Posts Tagged ‘short’

BUSHO 2012: Apocalypse Now!

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

The BuSho’s website has gone through a major improvement and been re-interpreted according to the requirement of present times. The words of the webmaster: ’Those who uses internet explorer 6 probably does not read the site, although it is quite common worldwide to use internet on phone or tablets. Because when you open the site in IE6 it asks you to install Chrome Frame plug-in and then it’d work fine, so basically the site isn’t optimized for, neither against anything. They refreshed the mailing list and newsletter system so if you do not want to receive newsletter anymore please click on unsubscribe so that they can delete you from the database. The online registration has been renewed too so the registration is now open for BuSho International Shortfilm Festival 2012!

From this year they can only accept shorts that is registered through the online system except if a studio, school or workshop enters 5 or more shorts, they can send them in on DVD form. Despite the crisis they would like to carry on with projects they started up over the years: 8th BuSho, 6th GomBuSho workshop, 4th LifeAd one-minute short competition and wish to have a second spot competition with poster topic too!

The annual closing party will be held at Vörösmarty cinema on 22-December-2011 starting at 6pm with plenty of interesting screenings of 2011. Unfortunately the venue of next year is still questioned since the future of this cinema hosted us for 4 years is unsecure, that’s the reason we hold this party here with a colorful program. A little bit of everything: winners, losers, workshops, EFA nominees, LifeAds, Danube mosaic, Hungarians, foreigners, animations, experiments, surprises then a Finale…

2012 Sundance Film Festival

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

Announces Short Film Program

Sundance Institute announced today the program of short films selected to screen at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. This year’s Short Film program is comprised of 64 short films selected from a record 7,675 submissions, up 16% over submissions for the 2011 Festival. The Festival will be January 19 through 29 in Park City, Salt Lake City, Ogden and Sundance, Utah.

Trevor Groth, Director of Programming for the Sundance Film Festival, said, “As technology allows greater access to short films as well as filmmaking tools, an increasing number of people are turning to short filmmaking as a form of expression and an opportunity to explore creative freedom. The fact that we received 1,200 more submissions in this category than last year speaks to that. Within them we saw a wave of truly original and outrageously distinctive films united by their uncompromised spirit.”

The Short Film program at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival is presented by Yahoo!, the premiere digital media company. As part of its sponsorship, a special selection of short films from the Festival will be featured on Yahoo! Screen, Yahoo’s premium video destination, where an audience of millions will be able to vote for their favorite. The winning filmmaker will be presented with the Yahoo! Audience Award at the end of the Festival.

U.S. SHORT FILMS
This year’s 32 U.S. short films were selected from 4,083 submissions.

U.S. NARRATIVE SHORT FILMS

- ’92 Skybox Alonzo Mourning Rookie Card (Director: Todd Sklar, Screenwriters: Todd Sklar, Alex Rennie)
Jim and Dave are brothers who haven’t spoken in years and don’t like each other very much, but are forced to come together for a week when their dad dies in Kansas City. A limited edition 1992 Skybox Series Alonzo Mourning rookie card is a point of contention.

- The Arm (Directors and screenwriters: Brie Larson, Sarah Ramos, Jessie Ennis)
In an attempt to keep up with social pressure in a technologically advanced world, Chance starts a texting relationship with Genevieve, a girl he meets at a yogurt shop.

- The Black Balloon (Directors: Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie)
The Black Balloon strays from the herd and experiences what life as an individual is like. He explores New York City in the deepest way, seeing all of its characters.

- Dol (First Birthday) (Director and screenwriter: Andrew Ahn)
A gay Korean American man yearns for a family life just out of reach.

- Famous Person Talent Agency: Pearls of Asia (Director: Ivan Hurzeler, Screenwriter: Cami Delavigne)
Jackie Diamond is a luckless talent agent who never stops dreaming. He believes in his clients and he believes in show business. Jackie reaches for the stars from a shabby office in Queens – the Famous Person Talent Agency.

