Archive for December, 2011

We’re proud to announce that the lineup of the 2012 Sundance Film Festival will include the world premieres of seven films Cinereach has supported in various capacities.

Taking place January 19th-29th, the fest marks some key milestones for us. We’re thrilled that Beasts of the Southern Wild, the first Cinereach Production to hit Park City, will premiere in competition. We’ll also be celebrating the achievements of the Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute, a fruitful three-year partnership that has provided $1.5 million to complement Sundance Institutes’ invaluable support of fiction and nonfiction works-in-progress.

We look forward to watching these films on the big screen with you, at Sundance and beyond!

From Cinereach Productions:

Beasts of the Southern Wild U.S. Dramatic
Director: Benh Zeitlin

Written by: Lucy Alibar and Benh Zeitlin

Producers: Michael Gottwald, Dan Janvey, Josh Penn

EP: Philipp Engelhorn, Paul Mezey, Michael Raisler

Cast: Quvenzhané Wallis, Dwight Henry

Waters gonna rise up, wild animals gonna rerun from the grave, and everything south of the levee is goin’ under, in this tale of a six year old named Hushpuppy, who lives with her daddy at the edge of the world.

Sundance Screening Times

Films Supported by the Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute:

Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry U.S. Documentary
Director: Alison Klayman

Producers: Alison Klayman, Adam Schlesinger

The inside story of a dissident for the digital age who inspires global audiences and blurs the boundaries of art and politics.

Sundance Screening Times

An Oversimplification
An Oversimplification of Her Beauty New Frontier
Director: Terence Nance

Producers: Andrew Corkin, James Bartlett, Terence Nance

A quixotic young man humorously courses live action and various animated landscapes as he reaches for self-awareness after a mystery girl stands him up.

Sundance Screening Times

Compliance NEXT<=>
Director: Craig Zobel

Producers: Sophia Lin, Lisa Muskat, Tyler Davidson, Theo Sena, Craig Zobel

When a caller posing as a police officer convinces a fast food restaurant manager to interrogate an innocent young employee, no one is left unscathed. Based on true events.

Sundance Screening Times

I Am Not a Hipster
I Am Not A Hipster NEXT<=>
Director: Destin Daniel Cretton

Producers: Ron Najor, Destin Daniel Cretton, Trevor Fernando

A young singer-songwriter with a growing local following wanders through his apathetic life in San Diego. When his dad and three sisters show up to spread his mother’s ashes, he’s reminded of the part of himself he left back in Ohio and is forced to deal with the person he’s become.

Sundance Screening Times

Keep the Lights On U.S. Dramatic
Director: Ira Sachs

Producers: Marie Therese Guirgis, Lucas Joaquin, Ira Sachs

The story of a tumultuous, decade-long relationship between two men in New York City, chronicling the bonds that keep them together and the addictions that tear them apart.

Sundance Screening Times

The Queen of Versailles U.S. Documentary
Director: Lauren Greenfield

Producers: Lauren Greenfield, Danielle Renfrew Behrens

A character-driven documentary about a billionaire family and their financial challenges in the wake of the economic crisis.

Sundance Screening Times

Pariah 16x9 2

Written and directed by Dee Rees and produced by Nekisa Cooper, Cinereach grantee Pariah opens in theaters on December 28th.

Pariah draws you into the life of a Brooklyn teen who juggles conflicting identities while searching for an authentic expression of self and sexuality that doesn’t place her at odds with family, friends or lovers. Its story is painted through the acclaimed cinematography of Bradford Young, and embodied by a stellar ensemble that includes Adepero Oduye, Kim Wayans, Charles Parnell and Pernell Walker.  A dynamic soundtrack featuring Brooklyn musician Tamar-kali intensifies the film’s pulse.  Dee Rees’ ability to helm all of these talents landed her  Breakthrough Director at this year’s Gotham Awards, and the film has been recognized with two nominations for the Independent Spirit Awards.

Pariah arrives in theaters almost a year after its premiere at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, but its story truly began several years ago when Rees set out to make a short that could be expanded into a feature version.  The challenges and triumphs of the film’s journey are well described in Film Independent’s interview with Rees and producer Nekisa Cooper.  Cinereach is proud to have been one of many organizations along the way to have supported the film.

VIBE’s interviews with Rees and star Adepero Oduye offer you a chance to spend more time with these breakthrough talents, before seeing their outstanding work.  And Nelson George’s recent New York Times article contextualizes Pariah in a range of independent film made by African-Americans from the late 70s to now (including fellow Cinereach grantee Kinyarwanda).  Even better than reading about the film is watching it.

