Showing posts with label Film Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film Festival. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2013

Twin Rivers Media Festival Opens May 17th at the Flood Fine Arts Center


Production Still From:  Family Dinner- Short Drama by Peter Davenport, Williamstown, MA

Asheville, NC.   The 20th Twin Rivers Media Film Festival opens Friday May 17th  through 19th,  and continues with a multi-media performance on May 23rd by Daniel Ouellette & The Shobijinand then ends with the Feature Film Winner May 24th  at the Phil Mechanics Building at 109 Roberts St at the Courtyard Gallery and Flood Fine Arts Center.  These screenings offer the community a chance to view outstanding films from around the world, enjoy good food and drink, and mingle with special guest filmmakers all in one weekend. All events are free and open to the public.

The 20th  annual festival has more than 50 selections that include world premier feature films, shorts drama, documentary and animated films that will screen in the  Flood Fine Arts Center Library and the Courtyard Gallery both at the Phil Mechanics Building in the River Arts District of Asheville.

The Courtyard Gallery and the Mechanical Eye of Hendersonville  organizes the festival, and has brought independent filmmaking to the area for the past 20 years.

Cynthia Potter coordinator of the TRMF, said “this festival is a great way to bring the community together.  While the majority of the submissions are from International filmmakers, there are more Western North Carolina entries this year than in any previous years. There's also opportunities to meet some local and national filmmakers," she said.

A local short film called “Over Home” featuring WNC musicians will be screened with a live performance from some of its talent and Asheville filmmaker LisAnna will be presenting her short film “Orphan.”

The wide range of short drama and feature films vary from some set on the streets of India, Moscow, Mexico City or Tokyo, to one smuggled out of Iran. The US entries provide dramatic looks at injustice against the Japanese Americans during World War II, and range from comic to tragic looks at society’s misfits and dysfunctional families. The award winning short film this year is Mousse, a comic look at robbery and justice.

Documentary films range from films examining a massacre in Afghanistan to dancing in the Appalachian Mountains. The Animation and Experimental film categories are
especially well represented with the inclusion of Mechanical Eye as sponsors for the event, bringing a wider selection of experimental filmmakers to Asheville this year.

"This year's festival is bigger and more prestigious with films coming from every corner of the world and the US, and although we all have different objectives, this is a good place for independents to get feedback and learn about filmmaking," Ms. Potter said.

  The Flood Fine Arts Center Library and the Courtyard Gallery are the venue for the festival, which include the screenings,  food and wine, and live music. The opening night films are the winner of short drama and La Jettee from France.

“The winning feature film will screen on May 24th,” states Ms. Potter, “this is a chance for Asheville audiences to view world premiers that will be distributed in theaters later this year.

All screenings are free and open to the public but a donation is suggested. The
Twin Rivers Film Festival Schedule is:

Friday, May 17th--7:30 p.m. -  Kick Off  with:
La Jettee, France and  Mousse, by John Hellberg, Stockholm, Sweden

Saturday: May 18th—Courtyard Gallery and Flood Fine Arts Center Library
10am to 12n  Documentary Films,
1pm to 5pm Short Drama Winners
6pm to 8pm Animation and Experimental Winners, Courtyard Gallery

Sunday May 19th: Courtyard Gallery and Flood Fine Arts Center Library
1pm-4pm: Short Drama Winners
5pm to 7pm: Animation Winners

Thursday  May 23rd, Multimedia Installation and Presentation—Courtyard Gallery
 8pm —Daniel Ouellette & The Shobijin

Friday May24th-Feature Film Winner—Courtyard Gallery, 8pm


All screenings are free an open to the public at the Phil Mechanics Building at 109 Roberts St. in the River Arts District of Asheville. Call 828-273-3332  or see www.twinriversmediafestival.com for more information.

For More info: Contact, Carlos Steward, 828-273-3332
carlos@ashevillecourtyard.com

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Twin Rivers Media and Film Festival May 25-27, 2012

19th ANNUAL TWIN RIVERS INTERNATIONAL MEDIA AND FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2012 FESTIVAL LINEUP

check out some of the trailers here:
Siberia Monamour http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AcscUgVbdyU
A.L.F.
Animal Liberation Front
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hlLMZ_dMhkU#!
Meherjaan http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GgLvH0xhjo
Education Under Fire http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qsc-mglel-w
American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vVw49cAbc_w

Animation
Dear Sweet Emma http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTinpL066Gw
Fruitless Efforts
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsUbvqcyLKE


The 19th Annual season of The Twin Rivers Media Festival(TRMF) will celebrate this year with the latest in independent feature, documentary, short and animated films.  The festival runs from May 25th – May 27th 2012 in with features films screening each Friday night until June 22, 2012 at the Phil Mechanics Building at 109 Roberts St. in the River Arts District of Asheville, NC.

