| |
Click a series to be taken to the synopses in that set.
| Festival Awards |
Best horror film - "13 Hours in
a Warehouse" Best foreign language film -
"Punch" Best student film - "First Memories"
Best foreign-produced film - "The Stone Angel"
Best Native American film - "Standing Silent
Nation" Best short film - "English Language
(With English Subtitles)" Best documentary
- "Vaccine Nation"
Jim and Matt's choice (festival directors') award
- "The Bilbee Boys" Best
feature film - "Minotauro" |
|
| Friday, April 25, 2008 |
Everyone
But You
dir. by Eric Shiveley
Kimball’s Twin Peak Theater, 8pm
Independent musician and producer Eric Shiveley spent two
years building a tiny home-studio in Colorado’s breathtaking
San Luis Valley. Shiveley purchased a cheap camcorder to document
the construction, but the house became one small story in
a documentary that’s heart-wrenching, funny and excruciatingly
authentic. Chihuahuas, tornadoes, and a pretty blond girl
in the coffee shop control the quirky, random universe of
the independent artist. And Shiveley’s incredible, haunting
music reflects the hope and despair of trying to create something
timeless under an unreal desert sky.
Opening Night
Party
The Metropolitain, 10pm-12pm
VIP Passes Only!
When there is a party, there is beer. And not just any beer,
but Colorado Springs’ finest locally brewed beer; Laughing
Lab. Please join us after opening night selection at the Metropolitain
to welcome all the filmmakers who could be a part of the festival
this year. This event is being sponsored by Bristol Brewing
and will have free pints of their award-winning Laughing Lab.
Come on down and mingle with the filmmakers and other film
lovers to discuss your choices for Saturday’s line up.
If you don’t feel like talking, try some sweet potatoes
fries off the menu.
|
|
| Saturday, April 26, 2008 |
Short
Series 1
10am-12pm
Edifice Gallery
The Travelogues
dir. by Dustin Thompson, 7 min.
Explorations into the monotonous non-events that comprise
and compose the human condition in respect to language, perception,
and projection, while re-appropriating the American ideal
in travel and the Other.
Attendance
dir. by Robert Woolsey, 14 min.
Jake is on a ‘date from hell’ whose only chance
at redemption comes from the bathroom attendant. Jake learns
that help is found in the most unlikely of places - and that
we can all use a little attendance....
No Goodbyes
dir. by Callan Woolcock, 4 min.
A young family from the 1940s is forced into a state of depression
over the loss of their father figure, a World War II soldier,
who is reportedly ‘feared dead’ by a newspaper.
When the father suddenly returns home one night, the family’s
way of living is changed forever.
Direct Mail
dir. by Paulo Costa, 12 min.
Story of a man that is confronted with a chance of change
in his life....
American Piety
dir. by Steven Karageanes, 26 min.
A self-absorbed man gets hit by a car, goes to Purgatory,
and has to choose a religion to get back to Earth.
Ordinary Angels
dir. by Todd Downing, 37 min.
Front line angelic soldiers battle their fallen brethren,
while the souls of mortals hang in the balance. One part police
drama, one part supernatural thriller, one part mockumentary,
Ordinary Angels puts a unique, contemporary spin on ancient
angelic lore.
|
Doc
Series 1
10am-12pm
Antlers Hilton Learning Center
On the Edge of Black and White
dir. by Sean Laskey, 63 min.
In the mid 1960s, the last of the old American television
shows converted from black and white to color. At the same
time, America was undergoing an epic cultural revolution.The
stars from those shows who were children when we were children,
witnessed those changes from the ‘inside’ while
they were growing up ‘in’ television and growing
up in America. That era of Black and White family television
didn’t last long and it ended seemingly overnight. It
would be the last time that America, in mass, was tied together
with the same high-ideal family television.
Kick Like a Girl
dir. by Jenny Mackenzie, 25 min.
Kick Like A Girl is the story of what happens when “The
Mighty Cheetahs”, an undefeated third grade girls’
soccer team, competes in the boys’ division. Refreshing
and triumphant, Kick Like A Girl reminds us all of the lessons
learned in competitive athletics and how sports has been one
of the most effective instruments of social change in our
lifetime.
Two Kenyan Shorts:
Being Damaris and Dreams to be Obama
dir. by James Nardella, 28 min.
Dreams to be Obama - James and his Kenyan
classmates were inspired by Martin Luther King Jr.’s
“I Have a Dream” speech to compose their own dreams
for their country. His life proves that not even the tribulations
of cancer or the neglect of a father will keep a boy from
dreaming once empowered by education. Dreams to be Obama documents
just that: one boy’s hopes to be like Barack Obama.
Being Damaris - Damaris, a female student
in Southwest Kenya, is from a traditional polygamous family
of the nomadic Maasai tribe. Being Damaris accounts for the
role this young woman plays in her family’s survival
and the gender inequality she faces. Her life argues that
education for girls means freedom and an expansion of choices.
|
Doc
Series 2
10am-12pm
Antlers Hilton Carson Room
Nomads of Iran
dir. by Saeid Atoofi, 53 min.
