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International Film Festival (EIFF) announced two new Honorary Patrons of the Festival.

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Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) this evening announced two new Honorary Patrons of the Festival. Scottish actor James Cosmo and director/actor Karen Gillan have accepted the role of EIFF Honorary Patrons as the Festival heads into its 70th anniversary year. Karen Gillan and James Cosmo will be joining other EIFF Honorary Patrons Tilda Swinton, Robert Carlyle, Seamus McGarvey and Mark Cousins.

 

The 69th edition of EIFF drew to a close with the World Premiere of Scott Graham’s IONA, and leading lady Ruth Negga was joined by fellow cast members in attendance on the red carpet.

 

EIFF Artistic Director Mark Adams said: “We are thrilled to add two Scottish luminaries to our illustrious troop of EIFF Honorary Patrons. James Cosmo is a powerhouse of acting fortitude, acknowledged this year by the Michael Powell Jury, and Karen Gillan is not only a star onscreen - her directorial debut at EIFF has shown her talents also extend behind the camera. Karen is unable to join us this evening as she’s on a long-haul flight, and James has been backwards and forwards to the Festival so many times with his two films and the Awards Ceremony, he needed a night off! But they are both with us in spirit, and we’re delighted to know they’re flying the EIFF flag worldwide for us.”

 

EIFF Honorary Patron James Cosmo said: “It’s a real honour, and a genuine privilege to serve as Honorary Patron for the Edinburgh International Film Festival.  As a Scots born actor, EIFF has always held a place in my heart and I look forward to working with the other honorary patrons and all the staff there as the Festival moves into its 70th edition in June 2016.”

 

The recipient of the Festival’s highly sought after Audience Award was also announced during the Closing Gala speeches at Festival Theatre Edinburgh. Voted for by the public across 14 films screening at the 12 day Festival, the 2015 Audience Award went to BIG GOLD DREAM: SCOTTISH POST-PUNK AND INFILTRATING THE MAINSTREAM, directed by Grant McPhee.

Karen Gillan, new EIFF Honorary Patron, quotedd “I am so thrilled to become a Patron of Edinburgh International Film Festival. I moved to Edinburgh, from Inverness, when I was sixteen to study acting. I developed such a creative connection with the city. So to come back and celebrate Scottish and international filmmaking is an honour.”

 

www.edfilmfest.org.uk/press


The 69th Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) Awards

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The 69th Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) Awards were announced at the EIFF Awards Ceremony today, held at Filmhouse in Edinburgh, hosted by  journalist, broadcaster and newsreader Jackie Bird. The Ceremony took place ahead of Sunday’s Closing Gala, which concludes the 12-day Festival with the World Premiere of Scott Graham’s IONA, and the EIFF Audience Award, voted for by the public, will also be announced.

The Michael Powell Award for Best British Feature Film was awarded to Andrew Haigh’s 45 YEARS which received its UK Premiere at the Festival. His beautiful portrait of a fractured relationship wins one of the longest-running film awards in the UK, honouring imagination and creativity in British filmmaking. The Award was presented by actor Jane Seymour.

 

The winner was chosen by the Michael Powell Jury, chaired by LA Times film critic Kenneth Turan with actor/director Karen Gillan and actor Ian Hart. Special Mentions were given to Kyle Patrick Alvarez’s THE STANFORD PRISON EXPERIMENT and J. Davis’ MANSON FAMILY VACATION.

 

The Michael Powell Jury said: “We’re delighted to present the Michael Powell Award for best British feature. This year it goes to a quietly explosive film which represents classic filmmaking at its best. This is a measured yet provocative film, a masterclass in understated acting that was the unanimous choice of the jury.”

 

Director Andrew Haigh said: “This is a real honour and made even more special when you consider the list of British films that have won before. All you can hope for when you make a film is that it resonates with people and that is why receiving an award such as this feels so fantastic.”

 

The Award forBest Performance in a British Feature Film was shared between James Cosmo for his performance in THE PYRAMID TEXTS and Charlotte Rampling for her performance in 45 YEARS.  The performance awards were also selected by the Michael Powell Jury. The Award was presented to James Cosmo by Ewen Bremner, while Charlotte Rampling was unable to attend in person.

 

Jury member Ian Hart said: “There’s an old actor’s joke when someone’s rehearsing a scene and they come across a certain piece of text and they say I don’t need that line, I can do that with a look. But most people can’t so the line goes back in. But certain people can, they can do more with a gesture, they can do more with a look than most people can do with ten words, and this is why this award goes to Charlotte Rampling.”

 

Jury member Karen Gillan said: “I think I speak to all up and coming Scottish actors when I say James Cosmo is a huge inspiration, his acting is a lesson to us all, you show us how it’s done.”

 

Charlotte Rampling said: “It is an extraordinary moment when you are singled out when the craft that you have been perfecting throughout your life is appreciated and rewarded. It is thrilling and humbling and I thank you so much for giving me the chance to feel so proud. I thank Andrew Haigh for seeing what he sees, Tom Courtenay for moving me to tears, and Tristan Golligher for believing that this could be made.”

 

The Award for Best International Feature Film was awarded to Marielle Heller’s THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL (USA), which received its UK Premiere at EIFF. The award is given to filmmakers from outside of the UK in recognition of their imagination and innovation. Director Amy Berg chaired the International Feature Film Competition Jury, with actors Archie Panjabi and Natascha McElhone. The Award was presented by EIFF Honorary Patron, Seamus McGarvey.

 

The International Competition Jury said: “The Diary of a Teenage Girl is imaginative both visually and narratively, emotionally gripping and completely unapologetic in tone. We had a tough decision to make as we had some very strong contenders.”

 

Marielle Heller said: “Although this is an American film, it was made by a very international group, including our North Star, the British Bel Powley, whose brave performance is the heart of this film.  I am so pleased to have such a prestigious UK premiere for the film at Edinburgh, and I am especially thrilled for Bel's performance to be brought to her home turf for the first time.  And I am so honoured by this award, which was a wonderful shock!”

 

The Award for Best Documentary Feature Film was awarded to Crystal Moselle’s THE WOLFPACK (USA). The award underlines the Festival’s long-standing support of documentaries. The winner was selected by the Best Documentary Feature Film Jury, chaired by AFI Festival Director Jacqueline Lyanga, with actors Denis Lawson and Jo Hartley. The Award was presented by Mark Adams, Artistic Director of the Edinburgh International Film Festival

 

The Best Documentary Feature Film Jury said: “Out of a very strong field, the Jury has selected THE WOLFPACK as the best documentary in competition at the 2015 Edinburgh International Film Festival. Shot over five years, the director Crystal Moselle turned a chance encounter with six brothers into an intriguing, intimate portrait that shines a light on the warmth, humour and underlying tension of an extraordinary situation.”

 

SCRAPBOOK directed by Mike Hoolboom won The Award for Best Short Film. The award was bestowed by the Short Films Jury which was chaired by director Kyle Patrick Alvarez with actors Dolly Wells and Jaime Winstone. Special Mentions went to Juliana Bao’s performance in Maruani Landa’s CIPRIANA and Ahmet Simsek’s performance in Jannis Lenz’s SHADOWBOXER. The Award was presented by Diane Henderson, Deputy Artistic Director of EIFF.

