, the film is an intimate, frank exploration of the truth, sexuality, politics, and emotions surrounding modern breastfeeding.

    During DOC NYC, BREASTMILK will screen on Saturday, November 16 at 4:30pm at the School of Visual Arts Theatre in Chelsea (333 W. 23rd Street, NYC) with Q&A to follow with Dana Ben-Ari, Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein and Tuesday, November 19 at 11:30am at IFC Center in the West Village (323 6th Avenue) with a Q&A to follow with Dana Ben-Ari.

    BREASTMILK is the first film to explore the full range of the breastfeeding experience. With unexpected humor and an unflinching camera, first-time director Dana Ben-Ari documents the journeys of new parents, bringing to light their pain, their honest revelations, and a surprising amount of fun.  Many women today are wrestling with questions of their maternal and reproductive health and their roles in society as mothers and women. BREASTMILK speaks to those concerns in a direct, surprising way.

    The film is unrated with a running time of 90 minutes. It is produced by Aleph Pictures. Executive Producers are Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein, the filmmakers behind the 2008 documentary The Business of Being Born.

    BREASTMILK is also hosting a limited number of community screenings in the US and Canada. Find or request a screening at www.breastmilkthemovie.com.

    http://youtu.be/0Zkq_Sr5NYQ

    via press release

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  • RAM-LEELA to Open 2013 Marrakech International Film Festival | PICS + TRAILER

    RAM-LEELA, the new film from Sanjay Leela Bhansali

    The opening ceremony of the 13th Marrakech International Film Festival will have an Indian flavor with the premiere of RAM-LEELA, the new film from Sanjay Leela Bhansali, the director of DEVDAS.  RAM-LEELA, described as a modern version of Romeo and Juliet, and starring  Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh, will kick off the festival on 29 November, 2013.  The 13th edition of the Marrakech International Film Festival takes place from 29 November to 7 December 2013 in Marrakech, Morocco.

     RAM-LEELA is said to be an adaptation of Shakespeare’s epic love story Romeo and Juliet, set in violent times

    RAM-LEELA, the new film from Sanjay Leela Bhansali

    Ram : Born in the land of guns, goons and hardcore enmity, RAM – the local village romeo, is a raapchik, cheap, dramatic vagabond. The lover who fights the whole world for his Leela and yet the man who stands by his clan even at the cost of his own love

    RAM-LEELA, the new film from Sanjay Leela Bhansali,

    Leela : In love with her enemy, a beautiful, young, spicy, fearless gujrati belle, born to an underworld mistress and yet far removed from the violence that surrounds her. Her life is only about her faith in her lover , her tireless wait for him, her sacrifices for him and ultimately her’self’ against him 

    When the two see each other for the first time, worlds collide, wars are fought and destinies are written in blood, forever. The Jadejas and the Rabaris are sworn enemies since the past 500 years and their own kin falling in love with each other is worst than any storm that could have ever come by. Set in the present day, magnificent vibrant landscape of Gujarat, woven with song and dance, Ram and Leela fight the world to live their own dreams. What will happen when they declare their love to the world? Will their families relent or will Ram and Leela carve their own destiny?

    http://youtu.be/StphRCLkx6Q

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  • AFI FEST 2013 Full Program Including World Cinema Selections

     WE ARE THE BEST directed by Lukas Moodysson. WE ARE THE BEST directed by Lukas Moodysson.

    AFI FEST announced the remaining sections and films that will screen in the festival’s World Cinema, American Independents, Breakthrough, Midnight, Cinema’s Legacy and Presentations programs. This year’s program includes CLOSED CURTAIN directed by Jafar Panahi; MOEBIUS directed by Kim Ki-duk; OUR SUNHI directed by Hong Sang-soo; TOM AT THE FARM directed by Xavier Dolan and WE ARE THE BEST directed by Lukas Moodysson.

    WORLD CINEMA SELECTIONS (32 titles)

    This section presents new work by many of the world’s most renowned filmmakers.

