Film
Festivals and More Film Festivals
by
Beth Accomando
KPBS Online
October 2003
Twenty
years ago just about the only film festival you could find in
town was the San Diego International Film Festival. Now we have
a slew of festival all occurring within a week. Here’s a
rundown.
The
San Diego Asian Film Festival calls itself “a grassroots
festival, born out of a love for independent film and the desire
to represent different aspects of the Asian American experience
in San Diego.” Now in its fourth year, SDAFF runs October
2-5 at Madstone’s Hazard Theaters as well as at a few satellite
venues. The festival emphasizes Asian-American independent cinema
(both features and shorts) but also highlights international titles
(such as South Korea’s “Memories of Murder”,
Japan’s “The Returner”, The Philippines’
“Small Voices”). Anyone wanting to support local San
Diego filmmaking should check out Vikram Yashpal’s feature
“Trade Offs”. Set against the dot-com
boom of the nineties, the film focuses on one young, just-married
Indian couple’s coming to terms with their newly adopted
country. The film begins lightly but takes some surprising turns
as it nicely sidesteps a formula plot about assimilation.
For
a complete schedule and more information, go to their web site
at www.sdaff.org.
This
month also marks the debut of two film festivals: the Imperial
Beach Film Festival on October 3-5 and the San Diego Girl Film
Festival on October 4.
The
Imperial Beach Film Festival is the inspiration of Steve Futterman,
an Imperial Beach resident who looked around his community and
decided that it could use some more cultural events for young
people. So he decided to put together a film festival complete
with workshops and seminars geared toward young people. Futterman
plans to make the festival a fixture within the emerging community
of filmmaking by creating and sustaining a professional environment
that supports and promotes film artists in this country and abroad.
His goals are commendable and the festival will showcase a few
independent features as well as a showcase of locally made short
films.
For
more information, visit the web site at http://www.ibfilmfestival.com.
The
first annual San Diego Girl Film Festival will be held on Saturday,
October 4 at the University of San Diego. The free, one-day event
will highlight films about young women created by women of all
ages. The festival will also provide opportunities for women film
producers and directors to act as mentors to a new generation
of female youth. Jennifer Spell will present her film “Unforgettable:
The Little Mo Connolly Story” and the Reel Grrls of 911
Media will participate in a panel discussion after the screening
of their films, “Reel Grrls” and “Can You Hear
Me Now?” The festival will also host a screening of the
San Diego Asian Film Festival’s collection of nine short
films from their women’s category. The day’s films
will conclude with New Zealand’s “Whale Rider”,
written and directed by Niki Caro.
For
more information, visit http://www.sdgff.org or contact sdgirlrocks@yahoo.com.
And
speaking of strong women, Strong Women Enterprises will present
BuffyFest San Diego 2003 on Saturday, October 11th. It’s
a daylong celebration of all things Buffy. BuffyFest will include
stunt fighting workshops, theatrical presentations, celebrity
appearances, academic discussions, a Buffy screening room, and
a writer's panel hosted by San Diego Buffy writers Nancy Holder
and Jeff Mariotte. BuffyFest's proceeds will go to several charities
including: The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, the
Breast Cancer Fund, the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network,
and San Diego's own Sanctuary, located in Ocean Beach.
For
ticket information, go to www.buffyfest.com.
And
finally, a quick note about the Chinese Underground Film Festival
at UCSD on October 8-10. The festival will highlight thirteen
films made but never screened in China and will have some of the
filmmakers in attendance. This is truly an incredible opportunity
to see how Chinese cinema is changing and redefining itself in
the new millennium and in the digital age of filmmaking. For more
information go to http://cuff.ucsd.edu.
© Copyright 2003, KPBS
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