Archive for February 2012

Return-OneSheet_small

Written and directed by Liza Johnson and produced by Noah Harlan & Ben Howe, Cinereach grantee Return opens in theaters in NY & LA this Friday, February 10th.

Return draws you into the life of Kelli, a soldier returning from an overseas tour of duty. With powerful performances from Linda Cardellini and Michael Shannon, Time Out NY’s review of the film says “Writer-director Liza Johnson has (not so) simply created a movie about a woman’s transitional moment.”

Be sure to check out the indieWire’s interviews with Linda Cardellini and Michael Shannon.

Return arrives in theaters almost a year after its premiere at the 2011 Director’s Fortnight.  Cinereach is proud to have been one of many organizations along the way to have supported the film.

Opening on Friday, February 10th in select theaters in NYC and California, Return further expands to Columbus, Ohio and Williamstown, MA in March. Focus World will be releasing the film via digital platforms beginning February 28th.

» cinereach.org
» info@cinereach.org
04/05/2011
Winter grantees have been selected!
Dear Friends of Cinereach,
This winter, Cinereach received over 1000 applications for funding from more than 70 countries! This has been our most competitive grant round to date. Today we’re pleased to announce our latest grantees. Thirteen projects will receive $400,000 in funds. The selected films exemplify our commitment to funding vital stories, artfully told.

As you may know, Cinereach supports first-time feature directors, as well as filmmakers building on prior achievements and moving in new directions. The selected films also range from the early research and development phase to the final stages of post-production.

These projects tackle a number of timely themes and topics from unexpected viewpoints. We’re excited for the many surprises that will be revealed as each one progresses towards completion:

The Angola Project (Nonfiction)
Dir. Jeremy Xido | Angola | In Research & Development
A post-colonial western-meets-road film about the fevered reconstruction of the Benguela Transcontinental Railway and the African and Chinese lives that are intertwined because of it. » More
Diamond, Silver & Gold (Nonfiction)
Dir. Jason Kohn | USA | In Production
A look into the origins of life, synthetic diamonds and other nagging problems.» More
The Great Invisible (Nonfiction)
Dir. Margaret Brown | USA | In Production
An observational documentary about the Gulf oil spill and the resulting moratorium on drilling in the Gulf.» More
In the Last Days of the City (Fiction)
Dir. Tamer El Said | Egypt | In Post-Production
A filmmaker comes of age in a city on the brink of revolution. » More
Just Do It: A Tale of Modern Day Outlaws (Nonfiction)
Dir. Emily James | UK | In Post-Production
An observational documentary providing unprecedented access to the environmental direct action movement in the UK.» More
Montana Medical Marijuana Film (Nonfiction)
Dir. Rebecca Richman Cohen | USA | In Production
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. » More
Narco Cultura(Nonfiction)
Dir. Shaul Schwarz | Mexico/USA | In Post-Production
An in-depth and vivid exploration of a new, powerful culture fueled by the cartels responsible for Mexico’s deadly drug wars. » More
The Patron Saints (Nonfiction)
Dir. Melanie Shatzky & Brian Cassidy | USA/Canada | In Post-Production
A disquieting and hyperrealistic glimpse into life at a nursing home.
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More
The Scribe of Uraba (Fiction)
Dir. Jeff & Michael Zimbalist | USA/Colombia | In Development
When her father is murdered in rural Colombia, Alcira Gil embarks on a quest for justice that is larger than her family, her village, or even her country. » More

States (Nonfiction)
Dir. David Soll | USA/Southern Sudan/Western Sahara | In Research & Development
The world’s only freelance diplomats guide non-states in their struggle for recognition, through the pageantry of international affairs. » More
Strong Island(Nonfiction)
Dir. Yance Ford | USA | In Production
A documentary about the violent death of the filmmaker’s brother nearly 20 years ago, and how the collision of silence, fear and the judiciary allowed his killer to go free. » More
Ushio + Noriko (Nonfiction)
Dir. Zachary Heinzerling | USA | In Post-Production
A meditation on companionship, sacrifice, and the creative spirit, this love story explores the chaotic forty-year marriage of two New York-based, Japanese artists. » More
The Vanquishing of the Witch Baba Yaga (Nonfiction)
Dir. Jessica Oreck | Russia/Poland/Ukraine | In Post-Production
A descent into the woodlands of Eastern Europe that uncovers the secrets of the mysterious mushroom and the mythic qualities of the forest it inhabits. » More
Thanks for keeping up with Cinereach news. We hope to be in touch with you again soon.