It seems unimaginable that in the 21st century there still
could exist nomads wandering around in our planet. This documentary
is a rare glimpse of the gypsies and two of the major nomadic
tribes of Iran; Quashquis and Bakhtiaris. Nomads talk about
their lives, traditions, weddings, ways of making decisions
for their families and tribes, and occasionally complement
the beautiful sceneries of their surroundings with singing
nomadic songs. This documentary also explores the changes
of lives of nomads who preferred to stay put permanently and
built a new way of life in small towns. Nomad-settlers explain
how settlement has changed the very fabric of their family,
way of thinking, and being in the world.
Beyond Fear
dir. by Michael Perlman, 57 min.
Nawang, a 13-year-old Buddhist nun and Bagdro, a 20-year-old
Buddhist monk lead freedom demonstrations against the Chinese
occupation of Tibet. Following a brutal military crackdown,
they endure horrific torture as they struggle to find a way
beyond fear. Bagdro and Nawang withstand electric shocks,
terrible beatings and are near starvation but refuse to name
names of anyone else involved in the democracy movement. Bagdo
escapes across the Himalayan mountains, endures temperatures
of 40 degrees below zero until he arrives in India and meets
the Dali Lama.Nawang repeatedly protests while in prison and
receives several extended sentences. They throw her in a dark
hole with rats for six months, beat her fellow women inmates
to death, but can not break her. She and other nuns smuggle
out a secret recording of protest songs that galvinizes the
international community into action. Bagdro becomes a relentless
advocate for politcal prisoners and helps Amnesty International,
International Campaign for Tibet and other human right organizations
spearhead an international effort that culminates in her release.
Nawang was the longest serving female political prisoneer
in Tibet. Through the power of a positive mind and inspired
by the Dali Lama, Bagdro and Nawang let go of anger and even
forgive their former torturers. Today, they continue to work
to free their fellow prisoners and countrymen.
|
Short
Series 2
1:00-3:00pm
Poor Richard’s Bookstore
We Do Monsters
dir. by Kent Welling, 11 min.
Constructing a machine to advance his ways, a telemarketer
accidentally turns his customers into zombies and is forced
into a new business opportunity.
The Accidental Activist
dir. by Andrew Hunt, 14 min.
June is a shy, never-been-in-love, thirty-something who still
lives at home. She sets off for the library; how could a simple
trip to the library go so wrong... and yet so right!?
Tesla and the Bellboy
dir. by Timothy Ziegler, 3 min.
Tesla & the Bellboy is an absurd comedy in the vein of
‘Ed Wood.’
I Just Want to Eat My Sandwich
dir. by Julia Radochia, 7 min.
Susan tries to eat her lunch at her desk but keeps getting
interrupted by her co-workers.
LA Actors
dir. by Ricardo Halpern, 9 min.
Have you ever heard the saying ‘everybody in LA is an
actor’? Well it turns out to be true.
Aaavocado!
dir. by Ken Arnold, 9 min.
The true story of one man’s quest to recover his stolen
sandwich.
Timmy, the Bag Boy
dir. by Randy Kent, 23 min.
The story of a boy, his bag, and the one man who may just
understand.
Somewhere Between Here and There
dir. by Rachel Goldenberg & Carolyn Pender, 15 min.
Sam and Leizah develop a close, often fantastical friendship,
meeting in an exciting imaginary world that leads them to
self-discovery.
Imagination Celebration’s
Student Film Festival Winners
6 min.
|
Short
Series 3
1:00-3:00pm
Edifice Gallery
Keys
dir. by Christopher Babers, 23 min.
Keys is the dramatic story of a broken family that discovers
healing within the broken keys of an old piano.
Blindness
dir. by Helio San Miguel, 32 min.
A pathologically shy young man falls for a beautiful blind
woman, but an unforeseen turn of events will reveal his much
more complex and disturbing side.
Homecoming
dir. by Josiah Signor, 4 min.
A young soldier returns home from war only to find his father
unresponsive to him. His father soon realizes all is not as
it once was.
To the Altar
dir. by Erica Sterne, 12 min.
It is the much anticipated social event of the season: the
wedding between the two ruling families of American Royalty.
But can our young heiress, Alessandra Dumont (of the Connecticut
Dumonts) make her way from the knave “to the altar”
and marry the man of her mother’s dreams?
Digits
dir. by Sean Gillane, 7 min.
An awkward date concludes with a magical, and sinister, discovery.
English Language
(with English Subtitles)
dir. by Tim Plester, 19 min.
A tenderly offbeat comedy about love and communication...
or the lack thereof. Meet Mulligan (a typically English man),
Esther (his Scandinavian girlfriend), and the on-screen subtitles
that find themselves along for the ride. Featuring sparkling
music by singer/songwriter Barbarossa.