    BABY BLUES – DIR/SCR Kasia Rosłaniec. Poland.

    BETHLEHEM – DIR Yuval Adler. SCR Yuval Adler, Ali Waked. Isarel.

    BORGMAN – DIR/SCR Alex van Warmerdam. Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark.

    CHILD’S POSE – DIR Călin Peter Netzer. SCR Răzvan Rădulescu, Călin Peter Netzer. Romania.

    CLOSED CURTAIN – DIR Jafar Panahi, Kamboziya Partovi. SCR Jafar Panahi. Iran.

    THE CONGRESS – DIR/SCR Ari Folman. Israel, Germany, Poland, Luxembourg.

    AN EPISODE IN THE LIFE OF AN IRON PICKER – DIR/SCR Danis Tanovic. Bosnia and Herzegovina, France, Slovenia.

    EXHIBITION – DIR/SCR Joanna Hogg. United Kingdom.

    GABRIELLE – DIR/SCR Louise Archambault. Canada.

    GLORIA – DIR Sebastián Lelio. SCR Sebastián Lelio, Gonzalo Maza. Chile, Spain.

    GRAND CENTRAL – DIR Rebecca Zlotowski. SCR Gaëlle Mace, Rebecca Zlotowski. France, Austria.

    THE GREAT BEAUTY – DIR Paolo Sorrentino. SCR Paolo Sorrentino, Umberto Contarello. Italy, France.

    HALF OF A YELLOW SUN – DIR/SCR Biyi Bandele. Nigeria, United Kingdom.

    HELI – DIR Amat Escalante. SCR Amat Escalante, Gabriel Reyes. Mexico, France, Germany, Netherlands.

    JUVENILE OFFENDER – DIR Kang Yi-kwan. SCR Kang Yi-kwan, Park Joo-young. South Korea.

    LA JAULA DE ORO – DIR Diego Quemada-Diez. SCR Diego Quemada-Diez, Gibrán Portela, Lucía Carrera. Mexico, Spain.

    LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON – DIR/SCR Hirokazu Kore-eda. Japan.

    THE LUNCHBOX – DIR/SCR Ritesh Batra. India, France, Germany.

    MANAKAMANA – DIR Stephanie Spray, Pacho Velez. Nepal, USA.

    MANUSCRIPTS DON’T BURN – DIR Mohammad Rasoulof. Iran.

    MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS – DIR Thomas Imbach. SCR Thomas Imbach, Andrea Štaka, Eduard Habsburg. Switzerland, France.

    THE MISSING PICTURE – DIR Rithy Panh. SCR Christophe Bataille. Cambodia, France.

    MOEBIUS – DIR/SCR Kim Ki-duk. South Korea.

    OMAR – DIR/SCR Hany Abu-Assad. Palestine.

    OUR SUNHI – DIR/SCR Hong Sang-soo. South Korea.

    THE ROCKET – DIR/SCR Kim Mordaunt. Australia.

    STRANGER BY THE LAKE – DIR/SCR Alain Guiraudie. France.

    TOM AT THE FARM – DIR Xavier Dolan. SCR Xavier Dolan, Michel Marc Bouchard. Canada, France.

    VIC + FLO SAW A BEAR – DIR/SCR Denis Côté. Canada.

    WE ARE THE BEST! – DIR/SCR Lukas Moodysson. Sweden.

    WHEN EVENING FALLS ON BUCHAREST OR METABOLISM – DIR/SCR Corneliu Porumboiu. Romania, France.

    THE WIND RISES – DIR/SCR Hayao Miyazaki. Japan.

    AMERICAN INDEPENDENTS SELECTIONS (6 titles)

    The American Independents section features work by emerging U.S. filmmakers.

    AWFUL NICE – DIR Todd Sklar. SCR Todd Sklar, Alex Rennie. USA.

    BLUE RUIN – DIR/SCR Jeremy Saulnier. USA.