- FISHING WITHOUT NETS (Director: Cutter Hodierne, Screenwriters: Cutter Hodierne, John Hibey)
A story of pirates in Somalia, told from the perspective of the pirates themselves.

- The Fort (Director and screenwriter: Andrew Renzi)
On a rainy day, a young boy builds a fort in the woods when a man appears and offers to help.

- FOURPLAY: TAMPA (Director: Kyle Henry, Screenwriter: Carlos Trevino)
Louis loops into a local mall to grab lunch in the food court and a quickie in the public restroom. Paranoid about his own small package and clearly nervous about the situation, he scouts for possible partners, letting his imagination take over when reality proves thoroughly unsatisfying.

- Hellion (Director and screenwriter: Kat Candler)
Little seven-year-old Petey falls prey to his older brothers’ hellion ways.

- Henley (Director: Craig Macneill, Screenwriters: Craig Macneill, Clay McLeod Chapman)
Meet nine-year-old Ted Henley, budding motel manager and roadkill entrepreneur.

- L TRAIN (Director and screenwriter: Anna Musso)
Sunny is a self-regarding teenager fighting her way through an inner city blizzard, until she encounters someone who forces her to consider an altruistic, if not absurd, action.

- Life and Freaky Times of Uncle Luke (Director: Jillian Mayer, Screenwriter: Lucas Leyva)
A modern Miami adaptation of the 1962 French short film La Jetee, the film recounts Luke’s (Uncle Luke, legendary rapper from the hip-hop group 2 Live Crew) rise to fame as he changes the face of hip-hop and fights for first amendment rights- and later as he ushers Miami into a golden era of peace and prosperity as Mayor.

- OK BREATHE AURALEE (Director and screenwriter: Brooke Swaney)
Auralee wants a baby and will go to great lengths to get what she wants.

- Rolling on the Floor Laughing (Director and screenwriter: Russell Harbaugh)
Two grown brothers return home for their widowed mother’s birthday, only to find themselves competing with a strange man for her affection.

- Song of the Spindle (Director and screenwriter: Drew Christie)
An animated, humorous and informative conversation between a sperm whale and a man. Each one tries to convince the other that his brain is bigger.

- Spoonful (Director and screenwriter: Jenée LaMarque)
Three sisters return to their childhood home after the death of their father in order to pack up the family house. To make matters worse, the oldest sister has been separated from her baby for the first time.

- The Thing (Director: Rhys Ernst, Screenwriters: Rhys Ernst, Avery McTaggart)
Zooey has spent weeks planning a road trip to a mysterious roadside attraction known as ‘The Thing’ in the hopes that she and Tristan will reconnect. Both Tristan, an FTM transman, and his fluffy cat Steven struggle to find places to comfortably pee, while Zooey learns the open road isn’t everything she hoped it would be.

- UNA HORA POR FAVORA (Director and screenwriter: Jill Soloway)
A woman hires a day laborer for an hour and gets more than she bargained for.

U.S. DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILMS

- AQUADETTES (Directors: Drea Cooper, Zackary Canepari)
The Aquadettes are a group of elderly synchronized swimmers from Leisure World, a retirement community nestled in Orange County, California. One of them, Margo Bauer, is fighting multiple sclerosis and using medical marijuana to ease her pain and to keep on swimming.

- The Debutante Hunters (Director: Maria White)
In the Lowcountry of South Carolina a group of true Southern belles reveal their more rugged side, providing a glimpse into what drives them to hunt in the wild.

- Family Nightmare (Director: Dustin Guy Defa)
A dizzy trip through the mid-1990s with a dysfunctional American family. Reliving a distracted child’s birthday party, an emotionless wedding, a Halloween in a garage and a Christmas marked with alcohol, drugs and perversion, the film is a crumpled letter from a filmmaker to his family: a shattered kaleidoscope of the destructive patterns that have trapped and wounded its members.

- The Meaning of Robots (Director: Matt Lenski)
The benevolent Mike Sullivan, age 65, has been shooting an epic stop-motion robot sex film in his apartment for the last 10 years. Obsessed with constructing the miniature robot porn stars, his apartment now overflows with thousands of them.

