Dances With Films Waltzes to a Close – Our Reviews Part 1

Dances with Films began June 13 and concluded June 23rd, but our reviews are just taking the stage. The 11 day festival offered a wide-range of exciting feature-length narrative films, documentaries, pilots, TV projects, and stellar shorts.

With more than 200 projects screened, we did not catch them all, but we did see 41 hours of cinema – with a small bouquet of screeners we have yet to view ahead.

Here comes the first installment of our capsule reviews; previously posted: opening night review of Apple Seed.

We saw three blocks of shorts in one day, and never tired of them: there were a profound number of gems.

Competition Shorts Block 1 included:

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Master Yoshi’s Terrible Day, a delightful and poignant comedy that writer/director Ken Lin describes as “based on a video of a master sensai that went viral. He was beaten by a student and I wanted to explore what happens when you lose your sense of direction.” The film starred Lin’s actor/neighbor – Lin wrote the part for Jun Suenaga, speaking above.

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The Beach was also inspired by a true event – a family history. The intense and moving story of a father trying to keep his children out of social services custody,  the passion project of co-writers Toroes D Thomas Jr., Blayre Pichon – Thomas also directed – was shot “rogue indie style” in Baton Rouge.

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Infertile Hearts, a story told entirely through music and dance, tackled the difficult subject of infertility, seeking to raise awareness of the issues surrounding a common yet taboo-subject. Writer Colleen Hartnett (speaking above) also co-starred in a sweeping film directed by Kevin R. Phipps. Hartnett explained “I did infertility treatment for a long time. As soon as we got our miracle we shot the film quickly before I started showing. We filmed it to the song, but we didn’t edit it that way.”

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Washland Express was an hilarious “crime noir” from writer/director Camille Campbell. “I usually write dysfuctional comedy,” Campbell says. There are elements of that genre here as well. Campbell’s first time directing effort sparkles in a story of a drug-taking doctor and her car wash hook-up tailor-made for her lead actress Jennifer Allcott (speaking above).

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Evie tackles the subject of child brides. “I hear a story about this on the radio, and when I wrote this, we partnered with Unchained at Last who are working to help change laws and deal with this,” writer Marc Fellner-Erez and writer/director, Mike Peebler explained (speaking, above). It is their 5th short film together, and the lead was hauntingly performed by Caitlin Durkin.

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In Consent, a reversal of sex roles makes sexual coercion into a comedy, with the tale of an aggressive female bar singer played by the film’s writer Rebekka Johnson. Director: Kimmy Gatewood “did a favor for me,” Johnson reported in helming the sharply funny project.

Fish Head, from writer/director Marcos Durian used events taken from Durian’s feature script based on family dynamics and social prejudices in the life of a Filipino-American boy.

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The second block of competition shorts included the long-form, moving story of male friendship, Raceland. Set in the south, it is the story of two best friends for life who may or may not have sexual feelings toward each other.  Writer/director Scott Bloom said “It came about as a reaction to some of the toxic masculinity and homophobia swirling around the Internet. I dreamed up a story about two men who were incredibly close.” The actors all knew each other , and hewed closely to the intimate script.

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Dance with a Demon tackled the subject of depression as if it were a demon who possessed the young mother in the film. “I’ve had family members who struggled with depression,  and for them it was as if they were battling a demon,” writer/director Mitch Bax said (speaking, above). The work combined the vibe of a supernatural experience with the highly pertinent yet persistently taboo discussion of handling mental health issues.

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In Something Like Loneliness, writers Ryan Dowler and Seth Epstein used poetic visuals in piece that was originally a theatrical play. Directed by Seth Epstein and Ben Epstein, the story was based on a friend who was isolating himself, and searching for connection with an equally lonely neighbor, in a world where sounds are preserved like treasures.

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The animated Retro was graphically gorgeous and filmed from story boards, according to writer/director/producer Aaron Lindenthaler. “I was interested in a charcter that you couldn’t tell if the guy was a hero or a villian. It was done in little bursts of color, greys, and sepias.”