    BREATHE IN – DIR Drake Doremus. SCR Drake Doremus, Ben York Jones. USA.

    CAUCUS – DIR AJ Schnack. USA.

    CHARLIE VICTOR ROMEO – DIR Robert Berger, Patrick Daniels, Karlyn Michelson. SCR Robert Berger, Patrick Daniels, Irving Gregory. USA.

    WE GOTTA GET OUT OF THIS PLACE – DIR Zeke Hawkins, Simon Hawkins. SCR Dutch Southern. USA.

    BREAKTHROUGH SELECTIONS (4 titles)

    B FOR BOY – DIR/SCR Chika Anadu. Nigeria.
    North American Premiere.

    CONGRATULATIONS! – DIR/SCR Mike Brune. USA.

    LITTLE BLACK SPIDERS – DIR Patrice Toye. SCR Ina Vandewijer, Patrice Toye. Belgium.

    MY AFGHANISTAN – LIFE IN THE FORBIDDEN ZONE – DIR/SCR Nagieb Khaja. Denmark.

    MIDNIGHT SELECTIONS (5 titles)

    This section showcases comedy and horror programming worth staying up late for.

    BIG BAD WOLVES – DIR/SCR Navot Papushado, Aharon Keshlaes. Israel.

    THE GREEN INFERNO – DIR Eli Roth. SCR Eli Roth, Guillermo Amoedo. USA, Chile.

    R100 – DIR/SCR Hitoshi Matsumoto. Japan.

    THE SACRAMENT – DIR/SCR Ti West. USA.

    THE STRANGE COLOUR OF YOUR BODY’S TEARS – DIR/SCR Hélène Cattet, Bruno Forzani. Belgium, France, Luxembourg.

    CINEMA’S LEGACY SELECTIONS (3 titles)

    THE COURT JESTER (1955) – DIR/SCR Norman Panama, Melvin Frank. USA.

    MARY POPPINS (1964) – DIR Robert Stevenson. SCR Bill Walsh, Don DaGradi. USA.

    THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG (1964)  DIR/SCR Jacques Demy. France.

    PRESENTATIONS SELECTIONS (2 titles)

    The Whitewater Films Roundtable

    Micro-Budget Filmmaking – The New Paradigm

    Producer and Director Rick Rosenthal brings the famed Whitewater Films roundtable to AFI FEST for a conversation about how micro-budget filmmaking has emerged as the new paradigm for independent filmmakers. The conversation will be followed by a screening of Rosenthal’s micro-budget film DRONES.

    DRONES – DIR Rick Rosenthal. SCR Matt Witten. USA.

    Michael Stevens presents HERBLOCK: THE BLACK AND THE WHITE

    Special guests join director Michael Stevens for a panel discussion about the influence of the political cartoons of Herbert Lawrence Block. The conversation will be followed by a screening of Stevens’ HERBLOCK: THE BLACK AND THE WHITE.

    HERBLOCK: THE BLACK AND THE WHITE – DIR Michael Stevens. SCR Sara Lukinson, Michael Stevens. USA.

     

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  • 2013 Heartland Film Festival Grand Prize Awards;

    2013 Heartland Film Festival Awards Winners2013 Heartland Film Festival Awards Winners

    The 22nd annual Heartland Film Festival taking place October 17 to 26, 2013 in Indianapolis, Indiana, announced its four Grand Prize Awards.  HIDE YOUR SMILING FACES directed by Daniel Patrick Carbone received the award for Best Narrative Feature Film and THE NETWORK directed by Eva Orner received the award for Best Documentary Feature. In addition actress Vanessa Hudgens received the Pioneering Spirit: Rising Star Award for her role in GIMME SHELTER, the Festival’s Opening Night Event film that held its world premiere at the festival.