- The Movement: One Man Joins an Uprising (Directors: Greg I. Hamilton, Kurt Miller)
In 2004 Rick Finkelstein was paralyzed in a ski accident on Aspen Mountain. With a severed spine and severe internal trauma, he wasn’t expected to live. Six years, nine surgeries, and a lifetime of rehab later, cameras captured his dramatic return to Aspen and skiing.

- Odysseus’ Gambit (Director: Àlex Lora Cercós)
A gambit is a chess opening in which a player sacrifices a pawn with the hope of achieving a resulting advantageous position. The protagonist is a Cambodian American guy looking for his place in the game.

- Pluto Declaration (Director: Travis Wilkerson)
Restore the classical definition of planet! Bring back planet Pluto! The solar system is 12!

- The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom (Director: Lucy Walker)
Survivors in the areas hardest hit by Japan’s recent tsunami find the courage to revive and rebuild as cherry blossom season begins. A visual haiku about the ephemeral nature of life and the healing power of Japan’s most beloved flower.

U.S. ANIMATED SHORT FILMS

- 38-39° C (Director and screenwriter: Kangmin Kim)
A man with a big birthmark on his back enters an old public bathhouse. He falls into a dream where he confronts his father who has the same birthmark.

- Avocados (Director and screenwriter: Kataneh Vahdani)
A journey with many characters in one day through a city.

- Dr Breakfast (Director and screenwriter: Stephen Neary)
One day at breakfast, a man’s soul bursts out of his eyeball. A surreal meditation on the quirky but rejuvenating nature of friendship.

- It’s Such a Beautiful Day (Director and screenwriter: Don Hertzfeldt)
Bill wakes to find himself in a hospital struggling with memory problems, in this third and final chapter to Don Hertzfeldt’s EVERYTHING WILL BE OK.

- Night Hunter (Director and screenwriter: Stacey Steers)
In this handmade film, composed of more than 4,000 collages and shot in 35mm color, the actress Lillian Gish is seamlessly appropriated from silent-era cinema and plunged into a new and haunting role.

- Once It Started It Could Not End Otherwise (Director and screenwriter: Kelly Sears)
Terrifying and strange happenings descend on a 1970’s high school.

INTERNATIONAL SHORT FILMS
This year’s 27 international short films from 16 countries were selected from a record 3,592 submissions.

INTERNATIONAL NARRATIVE SHORT FILMS

- Barbie Blues / Israel (Director and screenwriter: Adi Kutner)
When Mika, a suburban teenager finds a disturbing creature in her swimming pool she asks her neighbor Gershon for help. What starts off as a friendly encounter between two neighbors turns into an unexpected lesson on the borders of control.

- BEAR / Australia (Director: Nash Edgerton, Screenwriters: Nash Edgerton, David Michôd)
Jack means well, but sometimes good intentions have horrible consequences.

- Don’t Hug Me I’m Scared / United Kingdom (Directors: Joseph Pelling, Rebecca Sloan)
A short film about teaching creativity by This Is It Collective.

- Frozen Stories (Opowiesci z chlodni) / Poland (Director and screenwriter: Grzegorz Jaroszuk)
Two worst employees of a supermarket have been ordered to find a goal in their lives.

- Fungus (Svamp) / Sweden (Director and screenwriter: Charlotta Miller)
Katrin decides to face her old boyfriend, who is back to collect some of his stuff.

- Girl / Sweden (Director: Fijona Jonuzi, Screenwriter: Gustaf Boman Bränngård)
Hanna, 32, randomly finds a party consisting of of five 20-year-old boys. At first she feels uncomfortable, but after a little adjusting, she soon feels like she’s one of them.

- The Hidden Smile (El somriure amagat) / Spain (Director: Ventura Durall, Screenwriters: Ventura Durall, Miguel Llansó)
Following a 10-year-old kid who arrives at the Ethiopian capital after escaping from his home and his misfortunes to integrate into a street children group, The Hidden Smile constructs a realistic tale on the values that flourish in a society formed by children.