Happy spring!

Best regards,
Adella Ladjevardi
Grants Manager

Visit cinereach.org or become our fan on Facebook and Twitter for regular updates and more information about these and other projects Cinereach supports. To contact us please email info@cinereach.org

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

Anthony Morrison

A post by Anthony Morrison

Three feet tall and rising; a classroom of two and three year olds is buzzing. The New York Child Resource Centers in the south Bronx and Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn offer early intervention services for children diagnosed on the autism spectrum. I visited the school once in March, then again in May, meeting with the owners and principals, couple Michelle and Dr. Fred Weinberg. Together we brainstormed potential stories for Bye, the documentary that would eventually become my entry into Cinereach’s Reach Film Fellowship. Michelle joked there were a million stories within the classroom.

In those two short months separating our visits, there was visible development and learning; kids now saying their first words, some transitioning out of special education into traditional kindergarten classrooms. In October, as I returned to the school, I struggled to choose one perspective as my focus for the film: whose angle on this story provides the best frame? There are Principals Michelle and Fred, there are the therapists who guide the students, there are the kids themselves (some of whom are recently diagnosed and are new to the classroom). How do I decide which will work best within the time constraints of a 5-10 minute piece? I know I can’t follow them all.

In my last short doc, specificity of perspective was a problem. I was lucky enough to travel to South Africa and co-direct a documentary about the role of protest music in the current struggle against HIV. We shot for forty-one days, collecting over one-hundred and fifty hours of footage. While in production, these numbers were confidence boosters. We followed fifteen different characters but only for three days each. A part of me felt that there must be something buried within that large amount of footage that would give us a compelling narrative – each of the MiniDV tapes like little bricks in a foundation. I found out in the editing room, however, that too much footage, covering too much ground, can sink a project. The overwhelming weight of hundreds of tapes made a final cut seem impossible. Our content was extensive, but didn’t go quite deep enough into any one storyline or character to build the kind of story I had hoped for.

Through the Reach Fellowship I was lucky enough to be matched with Mad Hot Ballroom Director Marilyn Agrelo (my mentor) and Yoni Brook (consulting producer of RFF and a Cinereach grantee for his films Bronx Princess and A Son’s Sacrifice). These two have helped me narrow my focus by challenging me to write a defining statement for the film; part artist statement, part hypothesis. This statement should guide my focus as I pick and pursue an angle into the world I have chosen to tell a story about. I made more visits to both centers and spent time observing therapy in action – wrestling all along to find a simple phrase or question that could guide my efforts to capture the action. My first attempts were oversimplifications: Was this a drama about the intersection of poverty and autism? Was this a political story about families fighting for educational rights for kids on the spectrum? Although valid questions, they are very broad, too much for a ten minute cut. I could already see the stacks of MiniDV tapes piling up.

Part of the Reach Fellowship includes meetings with advisors from different facets of the film business and getting their perspectives. One evening, after I had spent a day at the school, still unsure of who my main characters were, all of the fellows met with Cinematographer Michael Simmonds at the Cinereach offices. One of his main points of advice was to emphasize the importance of specificity, being economical with our choice of shots when covering a scene. He explained how simple, specific shots expressing simple ideas are the best building blocks for communicating larger, very complex ideas. (I’m butchering this, but he used the example of communicating a story about a baker’s wife cheating on her husband. To convey it, all you need is 1) shot of bed rocking 2) shot of waiting butcher 3) shot of wife, meeting husband, disheveled clothes.)