    Narrative Feature
    HIDE YOUR SMILING FACES
    Directed by Daniel Patrick Carbone

    HIDE YOUR SMILING FACES, directed by Daniel Patrick Carbone

    While exploring their Northeastern environment, two young boys discover the dead body of one of their friends under a bridge. Even though there doesn’t seem to be any evidence of foul play, the event ripples under the surface of their town, unsettling the brothers and their friends in ways they can’t fully understand. Once-familiar interactions begin to take on a macabre tone in light of the tragic accident, leading Eric and Tommy to retreat into their wild surroundings. They face opposition from different forces in their town, including the father of their friend, as they struggle to come to terms with what happened and how this correlates with the existing paradigm of nature. As the two brothers vocally face the questions they have about mortality, they simultaneously hold their own silent debates within their minds that build into seemingly insurmountable moral peaks.

    Documentary Features
    THE NETWORK
    Directed by Eva Orner

    THE NETWORK, directed by Eva Orner

     

    This is the story of the first independent television network, TOLO TV, in one of the most unstable and dangerous places on earth, Afghanistan. In 2002, Kabul was emerging from five years of Taliban terror. Under the Taliban, all forms of media except the state-run radio station had been outlawed. Wanting to help rebuild their country, the Mohseni family returns from exile in Australia, passionate about giving the Afghan people a voice that had been taken away from them for so long. They knew nothing about the media, but they knew how to run a successful business. The result is Afghanistan’s largest and most successful television network employing over 800 Afghans producing news, current affairs, drama, comedy, music and lifestyle programs.

    This was not and is not an easy process. Expats are brought in to teach the Afghans the myriad details of running a television network and find themselves, in spite of the serious dangers, enamored of the Afghans; their optimism and how, really, they just want the same basic things we do. Women, despite cultural and familial pressures, risk their lives and reputations to work alongside the men at TOLO TV. You’ll find yourself completely taken in by this most unlikely subject, fascinated by the unusual challenges faced by the upstart television network. Finally, it’s a chance to see Afghanistan and its people as something other than a war-torn nation.

     

    Narrative Short
    THE AMBER AMULET
    Directed by Matthew Moore

    THE AMBER AMULET, directed by Matthew Moore

    The Masked Avenger can make things happen. Though at 10 he is considered young for a justice fighter he has already proved himself highly effective in the pursuit of peace. He has discovered powers that are locked inside gems and minerals and uses them to keep Franklin Street safe. But something is wrong in the house at the end of the street. There is a woman in trouble. When The Masked Avenger leaves a ‘happiness questionnaire’ in her letterbox a series of events are set in motion that no one could predict. This is the story of a superhero, a beagle, an amber amulet and the potential that is locked inside all of us.

    Documentary Short
    WRINKLES OF THE CITY – LA HAVANA
    Directed by José Parlá and J.R.

    WRINKLES OF THE CITY – LA HAVANA, directed by José Parlá and J.R.

    In 2012, the French artist JR collaborated with Cuban-American artist Jose Parla for the Havana Biennale. Through JR’s pasting and Jose’s painting, they created murals to tell the stories of 25 senior citizens who lived through the Cuban revolution.

    High School Film Competition
    UPROOTED
    Directed by Carol Nguyen

    UPROOTED, directed by Carol Nguyen

    Everyone has an origin story. It is important to know your history because it is part of your identity and reveals where you came from. ‘Uprooted’ is a personal retell of my father’s escape from Vietnam. His story displays the powerful strength of the human will and illustrates how we should enjoy the little things in life.

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  • IT’S BETTER TO JUMP Gets November 2013 Release Date | TRAILER

    IT'S BETTER TO JUMP

    IT’S BETTER TO JUMP, a documentary film about the ancient walled city of Akka in northern Israel, inhabited by Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Baha’i, and focuses on the aspirations and concerns of the Palestinian inhabitants who call the Old City home, opens in NYC on November 22, 2013 at The Quad Cinema. The film, directed by Patrick Alexander Stewart, Gina M. Angelone, and Mouna B.Stewart, will also be featured in a number of film festivals including the Boston Palestine Film Festival on October 21st and the Other Israel Film Festival in New York on November 19.