 

The Short Films Jury citation read: “We found Scrapbook to be incredibly unique, singularly captivating, unlike anything we have seen before. Congratulations to Mike Hoolboom on making such a moving film. We would also like to give a special mention to the lead actress in Cipriana, Juliana Boa who gave an incredibly brave performance for such a young actress. We would also like to give a special mention to Ahmet Simsek’s performance in Shadowboxer whose work we found incredibly moving and touching, a really captivating performance.”

 

Mike Hoolboom said: “I feel touched this afternoon by a hand that has reached all the way across the Atlantic to find me in my Toronto home: who knew that hands could reach that far, and with such kindness. It reminds me that the cinema is able, sometimes, at least occasionally, to bring far away people so close, close enough that they can feel like part of our lives, and help us with this fundamental task: how can we get along with each other?”

 

Voted for by the audience, The McLaren Award for Best New British Animation, supported by the British Council, went to STEMS by director Ainslie Henderson. Named after Scottish-born filmmaker Norman McLaren, the McLaren Award is the longest running award celebrating creativity amongst UK animation talent. The Award was presented by animator Barry Purves.

 

The Student Critics Jury Award, supported by James and Morag Anderson, was awarded by Jury members Catriona Morton and Sunrise Ishimwe to BLACK MOUNTAIN POETS directed by Jamie Adams. The award was determined by a jury of young film critics who were under the guidance of film critics Siobhan Synnot and Dave Calhoun.

                                            

The Student Critics Jury citation read: “We’ve seen such a variety of films, and all of us have our favourites, and our guilty pleasures – and what’s more, they’ve all been very different! It was genuinely challenging to pick just one – but in the end, our vote was unanimous.”

 

Jamie Adams, director of BLACK MOUNTAIN POETS said: “The idea that a dozen or so students have concluded that our movie Black Mountain Poets is the one that has excited their collective imaginations the most out of the brilliant movies they considered is a beautiful thing - it reminds me why we set out to create our modern romance trilogy in the first place.”

 

 

www.edfilmfest.org.uk/press

Hubert Bals Fund announces first selection HBF+Europe: Minority Co-production Support The Hubert Bals Fund of International F

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The Hubert Bals Fund of International Film Festival Rotterdam is proud to announce the first selection of its new HBF+Europe: Minority Co-production Support scheme. An amount of 220.000 Euro has been awarded to four promising film projects from Ukraine, Colombia, Iran and Thailand, co-produced by production companies from Germany, France and the Netherlands. The selection includes projects by award-winning directors such as Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy (THE TRIBE) and Anocha Suwichakornpong (MUNDANE HISTORY).
 
The 2015 HBF+Europe: Minority Co-production Support selection includes:
 
LUXEMBOURG by Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy (Ukraine).
Recipient HBF+Europe grant: Tandem Production Germany (Germany)
Second feature by award winning filmmaker Slaboshpytskiy, whose debut film THE TRIBE won - amongst others - the Nespresso Grand Prize at the Semaine de la Critique in Cannes 2014. LUXEMBOURG tells the story of a policeman who confronts the system, his job and the women in his life – in a city overshadowed by the effects of a nuclear disaster: the Chernobyl exclusion zone. The film was supported for HBF Script and Project Development, as was his debut film THE TRIBE. LUXEMBOURG also participated in CineMart 2015, where it won the Arte International Prize. The film is produced by Garmata Film Production (Ukraine), Tandem Production Germany (Germany), DUOfilm (Norway) and Alpha Violet (France).

MONOS by Alejandro Landes (Colombia) and Alexis Dos Santos (Argentina).
Recipient HBF+Europe grant: Lemming Film (The Netherlands)
Landes’ debut film PORFIRIO premiered at the Quinzaine, Cannes 2011. Dos Santos’ previous films include GLUE (IFFR Tiger Competition 2006) and UNMADE BEDS (IFFR 2009). MONOS follows a group of teenage soldiers on a Colombian mountaintop, whose mission is to keep alive the only adult among them - a kidnapped American woman in their custody. The film received HBF Script and Project Development support and was presented at CineMart 2014. MONOS is produced by Mutante Cine (Uruguay), No Franja (Colombia), Lemming Film (The Netherlands), Pandora Film Produktion (Germany), Film Farms (Norway), El Campo Cine (Argentina) and Le Pacte (France).
 
OBLIVION VERSES by Alireza Khatami (Iran)
Recipient HBF+Europe grant: Endorphine Production (Germany)
First feature by Iranian filmmaker and digital artist Alireza Khatami. His earlier shorts include Mr CHANG’S NEW ADDRESS, FOCAL POINT (IFFR 2010) and WHEN THE CURTAIN FALLS (IFFR 2013). OBLIVION VERSES tells the story of an old man in charge of a morgue in an unknown city in the Middle East. The film previously received HBF Script and Project Development support and was selected for the Netherlands Film Fund+Hubert Bals Fund Coproduction scheme. OBLIVION VERSES is produced by House on Fire (France), Endorphine Production (Germany), Lemming Film (The Netherlands) and a production company from the region.
 
BY THE TIME IT GETS DARK by Anocha Suwichakornpong - Thailand
Recipient HBF+Europe grant: Survivance (France)
Second feature by Thai filmmaker Anocha Suwichakornpong, whose debut film MUNDANE HISTORY won the 2010 Tiger Award at IFFR. Her second feature BY THE TIME IT GETS DARK offers a contemplative reflection on Thai history and society through multiple storylines. The film was supported for HBF Script and Project Development and was presented at CineMart. BY THE TIME IT GETS DARK is produced by Electric Eel Films (Thailand) and Survivance (France).
 
 
About HBF+Europe
HBF+Europe is the new international co-production programme of the Hubert Bals Fund of International Film Festival Rotterdam. The program is designed to provide financial support to European producers serving as minority co-producers in high-quality feature films by talented filmmakers from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and parts of Eastern Europe. Additionally, HBF+Europe is also committed to helping internationally co-produced films through to release by providing a financial framework for distribution. Through this scheme, the HBF expects to boost the potential of these films, to find their audiences across Europe and beyond. 

A new call for proposals for HBF+Europe Distribution Support for International Co-productions has recently been opened. The application deadline is 1 September 2015.
 
HBF+Europe is supported by the Creative Europe – MEDIA programme of the European Union and exemplifies IFFR’s ongoing commitment to supporting filmmakers year-round.
 

FEELFEST, the new International online Festival of Short Films,Documentary Films and Animation

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o The first FeelFest.com competition will take place from November 6th through December 8th, exclusively online on the international VOD web portal FEELMAKERS.

o Awards will be given to the winning films in competitive sections of fiction short films, full-length and short documentary films and fulllength and short animation films. Every film selected will receive 150 Euros, to be given to owner of the film's exploitation rights.

o The Festival is to be made up of two Official Sections: the International Competition and the International Schools Competition. In addition, there will be Parallel Activities and Sections held entirely online.

Madrid, June 29, 2015

The celebration of the first International Short Film, Documentary and Animation Festival FEELFEST (www.feelfest.com) will be held entirely online on the Video on Demand (VOD) web portal FEELMAKERS (http://www.feelmakers.com) from November 6th through December 8th, 2015 (GMT -9 time). It will be made up of two Official Sections: the International Competition and the International Schools Competition. In addition, there will be Parallel Activities and Sections to be enjoyed entirely online.

