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6 Arts Notes

Workshop Leaders Named for The Journey of a Hollywood Idea

March 10, 2021 by Oxford Community Center

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On April 17 and 18, The Oxford Community Center and the Chesapeake Film Festival will host The Journey of a Hollywood Idea. This weekend-long event follows the “idea” from development, to pre-production, to production and postproduction, and ends with an examination of the diverse marketplace for films and videos.

Top: Kimberly Skyrme and Cid Collins Walker. Bottom: Monda Raquel Webb and Irene Magafan

In addition to presentations by a robust lineup of Hollywood insiders, The Journey of a Hollywood Idea will include workshops led by talented producers and educators from the Chesapeake Film Festival roster of friends and collaborators. The workshops will dig deeper into the subjects to provide specific information and tips for participants.

The combination of Hollywood sprinkled across a solid foundation of knowledge is the magical one-two punch this conference produces.

Workshop leaders include:

Kimberly Skyrme – Director, Producer, Writer, Casting Director-CSA

Kimberly is a 30-year veteran in the film and television Industry. She defines herself, first and foremost, as a “storyteller”.  A multi-tasker extraordinaire, Kimberly recently completed several projects while she was in preproduction for several new films, and is in development on multiple series. Her insider knowledge and experience at every phase of filmmaking is remarkable.

Kimberly’s casting collaborations include: NETFLIX series House of Cards, STARZ series The Girlfriend Experience, and Unsolved Mysteries, Deep Impact, Beloved, The Pelican Brief, and True Lies, as well as numerous independent features and short films and commercials.

Kimberly is currently producing and casting several feature films; Metronome, What We Leave Behind, The Hive and One Lucky Moon, a Musical Comedy by Director/Writer Peter Bogdanovich (The Last Picture Show, What’s Up Doc, and Paper Moon) with the music of Willie Nelson.

Kimberly’s professional memberships include the Casting Society of America (CSA), New York Women in Film & Television (NYWIFT), Women in Film & Video (WIFV-DC), as well as Past Chair of Women in Film & Television International (WIFTI).

Greg White – Producer, Unit Production Manager, 1st Assistant Director

Starting as a production assistant more than 30 years ago, Greg worked his way up to become an award-winning producer and assistant director.  His credits include the Emmy-winning TV series Law and Order and Cobblestone Corridor on PBS.

In addition to the Law and Order episodes, his credits include:  People I Know, Don’t Say a Word, How to Make It in America, New York Minute, Burn Notice and Sneaky Pete.

Greg joined the Director’s Guild of America in 1996.

Cid Collins Walker – Writer, Director, Producer, Artist

Cid Collins Walker, festival director of the Chesapeake Film Festival, released her first feature-length film, ARC OF LIGHT: A Portrait of Anna Campbell Bliss, a documentary about the life and work of the legendary American artist Anna Campbell Bliss in 2012. The film was screened at numerous festivals and museum, aired on PBS and now is international distribution with Films Media Group.

Cid’s versatility in the arts is unmatched. In addition to her documentary work, her film credits include storyboards for the major motion picture In the Line of Fire, directed by Wolfgang Peterson.  Cid also has extensive experience in television (including CBS and NBC in Washington and Black Entertainment Television), creative direction, animation, print design and brand management. Her awards include four Telly Awards for her work in production design.

Cid has served on the Board of Directors of Women in Film & Video, Washington DC and as vice president of membership, and vice president of development.  She earned a B.A. degree in painting from Scripps College in Claremont, California and received a fellowship with the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Her painting and printmaking have been widely exhibited and collected.

Claudia Myers – Writer, Director, Producer

Claudia Myers was named one of “10 Filmmakers to Watch” by Independent Magazine in 2015.  Most recently Claudia wrote and directed Above the Shadows, a fantasy action drama starring Olivia Thirlby, Alan Ritchson, Jim Gaffigan and Megan Fox. The film opened the 2019 Brooklyn Film Festival where it won the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature. It subsequently was acquired by Hulu.