Oily Marks
dir. by E.J. Vasko, 6 min.
A struggling painter distraught with his work, begs the question,
‘What if passion just isn’t enough?’ when
visited by his past mentor.
|
Animation
Series
1:00-3:00pm
Antlers Hilton Learning Center
Collywobbles
dir. by Ian Helm, 9 min.
In a primordial time, Collywobbles are simple creatures, whose
only concerns are food and safety from their sole predator,
a vicious monster worm, the Quietus. When one collywobble
discovers that a simple stick can be used to repel the beast,
an enormously rich culture’s seeds are planted - seeds
that grow before our eyes.
Dilly’s Program for Kids!
dir. by John R. Dilworth, 43 min.
Sevens animations from John R. Dilworth:
1. Catch of the Day
2. Chicken from Outer Space
3. The Dirdy Birdy
4. Garlic Boy
5. Noodles & Nedd
6. Psyched for Snuppa
7. Mousochist
The Space Burger
dir. by Sookyoung Choi, 3 min.
This story is about a horrific, but comic, situation in a
space burger shop.
The Cave
dir. by Michael Ramsey, 3 min.
An adaptation of Plato’s, ‘Allegory of the Cave’
animated in clay.
First Memories
dir. by Soo Hee Han 4 min.
This 3D animation is about a girl’s unique experience
that she has in a baby’s dream.
The Whole Truth
dir. by Gerald Guthrie, 8 min.
An animated work that analyzes certain aspects of human interaction
by decontextualizing individual contributions to an ‘overly
polite’ conversation.
Mysterieuse
dir. by Samantha Olschan, 3 min.
When a local girl is seduced by the arrival of an enigmatic
leopard she is left with more than memory.
Dinner Table
dir. by Song E Kim, 3 min.
A couple is having dinner on an ordinary day. The girl casually
asks the boy how the food is. He answers. However, his manner
of speaking takes her to her psychological journey.
|
Doc
Series 3
1:00-3:00pm
Antlers Hilton Carson Room
National Sacrifice Zone: Colorado and the
Cost of Energy Independence
dir. by Joseph Brown, 59 min.
National Sacrifice Zone: Colorado and the Cost of Energy Independence
is a feature length documentary that takes a critical look
at the effects of the most current Rocky Mountain energy boom.
Starting with stories of Colorado’s secret and unfathomable
oil resource --oil shale-- and the trillions of barrels of
oil this mysterious rock is said to contain, National Sacrifice
Zone looks at the history of energy related Booms and Busts
in Western Colorado. From Black Sunday, when Exxon walked
away from a 970 million dollar project and left 2300 people
unemployed in the small town of Rifle, CO, to attempts to
unlock oil and gas through nuclear stimulation technology,
and finally to Shell’s new interest in the Rock that
Burns, National Sacrifice Zone tells the story of what is
shaping up to be a 19th Century type boom and the local worries
for the bust that may follow.
Heart & Soil
dir. by Mara LeGrand, 45 min.
‘Heart & Soil’ vignettes the lives of farming
families who inspire us through their efforts to provide for
a more sustainable planet. The film clips along to the pace
of barefoot children and frolicking livestock, taking us on
a journey into the rich landscape of the southwest. Pueblo
Indians speak about their meaningful connection to the most
important resources needed by all living things: clean air,
clean water and clean soil. Water specialists offer a concise
understanding of the inter-relationship of the environment
and agriculture. The film highlights the importance of small
scale farming as a means to cut down on fossil fuel usage,
corporate take over of our food supply, and as a means to
strengthen communities.
|
Doc
Series 4
3:30-5:30pm
Poor Richard’s Bookstore
Vaccine Nation
dir. by Gary Null, 110 min.
From the award-winning director of The Drugging of our Children,
Gulf War Syndrome: Killing Our Own and AIDS Inc. - comes the
latest film of critical social importance: Vaccine-Nation.
For most people, vaccinating themselves and their children
seems like a good idea. Vaccines are safe, effective and are
supposed to protect us against dangerous infectious diseases
-- Right? Wrong! What you don’t know can harm you or
kill you!
In this groundbreaking film, you will see the truth about
the dangers of vaccines and their direct relationship to autoimmune
diseases, infections, allergies and an unprecedented increase
in developmental learning and behavioral disorders in children,
such as Autism. Discover the truth about the history of vaccines
and how they have NEVER been proven to be safe and effective
for anyone. Witness the legacy of governmental deception and
cover-ups associated with vaccines. Learn about the corruption
within the scientific community and how vaccine studies are
seriously flawed. You’ll also follow heart-wrenching,
real life stories of the parents and children devastated by
the effects of vaccines. Join director Gary Null, PhD., and
over 40 of the worlds foremost vaccine experts in this shocking
exposé that will shatter the truth as you know it.
www.vaccinenation.net
|
Short
Series 4
3:30-5:30pm
Edifice Gallery
Joesph Henry
dir. by Phil Allocco, 13 min.