The International Competition will feature participation of fiction short films, documentary shorts and feature films, and animated shorts and feature films. Additionally, the International Schools Competition will feature films participating in the same categories whose exploitation rights belong to film schools, universities, study centers and active students. In both cases, only films that have been produced after January 1 will be admitted. The deadline for submitting films will be September 15, (GMT +2).

Submissions are to be made online via the web portal UPTOFEST (www.uptofest.com). The owner of the exploitation rights to every film selected will receive 150 Euros. Once the list of films in competition has been posted on FEELMAKERS, a jury made up of professionals from the audiovisual sector shall grant the following Awards in the International Competition Section:

Best Fiction Short Film, Best Animation Film, Best Documentary Film and Best Film, this latter to be selected from among all the films in all categories. While in the International Schools Competition, the following awards will be given: Best Fiction Short Film from a School, Best Animation Film from a School, Best Documentary Film from a School and Best Film from a School, this latter to be selected from among all the films in all categories. In addition, FEELMAKERS viewers will grant the Audience Award for Best Film from the International Competition and Best Film from a School in the International Schools Competition.

Along with the 150 Euros paid to all films that are selected, the award-winning films shall receive a diploma, a free annual subscription to FEELMAKERS and a pack for 30 free submissions to festivals on the platform UPTOFEST (these shall have no expiration date and may be used with any film). Lastly, the winning films will be announced on December 9. They will remain available online on the web portal until December 22. Furthermore, all the films selected to compete in FEELFEST shall go on to make up part of the FEELMAKERS catalogue, provided the owner of the film's exploitation rights so desires.

The FEELFEST Festival, the web portal FEELMAKERS and the UPTOFEST platform have been created at the initiative of three companies with a long background in the film sector: the agency of culture management Great Ways, the film and advertising production company Nephilim -both run by Luis Collar and Jorge Moreno- and the sales and distribution company at festivals Freak, led by Millán Vázquez.

 

Chatting with Two Great Directors

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http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/listen-37-minute-talk-with-michael-haneke-and-darren-aronofsky-20150626

Film Festival Shorts

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Film Festival Shorts

DVD Release: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B010GPW4DE/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_oewKvb048R25R

IMDB Page: www.imdb.com/title/tt4811332

 

“Film Festival Shorts” is a compilation film of shorts screened at film festivals in USA, Canada and France. These are excerpts from shorts and music videos released in film festivals and gala events between year 2005 to 2013 and remixed re-editions of the same films made from 2014 to 2015.  These films have been released in film festivals in Miami, Los Angeles, New York USA, Vancouver, BC , Canada and Cannes, Paris France.  All footage of premieres and parties of these shorts  is released in a  separate film/documentary called “Omer Pasha World Premieres.”

 

The films cover all themes of action, adventure, reality, love, dance, glamour, music, fashion, religion, spirituality, dance, horror and comedy.  These films were released at film festivals, night clubs, after parties, cock tail parties, fashion shows, gala evening events and private disco parties in Manhattan New York City, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Cannes France and Vancouver BC Canada between the years 2005 to 2013.

 

Numerous storylines follow , a young boy is cursed by an evil witch in his love life. Two girls taken away from him in a ferocious curse by a  supernatural   witch. He has to break the curse with the power of spirituality. The curse of the evil witch spreads all over to California. The spells and curses take over Glendale, Sacramento , Hollywood, Santa Monica, San Diego and Santa Barbara. The boy  breaks the curse of the evil witch and realizes the witch had her own sorrows too, thus he saves her too.  All curses are broken. Sexy , luscious and seductive men and women hover over Glendale, Burbank, Pasadena, San Diego, Santa Monica, Sacramento, Sunnyvale, San Jose, Orange County, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Melrose Avenue, LAX Airport and Ivar Street in Los Angeles turning entire California into a 'flooding' night club frenzy of dance and love.  Music videos and shorts change into the art of the second coming of Christ and the emergence of the anti christ, basically the ends of times.  It symbolizes with the airplanes and explosions that there will be wars around that time the anti christ will emerge. The parades in the film of various armies symbolize the parade of the anti christ , and how he will emerge.  Also the calling of dead spirits back to the world is beautiful.  Musicals depict romance, tea lights, candles, nightlife, narration of love with beautiful men and women.  Music videos are based on Arizona, Florida, California, Toronto and Vancouver, BC as a celebration of reality fashion style and parties.

 

 

Director: Omer Pasha

Music: Omer Pasha

Editor: Omer Pasha

Producer: Omer Pasha

 

All Rights Reserved

 

Made in Canada

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"Palio": Horse racing under the Tuscan Sun

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Unicorn. Goose. Shell. Tower. If you haven't been to Siena, Italy, if you aren't up on the city's 17 districts, these four are a colorful start. All of Siena's ancient neighborhoods play a role in the local horse race called the Palio and in Cosima Spender's documentary of the same name. 

Palio premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival this past April, and the twice-yearly race is around the bend: first comes Palio della Madonna di Provenzano on July 2, followed by Palio dell'Assunta on August 16.

Forget the Kentucky Derby. Held in a narrow, winding track on Siena's Piazza del Campo, the Palio excites conflict between districts and sanctions bribery as a basic strategy. Wheeling and dealing govern every clomp of the way, including the choice of jockey to represent each of the nearly dozen districts that participate on a rotating basis. Things can get brutal. Jockeys who get paid off to lose might end up black and blued by their assigned district, and at the height of the race, it's not unusual to see riders whacking one another with their clubs. If this all sounds a bit Medieval, it is. The Palio dates back to the 1400's.

Spender captures its modern pulse with the aid of Silvano "Bastiano" Vigni, winner of five bouts and the film's narrator, alongside a roundup of fellow retired jockeys who reminisce about the rough and tumble politics of the sport. Whatever their relative equestrian skills, it's hard to say which of these scrappy characters would win in a contest of abrasiveness and coglioni. Machismo oozes from each sweaty, exhilarating frame surrounding and during the famed 90-second race.

Two jockeys anchor the movie: veteran champion Gigi Bruschelli and his newest nemesis, swaggering upstart Giovanni Atzeni. How Bruschelli has won 13 races in 16 years is a marvel, but as we learn, more so for his political cunning than for his athletic prowess. With two races standing between him the world record, Bruschelli is cocked for the glory he figures he has coming to him. Young, idealistic Atzeni rides to a different tune. Though trained by Bruchelli, the wholesome Sardinian protegé embodies the hopes of a new generation. For Atzeni, it's all about the love of the game. "He brought back the romance," Spender told me several days before Palio won a Best Editing award at Tribeca. In this horse race cum metaphor for Italian politics, Atzeni is "giving hope," she said.