Pariah opens on Wednesday, December 28th in select theaters in NYC and California, and expands further nationwide on January 6th. Visit the Focus Features website for information on where to see Pariah.

KINYARWANDA_TheaterPosterKinyarwanda dramatizes the 1994 genocide in Rwanda that saw one million lives lost in one hundred days. As it interweaves six tales into one narrative, its characters confront the realities of forgiveness in the face of vengeance. Kinyarwanda is the feature-length debut of writer/director Alrick Brown; produced by Darren Dean, Tommy Oliver and Executive Producer Ishmael Ntihabose. The film was supported by a Cinereach grant in summer 2010 (towards post-production), and premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, where it received the World Dramatic Competition Audience Award. Kinyarwanda begins its theatrical run December 2nd in multiple cities across the US, being distributed by the African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement (AFFRM).

Kinyarwanda’s theatrical release happens to coincide with the announcement of the 2012 Sundance Film Festival lineup. This exciting time finds producer Tommy Oliver reminiscing about an unexpectedly rewarding bond forged at Sundance, that is even stronger one year later. Infused with admirable generosity, his post offers an uplifting example of the social capital that can sustain films through their festival and distribution journeys.

A Rising Tide Raises All Ships
a guest post by Producer Tommy Oliver

On a freezing cold day last January in Salt Lake City, something special happened.

Before I tell you what that special something was, let me offer a bit of context:

1) Salt Lake City is 45-60 min drive from the main Sundance hub of Park City.

2) By cold, I mean less than 20 degrees.

3) When you have a film (especially your first film) at Sundance, you barely have time to breathe between multiple screenings, events, press junkets and so forth.

4) Before every screening we had, I made a point to engage with each and every waitlist line (if they were willing to wait in line for the chance to get tickets, they absolutely deserved attention and gratitude).

While engagingd with the waitlist line for our Salt Lake City screening, I happened upon three faces I knew.  They were those of Dee Rees, Nekisa Cooper and Adepero Oduye, the writer/director, producer and star, respectively, of the phenomenal film Pariah, which was also playing at the festival.

The fact that they would attend our screening isn’t a particularly big deal – Alrick and Dee were contemporaries at NYU and we all went through the IFP labs together. But when you take into account that they had their own screening that day, drove 45 minutes in the snow, waited outside in the cold with little chance of securing tickets and not once picked up the phone to call Alrick, Darren or myself for tickets before heading down, it paints a very different picture. They wanted to support us and not in a fleeting or ephemeral manner, and I loved them for that. It was so gracious, humble and incredibly beautiful.

It was the sort of thing that affirms your faith in people and collaboration in an industry typically known for its narcissism.

Fast-forward eleven months as both films are set to open theatrically (Kinyarwanda on December 2nd and Pariah on December 28th), and our bond is even tighter. We’ve supported and cross-promoted them at every turn and they’ve done the same for us. If you go to Nekisa’s Facebook page, you’d see that her profile picture is the Kinyarwanda poster. If you check my twitter feed, you’d see that I’ve mentioned Pariah almost as much as I’ve mentioned Kinyarwanda.

We’ve fallen into a sort of symbiosis (ironic for a film named Pariah) that illustrates how working together can result in something greater than the sum of the parts. It also shows that treating collaboration and not competition as the default, is a healthy and viable option. The best part of all of this is that it was completely organic. We’ve never once had a conversation about how we’d cross promote, what the parameters were or who was doing what. Ever.

In the end, Pariah is a good film done by good folks and spreading the word about it is something we did happily and will continue to do.

A rising tide raises all ships.

Follow @KinyarwandaMov @ProducerTommy and @NorthstarPics on Twitter for more good vibes related to Kinyarwanda and Pariah.

Kinyarawanda theater and ticket information can be found at affrm.com.

Tommy OliverTommy Oliver, a strong believer in the transformative power of film, is trying to make the world a better place, one film at a time.  Growing up in inner city Philadelphia, he quickly learned that “preaching at” his peers was not the way to go and film was a much better medium to reach them.  Over the next fifteen years, he has honed his craft through practice, training, education and experimentation. As a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University, where he double majored in Economics and Digital Media, and as a Microsoft alum, he developed a keen understanding for business as a whole. As a cinematographer and certified techie, he developed the technical skills to fill in any crew position and to be able to better communicate with team leaders and vendors. As a producer and writer, he’s faced innumerable challenges from crafting a coherent and marketable story to tackling the logistics of shooting in a foreign country and beyond. This combination of skills allows for outside the box thinking, creative problem solving and better communication.  In addition to dozens of short films and commercials, Tommy has produced three feature films including Kinyarwanda and Plastic Jesus starring Mackenzie Foy and Hilarie Burton.

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