Taking Another Waltz: Dances with Films 19

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Dances with Films 19 finished a week ago, and the festival continued to amaze even as it drew to a close. Missed the fest this year? Then put it on your calendars for next year, and do watch for the stellar films shown at the festival. While these reviews bring those screened at the event to a close, there are several we missed seeing in the theater that we’ll be catching up on shortly.

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Above, cast, crew, and advisors on The Track; with microphone, star Mariah Kirstie

The Track started as a short film by director Brett Caroline Levner, and was expanded into a feature by Levner and writer Matthew McCue. “I looked out my window one day,” Levner relates, “and I saw a 15 year old girl going in and out of cars, working as a prostitute.” Drawn to tell the story of underage, exploited children, Levner, who teaches film at University of Nevada Las Vegas, tackled the tough and moving story of Barbie.

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Played brilliantly by Mariah Kirstie, the girl comes into contact with a suburban woman who has just lost her daughter, played by Missy Yager.  “I come from a theater background,” Kirstie reports, “but for this character I didn’t do anything formal. I was so connected to her, I just wanted to stay in the moment with my performance.” Yager says “This is a woman’s issue, these little girls get arrested. My character had a calling to help.”

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The performances make the film, a true vehicle for social justice, into a compelling drama.

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Above, star Joe Burke in Dependents Day

Dependents Day, a very different film, also began as a short. Director David Lynch (below) found star Joe Burke and a ribald romantic comedy was born. “I love nuance,” Lynch says,  “I thought he was a firecracker and all I had to do was set him off.” The versatile Lynch was also director of a dramatic documentary screening at the festival, Victor Walk, which won the audience award in the docs category; but Dependents is pure levity.

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The story of a struggling actor claimed as ‘dependent” by his more successful girlfriend,  the film tackles love, LA lifestyle, and sexual mores with a witty vengence.

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Star Burke says “We put so much into this, I’m so emotional to have so many people I love in one room. I feel so blessed.” Shot in just 17 days, the comedy is zany, the performances from Burke and co-star Benita Robledo pitch perfect.

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Above with microphone, Kristin Wallace, co-writer/producer/star of Moments of Clarity

Moments of Clarity is a film that defies categorization. Sweet comedy, female buddy picture, road movie, witty take on independence, feminism, mental health issues – yes, all of those. A film that keeps you guessing, we loved it’s wild moments of comedy, touching sweetness, and screwball plot. Writer/producer Kristin Wallace plays lead Claire. Co-written by Wallace and Christian Lloyd, the film was directed by Stev Elam.

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Claire is the daughter of a repressed agoraphobic, who teams up with a pastor’s daughter to escape their home town, fix a broken camera, and come into their own. “I wanted to create more roles for women,” says Candian-born Wallace. “I’d just moved from Toronto to LA and felt very out of place, so I kind of connected with my inner child to create this character. I just wanted to follow this character who was unabashedly herself.” Shot in 15 days, the film has the look of a much larger-budgeted feature, with bright colors, hilarious set pieces, and the edge of dark-comedy ever sharpened.

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Wallace and Lloyd wrote only via email and didn’t meat Wallace and the rest of the production team until he came to the set for the last four days of shooting. “I Just sat there smiling like an idiot. It didn’t make sense that so many people came together to make such a wonderful film and have such a strong connection.”

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Director Elam says “I loved that the script had so much positivity and no violence. When I read the script I thought this is like a foreign film, but they have American names. Then they said they were Canadian,” he laughs.

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Whatever the origin, this is a don’t-miss. It releases in the fall of 2016, watch for it.

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Rounding up the fest’s final day at the TCL Chinese was Those Left Behind, a drama that grew from the director’s involvement in a documentary about suicide.

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The drama recounts a family’s struggle to come to terms with the grief over their son’s suicide 25 years earlier.

“You can live a joyous life and still struggle with depression,” says Grant Jordan, who plays the pivotal character of Jamie.

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“I think a lot about loss in my own life, and how unresolved grief comes back to people, so I wanted to use that. I had an amazing cast, I asked people to be very quiet, to let the performances and the story build slowly. It was like unpeeling an onion,” director Maria Finitzo says.

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Also viewed: Killing the Apologetic Girl, the fest’s audience award winner in the TV pilot category.  Writers Stephanie Little, Kimberly Aboltin – the latter also directed – have created a sweet and funny  story about the overly-apologetic Steph and her returned-from-Morocco decidedly unapologietic friend, Kim. Fresh and delightfully sarcastic, there’s a lot to like and much to want to see more of with these characters. Well-paced and exceptionally well-cast.

Don’t worry: Josephine Doe, Pop-Up, and fest top narrative award winner Virtual Revolution reviews are still coming up.

  • Genie Davis; All photos: Jack Burke

 

West Hollywood Arts Plan

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West Hollywood has always had a strong commitment to and interest in the arts. And now, as the city enters its 30th year, West Hollywood has now announced the next step in that commitment – establishing a formal arts plan. This extensive planning process bears the name “WEHO Arts: The Plan.”

Designed to explore the future of the arts, culture, and creativity in West Hollywood, the program is a community-focused cultural planning process. This inclusive program will be led by social practice artists Alyse Emdur and Rosten Woo, who are developing what the city terms “imaginative pathways for engagement.”

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It’s hardly a surprise that the city would want to create such a plan. Although WeHo is a diminutive 1.9 square miles in size, the city packs a mighty punch, conceivably providing more art per square mile than any other city in the U.S.