It wasn't until Spender and editor Valerio Bonelli started cutting the film that its essential theme became apparent. Reviewing the corruption of the master and the purity of the apprentice, the filmmakers soon teased out a story of redemption. The bravado of Bruschelli's "well-oiled machine" may have been "irresistible" to the Sienese, according to Spender, who grew up near Siena in Chianti, yet "they're all very pleased that a bit of romance has come back." And not just on the race track. Palio speaks to a larger phenomenon in today's Italy, where, as Bonelli put it, "there are a lot of older people pushing and squashing the young generation that's trying to come up." Not for nothing did the film climax with Bastiano's observation, 'Now it's time the youth woke up. They can't be content with just a few crumbs.' "

50,000 admissions at Edinburgh International Film Fest, a 9% increase

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The 69th edition of Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) drew to a close on Sunday night having screened 134 new features over the 12 day Festival.  More than 50,000 admissions represent a nine per cent increase on 2014.  An additional 14,600 people enjoyed the Festival’s two weekends of outdoor screenings, as part of Film in the City.

 

The Festival sold tickets for its venues across the city, which included the EIFF’s home at Filmhouse, its venue partner Cineworld, and at Festival Theatre Edinburgh, the Traverse, Dominion Cinema, Odeon Lothian Road, Royal Lyceum Theatre and Belmont Filmhouse in Aberdeen.

 

Ken Hay, CEO Edinburgh International Film Festival, commented; “There have been some truly memorable moments at the Festival this year, from the spectacular opening night World Premiere of THE LEGEND OF BARNEY THOMSON, Ewan McGregor’s sold out In Person at the Lyceum, the skype Q&A with the stars of our Documentary Award Winning Film THE WOLFPACK, the sensational screening of BACK TO THE FUTURE with the RSNO performing the score live, and the opportunity to meet filmmaking legends, Haskell Wexler and Johnnie To.  Our audiences have obviously responded to our rich and diverse programme and we are thrilled to see the increase in admissions.”

 

Winning films this year included Andrew Haigh’s 45 YEARS which picked up The Michael Powell Award for Best British Feature Film, THE DIARY OF A TEENAGE GIRL won the Award for Best Film in the International Competition and THE WOLFPACK was presented with the Award for Best Documentary Feature which received its European Premiere at the Festival.  The Audience Award was won by BIG GOLD DREAM: SCOTTISH POST-PUNK AND INFILTRATING THE MAINSTREAM.

 

www.edfilmfest.org.uk/press


Durban FilmMart Success Stories 2010-2015

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Media Release

Durban FilmMart Success Stories 2010-2015

Now in its sixth year, the Durban FilmMart (DFM) has become an integral part of the fast-growing South African film industry. Since its inception in 2010, DFM has helped to facilitate more than 80 African co-production projects, many of which have subsequently been produced as acclaimed films. As the African and South African industry grows, the quality and volume of submitted projects has increased every year, making DFM the leading independent film market on the continent and a major force in the facilitation of successful African films.

As a result of DFM’s success, the Durban International Film Festival now regularly includes works from DFM alumni in its programme. Major fiction projects from the last 6 years that have had their genesis at DFM and were subsequently screened at DIFF include Ayanda (DFM 2013), the opening film at this year’s festival, the acclaimed Boda Boda Thieves (DFM 2011) from Ugandan co-operative Yes! That’s Us films and Imbabazi: The Pardon (DFM 2012), a personal account of the Rwandan genocide. Non-fiction films which have been screened at DIFF and made a major splash around the world include the South African gangster documentary Devil’s Lair (DFM 2012), Unearthed (DFM 2013) which explores the dangers of fracking and TheShore Break (DFM 2012), a vitally important film that chronicles the attempt of an international mining company to mine for titanium in one of the world’s last untouched natural areas.

Fiction Film Success Stories

The Nigerian film Confusion Na Wa was a DFM project in 2010 and went on to win best film at the 2013 African Movie Awards, as well as other awards around the world. A dark comedy about a group of strangers whose fates become intertwined over the course of 24 hours, Confusion Na Wa was produced by Tom Rowlands-Rees and directed by Kenneth Gyang.

Imbabazi: the Pardon was one of the selected project at DFM in 2011, as a result of which producer-director Joel Karekezi attended the Rotterdam Lab in 2012. A very personal story about the genocide that took place in Rwanda, the film screened at DIFF 2014 as well as other festivals around the world, from Chicago to Luxor.

A Shot at the Big Time (DFM 2012) is inspired by the true story of director Janet van Eeden's brother, Jimmy, who took his own life rather than fight in the Apartheid border war.  After receiving its world premiere at DIFF, the film was selected for the Cannes Court Metrage, the short film corner of the official Cannes Festival 2014. The film was later nominated for Best Director and Best Original Screenplay at the Independent Mzansi Short Film Festival. The feature film version of A Shot at the Big Time is currently in production.

Boda Boda Thieves began its life as a pitch at DFM 2011 and has gone on to receive international acclaim. A collaboration between South African producer James Tayler and Kenyan producer Sarah Muhoho, the project was awarded the CineMart Rotterdam Lab award at DFM and went on to win a Highlight Pitch Award at the Berlin Film Festival’s Talent Project Market.  The Boda Boda Thieves tells the tale of a poverty-stricken family from Kampala, Uganda, who support themselves by driving a motorcycle taxi or ‘boda-boda’. Both producers and the film’s director Donald Mugisha are passionate about creating and developing content for African cinema, which they believe expresses a “proud identity of humanity, heritage and culture”.

Ayanda, which was selected as a project for DFM in 2013, will be opening the 36th edition of the Durban International Film Festival. Directed by Sara Blecher and produced by Terry Pheto, the film tells the story of a 21-year-old woman who fights to save her late father’s motor repair shop when it is threatened with closure. Ayanda received its world premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June this year where it was awarded a special mention in the world fiction category.

Documentary Success Stories

South African director Mayenzeke Baza's short documentary film Ndiyindoda (I Am a Man) tackles male circumcision, highlighting the dilemma it poses for South Africa as the country forges a position for itself in the modern world and attempts to reconcile its strongest traditions with newly enshrined democratic rights. Produced by Andy Jones, the project won Most Promising Documentary at DFM 2011, enabling Baza and Roughton to attend the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA) later that year. The film premiered at the Encounters documentary festival and went on to be nominated for two South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTA) in 2014. The film also screened on the international news channel Al Jazeera and has helped to established Baza as a significant force in the South African film industry.

Devils Lair chronicles the life of a convicted murderer and gang leader named Braam as he comes to terms with a lifetime of dubious choices. Producer Neil Brandt and director Riaan Hendricks won Most Promising Documentary Project at DFM 2012 – which came with the opportunity to participate at IDFA Summer School and to pitch at the IDFA Forum The film went on to premiere at Hot Docs and became one of the highlights of DIFF 2013. It received three nominations at the SAFTAs in 2014, going on to win Best Feature and Best Editor, as well as numerous other awards at festivals around the world.

Unearthed, directed by Jolynn Minnaar and produced by Dylan Voogt, Stacey Keppler and Saskia Schiel, explores the effects of fracking in the United States in anticipation of proposed shale gas extraction in the Karoo and elsewhere in Southern Africa. Selected as a project for DFM 2013 and winning the WorldView Development Grant, the film screened to enthusiastic audiences at DIFF in 2014 and won the Green Award at the Sheffield International Documentary Festival the same year.

