Posts Tagged ‘ shorts ’

A Letter to Father, by Christine Chong

October 26, 2011
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A Letter to Father, by Christine Chong

A Letter to Father (2010), a short film by Christine Chong, is about a young man writing a letter to his late father. In the letter, he describes to his father the adventures he is having on a fantastical journey, and reflects sadness at his father not being able to share the journey. Although the lead character seems to be a warrior of sorts, the film is more emotion-based than action based. The film’s one action sequence is nicely laid out with some beautifully designed lighting effects. But in the end, the story is held together by the young man’s reflections of his journey and uncertainty at how his life is progressing. This uncertainty achieves some resolve when he tears up the letters to his father in the end. Christine’s style is clearly anime and manga-inspired, but with a painterly feel to it. She has a great attention to detail and a handle on anime’s cinematic abilities. A Letter to Father is Christine’s School of Visual Arts thesis, but the film does not stand alone. It is a summation of the first five books of her self-published manga, 2Masters. Christine continues to work on 2Masters (with additional fundraising). You...

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The Lift by Robert Kohr

October 3, 2011
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The Lift

Today’s Viewseum entry is a short film with traits that most city dwellers can relate to. Traits pertaining to the consistent use of the elevator, a luxury most city dwellers (including us New Yorkers) tend to take for granted. Filmmaker Robert Kohr tackles issues of impatience and guilt in his film The Lift. Designed with a bold-line style reminiscent of graphic novels and 3D-rendered backgrounds, the film mixes both realism and fantasy in a domestic setting. Mr. Kohr presents a young woman in a Brooklyn-esque setting making the common gesture (and sometimes mistake) of closing the elevator doors before someone else can get on. The tale sounds simple, but Mr. Kohr proceeds to illustrate the young woman’s guilt and conscience through a series of illustrative hallucinations. Four years in the making, the film has won multiple awards and screened in over 55 festivals (full list here on Mr. Kohr’s website). Also of note, Mr. Kohr assembled a team of artists found online, all of whom he had never met before. According to Mr. Kohr on his website: “In this day and age it’s important to leverage social networking into your business model and The Lift is an example of...

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A night of Dark Toons, under the stars at Rooftop Films

June 1, 2010
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A night of Dark Toons, under the stars at Rooftop Films

Article by Dayna Gonzalez. On Friday, May 28, Rooftop Films presented  a series of short films with the theme “Dark Toons“.    This intriguing mix of films ranged from the chaotic train ride that is Cordell Barker’s Runaway to a short treatise on big, juicy, tasty hot dogs appropriately titled Sam’s Hot Dogs by David Lopez Retamero.  New York’s own Jake Armstrong’s, The Terrible Thing of Alpha 9, was also featured.  His wonderfully ugly yet adorable monster got a lot of laughs.  About a dozen animated films were presented, and although not all were my cup of tea, the majority were really interesting takes on a dark or disturbing subject.   I had not seen the majority of them and it was a very international mix.  The event took place at an amazing venue at the Open Road Rooftop above New Design High School in the Lower East Side.  The space is huge and covered in graffiti murals all painted by the students who attend that high school.  Those same students were cooking hot dogs and hamburgers, the proceeds of the sale of which was going directly to the school to fund activities.  The students are quite the artists and I...