The plan to be developed will guide the work of the city’s Arts and Cultural Affairs Commission (ACAC) and Arts and Economic Development Division (AEDD) over the course of the next five to ten years. The goal? To celebrate the city’s artistic and cultural identity, acknowledge the city’s support of the arts, and present a shared future vision that firmly secures the position of arts and culture in the city.

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It’s fitting that West Hollywood should come up with such a plan, as the city’s support of the arts has long been a vital force in the community. This year alone, the city has supported the massive, 40-day arts program One City One Pride, held live dance and music performances, poetry readings, art exhibits, and established poetry installations. And the city is now fielding applications for the position of its second poet laureate.

So just what is the city’s new art plan? Throughout the year, interested individuals – including both residents and visitors – are invited to participate in an interactive series of formal and informal conversations, surveys, and artist-led activities, all designed to gain insight into the city’s continuing arts programs, and formulate a vision for the future.

West Hollywood’s government, the ACAC and AEDD are after something special: an arts plan that nurtures the energy and creative vitality of the city. Artists Emdur and Woo will join the ACAC commissioners, AEDD staff, and a cultural planning consultant through December, to create and define activities and experiences throughout the community that encourage contributions to the arts plan.

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Emdur and Woo are uniquely qualified to interact with the topics of artistic and cultural practice in West Hollywood. Emdur is an LA-based photographer who has created works of large format photography, video, and drawings. Her personal aesthetic is to search for deeper connections within her subjects. Exhibited nationally and internationally, Emdur’s 2013 book, Prison Landscapes, is all about connection.

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In it, there are photographs of prison inmates positioned before painted visiting room backdrops depicting ideal landscapes – in front of which they can pretend, however briefly, to be elsewhere.

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A designer, artist, and educator, Woo is co-founder of the Center for Urban Pedagogy, a New York-based non-profit that uses art and design to foster civic participation. He also teaches art and design at the California Institute of the Arts, Pomona College, and Art Center College of Design. Woo creates artistic engagements that help people understand complex systems, re-orient themselves to places, and participate in group decision-making.

The participatory projects Emdur and Woo will be presenting throughout the next six months are just one aspect of West Hollywood’s arts planning. Residents can also be involved online at www.weho.org/theplan and take The Plan’s quick online survey.

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In-person participation opportunities will be announced in the next few weeks, and will include arts and culture pop-ups, discussion series, and the WeHo Talks series. Just as the arts plan to be established will take into consideration the entire community, the planning process is meant to involve residents and visitors alike. Join in, as the city formulates its plan to remain a bastion of cultural support and programs.

John Mills at Rosamund Felsen – Not Just “For Your Eyes Only”

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John Mills’ solo show at Rosamund Felsen Gallery, For Your Eyes Only, is all about what you observe.  Above, the artist invites you to take a look.

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Above, Mills’ Nature Crush – are we loving nature to death?

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Evoking tribal art, Matisse, and the art of post-minimalist Richard Tuttle, Mills’ large scale oil, pencil, and graphite works are uniquely his own.  There’s humor and insight in these often symbolic and whimsical works.

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“For me, in the end, what I like to work on is visual signs, what makes an image, the lines, the shape, the form. I question the idea of consciousness. As an artist, the image ends up being a stand in for you, a mirror, a way to contemplate your existence,” Mills says.

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“I find pleasure in making pictures that can be light but that also bring in conceptual ideas,” the artist relates.

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Scoring his paint when wet, using pencil on top of dry paint, his work is all about “the process of making a picture.”

Whether you connect with his symbols or engage with the delicate yet edgy design, Mills work is about seeing, and his vision is one to behold.

The gallery is located at: 1923 S Santa Fe Ave #100
Los Angeles, CA 90021

  • Genie Davis; all photos: Jack Burke

For the Love of Carmine – Lena Moross at MuzeuMM

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Above, opening night at MuzeuMM – For the Love of Carmine

We’ve written about Lena Moross’  before, the passionate artist originally from St. Petersberg who has brought classical training and an impressionistic style to her now very-LA work. Running through July 11 at MuzeuMM, Moross’ large scale watercolor portraits in “For the Love of Carmine,” details Carmine, a transgender man that the artist met 5 years ago on a Hollywood street.

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Roses, wine, the delicate grace of an intensely female subject inside a bulky male body – these are the images Moross has captured with a magical bent. her paintings are sensuous, voluptuous, depicting a man/cocoon housing his female/butterfly.

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Moross says “Old European cities have areas where children play in the dirt and sometimes discover things like a rhinestone, or piece of foil, a remanent of something years or maybe even centuries past. They were treasures I would gather that I discovered. Even though they were found in dirt, after cleaning and loving these things, bringing them to light, each would reveal beauty and stories again and again. So for me, Carmine initially was one of these precious beautiful found rhinestones.”

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Carmine himself, above, in red.

She found her subject beautiful, and has created beautiful works about him. “Ultimately, it’s my decision what is beautiful or not.”

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Trust us – she made a profoundly lovely choice, here.

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Above, musicians Ketchup Soup, entertained the opening night crowd.

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Above and below, center, MuzeuMM founder Mishelle Moross; with below left artist Francisco Alvarado.

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MuzeuMM is located at 4817 West Adams Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90016

  • Genie Davis; all photos by Jack Burke