Claudia also wrote, directed, and produced the drama Fort Bliss starring Michelle Monaghan, Ron Livingston and Pablo Schreiber. The film won several festival awards, and top critics for The Washington Post and Philadelphia Inquirer both cited Fort Bliss among the best films of 2014.

As a screenwriter, Claudia has won numerous awards, was twice a finalist for the Sundance Screenwriters Lab, and is an alumna of the Hamptons Screenwriters Lab. Claudia is currently in development on her next feature, the true crime drama Out of Darkness.

Monda Raquel Webb – Writer, Director, Producer, Performance Artist

With a degree in Broadcast Journalism from the University of Rhode Island in 1990, Monda began her production career as a traffic coordinator for City Cable 16 in Washington, DC and quickly climbed the ranks in all aspects of production. As a producer, she won awards from the National Association of Telecommunications Officers and Advisors (NATOA) for Production in several different categories.

Currently Monda combines her diverse talents for the written word, spoken word, social media and film under the umbrella of her consulting company, Monda Media, LLC. The publishing arm of Monda Media has published four books and manages author brand, public relations, and marketing/sales of product and ancillary items.

Little Known Stories Production Company, LLC is the production arm of Monda Media. In 2015, she wrote, directed and produced her first short film, Zoo (Volkerschau), which has won over a dozen U.S. and International Film Festival Awards, including awards from Spain and Indonesia, for Best Short (film), Best Script, Excellence Award, and Best International Short.

Monda’s second film, Pooch Sitter, a short film about a quirky pet-sitter who seeks love and affection from other people’s dogs in an untraditional way, is currently on the film festival circuit. This modern-day Goldilocks-ish tale is giving “paws” to audiences worldwide. Team Pooch has given $1,600 to non-profit organizations focused on homelessness and women and children.

Irene Magafan – Writer, Producer, Editor, Actor

Irene Magafan is a video specialist and editor at World Wildlife Fund. She is also a freelance voiceover artist, actor and an award-winning independent documentary filmmaker.

Her documentary, The Bonobo Connection, narrated by Hollywood actor and activist Ashley Judd, has received awards at numerous film festivals, along with several Television, Internet and Video Association Peer Awards, and is currently being reviewed for potential broadcast and distribution. The Bonobo Connection is currently on the independent streaming platform, Laurel Channel. The film continues to be used as a vehicle for bonobo conservation and will be translated into French and Lingala for the local communities of the DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo).

Irene is a regional Emmy Award recipient for a show she helped shoot and produce which aired on Maryland Public Television called EcoViews: The Chesapeake Bay. She is a member of SAG-AFTRA, Women in Film and Video and on the Board of Directors of the Chesapeake Film Festival and on the Alumni Board at American University, where she serves as Chair for the Career Committee.  She received her Master of Fine Arts degree and Bachelor of Arts degree from American University.

Register Now!

The Journey of a Hollywood Idea appeals to anyone who has ever been curious about how an idea travels through the many hands to eventually arrive on the screen. This seminar uniquely shares current Hollywood trends and best practices. Aspiring filmmakers and film enthusiasts alike will all leave with knowledge and insights that only insiders and experts in their fields can deliver.

Dates: Saturday, April 17 & Sunday, April 18 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM both days

Tickets are $75 for the two-day series.

For members of Women in Film, the discounted cost is $65; for students, $60.

Education Sponsorships are available for $600, which allow ten students to attend this two-day event.

To purchase tickets or for more information about The Journey of a Hollywood Idea, visit chesapeakefilmfestival.com or oxfordcc.org/speaker-series/.