This narrative explores innocence and wisdom, hope and regret,
through what seems to be an ordinary conversation between
two strangers; a man and a boy who meet at a bus stop
The Audition
dir. by James Augustine, 12 min.
When first-year lawyer, Sarah Kettleman, revisits her dream
of becoming an actress by auditioning for downtown dance/theater
auteur, Donovan Sykes, the truth of Sarah’s painful
past brings Donovan’s vision of a woman on the edge
to life.
Music is Fun for Everyone
dir. by Eva Honegger, 5 min.
A drama about eight year old Kevin, who discovers his passion
for playing the piano. While his mother is very supportive,
his father perceives the lessons as an unnecessary expense.
Counting the Days
dir. by James Notari, 19 min.
Thanks to an unexpected connection with a fellow terminally
ill patient, hospital-bound Warren Burris comes to discover
that even in the twilight of life, each new day deserves to
be lived to its fullest.
Punch
dir. by Sotiris Dounoukos, 11 min.
In a city of beauty and noise, a broken man tries to escape
his pain and loneliness by playing the clown he feels like...
Out of Focus
dir. by Angelo Campanile, 18 min.
The writer/director wants Luke, the main character in his
drama, to commit suicide, but Luke doesn’t quite like
the idea, and when he realizes his life is just fiction, he
takes over the show and changes his fate... or does he?
Film's
myspace
The Offering
dir. by Paul Lee, 10 min.
The Offering is an elegiac meditation about the passing of
life, told through the story of love and friendship between
a Japanese monk and the novice who came into his life, from
their initial encounter to their final parting.
|
Native
American
3:30-5:30pm
Antlers Hilton Learning Center
The Enlightened Time
dir. by Stephan Galfas, 5 min.
Jana embarks upon a journey that finds her looking into the
past of her people through the eyes of Sha’kona, the
heroine of this song, who lived many generations ago.
Standing Silent Nation
dir. by Suree Towfighnia, 53 min.
What does a family have to endure to create a future for itself?
A Native American family plants industrial hemp on the Pine
Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. They put their hopes for
a sustainable economy in hemp’s hardiness and a demand
for its many products, from clothing to food. But when federal
agents raided the White Plume’s fields, the Lakota Nation
was swept into a Byzantine struggle over tribal sovereignty,
economic rights, and common sense.
Good Riddance Chief Illiniwek
dir. by Torry Mendoza, 2 min.
Finally, after years of fighting for the termination of the
dishonorable portrayal of the University of Illinois’
Chief Illiniwek, he will dance his last dance and be retired.
Kemosabe Version 1.0
dir. by Torry Mendoza, 3 min.
Tonto re-appropriates his identity as ‘faithful sidekick’.
Reservation(s)
dir. by Torry Mendoza, 4 min.
Reservation(s) is the culmination of my disaffection one and
a half years into the MFA Film program at Syracuse University.
Western Pedagogy tends to clash with Native American cultural
views in the academic arena, especially when professors do
not possess a comprehension of Native American culture.
Human/Nature
dir. by Jerry Stein, 49 min.
The fascinating life stories of individuals able to live surprisingly
successful lives, despite growing up in miserable circumstances,
have long puzzled psychiatrists. Human/Nature offers insight
into the secret of some of their success. Many are Nature-Nurtured
with a lifelong immersion in the out-of-doors.
|
Doc
Series 5
3:30-5:30pm
Antlers Hilton Carson Room
The Hunt for the Texas 7
dir. by Stuart Clarke, 50 min.
‘You haven’t heard the last of us...’ were
the chilling words on a note left behind by seven armed and
dangerous inmates who escaped from a maximum-security prison
in Texas in December 2000. Their escape gripped the American
public for six weeks and led to the biggest manhunt in Texan
history. The dramatic exploits of the seven desperados attracted
the world’s media attention and threw a spotlight on
the penal system of Governor Bush’s Texas. The criminals
became an infamous gang, led by an ex-armed robber, George
Rivas. In the weeks following their escape, they defied convention
by banding together to commit armed robberies, and to stockpile
an arsenal of lethal weapons. On Christmas Eve 2000, the gang
signed their own death warrant during a raid on a Dallas sporting
goods store. Confronted by a police officer the men let lose
a hail of bullets - murdering the officer. The escapees were
public enemy number one - no resources were spared, and once
caught the Texan authorities vowed the men would go to the
death chamber. For six frantic weeks, a massive manhunt turned
up dead ends, until a tip came in from a trailer park in Colorado.
A witness had realized that seven ‘religious men’,
who had just arrived at the park, and who attended local bible
meetings, were actually the notorious Texas 7. The Hunt for
the Texas 7 is the true story of the escape - told by all
those involved.
Spine Tingler!
The William Castle Story
dir. by Jeffrey Schwarz, 80 min.