    IT’S BETTER TO JUMP is about the ancient walled city of Akka in northern Israel, inhabited by Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Baha’i.  But its history goes all the way back to rule of the Egyptian Pharaohs.  As Akka undergoes harsh economic pressures and vast social change, the present-day situation is causing Arab families to leave the places where they have grown roots for dozens of generations and shaped a rich culture for over a thousand years. This film focuses on the aspirations and concerns of the Palestinian inhabitants who call the Old City home.

    Atop a forty-foot, centuries-old seawall in this ancient port city, young people dare to stand along the one-meter thick structure and risk their fate by jumping into the roiling waters below. This perilous tradition has continued for many generations and has become a rite of passage for the children of Akka. Within their current dilemma, jumping from the ancient seawall becomes not only an expression of extreme exhilaration, but also a matter of self-determination. 

     http://youtu.be/zhYiZuRSUxg

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  • Winners Announced For Academy Nicholl Fellowships

    The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented its Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting awards dinner

    Four individual writers and one writing team have been selected as winners of the 2013 Academy Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting competition.  Each winner will receive a $35,000 prize, the first installment of which will be distributed at an awards presentation on Thursday, November 7, at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.  For the first time, the event will also feature a live read of selected scenes from the fellows’ winning scripts.

    This year’s winners are (listed alphabetically by author):
    Frank DeJohn & David Alton Hedges, Santa Ynez, CA, “Legion”
    Patty Jones, Vancouver, BC, Canada, “Joe Banks”
    Alan Roth, Suffern, NY, “Jersey City Story”
    Stephanie Shannon, Los Angeles, CA, “Queen of Hearts”
    Barbara Stepansky, Burbank, CA, “Sugar in My Veins”

    The winners were selected from a record 7,251 scripts submitted for this year’s competition. 

    Fellowships are awarded with the understanding that the recipients will each complete a feature-length screenplay during their fellowship year.  The Academy acquires no rights to the works of Nicholl fellows and does not involve itself commercially in any way with their completed scripts.

    Directed by Rodrigo Garcia (“Albert Nobbs,” “Mother and Child,” “Nine Lives”) and produced by Julie Lynn ( “Albert Nobbs,” “Mother and Child,” “The Jane Austen Book Club”), the awards presentation and live read, which is supported by Lexus, will include members from the Academy’s Actors Branch performing scenes from the five winning scripts.  Casting for the live read will be announced.  Tickets to the event are available to the public at www.oscars.org.

    Lexus will engineer a new and innovative extension of the fellowship for the first time. One of the top five winners will be presented with a grant which will allow them to write and produce a short film that will appear on certain Lexus creative platforms such as LStudio.com

    The Academy Nicholl Fellowships Committee, chaired by producer Gale Anne Hurd, is composed of writers Naomi Foner, Daniel Petrie Jr., Tom Rickman, Eric Roth, Dana Stevens and Robin Swicord; actor Eva Marie Saint; cinematographer John Bailey; costume designer Vicki Sanchez; producers Peter Samuelson and Robert W. Shapiro; marketing executive Buffy Shutt; and agent Ronald R. Mardigian.

    Since 1986, 133 fellowships have been awarded, including one to 2010 winner Destin Daniel Cretton who recently wrote and directed “Short Term 12” from his Nicholl Fellowship-winning script.  Creighton Rothenberger co-wrote “Olympus Has Fallen,” which opened in theaters this past March.  Rebecca Sonnenshine is a writer and executive story editor on “The Vampire Diaries.”  Andrew Marlowe is a writer and executive producer, and Terri Edda Miller is a writer and consulting producer on “Castle.”

     via press release

    Pictured: Academy Executive Director Bruce Davis. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented its Nicholl Fellowships in Screenwriting awards dinner on November 4, 2010 in Beverly Hills.  via: Facebook

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  • 2013 New Hampshire Film Festival Granny Award Winners; ALL THAT I AM Wins Grand Jury Award

     ALL THAT I AM directed by Carlos PugaALL THAT I AM directed by Carlos Puga

    ALL THAT I AM directed by Carlos Puga is the winner of the Grand Jury Award at the 2013 New Hampshire Film Festival which took place October 17 to 20, 2013 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.  GOODBYE WORLD directed Denis Henry Hennely took the award for Best Feature and THE CRASH REEL directed by Lucy Walker won the award for Best Documentary. 