- Juku / Bolivia (Director: Kiro Russo, Screenwriters: Gilmar Gonzales, Kiro Russo)
The dark mass between the screen and the room can beat again like once the first darkness did. Deep in it a man moves. He has a lamp, and the light it makes forms the rocks that will end up taking over the screen. About ten thousand people enter daily into Posokoni, the largest tin mine in Bolivia.

- Killing the Chickens to Scare the Monkeys / Sweden (Director and screenwriter: Jens Assu)
Nine scenes unfold in the grey area between black and white, where national politics and strategy have unforeseen consequences on a young teacher’s life.

- Las Palmas / Sweden (Director and screenwriter: Johannes Nyholm)
A middle-aged lady on a holiday in the sun tries to make new friends and have a good time.

- LAZAROV / France (Director and screenwriter: Nieto)
Refusing to accept the decline of the USSR, a handful of Russian scientists work secretly to resurrect the Soviet power. Here are some new images of the mysterious program Lazarov.

- Long Distance Information / United Kingdom (Director and screenwriter: Douglas Hart)
Da always said not to talk to strangers…but you’ve got to phone home sometimes.

- Moxie / United Kingdom (Director and screenwriter: Stephen Irwin)
A pyromaniac bear misses his mother.

- Playtime (Spielzeit) / Germany (Director and screenwriter: Lucas Mireles)
A seamless journey of German youth and innocence on a Sunday afternoon.

- Random Strangers / United Kingdom (Director: Alexis Dos Santos, Screenwriters: Laurence Coriat, Alexis Dos Santos)
Rocky and Lulu live in opposite sides of the planet: they bump into each other in ChatRoulette and decide to stay in touch. Using video diaries, secret confessions, fictional representations of facts of their lives made with toys, dance performances and songs, they create a place where they can truly be themselves. But how real is their world?

- The Return (Kthimi) / Kosovo (Director: Blerta Zeqiri, Screenwriter: Shefqet Gjocaj)
A man comes back from a Serb prison to his wife and son. Much has changed since he was declared missing and continuing where they left off four years ago may not be as easy as it seems.

- Surveillant / Canada (Director and screenwriter: Yan Giroux)
It’s another quiet summer day in Park Dufresne. The neighborhood youth loiter around the park until a new park monitor appears for his first day of work. Two universes clash and a territorial struggle begins.

- Tooty’s Wedding / United Kingdom (Director: Frederic Casella, Screenwriters: Laura Solon, Ben Willbond)
A young couple’s marriage hilariously hits the rocks during a weekend wedding in the country.

- Tumult / United Kingdom (Director and screenwriter: Johnny Barrington)
A tribe of Norse warriors traipse across a barren land after battle. Bloodied and wounded, their chief is near death. He is about to hand over power to his son when an army of a completely different kind descends upon them.

INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY SHORT FILMS

- Into the Middle of Nowhere / United Kingdom (Director: Anna Frances Ewert)
The documentary is about the uniqueness of childhood and the exploration of the human mind. In an outdoor nursery based in the woods, children create their own individually constructed worlds and can test out the boundaries of reality.

- Stick Climbing / Austria, Switzerland (Director: Daniel Zimmerman)
A contemplative walk leads to a bizarre climbing tour going from everyday village life to a seemingly impossible ascent.

INTERNATIONAL ANIMATED SHORT FILMS

- 663114 / Japan (Director: Isamu Hirabayashi)
I am a 66-year-old cicada. There was a big earthquake. There was a big tsunami. There also was a big accident.

- Belly / United Kingdom (Director: Julia Pott)
Oscar is coming of age, against his better judgment. In doing so he must experience the necessary evil of leaving something behind, but he can still feel it in the pit of his stomach.

- BOBBY YEAH / United Kingdom (Director: Robert Morgan)
Bobby Yeah is a petty thug who lightens his miserable existence by brawling and thieving stuff. One day, he steals the favorite pet of some very dangerous individuals, and finds himself in deep trouble. He really should learn, but he just can’t help it.