Carlos Steward, founder and director of the Twin Rivers Media Festival, stated, “we are thrilled to once again bring to our Western North Carolina community an incredibly diverse program with over 40 independent films from around the world.” With an exciting season programmed, the festival will kick off with an opening night party at the historic Flood Fine Arts Center Library and adjoining Courtyard Gallery at 7:30PM with the screening of “Siberia Monamour” from the Russia Federation. 

TRMF has become the festival of choice for filmmakers and film lovers who are seeking a unique River Arts District experience and a place to indulge their passion for film. The Festival connects audiences to compelling documentaries, award-winning international releases with tantalizing discussions with visiting filmmakers.

The selection process was rigorous and exclusive.  Only a small percentage of the
submitted films are chosen to screen in the festival.  The films are placed in
sessions, in both venues allowing audiences to see one genre of film one day and another the next. .  Saturday mornings and afternoon films include a potluck lunch and l Question and Answer period, in which the audience is invited to ask the filmmakers questions.

Photos: “The Boy Who’d Never Seen Rain”, Australia feature film (boy who’d.jpeg)
“Siberia Monamour” Russian feature film (siberiamonamour.jpg)
“Caught” short drama by Elizabeth Page, NY (caught.jpg)
“Brotherly Love” short drama, CA, Brothers try to hold their family together, (brolove.jpg)
“American Veterans, Discarded and Forgotten,”  Doc NYC, (amvets.jpg)

The complete three day line up and Friday night feature films in June follows:

Features on Fridays

May 25th • 8pm (Festival Kickoff 7:30 pm)
Siberia, Monamour  (105 min)
Directed by: Slava Ross  (Moscow, Russian Federation)
Siberian taiga. Late autumn. In a deserted village, there lives an old man & his seven-year-old grandson Leshia. A pack of feral dogs devours everything alive in the neighborhood, but one of these dogs becomes Leshia's best friend. Sometimes Uncle Yuri brings food to them. Once on his way back from the village Uncle Yuri is attacked by dogs & perishes. Ivan & Leshia stay on without any food supplies.

June 1st • 8pm
The Duck Hunter  (90 min)
Directed by: Egidio Veronesi  (Modena, Italy)
A film about memory, memories of the past and memories of the protagonists. Memory gets back, through the images of the film, to those who were its custodians, following new and unexpected paths.

June 8th • 8pm
A.L.F.  (96 min)
Directed by: Lescure Jérôme  (Paris, France)
What happened, that 24th of December? This is what officer Chartier wants to find out. To understand, he will have to go back 48 hours earlier: Franck's Christmas eve.
Franck: insignificant drama-teacher, Franck belongs to a nameless and leaderless commando: the Animal Liberation Front. These characters are bound by a limitless empathy towards mistreated animals, and will have to show courage to complete a mission they have been preparing for months.

June 15th • 8pm
The Boy Who'd Never Seen Rain  (70 min)
Directed by: Kim Ramsay  (Sydney , Australia)
The poignant portrayal of an outback Australian sheep farming family struggling to remain together despite looming bankruptcy. Neil Cobblin tries to defend his pride when it becomes apparent he's losing the battle against years of drought, and the outreach workers have arrived in town to offer a helping hand. His wife Rita begins to lose herself in the nostalgia of teenage dreams of becoming a Beauty Queen whilst their 8 year old son Danny fights to be seen as a man by his father and the school bully. This film examines the effects of depression and suicide risk in the Australian rural sector -- a topic which is too often ignored in the mainstream media.

June 22nd • 8pm
Meherjaan  (119min)
Directed by: Rubaiyat Hossain  (Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Meherjaan is a film about loving the Other. Meherjaan gives away with the unitary masculine narrative in order to usher in emotional multiplicity of feminine emotion and sensibility. This film critiques certain pitfalls of nationalism that create conditions to justify war, killing and violence. Finally, Meherjaan attempts to offer an aesthetic solution to war and violence by taking refuge in love and spiritual submission.


