FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April, 2009
SMOGDANCE TO HOST
DISCUSSIONS WITH FESTIVAL FILMMAKERS
Pomona, CA (March 29, 2009)
The Smogdance Film Festival will expand its program this year to include
informal discussions with filmmakers, whose work will be screened during
the three-day festival, April 24 to 26, at the historic Pomona Fox Theater
in Pomona, California.
Among the filmmakers scheduled to attend are Emmy Award-winning documentary
filmmaker Saul Landau; director Paul Hendry (and most of his cast and
crew) from the comedy, The Re-Bourne Identity; and Mexican director
Alonso Alvarez Barreda, whose film, The Story of a Sign, won the 2008
Cannes Short Film Competition.
"We are thrilled that so many filmmakers have responded and will
attend the after-screening parties," says Charlotte Cousins, director
of the Smogdance Film Festival."We've been trying to expand the
scope of the festival each year, and we hope the addition of the Q and
A sessions will give the audiences and filmmakers a chance to interact
and explore the artistic and technical processes behind these films."
The discussions will be part of the "After Festival Parties,"
held each night at the dA Center for the Arts in Pomona immediately
following the final screenings. Winners of the audience choice awards
also will be announced at the parties, which will feature music and
refreshments and are free and open to the public.
The Smogdance Film Festival will celebrate its 11th anniversary with
an eclectic mix of animation, documentaries, comedies and short dramas.
Of the record-breaking 280 submissions this year, 46 films will be presented
representing local talent, as well as filmmakers from nine states, Australia,
Canada, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Iran.
Festival hours are from 7-10 p.m., Friday April 24,
and Saturday April 25, and from 5-8 p.m. on Sunday April 26. Doors open
a half hour before each show. Awards will be presented for student and
non-student work in best animation, best open experimental and best
comedy.
Screening location: Pomona Fox Theater, 301 S. Garey
Avenue, Pomona, CA 91766.
After Festival Party: dA Center for the Arts, 252-D S Main St
Pomona CA 9176.
Ticket information: Tickets are now available online
at www.smogdance.com. Tickets also may be purchased at the door during
the festival. Daily admission is $10 for adults and $8 for seniors and
students. Festival Passes are available for $20, and $16 respectively.
About the theater: The Pomona Fox Theater opened in
1931 as one of the jewels of the Fox West Coast Theaters chain. The
first-run theater, which once hosted test screenings for the major studios
and live shows featuring Bob Hope and Shirley Temple, was renovated
by Arteco Partners. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places,
the theater will reopen in April with a sneak preview fundraiser.
About the dA: The dA Center for the Arts is a community
nonprofit organization that has been promoting the arts in Pomona since
1984. Contact information: dA Center for the Arts, 909-397-9716, info@dacenter.org.
The following filmmakers are scheduled to appear at the After Festival
Parties.
Friday, April 24
Paul Hendry and (almost) the entire cast and crew, The Re-Bourne Identity
(comedy) ñ Local filmmaker Hendry will bring members of his cast
and crew to the festival and after-screening party to discuss their
comic take on a day in the life of a man of mystery, intrigue and danger.
Douglas Hunter, The Constant Process (documentary) - Hunter, a Mormon
filmmaker, wrote and directed The Constant Process, a timely film that
explores the spiritual and personal journey of Susan Russell, a lesbian
Episcopalian priest. The subsequent friendship between Russell and Hunter,
and Hunterís decision to join the fight against Proposition 8,
the California initiative banning gay marriage, were described in the
Los Angeles Times last winter.
Franz Keller. Puppets of War; Zebulon (animation) - A returning Smogdance
filmmaker, Keller studied film and media design at UCLA, and at the
California College of the Arts and the Academy of Art University in
San Francisco. A local artist and filmmaker, Keller also is a video
jockey (VJ) and produces music videos representing an eclectic range
of rock and experimental bands.
Brett Meyer, Holding Hands (open/experimental) - Meyer, a filmmaker
in his senior year at Cal State Fullerton, wrote and directed this story
of young lovers as they struggle with family, friends and society to
overcome the obstacles of being an interracial couple.
Leigh Richert, Detroit: Not For Wimps (comedy) - Richert moved to California
after graduating from Michigan State University. He earned a Masters
at the University of Southern California, where he created this charming
and funny look at brotherly love as his thesis project.
Francesca Roveda, Tents, The Patchwork Project (documentary) - After
25 years as a professional potter, Roveda began pursuing a new passionódocumentary
filmmaking. Tents, The Patchwork Project, documents a communal art project
between children in the United States and in Darfur refugee camps. One
of the tents depicted in the film was created by the Pomona Tents Project,
organized by local Pomona Arts Colony member Cheri Savoie.
Saturday, April 24
Eric Alexander-Hughes, Filth (open/experimental) - A senior at Claremont
High School, Alexander-Hughes has been making films since he was 10
years old. His latest is a six-minute short that explores the theme
of forgiveness. Alexander-Hughes, who will attend film school at San
Francisco State University next fall, is currently working as intern
on The Book of Eli, directed by his father and uncle (Allen and Albert
Hughes).
Steven Bentley, Helping Hand (comedy) - An award-winning L.A. filmmaker,
Bentley wrote and directed this comedic short about a manís nerve-wracking
effort to help his friends, Laura and Roxy, start a family.
Danny Grossman, Tossers (comedy) - Grossman is a graduate of the American
Academy of Dramatic Arts and one of the founding members of the SoCal
Film Group, a collective of filmmakers in the Los Angeles Area. A returning
Smogdance filmmaker, Grossmanís mockumentary tells the ìtrue-ishî
story of the worlds 4th Annual Gay Frisbee Dancing competition.
Saul Landau, We Don't Play Golf Here (documentary) - Landau is an internationally-known
scholar, author, commentator, and filmmaker on foreign and domestic
policy issues. He was a longtime commentator on Pacifica Radio, and
is the recipient of numerous awards, including a 1980 Emmy. His documentary
uses Mexico as a microcosm of how foreign investments in Third World
export factories distort both the culture and environment. Landau is
Professor Emeritus at Cal Poly Pomona University.
Amir Motlagh, Plain Us (open/experimental) - Motlagh, who made his debut
at the 2004 Smogdance film festival, tells a poignant story of a touring
rock musician who gets a glimpse of what his life might have been like
when he returns to his hometown to visit his estranged girlfriend and
child. Motlagh studied film at Chapman University, where he received
a Masters in motion picture directing.
Kalani Queypo, Ancestor Eyes ñ (open/experimental) Queypo was
awarded a production grant from the Southern California Indian Center
for Ancestor Eyes, which tells the story of a young Native American
woman and her mother, who both must come to terms with the young woman's
illness. Pain turns into a source of inspiration, igniting her mother's
gift for storytelling and ultimately paving a path of magical transformations
Sunday, April 26
Alonso Alvarez Barreda, Historia de un Letrero (The Story of a Sign)
(open/experimental) - Mexican director Alvarez Barreda was one of the
winners of the 2008 Cannes Short Film Competition for his short film,
which wordlessly shows how a strangerís pen changes the life
of a homeless blind man. The Story of a Sign was one of nine films selected
out of 650 submitted to the competition.
Matthew Bowler, Teresa (documentary) - A graduate in motion picture/television
direction from the Academy of Art, San Francisco, Bowler returned to
his Denver roots in 2003. Teresa, which marks his directorial debut,
is an uplifting look at an 18-year-old girl with Osteogenesis Imperfecta,
a debilitating disease that causes fragile bones .
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