- A Morning Stroll / United Kingdom (Director: Grant Orchard)
When a New Yorker walks past a chicken on his morning stroll, we are left to wonder which one is the real city slicker.

- Robots of Brixton / United Kingdom (Director: Kibwe Tavares)
The trials and tribulations of young robots surviving at the sharp end of inner city life, living the predictable existence of a populous hemmed in by poverty, disillusionment and mass unemployment.

- Slow Derek / United Kingdom (Director: Dan Ojari)
The tale of Derek, an office worker, as he struggles with the true speed of planet earth.

NEW FRONTIER SHORT FILMS
An electrifying celebration of innovation in filmmaking, these New Frontier shorts, through bold color and thought-provoking messaging, electrify and energize the mind.

- The Conquerors (Les Conquérants) / Canada, France (Directors and screenwriters: Sarolta Szabo, Tibor Banoczki)
What exactly we need to build new civilization? Bravery? Courage? Power? Or the only thing we need is to successfully destroy an already existing one.

- The Diatom / U.S.A. (Director: Chris Peters)
The diatom is the most numerous species on the planet, the basis of the aquatic food chain, produces most of the oxygen on earth, and is a key scientific indicator of the health of a water system. In order to understand our place in the world this mixed-mode ’science film’ observes renowned Utah-based scientist Sam Rushforth and his team in the wide isolated landscape then in the lab and finally goes through the microscope to the diatom itself.

- Fragments of Dissolution / U.S.A. (Director: Travis Wilkerson)
A poetic, anguished cry from the heart of a rotting empire. Four women describe their own unique hells. Children, brothers, and friends burned alive while simply trying not to freeze. Husbands and sons deployed over and over, who kill themselves rather than fighting again. From Ft. Lewis to Detroit, the empire is devouring its own intestines.

- Moving Stories / Belgium (Director and screenwriter: Nicolas Provost)
Two young passengers adventure towards a mysterious future.

- SEEKING THE MONKEY KING (Director: Ken Jacobs)
The film could have well been called KICKING AND SCREAMING but that only describes me in the process of making it, questioning its taste. Cut through the flashy swastikas and one sees the German Nazis were Christians fulfilling historic obligation (The Final Solution) with relatively few so well-read as to imagine themselves Nietzscheans. SEEKING THE MONKEY KING is a reversion to my mid-20s and that sense of horror that drove the making of STAR SPANGLED TO DEATH.

Submit your film: Cinema Perpetuum Mobile

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

“Cinema Perpetuum mobile” is an international cinema cooperation festival that gathers independent film makers and their groups to work under the theme of the perpetual motion.

The authors are free to artistically interpret the theme and develop their ideas on what the “perpetuum mobile” is.

The project is aimed at cinema cultural diversity and the promotion of independent auteur movies. Festival co-operation aims to cover all countries and continents from Scandinavia to the Cape of Good Hope and from Patagonia to the Aleutian Islands.

“Cinema Perpetuum mobile” is a non-commercial project, so the organizers aspire only to cover their expenses on the festival while the participants whose films are included into a short list, are likely to receive dividends in case the collection of “Perpetuum Mobile” films is shown in cinemas after festival. The participation in our cinema cooperation festival is free. Organizer of the festival is an independent association «Kinaklub.org», with the following principles: cinemania, self-organization, decentralization, mutual aid.

Deadline: December, 1st, 2011.

More info: cpm.kinaklub.org/en

Black Shorts – New Visions of Georgia

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Five experimental short films on everyday life in Georgia

Plotki (Rejs e.V.), Sakdoc Film and the Centre for Arts and Culture at the Central European University proudly present five Black Shorts from Georgia.

In May 2011, twenty young creative people from across Europe met for the first time in Garikula, Georgia. Some of us had never made a film before in our lives, whilst others had considerable experience in the medium. Each of us arrived with a topic for a possible film in mind and more topics came up as we discussed film, Georgia and the perfect khachapuri (Georgian cheese bread). After some basic training in filmmaking, we split into 5 groups and set off to different parts of the country for 8 days of shooting, before meeting again in Tbilisi to review our footage. After a fortnight’s break, we came together in Budapest and edited the footage over four days. The resulting Black Shorts are as diverse as they are intriguing. The films capture the endearing character of a barber’s shop in Tbilisi; the highflying web of cable cars in Chiatura; the lively theatrics of death in Kutaisi; the second life of objects as scrap metal in-and-around Zugdidi; and a day in the life of an underpass’s resident band in Tbilisi.

