Archive for 2012

Cinereach supported films are screening at festivals all over the globe this fall. We hope you’re stepping out of the newly chilled air and into the warm theater to catch some of them when the timing and location is right!

Some of the below have already come and gone, but some are going on as we speak, or are just on the horizon. The links below will lead you to any available ticketing information.

Informant

Informant

November

AFI Fest November 1 – 8, Los Angeles, CA
Cinereach grantees: Here and There, Leviathan and Tchoupitoulas
CPH: Dox November 1 – 11, Copenhagen, Denmark
Cinereach grantees: Tchoupitoulas, Leviathan and Call Me Kuchu
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: The Queen of Versailles
Doc NYC November 8 – 15, New York, NY
Cinereach grantees: Code of the West, Informant and The Mosuo Sisters,
with God Loves Uganda (featured as a work-in-progress)
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry
Rome Film Festival November 9 – 17, Rome, Italy
Cinereach grantee: El Ojo Del Tiburon (The Shark’s Eye) - World Premiere
IDFA November 14 – 25 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Cinereach grantees: Informant, Leviathan, Reportero and The World Before Her
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: The Queen of Versailles
IDFA Forum – Cinereach grantees: PowerlessStrong IslandWhite Elephants

Here and There (Aqui y Alla)

Here and There (Aqui y Alla)

October
Sao Paulo International Film Festival October 19 – November 1, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Cinereach grantees: Bully, Here and There (Aqui y Alla) and Laura
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Postcards from the Zoo
New Orleans Film Festival October 11 – 18, New Orleans, Louisiana
Cinereach grantees: Call Me Kuchu, Informant and The Patron Saints
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees: An Oversimplification of Her Beauty, Compliance and Keep the Lights On
Abu Dhabi Film Festival October 11 – 20, Abu Dhabi, UAE
Cinereach production: Beasts of the Southern Wild
Cinereach grantee: The World Before Her
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry
Woodstock Film Festival October 10 – 14 Woodstock, NY
Cinereach grantee: Informant
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees: I Am Not a Hipster and Words of Witness
BFI London Film Festival October 10 – 21, London, England
Cinereach production: Beasts of the Southern Wild
Cinereach grantees: Here and There (Aqui y Alla) and Tchoupitoulas
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Compliance, Fill the Void and Keep the Lights On
Busan International Film Festival October 4 – 13, Busan, South Korea
Cinereach production: Beasts of the Southern Wild
Cinereach grantee: Here and There (Aqui y Alla)
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Postcards From the Zoo
Hamptons International Film Festival October 4 – 8, Hamptons, NY
Cinereach grantee: Call Me Kuchu

The Mosuo Sisters

The Mosuo Sisters

September
New York Film Festival September 28 – October 14, New York, NY
Cinereach granteesHere and There (Aqui y Alla) and Leviathan
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee: Fill the Void
Camden International Film Festival September 27-30, Camden, Maine
Cinereach grantees: Call Me Kuchu and Code of the West
Zurich Film Festival September 20 – 30, Zurich, Switzerland
Cinereach production: Beasts of the Southern Wild
Cinereach grantees: The Mosuo Sisters – World Premiere and The World Before Her
Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees: At Any Price and The Queen of Versailles
We began making Girl Model in the summer of 2007 when Ashley Arbaugh (the scout featured in our documentary) approached us with an idea to document “modeling and prostitution or the foggy line that exists between the two.”  Five years later Girl Model has been released during New York Fashion week (September 5 at the IFC Center).
Ashley Arbaugh brought us into a secretive world of fashion for unknown reasons; any guess on our part would be conjecture. Yet, her ambivalence about participating in an industry where she was scouting girls as young as 13 interested us as storytellers. Indeed, the story developed into a narrative about Ashley’s experiences. One of her young discoveries was 13 year-old Nadya Vall from Ob, Siberia, whom Ashley sent to Tokyo, Japan. Nadya became a focus of the story as well.
Spending four years exploring Ashley and Nadya’s world left us with a feeling of forlornness that we wanted to translate into the structure of our verite story. After we finished shooting Girl Model, we set out to craft scenes that were engaging but at the same time, built toward a looming sense of dread, imitating the situation in which the girls find themselves. We edited while shooting and then hired two editors (Alan Canant and Darius Marder) to help shape the story out of 200 hours of footage.
We started and ended Girl Model with the intention of documenting a story, not developing a thesis statement or exposing the practices of specific individuals or companies. To us, above all, our film is, and will always be, a verite narrative. That said, we do recognize that Girl Model stirs up audience emotions and begs questions of conscience, perhaps even more so than it would have if we had tried to argue a point using facts and stats.
Audiences are outraged to witness some of the more disturbing aspects of the underbelly of the modeling and fashion industries — the illegal working conditions, the manipulation and exploitation of young, malleable girls. After seeing it, some want a space to participate in discussions, events or actions around these problems, and to learn how they can hold people or companies accountable. This inspired us to create an outlet for these reactions as we strategized the film’s distribution.
We conducted a Kickstarter fundraising campaign to raise an outreach budget, and began fueling conversations about the Girl Model’s themes in social media and beyond.  Raising awareness and media literacy among young boys and girls was has become a major focus of our efforts. We’re working with Rachel Blais, who is featured in Girl Model, and an outreach coordinator, Nancy Schwartzman, to get young people talking, and to help book the film in high schools. Recognizing that youth access their media online, Nancy (@fancynancynyc) and Rachel (@rachelblias1) have developed a social media campaign to provide a platform to hear from models who have been silenced by the industry, using #askagirlmodel.
We have also built partnerships with The Model Alliance (@modelallianceny), Equity (http://www.equity.org.uk/models/), and, inspired by their activism, we hope to partner with Spark Summit – http://www.change.org/petitions/seventeen-magazine-give-girls-images-of-real-girls[,] http://www.change.org/petitions/teen-vogue-give-us-images-of-real-girl) and Girls Leadership Institute (http://www.girlsleadershipinstitute.org/).
We didn’t set out to create a tool for advocacy, but it’s been highly rewarding to see Girl Model spark complex and productive dialogues as it enters the media landscape.