Michael Simmonds advises the RFF Fellows on Cinematography

Michael Simmonds advises the RFF Fellows on Cinematography

During our conversation with Mike, I began thinking about what types of situations would allow me to collect the simple building blocks of my story. What was the most basic and most interesting thing I could capture that would communicate a compelling, larger idea – one that reflected why I was drawn to this subject to begin with. It then struck me that the purest and most essential moments I could capture would be those of daily learning and social interaction between the kids during their first introduction to the school environment.

For the autism populations in Brooklyn and the Bronx who are so scattered and sometimes isolated by stigma or because they are undiagnosed, this classroom serves as a rare chance to interact with peers. This is one of the most essential things they gain from being at the schools, and is also a human and relatable need audiences will immediately identify with.

This guided me towards my first formal attempt at a defining statement: These kids deserve the same chance at being in a classroom as everyone else. Scenes that show that can be the building blocks of my film. The majority of my footage for the doc should come from material captured within the classroom and show how the rare, early intervention services Michelle and Fred’s unique schools provide are life changing for these students.

Now days away from starting principal photography, I feel armed with my defining statement. The process of struggling to define it is extremely helpful in establishing a structure and distinguishing the excellent scenes from the great. The statement reminds me what is at the core of this story, keeping me specific about what scenes we shoot, but at the same time open to surprises. Coming up soon, our first test shoot. My DP, Ivaylo Getov, and my sound mixer, Shawn Axman, will do a two-day trial shoot in the classroom to test our setups, then my editor Andrew Siwoff begins cutting. In our first sequence, we will document the arrival of a new student and the class’ reaction.

2010 RFF Fellow Anthony Morrison (mentored by Marilyn Agrelo) studied film at NYU. In 2006 he co-directed Body Soldiers, a documentary about the role of protest music in fighting HIV in South Africa, winner of a production grant from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Recently, he worked as a researcher for This Is Not A Robbery, by Andrea Lauren Productions, which premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival. In his RFF Film, Bye, a class of two-year-olds  faces opportunities and challenges at a school for previously undocumented autistic kids.

Each month MediaRights.org (part of Cinereach sister organization Arts Engine) selects a video clip from a social-issue piece of media and presents it to visitors to watch, comment-on and forward to peers. This new staple of their site, called 90-Second Cinema, will feature Clips that are no longer than ninety seconds and, for each one, highlight how a creative or artful approach was employed to tell a story with impact. 90-Second Cinema is a quick and instructive way to collect tips on the art and craft of socially relevant storytelling.

This month, the site features a clip from The Devil Came on Horseback, and notes how several different types of source material were used in one sequence to powerful effect. Annie Sundberg (who made the film along with Ricki Stern) is a mentor of RFF 2010 Fellow Nadia Hallgren and has been advising Nadia on the craft of socially relevant storytelling as it relates to Nadia’s film, Love Lockdown.

IFP/ROTTERDAM LAB FELLOWSHIP
(from an IFP announcement)

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Through its No Borders’ partnership with CineMart, IFP will select and provide travel assistance to two American producers to participate in the 2010 Rotterdam Lab Fellowship.

The Rotterdam Lab is a four-day training workshop which runs concurrently with the CineMart Co-Production Market. Designed to build up the international networks and knowledge of producers in its professional panels and speed-dating sessions, lab participants will enjoy formal and informal meetings with colleagues and numerous representatives in the international finance, production, sales and distribution sectors.

Recent IFP/ROTTERDAM Lab Fellows include: Paul Mezey, Karin Chien, Noah Harlan, Jamin O’Brien, Anish Savjani and Mynette Louie.

Those interested in consideration for the program should apply with a letter of interest and a resume to Amy Dotson, Deputy Director IFP BY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13th. Applicants should have at least one feature-film credit and be a current IFP member.

For more information on CineMart and the Rotterdam Film Festival go to www.filmfestivalrotterdam.com.