Is this really the best way to make films?

Probably not. You might want to choose people with more experience in filmmaking, to give people set roles and to allow much more time for everything – but Black Shorts is about more than just filmmaking. It’s about people exploring a new country through the medium of film, it’s about the interactions between young people from different parts of Europe, it’s about learning how to work with a new medium, it’s about the challenges and joys of group work and about making new friends in countries many of us have never been to before. But most of all, it’s about the joy of spreading a collective rumour (a plotki) throughout the region.

So why Georgia? Why Black?

Black is both a provocative colour bristling with symbolic tension, and the mundane colour of everyday Georgian life found in most peoples’ clothing, hair and the name of the sea. This fascinated us, as it allowed an entry point for exploring everyday life along broad thematic lines that did not exoticise, and yet it still stimulated the artistic imagination. It was suitably provocative, with angry complaints from Georgians outside Georgia demanding we should rather focus on the ‘positive’ aspects such as Georgian folklore. And yet, encouragingly for all involved, it was warmly greeted by those who were the subjects of the films; they were more than happy to have their everyday stories filmed and we became friends. We hope the films did them justice.

Where next for Black Shorts?

The Worldwide Premiere took place in Budapest on June 9th 2011, the films will be published online and the DVD is currently working its way across the continent. Depending on when you read this, you may have missed, or may still have time to catch, screenings in Tbilisi, Berlin, Prague, Garikula, Sofia, Bucharest, Leipzig, Frankfurt/Main and once again in Budapest.

Black Shorts is generously funded by the European Cultural Foundation and The Open Society Institute.

Hair – It’s one of the most visible parts of our body whether black or white, long or short, straight or curly. This black short concentrates on hair as a character and takes place where it is shaped – a barber’s shop in Tbilisi. Nowadays many mainstream salons are alike, but the barber shop in Hairminators retains the ˜white gowned” spirit of old. Waiting involves dominoes, eating, chatting, singing, or even sleeping before the hair which “needs to be organized” arrives (14:25 mins) (A film by Data Chigholashvili, Salome Joglidze and Birgit Kuch)

Chiatura was once one of the most prosperous industrial cities in Georgia, boasting rich resources of manganese. Due its location in a steep valley surrounded by high mountains, Chiatura installed a system of cable cars to transport workers to and from the mines, as well as manganese from the mines to the factories. With deindustrialisation the manganese industry shrank and Chiatura’s population halved, but many of the cable cars still run, establishing a net between the city and its people. Chiatura, my Pride explores how this extraordinary transport system gives character to the city forty years after its installation. (13:43 mins) (A film by Stephanie Endter, Max Kuzmenko, Lisa Müller, Ulrike Penk and Kajetan Tadrowski)

Gulo – is a film that explores the line between death and life, visualising the theatrical happenings and settings surrounding burial rituals. Often death is presented as the ending of life, something feared by people. Contrary to this, Gulo shows the diverse approaches to death and reveals the thoughts of people who are directly connected to the passageway between life and death: “death no longer interests me. I wish I had a different life, I want to be on stage.” Gulo is shot in Kutaisi. (15:41 mins) (A film by Elene Asatiani, Eliane Bots, Mirek Koranda and Sophia Tabatadze)

harvest georgia – Weathered hands move scrap metal from the homes of those who live in and around Zugdidi to the Black Sea port of Poti, and Georgian society moves too, moulding itself around one of the country’s leading exports. From bathtubs, bedsprings and boilers to pots & pans, tin cans and coat stands… in Harvest Georgia the process of scrap metal collecting, weighing and exporting is told through the interaction of these re-valued objects, with those who handle them as part of their everyday lives. (6:37 mins) (A film by Odeta Catana, Ian Cook, Angelika Herta and Zhenya Zakharova)