The Shore Break was selected as a DFM project in 2012 and premiered at IDFA in 2014. A powerful documentary whose narrative is every bit as engaging as a fiction thriller, the film will screen at DIFF this year and has already screened at the Encounters documentary film festival. It was the only South African documentary in Competition at IDFA 2014 and the only South African feature length documentary selected for Hot Docs 2015 in Toronto. The film won Best Feature Length Documentary at the 2015 Festival International du Film d'Environnement (FIFE) in Paris and the Backsberg Audience Choice Award at Encounters South African International Documentary Festival in June this year.

The Dreams of Shahrazad (DFM 2010) directed by Francois Verster and produced by Neil Brandt, Shameela Seedat and Wael Omar, explores the relationship between art and revolution through the famous story collection The 1001 Nights. The film received development and production support from DFM as well as the Sundance Institute, the IDFA Bertha Fund, the NFVF, the Hakkaya Network, the Dutch Film Fund and Spier Films, who also act as the films sales agent. The film premiered at the prestigious Masters Section of IDFA, and has gone on to receive critical acclaim and broadcast sales worldwide.

Other major successes that have emerged from DFM include the fiction-documentary hybrid Black President (DFM 2011), produced by Anna Teeman and directed by Mpumi Mcata (and also screening at DIFF this year), as well as the remarkable I, Afrikaner (DFM 2011), produced by Lauren Groenewald and directed by Annalet Steenkamp, which won Best South African documentary at DIFF in 2014. Khalo Matabane’s Mandela: The Myth and Me was selected as a DFM project in 2012 and won Special Jury at International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam IDFA. Like Rehad Desai’s Miners Shot Down (DFM 2013), it has been widely recognised as one of South Africa’s most important documentary films and has gone on to have an extremely rich life at festivals around the world.

Success Stories Still in the Making

Black Sunshine tells the story of a 12-year-old albino girl named Coco and her mother Rosemary who longs to escape her frustrating African reality which is dominated by issues of skin colour. Selected for DFM 2013, the project won Arte France’s Arte International Award and received the Tribeca All Access grant. Produced by Obibini Pictures and directed by Akosua Adoma Owusu, the project was also selected for the 2012 edition of Locarno Film Festival’s Open Doors co-production market.

 

Solidarité , which has been renamed I am not a Witch, is a tragi-comedy about a Zambian child prodigy from first-time director Rungano Nyoni. Solidarité was selected as project for DFM 2013 where Nyoni won the IFP Prize giving her the opportunity to present the project at IFP in New York. The same year Nyoni was also selected for the Cannes Film Festival’s Cinéfondation Résidence. The project was awarded development funding from the Hubert Bals Fund and also participated in the Locarno Open Doors co-production market, winning the Arte Prize and Vision Sud Est Prize. I am not a Witch is about to go into financing stage of pre-production.

 

Sea Monster from the now globally successful Triggerfish Studios tells the story of an obsessive-compulsive science geek who discovers a primordial sea monster off the coast of South Africa. Like its predecessor Khumba, which achieved sales in a large number of territories, Sea Monster is aimed at a global audience, taking on Dreamworks and Pixar at their own game. Directed by Anthony Silverston and produced by Stuart Forrest, Sea Monster is still in development.

Flatland from producer David Horler and director Jenna Cato Bass was selected for DFM 2012 where it scooped three awards: the WorldView prize for the most promising feature project, the IFFR prize and the European Audio Visual Entrepreneurs (EAVE) prize. Set in the Karoo, Flatland is a South African feminist western which tells the tale of three women who face mental and physical hardships as they search for a fabled apartheid-era nuclear bomb. The film has since secured production support from the World Cinema Fund and has also secured a German co-producing partner, In Good Company, under producer Roshanak Behesht Nedjad. Flatland has secured intention for world sales from The Match Factory and production will begin in Winter 2016.

The 6th Durban FilmMart takes place in Durban, at the Tsogo Sun Elangeni from 17 to 20 July 2015, during the 36th edition of the Durban International Film Festival (16-26 July 2015).

For more information on the Durban FilmMart and to register as a delegate visit www.durbanfilmmart.com

 

 

The Durban FilmMart (DFM) is a co-production and finance market and is a joint programme of the Durban Film Office (DFO) and the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF). DFM provides filmmakers from across Africa with a valuable opportunity to pitch projects to financiers, distributors, sales agents and potential co-producers, and to participate in meetings, project presentations and a series of master classes and workshops on the latest industry trends. www.durbanfilmmart.com

The Durban Film Office (DFO) is the film industry development arm of the eThekwini Municipality, mandated to position Durban as a world-class film production destination and facilitator for the development of the local film industry. The DFO drives activity and development in the sector in order to boost tourism, job creation and the development of core skills and SMMEs in the region. www.durbanfilmoffice.com

 The Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) presents over 250 screenings from different countries and cultures with a special focus on Africa. The festival includes development programmes such as Talents Durban and a rich schedule of workshops. DIFF is a flagship project of the Centre for Creative Arts, University of KwaZulu-Natal, which facilitates creative platforms and economic opportunities for artists and related industries, intercultural exchange and network development, training, audience development and strategic Pan-African and international cooperation in the cultural sectors. www.cca.ukzn.ac.za

 

Michelangelo Antonioni Il maestro del cinema modern An Eye exhibition in Amsterdam

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Michelangelo Antonioni – Il maestro del cinema moderno, from 12 September 2015 to 17 January 2016 at EYE, IJpromenade 1, Amsterdam, eyefilm.nl/antonioni

From 12 September 2015 to 17 January 2016, EYE is presenting Michelangelo Antonioni – Il maestro del cinema moderno, an exhibition about one of the foremost innovators in film from the last century. The exhibition shows how Antonioni renewed the grammar of film by thinking in terms of the image and less in terms of narrative. He was one of the first film authors who tried to capture the state of mind of characters searching for meaning by framing them in a particular way in a striking mise-en-scène. “Each square centimetre of the image is essential,” asserted Antonioni. The exhibition contains film fragments, photos by press photographers from Magnum, set photos, letters from Marcello Mastroianni, Jeanne Moreau and Umberto Eco, and paintings by Antonioni. Antonioni’s films will be screened in the auditoriums and accompanied by special programmes.

 

With his famous trilogy L’avventura (1960), La notte (1961) and L’eclisse (1962) – all featuring his muse Monica Vitti – Antonioni became one of the leading directors of the last century. A stylistic perfectionist, he renewed the grammar of film. He conveyed estrangement and faltering communication between lovers with sophisticated mise-en-scène and wonderfully framed, desolate shots of industrial and desert landscapes. Narrative, dialogue and action were of lesser importance to him.

 

L’avventura (1960) ranks as a turning point in the history of film and the start of modern cinema. The director succeeded in translating the sense of malaise among the affluent middle class into oppressive images. It was deemed outrageous that, during a boat trip right at the start of L’avventura, the celebrated actress Lea Massari was made to disappear from the story. The film received fierce criticism at its premiere in Cannes, where leading actress Monica Vitti left the screening in tears. Nonetheless — after a campaign of support from fellow directors who immediately recognized the importance of the film – the film still won the jury prize.