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The whimsical romance-that-never-was For the Girl in the Coffee Shop, came from writer/director Rebekah Jackson. “It’s about connection,” Jackson said, “And the use of some cutesie pastel dreamland sequences were used to take audiences on the same journey as (lead character) Will.”

The decidedly chilling Wanda, a French Canadian film about a very troubled girl running away from home, was one of the rare shorts shot on 16mm film.  It was directed by Benjamin Nicolas.

Shorts Block Three brought films including the gangster-film asethetic with “a modern twist of surveillance and the police depicted as a gang” of rival thugs in Five Families, directed and co-written by Adam Cushman, who penned along with Barry Primus.

Big Boy Pants was an hilarious, twist and turn filled romp between con artist brother and sister that grew out of a script originally written as an Upright Citizens Brigade live sketch performance by Scarlett Bermingham, and adapted with director Phillip Montgomery. “What stood out,” Montgomery said “was the conceit seemed like a typical groom with cold feet story, and it was twisted on its head.”

With The Automaton, writer/director W. Alex Reeves takes his “fascination with the turn of the century period science” and puts it to good use in the Old West-set relationship between a young widow, her dementia-inflicted mother, and the widow’s deceased husband’s robotic creation, Otto.

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In The Night Before, writer Brendon Slee and writer/director Mragendra Singh give us a character study of a deaf Indian-American bride on the night before her wedding, as she means with her former same-sex lover in a take on “Indian guilt… I wanted to try something with sign language” Slee related.

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One of my favorites, the very off-beat Mr. Sam, came about due to a part of an idea presented to writer/director Zeus Kontoyannis’ by his brother. “I took my brother’s pitch and nailed it down into a character I could create who does creepy things in the dark, but make him heroic, and someone you could root for.”  The short was originally intended as a feature – and Kontoyanis hopes to take this deeply involving, twist-and-turn-filled story of a small town mortician down that route soon. We hope he does.

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The first of three competition features we viewed was Two Ways Home. The film, starring the dynamic Tanna Frederick (above), who also produced, tackled an important subject – bipolar illness and how like any other illness, it can be managed with proper care. Writer Richard Schinnow and director Ron Vignone said “our cast brought heart and soul to the film,” which was championed by the National Alliance for Mental Illness.

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While it handled the shouldn’t-be-taboo but is subject of mental illness with care, the project was uneven with a story that included a cantankerous grandfather, a rebellious 12-year-old, an ex-husband, and the scourge of factory farming.

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Written by Chris Lee Hill and directed by Tom Morris, the pitch-perfect romantic comedy/disaster movie fusion of Blowing Up Right Now was inspired by the false bomb alert that terrified Oahu last year.

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Using friends and primarily one location in a ten-day shoot,  the falling-apart relationship of Shep and Mandy reaches its nadir as a missle strike is scheduled to hit LA. The script was brilliantly mordant with a terrific series of twists and turns throughout.

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We only saw one midnight feature this year, but it was a fun ride. Driven, primarily shot in the car of an exasperated, wanna-be stand-up comic/rideshare driver, gave us demons and a demon slayer in a fun, tense two-hander with comic tone. Writer Casey Dillard (who also co-starred, along with the wonderfully matched Richard Speight, Jr) and director Glenn Payne are both from Tupelo, Miss., where the project was shot. Smart, sharp, and perfectly cast.

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It was Dillard’s first feature script, and made with the goal of keeping the film primarily in the car, which had its own set of challenges. “We thought it would be interesting to shoot in the car,” Payne related, “and it was. But it was not easy.” They just made it look like it was.

More shorts and features to come!

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke 

Dances with Films Offers an Actor’s Inspiring Swan Song for Opening Night

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Dances with Films opened it’s 22nd year of independent cinema with the theme “Limitless.” The opening night film, Apple Seed, is a good example of just that – what you can do with limitless love for a project.

Written for the late Rance Howard (father of Ron and Clint Howard, yes, that Ron Howard), writer/director/co-star Michael Worth took 15 years to realize the project, a beautifully shot, poetic labor of love and tribute to the elder Howard.