Spine Tingler! The William Castle Story chronicles the last
great American showman, filmmaker William Castle, a master
of ballyhoo who became a brand name in movie horror with his
outrageous audience participation gimmicks. In the 1950s and
60s, Castle treated delighted moviegoers to buzzing seats,
flying skeletons, luminescent ghosts, and life insurance policies.
His is a rags to riches tale of a larger than life showman
who climbed his way up the Hollywood ladder by reinventing
himself as a modern P.T. Barnum, all the while driven by a
fear of failure and a longing to be respected among his peers.
|
Doc
Series 6
6:30-8:30pm
Poor Richard’s Bookstore
Blame the Woman
dir. by John Lazzaro, 25 min.
A documentary on why society blames the woman when she is
raped or sexually assaulted. Blame the Woman looks at the
controversial Maryland Rape Law and the Vermont Cynic Op-Ed
piece ‘One Drink Rape’ and answers this question
with an assortment of interviews ranging from lecturers to
a Women’s Center director as well as the deep and personal
stories of two survivors.
Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld
dir. by Liza Figueroa Kravinsky, 55 min.
What draws together a pageant queen, a physician, a legal
assistant, an exotic dancer, an entrepreneur, and a musician
who used to work with Prince? They have all been called ‘beautiful.’
But what does beauty mean to them? Surprising stories emerge
as they talk about childhood, careers, relationships, and
life happiness.
First Period
dir. by Allyson Schwarz, 7 min.
Being thirteen is the worst thing that could happen to Libby.
She is a social outcast in her class, her only friend is living
on planet fashion, her crush on Kyp is futile since he is
dating the prettiest girl in school and doesn’t even
know she exists. To make matters worse, she has to give a
presentation in class; which is when she and the rest of her
class realizes that Libby has just gotten her first period.
Canvas
dir. by Arlene Bogna, 1 min.
Canvas, produced by the Women In Film PSA Production Program
for the charity ‘A Window Between Worlds’, is
a powerful, narrative 30 second spot that utilizes powerful
imagery, color, and sound to tell the story of a woman and
her child who use art to heal.
The Romanov’s Last Photograph
dir. by Catherine Faris King, 15 min.
The Romanovs’ Last Photograph tells the story of the
Romanov sisters, Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia, in the
hours leading up to their execution in 1918.
|
Short
Series 5
6:30-8:30pm
Edifice Gallery
Perfekt
dir. by John T. Trigonis, 29 min.
Matt has been searching for the ideal woman, but, unable to
find her, settles for being with five girls simultaneously.
Each of his girlfriends has one aspect of their personality
he finds magnificent, and one negative aspect in each that
he finds utterly repulsive. So Matt, fatigued by the fiasco
and somewhat discontent with his own obsessive-compulsive
lifestyle, breaks up with each of his unique girlfriends and
heads to his favorite wine bar to forget them when he meets
Nellie, his perfect match. But perfection sometimes comes
with its own costs.
The Tribe
dir. by Tiffany Shlain, 17 min.
An unorthodox, unauthorized history of the Jewish people and
the Barbie doll... in about 15 minutes.
Fine.
dir. by Jonathan Buiel, 13 min.
Matt loves his wife Cameron. Everything with her is just ‘fine.’
In an effort to become more than fine, Matt shows Cameron
that love means never having to say you’re fine.
Tag
dir. by Justin Smith, 22 min.
Tag is a non linear film told backwards. Flip, a graffiti
artist, struggles to figure out his life, his art, and his
love life in the streets of Los Angeles. Robert, a police
officer, will go to any length to make sure his daughter,
Marina, does not date Flip, including employing Nacho to kill
Flip. What happens when Robert’s plan backfires and
Marina is accidentally shot? Robert’s hatred for Flip
and his intense love for Marina sets up a surprise twist that
changes the audience’s viewpoint of the entire meaning
of the film.
Gods of Light, Idols of Mud
dir. by Jeremy Moss, 22 min.
Three individuals in the modern world are driven to escape
their lives and act out.
Colorado College
Film Festival Winner
10 min.
The winner from the Colorado College International Film Festival
will be displayed.
|
Doc
Series 7
6:30-8:30pm
Antlers Hilton Learning Center
Very Young Girls
dir. by David Schisgall, 83 min.
Very Young Girls chronicles the journey of young women through
the underground world of sexual exploitation in New York City.
It follows the girls in real time, using verite and intimate
interviews with the girls, both when they are still working
and when in recovery.
The film also uses footage shot by pimps themselves that illustrate
exactly how it all starts. Very Young Girls tells the story
of girls who spend their teenage years being recruited and
brainwashed by predatory pimps, bought and sold on the street,
sent to jail, and then recovering from the trauma of sexual
exploitation. Recovery occurs through Rachel Lloyd, who runs
GEMS, the only survivor-led organization in New York that
offers services to sexually exploited girls. Rachel rescued
herself from sexual exploitation, and she and her staff are
relentless in their mission to help girls sent by the courts
to GEMS after being arrested or found on the streets by GEMS
staffers, to piece their lives back together in group therapy.