 

After Il deserto rosso (1963), unhappy with the political climate and mood of lethargy in his home country, the director left Italy to make films abroad. He was nominated for Oscars for Best Director and Scenario for his box-office hit Blow-up (1966). Set in Swinging London, the film is about a paranoid fashion photographer and the impossibility of knowing the truth, with music by The Yardbirds and Herbie Hancock. He then left for the United States, where he made Zabriskie Point (1970), a sociocritical film shot in the Death Valley desert with a soundtrack that included Pink Floyd and The Rolling Stones. Both films are powerful portraits of their time, effectively capturing the emerging pop culture and social dissatisfaction of the era. Antonioni went on to direct the sensual Identificazione di una donna (1982, Golden Palm nomination) and Al di là delle nuvole (1995, co-directed by Wim Wenders).

 

More about the director

Michelangelo Antonioni (1912-2007) started his career during the Second World War when he co-wrote scenarios for Roberto Rossellini and worked as an assistant director for Marcel Carné. In 1951 he made his directing debut with the film noir Cronaca di un amore. He later shifted from realistic representation to a more philosophical style. Antonioni probed the human soul and did it in a totally innovative manner.

 

With the trilogy L’avventura (1960), La notte (1961) and L’eclisse (1962), followed by Blow-up (1966) and Professione: reporter (1975, with Jack Nicholson), Antonioni reinforced his position as a prominent director. In Il deserto rosso (1963), his first film in colour and set in the industrial, misty landscape of the Po Valley, he even added paint to lawns and trees to intensify the colours. He later received an Honorary Oscar for his entire body of work.

Antonioni’s films inspired countless film-makers, among them Godard, Scorsese, Tarkovski, Kurosawa, Wong Kar-wai and Tsai Ming-liang. On top of that, he influenced writers and artists such as Umberto Eco, Roland Barthes and Jeff Wall. The director died at the age of 94.

 

 

About the exhibition

Michelangelo Antonioni – Il maestro del cinema moderno presents a selection of the many private documents preserved by the Gallerie d'arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Museo Michelangelo Antonioni di Ferrara. The exhibition offers insight into his work and shows how Antonioni changed the language of film for good.

 

The exhibition contains film excerpts, photographs taken on sets by Bruce Davidson (Magnum) among others, press articles, original scenarios and letters (by Alain Delon, Italo Calvino, Marcello Mastroianni, Jeanne Moreau, Roland Barthes, Luchino Visconti, Umberto Eco, Giorgio Morandi and more). Also on display are paintings by Antonioni as well as excerpts from early Antonioni documentaries – Gente del Po and N.U. - Nettezza Urbana – and the documentary made by Antonioni in 1972 at the invitation of the Chinese Communist Party.

 

Accompanying the exhibition is an extensive programme of films, talks and events in the auditoriums.

 

The exhibition is curated by Dominique Païni in collaboration with Jaap Guldemond, Director of Exhibitions/Curator EYE, with the assistance of Maria Luisa Pacelli (Director, Gallerie d’arte moderna e contemporanea di Ferrara) and Barbara Guidi (Chief curator, Gallerie d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Ferrara).

 

Exhibition concept by Fondazione Ferrara Arte and Gallerie d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea-Museo Michelangelo Antonioni di Ferrara, in collaboration with Fondazione Cinetecca di Bologna.

Dany Laferrière will head the Jury at FFM 2015

Louis L. Roquet jons the board at FFM

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The Montreal World Film Festival is pleased to announce that Louis L. Roquet, President of Investissement Québec's Board of Directors has agreed to serve on the board of the Festival. “I am very honoured that Louis L. Roquet has accepted my invitation,” declared MWFF president Serge Losique. “The expertise of Mr. Roquet is widely acknowledged and his economic vision of Quebec and his openness to culture meshes perfectly with the mission of the Festival. I am convinced that without a thriving economy there is no thriving culture and I look forward to benefit from the expert advice of our new board member.”

 

Mr. Roquet’s rich and varied career had given him an exceptional knowledge of business and culture. After teaching at HEC Montreal, he worked in consulting and retail commerce for almost a decade. He then joined municipal government and the provincial public service, where he held the positions of General Manager of the Montreal Urban Community (1990-1994), President and CEO of the Industrial Development Corporation of Quebec (1995-1998), President and CEO of Investissement Québec (1998-2002) and President and CEO of the Société des alcools du Québec (2002-2004). From 2004 to 2009 he was President and Chief Operating Officer of Desjardins Venture Capital, general manager of the City of Montreal in 2010-2011 and CEO of Cevital Spa (Algeria) from 2012 to 2014. In June 2014 he was appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors of Investissement Québec.

 

Holder of an MBA from HEC Montreal and a Ph.D. from Harvard University in business administration, Mr. Roquet is recognized for his participation in numerous public service boards. In 2004, the Quebec MBA Association awarded him the title of MBA of the year.

The 39th MWFF will be held August 27 to September 7, 2015.

Record number of short films Submissions to the Montreal Film Festival with a strong filmfestivals.com partnership

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A record number of short films were submitted to the Montreal Film Festival for this year’s edition. Over 1200 shorts including some 400 Canadian and foreign student films, were submitted prior to the festival deadline, an increase of 42 % over last year’s figures. Seven hundred and twenty-six films from 64 countries have already be tabulated, with more countries sure to come.

 

“These numbers are evidence of the vitality of today’s young filmmakers,” observed MWFF president Serge Losique. “Our screens are always available to welcome new talents from around the world.”

 

The 39th edition of the Montreal World Film Festival will run from August 27 to September 7, 2015.

Muhammad by Iranian director Majid Majidi will open Montreal FFM 2015

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The latest film by renowned Iranian director Majid Majidi (3-time winner of the Grand Prix des Amériques) will open the festival and have its world premiere at the 39th Montreal World Film Festival, it was announced. This 171-minute epic on the early years of the prophet of Islam is, with a budget of over $50 million, the most expensive film ever made in Iran, and has been in production for five years. “The Festival is very proud to be able to host the premiere of this important work, a film of very high artistry aimed at a very wide audience,” declared MWFF President Serge Losique. “There have been many movies dealing with key figures of the world’s great religions, including Jesus, Moses and Buddha, but this is only the second epic screen treatment of Islam’s founder.”

 

Majidi, who has been a frequent visitor to the MWFF, will accompany his film to Montreal along with principal members of his cast and crew.

 

By the order of Abraha, King of Habasha, one of his army commanders launches an attack on Mecca in order to destroy the Kaaba. He leads a well-equipped force comprised of thousands of soldiers, horses and elephants. As the army approaches Mecca, the elephants respond to divine order by halting and refusing to continue. Millions of small birds then release a hail of stones onto Abraha’s forces and the army is annihilated. A month later, Muhammad is born. This film depicts the pagan age with all its tyranny and oppression as seen through the eyes of Muhammad from birth to the age of 13.

 

Starring many of Iran’s top actors, the film’s crew includes such renowned international craftsmen and artists as director of photography Vittorio Storaro (Oscars for Apocalypse Now, Reds and The Last Emperor), editor Roberto Perpignani (Padre PadroneIl Postino, Caesar Must Die), special effects designer Scott E. Anderson (Oscar winner for Babe), makeup designer Gianetto De Rossi (1900, Fellini’s CasanovaDune) and Indian composer A. R. Rahman

 

The 39th Montreal World Film Festival will be held August 27  to September 7, 2015.