The Chesapeake Film Festival and The Oxford Community Center are both 501(c) 3 nonprofit organizations.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, local news, Oxford Community Center

Cabin Fever Film Festival Presents This Beautiful Fantastic

January 9, 2021 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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The Chesapeake Film Festival and the Talbot County Free Library are cosponsoring the Cabin Fever Film Festival again this Wednesday, January 13 with This Beautiful Fantastic. When you’re stuck at home due to the pandemic and you have the winter doldrums, take a break and enjoy a rare cinematic gem and Zoom after the show.

Zoom discussion on Wednesday, January 13, 2021 at 7 pm: This Beautiful Fantastic

Set against the backdrop of a beautiful London garden, this contemporary fairy tale centers on the unlikely friendship between a reclusive young woman who dreams of writing children’s books and a cranky widower. Facing eviction over her neglected garden, Bella (Jessica Brown Findlay) meets her grumpy, loveless, next-door neighbor (Tom Wilkinson), who happens to be an amazing horticulturalist.

THE FILM CAN BE ACCESSED FOR FREE ON YOUTUBE:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8yhL0lcQ5g&t=479s

THE FILM CAN ALSO BE ACCESSED FOR FREE ON HOOPLA FOR ANYONE WHO HAS A LIBRARY CARD FROM ANY OF THE EASTERN SHORE LIBRARIES.

THIS IS THE WEBSITE GUIDE TO USING HOOPLA:  https://www.tcfl.org/eresources/Hoopla_QuickStart.pdf

CARDHOLDERS ARE LIMITED TO 8 CHECKOUTS A MONTH.  THE FILMS NEED TO BE WATCHED WITHIN 3 DAYS (72 HOURS) OF CHECKOUT.

NOTE: Use this Zoom Link to join the discussion on Wednesday, January 13 at 7 pm:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83913806633

The Zoom discussions will be led by the Chesapeake Film Festival Director, Cid Collins Walker and Executive Director, Nancy Tabor. Come prepared to have a fun and insightful time!

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Shared Earth Foundation, Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Richard and Beverly Tilghman, Karen and Langley Shook, U.S. Small Business Administration, Talbot CARES Small Business Grant and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, local news, Talbot County Free Library

The Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival is Here! October 1-4

October 1, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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Don’t miss this year’s Chesapeake Film Festival!  The 2020 Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival is coming to you Oct. 1 (9 am EST) – Oct. 4 (12 pm EST), 24/7, wherever you may be.

There is NO registration for this FREE event, just go to chesapeakefilmfestival.com and click on the button to enter the festival on October 1.

Also, right now, all our trailers are available to you by going to chesapeakefilmfestival.com.

The Virtual Festival is our gift to film lovers in our community, and beyond, in the difficult times precipitated by CoVid-19.   While participation is free, donations are appreciated.

You can select the films you want to watch, and when and where you choose to enjoy them.   The Virtual Festival benefits our filmmakers, too, with the amazing opportunity to present their films to an audience without borders.

Now in our 13th year, the Chesapeake Film Festival invites you once again to savor an explosion of cinematic flavors, including dramas, comedies, documentaries and animations.  From 5-minute shorts to 90-minute features, the Festival offers something for every cinematic taste.

Les Animaux Domestiques

Willow

A Piece of Cake

Wake Up

Don’t miss out on these CFF 2020 award-winning films:

  • Best Animated Film – Les Animaux Domestiques, Willow
  • Best Comedy – A Piece of Cake
  • Best Director – Stefan Schwarz, About Us
  • Best Documentary Feature – You Don’t Know Nothin’ Bout Groove City
  • Best Drama – Unarmed Man
  • Best Editing – Fort Bliss
  • Best Emerging Filmmaker –Mason Mirabile, Never Too Small and Micaa Thomas, Our House is On Fire
  • Best Environmental Feature – Unbreathable: The Fight for Healthy Air
  • Best Environmental Short – Seeds of Hope
  • Best International Film – Imaginarius
  • Best Made in Maryland Film – Squeegee
  • Best Performance – Actor –Shaun Woodland and Danny Gavigan, Unarmed Man
  • Best Short Film – Wake Up
  • Best Sound Editing – Balloon Man
  • Jury’s Prize – Emanuel

Check chesapeakefilmfestival.com for more information. For questions, call Nancy Tabor, Executive Director at 443-955-9144 or contact her at [email protected].