When Cinereach grantee Girl Model opened Wednesday at New York City’s IFC Center, we asked directors Ashley Sabin and David Redmon to take us through the film’s evolution, from the introduction of subject Ashley Arbaugh and her world, to the early audience reactions and the birth of an unanticipated outreach campaign.

……..……..……..……..……

We began making Girl Model in the summer of 2007 when Ashley Arbaugh (the scout featured in the documentary) approached us with an idea to document the journey of young girls who “become prostitutes and fashion models or the foggy lines that exist between both.” Five years later Girl Model has been released during New York Fashion week (September 5 at the IFC Center).

Ashley Arbaugh brought us into a secretive world of fashion for unknown reasons — any guess on our part would be conjecture. Yet her ambivalence about participating in an industry where she was scouting girls as young as 13 was interesting to us as storytellers. Indeed, the story developed into a narrative about Ashley’s experiences. One of her young discoveries was 13 year-old Nadya Vall from Ob, Siberia, whom Ashley sent to Tokyo, Japan. Nadya became a focus of the story as well.

Spending four years exploring Ashley and Nadya’s world left us with a feeling of forlornness that we wanted to translate into the structure of our verité story. After we finished shooting, we set out to craft scenes that were engaging but at the same time, built toward a looming sense of dread, imitating the situation in which the subjects in Girl Model find themselves. We edited while shooting, and then hired two editors (Alan Canant and Darius Marder) to help shape the story out of 200 hours of footage.

Girl Model (photo courtesy of the filmmakers)

Girl Model (photo courtesy of the filmmakers)

We started and ended Girl Model with the intention of documenting a story, not developing a thesis statement or exposing the practices of specific individuals or companies. To us, above all, our film is a verité narrative. That said, we do recognize that Girl Model stirs up audience emotions and begs questions of conscience, perhaps even more so than it would have if we had tried to argue a point using facts and stats.

Audiences members are often outraged to witness some of the more disturbing aspects of the underbelly of the modeling and fashion industries — the illegal working conditions, the manipulation and exploitation of young, malleable girls. Some want a space to participate in discussions, events or actions around these problems, and to learn how they can hold the responsible parties accountable. This inspired us to create an outlet for these reactions as we strategized the film’s distribution.

We conducted a Kickstarter fundraising campaign to raise an outreach budget, and began fueling conversations about Girl Model’s themes in social media and beyond.  Raising awareness and media literacy among young boys and girls has become a major focus of our efforts. We’re working with Rachel Blais, who is featured in the film, and Outreach Coordinator Nancy Schwartzman to get young people talking, and to help book the film in high schools. Recognizing that youth access their media online, Nancy (@fancynancynyc) and Rachel (@RachelBlais1) have developed a social media campaign to provide a platform to hear from models who have been silenced by the industry, using the Twitter hashtag #askagirlmodel.

We have also built partnerships with The Model Alliance, Equity. Inspired by the activism of Spark Summit and Girls Leadership Institute, we hope to partner with them as well

We didn’t set out to create a tool for advocacy, but it’s been highly rewarding to see Girl Model spark complex and productive dialogues as it enters the media landscape.