“The Hunger Games” Exhibit at “Discovery Times Square”

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0HG-NEW-ROTATOR

“The Hunger Games Exhibit” opens July 1st at “Discovery Times Square” on 44th Street. Throughout the years, the “Discovery Center” has hosted King Tut, Dead Sea Scrolls, Pirates Treasures, Pompeii, Bodies, and Legos. This exhibit is every bit as fabulous! It’s a really fun thing to do this summer. See the costumes they wore, the actual sets, and learn how to dodge arrows. Take home your own video and photos of you and your friends riding a chariot, approaching President Snow, and putting out a fire when your cape catches fire. The gift shop sells the coolest things like Katniss’ torn knit sweater! Must own!

photo

When and if you are in NYC, go and have fun!

 


“The Hunger Games” Exhibition at “Discovery Times Square”

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0
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0HG-NEW-ROTATOR

“The Hunger Games Exhibit” opens July 1st at “Discovery Times Square” on 44th Street. Throughout the years, the “Discovery Center” has hosted King Tut, Dead Sea Scrolls, Pirates Treasures, Pompeii, Bodies, and Legos. This exhibit is every bit as fabulous! It’s a really fun thing to do this summer. See the costumes they wore, the actual sets, and learn how to dodge arrows. Take home your own video and photos of you and your friends riding a chariot, approaching President Snow, and reacting when your cape catches fire. The gift shop sells the coolest memorabilia like Katniss’ torn knit sweater! Must own!

photo

When and if you are in NYC, go and have fun!

 

"Life Is Sacred": A Human Rights Watch Film Festival Premiere

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When's the last time a film about a mayor got your pulse racing? For attendees of the recent Human Rights Watch Film Festival at the Film Society of Lincoln Center, the answer must be Life Is Sacred, Andreas Dalsgaard's portrait of Antanas Mockus. And before that, it was surely Dalsgaard's 2009 documentary Cities on Speed: Bogota Change. That too centered on heady, twinkle-eyed Mockus.

The two-time mayor of Bogota is perhaps best summed up by the caped persona he playfully assumed as part of his historic campaign to redress civic dysfunction: "Super Citizen." Or was it his dramatic gesture of mooning a disruptive student assembly at the university where he previously served as dean (to expose "the color of peace -- white.")? Either way, such antics give a sense of Mockus's unorthodox approach to curbing violence and corruption in Colombia. It's said that, on his watch, homicides plunged by 70 percent and reports of road deaths were halved.

Reprising footage from Bogota Change, Dalsgaard's new film samples Mockus's transformative strategies such as deploying an army of mimes to ridicule traffic offenders. As we see, this is no ordinary politician. The soft-spoken son of Lithuanian immigrants came to public service by way of philosophy, mathematics and innate creativity.

The film's title itself is taken from a mantra Mockus introduced as part of his societal clean-up initiative using visual and verbal symbols. Life is Sacred explores how these ideas -- and the young, bright-eyed supporters they rally -- power his attempt to run for president in 2010.

One such idealist is Katherine Miranda, a Green Party adept who essentially narrates the documentary. Decades of drug-fueled, politically abetted turbulence has left her and many of her compatriots desperate for peace. The urgency for Miranda is to reach it within her grandmother's lifetime.

It's easy to see that Mockus is a pied piper for anyone like Miranda who seeks a new Colombian ethos. Whether it's because -- or in spite -- of his professorial style is at times less obvious. The film squarely establishes that the man's radical vision, enlightened strategies and unflashy charisma loft him above the unctuous machinations of Colombia's typical politicos. But it begs the question of whether precisely the quirky thoughtfulness that so endeared Mockus to Bogota's good citizenry worked against him on the national stage.  

Dalsgaard shows us some of the key players who did just that: work against Mockus on the national stage. One of the big villains in this story is J.J. Rendon, whose media-savvy tactics and vote-buying tricks helped sway the electorate behind Mockus's opponent, Juan Manuel Santos Santos. There's nothing banal about the film's revelation that Mockus has dropped out of the fray. Dalsgaard himself must have learned a thing or two from his inspired subject about how and when to put over a message -- and the thinking behind it -- for maximal effect. It's only the most arresting twist in a narrative pumped with the unexpected and the uncommon.

Spanning some eight years, Life Is Sacred is unabashedly taken with Mockus. Even when showing him in his most vulnerable moments, the film's enthusiasm is infectious. Notable among these is Mockus's moving exchange with his mother, a fiercely independent artist who is his sharpest critic and consultant. A few more such intimate scenes would have been welcome for mining deeper insights into what makes Mockus tick. Similarly, the film could have used a mite more context about the zeitgeist in which he began formulating his redemptive platform. And that's to say nothing of its conspicuous omission of America's history of meddling in Colombia's troubled arena. Nonetheless, Dalsgaard succeeds in making Life's complex issues not only graspable but compulsively watchable, and its Super Citizen an all-too human hero to root for. 

Save 25% with Filmfestivals.com Partner Offer for The Zurich Summit Membership

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2nd Annual Zurich Summit| September 26 - 27, 2015 | Zurich, Switzerland

We’re thrilled to announce our first Keynote Speaker for this year’s Zurich Summit!

Thomas Ebeling, Chief Executive Officer of
ProSiebenSat1 Media AG, will address the
"Future of European’s Media Industry."

The Zurich Summit brings together entrepreneurs, leaders and creative luminaries in film, entertainment and media for an exceptional gathering that revolves around the exchange of new ideas, making new contacts and exploring the latest global business models.

Over the course of the next three months we’ll be announcing exciting updates to the 2nd Annual Zurich Summit programming. Our weekend summit will once again begin with a full day of compelling keynotes and discussions on Saturday, September 26 followed by high-level networking with two exclusive events. On Sunday, September 27, we will host the Charity Tennis Tournament and the Traditional Investor’s Dinner for honorary guests of the Zurich Film Festival and the Summit.



Past keynote speakers and panelists have included award-winning producers Michael Shamberg, John Lesher, Nicolas Chartier, Stacey Sher, and Greg Shapiro. Special guests of our networking events have been Harvey Weinstein, Peter Fonda, Susan Sarandon, Benicio del Toro, Richard Gere, and Melissa Leo.

We hope you join us at Switzerland’s top 5-star hotel The Dolder Grand – Zurich is absolutely breathtaking at that time of year!

Become a Member Now:
Participation in the Zurich Summit is only possible with membership and space is limited. As a member, you and your guest benefit from access to all events; and you will receive the following:

  • 2 tickets for Zurich Summit @ The Dolder Grand (incl. lunch and drinks)
  • 2 cinema tickets for a selected Gala Premiere @ Zurich Film Festival
  • 2 invitations to the Zurich Summit Tennis Tournament
  • 2 tickets for the Zurich Summit Dinner
  • 2 tickets for the Zurich Summit After Party

Membership fee (including one guest) CHF 3'000. For a limited time, save 25% with discount code FEST21. To take advantage of this special rate, please register here by July 17, 2015.

Many Thanks to Our Sponsors and Partners:

Produced by Zurich Summit Co-Chairs:


Katherine Winston
Winston Baker


Amy Baker
Winston Baker


Karl Spoerri
Zurich Film Festival

To learn more about the forum, contact Customer Service at cs@winstonbaker.com
or visit our website at www.ZurichSummit.com

© 2015 Winston Baker. All rights reserved.