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On a cross country road trip following a misguided plan to rob his hometown bank, Prince McCoy  – reeling from the death of his father and the foreclosure of a hotel rehab project the pair were working on —ends up traveling with ex-con Carl Robbins, a philosophizing, sometimes-preaching ex-con trying to make amends, and open to building friendships and offering Zen-like wisdom.

It’s an odd couple/buddy picture with great original music, two terrific star performances, and the kind of scruffy, banged-up, but lovable characters that you don’t see nearly enough of in mainstream cinema. Not that the film doesn’t have mainstream appeal and plenty of heart, just like DWF itself.

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Worth says “I did a film with Rance in Flagstaff, Arizona and I knew I had to do a film for him. It was just one of those things I wanted to get made. We completed the project just before Rance passed away.”

Casting Clint with father Rance as a father and son in the film was serendipity for Worth. “It was the best day directing ever,” he asserts.

The younger Howard relates “It was such a blessing. Dad could always shine as a character actor, and he always came prepared, always rehearsed everything.”

Dasha Chadwick, who plays the role of, and sings the music of, a talented musician named Dallas in the film, says “Rance reminded me of a magical fairy tale creature. He made you feel you were magic, but I also felt lazy as hell. He was always on point, always grateful. He said this was his 301st film.”

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Above, Worth with Clint Howard

The shoot took 15 days and was split between Arizona and Vermont. The completion of the film was a bittersweet milestone with Rance’s passing, Worth says. “The most fun part was coming up with the things Rance said. I’d always hoped the film would be made while Rance was alive, and we did it.”

Clint Howard adds “He dreamed of it, he did it, he did all the looping, and then he passed away.”

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The film makes a fitting elegy for Rance Howard, and a great start for what appears to be a stellar year at Dances with Films.

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DWF screens at the TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood. Individual tickets are $20,  Festival passes are $375 for ten days of programming.

Visit www.danceswithfilms.com for more information and to purchase tickets.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

Final Day of Mammoth Lakes Film Festival Programming and Awards Ceremony: A Winner of a Day for a Winning Film Festival

 

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The final day of Mammoth Lakes Film Festival’s 5th year began with another strong set of shorts in Shorts Block 5. Who’s a Good Boy was a surreal take on man-as-dog; Pastel Noir,  below, was inspired by director Beau Bardos listening to a podcast from David Lynch who said “‘One day I was painting and I wanted to make a movie'”

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Bardos added “which I really dug, so I made a movie.”  He made it using images of some actors he would dearly love to cast: Bogart and Brando, plus a collage-like pastel take on a noir tale of a kidnapped heroine who stabs her would-be attacker and then hails a ride home. Squirrel was an ironic, delightful, and really rich story about a man whose inappropriate texting-while-driving caused an accident that left a woman a parapleigic — and his apology to her, and her attendance at his birthday party, and the way in which both of their lives was inextricably altered. And it’s funny.

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In License and Registration, director Jackson Ezinga, above,  stars as a police impersonator whose first arrest gravely misfires. Shot in Ezinga’s Grand Rapids’ neighborhood, this terrific character study offered drama, pathos, and humor with a strong script and directorial focus.  “I starred in it by default when my lead actor couldn’t make it, and everything was set up already,” he related, acknowleding that writing, starring and directing was “a lot.” Despite that, Ezinga multi-helmed a terrific, engaging piece.

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Directors Ryan Betschart and Rachel Nakawatase – Nakawatase also scored – produced A Collection of Attempt in Astral Travel. The abstract work was inspired by the books of parapsychologist D. Scott Rogo and uses colors that are liquid-based through the use of a multi-plane, upshooter camera. The married duo are planning to create a feature doc that includes this type of footage, but the process was paintstaking: it took two years to create the six minute animation.  023 _GRETA-S presents a young actress’ emotionaly devastating and manipulative audition experience; while from Iran, Like a Good Kid rounded out the shorts program with a tense depiction of a nanny tormented by her bratty 5-year-old charge when caught in a theft.