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Shared Earth Foundation, Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Richard and Beverly Tilghman, Karen and Langley Shook, U.S. Small Business Administration, Talbot CARES Small Business Grant and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, local news

Emanuel Takes Chesapeake Film Festival’s Jury Prize

September 15, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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On June 17, 2015, national headlines blazed the story: Churchgoers gunned down during prayer service in Charleston, South Carolina. After a 21-year-old white supremacist opened fire in Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, nine African Americans lay dead, leaving their families and the nation to grapple with this senseless act of terror.

Featuring intimate interviews with survivors and family members, Emanuel, from Executive Producers Stephen Curry and Viola Davis, & Co-Producer Mariska Hargitay, is a poignant story of justice and faith, love and hate, examining the healing power of forgiveness.

With a 100% rating on the movie critique website, Rotten Tomatoes, Emanuel was lauded by critics when it came out:

“Emanuel achieves a rich solemnity in honoring lives ripped away too soon and often quickly forgotten by a public all too often redirected by the news cycle toward another mass shooting.”

(October 18, 2019, Robert Abele, Los Angeles Times)

“Emanuel is a tribute to those who lost loved ones, but it’s also a movie with a message, one that emphasizes some survivors and family members’ willingness to forgive Roof just mere days after he walked into their church.”

(October 11, 2019, Monica Castillo, TheWrap)

Emanuel

Ben Kenigsberg, of the New York Times writes that “Emanuel is primarily an act of bearing witness that does not ask to be judged on conventional filmmaking terms.” (Emanuel Review: Race, Religion, Thoughts and Prayers, October 10, 2019). He further describes the film:

“At a time when news of each new mass shooting vanishes all too quickly from headlines, Emanuel offers a memorial. The director Brian Ivie weaves in a bit of the history about Charleston, a hub of the slave trade, and about churchgoing as a symbol of independence for African-Americans after the Civil War.

Initially, it seems like a mistake for the movie to introduce the shooter Dylann Roof, a white supremacist, onscreen. He is seen only in archival footage, but why not keep the focus on the nine people, all of whom were black, he killed? Then the film shows that, at Roof’s bond hearing less than 48 hours after the shooting, some of the bereaved — like Nadine Collier, whose mother was killed — began to offer expressions of forgiveness for him. The film argues that these expressions were not submissive (as some critics have claimed), but demonstrations of courage and grace.

This film, headlining at this year’s virtual Chesapeake Film Festival (October 1, 9 am EDT- October 4, 12 pm EDT) is highly impactful and considered a tour de force in documentary movie-making. You can experience the best in independent filmmaking from the U.S. and around the world in the 2020 Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival. Watch any or all of the 45 films FOR FREE as the Chesapeake Film Festival’s gift to communities coping with CoVid 19.

Donations and sponsorships are appreciated.  The Chesapeake Film Festival is a 501 c3 charitable organization.

Check chesapeakefilmfestival.com for more information or call Nancy Tabor, Executive Director at 443-955-9144.

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Shared Earth Foundation, Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Richard and Beverly Tilghman, Karen and Langley Shook, U.S. Small Business Administration, Talbot CARES Small Business Grant and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, local news, The Talbot Spy

California Typewriter Featured in Upcoming Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival

August 25, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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A key feature of the Chesapeake Film Festival (October 1-4) is the delightfully, quirky, homage to the typewriter, California Typewriter.

According to a review in the New York Times (‘California Typewriter’: Preserving the Past, Key by Key by Jeannette Catsoulis, Aug. 17, 2017):

“California Typewriter might center on a small, beleaguered typewriter repair shop in Berkeley, California, but this … documentary is about so much more than broken keys and busted type wheels. It’s really about how we create art.