 

Call for Entries: 14th Pune Internatioal Film Festival

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The 14th Pune International Film Fesival is being held from 14th - 21st January, 2016.

 

Call for entries: For the World Cinema competition & Marathi Cinema Competition

 

Cash Awards: 

World Cinema

  1. Government of Maharashtra “Prabhat” Best International Film Rs. 10LACS
  2. Government of Maharashtra “Prabhat” Best International Film Director Rs. 5LACS

Marathi Cinema

  1. Government of Maharashtra - “Sant Tukaram ” Best International Marathi Film Rs. 5Lac.

Akhil Bhartiya Marathi Chitrapat Mahamandal

  1. Best Director Rs.25,000
  2. Best Actor Rs.25,000
  3. Best screenplay Rs.25,000
  4. Best Cinematographer Rs.25,000
  5.  
  6.  For more details please visit our website: www.piffinidia.com or contact us on piff@piffindia.com

Check these partner festivals calling July 1st onwards

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                    FOLLOW US ON THE SOCIAL NETWORKS:     Facebook  Twitter  YouTube  RSS                                                                                                                                       

Dear filmmakers friends do not miss these Festivals in Focus. The next eBlast is may 30 with more festivals to watch.

 

Digital Gym

> PARTNERS FESTIVALS IN FOCUS

 

World Trailer Awards - London October 16

 

 

Early Bird Deadline July 30th, 2015

Announcing Call for Entry for the Inaugural World Trailer Awards in partnership with filmfestivals.com

Kicks off in London this fall.

Earlybird Deadline is July 30th

For more information and to submit your trailer, please visit to www.Worldtrailerawards.com

Website I Submit I  Facebook I Twitter I Contact Evelyn Waters

 

Digital Gym

MANHATTAN SHORT 2015  September 25 to October 4, 2015 

Final Call For Entries: Deadline July 31.

Filmmakers have until July 31st to get their films and screenplays into NYC if they hope to be part of the 18th Annual MANHATTAN SHORT Film Festival to take place in over 250 cinemas across 6 continents. MANHATTAN SHORT is more than just one of the largest short film festivals in the world today, it’s the world’s first and only global film festival.

Manhattan Short on Filmfestivals.com I Website I Submit on Filmfreeway I Submit on Manhattan Short I Facebook I Twitter I Contact Nick Mason

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The World of Film Festival October 1-4 2015

In partnership with filmfestivals.com

The World of Film Festival, formerly known as Commonwealth Film & Theatre Festival Glasgow is coming back for its second edition October 1-4 2015. In four days full of film screenings, theatre performances, live events, panel discussions and networking receptions WoFF will bring new, more vibrant and youthful vibe to the city’s emerging film and theatre scene.

WoFF’s errand is to bring together audiences from Glasgow’s multi-stranded art scene, while at the same time engaging people with powerful background in film and theatre that will bring fresh ideas, filling the gaps in Glasgow’s film and theatre events’ agenda.

WoFF Glasgow's blog on filmfestivals.com I Website: woffglasgow.com I Submit on Filmfreeway I Contact:  Martin Petrov

Digital GymUniversal Film Festival September 24 -26

user
Regular Deadline July 31

The 9th Annual Universal Film Festival will be held in Kansas City this September.  Go to Film Freeway  and submit your film today! We are seeking all genres including documentaries of any length; feature films that are at least 60 minutes in length; and short films that are a minimum of 15 minutes in length. The mission of the Universal Film Festival is to create and provide a credible and accessible venue for aspiring and talented filmmakers.  The Universal Film Festival offers a medium in which Independent Filmmakers may showcase their works nationally and internationally.      All entries are $50.00 by PayPal or credit card. Waiver for Foreign and Student Films upon request. 

Universal Film Festival's blog on filmfestivals.com I Website: www.universalfilmfestival.com/I Submit on Filmfreeway I Contact: info@universalfilmfestival.com 

Digital Gym

Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival November 6 - 22, 2015

Final Deadline August 15

Celebrating its 30th annual festival in 2015, the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival (FLIFF) presents American indies and studio films, international films, special tributes and seminars and introduces industry leaders to South Florida audiences. The fall festival runs October-November, and annually screens foreign and independent films in Fort Lauderdale, Weston, Pompano Beach, Sunrise, Hollywood, St Augustine, Amelia Island, Jacksonville, Tallahassee, Daytona Beach and The Bahamas. Considered one of the most important regional film festivals in the U.S., the Festival's commitment to first-time filmmakers and innovative programming make it the perfect test market for filmmakers. In partnership with filmfestivals.com

FLIFF on filmfestivals.com I Website I Submit  I WaB I Facebook I Twitter I Contact Gregory von Hausch

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MORE FESTIVALS CALLING

http://www.filmfestivalspro.com/channel/festivals/call_for_entry

DEADLINES APPROACHING FAST: 
June Deadlines

Browse by dates, genre... in the search engine

 

THE DISCOVERY SECTION

Browse our site for other festival calling now.

Bookmark this link

 

Add a film listing to your profile, your free entry in the film directory on filmfestivals.com
http://www.filmfestivals.com/en/node/add/film

Feed your blog profile, promote for free
http://www.Filmfestivals.com/node/add

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PROMOTE YOUR FILM AND GET READY FOR THE FESTIVAL CIRCUIT.

We can offer Festival consulting and marketing services to fit your film ambitions.


-          The 500€ Festival Fast Track 

The Festival Fast Track service offers you a presence in the film showcase page with links and video streaming. The Film promotion Showcase is a combination of online services, (charged 500€ or about $690) that will bring recognition from our international audience who trust us as the only international media totally dedicated to the festival circuit. The Film promotion Showcase includes all those features: 

Film directory Database listing of your film. Ready for a quick initial evaluation.

- Your film and logo featured on the Showcase Section (linked from all pages) to highlight the film blog itself (example here) including a dedicated page.

Newsletter messages:  2 runs to our newsletter audience of 197 000 (4 lines) sample

Editorial on filmfestivals.com about your film, 1 article guaranteed.

One week long banner campaign on our sites. 728X90 pixels

- And we include your film in our monthly blast to festival programmers and other festival staffers 

 

-          The 350€ Film Showcase Booster

The package includes the previous packages benefits less the banner campaign.  

-           The 150€ Filmmakers Showcase Eblast to festival Programers 

The package and includes your ad in the eBlast with 4 lines promo : visual, title, link to trailer, synopsis 190$ 150€ 

 

We can also brainstorm with a range of packages include your film blog promotion with banners and newsletter ads  

We can also discuss a Cannes presence as we are a regular partner of Cannes Market.

We can work with you on a consulting basis around a viral campaign

We help some filmmakers and assist them in the Festival Circuit designing the strategy, handling festival submissions, waiving submission feees, negotiating screening fees...

Just ask me bruno@m21entertainment.com

 

Rather than pushing to scores of festivals let the film be noticed AND asked for by Fest directors?

Look for publishing help here: http://www.filmfestivals.com/en/blog/filmfestivals/register_a_film

Check the 10 good reasons to open a blog on filmfestivals.com.

Happy new year and good luck for your film...  

The Filmfestivals.com  team

 

Kind regards
Bruno Chatelin

bruno@filmfestivals.com

 

 

 

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