Under a – Form of government: presidential parliamentary democracy. Official language: Georgian. Population: 4.6 million. Capital: Tbilisi. As the eye deciphers the fading inscriptions in the underground passage and the body instinctively avoids the commercial humdrum, the ear catches the music. Under a is a film about the passage that runs under Tbilisi’s centrally located Freedom Square, and follows a band’s everyday flow in an underground place filled with tunes. (16:07 mins) (A film by Natalia Buier, Madis Kats, Filip Pospíšil and Mikheil Svanidze)

The Black Shorts films are only avaible on http://daazo.com/blackshorts.

Berlinale – Call for Short Films

Monday, November 7th, 2011

There is still time to enter your short films into the Berlinale!

Deadline for receipt of entry forms and short  films: November 14, 2011

A film entry is only possible with a personal account and using the online registration form.

In order to submit a film to the Berlinale you have to send the film and the completed online film entry form to the Festival before the given deadline.

Please read the Festival’s General Regulations for film entries, the specific regulations of the section(s) for which you wish to submit a film, as well as the “How to Berlinale” short guide to film submission.

For more information, check out the Berlinale website.

Go Short! competition for 2012 is open

Sunday, November 6th, 2011

Go Short accepts all genres in short films for its competition programs, divided in the genres animation, documentary, fiction and experimental/artfilm. The short films that will be selected for the International Competition are eligible for the Go Short award for the best short in four different categories.

Foundation Go Short aims to contribute to deepening and expanding short film culture, nationally and internationally, by means of organizing a yearly international film festival for short films.

More information: http://www.goshort.nl/entry/

Next Film Festival is looking for shortfilm submissions

Sunday, November 6th, 2011


The 6th edition of NexT International Film Festival will take place in Bucharest from March 28 to April 1, 2012.

NexT International Film Festival celebrates innovative and creative filmmaking from all around the world. Our goal at NexT IFF is to discover and promote today the major talents of tomorrow’s international cinema.

For the first time, the call for entries is open not only for the competition, but also for three special off competition programs: NexT Imaginaria, NexT Dance and NexT Kids.

Deadline for submissions: December 15, 2011

COMPETITION

NexT calls for entries of narrative films (live action and animation) up to 60 minutes completed after January 1st, 2010. Documentaries, film essays, video installations and music videos will not be considered for the competition.

Awards for the films selected in the competition:

NexT Trophy – 4000 Euro

“Cristian Nemescu” Best Directing Award – 2000 Euro

“Andrei Toncu” Best Soundtrack Award – 2000 Euro

Best Romanian Film – 1000 Euro

NexT covers accommodation and travel expenses (%) for the director / sound-designer of the films in competition.

NexT Imaginaria

A program to explore parallel universes, fantasy worlds, alternative history, utopias and dystopias, haunting visions and dark fears for a night to remember at NexT 2012. An international off competition program open to sci-fi, fantasy, horror, extreme action or simply fantastic out-of-the-box films to open your mind and dare you to dream!

Maximum duration of submitted films: 60 minutes.

The films must be completed after January 1st 2010.

NexT Dance

From good ol’ school musicals to hot pop, from street dance & hip hop to classical ballet & contemporary choreography, we welcome international narrative short films that spice up their story with a splash of music & dance, for a very special night at NexT 2012. Our goal: a 2-hour off competition program to electrify our audience and make them go home humming and swinging.

Maximum duration of submitted films: 60 minutes.

The films must be completed after January 1st 2010.

NexT Kids

A special program for the youngest hearts at NexT 2012, designed to make them experience smart and fascinating short films: an opportunity for 5 to 12 year olds to discover cinema through creative animations and live action short films from all around the world. The screenings will be followed by hands-on special activities related to the films in the program.

Maximum duration: 10 minutes.

For this section only, there is no time limit regarding the completion date of the films.

For further details, read the regulations of NexT International Film Festival 2012.

Download the entry form of NexT International Film Festival 2012.