“Sinking into a dedicated…subculture of enthusiasts, the director Doug Nichol unearths a trove of reasons for loving the clickety clacking machine. The playwright and actor Sam Shepard… confesses an addiction to the percussive sound of thoughts striking paper. Tom Hanks, an avid collector who owns around 250 machines and types almost daily, declares that he hates emailed thank-you notes and simply deletes them….

“More substantively, the musician John Mayer and the historian David McCullough speak eloquently of the need for tangible proof of creation versus the ephemeral nature of digital data. Denied diaries, letters or first drafts — whether of songs or presidential speeches — future historians will find it much harder to plumb the minds of the famous.

 “California Typewriter fields plenty of thinkers, but it’s the fringe folks who entertain. Like the sculptor Jeremy Mayer who — inspired by multiple viewings of “Metropolis”— transforms irreparable machines into fantastic beasts and life-size figures. Or the self-described typewriter poet, Silvi Alcivar, who composes impromptu stanzas for any occasion and for people who just need cheering up. As an alternative, those clients could slip into a performance by the delightful members of the Boston Typewriter Orchestra.

“These celebrities and artists love the elegance of the typewriter. Tom Hanks, especially, has created an app called “Hanx Writer” in which he says “I have come to own many manual typewriters—large desktops and the smallest of travelling machines. They all work. I rotate them in use to keep them loose and me creative. Hanx Writer is to the iPad and iPhone what typewriters are to your desk—writing machines that need only your imagination coupled with your hands and ears to produce, one letter, one word, one thought at a time, any of which can change the world.” And you can use this app like a real typewriter!

Don’t miss this truly fascinating exploration of the typewriter during the Chesapeake Film Festival, October 1-4. You can experience the best in independent filmmaking from the U.S. and around the world in the 2020 Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival. Watch any or all of the 45 films FOR FREE as the Chesapeake Film Festival’s gift to communities coping with CoVid 19.

Donations and sponsorships are appreciated.  The Chesapeake Film Festival is a 501 c3 charitable organization. Registration for the festival opens September 1 on chesapeakefilmfestival.com. Trailers of many of the films will also be available on September 1.

Check chesapeakefilmfestival.com for more information or call Nancy Tabor, Executive Director at 443-955-9144. Schedule of films is subject to change.

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Shared Earth Foundation, Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Richard and Beverly Tilghman, Karen and Langley Shook, U.S. Small Business Administration, Talbot CARES Small Business Grant and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

Don’t miss the latest! You can subscribe to The Chestertown Spy‘s free Daily Intelligence Report here

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, Chestertown Spy, local news

The 2020 Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival

August 12, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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From films made around the Chesapeake Bay, to films produced on the West Coast, to films from across the ocean, our 2020 Festival promises to be the most diverse and exciting in the 13-year-history of the Chesapeake Film Festival. It’s virtual. It’s international. And it’s FREE!

CFF 2020, Oct. 1-4, includes seven outstanding films that came to us from filmmakers in countries as diverse as the Netherlands and Iran.

Imaginarius –Documentary Feature, 1:007:00, Directed by Juan Ignacio Bello, Chile –A total solar eclipse draws thousands of astronomers and tourists to the Elqui Valley of Chile. Amid the unusual frenzy that surrounds their town, four friends take a journey filled with humor, fantasy and creativity.

Our Gorongosa

Our Gorongosa  — Documentary Feature, 60:00, Written and produced by Carla Rebai, Netherlands — Gorongosa National Park has become one of Africa’s most celebrated wildlife restoration stories.  After a decade of renewed protection, Gorongosa’s large mammal population has increased 10-fold to over 100,000 animals. But the Park must also find a way to co-exist with the 200,000 people living in surrounding communities.

The Abjurants

The Abjurants, Narrative Short, 15:00, Directed by Antonio De Palo, Italy – 2087. Vera and Roberta are abjurants, meaning women who refuse to adhere to the Eugenics Program imposed by the Government.  They are confined and used as test subjects.  Their only purpose in life is recalling their lovers’ faces.