But sessions reopen wounds as girls relive memories of the
abusive homes they ran away from, pimps who convinced them
that they were “in love,” the nightly rapes they
endured to make money so their pimp would give them attention
instead of a beating, and the fear that they will never be
anything but a “ho” in anyone’s eyes, including
their own. Very Young Girls’ unprecedented access to
girls and pimps will change the way society as a whole looks
at sexual exploitation.
NORTHLAND: Long Journey
dir. by Edie Steiner, 18 min.
A meditation on the filmmaker’s quest for new truths
regarding her father’s death from occupational illness
thirty years prior. A generation later, new scientific evidence
amended the original legal and medical judgments. Filmed in
and around a small mining community in Northwestern Ontario,
the process of making the film became a forensic review and
a legal challenge to appeal the refusal of survivor benefits
to the filmmaker’s widowed mother. Twenty years after
the death, new epidemiological studies finally confirmed the
relationship between environmental toxins and the worker’s
death. This is a film about family and environment, nature
and culture, and how truth is shaped by phenomena over time.
|
Horror
Feature 1
6:30-8:30pm
Antlers Hilton Carson Room
13 Hours in a Warehouse
dir. by Dav Kaufman, 94 min.
13 Hours in a Warehouse is a thriller that spins the tale
of five theives who, after a successful heist, spend the night
hiding out in an abandoned warehouse to await the buyer’s
arrival in the morning. Two of them know this place as the
studio that was once thought to be used by their father as
a porn studio. But we find that it wasn’t porn Daddy
was filming and now our baddies have a big problem. They are
not alone in the warehouse.
|
| Doc
Series 8
9:00-10:00pm
Poor Richard’s Bookstore
Wal-Mart Nation
dir. by Andrew Munger, 61 min.
Wal-Mart Nation is a feature length, documentary journey through
the complex, layered and revealing world of anti-Wal-Mart
activism. The film is access-oriented and strongly point of
view. Wal-Mart’s emergence as a global corporate power
has inspired a dedicated army of activists, agitators and
organizers. Their lives are defined by a determination, bordering
on obsession, to fight a quixotic battle against a powerful
corporate leviathan. Their struggles are the stories at the
core of this film. They are a generation of activists baptized
by the fire of anti-globalism. They constitute the Wal-Mart
Nation. Philosophically, Wal-Mart Nation shares the spirit
of contemporary, political, filmmaker-driven documentaries
like Super Size Me, Fahrenheit 911, and The Corporation. The
documentary blends satire, intervention, actuality, POV, graphics,
text, and music, judiciously leavened with humor and irony.
The film is structured as an eighteen month long, first person
journey through the world of anti Wal-Mart activism. The filmmakers
blend actuality sequences, one on one interviews, archival
film and photos, confrontation, constructed sequences, animation,
text and graphics. The result is a provocative, engaging,
and entertaining documentary imbued with a clear and critical
point of view, leavened with irony and parody. Our stories
are set in relief against the colourful landscape of Wal-Mart’s
unusual corporate culture. As well, we’ll examine how
Wal-Mart has perfected the template for 21st century, post-industrial,
global capitalism.
|
Doc
Series 9
9:00-10:00pm
Edifice Gallery
Sink Faze
dir. by Grant W. Graves, 63 min.
A freediving adventure. Follow three athletes as they explore
the very edge of human potential. Martin Stepanek, Mandy-Rae
Cruickshank, George Lopez, and their coach Kirk Krack embark
on a project to break world and national records in competitive
freediving. Freediving is the ultimate extreme sport where
failure means unconsciousness. Join in as the athletes push
their own physical and psychological limits while pursuing
the ultimate test - World and National records. Special appearance
made by David Blaine while training for his Drowned Alive
stunt. Shot in Grand Cayman in 2006, the day to day struggles
and victories of each athlete are followed. Spectacular underwater
footage allows the audience to join in as the athletes train
and play. This non-traditional documentary tells each of their
stories as its own chapter. At the elite level freediving
is a psychological challenge. Performances are based on how
physically ready an athlete is, but more so on where they
are mentally. Follow the rise and fall of two world class
athletes as they fight to reach their goals. Never before
has the inside story of the mental part of the game been so
fully documented. One athlete arrives sick and wondering if
they can dive, while another has a better start than they
ever have before. Where they end up may surprise you.
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Feature
1
9:00-11:00pm
Antlers Hotel Learning Center
The Garage
dir. by Carl Thibault, 93 min.
A man reflects on his childhood and of working at his dad’s
garage during the late seventies. Two best friends plan to
leave the small town they grew up in but leaving home isn’t
always that easy. Matt, 18, works at his dad’s garage,
smart, sensitive, just graduated from high school. Schultz,
21, works for his dad in construction: strong headed,high
school dropout. For Matt it’s getting out of the
garage and pursuing his passion. For Schultz, it’s simply
survival: to get away from his abusive father. But leaving
the garage turns out to be more difficult than Matt realized.