    Grand Prize Screenplay Writers
    George Guthridge and Deborah Schildt

    Best Student Film – IF WE WERE ADULTS
    Directed by Michael Fitzgerald
    Starring: Suziey Block and Zach Alden
    When Mitch and Izzy learn of their best friend’s engagement, they become the last unmarried couple. Out of spite and a little booze, they decide to take the plunge, and what they find is downright frightening.

    Best Short Comedy – ALIVE FEELING LIKE A BUCK SEVENTY FIVE
    Directed by Michael Neithardt
    1999. I was somebody. Then she broke my heart. Can’t forget. Don’t want to remember. Amanda came into my life like a goddamn freight train. Why’d we ever meet? Everything was fine. It’s years later. Still feel empty. I’m nobody. For months, you know what, almost a whole year I was somebody. But I’d give it all back to avoid this empty, bleeding feeling. Because nobody deserves that. Never.

    Best Short Drama – PALIMPSEST
    Directed by Michael Tyburski
    A successful house tuner provides clients a unique form of therapy that examines subtle details in their living spaces.

    Best Short Documentary – HIGH AND HALLOWED: EVEREST 1963
    Directed by David Morton, Jake Norton, Jim Aikman
    High and Hallowed: Everest 1963 is the deeper story of the greatest Himalayan climb in American mountaineering history. Profiling the bold and visionary efforts of the 1963 American Mount Everest Expedition, the film examines the sheer commitment, step-by-step struggle and lasting impact of the first American ascent of Mt. Everest and the pioneering first ascent of the West Ridge by Tom Hornbein and Willi Unsoeld. Five decades later, High and Hallowed journeys back to Everest to discover if the essence of risk, adventure and the unknown that drew the first Americans to the summit still exists on Everest today.

    Best Animated Film – THE MISSING SCARF
    Directed by Eoin Duffy
    Albert the Squirrel makes a startling discovery … an empty space where once his favorite scarf lay. He heads off into the forest only to find everyone else is preoccupied with worries of their own. He helps whomever he can before moving on but never seems to get any closer to his goal. Ultimately, Albert’s problem is put in perspective by the friends he helped and the problems they faced and overcame together.

    Audience Choice Documentary – LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM
    Directed by Sean and Andrea Fine
    One family’s courageous fight to save their only son from a rare and fatal disease, progeria. The average age of death from progeria is 13, there is no treatment and no cure. Dr. Leslie Gordon and Dr. Scott Berns are set on changing this. Their son, Sam, was diagnosed with progeria at age two and they were told to enjoy what time they had. They refused to believe this was the answer. Sam is now 16. In less than a decade, their advances have led to the discovery of the gene at fault, creating the first drug trials for treatment, and revealing the amazing discovery that progeria is linked to the aging process in all of us.

    Audience Choice Feature – SANATORIUM
    Directed by Brant Sersen
    Starring: Kate Wood, Megan Neuringer, Don Fanelli, DJ Hazard.
    On a bitterly cold December night, a paranormal investigations team has set their sights on the bloody Hillcrest Sanatorium to answer the age old question: Is there life after death? With rumors of hauntings and local children gone missing, they may just get their answer the hard way when members of the team mysteriously disappear, leaving behind unnerving evidence…

    Best Documentary – THE CRASH REEL
    Directed by Lucy Walker
    Starring: Kevin Pearce, Shaun White and Mason Aguirre
    Fifteen years of vérité footage show the epic rivalry between snowboarding half-pipe legends Shaun White and Kevin Pearce. These childhood friends became number one and two in the world leading up to the Vancouver Winter Olympics, pushing one another to ever more dangerous tricks, until Kevin crashed on a Park City half-pipe, barely surviving. As Kevin recovers from his injury, Shaun wins Gold. Now all Kevin wants to do is get on his snowboard again, even though medics and family fear this could kill him. We also celebrate Sarah Burke who crashed in Park City and died January 19, 2012.

