Posts Tagged ‘festival’

Nisimazine Bratislava

Friday, October 21st, 2011

Nisimazine will cover the One World / Jeden Svet Documentary Film Festival in Bratislava, from 28th November to 5th December in Bratislava, Slovakia!

They are currently seeking 7 aspiring young film critics, 2 video bloggers, and 1 photographer – between the ages of 18 and 35 – to join they international editorial team. Candidates must be citizens and/or residents of one of the following countries: France, Germany, Slovakia.

Please read the call carefully before filling in the application form and sending with the required materials by the deadline of 25th October.

Downloads:
- Call for Participants
- Application Form

About the Jeden Svet Documentary Film Festival:

Jeden Svet Documentary Film Festival is the only film festival in Slovakia addressing human rights, social and global issues using documentaries. The festival, now in its 12th edition, is a partner event of the One World Film Festival in Prague (Czech Republic).

Jeden Svet annually presents about 70 international documentaries, hosts a dozen of debates and receives around 14 000 visitors. In 2011 the program will be divided in 8 sections: ‘New Media Change the World’; ‘Roads to Freedom’; ‘Our R/evolution’; ‘Right to Know’; ‘Eco-activism’; ‘Female Worlds’; ‘Slovak Documentary’; ‘One World for Children’. The main theme of the festival for the upcoming edition will be ‘World online’, reflecting on “the widespread use of social networks, which brought the sharing of contents to a whole new level (…), an inseparable part of the dominoes – effect of the revolutions in the Arab world. (…) One World Festival will focus on films created thanks to digital technologies, or covering topics related to video-activism and to current possibilities of communication about human rights.”

Festival website: www.jedensvet.sk

Half-time at Raindance!

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

Raindance is now half over, and a record number of film fanatics have attended the festival so far.

Last night saw a packed Live!Ammunition!, where over 20 people pitched their scripts. The results are as follows:
- 1st Place: Nicholas Horwood – Mandemic!
- 2nd Place: Mark Pallis – Braai
- 3rd Place: Palle Nodeland – A Hairy Tale
- Hon Mention: Alastair Collinson – Jesus and Judas

What’s on today:

2.00 pm The Cameramurderer: a toe-curlingly gripping thriller, set in the natural maze of Hungary’s lakes and grasslands
6.15 pm Sevdah for Karim: An exploration of one man’s search for morality and stability in post-war Bosnia.
8.45 pm Restive: A brooding thriller that draws on Deliverance and David Lynch in equal measures to deliver a rich atmosphere of impending doom.

What’s on tomorrow:

1.45 pm Beyond the Road: Santiago, a young Argentinian meets Belgian hitchhiker Juliette. They hit the road together in the stunning Uruguayian countryside.
6.30 pm Leaving Baghdad: Saddam Hussein’s cameraman escapes Iraq, hunted by the regime, haunted by guilt and memories, writing letters to his lost son confessing what he witnessed.

Raindance is now half over
Also, look out for the new courses offered by Raindance: Low Budget 3D and Basic DSLR.

For more info, visit the Raindance website:
www.raindance.co.uk

Raindance Festival Has Begun

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Those lucky enough to be in London over the next few days have the chance to indulge in hot new independent films, courtesy of the 19th Raindance Festival. The event kicked off on 28th September with the gala screening of Another Earth, an indie sci-fi-drama, followed by a question&answer session with first-time writer/director Mike Cahill.  The after-party commenced with a roaringly successful live performance by multi-media composers group Fall on Your Sword.

On Thursday, festival-goers were treated to a story of love, decadence and time travel (A Thousand Kisses Deep) and to The Casserole Club, a tale of housewife rivalry (first over the best casserole, then, after a few too many units of alcohol, over spouses). Friday’s screenings will be Savage, focusing on what might be called the ‘white trash’ of Sweden, and football film Montevideo, Serbia’s selection for the Oscars, telling a story of friendship, enthusiasm, persistence and love for the game.

Check out the Festival’s full listings here: www.raindance.co.uk

Also, look out for Raindance’s filmmaking and producing courses, coming up in October and November!

If you can’t be in London right now, you can still experience the Raindance vibe with watching past years’ hits on Daazo.com. Enjoy!

Austrian Film with Oscar Chance Won the Main Prize of Jameson Cinefest

Monday, September 26th, 2011

14 feature films in competition, all Hungarian premieres, 6 feature films out of competition, 9 classical movies in the PORT.hu CineClassics section, 19 short films, 10 documentaries, 15 animated movies, 3 exhibitions, 3 workshops, conferences, several professional meetings – issues of the 8th Miskolc International Film Festival which ended on 25 September. Due to the achievements of the last 8 years, Jameson CineFest has become the best film festival in Hungary.