Matt has a strong loyalty to his dad, despite his father’s
drinking problem, and he knows the impact leaving the garage
will have. Plus Matt’s just met a girl who will rock
his world. A devastating incident occurs and Matt will now
have to find his true direction in life. The Garage was written
with heart and passion. It is a story that evokes thought,
emotion, and having your whole life in front of you with all
your hopes and dreams still possible. It’s about sometimes
thinking only ‘if things had been different." When,
in reality, they were just the way they were supposed to be.
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Horror
2
9:00-11:00pm
Antlers Hotel Carson Room
Wasting Away
dir. by Matthew Kohnen, 96 min.
Ever feel like life is just passing you by? That love, career,
or sometimes just survival are out of reach, and it would
be great if something came along to kick start your Destiny?
For Mike, Tim, Cindy, and Vanessa, four twenty-something friends
in various stages of their formative years, that kick comes
in the form of a barrel of Toxic Green Goo, compliments of
a wrecked Military truck that wasn’t exactly an ‘accident.’
Filled with the Toxic Leftovers of a misguided Military project
designed to create a new breed of Super Soldier, all it’s
ever done is turn young Soldier/Guinea Pigs into horrible,
Brain-munching Zombies. And when it seeps into the Soft-Serve
Ice Cream that Mike mixes up for them, it gives them a hell
of a lot more than Brain Freeze. In any other Movie, that
would be the end of their story. But in Wasting Away, it’s
just the beginning...The World looks very different through
the eyes of a Zombie, and it seems like everyone else has
gone mad. Confused, scared and convinced they’re the
only sane ones in a sea of Infected Humans, they struggle
to set things right. Along the way, they’ll find what
they’ve been searching for! Love, Destiny, and a Sense
of Purpose. But most of all, they’ll find that in so
many ways, all the ones that matter, life begins at death.
Wasting Away is here to say, Zombies are people, too...
Psycho Hillbilly Cabin Massacre!
dir. by Robert Cosnahan, 17 min.
Sophie is an innocent college girl who wants to be in an Ivy
League Secret Society, mainly because she has a crush on Spencer,
an elite member. During an initiation ritual deep in the woods,
Sophie, Spencer and the affluent society kids, Brad and Gillian,
take a detour and encounter an ominous hillbilly cabin. When
an angry, shotgun-wielding hillbilly threatens them, a bloodbath
erupts the likes of which Sophie has never seen. Sophie must
face a terrible enemy if she wants to make it out of the woods
alive in this chilling, dark-humored chronicle of evil made
in the best ‘grindhouse’ horror tradition.
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| Sunday, April 27, 2008 |
| Feature
2
10:00am-11:30am
Pikes Peak Center Main
War Eagle, Arkansas
dir. by Robert Milazzo, 94 min.
War Eagle is a character-driven drama about a young man’s
choice of whether to leave his family and friends for a career
in baseball or stay and redeem his struggling community. The
story takes place over a few pivotal weeks in the summer after
Enoch Cass’s senior year, and is set against the backdrop
of Arkansas’ beautiful Ozark Mountains.
Q&A afterwards with Producer Vincent Insalaco
www.wareaglearkansas.com
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| Feature
3
10:00am-11:30am
Pikes Peak Center Studio Bee
Freezer Burn
dir. by Charles Hood, 94 min.
Virgil is a thirty-year-old scientist developing technology
to permanently preserve human organs for transplant. However,
his obsession with his work takes a toll on his marriage.
Virgil’s only distraction is Emma, a fourteen-year-old
student in his wife’s high school art class. His sanity
hangs in the balance as he struggles to suppress his taboo
attraction to the girl. Virgil decides to use his experimental
technology to freeze himself in order to align his age with
the young girl’s. But his plan doesn’t turn out
the way he’d hoped.
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| Feature
4
12:00-2:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Main
305
dir. by David Holechek and Daniel Holechek, 84 min.
A comedy of epic proportions! Based on the online smash hit,
305 is a mockumentary detailing the misadventures of five
not-so-brave members of the Spartan army charged with guarding
a seemingly ordinary goat path. But when their actions lead
to the death of King Leonidas and his army of 300 men, the
five are shamed throughout the land and forced into hiding.
But with Sparta cowering under the threat of Persian invasion,
the five must band together once more and become true warriors.
Do the five have what it takes to save the day?
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| Feature
5
12:00-2:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Studio Bee
Broken Fences
dir. by Troy McGatlin, 103 min.