Saturday 5/26
11am
American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten (2 parts, 1 hour each)
Directed by: Richard Polonetsky; Directed by: Gary Null, Brooklyn NY
Gary Null, PhD, explores the truth about Gulf War Syndrome, a horrific condition affecting thousands of soldiers and their families, and the disturbing secrets being hidden by the government. Hear the truth from doctors, scientists, military analysts and the veterans who are still suffering from the effects of their tours of duty while the government denies any accountability for this illness. Dr. Null also reveals the epidemic of homelessness affecting our American veterans today.

12 - 1pm
Potluck lunch
Bring a favorite dish and join us for an opportunity to sit down with filmmakers and film aficionados for an exchange of ideas and edibles!

1pm
Daytona Flash Mob  (10min)-  Filmmaker Present for discussion
Produced by Lou and Guili Schacht
600 Dancers materialize in a spontaneous dance event at the Daytona 500.

Education Under Fire  (30min)
Directed by Jeff Kaufman
Produced by Single Arrow Productions and co-sponsored by Amnesty International. This revealing documentary profiles the growth, struggle, and inspiring spirit of the Baha´i Institute for Higher Education. The Baha´i people in Iran have been subjected to systematic persecution, including arrests, torture, and execution simply for refusing to recant their beliefs. They are also prohibited from going to college (and blocked from many professions).

Anela en Rouge  (19min)-  Filmmaker Present for discussion
Cara Myers, Kansas City, MO
A touching experimental dance documentary in which Nannette Rogers-Kennedy tells a story of losing her mother, who before death, promises to come back to visit her children as a Cardinal. Two weeks later, her mother keeps her promise, not only to her, but to every other member of her family, proving that our love for one another transcends the boundaries of life or death.

Its a Girl Thing: MKA, Tween Queens and the Commodification of Girlhood  (60min)-  Filmmaker Present for discussion›
Directed by: Shannon Silva, Wilmington, NC
Since the birth of Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen in 1987, the girls' tween market has evolved from almost non-existent into a $43 billion-dollar-a-year money making machine. Framed by the structure of a faux interactive website, It's A Girl Thing speaks with consumer critics, tween brand marketers, girls, moms, and educators to explore the seemingly benign cultural universe of pastel-colored, hyper-commercialized girl culture (and the tween queen phenomenon) to reveal the complex and contradictory messages directed at today's young girls.

Saturday 5/26 • 4pm-8pm
Courtyard Gallery Screen

Short Drama
Wrigley and King, 9 min
Cornelius Murphy, Lynnfield, MA
A man attends his brother's funeral and reflects on a childhood memory when his brother took revenge against a neighbor for killing the family dog.

Impressions, 20min
Robert Schwartz, Los Angeles. CA
Two people who come from very different backgrounds have inherited the struggles they face in a relationship.

Leak, 29min
beni fredman, Jerusalem, Israel
7 yr old Hadar is behaving strangely and shockingly in order to eliminate an imaginary monster. Her father, a rich and powerful man, covers up her behavior by silencing people with payoffs and refusing to send Hadar to psychiatric treatment. Desperate, her mother secretly takes her to a clinic to undergo a futuristic and risky operation for trauma removal.

1000 grams, 15min
Tom Bewilogua, Hamburg, Germany
A film about Flesh. Flesh in all of its meanings! A story of two tragically colliding Worlds. Poor and Rich! An unadorned view on the current circumstances of our reality, while the audience is flying through society like a ghost.

Astray, 15min
Evan Stroum, Tigard, OR
A man awakens alone in the forest, all memories lost. As he retraces his steps, anxiety builds until the discovery of a dead body pushes his emotions to a boiling point as memories come flooding back.

Workers Leaving the Factory (10min)
Anna Linke, Weimar, Germany
Karin works in a metal factory  performing the same monotonous tasks day after day. When a new worker arrives, it seems to be the end of this drab life.

Brotherly Love, 17min
Choice Skinner, Van Nuys, CA
Isaac, flees home to plead with his brother Elijah to help him hide a terrible secret from Abraham, the eldest brother who is a strict disciplinarian and very religious.

Diana , 15min
Wen-Cheng Yu, Pasadena, AK/Taiwan
Diana is young, attractive, smart, confident and cold. She has an affair with a married man and a fight with her student in class. Everyone makes bad decisions. So does Diana. But this time, she does it with determination.