DVD PAL screeners must be sent to:

NexT Cultural Society
179 Traian Street
024043, Bucharest
Romania

Besides the competition and the off competition programs, NexT also presents a series of seminars on directing, sound-design, production & distribution, script-writing etc. offered free of charge to the participants.

NexT intends to be a meeting point for young filmmakers around the world.

Get-together with local filmmakers & live music every night.

More information: http://www.nextfilmfestival.ro/en/archives/2564

FINALE begins

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Warsaw Film Festival short film competition hosts the European premiere of Balázs Simonyi’s latest moving picture.

„It’s late evening in a Budapest neighbourhood and two suspicious-looking men are waiting around for their greatest hit. Impressively shot in one continuous take.” – Finale, the latest film by Balázs Simonyi (One Vote, Tangering, Tour) will have its European premiere in the short film competition of the 27th Warsaw Film Festival (October 7-16).

The 8 minute Hungarian moving picture was produced by Snittegylet Filmműhely and Celluloid Műhely.
Besides the European premiere, Finale debuts in North America as well. Vancouver IFF screened Simonyi’s short in the ‘Cinema of Our Time’ selection recently.

In 2009 the Warsaw Film Festival became one of 14 events recognized by the International Federation of Film Producers Associations (FIAPF) as international film festivals – besides Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Locarno, San Sebastian, Karlovy Vary etc.

Check out Simonyi’s work on Daazo!

Call for short film projects: EUROPEAN SHORT PITCH 2012

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

The deadline for our Call for Short Film Projects for the sixth edition of EUROPEAN SHORT PITCH is approaching!

If you would have any pending projects in their early stages, or scripts in need of support and a fresh point of view, don’t hesitate to apply. You still have 5 days to submit your short film project for consideration. An opportunity not to be missed!

European Short Pitch (ESP) is an initiative aimed at promoting the European coproduction of short films which combines a scriptwriting workshop in residency, an on-line session and a coproduction forum bringing together scriptwriters and industry professionals from all over Europe.

ESP 2012 comes along with several exciting new partnerships, including: the Luxembourg Film Fund, Maribor 2012 European Capital of Culture, and the Bristol Encounters Film Festival.

The main events of ESP 2012 are planned for the following dates/locations:
- Jury meeting for selection of the finalist projects at Bristol Encounters Film Festival (UK), 16th November 2011
- Scriptwriting workshop in Luxembourg City, 3rd to 8th January 2012
- Pitching and coproduction forum in Maribor (Slovenia), 2nd to 4th March 2012

ESP is for creative teams developing international short film projects. It is therefore open to writers, directors and producers. The author(s) of the script must be between 18 and 35 years of age on the closing date of the call and resident in the European Union or one of the following countries: Croatia, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia, Russia, Turkey, Ukraine.

You can find the detailed call and application form in attachment to this email and on the NISI MASA website.

The deadline is the 10th of October, before midnight!

Kino Kabaret selection, offered by Daazo.com

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

Fun parties, straying thoughts, or terrifying horror – a selection of short films of all sorts of themes and genres, made in the framework of the international workshops of Kino Kabaret is now available on Daazo.com, the short film sharing site supported by the MEDIA Programme of the EU.


The Kino Kabaret is an international filmmaking workshop with no rules that offers a framework for filmmakers to create freely and without boundaries. Filmmakers from all around the world are gathered together to Kino Kabaret’s spontaneous filmmaking marathons that take place in various cities worldwide. The basic equipment is provided and a timeframe of 48 or 72 hours given – there are no other limitations or help. The selection of films that have been shot within these few hours at the Kino Kabaret in Vienna, Bratislava and Berlin, now available to view on Daazo.com, include a variety of genres: horror (Morph, Bite It Even), romantic comedy (White Teeth), experimental films (The Inevitability of Silence, A Tale from outer Suburbia) as well as a hilarious comedy featuring a house party (Only for Guests).

About Daazo.com

Daazo.com is a short film sharing site that hosts several thousand contemporary shorts. Alongside these recent films, Daazo 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.