Jameson CineFest’s main prize, named after the Miskolc born Oscar winner director-screenwriter Emeric Pressburger, was awarded to Karl Markovics’s movie Atmen (Breathing), and the award was received by Thomas Schubert, the film’s leading actor. It is Markovics’s, one of Austria’s most famous and most popular actors’ first work as a director, and it is the official Austrian Oscar nominee. Austria received the jury’s grand prix either: the film Michael arrived to Hungary straight from Cannes, and it is the first direction of Markus Schleinzer, Michael Hanekes casting director.

Emeric Pressburger Prize: Atmen

Max Zahle’s Raju proved to be the best short film and its award was offered by Daazo.com. The best documentary was Viktor Oszkár Nagy’s Két világ között (Caught Between Two Worlds). The best animated film’s award, which is wearing the name of Attila Dargay for the honouring of the animation artist with Miskolc origins, was offered by KEDD Animation Studio and it went to A Lost And Found Box of Human Sensation. FICC, the International Federation of Film Societies favoured Christian Schwochow’s Die Unsichtbare (Cracks In The Shell) and honoured this production with the Don Quijote Award. Film New Europe’s award went to Adrian Sitaru’s Best Intentions as the best (Hungarian-Romanian) coproduction, and the award was received by Emőke Vágási co-producer.

Best Short Film – Daazo.com Prize:  Raju

This year, in Miskolc International Film Festival, international ecumenical jury awarded the films for the first time, and it is a very important step in enhancing the festival’s international reputation. They also awarded Atmen, a film which due to receiving the film critics’ award, either, could bag three awards at once.

Grand Prix Spécial: Michael

The ever improving PORT.hu CineClassics film historical program series, with the patronage of legendary director István Szabó, screened a complete István Szőts retrospective. In the Miskolc Galery, an exhibition and conference commemorated the great director of the Emberek a havason (People in the Alps) which was shot 70 years ago. The audience could visit a large-scale Krzysztof Kieslowski and Tamás Major exhibition; furthermore, there was a film forum held on the transformation of film industry’s  support system, and roma workshop and a three-day cinema conference were also organized. And, of course, several concerts and parties were hosted by the festival – staying faithful to the Jameson CineFest traditions.

Selected little adventures within the programme of the Jameson Cinefest

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

Daazo.com is the proud sponsor of the short film programme of the Jameson Cinefest

Daazo.com, the short film sharing site supported by the MEDIA Programme of the EU, is the official sponsor of the short film competition programme of the  Jameson Cinefest International Festival that will show 19 short films this year. Daazo.com offered a prize of HUF 150.000 for the best short film. The prize will be awarded at the closing ceremony of the festival.

It is no exaggeration to say that the best short films of the year will be shown in Miskolc between 17-25 September – prize-winning works of the most important film festivals will be presented in Hungary at the Jameson Cinefest.

The festival season in Berlin started with the Romanian short Silent River, telling the story of illegal border crossers – its director, Anca Miruna Lăzărescu will be there  in Miskolc in person to present her film. The Hungarian premiere of the Palme d’Or-winning  French short, Cross Training will also take place at the Cinefest. For You I Will Fight gives a glimpse into the life of female soldiers – it was awarded a Silver Leopard at Locarno, while Out of Erasers, showing the clash of erasers and scribbles with mixed methods, got an award at Annecy. Cédric Prévost’s film Hymen comes from Clermont Ferrand and tells a curious small adventure tale. The Hungarian film scene will be represented by students of the University of Theatre and Film: Gábor Reisz (On a lower level) and Dénes Nagy (Report) were both awarded at the Filmszemle, Béla Bagota’s With Clean Hands won the Sándor Simó award for the best graduation film.

Daazo.com hosts several thousand contemporary short films, many of which have  been previously featured in the competiton programme of the Jameson Cinefest. Alongside these recent films, Daazo also presents old classics that are not available elsewhere on the Internet, such as Oscar winner Ferenc Rofusz’s animations or  Palme d’Or-winning shorts.

Daazo.com is an open platform – anyone is welcome to upload their short film to Daazo, now also available for download as an app for smartphones.

On Daazo.com, film lovers are invited to watch regular film premiers, follow or take part in film competitions and find out about short film news and updates.

Raindance Announces Festival Line Up

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

“The World through a Different Lens”

Raindance has announced the full line up of films for this year’s festival in London, 28th Sep – 9 Oct.

The programme boasts over 90 UK premieres from 36 countries, including more than 30 international premieres, cementing Raindance’s position as Europe’s leading independent film festival specialising in edgy and alternative films by first-time filmmakers.

Read the complete Press Release Here
See the A-Z of Features Here
See the Nominated Films Here
Watch our new Festival Trailer Here

The festival will open with the UK premiere of Another Earth – the critically-acclaimed breakout hit at this year’s Sundance.

The closing film is ’slacker romance’ Bonsai – the second film from cult Chilean director Christian Jimenez. Featuring pitch-perfect performances together with superb direction from one of Chile’s rising stars, this will be Bonsai’s UK premiere.