Advanced Payment, 21min
Heath Jones, New Smyrna Beach, FL
After a drunk driver kills her son and escapes prosecution, a well-to-do woman seeks revenge on her own. She buys an unregistered gun from a back alley thug, who quickly recognizes her as an easy target and teaches her a hard lesson about street justice.

Caught, 20min
Elizabeth Page, Brooklyn, NY
Hannah has spent her life trying to do the right thing, but she can not catch a break, or win the sought after affection of her mother, nor the respect of her brother. Hannah finds solace in baseball from the time she is young. This family strife culminates on the ballfield during the playoffs.

Dog Eat Dog, 7min
Curtis Jensen, Thunder Bay, ON
Tony, a mafia boss, has grown tired of Fluffy, his neighbour’s dog, pooping on his lawn. Instead of dealing with his grievances civilly, Tony hires Chester and Louis take the dog out. The two hit men accept the job, even though Louis feels like the job is an insult to his abilities.

Alienated, 5:30min
Piper Kroeze, North Hollywood, CA—Student Entry
John is an extra-terrestrial living on another planet but decides it's best for him to travel to earth to start a new chapter in his life, against the will of his father. John is still waiting for his slahfle, a body part that grows on the forehead of each alien at a certain age, to come in, in order to regain the respect of his elders as a man.

The Light, 14min
Kajsa Ribbing, Stockholm,Sweden
It's all about love - and life - when an old and dying author writes his last novel about a young couple and the games they play.



Saturday 5/26 • 4pm-7pm
Flood Library Screen

Animation
Tony's Big Score, 12min
David Provost, Emeryville, CA
Tony is just your average everyday robot until the day the entire world starts crashing in on him.

The Eater, 3min
Wally Chung, NY,NY
A man has a strange experience that ends up affecting the people around him.

X-Mess Detritus-2min
Aurelio Voltaire, NY, NY
MTV and SciFi Channel veteran, Voltaire, takes a dark look at gift-giving and the negative effect it has on the Earth in this one-minute Christmas parable.

Dear Sweet Emma, 5:17min
Out of Our Minds Animation Studio, NC
As the search is given up for Emma’s latest husband, Tucker, a private look reveals that Emma has a secret and uncontrollable dark side.

Dinner Table, 3min
Song E Kim, Los Angeles, CA
The dinner table, where we sit everyday to satisfy the basic of needs, can become the most awkward place to be with one simple conversation and mounting emotion.

Fruitless Efforts - Fruit of the Womb, 5min
Oren Robashkin, Minneapolis, MN
Apple is trying to lead a normal life, but is being held back by his friends.

Lunch, 1min
Irina Golina-Sagatelian, Israel
Vlad sits in his chair, looks eagerly at his plate with a juicy fish. Suddenly someone rings the bell. Disappointed, he gets up and wonders when he can get back to his meal.

Oh! Natural, 2min
Becky Bush, NY, NY
An acorn becomes all it can be.

Experimental
Ode, 18min
Dawn Hollison, Arvada, CO
A story of Collector and Collected, Ode examines the human cycle of action and effect, and its reflection in the internal experience of recognition, regret, and remembrance. Three episodes record the phases of a woman's evolution toward a deeper understanding of her own motivations and her relation to others.

Pin, 15min
Mountains Plain, Asheville, NC
An examination of our mountain heritage.

Sixty in 60, 60min.
Ronnie Cramer, Denver CO
Experimental art film featuring sixty one-minute works of many genres, including abstract, animation, documentary, experimental, narrative, stop-motion, time-lapse and video art.

Commercial
Tales from the Hood, 9min
Manny Marquez, Denver, CO
In 2011, Native Eyewear descended upon Hood River, OR asking the natives to show them the ropes. The locals welcomed them, giving the crew a peek into their lives, and acting as tour guides, showed them all over the stunning little mountain town. This documentary captures the stories of the locals, or the Tales from the Hood, as Natives like to call them.