Ashmina

Ashmina, Documentary Short, 14:59, Directed by Dekel Berenson, United Kingdom–Ashmina, 13, lives at the outskirts of Pokhara Nepal, paragliding capital of the world. She skips school to work at the landing field, packing the parachutes of foreign pilots in return for small change to help her family meet expenses. An unusually large tip leads her to question fundamental aspects of her life.

Musician

Musician – Narrative Short, 19:41, Directed by Mohsen Mehri Darouei, Iran – Mahmoud is a very, very short man about one meter tall who wishes to play a two-meter high instrument — a Contrabass.

No Dominion

No Dominion – Narrative Short, 13:48, Directed by Georgios Dimitropoulos, United Kingdom– On a random winter weekend in beautiful Wales, three travelers, an American and a French couple, come to a Swansea getaway for very different reasons.

Whether you are a local film enthusiast on the Eastern Shore of Maryland or a film lover in Chile, you can experience the best in independent filmmaking from around the world in the 2020 Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival. Watch any or all of the 45 films FOR FREE as the Chesapeake Film Festival’s gift to communities coping with CoVid 19.

Donations and sponsorships are appreciated.  The Chesapeake Film Festival is a 501 c3 charitable organization. Registration for the festival opens September 1 on chesapeakefilmfestival.com. Trailers of many of the films will also be available on September 1.

Check chesapeakefilmfestival.com for more information or call Nancy Tabor, Executive Director, at 443-955-9144. Schedule of films is subject to change.

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Shared Earth Foundation, Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Richard and Beverly Tilghman, Karen and Langley Shook, U.S. Small Business Administration, Talbot CARES Small Business Grant and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

Don’t miss the latest! You can subscribe to The Chestertown Spy‘s free Daily Intelligence Report here

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, Chestertown Spy, local news

The FREE Virtual Chesapeake Film Festival Announces a Sneak Preview of Its 2020 Line-up

July 12, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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The pandemic can’t stop the Chesapeake Film Festival from giving our valued film enthusiasts and supporters another fabulous cinema experience in 2020. At NO COST to you, you’ll receive a four-day All Festival pass to watch any or all of 45 films selected from more than 200 submissions. It’s our gift to film lovers in our community, and beyond. Because we’re virtual, you can watch the films anywhere in the world. All we ask is that you consider a contribution to offset our expenses.

We’re bringing you an explosion of cinematic flavors, including dramas, comedies, environmental concerns, emerging artists, Maryland-made films, fascinating documentaries and pulsating animations.

Right in your living room, engage in the fun, heartbreak, intellectual stimulation and edification of films like these:

Narrative Features:

About Us –In an effort to rekindle their troubled marriage, a young couple revisits the location where they spent their honeymoon eight years earlier. They navigate the beauty and the pain of love, culminating in a heartbreaking finale as truths are revealed. The ending will amaze you!

Unarmed Man –Civil unrest erupts after a police officer shoots and kills an unarmed black man during a routine traffic stop.  Forced to give a statement, the officer recounts his version of events in a scathing examination of racial profiling, fear, prejudice and violence.

Narrative Shorts:

A Piece of Cake— When a desperate father discovers his daughter’s favorite cake decoration is illegal, he descends into a confectionary black market. Now he must make the ultimate parenting choice: break a birthday promise or break the law?

Wake Up

Wake Up–In a short film directed by Olivia Wilde, Margaret Qualley stars as a woman awakened to a world she doesn’t recognize, one where people are more engaged with screens and devices than with each other. She sets out on a journey to find connection in a disconnected world and relearns what it means to be human.

Documentary Features:

City On the Hill – Tech giant Google has pledged $1 billion dollars to build more housing in the Bay Area, which has the third largest homeless population in the U.S. at more than 28,000 people. Civil rights leaders, politicians, Bay Area natives, and small business owners provide their perception of the realities of gentrification in San Francisco, home to the highest housing costs in the country.