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The sharply hilarious and frightening short Hot Dog preceded the screening of narrative feature No Exit. Hot Dog gives us a very bad and ultimately halucinogenic day in the life of a brusque female cop. Director T.J. Yoshizaki, above,  says the idea for the project began when a rather rude female cop blocked in his own car. “Somehow I built a story around it.” The director joked in regard to a question about an extremely well-staged hit and run accident in the film: “Don’t worry, only one actor was killed.”  The smart short made a worthy opening to a fresh, eerie horror-suspense film set and entirely filmed in Kazakhastan, No Exit.

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This film was shot by writer/director Sarah L. Wilson who was teaching in Kazakhastan, and who started the project as a committment to the students she taught. A success both in terms of its realization, it’s insight into a location we rarely see, and its terrific use of first-time acting talent, the film works quite well as “just” a good horror film, while also touching on family relationships, life and death, and cultural tropes. “When I was asked to go to Kazakhastan to teach, I went. The country healed me after someone close to me committed suicide,” Wilson explained. “I’d made government commercials there when I was teaching and my students told me they wanted to make a feature film, so I agreed.”

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Her lead actor, Bexultan Sydykov, had a nightmare which he shared with Wilson, in which he dreamed he was trapped in his family’s house – this inspired the film.  “They’re a real family, and he’d recently lost his father in real life,” the director relates. “His whole family – two brothers, his mother, were in the film along with him. That’s their real house in the film. We shot for ten days, and we literally stole every location,  including the subway. When the security guards – who take themselves very seriously in Khazakhastan – would ask, I’d say I was just teaching, and they’d let us shoot. ” The project should have a rosy future:  Wilson and her students have a deal to do an eight- part television series based on the film with the Khazakhastan national film studio. “We’re going to pitch it to an American TV company to do a co-production, but I want it to stay in Kazakhastan.”

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Two documentary films rounded out the festival: the first,  Jawline, follows the odyssey of wanna-be social media influencer Austyn Tester, a 16-year-old newcomer attempting to become the next big internet crush. Also in the film: the fan girls who support him and so many others; a successful internet talent agent – just 18 himself – and a look at Tester’s family, home life, aspirations, dreams, and the sincerity that ultimately makes succeeding in this Internet world difficult. Of her thoroughly accomplished film with its visceral character arc, director Liza Mandelup says “I wanted to film someone who had a high stakes situation, someone who dropped everything to try something. I was told about Austyn – I was looking for someone like him – and that’s how the film began. Ultimately he didn’t have the superficial qualities to stay in the business, and really this is a commentary on the oversaturated post-social media gold rush. When I first started filming, I thought I was covering a rise-to-fame concept, but this is a more complex story.” The film will have an August theatrical release date as well as a release on Hulu.

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Bronwyn Maloney, the graphic artist who created an astonishing opening teaser for the festival featuring archaic images of regional fossils, was thanked by festival director Shira Dubrovner and program director Paul Sbrizzi, above, at the start of the closing film of the festival. Bittersweet to see the festival end, this final day was terrific, including the last screening, a solid telling of the Chelsea Manning story in XY Chelsea. The whistle blower’s story, from its political and social aspects to her own personal odyssy as a trans soldier and prisoner, are expressed well in a film with brooding insights over what it means to be a social activist – and what constitutes activism – in today’s America.

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After the last film, guests headed over to the Mammoth Lakes Polo Event Center for a lively awards ceremony and party. The warm, jubilant, and inclusive event echoes the way in which this highly professional yet intimate festival itself is run each year. Awards from both jury and audience were presented, craft cocktails from Devil’s Creek Distillery, Blue Moon brews, Black Box wine, and Bleu Handcrafted foods kept guests sated while prizes were announced.

Awards are listed below.

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Jury Award for Best North American Narrative Feature, with a $1,000 cash prize, $10,000 Panavision Camera Rental Grant and $10,000 Light Iron Post Production Package, went to A Great Lamp.

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Special Mention went to actor Max Wilde for his performance and animation in A Great Lamp.

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Jury Award for Best International Narrative Feature, with a $500 cash prize, went to Cat Sticks.

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Special Mention went to No Exit.