Little Pearls-30sec
Linda McLean, Asheville, NC
Little Pearls are “tiny films” that open hearts and minds, inspiring authentic connection and compassionate action on behalf of al living beings

Doritos: Super Cheesy, 1min
Jen McGowan, Venice, CA
A cheesy Senator's secret obsession is exposed.
Saturday 5/26 • 4pm-7pm
Flood Library Screen



Sunday 5/27
Courtyard Gallery Screen

Documentaries
1pm - 5pm
Co Raz Zostalo Zapisane (Written in Ink), Poland (12min)
Martin Rath
A documentary about hope, this compelling story is about a a man trying to get back in touch with his sister after they haven't had any contact for 14 years. But can one change what has already been written in ink?

Nullification: The Rightful Remedy  (72min)
Jason Rink, Austin, TX
What do we do when the federal government steps outside of its Constitutional boundaries? Do we ”vote the bums out” and hope that the new bums limit their own power? Do we ask federal judges in black robes to limit the federal government's power? This documentary explores the history of state nullification, and how it is being used today to push back against the encroachment of federal power.

Into The Distance  (15min)
Philip Arnold, New Albany, OH
Follow Adriane Blewitt on her quest to become the Women's World Champion in the Scottish Highland Games. A nationally-ranked shot putter in college, Adriane's dream of making the USA Olympic Team in 2004 was sidelined due to a serious illness. While remaining competitive following her recovery, Adriane discovered another field of competition in which she could test her strength and technique with heavy implements.

Meme  (39min)
Paola Oliveras Garcia, Guaynabo, PR
The recently independent Namibia now suffers a different war. The epidemic of AIDS affects everybody. But in a country where sexual matters are considered private, and women's survival depends on men, the women tend to suffer most of the consequences. Yet, for the fist time, the 'Memes' are standing up to their social and cultural carries by using the most powerful weapon they have: Their Voice.

The First 70  (30min)
Jarratt Moody, San Francisco, CA
Last May, California announced plans to close one quarter of their 278 parks, a devastating move that is intended to save the state a mere $22 million per year. The closure list includes thousands of acres of park land, recreation areas, wildlife reserves, and 50% of the state's historic parks. By July 2012 Californians will be bereft of 70 magnificent natural parks.

Not One of Us (different is weird)  (2min)
Cameron MacKenzie, Fargo,ND
”I wanted to do a short film about bullying...a HUGE problem. I know. I'm a 14-yr-old 8th-grader. I live in a small town that likes to think of itself as being 'family friendly' and 'different than the big cities of NY and LA'. But, people are people...and bullying is bullying. What I learned in doing this film is that there are two main forms of bullying--aggressive or active (obvious) and passive. I chose to make this film about passive bullying because not only is passive bullying harder to prove, it may be even more dangerous than obvious bullying.”





Sunday 5/27 • 1-5pm
Flood Library Screen
Animations-- Same as Saturday
Short Drama
Wrigley and King, 9 min
Cornelius Murphy, Lynnfield, MA
A man attends his brother's funeral and reflects on a childhood memory when his brother took revenge against a neighbor for killing the family dog.

Impressions, 20min
Robert Schwartz, Los Angeles. CA
Two people who come from very different backgrounds have inherited the struggles they face in a relationship.

Leak, 29min
beni fredman, Jerusalem, Israel
7 yr old Hadar is behaving strangely and shockingly in order to eliminate an imaginary monster. Her father, a rich and powerful man, covers up her behavior by silencing people with payoffs and refusing to send Hadar to psychiatric treatment. Desperate, her mother secretly takes her to a clinic to undergo a futuristic and risky operation for trauma removal.

1000 grams, 15min
Tom Bewilogua, Hamburg, Germany
A film about Flesh. Flesh in all of its meanings! A story of two tragically colliding Worlds. Poor and Rich! An unadorned view on the current circumstances of our reality, while the audience is flying through society like a ghost.

Astray, 15min
Evan Stroum, Tigard, OR
A man awakens alone in the forest, all memories lost. As he retraces his steps, anxiety builds until the discovery of a dead body pushes his emotions to a boiling point as memories come flooding back.

Workers Leaving the Factory (10min)
Anna Linke, Weimar, Germany
Karin works in a metal factory  performing the same monotonous tasks day after day. When a new worker arrives, it seems to be the end of this drab life.

Brotherly Love, 17min
Choice Skinner, Van Nuys, CA
Isaac, flees home to plead with his brother Elijah to help him hide a terrible secret from Abraham, the eldest brother who is a strict disciplinarian and very religious.