Emanuel — National headlines blazed the story: Churchgoers Gunned Down During Prayer Service in Charleston, South Carolina. After a 21-year-old white supremacist opened fire in Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, nine African Americans lay dead. Featuring intimate interviews with survivors and family members, Emanuel is a poignant story of justice and faith, love and hate, examining the healing power of forgiveness.

International Shorts:

Ashmina

Ashmina, United Kingdom–Ashmina, 13, lives with her family at the outskirts of Pokhara Nepal, paragliding capital of the world. She skips school to help her family make ends meet by working at the landing field, packing the parachutes of foreign pilots in return for small change. A larger than usual tip leads her to question fundamental aspects of her life.

Musician, Iran – Mahmoud is a very, very short man about one meter tall who wishes to play a two-meter high instrument — a Contrabass.

Environmental Features:

The Life and Legend of Jane Goodall– In the summer of 1960, 26-year-old Jane Goodall set out for Africa. Her mission was to find and observe an elusive tribe of chimpanzees. Today, Jane has grown from a stranger to the chimp’s local friend and strongest ally.

Unbreathable: The Fight for Healthy Air

Unbreathable: The Fight for Healthy Air – Over the past fifty years, there has been major progress in significantly reducing air pollution across the nation thanks to the Clean Air Act.  However, asthma continues to be the number one health issue for children and nearly half of all Americans across the country today are still impacted by unhealthy levels of air pollution.

Animation Programs:

Lost Cat

Lost Cat –A girl travels through a surreal environment to catch her escaped cat. From “Sweaty Eyeballs 2019 Baltimore Showcase.”

Les Animaux Domestiques

Les Animaux Domestiques, France — Mr. and Ms. Archibald adopt by turns a dog, a cat, a fly, a toad and a moth. But they do not know anything about animals.

 

Athleticus: Course de demi-found, France– Animals compete in summer sport games.

Check chesapeakefilmfestival.com for more information or call Nancy Tabor, Executive Director at 443-955-9144. Schedule of films is subject to change.

The Chesapeake Film Festival is generously supported by the Maryland Film Office, Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot County Arts Council, Talbot County Department of Tourism, Artistic Insights Fund, Shared Earth Foundation, Richard and Beverly Tilghman and The Ravenal Foundation. Funding has also been provided to the Chesapeake Film Festival from Maryland Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as part of the 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020.

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Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, Chestertown Spy, local news

Chesapeake Film Festival Comes to You Virtually This Year! October 1-4, 2020

July 3, 2020 by Chesapeake Film Festival

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The Chesapeake Film Festival’s commitment to bringing outstanding independent films to the people of the Chesapeake Bay area remains a priority despite the challenges of 2020. Because of the pandemic, CFF has had to figure out an alternate means of delivering those films to you. Our answer is a virtual festival, which extends our potential audience beyond the physical boundaries of the Eastern Shore.

We’re here this year to reach our community during these times of isolation. Inclusivity is our hallmark by uniting our audience in a celebration of cinematic achievement. During times of chaos and uncertainty unity is strength… when there is teamwork and collaboration, wonderful things can be achieved.  Mark your calendars for October 1- October 4 for the 13th Chesapeake Film Festival coming to you at your home.

The mission of the Chesapeake Film Festival is to entertain, inspire and educate by bringing the finest in narrative, documentary, short film, environmental film and animation to the greater community. The films we showcase illuminate both the diversity and universality of humankind and the environment. We believe films can affect positive change, and through this medium, individuals and communities can gain a greater understanding of themselves and the world.

Stay tuned for the upcoming announcement of our offerings for the 2020 festival!

Don’t miss the latest! You can subscribe to The Chestertown Spy‘s free Daily Intelligence Report here

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes Tagged With: Arts, Chesapeake Film Festival, Chestertown Spy, local news

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