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Jury Award for Best North American Documentary Feature, with a $1,000 cash prize, went to 17 Blocks.

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Jury Award for Best International Documentary Feature, with a $500 cash prize, was won by Clean Hands.

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Special Mention went to Juan, above.

Jury Award for Best Narrative Short, with a $500 cash prize and $5,000 VER Rental Grant, went to Molly’s Single.

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Special Mention for strong editing, cinematography and acting was given to the terrific Enough Is Enough, above.

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Special Mention for choreographed storytelling went to Diva & Astro, the film’s astonishing direction and cinematography (director and cinematographer above) was impressive.

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Jury Award for Best Documentary Short, with a $500 cash prize, went to The Clinic.

Jury Award for Best Animation Short, with a $500 cash prize, received by the intensely moving Dani.

Special Jury Award for Bravery, with a $500 cash prize, was received by doc Midnight Family.

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Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature, with a $1,000 cash prize and $5,000 Panavision Camera Rental Grant, went to the impressive No Exit, above. 

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Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature, with $1,000 cash prize, was awarded to JuanThe award for this true labor of love film was even more important today than at any other time: a premiere in the director’s – and the film’s – country of origin, Venezuela, was cancelled due to current policial/social circumstances there.  It’s a beautiful film, and one that celebrates the heritage of the nation itself, as well as the work of its titular artist and guru, Juan Sanchez.

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Paul Rudder, festival sponsor, above with Shira Dubrovner. Rudder said “I want to thank Shira for this festival, and I want to than everyone for coming. We are glad to have you here in Mammoth Lakes. We’re a ski town,  where some people think culture is someone who left a book behind at a McDonald’s.  You, your presence, proves them wrong.”

Jurors included:

North American Narrative Features Jury: Mia Galuppo (The Hollywood Reporter), Sean McDonnell (A24) and Katie Walsh (Tribune News Service, Los Angeles Times)

International Narrative Features Jury: Shalini Doré (Variety) and Max Weinstein (MovieMaker Magazine)

North American Documentary Features Jury: Allison Amon (Bullitt) and Andrew Borden (1091 Media)

International Documentary Features Jury: Gus Krieger (Filmmaker) and Jacques Thelemaque (Filmmakers Alliance)

Shorts Jury: Delila Vallot (Filmmaker) and Harry Vaughn (Sundance Film Festival Programmer)

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To sum up the festival: it was terrific; and each of the films we saw are more than worth viewing, supporting, and celebrating. As always:  the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival, program director Paul Sbrizzi, and festival director Shira Dubrovner (below) have created unique programming that’s rewarding to see, and a festival experience that’s a celebration of film, originality of vision, and community spirit. It’s no easy task, but it is an important one.

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  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke 

 

Friday Film Slate Rocks at Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019

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A wide variety of entirely unique film-going adventures marked Friday’s packed slate at the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019.

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Shorts Block 2 began our programming day with a mix of comedy, drama, and even a musical. From the U.K., Deadpan is an hilarious dark comedy about a stand-up comic’s true love: who can’t laugh, or she literally might die. Ready for Love was also brilliantly funny, a three-time approach by the mythical Amber Lee Weatherbee as she attempts to become a contestant on The Bachelor. Hastings quietly projects a disconnect – and a connection – between mother and daughter when one of several siblings flies home to celebrate her mother’s birthday.

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Heirophany is an evocatively shot black and white work in which two teens plot to steal a backpack full of rabbits; one witnesses a dramatically beautiful falcon,  and changes his mind. Director Kevin Contento explained that the short’s unique location in Bell Glade, Fla. was chosen in part because he lives 40 minutes south of that community. “Before I went to film school, I was into falconry and went to that area with an experienced falconer who lost his bird while we were there. He got it back, but I wanted to give the story more of an abstract feel but use the location and also include a simpler story about rabbit hunters in the sugar cane fields.”  He chose black and white in part because he’s an Ingmar Bergman fan,  but also because he felt the approach “allows you to give yourself more to the story.”

Difference, a cleverly constructed short from Iranian director Ali Asadollahi, follows the funny/sad story of three young men who accuse each other of hallucinating one of the three,  insisting that each is correct and the others are wrong.