Follow Girl Model on Facebook and Twitter to for the latest updates.

photo by Joshua Weinstein

photo by Joshua Weinstein

David Redmon (Co-Director/Producer) began his filmmaking career with the documentary Mardi Gras: Made in China.  During production, David and Ashley Sabin (Co-Director/Producer) met and continued collaborating on Kamp Katrina, Intimidad and Invisible Girlfriend.  In addition to Girl Model (which has screened at IDFA, SXSW, the Toronto International Film Festival, and other festivals around the globe), Redmon and Sabin recently completed feature documentary Downeast. In recent years, with greater aspirations for the lives of their films, the team added a distribution branch to their production company, Carnivalesque Films, and now distribute all of their own productions and works by other filmmakers.


We’re very happy to announce that Cinereach is now accepting Letters of Inquiry for our 2012 Grant Cycle. The submission deadline is Tuesday, September 4th at 7:00 PM (EST).

Cinereach will award grants of up to $50,000 to a selection of feature length fiction and nonfiction films at any stage of production, from development through post.

If you intend to apply, please visit the How to Apply, Priorities & Guidelines, and FAQ pages on our website.





Whether or not you’re a prospective applicant, please share this call for submissions with any filmmakers you know who may be working on projects at the intersection of engaging storytelling, visual artistry and vital subject matter.

We can’t wait to find out what you’ve been working on, and to expand the Cinereach family.


Looking forward!

Adella Ladjevardi
Grants Manager

Summer film festivals provide air conditioned refuge from the heat outside and big screen encounters with perspectives from around the world. We hope you’ll be able to attend one or more of these thrilling fests, and catch some Cinereach supported films while you’re there:

Sydney Film Festival June 6 – 17, Sydney, Australia

Cinereach production:
Beasts of the Southern Wild

Cinereach grantees:
Bully and The World Before Her

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry and Postcards from the Zoo

HotDocs-Call Me Kuchu

Sheffield Doc/Fest June 13 – 17, Sheffield, UK

Cinereach grantees:
Call Me Kuchu and Planet of Snail

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry

Full-Frame---Reportero

Human Rights Watch Film Festival June 14 – 28, New York, NY

Cinereach grantees:
Call Me Kuchu, Habibi, and Reportero

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry and Words of Witness

Words of Witness

Los Angeles Film Festival June 14 – 24, Los Angeles, CA

Cinereach production:
Beasts of the Southern Wild

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
An Oversimplification of Her BeautyThe Queen of Versailles,
Words of Witness and a short from Remote Area Medical

world_before_her_legs
SilverDocs June 18 – 24, Silver Spring, MD

Cinereach grantees:
Call Me Kuchu, Planet of SnailTchoupitoulas and The World Before Her

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry, and The Queen of Versailles

The Patron Saints 16x9 2
BAMcinemaFest June 20 – July 1, Brooklyn, NY

Cinereach production:
Beasts of the Southern Wild

Cinereach grantees:
The Patron Saints and Tchoupitoulas

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:
Compliance

The_Queen_of_Versailles_website

Nantucket Film Festival June 20 – 24, Nantucket, MA

Cinereach production:
Beasts of the Southern Wild

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry and The Queen of Versailles

The_Queen_of_Versailles_website

Traverse City Film Festival July 31 – August 5 Traverse City, MI

Cinereach production:
Beasts of the Southern Wild

Cinereach grantees:
BURN, Code of the West, On the Ice, Up Heartbreak Hill, and The World Before Her

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai WeiWei: Never Sorry, Compliance, An Oversimplification of Her Beauty, and The Queen of Versailles

The_Queen_of_Versailles_website

Locarno Film Festival August 1 – 11 Locarno, Switzerland

Cinereach grantees:
Leviathan

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Compliance

Look, Stranger, a Cinereach grantee, is the story of a displaced woman making a dangerous journey home. Set in an unidentified world at war, it is an intense character and landscape study exploring the destiny of lost souls.

In this guest blog post (with photos by Gus Powell), Writer/Director Arielle Javitch shares fourteen pairings of thoughts and images emblematic of her experience creating Look, Stranger.

The film screens Wednesday, May 23, at 7pm at the SVA Theater in New York City.

Fourteen Things
by Arielle Javitch

1. A page from an early draft of Look, Stranger. The dialogue is in Uslan, an imaginary language I invented for the film.

Script

2. Gypsy children at a Belgrade casting session. A major challenge of making my film was creating an imaginary world using real people and a real place.