    Best Feature – GOODBYE WORLD
    Director Denis Henry Hennely (pictured above)
    Starring: Adrian Grenier, Gaby Hoffmann, Ben McKenzie, Mark Webber, Kerry Bishé, Scott Mescudi and Caroline Dhavernas
    James and Lily live off the grid, raising their young daughter in a cocoon of comfort and sustainability. When a mysterious mass text ripples its way across the country, triggering a crippling, apocalyptic cyber attack, their home transitions from sheltered modern oasis to a fortress for the estranged old friends that show up at their door for protection and community. The unexpected reunion—abundant with revelry and remembrances, generously enhanced by organic wine and weed—is quickly undermined by the slights of the past, the spark of lingering flirtations and the threat of a locally grown new world order.

    Grand Jury Award – ALL THAT I AM
    Directed by Carlos Puga
    Starring: Christopher Abbott, Gaby Hoffmann, Chris McCann and Dan Bittner
    When Dr. Lynn abandoned his terminally ill wife on her deathbed, he left his three children—Susan, Christian and Win—essentially orphaned. Almost a decade later, on the eve of their annual family reunion, Dr. Lynn unexpectedly shows up at Christian’s door claiming he can justify his nine-year absence. Drug-addled and emotionally vulnerable, Christian reluctantly agrees to escort his father to the reunion, sending an already volatile family environment reeling.

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  • 57th BFI London Film Festival Awards; IDA Wins Best Film

     Ida, directed by Pawel PawlikowskiIda, directed by Pawel Pawlikowski

    IDA, directed by Pawel Pawlikowski is the winner of Official Competition Best Film award at the 57th BFI London Film Festival which ran October 9 to 20, 2013.  Philip French, recent BFI Fellow and President of the Official Competition jury said, “The jury greatly admired Ida, the first film made in his native Poland by a director who came to prominence while living in Britain. We were deeply moved by a courageous film that handles, with subtlety and insight, a painfully controversial historical situation – the German occupation and the Holocaust – which continues to resonate. Special praise went to his use of immersive visual language to create a lasting emotional impact.”

    Ilo Ilo, directed by Anthony ChenIlo Ilo, directed by Anthony Chen

    The Sutherland Award presented to the director of the most original and imaginative feature debut in the Festival went to Anthony Chen, the director of ILO ILO, described as a devastating study of a modern affluent family and its vulnerabilities.

    MY FATHERS, MY MOTHER AND MEMY FATHERS, MY MOTHER AND ME

    The Best Documentary Award was awarded to MY FATHERS, MY MOTHER AND ME, a portrait of Friedrichshof, the largest commune in Europe, founded by the Viennese Actionist Otto Mühl in the 1970s and the devastating emotional effects on its residents.  The jury also commended CUTIE & THE BOXER for the original and creative way in which the filmmakers crafted an intimate portrait of a relationship, as well as Greg Baker’s compelling MANHUNT which gave the audience extraordinary access to usually unreachable secret intelligence operatives. The exquisite cinematography of PIPELINE was also recognized and commended.

     Starred UpStarred Up

    The Best British Newcomer award which honors new and emerging film talent, recognizing the achievements of a new writer, producer, director, actor or actress went to screenwriter Jonathan Asser, for his debut feature STARRED UP whose title refers to the practice of placing violent young offenders prematurely in adult prison.  The jury also highly commended the performances of nominees Conner Chapman and Shaun Thomas for their roles in THE SELFISH GIANT.

    via BFI London Film Festival

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