About Raindance Film Festival
Raindance Film Festival will run from 28 Sept – 9 Oct at the Apollo Cinema in London’s Piccadilly Circus, with the Opening Night premiere of Another Earth at Cineworld Haymarket on 28 Sept.

Tickets and passes to the festival will be on sale from 9th September on www.raindance.co.uk.

Raindance again!

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

It’s film festival time again.

With a selection of 94 features and feature docs as well as over 130 shorts from a grand total of 36 countries this year’s festival promises to be a mouth-watering feast of the very best of independent film from around the world. Read the festival facts here.

They launch their new festival trailer today. Have a look at the 2011 Raindance festival trailer.

They will be at tonight’s Open House along with some of their tutors and the Festival team. It’s pretty rammed, but they still have a dozen places. Email courses@raindance to get onto the guest list.

Next Saturday – the 10th September, Elliot Grove will be in Manchester with Patrick Tucker and the Saturday Film School. See you northerners there?

Finally – Raindance depends on you, our loyal readers and film lovers.
Help spread the word.
Follow us on Twitter. Like our Facebook.
Become a Festival Friend (and get your pass to the festival thrown in!)

Elliot Grove

About Fresh Film Festival

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

The 8th annual of the International Festival of First Features and Student Films will be held in Prague, Czech Republic from August 24th to 28th, 2011.

Fresh Film Fest is an international competitive film festival, which focuses on student and first feature films. In 5 days, the festival aims to provide a wide portrait of contemporary young world cinema and hosts professional non-public presentations. Up to 150 films with around titles in five competitive sections of the Official Selection are screened during the festival. Special film programs and feature film openings are accompanying the student and first films selection.

Despite its short existence, the festival is a follow-up to a more than 30-year old tradition of CILECT RIFE International Student Film Festival held in Karlovy Vary. It both keeps extensive contacts with the most prominent film schools (VGIK, FEMIS, FAMU, NFTS, Columbia) and invests in discovering of young talents from regions with low audiovisual potential (Africa, Latin America, CEE region).

Fresh Film Fest annually offers a solid and varied array of Central and Eastern European student films with the special attention the Visegrad Group countries and to Germany. Fresh Film Fest is also the creator and executive curator of the official students section “Fresh Selection – The promising five” at Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, the second biggest film festive event in the Central Europe after the Berlinale. Similar to prestigious student sections of Cannes Film Festival and the Berlinale, KVIFF and Fresh Film Fest present the world’s most interesting young filmmakers. Within this five films selection, one film produced by a Czech film school is presented to introduce the next Czech talent for the universal world‘s cinema.

MOFILM Brazil short film competition

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Make your perfect short film for MOFILM, and you could win up to $10,000, a trip to the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival 2011 – flights and accommodation all covered – and an exclusive screening of your film.

The competition briefs give you a starting idea from which you can let your creativity and ideas run free. Pepsi Films, Chevrolet and Dell are all looking for your inspired short films, and you have until 12th September to get them submitted.

Find full details, register for competition updates, and get a free Shooting People trial membership to help you make your film from http://shootingpeople.org/mofilm

Filmmakers from South-Eastern Europe Join Forces

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Sarajevo City of Film Collection on Daazo.com

In the age of co-production based European cinema, Sarajevo City of Film is one of the most inspiring and useful initiative for young talents. In cooperation with the project Daazo.com is delighted to present an online selection of Sarajevo City of Film.

Sarajevo City of Film is a project for the realization of short micro-budget films, created through artistic and technical cooperation between young filmmakers from South-Eastern Europe.

All screened authors are entrants of the last two editions of the Sarajevo Talent Campus, whose work represents the future of regional cinematography. The shootings took place in Sarajevo, the city known as being crossroads of different cultures and religions, and a symbolic film centre of the region. From 2008, each year four to five shorts were filmed, and premiered at the Sarajevo Film Festival. In this online collection you can watch the most inspiring works made in the Sarajevo City of Film framework.

Alena’s Journey was one of the first ones realised in the SCF project. The story by Károly Ujj Mészáros is about Alena, an inhibited, thirty-year old accountant from Sarajevo who has a plane to catch, but everything seems to work against her. Meanness at the workplace and the cruel secrets of the Balkan war come to the surface while in the meantime Alena bravely struggles to achieve her goal.

Waiting by Dániel Béres is an innovative artistic reconstruction of the zombie film genre. It’s about a girl who – while taking a walk through the centre – discovers something very strange about the people of Sarajevo. They seem like lifeless ’zombies’, they only come alive for a few seconds to perform a little scene written down for them. She takes it as a joke first and fools around until she comes across someone with a paper: „Kill her!” written on it.

Pink River by Zacharias Mavroeidis is a daring piece on the gay issue. The story focuses on Mari, who after living in London for 10 years, returns to Sarajevo to sell a house she inheritated. While in town, she meets and catches up with Asja, her ex girlfriend. The two women and their opposing lifestyle choices will soon come in conflict.

Check out the projects and spot the next generation of regional filmmakers at www.daazo.com/scf!