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Rewind was a stunning film from Ying Liu Hatch. The Chinese/American short dazzles with its original music and a delightful, moving twist involving true love an A.I. The lush cinematography by Sean Odea contributed to the film’s magic. Hatch says “We shot in eight days, and my biggest accomplishment was the use of the metro in the first scene. I had to write a special proposal – and shamelessly used my crew’s credits – to get clearance. We had a four hour limit, and shot late at night. In the metro station we had to find a guy to turn on the escalator again, as it was turned off for the night.” The crew was able to add a second 3.5 hour session the next day, by convincing the metro’s powers-that-be that the film would be good publicity. Hatch’s passion project was the first production she’s shot in China.

Feature doc Buddy, from acclaimed international director Heddy Honigmann, crafts a moving story about six service dogs and their owners. The poignant story shapes beautifully realized portraits of each dog and their person.

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Preceding Buddy, was a terrific stop-motion short, Dani. Director Elizabeth Hogenson, appearing with  the real-life cancer survivor and titular character of Dani, says the film started after she overheard her roommate’s actual conversation with her mother, which Dani had taped for use in a podcast she created. “It moved me, so I asked if I could take her phone recording and turn it into a stop action animation, which I was studying in grad school.”  She felt that the “use of stop action is so tactile and connected, it makes it more comfortable when dealing with something so heavy.” Dani, who just finished chemotherapy this February, had not listened to the recorded conversation since Hogenson first made the film. “It made me emotional all over again,” she attests – the same affect the short had on many members of the viewing audience.

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Juan is an international documentary that touches on elements of magical realism in the story of director Adrian Geyer returning to the site of his parents’ transformative visit to iconic folk artist Juan Felix Sanchez’ mountain home. Set in the voluptuously beautiful mountains of Venezuela, the film offers a poetic view of the meaning of art and find in purpose in one’s life. “It was magical discerning the same steps my parents took. This is the third part of a project I’ve been working on about Sanchez. I did a short film, and an art installation. It was really complex to do it,” he says, touching on the months-long process of securing some of the interviews with those who knew the late Sanchez when he was alive, and the 8-hour rugged horseback trek to Sanchez’ former home the site of many of his carvings and chapel. With an altitude of 13,000-feet and absolutely no amenities available, Geyer rose to the challenge literally in terms of creating this insightful work.

Paired with this feature was Autumn Waltz, a palpably tension-filled depiction of an encounter between a couple fleeing a besieged village and encountering hostile soldiers.  The Serbian film is edge-of-your-seat thrilling.

Rounding out the films viewed was something much lighter, the Nick Kroll-starrer Olympic Dreams, a loose romantic dramedy between a lonely volunteer dentist and a young cross-country skier athlete. The film’s setting was undeniably fresh and exciting: shot in the actual Athlete Village during the Winter Olympic Games, and featuring real Olympic athletes including romantic lead Alexi Pappas. Director Jeremy Teicher is an area local; the film had a strong improvisational flavor, doubtlessly attributable in part to Kroll.

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The film was paired with the truly tear-bringing – yet also richly humorous – short Jack, in which lead and writer Ryan Gaul successfully culls humor and heart-felt poignancy from the necessity of putting a beloved cat to rest. Gaul says “I’ve watched it about 600 times and it still affects me. The genesis of it was a sketch at the Groundlings (comedy theater), but our decision was to make it more real.” Director Nick Paonessa adds “There was a little improv in it, but the script was pretty tight. I cut three minutes out of the film because I worked to find real balance between what was sad and what made you laugh.” Although the film took literally just five hours to shoot in its entirety, it took the cast and crew a year to set it up and make.  “We purposely wanted to shoot something simple. It just felt meant to be. It’s really a film about this character’s unwillingness to confront the reality of this situation, and come to terms with it.”

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Post-screenings, the festival hosted filmmaker and other screening attendees at Mammoth Rock n’ Bowl for pizza, beer, bowling, and talk about films, of course.

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  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke, Genie Davis