Diana , 15min
Wen-Cheng Yu, Pasadena, AK/Taiwan
Diana is young, attractive, smart, confident and cold. She has an affair with a married man and a fight with her student in class. Everyone makes bad decisions. So does Diana. But this time, she does it with determination.

Advanced Payment, 21min
Heath Jones, New Smyrna Beach, FL
After a drunk driver kills her son and escapes prosecution, a well-to-do woman seeks revenge on her own. She buys an unregistered gun from a back alley thug, who quickly recognizes her as an easy target and teaches her a hard lesson about street justice.

Caught, 20min
Elizabeth Page, Brooklyn, NY
Hannah has spent her life trying to do the right thing, but she can not catch a break, or win the sought after affection of her mother, nor the respect of her brother. Hannah finds solace in baseball from the time she is young. This family strife culminates on the ballfield during the playoffs.

Dog Eat Dog, 7min
Curtis Jensen, Thunder Bay, ON
Tony, a mafia boss, has grown tired of Fluffy, his neighbour’s dog, pooping on his lawn. Instead of dealing with his grievances civilly, Tony hires Chester and Louis take the dog out. The two hit men accept the job, even though Louis feels like the job is an insult to his abilities.

Alienated, 5:30min
Piper Kroeze, North Hollywood, CA—Student Entry
John is an extra-terrestrial living on another planet but decides it's best for him to travel to earth to start a new chapter in his life, against the will of his father. John is still waiting for his slahfle, a body part that grows on the forehead of each alien at a certain age, to come in, in order to regain the respect of his elders as a man.

The Light, 14min
Kajsa Ribbing, Stockholm,Sweden
It's all about love - and life - when an old and dying author writes his last novel about a young couple and the games they play.




Friday, February 26, 2010

Twin Rivers Media Festival Early Bird Deadline ends today--save 45% in fees!

TopFloorStudios.com, MapPartners.com and AshevilleCourtyard.com present the 16th annual Twin Rivers Media Festival May 24 - 26, 2010 at the Courtyard Gallery in the Historic Downtown Courtyard with International Restaurants in Asheville, NC

SAVE OVER 45% IN FEES by submitting by the end of the day, Feb 26th.

EARLY BIRD DEADLINE February 26, 2010 (postmarked)
Regular Deadline March 31, 2010 (postmarked)
Late Deadline April 30, 2010 (postmarked)
Last Deadline May 14, 2010 (postmarked)

Entry categories: Feature, Short, Documentary Feature, Documentary Short, Experimental, Silent Film, Horror, Animation, Music Video, Soundtrack, Audio Art, Screenwriting

The Twin Rivers Media Festival is open to filmmakers, writers and sound artists working in ALL GENRES, SUBJECTS AND FORMATS.

Web
http://www.TwinRiversMediaFestival.com

Withoutabox
https://www.withoutabox.com/login/2108

Paper Entry Form
http://www.twinriversmediafestival.com/brochure126.pdf

Articles about our Festival
http://www.boldlife.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A68
http://ezinearticles.com/?The-Twin-Rivers-Media-Festival-is-Not-Your-Typical-Film-Festival&id=1157353
http://www.mountainx.com/movies/review/twin_rivers_media_festival_short_films
http://www.mountainx.com/movies/articles/twin_rivers_media_festival_2009
http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/citizen_times/access/1709321891.html?FMT=ABS&date=May+01%2C+2008

__________________
Carlos Steward
Festival Director
Twin Rivers Media Festival
http://www.TwinRiversMediaFestival.com

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Twin Rivers Media Festival

The Twin Rivers Media Festival is the first weekend in May every year in Asheville, NC. All proceeds from the festival, after promotional and other expenses, go back to the film makers and media artists. Next year is Twin Rivers Media Festival's 15th season. If you love independent film-mark your calendar now!

The festivals judges begin selecting films in March and April and continue right through the festival's official dates, during the first weekend in May, where the finalists are screened in two hour intervals throughout the weekend. The independent media festival typically draws around 150 viewers at each screening or so, for a total of over a thousand or so visitors overall. “The Twin Rivers audience really appreciates the media arts, and this festival gives them a chance to see stuff that might not otherwise be available. We get entries from all across Europe and Asia, as well as all over the Americas, and it’s some of the best in the world,” says Carlos Steward, the festivals founder and driving force.