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From the TFI Announcement:

The TFI Sloan Filmmaker Fund will provide up to $140,000 in support of innovative and compelling filmmaking that explores scientific, mathematical, and technological themes and storylines, or a leading character who is a scientist, engineer, innovator or mathematician in fresh ways.

The fund seeks exceptional narrative work of all genres (except science fiction or fantasy) with scientifically accurate themes or characters.

Selected projects from eligible directors, screenwriters and producers will be highlighted at the Tribeca Film Festival in May 2010. In addition to funding, grantees will receive professional guidance and industry exposure as needed.

Visit www.tribecafilminstitute.org for complete details and to apply now! Online Application Opens October 30, 2009! Deadline is January 11, 2010!

RFF Alum, Nicholas Bruckman’s award-winning doc, LA AMERICANA will screen throughout October as part of a Hispanic Heritage Month campaign, including several screenings in New York and Washington, DC. To view the trailer, click here. Featured screenings this week include:

Tuesday, Oct. 6th: Center for American Progress, Washington, DC

Followed by a discussion with filmmakers Nicholas Bruckman and Jesse Thomas with Angela Kelley, Vice President for Immigration Policy and Advocacy at CAP . Click here to RSVP

Friday, Oct. 9th: NYU Vanderbilt Hall, New York, NY

Followed by a discussion with filmmaker Nicholas Bruckman and Muzzafar Christi, Director of the Migration Policy Institute at NYU School of Law. Click here to RSVP

For more information on LA AMERICANA’s public screenings this month, click here.

THE REACH FILM FELLOWSHIP (RFF)
SEEKS CREW MEMBERS
FOR FOUR FELLOWSHIP FILMS

WHAT: An informal networking event to fill open crew positions on RFF Films

WHEN: Monday, September 28th @ 6 PM

WHERE: A TBD Manhattan location (attendees will be notified by email)

MORE INFO: The Reach Film Fellowship – a prestigious program through which Cinereach offers emerging filmmakers a grant, mentorship and industry exposure – is hosting an informal gathering to help its 2010 Reach Filmmakers fill open crew positions for their short fiction and nonfiction films. Some of the positions we are looking to fill include: gaffers, ADs, sound mixers, editors among many others. The films shoot in the coming weeks/months. Compensation for all crew positions depends on level of experience.

THE REACH FILM FELLOWSHIP (RFF): A program of Cinereach, RFF is a rigorous, annual program in which four filmmakers complete a short film with a socially relevant theme. Each receives a $5,000 grant, production resources, workshops, industry exposure, and personalized mentorship. Past mentors and advisors have included: So Yong Kim, Edet Belzberg, Ellen Kuras, Nicole Kassell, Albert Maysles, Rachel Grady, Jeremy Kipp Walker, and others. Annie Waldman, a 2008 Fellow, premiered her RFF short at Sundance 2009 and it airs on PBS this month. Nicholas Bruckman’s RFF film screened at Rooftop Films, and his follow-up feature “La Americana” went to over 30 festivals, winning 7 awards.

Send your resume right away to info@cinereach.org. Please put “RFF CREW EVENT” as the subject, and let us know your areas of interest/expertise. If there’s a potential match for an open position, we’ll get back to you with details on attending the 9/28 event to meet the fellows and learn about their projects.

CINEREACH LTD: Cinereach (cinereach.org) was created in 2006 by young filmmakers, philanthropists and entrepreneurs to champion vital stories artfully told. Cinereach facilitates the creation of films that challenge, excite, innovate, offer new perspectives and inspire action through three key initiatives: Grants & Awards, The Reach Film Fellowship and Productions. Cinereach has awarded over $2 million in grants and achievement awards to over 30 projects since its inception.

Submissions for the Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund open October 5th and close January 11th. “The Gucci Tribeca Documentary Fund provides finishing funds to feature-length documentaries which highlight and humanize issues of social importance from around the world. Funded films are driven by thoughtful and indepth storytelling, bolstered by a compelling visual approach.”

Grant amounts are in the range of $10,000 and $25,000. For more information click here.

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