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ROOFTOP FILMS

May 20, 2010
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ROOFTOP FILMS

The 2010 Summer Series of Rooftop Films has begun, and to promote this exciting run, Program Director Dan Nuxoll has generously offered ASIFA members a discount on tickets for the following shows.   Look for this code in our next email newsletter blast! ______________ From Dan: Next Friday, May 28, we have a show called Dark Toons with some really great animation from the dark side: http://rooftopfilms.com/2010/schedule/7-dark-toons Then on June 26 we have a screening of Brent Green’s Gravity Was Everywhere Back Then, with a live score performed by musicians, including members of Fugazi: http://rooftopfilms.com/2010/schedule/20-gravity-was-everywhere-back-then Then on Thursday, July 29, we have a program called Capucine and Other Filmmaking Renegades which includes a film by animation renegade Nieto: http://rooftopfilms.com/2010/schedule/31-capucine-filmmaking-monkeys-and-other-renegades ______________ These are not the only shows featuring animation so I suggest you check out the site to see the entire festival schedule! Rooftop Films is a New York based non-profit whose mission is to engage diverse communities by showing independent movies in outdoor locations, producing new films, coordinating youth media education, and renting equipment at low cost to artists. The Rooftop Films 2010 Summer Series, our 14th year of “Underground Movies Outdoors,” will run every weekend from May 14-August...

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Animazing Spotlight, New York Recap

April 23, 2010
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Animazing Spotlight, New York Recap

Article by Emmett Goodman. It is good to know that there’s always room to start up a new animation festival. When you get right down to it, there aren’t as many as there are general film festivals. Animazing Spotlight appears to be a new festival, having had its first annual screening last November in Hollywood. In our unique world of invisible celebrities, Animazing attracted some notable names to its first festival, such as Eric Goldberg, Bob Kurtz, and rising stars from Pixar. However, it wouldn’t be an animation festival without a competitive spotlight on short films. The winning shorts from Animazing were brought over to New York, at the request of ASIFA-East. And now that I have explained what the showcase is, I can say that this was a particularly disappointing screening. There were a few nice pieces in there, but overall there was little variety among the films. There were 15 films altogether, and all but three of them were CG. I noticed a similarity in more than half of the films. Aside from being CG, they strive for a dark, gothic formula, complete with faux mystery. And along with that, the need to copy Pixar’s short-story formula...

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The Tom Stathes CARTOON CARNIVAL #5

March 18, 2010
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The Tom Stathes CARTOON CARNIVAL #5

Cinebeasts and Vaudeville Park are quaking with excitement to present The Tom Stathes Cartoon Carnival for your viewing pleasure! On Saturday, March 20th, the Cartoon Carnival will overrun Vaudeville Park for its fifth installment: a two-part program of hand-selected 16mm treasures abandoned by history and reactivated by whiz kid curator Stathes. Luddites, romantics, nostalgists, pop culture theorists, enemies of censorship, lovers, archivists, nerds, kids-at-heart, actual kids and armchair film historians are all welcome! The lineup promises a mix of the bizarre, raunchy, and beloved: packed both with favorites and super-obscure characters and gags. The shorts range in vintage from the 1910s to the 60s, each one on the best possible print available. All cartoons fall within the public domain, but will be screened in stunning contrast to the pathetic discount DVDs and VHS tapes you see at garage sales and drugstores! The evening also promises an OPEN BAR with custom cocktails, free popcorn, a bake sale to benefit Cinebeasts, and some classic 78rpms jazz records following the cartoons. $6 at the door / OPEN BAR (with ID) / 7:30PM DOORS Vaudeville Park (26 Bushwick Ave at Devoe, Williamsburg): L train to Graham / G to Lorimer cartoonsonfilm.blogspot.com cinebeasts.com vaudevillepark.com

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John Has Love

February 6, 2010
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John Has Love

John Dilworth tells us of this screening that includes is his new short “Rinky Dink”. Films Announced for the 3rd Annual Love Actually: Short Films about Love, Sex & Romance NEW YORK – SCENEPR has announced the films that will be screened at their third annual Love Actually: Short Films about Love, Sex & Romance, on Valentines Day from 7-10pm at the historic Millennium Film Workshop in New York City, NY. Join us for this non-competitive film event featuring 11 short films from 12 brilliant independent filmmakers. The evening will begin with a pre-mixer with wine & cheese and end with a Q&A with some of the people involved in making the films being showcased, including former Oscar Nominee, Animator John Dilworth. www.scenepr.com/short-films for details

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