With 400-500 entries coming in from some of the best independent media artists working all over the world, Twin Rivers focuses on substance instead of glitz, and strives to be more eclectic than the typical film festival. In addition to featuring some of the best independent documentaries, short drama and feature films being made anywhere in the world today, The Twin Rivers Media Festival also offers categories for artists working in CD multimedia, audio media, commercials, internet media and websites. There are even special categories such as “Made on a Mac,” or for projects that deal with outdoor, conservation or environmental themes.

Over the years, Twin Rivers and its predecessors have become extremely popular with independent artists on the West Coast and in film schools. A majority of the US entries come from California, followed by film schools such as NYU and Florida State, then the Southwest. Accomplished professional artists will often be invited to talk about their work and teach workshops. Among students and local budding artists, education is a major draw to the festival. Film makers and other media artist can network, talk about projects and exchange ideas in a supportive setting.

Stewards love of the media arts goes far beyond just film, and he wanted to make his festival more inclusive and open to any media arts. “These art forms are so similar and inter-related,” observes Steward, “ I wanted to do more for independent artists creating amazing work in media besides film.” In the early 80’s, Stewards vision was realized, and a media festival in upstate New York was born. Since then, he has been involved in festivals in states across the country, and most recently has settled in Asheville, North Carolina, where the Twin Rivers Media Arts Festival continues to grow and expand. “Asheville has an amazing community who are very supportive of independent media,” says Steward, “It allows great exposure for artists from the U.S. and other parts of the world.”

As a film student at Florida State University and a documentary film maker in Mexico and Central and South America, Steward learned first hand how difficult it is to get independent film to audiences. “Underground media festivals are a great way to get things shown that normally would not be seen by a very wide audience. That’s where the idea for creating my own film festival began, and this current incarnation here in Asheville is the best so far. ”

Asheville offers other advantages, in that although the festival celebrates art from all around the globe, the entire event is organized and produced with local talent. Film judges belong to and are credentialed by MAP (the Media Arts Project) of Western North Carolina. Judges for audio and screenwriting come from various professional studios in and around Asheville. Steward believes Asheville to be the perfect community to produce a grassroots media arts festival. “I have been all over the world, and Asheville has one of the most amazing pools of local talent I have ever seen,” notes Steward. He tries to involve as many local artists as possible to ensure that the festival has a true community feel and has many art forms represented.

With 102 World Premiers and 8 North American premiers, the Twin Rivers Media Festival provides some of the best independent screenings to be found anywhere. Jamie Hester, a fan of the festival and regular at The Courtyard Gallery’s Friday night “World Cinema” series commented on some of his favorite entries from last year: “I really enjoyed ‘Fix’ by Tao Ruspoli, and ‘Karearea’ by Sandy Crichton was amazing.” Jarrett Leone, a Twin Rivers volunteer noted, “I liked ‘Camp Woz,’ by Jarrad Kritzstein, and not just because of the name. I also really loved ‘Ancestor Eyes’ by Kalani Queypo, the Native American film maker from California.”

The Twin Rivers Media Festival is not your typical film festival. This amazing showcase of some of the brightest international media artists manages to deliver world class talent without being the least bit pretentious. No Hollywood starlets walking down red carpets into fancy screening venues here. At The Courtyard Gallery, home of The Twin Rivers Media Festival, you are more likely to find yourself in a cozy chair or couch surrounded by one of the most diverse collections of work by local and international visual artists, or sit out in the courtyard itself and enjoy the secluded outdoor screening area.

There are a multitude of reasons artists choose to enter Twin Rivers. Many are interested in the highly popular film categories such as feature film, documentary or short drama. This gives competitive film makers a chance to see how their project stacks up against 100-200 entries from some of the worlds best. Other categories are less competitive than other festivals, and draws entrants who may feel they have a better chance to garner rewards for their work. The top placing winners receive a unique hand-made trophy or plaque made by Mexican artist Cynlos.

Although Twin Rivers is a Labor of Love, and consumes most of Steward’s time from March to early May, he believes it's well worth it. "Getting a really outstanding entry from an unknown film maker just blows everyone away. This year, one of these was ‘Rabia’ a student film by Muhammad Ali Hasan, about a young Islamic women that straps explosives around her waist and then shows her previous life in flashbacks. It is an amazing little film. Film makers and media artists need audiences to appreciate the enormous work that goes into their projects. Some of these projects are labors of love that can take a decade to make. Being able to bring these products to an appreciative audience is really a wonderful thing to see.”