Joe lives a life of solitude by choice on a ranch in the mountains
of Colorado, asking no one to feel sorry for him. A widower,
he has his daily routine of ranch chores interrupted one evening
by a call from his just paroled son, Dylan. Dylan is a good
kid that has a dark cloud that seems to follow him wherever
he goes. He hasn’t spoken to his father in years and
has nowhere else to go. Reluctantly, Joe takes Dylan in under
the condition that he has changed his ways. The two slowly
start to repair their rocky relationship when the ill fortune
that follows Dylan strikes again. The ensuing incident sets
forth a chain reaction of events that will cause dire consequences
for everyone involved.
www.brokenfences.org
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| Feature
6
2:30-4:30pm
Pikes Peak Center Main
The Stone Angel
dir. by Kari Skogland, 116 min.
With her life nearly behind her, the witty, quick tempered,
and fiercely proud Hagar Shipley sets out in search of a way
to reconcile herself to her turbulent past. Through her reflections
we come to know a passionate and rebellious young bride, her
love for her two sons, the freedoms she claimed, and the joys
she denied herself. As her mind wanders in and out of the
present, we experience with her the defining moments and characters
of her past: her affluent but demanding father whose suffocating
love drives her to rebel and marry the opposite of the man
he would have chosen for her; her husband Bram Shipley, a
man who unleashes her passion for love and life yet refuses
to meet the rigid social standards she is driven by; and her
children, Marvin and John. While hiding out in a dilapidated
house by the ocean, Hagar meets Leo, a young man hiding from
a different past, who accidentally forces her to face the
one big secret she must take to her grave. Her thoughts evoke
not only the rich pattern of her past, but also the meaning
of what it is to grow old and to come to terms with mortality.
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| Feature
7
2:30-4:30pm
Pikes Peak Center Studio Bee
Minotauro
dir. by Alejandro Cano, 94 min.
Judas and Sara are twins, separated as children because of
their mother’s vision of a future when Judas would betray
her. They’re reunited, years later, when Judas journeys
to Mexico to stop an imminent threat to his sister, entangling
them in the conflict of old family mysteries, binds of their
past, and need of redemption.
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| Feature
8
5:00-7:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Main
The Bilbee Boys
dir. by Mathew Nelson, 84 min.
The Bilbee Boys is a comedy about three teenage brothers who
deal with insecurity and social pressures when a young girl
moves in next-door. Barnaby, Maxwell and Orson try to impress
Rosemary in their own unique ways, but fail due to their problems
with anxiety and insecurity. School starts and the boys begin
to change themselves, physically and mentally, to impress
Rosemary. The Bilbee Boys explores the insecurities, societal
pressures and media influences teenagers and young adults
face, through the eyes of three teenage brothers.
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| Feature
9
5:00-7:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Studio Bee
Yesterday was a Lie
dir. by James Kerwin, 63 min.
Kipleigh Brown ‘exudes Bacall’ (‘Slice of
SciFi’) as Hoyle, a girl with a sharp mind and a weakness
for bourbon who finds herself on the trail of a reclusive
genius (John Newton). But her work takes a series of
unforeseen twists as events around her grow increasingly fragmented...
disconnected... surreal. With a sexy lounge singer (Chase
Masterson) and a loyal partner (Mik Scriba) as her only allies,
Hoyle is plunged into a dark world of intrigue and earth-shattering
cosmological secrets. Haunted by an ever-present shadow (Peter
Mayhew) whom she is destined to face, Hoyle discovers that
the most powerful force in the universe -- the power to bend
reality, the power to know the truth -- lies within the depths
of the human heart.
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Awards Program
7:00-7:30pm
Pikes Peak Center Main
We will be honoring truly exceptional films from
this year’s festival.
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| Feature
10
7:30-9:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Main
Windcroft
dir. by Evan Meszaros, 98 min.
On a remote farm in the sweeping hills of Pennsylvania, three
lives are torn apart by love, abandonment, deception, and
murder. After the death of his father, John and his new wife,
Diane, claim the estate. But, his father bequeathed to him
more than just the family farm, and as John’s past catches
up with him, he is forced to face a heritage of madness and
violence. With John’s attention becoming increasingly
distant and more focused on the farm, Diane finds friendship
with his childhood sweetheart, Mindy. Soon old feelings are
rekindled, family ties are tightened to a noose, and Mindy’s
own secrets crack the very foundation of house and home.
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| Horror
3
7:30-9:00pm
Pikes Peak Center Studio Bee
Kill Kill Faster Faster
dir. by Gareth Maxwell Roberts, 93 min.
Joe One-Way serves a life stretch for the murder of his teenage
bride, Kimba. Inspired to write by Clinique, his cellmate
and mentor, Joe writes the play `White Man: Black Hole?’.
NYC film producer Markie Mann pulls strings to have Joe paroled,
contracting him to write the screenplay. Fleur is Markie’s
wife, a one-time hooker and ex-con, who can’t help but
fall for kindred spirit Joe. Their attraction is irresistible.
Fleur is Joe’s salvation. Propelled on a journey of
obsession, guilt, and lust, Joe struggles between the pull
of heroin, his violence and the desire to redeem himself in
the eyes of his estranged twin daughters. Joe One-Way soon
discovers that life on the outside may be too dangerous even
for him.
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