Boys

3. Drawings I made when the film was still a dream, before the script.

Drawings

4. Two books that are central to the film. Consciousness, mysticism, and madness. My only regret is that there isn’t more silliness.

Books

5. This radio was a character in one of my short films. I liked it so much I cast it again in Look, Stranger.

Radio

6. The Russian nanny of my cousin from Tblisi, Georgia. A creature from a fairytale. She died before anyone could make a film about her.

Litka

7. Central African men at a Belgrade casting session. They didn’t believe I was the director, and would only discuss important matters with my husband.

Africans

8. A taxi driver asked me what my film was called and I said, Look, Stranger. He asked what it was about and I said, strangers looking at each other. We looked at each other.

Driver

9. During a location scout, someone unfriendly hocked phlegm into a coffee meant for me. I didn’t drink it, but it was hard not to cry.

Coffee

10. My sister was there for me a lot over the years it took to make the film. She also brought candy to set.

Sisters

11. There was ping pong and poker playing at night during the shoot. Unfortunately, I had to re-write the script each night and couldn’t join in.

Poker

12. My favorite part of directing a film is rehearsing with the actors and the text. Our hearts would beat faster when something was interesting or true.

Rehersal

13. Our female co-producers in Belgrade were nicknamed the Pitbulls. When I met them for the first time, I realized I’m a Pitbull sometimes too. I quickly grew very fond of them and now think of them as Labradors.

Dogs

14. In rehearsal with a child of eight, I asked him to make a wish, any wish, out loud. He said, “God, please make me a bigger person.” When lost, I think of what this might mean.

Bigger

 Arielle Javitch

Arielle Javitch, born in 1975, is from New York City. She came to filmmaking from a contemporary dance and performance background, and in 2002 began making short dance films that gradually evolved into short narratives. Her work has been awarded support and recognition from Cinereach, the Sundance Institute/Annenberg Foundation, the Edit Center, New York State Council on the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, and Dance Films Association. She has been cited as one of Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 Filmmakers to Watch.” Javitch is a former Fulbright Scholar in modern history. Look, Stranger is her first feature film.

» cinereach.org
» [email protected]
04/10/2012
Cinereach Supported Films at the Tribeca Film Festival
Dear Friends,
The spring festival season is upon us!
We’re excited to welcome five Cinereach supported films to New York City for the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival, which begins April 18th. Check the festival’s site for ticket info.
Grantees BURN and The World Before Her will have their world premieres, and Planet of Snail will make its North American Premiere.
BURN (Nonfiction)
Dirs. Tom Putnam & Brenna Sanchez

A front-line look at the city of Detroit, as seen through the eyes of its firefighters, who are some of the busiest in the world.

» Tribeca Screening Times

Planet of Snail (Nonfiction)
Dir. Seung-Jun Yi

Young-Chan comes from the Planet of Snail. Dwellers of this tiny planet are deaf and blind, and call themselves ‘snails’ because they rely only on their tactile senses, and communicating by touch.

» Tribeca Screening Times

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The World Before Her (Nonfiction)
Dir. Nisha Pahuja

Two competitors in the Miss India Contest show an India divided along many fault lines—political, religious, economic and cultural.

» Tribeca Screening Times

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees Keep the Lights On and Postcards from the Zoo will make their New York and North American premieres, respectively, at this year’s festival.
Keep the Lights On (Fiction)
Dir. 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.

» Tribeca Screening Times

Postcards from the Zoo (Fiction)
Dir. Edwin

After being abandoned at a young age at the zoo, a young woman leaves her magical childhood behind to discover the world outside.

» Tribeca Screening Times

Beyond New York City, across the US and around the world, the spring film festivals are brimming with Cinereach grantees. Keep an eye out for Code of the West, Informant, Kuichisan, Laura, The Patron Saints, Reportero, Ok, Enough, Goodbye and other titles in festival lineups from Boston to Buenos Aires! Click here for a full list.

More updates soon!

Happy spring,
Cinereach

The Tribeca Film Festival is a springtime staple for us New Yorkers, but film lovers from Boston to Buenos Aires have an exciting and simulating April to take part in as well.

Below are some festivals that are coming up fast, and we’ve listed the Cinereach supported films selected for each.

Bafici-OK

Bafici
April 11 – 22 // Buenos, Aires, Argentina

Cinereach grantees:
Kuichisan, Laura and Ok, Enough, Goodbye (plus short films by Rania Attieh & Daniel Garcia)

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:
Postcards from the Zoo

REPORTERO-SELECTS---64

Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
April 12 – 15 // Durham, NC

Cinereach grantees:
Girl Model
and Reportero

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:

Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry

CPH-Porfirio

CPH PIX
April 12 – 29 // Copenhagen, Denmark

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Keep the Lights On, Porfirio and Postcards from the Zoo
Girl Model 16x9

Dallas International Film Festival
April 12 – 22 // Dallas, TX

Cinereach grantees:
Girl Model
and Tchoupitoulas

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Compliance and An Oversimplification of Her Beauty

Sarasota-Patron

Sarasota Film Festival
April 13 – 22 // Sarasota, FL

Cinereach grantee:
Girl Model, The Patron Saints and Tchoupitoulas

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:
Compliance, Keep the Lights On and The Queen of Versailles

SF-Informant San Francisco International Film Festival
April 19 – May 3 // San Francisco, CA

Cinereach grantees:
Informant and Ok, Enough, Goodbye

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, Compliance, An Oversimplification of Her Beauty and The Queen of Versailles

Boston-Code

The Independent Film Festival Boston
April 25 – May 2 // Boston, MA

Cinereach grantees:
BURN, Code of the West and Girl Model

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantee:
Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry and The Queen of Versailles

HotDocs-Call Me Kuchu

Hot Docs
April 26 – May 6 // Toronto, ON Canada

Cinereach grantees:
Call Me Kuchu, Laura, Planet of Snail, Tchoupitoulas and The World Before Her

Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute grantees:
Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry and The Queen of Versailles


Cinereach is excited to note that the SXSW Film Festival, which takes place from March 9th – 17th, has included three Cinereach grantees in its lineup: the US premiere of Girl Model and the world premieres of Code of the West and Tchoupitoulas. Compliance, which received support through the Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute, will also be making its next festival appearance there.

Along with the festival, the SXSW Film Conference runs March 9th-13th and features a range of opportunities to survey the culture, technology and business of contemporary filmmaking. Conference attendees embarking on the grant-seeking process can join Cinereach’s Leah Giblin for the panel Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Grants (Sunday, March 11 at 11:00am). She’ll be sharing pragmatic insights in discussion with Judith Helfand of Chicken & Egg Pictures, Dianne Debicella of Fractured Atlas, Tamara Horowitz of San Francisco Film Society, and filmmaker Ellen Spiro.

Cinereach Grantees at SXSW:

Code Of The West_CannabisTincture
Code of the West nonfiction
Director: Rebecca Richman Cohen

Reflecting the controversies enveloping the marijuana industry throughout the United States, Montana braces itself to become the first state to repeal a medical marijuana law.

SXSW Screening Times

Girl Model 16x9
Girl Model nonfiction
Directors: A. Sabin & David Redmon

Follows a complex supply chain between Siberia, Japan, and the U.S. within the modeling industry.

SXSW Screening Times

Tchoupitoulas_16x9.jpg
Tchoupitoulas nonfiction
Directors: Bill & Turner Ross

Three young brothers explore the New Orleans night.

SXSW Screening Times

Compliance_copy_website
Compliance fiction
Director: 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.

SXSW Screening Times

Supported by the Cinereach Project at Sundance Institute

» cinereach.org
» [email protected]
02/23/2012

Dear Friends of Cinereach,
We have some exciting news to share from Cinereach Productions!
The Forgiveness of Blood in Theaters
Directed by: Joshua Marston
In Theaters: Tomorrow, February 24th

From the writer/director of Maria Full of Grace, The Forgiveness of Blood is the engrossing story of a northern Albanian family caught in a blood feud. The film has been lauded by critics, and won the Silver Bear for Best Screenplay at last year’s Berlin Film Festival. The director, along with some cast and crew, will be at select NYC and LA screenings this weekend for Q&As. Click here for theaters and showtimes. You can also watch the trailer here. It hits cities across the country in March.
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Directed by: Benh Zeitlin
In Theaters: June 29th

Benh Zeitlin’s tale from the edge of the world, Beasts of the Southern Wild, premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, and was honored with both the Excellence in Cinematography Award and the Grand Jury Prize in the U.S. Dramatic Competition. We’re thrilled to have a partner in Fox Searchlight Pictures for the film’s U.S. release, and we’ll be in touch with more details soon.
Upcoming Productions

Production is underway on both of our nonfiction features: Charge by Michael Plunkett and Teenage by Matt Wolf. We’re also well into post-production on The Cold Lands, a narrative feature by Tom Gilroy.

More on all these projects soon!

Best regards,

Philipp Engelhorn
Executive Director
Michael Raisler
Creative Director
Visit cinereach.org or connect with us on Facebook or Twitter for regular updates and more information about Cinereach projects. To contact us please email [email protected]

Cinereach is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit film production company and foundation.

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